
Anubis Dog Statue 3D Model

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3D Model Details
Vendor: | Eldefan |
Published: | Jan 15, 2025 |
Download Size: | 647.4 KB |
Game Ready: | – |
Polygons: | 20,000 |
Vertices: | 16,000 |
Print Ready: | – |
3D Scan: | – |
Textures: | – |
Materials: | – |
UV Mapped: | – |
PBR: | – |
Rigged: | – |
Animated: | – |
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Anubis Dog Statue 3D Model
Anubis , also known as INPU, Inpv, Cnpv or Anpu the Egyptian — God of funerary rites, protector of graves and guide to the afterlife in ancient Egyptian religion, usually depicted as a dog or a human with a dog's head. Initially (according to the Pyramid Texts), Anubis was the sole judge of the dead in the Duat, but since the end of the Ancient Kingdom (the end of the 3rd millenium BC), this high position has been usurped by Osiris (who was considered the deceased pharaoh), who assumed the titles of Anubis "lord of the West" (Khentiamenti), "lord of those who are on the in the west." Anubis in the same period is associated with the mummification of the dead and funeral rites. It was Anubis who oversaw the setting of the arrow on the balance arm and decided whether the deceased's heart balanced the feather of Maat or not. The god of wisdom, Thoth, made the decision without objection, as did the advice of the gods on which Horus based his appeal to Osiris. In the Book of the Dead, Anubis is often depicted leading the deceased to the scales; in other images, the scales are shown with a jackal's head at the top.
Anubis was preparing the deceased's body for embalming and turning it into a mummy. Then he laid his hands on her and turned the deceased into an ah ("enlightened", "blessed"). Anubis placed the children of Horus in the burial chamber and gave each a canopic jar with the entrails of the deceased to guard them. Anubis took care of the bodies of the dead and led their souls through the rocky desert of the west to the place where the paradise of Osiris was located. In this work, he was assisted by the wolf god Upuatu ("the one who opens the roads").During the period of animism, Anubis was represented as a North African wolf, which until 2015 was classified as a subspecies of the jackal. From a certain period of the development of the religion of Ancient Egypt, Anubis began to be depicted as a man with the head of a wild dog Saba (Egypt. sb "judge") or a man with the head of a jackal, a North African wolf or dog. Apuleius mentions two faces of Anubis: "one is black as night, the other is golden as day.
Anubis was depicted in the necropolis of Thebes on the seal in the form of a jackal lying on nine holes.
Anubis was preparing the deceased's body for embalming and turning it into a mummy. Then he laid his hands on her and turned the deceased into an ah ("enlightened", "blessed"). Anubis placed the children of Horus in the burial chamber and gave each a canopic jar with the entrails of the deceased to guard them. Anubis took care of the bodies of the dead and led their souls through the rocky desert of the west to the place where the paradise of Osiris was located. In this work, he was assisted by the wolf god Upuatu ("the one who opens the roads").During the period of animism, Anubis was represented as a North African wolf, which until 2015 was classified as a subspecies of the jackal. From a certain period of the development of the religion of Ancient Egypt, Anubis began to be depicted as a man with the head of a wild dog Saba (Egypt. sb "judge") or a man with the head of a jackal, a North African wolf or dog. Apuleius mentions two faces of Anubis: "one is black as night, the other is golden as day.
Anubis was depicted in the necropolis of Thebes on the seal in the form of a jackal lying on nine holes.
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