The Book of the Dead is the modern name of an Osirian funerary text. The original name for the text, transliterated w nw prt m hrw is translated as "The Book of Coming Forth by Day" and the text consists of a number of magic spells intended to assist a dead person journey through the realm of Pharasma, or underworld, and into the afterlife.
The Book of the Dead is part of a tradition of funerary texts which includes the earlier Pyramid Text, Divinity Text, and the Coffin Texts. Some of the spells included are drawn from these older works and date back to before the Age of Darkness. Other spells were composed later in Osirian history. . .
There was no single or canonical Book of the Dead. The surviving papyri contain a varying selection of religious and magical texts and vary considerably in their illustration. Some people seem to have commissioned their own copies of the Book of the Dead, perhaps choosing the spells they thought most vital in their own progression to the afterlife.
The Book of the Dead was most commonly written in draconic, Thassolian or Ancient Osirion on a papyrus scroll, and often illustrated with vignettes depicting the deceased and their journey into the afterlife. The Book of the Dead was placed in the coffin or burial chamber of the deceased. A number of the spells which made up the Book were also inscribed on tomb walls and sarcophagi.
Xutec's book is part informational text, part wizard's spellbook and part diary and details the gnome's mad quest to uncover the secrets of Necromancy and to seal forever the path of Undeath that Urgathoa created when she escaped Pharasma's graveyard.
He is now occupanied by Ash, a strange otherwordly familiar, who the gnome suspects as being the returned soul of his long dead brother.
The Book of the Dead is part of a tradition of funerary texts which includes the earlier Pyramid Text, Divinity Text, and the Coffin Texts. Some of the spells included are drawn from these older works and date back to before the Age of Darkness. Other spells were composed later in Osirian history. . .
There was no single or canonical Book of the Dead. The surviving papyri contain a varying selection of religious and magical texts and vary considerably in their illustration. Some people seem to have commissioned their own copies of the Book of the Dead, perhaps choosing the spells they thought most vital in their own progression to the afterlife.
The Book of the Dead was most commonly written in draconic, Thassolian or Ancient Osirion on a papyrus scroll, and often illustrated with vignettes depicting the deceased and their journey into the afterlife. The Book of the Dead was placed in the coffin or burial chamber of the deceased. A number of the spells which made up the Book were also inscribed on tomb walls and sarcophagi.
Xutec's book is part informational text, part wizard's spellbook and part diary and details the gnome's mad quest to uncover the secrets of Necromancy and to seal forever the path of Undeath that Urgathoa created when she escaped Pharasma's graveyard.
He is now occupanied by Ash, a strange otherwordly familiar, who the gnome suspects as being the returned soul of his long dead brother.
