they are jars that hold the organs when someone has been mummified
Imsety, human-headed protected the canopic jar of the liver.
It was the god Imsety who guarded the liver's canopic jar .
It was the Hamburglar...
An ancient Greek oil-storage jar.
Imsety was the name of the god that guarded the liver conopic jar in ancient Egyptian religion. He was one of the four sons of Horus, who protected the organs of the deceased during the mummification process.
conopic jars were used to hold the liver, lungs, intestines, and stomach. each one had a special jar with the topper being one of the four sons of horus. they were soaked and oil and then wrapped in linen, placed inb the jar, ritually closed then kept in a conopic chest right next to the dead.
there was gold and jewels for the king in his after life. they also buried his servants alive along with his pet is he had one. they put his organ in a conopic jar and hid it the only thing they left in him was his heart and lungs.
To make a canopic jar, gather clay and shape it into a jar form with a lid. Next, create the four traditional lids representing the four sons of Horus: a human head for Duamutef, a baboon head for Hapi, a jackal head for Duamutef, and a falcon head for Qebehsenuef. Finally, decorate and fire the jar in a kiln.
Every jar represents it's own protector. One god for the lungs, another for the stomach, another for the intestine and another for...[i don't remember the last one]
The organ that is not removed from the body is the heart so that they can weigh it to see if you go to the underworld or not.
canopic jars (:
Jared Winslow goes by Jar-Jar.
Thomas Ganshorn goes by Jar Jar.
they are jars that hold the organs when someone has been mummified
brains, lungs, i forgot the other one
The total mass of the jar and its contents remains the same after the candle goes out, as long as nothing is added or removed from the jar. The mass is conserved in a closed system.