| Abydos Abtu or Abdju The City of the Djed |
Seti-I Temple at Abydos
| Seti I, the second king of the 19th Dynasty was the son of Ramesses I and Queen Sitre. He reconciled with the Hittites who were becoming the most powerful state in the region. Seti I and his heir, Ramesses II campaigned against Kadesh. In Karnak he completed his father's plan by converting the court between the second and third pylons into a vast hypostyle hall. He built his vast mortuary complex at Abydos. Seti-I tomb in the Valley of the Kings where he was finally entombed was vandalized and his body was relocated to Deir el Bahri. The mummy of Seti I was found at Dayru l-Bahri in 1881. |
| Djet This round-topped stela of King Djet, the 4th King of Dynasy 1, was probably originally erected on the east side of his royal mastaba tomb. It was found in a royal necropolis at Abdyos, where most kings of the Dynasty 1 were buried. It was created circa 3000 B.C. of limestone, a relatively soft stone. The Horus falcon perches on top of the rectangular serekh, which contains the hieroglyph of a cobra, the actual name of the king. (Uadji? Djet?) |
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| One inhabitant of ancient Egypt made the pilgrimage to Abydos to see and participate at the Osirian; Ikhernsfret, and he wrote: "I celebrated the Procession of Upwauet when he proceeded to champion his father...I repulsed those who were hostile to the Neshmet barque, and I overthrew the enemies of Osiris...I followed the god in his footsteps...I sailed the divine barque...I equipped the barque called Shining in Truth of the Lord of Abydos with a chapel...I led the god to his tomb...I championed Osiris on that Day of the Great Battle, overthrowing all the enemies on the shore of Nedyt...I caused him to proceed to the barque, and it bore the beauty of Osiris...I gladdened the heart of the eastern highlands and knew the jubilation of the western highlands when they saw the beauty of Osiris upon the barque...the barque landed at Abydos and we brought Osiris, First of the Westerners, Lord of Abydos to his palace...I walked with Osiris." |
| The entry to the Osireion built by Seti-I contain many initiatory rights as hieroglyphs depicting ascension. It is considered by many as the second temple built by Seti-I. This anti-chamber opens into the Osireion where the large blocks are found. |
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The structures built by the successors of Aha in the First Dynasty lie to the west. The structure which King Aha built at Abydos was similar to those of the Late Predynastic Period, but built on a far grander scale. This is perhaps indicative of the increasing wealth available at the beginning of the First Dynasty.
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Heket The goddess Heket, who was
represented in the form of a frog or with a frog's head, was worshipped especially in the
town of Her-wer as the female complement of Khnum. Together with other gods she assisted
in fashioning the child in the womb and presided over the birth in her capacity as
midwife. She made her debut into the Egyptian pantheon in pyramid inscriptions, in a
magical text destined to allow the king to ascend into the sky. Women often wore amulets
of her during childbirth. As the daughter of the sun-god Re she is called 'Eye of Re' and
'Mother of the gods'. She is regarded as the consort of Khnum. Sometimes Heket was taken
as a form of Hathor, and called the mother of Horus the Elder. On account of her
life-giving powers she was classified at Abydos among the Osirian family of deities.
Depictions of later times show her present at the posthumous conception of Horus. |
| BASTIN, Dominique, De la fondation d'un temple: "Paroles dites par Seshat au Roi Sethi Ier," in: L'atelier de l'orfèvre. Mélanges Derchain, 9-24. The staircase of the temple of Seti I at Abydos leading to the terrace - and, thus, the Osireion - bears an address in 43 columns of the goddess Seshat to the king (KRI I, 186-188). The text displays a rigid scheme which deals with the temple itself and its two groups of occupants (the king and the gods) and in which pseudo-verbal/ temporal aspects and non-verbal sentences/ a-temporal aspects alternate. |
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| This hieroglyph in the Temple of Seti I at Abydos which shows apparent helicopters, and submarines, are perhaps where an inscription has been written more than once. As the plaster fell away, it looks like modern craft. |
| Amenhotep III, with his taste for antiquities, ordered the royal necropolis of Abydos to be cleared, and his subjects were told to find the tomb of Osiris. They claimed to have found the tomb, although in fact it was the tomb of King Djer (ca. 2800 BCE). |
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| Djer was the third king during the 1st Dynasty, when the crown still resided at Memphis. He was the son of Aha and one of his lesser ranked wives, a woman named Hent. |
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Tenets There are something called "tenets" - which were the basic "Tenets of Original Wisdom" that have been handed down through the ages. These tenets have become distorted and blended together in many other teachings to the point that they are almost unrecognizable as the original tenets. There were Temples of Direct Experience, about which we're speaking now, which allowed the initiates the highest levels of personal mastery. Once that was accomplished, there were Temples of Knowledge of which Abydos and the Osirian complex are very good examples. From Gregg Braden's "Tenets" http://www.crystalinks.com/teachers3.html
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| Red Aswan granite pillars, each weighing about a hundred tons support equally massive archways. This temple was built as a symbol of Seti's closeness to Osiris and contains a sarcophagus, though Seti was not buried here. |
Images courtesy Vincent Bridges, Drunvalo Melchizedek, Darlene, and Ray Flowers.
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