Affirm the belief of reincarnation

Finding the exact method involved in embalming and preserving the living bodies as if they were alive is still a mystery. So what did the ancient Egyptians do for mummification?

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The ancient Egyptians achieved the technique of embalming seemingly a default. By burying the dead in a desert pit, the body of the dead will be dehydrated and preserved with heat, the dry air of desert sand.

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Royal mummies like King Tutankhamen were gold-plated, and the poor were
just enough to preserve my body with the belief that there will be eternal life.

Later, they used the coffin when they found that the dead body was not well preserved if not exposed to dry, hot sand.

Ancient Egyptians developed complex methods to keep dead bodies alive. They removed the internal organs so that their decomposition did not affect the mummy.

It is also said that ancient mummies were preserved by using asphalt.

Ancient Egyptians believed that maintaining the body of the dead through embalming would help him to be born in the next life. Therefore, from the royal family to the ordinary people, the poorest people want to die when they die.

The first Egyptian mummy was known to date 3300 BC and is now on display at the British Museum. This mummy is known by the nickname Ginger because the mummy's hair color is red when buried in the desert.

Egyptian king Mummy Tutankhamun, who died in 1324 BC when he was still a teenager attracted attention worldwide. Mummy Howard Carter was discovered in the grave valley of the kings in 1922. A royal mummy like King Tut was made of gold and precious stones, buried in a grave.

But the poor citizens have spent a small fraction of the cost of mummified enough to preserve their bodies. Some are even more economical when they are living to make sure the best possible death is buried.