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No. Unlike modern priests, Egyptian priests were far removed from the common people and did not interfere in their lives – the temples were not even open to the public. Their duty is to serve the gods, to perform daily temple rituals to awaken the gods, and to serve the gods in peace.
They wore white robes, shaved their heads, and were to be kept clean at all times. They also act as the state – which is what many of their powers are. In return, they were given daily food (the gods simply symbolically "ate the sacrifices").
Priesthood is a part-time job, and they usually serve only one month out of every three months. The priests were well educated, and when they were not in the priesthood, they pursued other professions, such as medicine or law.
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The priests of ancient Egypt were a special group who acted as a bridge between gods and humans. Although their duty was to serve the gods, their personal lives and ways of behaving were not completely restricted.
In ancient Egypt, priesthood was usually held by men, but they were not forbidden to marry. In fact, many of the high priests and pharaohs were themselves married. However, they usually married not ordinary people, but other priests or noble women.
The duties of the priests in ancient Egypt were to serve the gods, keep the temple in order and clean, and perform religious ceremonies and the day-to-day management of the temple. They were regarded as the closest people to the gods and had the power to interpret oracles and interpret doctrines. Their marriage was not seen as a taboo or offensive to the gods.
However, ancient Egyptian society had strict rules and restrictions on the personal lives and actions of priests. For example, priests could not participate in secular wars and political activities, they had to be pure and chaste, they could not engage in sexual misconduct, and so on. These regulations were primarily intended to ensure that the priests were able to perform their religious duties wholeheartedly and to maintain the order and sanctity of the temple.
In conclusion, ancient Egyptian priests were allowed to marry, but their marriage and personal behavior were subject to certain restrictions and regulations to ensure that they could wholeheartedly fulfill their religious duties and maintain the order and sanctity of the temple.
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01 Why do people suddenly start paying attention to priestesses? This is because the tomb of a priestess was recently discovered in the Giza Heights on the southern outskirts of Cairo, Egypt, so people became fascinated by the priestess message.
02 In ancient Egypt, the power of the priestess was very high, whether in terms of power or fame, the position of the priestess could be compared with that of the pharaoh, and the priestess was also a messenger of the gods.
03 In ancient Egypt, priestesses were not an optional profession, but could only be hereditary, so their rights were enormous, and of course their own duties were also related to religious relations.
04 Unlike the ordinary priests we know, the ancient Egyptian priestesses did not come into contact with the public, and the priestesses needed to perform rituals in the temple every day, and they were not open to the public, so the sense of mystery was very strong.
05 The profession of a priestess is relatively strict, and the priestess herself must have a great deal of knowledge to be competent, after all, as an intermediary between God and man.
06 In addition, a priestess is required to ensure physical chastity throughout her life, which means that a priestess cannot have a spouse in her life, and certainly cannot have sexual relations with men.
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Egypt is an Islamic country, and the wedding customs of its inhabitants are unique and chic. There is a tradition among Egyptians that men and women are not allowed to see each other before marriage until the time of the wedding.
When the young man and woman reach the age of marriage, the matchmaker introduces the man's mother or sister to see the girl, and when she returns, she tells the young man a detailed description of the girl's situation, focusing on describing the girl's appearance. The young man was satisfied, and the girl's family agreed to the marriage, and the parents chose a date for the engagement ceremony.
The engagement ceremony takes place at the girl's house or in the club. At the time of engagement, the man must give the woman's parents a considerable bride price, which is not spent by the woman's parents, but is used by the woman's parents to prepare gold rings, bracelets, gold necklaces and other decorative items for the bride, and also use some of the money to buy furniture in the new house. Of course, the woman's parents also have to contribute some money.
At the engagement ceremony, the young man's sisters placed a gold ring on the ring finger of the girl's right hand, and some also wore gold bracelets and necklaces. Therefore, in Egypt, whether a girl is engaged or not is easy to understand. The girl's parents entertained the guests at the engagement ceremony with drinks and snacks, and the guests and hosts talked warmly and sang and danced together.
After the engagement, the marriage ceremony can take place after a one, two, or even three years of preparation for the marriage. During the period from the engagement to the wedding, the man needs to send some gifts to the woman's family during the New Year's holidays, and since the fiancé cannot see his fiancée, the gifts must be sent by the female relatives of the man's family.
On the day of the wedding, the bridegroom's ladies come to the bride's house in droves. The ladies first bathed the bride and then helped her to put on the groom's gorgeous wedding dress. The wedding dress is a white gauze dress with a long hem, and the bride's long skirt is usually supported by six or eight children when walking.
After dressing the wedding dress, the ladies help the bride comb her hair, comb her hair into dozens of slender braids, put on various hair accessories, and help the bride put on necklaces, earrings, bracelets, etc. After dressing, the bride, accompanied by her family, bids farewell to the village chief or the elders of the village one by one. At this moment, several colorful horse-drawn carriages arrive at the door of the bride's house, led by the groom's mother, who has come to welcome the bride to the wedding ceremony.
The carriage for the bride is even more dazzlingly decorated, decorated with expensive Kashmiri silk and various flowers, drawn by two or four horses, guarded by two young men dressed in Kashmiri silk, which looks grand and gorgeous. After the bride said goodbye to her elders, she got into the carriage and the procession set off for the groom's house. Along the way, the groom's mother is in front and the bride's mother is behind, and the people who see them off sing songs praising the bride's beauty and wisdom, and they pass through the bustling area to the groom's home.
The bride's dowry is also carried with the procession, and the dowry is usually 100 new robes, and in order to prepare these 100 dresses, some mothers begin to prepare and sew soon after the birth of their daughters.
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The supreme priest of all gods was Pharaoh, who appointed a high priest and a number of other priests to perform the priesthood on his behalf. The inner chamber of the temple was only accessible to pharaohs or priests, where the morning, noon, and evening rituals were performed. At other times no one is allowed to enter this part of the temple.
The remaining priests were the only ones allowed to step out of the outer court, and those worshippers were not allowed to enter the inner part of the outer court, and the worshippers gave the sacrifices to the priests, who took them into the temple, so that the temple could indeed be called the house of the gods, and it was not like the temples of other cultures, where people could come and go as many times as they wanted. The courtyards of these temples are the realm of the gods, and the gods are the inhabitants of the temples. It is the duty to watch over the gods to meet his needs.
They are true "servants of God." They were to do their best to keep the gods in Egypt so that there would be peace in the world. and left Egypt for fear of dissatisfaction.
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Ancient Egypt, one of the four great civilizations, was located in the middle and lower reaches of the Nile River (present-day Middle East) in northeastern Africa. About 7,400 years ago, the settlement organization of city-states began to appear in the Fayoum region around the Fayoum region and then formed a state, and the ancient Egyptian civilization was first formed in the Fayoum region of Lower Egypt about 7,450 years ago (about 5450 BC) and ended in (639 AD) when the Arab Empire Islamized it. >>>More
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