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Ankh

The ankh or key of life is an ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic symbol used to represent the word for "life" and, by extension, as a symbol of life itself.

The ankh has a T-shape topped by a droplet-shaped loop.

The ankh has a T-shape topped by a droplet-shaped loop. It was used in writing as a triliteral sign, representing a sequence of three consonants, Ꜥ-n-ḫ. This sequence was found in several Egyptian words, including the terms for "mirror", "floral bouquet", and "life". The symbol often appeared in Egyptian art as a physical object representing either life or related substances such as air or water. Commonly depicted in the hands of ancient Egyptian deities, sometimes being given by them to the pharaoh, it represents their power to sustain life and to revive human souls in the afterlife.

The ankh was a widespread decorative motif in ancient Egypt, also used decoratively by neighbouring cultures. Copts adapted it into the crux ansata, a shape with a circular rather than droplet loop, and used it as a variant of the Christian cross. The ankh came into widespread use in Western culture in the 1960s, appearing as a symbol of African cultural identity, Neopagan belief systems, and the goth subculture.

Use in writing edit


 
or
 
[1]
Ꜥnḫ
in hieroglyphs

In ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic writing, the ankh was a triliteral sign: one that represented a sequence of three consonant sounds. The ankh stood for the sequence Ꜥ-n-ḫ, where n is pronounced like the English letter n, is a voiced pharyngeal fricative, and is a voiceless or voiced velar fricative (sounds not found in English).[2] In the Egyptian language, these consonants were found in the verb meaning "live", the noun meaning "life", and words derived from them, such as sꜤnḫ, which means "cause to live" or "nourish";[1] Ꜥnḫ evolved into ⲱⲛϩ (onh) in the Coptic stage of the language.[3] The sign is known in English as the "ankh", based on the hypothetical pronunciation of the Egyptian word, or as the "key of life", based on its meaning.[4]

One of the common uses of the word Ꜥnḫ was to express a wish that a particular person live. For example, a phrase meaning something like "may you be healthy and alive" was used in polite contexts, similar to the English phrase "if you please", and the phrase Ꜥnḫ wḏꜣ snb, meaning "alive, sound, and healthy", was used as an honorific for the pharaoh when he was mentioned in writing. The Egyptian word for "oath" was also Ꜥnḫ, because oaths in ancient Egypt began with a form of the word "live".[5]

The same consonants were found in the word for "mirror" and the word for a floral bouquet, so the sign was also used in writing these words.[6] The three consonants also compose the word for a looped rope-like object found in illustrations on many coffins from the Middle Kingdom[4] (c. 2050–1650 BC).[7] The Egyptologists Battiscombe Gunn and Alan Gardiner, in the early 20th century, believed these objects to be sandal straps, given that they appear in pairs at the foot of the coffin and the accompanying texts say the objects are "on the ground under his feet".[4]

Origins edit

 
First Dynasty stone dish in the shape of an ankh embraced by a pair of arms representing the ka[8]

Early examples of the ankh sign date to the First Dynasty[9] (c. 30th to 29th century BC).[7] There is little agreement on what physical object the sign originally represented.[10]

Many scholars believe the sign is a knot formed of a flexible material such as cloth or reeds,[10] as early versions of the sign show the lower bar of the ankh as two separate lengths of flexible material that seem to correspond to the two ends of the knot.[6] These early versions bear a resemblance to the tyet symbol, a sign that represented the concept of "protection". For these reasons, the Egyptologists Heinrich Schäfer and Henry Fischer thought the two signs had a common origin,[11] and they regarded the ankh as a knot that was used as an amulet rather than for any practical purpose.[10][12]

Hieroglyphic writing used pictorial signs to represent sounds, so that, for example, the hieroglyph for a house could represent the sounds p-r, which were found in the Egyptian word for "house". This practice, known as the rebus principle, allowed the Egyptians to write the words for things that could not be pictured, such as abstract concepts.[13] Gardiner believed the ankh originated in this way. He pointed out that the sandal-strap illustrations on Middle Kingdom coffins resemble the hieroglyph, and he argued that the sign originally represented knots like these and came to be used in writing all other words that contained the consonants Ꜥ-n-ḫ.[4] Gardiner's list of hieroglyphic signs labels the ankh as S34, placing it within the category for items of clothing and just after S33, the hieroglyph for a sandal.[14] Gardiner's hypothesis is still current; James P. Allen, in an introductory book on the Egyptian language published in 2014, assumes that the sign originally meant "sandal strap" and uses it as an example of the rebus principle in hieroglyphic writing.[1]

Various authors have argued that the sign originally represented something other than a knot. Some have suggested that it had a sexual meaning.[15] For instance, Thomas Inman, an amateur mythologist in the nineteenth century, thought the sign represented the male and female reproductive organs, joined into a single sign.[16] Victor Loret, a nineteenth-century Egyptologist, argued that "mirror" was the sign's original meaning. A problem with this argument, which Loret acknowledged, is that deities are frequently shown holding the ankh by its loop, and their hands pass through it where the solid reflecting surface of an ankh-shaped mirror would be. Andrew Gordon, an Egyptologist, and Calvin Schwabe, a veterinarian, argue that the origin of the ankh is related to two other signs of uncertain origin that often appear alongside it: the was-sceptre, representing "power" or "dominion", and the djed pillar, representing "stability". According to this hypothesis, the form of each sign is drawn from a part of the anatomy of a bull, like some other hieroglyphic signs that are known to be based on body parts of animals. In Egyptian belief semen was connected with life and, to some extent, with "power" or "dominion", and some texts indicate the Egyptians believed semen originated in the bones. Therefore, Gordon and Schwabe suggest the signs are based on parts of the bull's anatomy through which semen was thought to pass: the ankh is a thoracic vertebra, the djed is the sacrum and lumbar vertebrae, and the was is the dried penis of the bull.[17]

Use in religion and art edit

In Egyptian belief, life was a force that circulated throughout the world. Individual living things, including humans, were manifestations of this force and fundamentally tied to it.[18] Life came into existence at the creation of the world, and cyclical events like the rising and setting of the sun were thought of as reenactments of the original events of creation that maintained and renewed life in the cosmos. Sustaining life was thus the central function of the deities who governed these natural cycles. Therefore, the ankh was frequently depicted being held in gods' hands, representing their life-giving power. The Egyptians also believed that when they died, their individual lives could be renewed in the same manner as life in general. For this reason, the gods were often depicted in tombs giving ankh signs to humans, usually the pharaoh.[19] As the sign represented the power to bestow life, humans other than the pharaoh were rarely shown receiving or holding the ankh before the end of the Middle Kingdom, although this convention weakened thereafter. The pharaoh to some extent represented Egypt as a whole, so by giving the sign to him, the gods granted life to the entire nation.[20]

By extension of the concept of "life", the ankh could signify air or water. In artwork, gods hold the ankh up to the nose of the king: offering him the breath of life. Hand fans were another symbol of air in Egyptian iconography, and the human servants who normally carried fans behind the king were sometimes replaced in artwork by personified ankh signs with arms. In scenes of ritual purification, in which water was poured over the king or a deceased commoner, the zigzag lines that normally represented water could be replaced by chains of ankh signs.[21]

The ankh may have been used decoratively more than any other hieroglyphic sign. Mirrors, mirror cases, and floral bouquets were made in its shape, given that the sign was used in writing the name of each of these objects. Some other objects, such as libation vessels and sistra, were also shaped like the sign. The sign appeared very commonly in the decoration of architectural forms such as the walls and shrines within temples.[6] In contexts such as these, the sign often appeared together with the was and djed signs, which together signified "life, dominion, and stability". In some decorative friezes in temples, all three signs, or the ankh and was alone, were positioned above the hieroglyph for a basket that represented the word "all": "all life and power" or "all life, power, and stability". Some deities, such as Ptah and Osiris, could be depicted holding a was scepter that incorporated elements of the ankh and djed.[22]

Amulets made in the shape of hieroglyphic signs were meant to impart to the wearer the qualities represented by the sign. The Egyptians wore amulets in daily life as well as placing them in tombs to ensure the well-being of the deceased in the afterlife. Ankh-shaped amulets first appeared late in the Old Kingdom (c. 2700 to 2200 BC) and continued to be used into the late first millennium BC, yet they were rare, despite the importance of the symbol. Amulets shaped like a composite sign that incorporated the ankh, was, and djed were more widespread.[23]

Ankh signs in two-dimensional art were typically painted blue or black.[24] The earliest ankh amulets were often made of gold or electrum, a gold and silver alloy. Egyptian faience, a ceramic that was usually blue or green, was the most common material for ankh amulets in later times, perhaps because its color represented life and regeneration.[25]

Other ancient cultures edit

 
Imprint of a seal impression of King Hezekiah with ankhs

The people of Syria and Canaan adopted many Egyptian artistic motifs during the Middle Bronze Age (c. 1950–1500 BC), including hieroglyphs, of which the ankh was by far the most common. It was often placed next to various figures in artwork or shown being held by Egyptian deities who had come to be worshipped in the ancient Near East. It was sometimes used to represent water or fertility.[26] Elsewhere in the Near East, the sign was incorporated into Anatolian hieroglyphs to represent the word for "life", and the sign was used in the artwork of the Minoan civilization centered on Crete. Minoan artwork sometimes combined the ankh, or the related tyet sign, with the Minoan double axe emblem.[27]

Artwork in the Meroitic Kingdom, which lay south of Egypt and was heavily influenced by its religion, features the ankh prominently. It appears in temples and funerary art in many of the same contexts as in Egypt, and it is also one of the most common motifs in the decoration of Meroitic pottery.[28]

Use of the ankh persisted in Israel into the Iron Age. In 2015, a clay seal (or bulla) belonging to King Hezekiah of Judah (c. 700 BC) was discovered in Jerusalem, which featured ankhs on either side of a winged sun figure.[29]

Christianity edit

 
A crux ansata in Codex Glazier, a Coptic manuscript of the New Testament, 4th to 5th century AD
 
Crux ansata signs on a piece of cloth, 4th to 5th century AD

The ankh was one of the few ancient Egyptian artistic motifs that continued to be used after the Christianization of Egypt during the 4th and 5th centuries AD.[30] The sign resembles the staurogram, a sign that resembles a Christian cross with a loop to the right of the upper bar and was used by early Christians as a monogram for Jesus,[31] as well as the crux ansata, or "handled cross", which is shaped like an ankh with a circular rather than oval or teardrop-shaped loop.[32] The staurogram has been suggested to be influenced by the ankh, but the earliest Christian uses of the sign date to around AD 200, well before the earliest Christian adoption of the ankh.[33] The earliest known example of a crux ansata comes from a copy of the Gospel of Judas from the 3rd or early 4th century AD. The adoption of this sign may have been influenced by the staurogram, the ankh, or both.[32]

According to Socrates of Constantinople, when Christians were dismantling Alexandria's greatest temple, the Serapeum, in 391 AD, they noticed cross-like signs inscribed on the stone blocks. Pagans who were present said the sign meant "life to come", an indication that the sign Socrates referred to was the ankh; Christians claimed the sign was their own, indicating that they could easily regard the ankh as a crux ansata.[34]

There is little evidence for the use of the crux ansata in the western half of the Roman Empire,[35] but Egyptian Coptic Christians used it in many media, particularly in the decoration of textiles.[30]

Modern use edit

Much more recently, the ankh has become a popular symbol in modern Western culture, particularly as a design for jewelry and tattoos.[16] Its resurgence began when the counterculture of the 1960s stirred a greater interest in ancient religions. In the 21st century it is the most widely recognized symbol of African origin in the Western world, and it is sometimes used by people of African descent in the United States and Europe as a symbol of African cultural identity. The ankh also symbolizes Kemetism, a group of religious movements based on the religion of ancient Egypt.[36] The sign is also popular in the goth subculture, being particularly associated with vampires, because an ankh pendant appears prominently in the 1983 vampire film The Hunger.[37]

The sign is incorporated twice in the Unicode standard for encoding text and symbols in computing. It appears as U+2625 (☥) in the Miscellaneous Symbols block,[38] and as U+132F9 (𓋹) in the Egyptian Hieroglyphs block.[39]

Character information
Preview 𓋹
Unicode name ANKH EGYPTIAN HIEROGLYPH S034
Encodings decimal hex dec hex
Unicode 9765 U+2625 78585 U+132F9
UTF-8 226 152 165 E2 98 A5 240 147 139 185 F0 93 8B B9
UTF-16 9765 2625 55308 57081 D80C DEF9
Numeric character reference ☥ ☥ 𓋹 𓋹

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Allen 2014, p. 30.
  2. ^ Allen 2014, pp. 18–19, 30.
  3. ^ Gardiner 1915, p. 20.
  4. ^ a b c d Gardiner 1915, pp. 20–21.
  5. ^ Allen 2014, pp. 34, 317–318.
  6. ^ a b c Wilkinson 1992, p. 177.
  7. ^ a b Wilkinson 1992, p. 13.
  8. ^ Fischer 1972, p. 5.
  9. ^ Fischer 1972, pp. 12–13.
  10. ^ a b c Gordon & Schwabe 2004, pp. 102–103.
  11. ^ Fischer 1972, p. 13.
  12. ^ Baines 1975, p. 1.
  13. ^ Allen 2014, pp. 3–4.
  14. ^ Allen 2014, p. 496.
  15. ^ Gordon & Schwabe 2004, p. 104.
  16. ^ a b Webb 2018, p. 86.
  17. ^ Gordon & Schwabe 2004, pp. 104, 127–129.
  18. ^ Finnestad 1989, pp. 31–32.
  19. ^ Tobin 1989, pp. 197–198, 206–208.
  20. ^ Hill 2010, pp. 240, 242.
  21. ^ Wilkinson 1992, pp. 177–179.
  22. ^ Wilkinson 1992, pp. 181, 199.
  23. ^ Andrews 1994, pp. 6, 86, 107.
  24. ^ Baines 1975, pp. 18–19.
  25. ^ Andrews 1994, pp. 86–87.
  26. ^ Teissier 1996, pp. 12, 104–107.
  27. ^ Marinatos 2010, pp. 122–123.
  28. ^ Elhassan 2004, pp. 11–12.
  29. ^ Fridman, Julia (4 January 2016). "Hezekiah Seal Proves Ancient Jerusalem Was a Major Judahite Capital". Haaretz. Retrieved 22 September 2023.
  30. ^ a b Du Bourguet 1991, p. 1.
  31. ^ Hurtado 2006, p. 136.
  32. ^ a b Bardill 2012, pp. 166–167.
  33. ^ Hurtado 2006, pp. 140, 143–144.
  34. ^ Bardill 2012, pp. 167–168.
  35. ^ Bardill 2012, p. 168.
  36. ^ Issitt & Main 2014, p. 328.
  37. ^ Ladouceur 2011, p. 7.
  38. ^ Unicode 2020b.
  39. ^ Unicode 2020a.

Works cited edit

  • Allen, James P. (2014). Middle Egyptian: An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs, Third Edition. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-05364-9.
  • Andrews, Carol (1994). Amulets of Ancient Egypt. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-70464-0.
  • Baines, John (1975). "Ankh-Sign, Belt and Penis Sheath". Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur. 3. JSTOR 25149982.
  • Bardill, Jonathan (2012). Constantine, Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-76423-0.
  • Du Bourguet, Pierre (1991). "Art Survivals from Ancient Egypt". In Atiya, Aziz Suryal (ed.). The Coptic Encyclopedia. Vol. I. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-02-897025-7.
  • Elhassan, Ahmed Abuelgasim (2004). Religious Motifs in Meroitic Painted and Stamped Pottery. Archaeopress. ISBN 978-1-84171-377-9.
  • Finnestad, Ragnhild Bjerre (1989). "Egyptian Thought about Life as a Problem of Translation". In Englund, Gertie (ed.). The Religion of the Ancient Egyptians: Cognitive Structures and Popular Expressions. S. Academiae Upsaliensis. pp. 29–38. ISBN 978-91-554-2433-6.
  • Fischer, Henry G. (1972). "Some Emblematic Uses of Hieroglyphs with Particular Reference to an Archaic Ritual Vessel". Metropolitan Museum Journal. 5: 5–23. doi:10.2307/1512625. JSTOR 1512625. S2CID 191367344.
  • Gardiner, Alan (1915). "Life and Death (Egyptian)". In Hastings, James (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics. Vol. VIII. pp. 19–25.
  • Gordon, Andrew H.; Schwabe, Calvin (2004). The Quick and the Dead: Biomedical Theory in Ancient Egypt. Brill / Styx. ISBN 978-90-04-12391-5.
  • Hill, Jane A. (2010). "Window between Worlds: The Ankh as a Dominant Theme in Five Middle Kingdom Funerary Monuments". In Hawass, Zahi; Houser Wegner, Jennifer (eds.). Millions of Jubilees: Studies in Honor of David P. Silverman. American University in Cairo Press. pp. 227–247. ISBN 978-977-704-084-6.
  • Hurtado, Larry W. (2006). The Earliest Christian Artifacts: Manuscripts and Christian Origins. Eerdmans. ISBN 978-0-8028-2895-8.
  • Issitt, Micah L.; Main, Carlyn (2014). Hidden Religion: The Greatest Mysteries and Symbols of the World's Religious Beliefs. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1-61069-477-3.
  • Ladouceur, Liisa (2011). Encyclopedia Gothica. Illustrations by Gary Pullin. ECW Press. ISBN 978-1-77041-024-4.
  • Marinatos, Nanno (2010). Minoan Kingship and the Solar Goddess: A Near Eastern Koine. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-03392-6.
  • Teissier, Beatrice (1996). Egyptian Iconography on Syro-Palestinian Cylinder Seals of the Middle Bronze Age. Academic Press Fribourg / Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht Göttingen. ISBN 978-3-7278-1039-8 / ISBN 978-3-525-53892-0
  • Tobin, Vincent Arieh (1989). Theological Principles of Egyptian Religion. P. Lang. ISBN 978-0-8204-1082-1.
  • "Unicode 13.0 Character Code Charts: Egyptian Hieroglyphs" (PDF). Unicode Consortium. 2020a. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  • "Unicode 13.0 Character Code Charts: Miscellaneous Symbols" (PDF). Unicode Consortium. 2020b. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  • Webb, Stephen (2018). Clash of Symbols: A Ride Through the Riches of Glyphs. Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-71350-2.
  • Wilkinson, Richard H. (1992). Reading Egyptian Art: A Hieroglyphic Guide to Ancient Egyptian Painting and Sculpture. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-05064-4.

Further reading edit

  • Fischer, Henry G. (1973). "An Eleventh Dynasty Couple Holding the Sign of Life". Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde. 99 (2): 16–28. doi:10.1524/zaes.1973.99.2.16. S2CID 195039128. (subscription required)

External links edit

  •   Media related to Ankh at Wikimedia Commons

ankh, life, redirects, here, japanese, film, life, other, uses, disambiguation, ankh, life, ancient, egyptian, hieroglyphic, symbol, used, represent, word, life, extension, symbol, life, itself, ankh, shape, topped, droplet, shaped, loop, ankh, shape, topped, . Key of life redirects here For the Japanese film see Key of Life For other uses see Ankh disambiguation The ankh or key of life is an ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic symbol used to represent the word for life and by extension as a symbol of life itself The ankh has a T shape topped by a droplet shaped loop The ankh has a T shape topped by a droplet shaped loop It was used in writing as a triliteral sign representing a sequence of three consonants Ꜥ n ḫ This sequence was found in several Egyptian words including the terms for mirror floral bouquet and life The symbol often appeared in Egyptian art as a physical object representing either life or related substances such as air or water Commonly depicted in the hands of ancient Egyptian deities sometimes being given by them to the pharaoh it represents their power to sustain life and to revive human souls in the afterlife The ankh was a widespread decorative motif in ancient Egypt also used decoratively by neighbouring cultures Copts adapted it into the crux ansata a shape with a circular rather than droplet loop and used it as a variant of the Christian cross The ankh came into widespread use in Western culture in the 1960s appearing as a symbol of African cultural identity Neopagan belief systems and the goth subculture Contents 1 Use in writing 2 Origins 3 Use in religion and art 4 Other ancient cultures 5 Christianity 6 Modern use 7 Citations 8 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External linksUse in writing edit or 1 Ꜥnḫin hieroglyphsIn ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic writing the ankh was a triliteral sign one that represented a sequence of three consonant sounds The ankh stood for the sequence Ꜥ n ḫ where n is pronounced like the English letter n Ꜥ is a voiced pharyngeal fricative and ḫ is a voiceless or voiced velar fricative sounds not found in English 2 In the Egyptian language these consonants were found in the verb meaning live the noun meaning life and words derived from them such as sꜤnḫ which means cause to live or nourish 1 Ꜥnḫ evolved into ⲱⲛϩ onh in the Coptic stage of the language 3 The sign is known in English as the ankh based on the hypothetical pronunciation of the Egyptian word or as the key of life based on its meaning 4 One of the common uses of the word Ꜥnḫ was to express a wish that a particular person live For example a phrase meaning something like may you be healthy and alive was used in polite contexts similar to the English phrase if you please and the phrase Ꜥnḫ wḏꜣ snb meaning alive sound and healthy was used as an honorific for the pharaoh when he was mentioned in writing The Egyptian word for oath was also Ꜥnḫ because oaths in ancient Egypt began with a form of the word live 5 The same consonants were found in the word for mirror and the word for a floral bouquet so the sign was also used in writing these words 6 The three consonants also compose the word for a looped rope like object found in illustrations on many coffins from the Middle Kingdom 4 c 2050 1650 BC 7 The Egyptologists Battiscombe Gunn and Alan Gardiner in the early 20th century believed these objects to be sandal straps given that they appear in pairs at the foot of the coffin and the accompanying texts say the objects are on the ground under his feet 4 Origins edit nbsp First Dynasty stone dish in the shape of an ankh embraced by a pair of arms representing the ka 8 Early examples of the ankh sign date to the First Dynasty 9 c 30th to 29th century BC 7 There is little agreement on what physical object the sign originally represented 10 Many scholars believe the sign is a knot formed of a flexible material such as cloth or reeds 10 as early versions of the sign show the lower bar of the ankh as two separate lengths of flexible material that seem to correspond to the two ends of the knot 6 These early versions bear a resemblance to the tyet symbol a sign that represented the concept of protection For these reasons the Egyptologists Heinrich Schafer and Henry Fischer thought the two signs had a common origin 11 and they regarded the ankh as a knot that was used as an amulet rather than for any practical purpose 10 12 Hieroglyphic writing used pictorial signs to represent sounds so that for example the hieroglyph for a house could represent the sounds p r which were found in the Egyptian word for house This practice known as the rebus principle allowed the Egyptians to write the words for things that could not be pictured such as abstract concepts 13 Gardiner believed the ankh originated in this way He pointed out that the sandal strap illustrations on Middle Kingdom coffins resemble the hieroglyph and he argued that the sign originally represented knots like these and came to be used in writing all other words that contained the consonants Ꜥ n ḫ 4 Gardiner s list of hieroglyphic signs labels the ankh as S34 placing it within the category for items of clothing and just after S33 the hieroglyph for a sandal 14 Gardiner s hypothesis is still current James P Allen in an introductory book on the Egyptian language published in 2014 assumes that the sign originally meant sandal strap and uses it as an example of the rebus principle in hieroglyphic writing 1 Various authors have argued that the sign originally represented something other than a knot Some have suggested that it had a sexual meaning 15 For instance Thomas Inman an amateur mythologist in the nineteenth century thought the sign represented the male and female reproductive organs joined into a single sign 16 Victor Loret a nineteenth century Egyptologist argued that mirror was the sign s original meaning A problem with this argument which Loret acknowledged is that deities are frequently shown holding the ankh by its loop and their hands pass through it where the solid reflecting surface of an ankh shaped mirror would be Andrew Gordon an Egyptologist and Calvin Schwabe a veterinarian argue that the origin of the ankh is related to two other signs of uncertain origin that often appear alongside it the was sceptre representing power or dominion and the djed pillar representing stability According to this hypothesis the form of each sign is drawn from a part of the anatomy of a bull like some other hieroglyphic signs that are known to be based on body parts of animals In Egyptian belief semen was connected with life and to some extent with power or dominion and some texts indicate the Egyptians believed semen originated in the bones Therefore Gordon and Schwabe suggest the signs are based on parts of the bull s anatomy through which semen was thought to pass the ankh is a thoracic vertebra the djed is the sacrum and lumbar vertebrae and the was is the dried penis of the bull 17 Use in religion and art editIn Egyptian belief life was a force that circulated throughout the world Individual living things including humans were manifestations of this force and fundamentally tied to it 18 Life came into existence at the creation of the world and cyclical events like the rising and setting of the sun were thought of as reenactments of the original events of creation that maintained and renewed life in the cosmos Sustaining life was thus the central function of the deities who governed these natural cycles Therefore the ankh was frequently depicted being held in gods hands representing their life giving power The Egyptians also believed that when they died their individual lives could be renewed in the same manner as life in general For this reason the gods were often depicted in tombs giving ankh signs to humans usually the pharaoh 19 As the sign represented the power to bestow life humans other than the pharaoh were rarely shown receiving or holding the ankh before the end of the Middle Kingdom although this convention weakened thereafter The pharaoh to some extent represented Egypt as a whole so by giving the sign to him the gods granted life to the entire nation 20 By extension of the concept of life the ankh could signify air or water In artwork gods hold the ankh up to the nose of the king offering him the breath of life Hand fans were another symbol of air in Egyptian iconography and the human servants who normally carried fans behind the king were sometimes replaced in artwork by personified ankh signs with arms In scenes of ritual purification in which water was poured over the king or a deceased commoner the zigzag lines that normally represented water could be replaced by chains of ankh signs 21 The ankh may have been used decoratively more than any other hieroglyphic sign Mirrors mirror cases and floral bouquets were made in its shape given that the sign was used in writing the name of each of these objects Some other objects such as libation vessels and sistra were also shaped like the sign The sign appeared very commonly in the decoration of architectural forms such as the walls and shrines within temples 6 In contexts such as these the sign often appeared together with the was and djed signs which together signified life dominion and stability In some decorative friezes in temples all three signs or the ankh and was alone were positioned above the hieroglyph for a basket that represented the word all all life and power or all life power and stability Some deities such as Ptah and Osiris could be depicted holding a was scepter that incorporated elements of the ankh and djed 22 Amulets made in the shape of hieroglyphic signs were meant to impart to the wearer the qualities represented by the sign The Egyptians wore amulets in daily life as well as placing them in tombs to ensure the well being of the deceased in the afterlife Ankh shaped amulets first appeared late in the Old Kingdom c 2700 to 2200 BC and continued to be used into the late first millennium BC yet they were rare despite the importance of the symbol Amulets shaped like a composite sign that incorporated the ankh was and djed were more widespread 23 Ankh signs in two dimensional art were typically painted blue or black 24 The earliest ankh amulets were often made of gold or electrum a gold and silver alloy Egyptian faience a ceramic that was usually blue or green was the most common material for ankh amulets in later times perhaps because its color represented life and regeneration 25 nbsp An ankh made of Egyptian faience nbsp The god Horus offers life to the king Ramesses II nbsp Ankh shaped mirror case from the tomb of Tutankhamun nbsp The god Banebdjedet with a scepter combining the was and djed with the ankh nbsp Frieze of ankh djed and was signs atop the hieroglyph for all nbsp Detail of the ankh held from KV2Other ancient cultures edit nbsp Imprint of a seal impression of King Hezekiah with ankhsThe people of Syria and Canaan adopted many Egyptian artistic motifs during the Middle Bronze Age c 1950 1500 BC including hieroglyphs of which the ankh was by far the most common It was often placed next to various figures in artwork or shown being held by Egyptian deities who had come to be worshipped in the ancient Near East It was sometimes used to represent water or fertility 26 Elsewhere in the Near East the sign was incorporated into Anatolian hieroglyphs to represent the word for life and the sign was used in the artwork of the Minoan civilization centered on Crete Minoan artwork sometimes combined the ankh or the related tyet sign with the Minoan double axe emblem 27 Artwork in the Meroitic Kingdom which lay south of Egypt and was heavily influenced by its religion features the ankh prominently It appears in temples and funerary art in many of the same contexts as in Egypt and it is also one of the most common motifs in the decoration of Meroitic pottery 28 Use of the ankh persisted in Israel into the Iron Age In 2015 a clay seal or bulla belonging to King Hezekiah of Judah c 700 BC was discovered in Jerusalem which featured ankhs on either side of a winged sun figure 29 Christianity edit Crux ansata redirects here For the book by H G Wells see Crux Ansata nbsp A crux ansata in Codex Glazier a Coptic manuscript of the New Testament 4th to 5th century AD nbsp Crux ansata signs on a piece of cloth 4th to 5th century ADThe ankh was one of the few ancient Egyptian artistic motifs that continued to be used after the Christianization of Egypt during the 4th and 5th centuries AD 30 The sign resembles the staurogram a sign that resembles a Christian cross with a loop to the right of the upper bar and was used by early Christians as a monogram for Jesus 31 as well as the crux ansata or handled cross which is shaped like an ankh with a circular rather than oval or teardrop shaped loop 32 The staurogram has been suggested to be influenced by the ankh but the earliest Christian uses of the sign date to around AD 200 well before the earliest Christian adoption of the ankh 33 The earliest known example of a crux ansata comes from a copy of the Gospel of Judas from the 3rd or early 4th century AD The adoption of this sign may have been influenced by the staurogram the ankh or both 32 According to Socrates of Constantinople when Christians were dismantling Alexandria s greatest temple the Serapeum in 391 AD they noticed cross like signs inscribed on the stone blocks Pagans who were present said the sign meant life to come an indication that the sign Socrates referred to was the ankh Christians claimed the sign was their own indicating that they could easily regard the ankh as a crux ansata 34 There is little evidence for the use of the crux ansata in the western half of the Roman Empire 35 but Egyptian Coptic Christians used it in many media particularly in the decoration of textiles 30 Modern use editMuch more recently the ankh has become a popular symbol in modern Western culture particularly as a design for jewelry and tattoos 16 Its resurgence began when the counterculture of the 1960s stirred a greater interest in ancient religions In the 21st century it is the most widely recognized symbol of African origin in the Western world and it is sometimes used by people of African descent in the United States and Europe as a symbol of African cultural identity The ankh also symbolizes Kemetism a group of religious movements based on the religion of ancient Egypt 36 The sign is also popular in the goth subculture being particularly associated with vampires because an ankh pendant appears prominently in the 1983 vampire film The Hunger 37 The sign is incorporated twice in the Unicode standard for encoding text and symbols in computing It appears as U 2625 in the Miscellaneous Symbols block 38 and as U 132F9 𓋹 in the Egyptian Hieroglyphs block 39 Character information Preview 𓋹Unicode name ANKH EGYPTIAN HIEROGLYPH S034Encodings decimal hex dec hexUnicode 9765 U 2625 78585 U 132F9UTF 8 226 152 165 E2 98 A5 240 147 139 185 F0 93 8B B9UTF 16 9765 2625 55308 57081 D80C DEF9Numeric character reference amp 9765 wbr amp x2625 wbr amp 78585 wbr amp x132F9 wbr Citations edit a b c Allen 2014 p 30 Allen 2014 pp 18 19 30 Gardiner 1915 p 20 a b c d Gardiner 1915 pp 20 21 Allen 2014 pp 34 317 318 a b c Wilkinson 1992 p 177 a b Wilkinson 1992 p 13 Fischer 1972 p 5 Fischer 1972 pp 12 13 a b c Gordon amp Schwabe 2004 pp 102 103 Fischer 1972 p 13 Baines 1975 p 1 Allen 2014 pp 3 4 Allen 2014 p 496 Gordon amp Schwabe 2004 p 104 a b Webb 2018 p 86 Gordon amp Schwabe 2004 pp 104 127 129 Finnestad 1989 pp 31 32 Tobin 1989 pp 197 198 206 208 Hill 2010 pp 240 242 Wilkinson 1992 pp 177 179 Wilkinson 1992 pp 181 199 Andrews 1994 pp 6 86 107 Baines 1975 pp 18 19 Andrews 1994 pp 86 87 Teissier 1996 pp 12 104 107 Marinatos 2010 pp 122 123 Elhassan 2004 pp 11 12 Fridman Julia 4 January 2016 Hezekiah Seal Proves Ancient Jerusalem Was a Major Judahite Capital Haaretz Retrieved 22 September 2023 a b Du Bourguet 1991 p 1 Hurtado 2006 p 136 a b Bardill 2012 pp 166 167 Hurtado 2006 pp 140 143 144 Bardill 2012 pp 167 168 Bardill 2012 p 168 Issitt amp Main 2014 p 328 Ladouceur 2011 p 7 Unicode 2020b Unicode 2020a Works cited editAllen James P 2014 Middle Egyptian An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs Third Edition Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 05364 9 Andrews Carol 1994 Amulets of Ancient Egypt University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 70464 0 Baines John 1975 Ankh Sign Belt and Penis Sheath Studien zur Altagyptischen Kultur 3 JSTOR 25149982 Bardill Jonathan 2012 Constantine Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 76423 0 Du Bourguet Pierre 1991 Art Survivals from Ancient Egypt In Atiya Aziz Suryal ed The Coptic Encyclopedia Vol I Macmillan ISBN 978 0 02 897025 7 Elhassan Ahmed Abuelgasim 2004 Religious Motifs in Meroitic Painted and Stamped Pottery Archaeopress ISBN 978 1 84171 377 9 Finnestad Ragnhild Bjerre 1989 Egyptian Thought about Life as a Problem of Translation In Englund Gertie ed The Religion of the Ancient Egyptians Cognitive Structures and Popular Expressions S Academiae Upsaliensis pp 29 38 ISBN 978 91 554 2433 6 Fischer Henry G 1972 Some Emblematic Uses of Hieroglyphs with Particular Reference to an Archaic Ritual Vessel Metropolitan Museum Journal 5 5 23 doi 10 2307 1512625 JSTOR 1512625 S2CID 191367344 Gardiner Alan 1915 Life and Death Egyptian In Hastings James ed The Encyclopedia of Religion and Ethics Vol VIII pp 19 25 Gordon Andrew H Schwabe Calvin 2004 The Quick and the Dead Biomedical Theory in Ancient Egypt Brill Styx ISBN 978 90 04 12391 5 Hill Jane A 2010 Window between Worlds The Ankh as a Dominant Theme in Five Middle Kingdom Funerary Monuments In Hawass Zahi Houser Wegner Jennifer eds Millions of Jubilees Studies in Honor of David P Silverman American University in Cairo Press pp 227 247 ISBN 978 977 704 084 6 Hurtado Larry W 2006 The Earliest Christian Artifacts Manuscripts and Christian Origins Eerdmans ISBN 978 0 8028 2895 8 Issitt Micah L Main Carlyn 2014 Hidden Religion The Greatest Mysteries and Symbols of the World s Religious Beliefs ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 61069 477 3 Ladouceur Liisa 2011 Encyclopedia Gothica Illustrations by Gary Pullin ECW Press ISBN 978 1 77041 024 4 Marinatos Nanno 2010 Minoan Kingship and the Solar Goddess A Near Eastern Koine University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 03392 6 Teissier Beatrice 1996 Egyptian Iconography on Syro Palestinian Cylinder Seals of the Middle Bronze Age Academic Press Fribourg Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht Gottingen ISBN 978 3 7278 1039 8 ISBN 978 3 525 53892 0 Tobin Vincent Arieh 1989 Theological Principles of Egyptian Religion P Lang ISBN 978 0 8204 1082 1 Unicode 13 0 Character Code Charts Egyptian Hieroglyphs PDF Unicode Consortium 2020a Retrieved 28 March 2020 Unicode 13 0 Character Code Charts Miscellaneous Symbols PDF Unicode Consortium 2020b Retrieved 28 March 2020 Webb Stephen 2018 Clash of Symbols A Ride Through the Riches of Glyphs Springer ISBN 978 3 319 71350 2 Wilkinson Richard H 1992 Reading Egyptian Art A Hieroglyphic Guide to Ancient Egyptian Painting and Sculpture Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05064 4 Further reading editFischer Henry G 1973 An Eleventh Dynasty Couple Holding the Sign of Life Zeitschrift fur Agyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde 99 2 16 28 doi 10 1524 zaes 1973 99 2 16 S2CID 195039128 subscription required External links edit nbsp Media related to Ankh at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ankh amp oldid 1212631653, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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