Religion:
 
As in the rest of Africa, the people of ancient Egypt were polytheistic throughout the Old

Kingdom, the Middle Kingdom, and the New Kingdom. That means that they believed in many

gods. Some of these gods were Anubis, Set, Osiris, Isis, and Horus. Egyptians worshipped these gods with animal sacrifices and with incense and many processions where people carried the image of the god from one place to another.

 

People believed that all of Egypt belonged to the gods, and that the Pharaoh was the representative on earth of the gods, or maybe a kind of god himself, and so everything in Egypt sort of belonged to the Pharaoh.

 

They thought that when you died, Anubis would weigh your soul against a feather, and if your

soul was heavier than the feather (with bad deeds), you would be punished. They thought that

after you died you went to a new world, just like this one, and so they put into your grave

everything you would need in the next world.

 

But, as in Mesopotamia, there was also a little monotheism in Egypt. During the New Kingdom, the Pharaoh Akhenaten started a new worship of the god Aten, and he seems to have wanted people to believe that Aten was the only real god, or maybe the only god worth worshipping.

 

After Akhenaten died, people went back to worshipping Anubis, Isis, Amon, and Osiris again, as they had before. The Persian invasion of Egypt in 539 BC doesn't seem to have made any difference to Egyptian religion. The Egyptians just kept right on worshipping their own gods. But the Persians prided themselves on their religious tolerance. When Ptolemy took over Egypt in 323 BC, which did make a difference.

 

Under Greek rule, the Egyptians did begin to worship some Greek gods, although they kept

on worshipping the old Egyptian gods as well. Also at this time, Greek people in Athens began to

worship the Egyptian goddess Isis. They learned about Isis from traders sailing over from Egypt.

 

When the Romans conquered Egypt in 30 BC, again the Egyptians kept on worshipping their own gods while at the same time continuing to worship the Greek gods, and adding on some Roman gods as well. If someone is powerful enough to conquer you, after all, it might seem smart to worship their gods! But little by little some Egyptians began to convert to Christianity, and by the time of the Great Persecution in 303 AD, there were many Christians in Egypt.

 

After the Roman Emperors became Christian and the persecution ended, most of the people of

Egypt seem to have converted to Christianity. This is the time of the great conflict between

Arius and Athanasius, a good deal of which took place in Alexandria, in Egypt.

Around this time, the idea of the hermit started in Egypt, where holy men and women would
leave their families, their jobs, their farms, and travel out into the desert beyond the Nile, and stay there devoting themselves entirely toChrist. When there got to be a lot of these hermits, they started banding together, and these are the first monasteries (the first monasteries had both men and women).

 

But with the coming of Islam to Egypt in the late 600's AD, most Egyptians soon converted from Christianity to Islam. Some Jews living in Egypt remained Jewish, and some of the Christians remained Christian - these Egyptian Christians are called the Copts, today. But since 700 AD most people in Egypt have followed the Islamic faith.

 


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