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@mydung1105: Nhảm nhí🥱#xh#fyp#capcut#foryou#cuocsong
DUNG🫧
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Friday 08 May 2026 01:35:36 GMT
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Why are almost all the noses broken? For years, pop culture and casual observers have chalked this up to a basic explanation: 1. The Gravity/Time Defense: "Noses protrude from the face, so naturally, when a statue topples over, the nose is the first thing to shatter." (While mechanically true for accidental damage, it doesn't explain the precise chisel marks found on statues that are otherwise completely pristine). To understand why someone would take a hammer and chisel to a limestone nose, you have to completely delete our modern understanding of a "statue." To the ancient Egyptians, a statue wasn't a decorative monument or a passive piece of art. It was a highly functional, supernatural piece of technology. The Egyptians believed that every human possessed multiple spiritual elements, including the Ka (the life force or double) and the Ba (the personality/soul). When a person died, or when a deity was worshiped, these spiritual entities needed a physical anchor in the material world. If a mummy was destroyed, corrupted, or lost, the Ka needed a backup plan. That backup plan was the statue. Through a sacred ritual known as the Opening of the Mouth ceremony, priests would use ritual tools to magically animate the stone, transforming it into a living, breathing surrogate body for the spirit. Once activated, that statue could: Consume the spiritual essence of food offerings. Hear the prayers of the living. Act on behalf of the deceased in the afterlife. Exert divine or royal power in the physical realm. If a new pharaoh wanted to erase the legacy of a predecessor (think Thutmose III navigating the memory of Hatshepsut), or if tomb raiders wanted to rob a burial chamber without facing the wrath of a deceased king's vengeful spirit, they couldn't just walk away. They had to neutralize the threat. But how do you kill a spirit that is already dead? You cut off its supply of life. The ancient Egyptians viewed the nose as the ultimate source of the Ankh—the breath of life. Even a stone statue housing a Ka needed to perform the metaphysical equivalent of biological functions to maintain its existence, and chief among those functions was breathing. By taking a chisel and deliberately hacking off the nose of a statue, an iconoclast wasn't trying to make the pharaoh look ugly. They were quite literally suffocating them. Without a nose, the vessel was deactivated. The spirit inside could no longer breathe, effectively rendering the statue dead, powerless, and incapable of interacting with the living world or taking supernatural revenge. What makes this theological concept of nose-cutting so incredible is how perfectly it mirrored the brutal, real-world legal systems of the New Kingdom. This wasn't just abstract religious theory—it was a reflection of state justice. Enter King Horemheb, the military general who ascended the throne to stabilize Egypt after the chaotic collapse of the Amarna Period. Horemheb was a man of absolute, unshakeable law and order. To clean up the widespread corruption, extortion, and abuse of power running rampant across the empire, he left a massive judicial monument carved into the foot of the Tenth Pylon at Karnak Temple, known as the Great Edict of Horemheb. In this legal text, Horemheb laid down incredibly strict, zero-tolerance punishments for corrupt state officials, judges, and military personnel who stole from the citizens or defrauded the royal treasury. The penalty for these high-level crimes? Literal, physical rhinotomy—having their actual noses cut off—followed by permanent exile to a remote border fortress town. SOURCES: Striking Power: Iconoclasm in Ancient Egypt Authors: Edward Bleiberg and Stephanie Weissberg (2019) Texts from the Amarna Period in Egypt Author: William J. Murnane (1995) Ancient Records of Egypt (Volume III: The Nineteenth Dynasty) Author: James Henry Breasted الشرائع والقوانين في مصر القديمة – الدكتور عبد العزيز صالح #pourtoi #creatorsearchinsight #ancientegypt #creepyfacts #egyptology
روز مادر مبارک🫶🏻♥️ . . . . 🌸❤️🩹#foruyou . . . . 🥰🎀 . . . #fyp #viral #viralvideos #دکلمه
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