Publisher's Synopsis
Ancient Egyptian Literature was composed throughout millennia in three different kinds of writing called hieroglyphs. There are three hieroglyph types: hieratic, demotic, and hieroglyphic. From hieratic are hieroglyphic signs. The first was a picture of an object, and the second was a form. We simplified the characters as much as possible to be able to write them. In the third, they lost their picture form quickly. As a result, they became mere symbols. The Egyptian God Tehuti, also known as Thoth, invented these objects, and like this, God was a representation of God's intellect, wisdom, and mind; the heavens and the earth, and the characters in the picture hieroglyphs were considered holy or divine at one time. There were specific religious texts considered to have particular virtues.
Chapters and sections of a book written in hieroglyphs were thought to have been composed by Thoth himself. The dead are greatly benefited by their presence and have very great power. Written in hieroglyphics and buried with them The coffins in which they are buried. The first astronomer, Thoth, discovered numbers, measured the Sun's, moon's, and stars' courses, and ordered the seasons. In every attempt humanity made to draw, he was said to be the author. He was said to possess all knowledge, heavenly and earthly.
By painting and carving, you can create art. Painting and carving were his methods of creating art. The gods kept his records, in which men recorded their deeds. The Egyptians appointed him Chief Judge of the Dead since he was incredibly enlightened by his knowledge. It was this ability that caused him to always seek out the truth. During a trial in heaven, Osiris was accused of certain crimes, and the God of evil, Set, committed the crimes. It is said that Thoth acted in this capacity in ancient times. When crimes were committed, Thoth investigated them.