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("{| border="1" |- |According to Philo, the Phoenicians associated the notion of death with the god Muth, a primordial deity that presided over the muddy, putri..." içeriğiyle yeni sayfa oluşturdu)
 
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|According to Philo, the Phoenicians associated the notion of death with the god Muth, a primordial deity that presided over the muddy, putrid netherworld to which spirits were believed to descend. Philo’s account appears to reflect a wider religious tradition which held that after death the soul of the deceased transitioned to an unknown, bleak and desolate place where it joined the spirits of its ancestors.<ref>{{:RefWoolmer001}} s. 131.</ref>  
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|According to Philo, the [[Phoenicians]] associated the notion of [[death]] with the [[god]] [[Muth]], a [[primordial]] [[deity]] that presided over the muddy, putrid netherworld to which [[spirit]]s were believed to descend. Philo’s account appears to reflect a wider [[religious]] [[tradition]] which held that [[after death]] the [[soul]] of the deceased transitioned to an unknown, bleak and desolate place where it joined the [[spirit]]s of its [[ancestor]]s.<ref>{{:RefWoolmer001}} s. 131.</ref>  
 
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10.37, 19 Ekim 2021 itibarı ile sayfanın şu anki hâli

According to Philo, the Phoenicians associated the notion of death with the god Muth, a primordial deity that presided over the muddy, putrid netherworld to which spirits were believed to descend. Philo’s account appears to reflect a wider religious tradition which held that after death the soul of the deceased transitioned to an unknown, bleak and desolate place where it joined the spirits of its ancestors.[1]
  1. Woolmer, Mark (2002). A Short History of the Phoenicians. London, New York: I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. s. 131.