Czére Andrea szerk.: A Szépművészeti Múzeum közleményei 104. (Budapest, 2006)
ÉVA LIPTAY: Between Heaven and Earth II: The Iconography of a Funerary Papyrus from the Twenty-First Dynasty (Part I.)
the most distinct variants of legged serpents, showing up in different situations. See also Heerma van Voss 1982, 58, n. 16, and Piankoff and Rambova 1957, No. 24. 100 On the papyrus of Hakenmut (Piankoff and Rambova 1957, No. 24) it is combined with the scene of separating Heaven and Earth (Hornung, Amduat II, 167). 11)1 A sun-disc is placed in the same way into the double serpent of papyrus Berlin 3152 (Niwiiiski 1989, 251 and pi. 48a - Berlin 25), and inside the sun-disc there is a scarab. 102 Hornung, E., Amduat II, 164 (No. 696 = M r nnwj 'The two winding ones'); Hornung 1972, 162-63; Darnell 2004, 386; M r nnwj in the Book of Gates: Zeidler 1999, 166-169; Hornung 1972, 243-45. 103 The scene of the 10-11th hour is Nun, the primaeval water, from where the sun-god is reborn at dawn, together with the saved souls: Hornung 1998, 159-81. 1(14 Hornung, Amduat I, 170—71; Amduat II, 164-65. 105 Piccione 1990, 43-52; and: Troy 1986, 44. 1116 Piccione 1990, 50. The text of the 12 th hour of the Amduat remarks in connection with the above mentioned huge serpent that Re enters through its tail and (in the form jwf-R r ) and comes out through its mouth in the form of Chepri. See also: Hornung, Amduat I, 197; Darnell 2004, 122; and about the same, above in the second part. 107 Piccione 1990, 50-51. 108 See also: CT VI 390 a-e; Troy 1986, 44.