Aaru: The Field of Reeds
Historical Encyclopedia

THE NILE IN THE AFTERLIFE

A Paradise Modeled on the River Valley

"I have entered the Field of Offerings... I have come to the region of the Horizon-dwellers. I ferry across in the boat... I plough and I reap." – Book of the Dead, Spell 110.

The Ancient Egyptians loved their land so much that they could not imagine a heaven without it. Their vision of eternity, the Field of Reeds (Aaru), was not a vague cloud city but a perfected, mirror image of the Nile Valley. It was a land of eternal harvests, endless water, and familiar comforts, where the Nile flowed forever without drought or destruction.

Depiction of the Afterlife Journey on Water

A Mirror of Earth

In the afterlife, the geography mimicked the physical Nile. The deceased were expected to cultivate crops in lush fields irrigated by celestial canals.

The Celestial River

The Egyptians looked up at the night sky and saw the Milky Way as a "Celestial Nile" (Winding Waterway). This was the path the sun god Ra sailed during the day.

The underworld (Duat) also had a river—a dark, dangerous counterpart to the Nile—which Ra navigated at night, battling chaos to be reborn at dawn. The soul's journey was essentially a voyage by boat across these cosmic waters.

Crossing the Waters

Just as one needed a boat to cross from the East Bank to the West Bank in life, the soul needed a boat to reach the afterlife.

The Ferryman

To cross the "Lily Lake" or the "Winding Waterway" to reach paradise, the deceased had to persuade a grumpy, backward-facing ferryman named Mahaf ("He who looks behind him"). The soul had to prove its worthiness and knowledge of magic to gain passage on his boat.

Water in the Afterlife

Burial: Crossing the physical Nile to the West Bank (Necropolis).
Journey: Navigating the river of the Duat with Ra.
Crossing: Persuading the Divine Ferryman.
Arrival: Living eternally by the waters of the Field of Reeds.

Frequently Asked Questions

Pharaohs were often buried with real, full-sized wooden boats (like the Khufu Solar Ship) to use in the afterlife. Commoners used wooden models or paintings of boats on their tomb walls.
Farming was central because it meant food and survival, but the afterlife also included feasting, drinking, playing games (Senet), and reuniting with family. It was an idealized version of earthly life.
Mahaf is depicted facing backward to show he is poling the boat (which requires looking back) rather than rowing. It also symbolizes his difficult nature; he must be convinced to help.

See the Solar Boats

Visit the Grand Egyptian Museum to see the Khufu Ship.