Egyptians believed that their pharaoh was a demi-god. He was not as powerful as the gods themselves, but he was a relative of theirs and able to communicate with them. One of the pharaoh's responsibilities was to appeal to the gods so they would make the sun rise in the morning and the annual inundation happen again. If these natural phenomena were not to occur, the pharaoh would be held responsible because the people would believe the gods did not like him. However, they always did, so people were usually very pleased with their pharaoh. This is part of the reason there were so few assassinations in ancient Egyptian society.
One powerful king of Egypt named Ramses the second a.k.a Ramses the great made Egypt powerful through war. Another pharaoh named Hatsheptsut (the first woman pharaoh) made Egypt powerful through trade and waging war. One of the places she traded with is Punt. There was this weird king named Akentan changed the whole egyptians religion. He wanted them to believe one god named Aton. he didn't last very long and then 3 years after he died king tut took over. King tut depended on his advisors. They told him to change the religion back to the way it was. King Tut died when he was 19 years old.
he was a king so they thought he was related to their god
Ancient Egyptians had their own polytheistic religion, worshipping dozens of gods they believed were present in and had control over nature. Rituals centered on the pharaoh, a human descended from gods.
While a pharaoh was alive, he was Horus. When he died, he became Osiris. Later the pharaoh also became associated with Ra/Re.
YES. Ancient Egyptians offered numerous animal sacrifices to appease the gods of the Egyptian Pantheon. While there was minimal human sacrifice to the gods, there was human retainer sacrifice, which was when servants in a Pharaoh's retinue would be killed when the Pharaoh died in order to accompany the Pharaoh in the afterlife. This was discontinued in later dynasties.
the egyptians thought of the Pharaohs as gods pointed by the pharaoh before them
gods
They had many gods and worshipped animals. Their pharaoh was considered a god. They believed in an afterlife; that is why their burial rituals were so elaborate.
YES. Ancient Egyptians offered numerous animal sacrifices to appease the gods of the Egyptian Pantheon. While there was minimal human sacrifice to the gods, there was human retainer sacrifice, which was when servants in a Pharaoh's retinue would be killed when the Pharaoh died in order to accompany the Pharaoh in the afterlife. This was discontinued in later dynasties.
Ancient Egyptians had their own polytheistic religion, worshipping dozens of gods they believed were present in and had control over nature. Rituals centered on the pharaoh, a human descended from gods.
No, those pictures in the hieroglyphics are just their gods wearing the heads of animals. The ancient Egyptians were just regular people who worshiped gods and had a pharaoh.
because the Egyptians were reverent
They blamed it on the River Nile on the Gods or even on the Pharaoh.