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Archaeology & History

Archaeologists discover ancient Egyptian mummy wrapped in gold

February 7, 2023 · Comment icon 9 comments

The sarcophagus in which the mummy was found. Image Credit: Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities
The find, which dates back to 2,300 B.C., was made at the site of the ancient necropolis of Saqqara near Cairo.
In January 2023, a group of archaeologists excavating tombs in the ancient necropolis of Saqqara, near Cairo, discovered the mummified remains of a man named Hekashepes, who lived circa 2300BC. Found inside a limestone sarcophagus in a burial shaft, the body and its wrappings are unusually well preserved for the period.

In the 5th century BC, the Greek historian Herodotus of Halicarnassus described the elaborate way Egyptians preserved their dead. The brain was removed through the nostrils with a hook, while the inner organs were removed through a cut in the abdomen.

The cut was then stitched up and the body rinsed with wine and spices. The body was left to dry in a natron solution (a substance harvested from dry lake beds and used to absorb moisture) for up to 70 days. After this period, it was carefully wrapped in linen bandages and finally laid to rest inside a coffin.

By the time Herodotus wrote this, Egyptians had been practising mummification for more than two millennia, gradually perfecting the technique through experimentation.

The pre-dynastic mummies of the fourth millennium BC were so well preserved by the dry desert sands - without human intervention - that their tattoos are still visible. The earliest attempts to replicate this outcome by artificial means were less effective so Hekashepes represents an early example of successful preservation.

Why did ancient Egyptians mummify their dead?

Egyptians had long observed that bodies interred in graves without direct contact with the drying sands tended to decompose and sought to prevent this for religious reasons.

Without a physical body to which it could return, they believed the Ka (soul essence) could not partake in food offerings brought to the cemetery and was instead left to roam the world of the living as a harmful spirit.

Mummification techniques were developed in order to preserve the body for the Ka. The earliest methods, which emerged no later than the time of state unification circa 3100BC, involved wrapping the body with resin-soaked linen bandages. However, as the intestines were left in place, the body eventually decomposed.

The lack of preserved human remains from this early period means that archaeologists have limited data on demographics, population health, life expectancy and diet. For this reason, the discovery of Hekashepes' remains is highly significant.

Scientific examination of the body will provide important insight into the mummification techniques used. Scientific analysis of the skeleton and teeth might also shed light on where Hekashepes grew up, what kind of food he ate, his health, his age and the cause of his death.

How was Hekashepes preserved?

Hekashepes' arms and legs had been individually wrapped to give the body a life-like appearance, and the head was painted with eyes, a mouth and dark hair. More striking, however, are the gold leaves that had been carefully applied to give the illusion of golden skin.
According to Egyptian beliefs, gold was the colour of the gods, and gilding the bodies of the dead expressed the idea that they acquired divine qualities in the afterlife.

As such, Hekashepes' loved ones could take comfort in knowing that he would be reborn and rejuvenated in the afterlife, enjoying his favourite food and drink with the gods for all eternity.

What does the discovery teach us?

The archaeologists who uncovered Hekashepes' sarcophagus also discovered, in a nearby tomb, a group of well-preserved limestone statues depicting men, women and children. These images, which only the wealthy could afford, were made to accompany burials as "reserve bodies" for the Ka to inhabit.

The beautiful statues, on which paint is still visible, depict men with athletic bodies and reddish-brown skin. The women are curvy and pale. Both sexes are depicted with luscious dark hair.

The images reflect gender roles in which men took on active roles in the public sphere, while women stayed indoors and looked after the home. Some of the statues depict women engaged in domestic tasks like grinding grain and baking bread, demonstrating the importance placed on women's labour in the household. The statues of married couples depict the husbands and wives affectionately linking arms. Some are shown with their children standing or kneeling by their feet.

The images of married couples and families emphasise the importance of the family as the basic social unit in ancient Egyptian society. Kinship ties were maintained in death and the living had an obligation to provide food offerings to sustain their relatives in the afterlife.

The Egyptians believed that, in return for the offerings, the dead could be called on for assistance. They could also act as intermediaries between the living and Osiris, the divine ruler of the underworld.

Although it is easy to get the impression that the ancient Egyptians were obsessed with death, the care with which they treated their dead reveals a love for life and a sincere hope of continued existence after death.

The discovery of Hekashepes' body gives us hope that more well-preserved human remains from the period will come to light and increase our understanding of life in the age of the pyramids.

Maiken Mosleth King, Lecturer in Ancient History, University of Bristol

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.

Read the original article. The Conversation

Source: The Conversation | Comments (9)




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Recent comments on this story
Comment icon #1 Posted by Wistman 2 years ago
Here is the layout on the north Saqqara plateau, Gisr al Mudir shown in red:   It's not surprising these tombs were found there, only surprising it took so long to dig them up.  Perhaps it was done in a hurry so that Dr. Hawass can save face from his (mis)pronouncement last September that he had the DNA results from Nefertiti's purported mummy...a statement which turned out to be less than truthful.  /s  
Comment icon #2 Posted by Tom1200 2 years ago
Archaeologists say they have found a gold leaf-covered mummy sealed inside a sarcophagus that had not been opened for 4,300 years. A golden opportunity to discover amazing new insights, or another excuse to bash Zahi Hawass? https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-64415816 "Critics have accused Egypt's government of prioritising media-grabbing finds over hard academic research in order to attract more tourism."  Is that really fair?  At least they're not just making stuff up and blaming aliens or vanished civilizations.  
Comment icon #3 Posted by Grim Reaper 6 2 years ago
Archeologists may have uncovered the oldest and "most complete" mummy ever found in Egypt during a recent excavation at a site in Saqqara, about 20 miles from Cairo. Dr. Zahi Hawass, the country's former antiquities minister, and his team discovered the mummy, which was covered in gold leaf, inside a large rectangular limestone sarcophagus at the bottom of a 50-foot shaft, he said in a statement. The remains belonged to a man named Heka-shepes. "The sarcophagus was found sealed with mortar, just as the ancient Egyptians had left it 4,300 years ago," Dr. Hawass said on Facebook Thursday. "T... [More]
Comment icon #4 Posted by and-then 2 years ago
Wow.  Exciting that they are still finding such complete records of that time period.
Comment icon #5 Posted by Grim Reaper 6 2 years ago
Actually, it seems they have only begun to scratch the surface. 
Comment icon #6 Posted by DreadLordAvatar 2 years ago
Why anyone would give Hawass their time of day is beyond me.  
Comment icon #7 Posted by Thanos5150 2 years ago
Of long interest has been the dating of Gisr el-Mudir which some argue the 2nd Dynasty ( I disagree and think the evidence is far to slim), some say 3rd or later. Some, like Colin Reader, believe Gisr el-Mudir is the Men-Netjeret spoken of in the Palermo Stone (I disagree). Anhoo, interesting that Gisr el-Mudir  contains a late OK cemetery which may give clues as to when it was constructed.           
Comment icon #8 Posted by Wistman 2 years ago
The site is begging for a thorough examination, and let me say you're right the dative attribution is based on meager evidence.  I can't help but think the new clearance there will yield better understanding.  The walls are constructed so bewilderingly uneven and it's purpose is confounding, yet its scale and positioning on the plateau makes it undeniably important.  And, just to say, I understand your unwillingness to ascribe the place to Khasekhemwy; the extant construction doesn't compare well with his other works, etc.
Comment icon #9 Posted by Thanos5150 2 years ago
Another candidate for Men-Netjeret I had, one I think I favor more at this point, is the M1-M3 core of Djoser's stepped pyramid at Saqqara.  ....Mastabas are rectangular and the core of Djoser (M1) is a square [the only one known of its kind] and is debated whether it was ever intended to be a mastaba. Stadelmann suggest this was the nucleus of a planned pyramid, I disagree, but regardless there is no doubt it was built first....  A bit of a tangent, but it is worth quoting more: Quote In the early stages (M1 to M3) the structure had the form of a mastaba before alterations (P1 to P2)... [More]


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