Mummification in ancient Egypt was a very long and expensive process. From start to finish, it took about seventy days to embalm a body. Since the Egyptians believed that mummification was essential for passage to the afterlife, people were mummified and buried as well as they could possibly afford. High-ranking officials, priests and other nobles who had served the pharaoh and his queen had fairly elaborate burials. The pharaohs, who were believed to become gods when they died, had the most magnificent burials of all. In the case of a royal or noble burial, the embalmers set up workshops near the tomb of the mummy.
The art of Egyptian mummification consisted of many steps. First, the body was washed and ritually purified. The next step was to remove the deceased person's inner organs. A slit was cut into the left side of the body so that the embalmers could remove the intestines, the liver, the stomach and the lungs. Each of these organs was embalmed using natron, which served to dry out the organs and discourage bacteria from decaying the tissues.
The organs were then individually wrapped using long strips of linen and placed in canopic jars. The lids of these jars were fashioned after the four sons of Horus, who were each entrusted with protecting a particular organ.
linen bandages
Tear a a long, small piece of toilet paper. Then, once the barbie is SURLEY dead, wrap her body in it.
You go around the shoulder and wrap the body
Ancient Egyptians mummify important peoples bodies because they thought that the person will need their bodies for the afterlife. They thought without the body, that person's soul would have no where to go.
Step 1: Extract internal organs. All organs removed except heart because Egyptians thought it was the source of intelligence.Step 2: Store the organs. Organs would be embalmed and stored in a jarStep 3: Clean the body with wine and saltStep 4: Wrap the bodyHope this helped you
piece of cloth used to wrap a dead body
linen bandages
They wrapped them in linen cloth
A burial shroud.S something that you wrap a dead body in so that other people can't see them.
NO. Ancient Egyptians used mummification and this had not been the practice in Egypt for centuries before Muslims invaded Egypt in 639 C.E. Mummification uses salt to remove water from the body, the body is wrapped tightly in bandages and resin. Muslims wash the body of a deceased person, wrap it in loose cloth, and bury it in a shallow grave. It is a completely different process.
Tear a a long, small piece of toilet paper. Then, once the barbie is SURLEY dead, wrap her body in it.
You embalm it after the body is really dead. to make they need to take thing out of your body then clean it dry it the wrap it in cloth and put it in a box or a coffin
Wrap My Body Tight was created in 1991.
Its called a Shroud. Not the Turin Shroud that was proved to be a Fake
they took all the organs out and keeped them in organ containers and they put bags of salt in the bodey and wrap them up and put them in coffins and put them in the pyramid.
you shouldn't have a dead body, but you could wrap it in plastic and dump it in a river/ocean, bury it, find a remote area and leave it on the ground, or just shred it (chainsaw) ? your welcome! hope you don't have a real dead body and are just asking thoreytical questions...
the ancient egyptians wrapped cats