There were many different types of priest and priestess in ancient Egypt, with a strict system of ranks and responsibilities.Unlike Christian priests, their job was not to preach or to influence the minds of ordinary people - they simply existed to serve the gods in different ways. In effect, the priests gave offerings to the gods on behalf of Pharaoh, who could not cope alone with the sheer number of offerings required.The basic requirement for a novice priest was circumcision. The entire body must then be shaved and kept permanently free of all hair, including having the eyebrows and lashes removed regularly. Priests were forbidden certain foods, including beef, pork, mutton, pigeon, fish, beans, garlic and all green stuff. The point of all of this was for a priest to be completely "clean" in a religious sense - the general term for a low-ranking priest was wb, meaning purified.Clothing had to be made from clean, fine linen and cut according to ancient patterns; on their feet they always wore white sandals. Higher ranks of priest wore special items such as a ribbon across the chest, a leopard-skin, a special necklace or a long fake plait attached to the bald head. Lector-priests wore two large feathers attached to their heads.Some priestesses served as temple musicians, singers and dancers.
The Bald Cypress.The bald cypress is a green pine tree, usually puffy..
No he is not going bald. His hair is like every other person's.
no...
No
No, they have various amounts of hair, and different hairstyles, according to their likes.
rainbow spaghetti
That is simply false. Many Egyptians went bald; further some even shaved their heads as a symbol of piety.
Lol Egyptian women and men don't shave there head for fun. Maybe it's cause they are bald? and figure to shave off the rest of it?
I researched that...and it is thought that even though it was common and not unusual to wear wigs and be bald in Ancient Egypt, she was not bald. She had her own hair. She was a queen, so she could afford special treatment to make sure she did not get lice and stuff.
probably because of bugs mites ticks fleas all that jazz
There were many different types of priest and priestess in ancient Egypt, with a strict system of ranks and responsibilities.Unlike Christian priests, their job was not to preach or to influence the minds of ordinary people - they simply existed to serve the gods in different ways. In effect, the priests gave offerings to the gods on behalf of Pharaoh, who could not cope alone with the sheer number of offerings required.The basic requirement for a novice priest was circumcision. The entire body must then be shaved and kept permanently free of all hair, including having the eyebrows and lashes removed regularly. Priests were forbidden certain foods, including beef, pork, mutton, pigeon, fish, beans, garlic and all green stuff. The point of all of this was for a priest to be completely "clean" in a religious sense - the general term for a low-ranking priest was wb, meaning purified.Clothing had to be made from clean, fine linen and cut according to ancient patterns; on their feet they always wore white sandals. Higher ranks of priest wore special items such as a ribbon across the chest, a leopard-skin, a special necklace or a long fake plait attached to the bald head. Lector-priests wore two large feathers attached to their heads.Some priestesses served as temple musicians, singers and dancers.
That is the correct spelling of "bald head" (adjective bald or bald-headed).
To be bald in woozworld you first need to buy a bald head then you wear it then your bald :)
No Bald Eagle do not eat another Bald Eagle
ummm....they are not bald. The name came from the obsolete English word (bald), meaning white.
the bald eagle is never bald it's just called the bald eagle because at the time it was discovered bald ment white not hairless and no they are not bald when they are born