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The Egyptian myth of the death of Osiris - Alex Gendler

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    It was a feast like Egypt had
    never seen before.
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    The warrior god Set and his wife,
    the goddess Nephtys,
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    decorated an extravagant hall
    for the occasion,
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    with a beautiful wooden chest
    as the centerpiece.
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    They invited all the most important gods,
    dozens of lesser deities,
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    and foreign monarchs.
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    But no one caused as big a stir as Set and
    Nephtys’s older brother Osiris,
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    the god who ruled all of Egypt and
    had brought prosperity to everyone.
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    Set announced a game –
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    whoever could fit perfectly in the chest
    could have it as a gift.
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    One by one, the guests clambered in,
    but no one fit.
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    Finally, it was Osiris’s turn.
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    As he lay down, everyone could see
    it was a perfect fit—
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    another win for the god
    who could do no wrong.
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    Then Set slammed the lid down with Osiris
    still inside, sealed it shut,
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    and tossed it into the Nile.
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    The chest was a coffin.
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    Set had constructed it specifically
    to trap his brother
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    and planned the party to lure him into it.
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    Set had long been jealous
    of his brother’s successful reign,
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    and hoped to replace him
    as the ruler of all Egypt.
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    The Nile bore the coffin out to sea and
    it drifted for many days
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    before washing ashore near Byblos,
    where a great cedar grew around it.
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    The essence of the god within gave the
    tree a divine aura,
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    and when the king of Byblos noticed it,
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    he ordered the tree cut down
    and brought to his palace.
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    Unbeknownst to him,
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    the coffin containing Egypt’s most
    powerful god was still inside.
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    Set’s victory seemed complete, but he
    hadn’t counted on his sisters.
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    Set’s wife Nephtys was also his sister,
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    while their other sister, the goddess
    Isis, was married to their brother Osiris.
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    Isis was determined to find Osiris, and
    enlisted Nephtys’s help behind Set’s back.
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    The two sisters took the shape of
    falcons and travelled far and wide.
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    Some children who had seen the coffin
    float
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    by pointed them to the palace of Byblos.
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    Isis adopted a new disguise and
    approached the palace.
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    The queen was so charmed by the
    disguised goddess
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    that she entrusted her with nursing
    the baby prince.
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    Isis decided to make the child immortal
    by bathing him in flame.
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    When the horrified queen came upon
    this scene,
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    Isis revealed herself and
    demanded the tree.
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    When she cut the coffin from the trunk
    and opened it,
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    Osiris was dead inside.
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    Weeping, she carried his body back to
    Egypt and hid it in a swamp,
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    while she set off in search of a means
    of resurrecting him.
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    But while she was gone,
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    Set found the body and cut into
    many pieces,
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    scattering them throughout Egypt.
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    Isis had lost Osiris for the second time,
    but she did not give up.
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    She searched all over the land,
    traveling in a boat of papyrus.
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    One by one, she tracked down the
    parts of her husband’s dismembered body
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    in every province of Egypt,
    holding a funeral for each piece.
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    At long last, she had recovered
    every piece but one –
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    his penis, which a fish
    in the Nile had eaten.
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    Working with what she had, Isis
    reconstructed and revived her husband.
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    But without his penis,
    Osiris was incomplete.
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    He could not remain among the living,
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    could not return to his old
    position as ruler of Egypt.
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    Instead, he would have to rule over Duat,
    the realm of the dead.
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    Before he went, though, he and Isis
    conceived a son to bear Osiris’s legacy –
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    and one day, avenge him.
Title:
The Egyptian myth of the death of Osiris - Alex Gendler
Speaker:
Alex Gendler
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
03:56

English subtitles

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