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Ammut, Great of Death, Eater of Hearts, The Devourer...

by Caroline Seawright
March 5, 2001
The demoness Ammut

Ammut, Great of Death, Eater of Hearts, The Devourer...

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Ammut, lighting a Fire from the Book of the Dead Ammut (Ammit, Ahemait, Ammemet) was an Egyptian demoness. She was known as the 'Eater of Hearts', 'The Devourer' and 'Great of Death' because she was a demoness of punishment. She was a netherworld dweller who waited by the scales of judgement to consume the heads of those who did evil during their lives. She was not worshiped, and was never regarded as a goddess. Instead she embodied creatures that the Egyptians feared, threatening to eat them if they did not follow the principals of Ma'at.

She had the head of a crocodile, the body of a leopard and the backside of a hippopotamus - all fierce creatures to the Egyptians. All man-eaters. It's no wonder that she was depicted as one who consumed the unworthy dead!

Ammut, Hoping to Gobble Up the Heart of the Deceased, if the Heart Didn't Way the Same as the Feather of Ma'at Of Ammut, an Egyptian papyrus (No. 9901) states:

hat en emsuh; pehu-s em tebt her-ab-set em ma.
the fore-part of a crocodile; her hind-quarters are those of a hippopotamus; her middle part [is that] of a lion.

-- The Book of the Dead, E. A. Wallis Budge

In The Book of the Dead, Ammut sat at the judgement of the dead in The Hall of Double Ma'at (when the deceased's heart was weighed on the scales against Ma'at), ready to devour the souls of the unworthy - the final death for an Egyptian! It has even been suggested that she was also a protector of Osiris, because of her position at the Judgement.

Ammut, Crouching by a Lake of Fire
Image © Insecula
She was also known as the 'Dweller in Amenty' or the 'Devourer of Amenty', the place where the sun sets. Amenty, as used by the Egyptians, was applied to the west bank of the Nile - Egyptian cemeteries and funerary places were all on the west. To the Egyptians, west was a direction linked to death. Amenty was also the name of the underworld - the place where Ra travelled during the night. Ammut, therefore, was not only a demoness of death, but a demoness of the underworld. In at least one papyrus, Ammut was depicted as crouching beside the lake of fire in the infernal regions of the underworld!

The Book of the Dead is a selection of spells, designed to assist the deceased through the trials of the underworld. This also, of course, assists the dead to not get eaten by Ammut. The papyrus of Ani, in a speech made by the gods to Thoth, says:

Ammut, Waiting to Eat the Heart of the Dead, with Anubis Weighing the Heart on the Scales The Osiris [the scribe Ani], whose word is true, is holy and righteous. He has not committed any sin, and he has done no evil against us. The devourer Ammut shall not be permitted to prevail over him.

-- The Book of the Dead

In the form of Egyptian's fiercest man-eaters, Ammut was a terrifying demon who was to eat those wrongdoers who had not followed ma'at. She stayed by the judgement scales in the underworld, the one who lived in Amenty - the Land of the West. She might have be fooled by spells, but what the Egyptians really wanted was to be judged as worthy and holy, as one who was fit to stay with the gods in the Field of Reeds.


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© Caroline Seawright 2001

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