Tag: Baboon

Baboon Mummy Tests Reveal Ethiopia and Eritrea as Ancient Egyptians’ ‘Land of Punt’

Mummified baboon at the British museumHeritage Key reported recently that mummified baboons in the British Museum could reveal the location of the land of Punt – a place to which pharaohsorganized trading expeditions. To theEgyptians, Punt was a placeof fragrances, giraffes, electrum and other exotic goods. It was sometimes referred to as Ta-netjer ‘Gods land’ a huge compliment given that the Ancient Egyptians tended to view outside cultures with disdain.

Although Egyptians record voyaging to it until the end of the New Kingdom, 3,000 years ago, scholars do not know where Punt was. Ancient texts offer only vagueallusions to its location and no ‘Puntite’ civilization has yet been discovered. Somalia, Ethiopia, Yemen and even Mozambique have all been offered as possible locations.

Thanks to some cutting edge science,the search for Punt appears to be coming to an end. New research, to be presented at an Egyptology conferencetoday, provides proof that itwas located in Eritrea/East Ethiopia.

We think Punt is a sort of circumscribed region that includes eastern Ethiopia and all of Eritrea.

How thisdiscovery was madeis a bit technical so bear with me.

Live baboonswere among the goods that we know the Egyptians got from Punt. Sometimes the Egyptians mummified them and the British Museum has three well preserved samples dating from New Kingdom times. One was found in Thebes and the other was found in the Valley of the Kings.

The team had permission to use baboon hairs from two of the mummies, and have just finished analyzing hairs from these baboonsby using oxygen isotope analysis. Oxygen isotopes act as a ‘signal’ that can let scientists know where they came from.

It works this way because, depending on the environment an animal lived in, the ratio of different isotopes of oxygen will be different. Oxygen tends to vary as a function of rainfall and the water composition of plants and seed, said Professor Nathaniel Dominy of UC Santa Cruz, who is on the team.

The researchers compared the oxygen isotope values in the ancient baboons to those found in their modern day brethren.

All of our specimans in Eritrea and a certain number of our specimens from Ethiopia that are basically due west from Eritrea those are good matches, said Professor Dominy.

We think Punt is a sort of circumscribed region that includes eastern Ethiopia and all of Eritrea.

Somalia, Yemen and Mozambique do not match.

The team cannot narrow it down further at this point, but they do have a working hypothesis of where in Eritrea the Ancient Egyptiansdocked their ships.

If you have a map in front of you and you can zoom in on Eritrea theres a major habour there, said Dominy (its located near modern day Massawa). We have a specimen from that same harbour and that specimen is a very good match to the mummy.

The other team members are animal mummy specialist Professor Salima Ikram of the American University Cairo (watch our video in which Salima Ikram explains how animal mummies are made below), and UC Santa Cruz graduate student Gillian Leigh Moritz.

Two Points of Caution

Readers should note two points of caution with these initial results.

One is that the researchers were only able to identify the origin of the baboon from the Valley of the Kings.

The other baboon, from Thebes, appears to have spent some time living in Egypt as an exotic pet. While it was living in Egypt, and consuming the local diet, its oxygen isotope value changed. That change means that researchers could not tell where it was from.

One other point is that, in the case of Yemen, the researchers could not get a recent baboon sample to use for comparison.

We havent measured any animals from Yemen so thats a problem, said Professor Dominy. However we can tell, based on the isotopic maps of the region, that a baboon from Yemen would look an awful lot like a baboon from Somalia isotopically. As Somalia is definitely not the place of originfor the baboon, Yemen also appears to be out.

The idea of Yemen as Punt has come under attack from Egyptologists for another reason. A scene depicting Punt, drawn on a temple built by Queen Hatshepsut, shows a giraffe -an animal that is native to Africa, not Yemen.

Long Distance Trade?

A question which a number of readers have asked, in response to a story last week, is could the people of Punt have acquired the baboons from long distance trade, before giving them to the Egyptians?

The answer is that it seems very unlikely.

Baboons can be found all throughout Africa as well as Yemen. There would be no need to transport one over long distances.

Furthermore it would be extremely difficult to transport a baboon a long distance and then giveitto the Egyptians for a second lengthy voyage.

Baboons are formidable animals (they) can really do some damage to you, said Professor Dominy. Its not an animal that I would want to travel with for long distances and maintain in captivity for any length of time, he said.

It would be impractical to go very far to get them or to get them from a middleman… it seems unlikely but not impossible.

The Next Step

These initial results will be presented today, in Oakland California, at the American Research Center in Egypts 61st annual meeting. Egyptologists from all over the world will be gathered there and about 100 research papers will be presented.

Theres a lot more to be done I think, said Professor Dominy.

The team hopes to use a strontium isotope test to confirm Eritrea/Eastern Ethiopia as the baboons origin and hopefully narrowdown its location a bitfurther. To do this they will need to get the British Museums permission to take a pea-sized sample of bone from the baboon mummy and use it for testing. They will also need to get some special export papers in order.

Strontium isotopes work differently then oxygen isotopes. Strontium comes from the bedrock, you breath in dust from the soils around where you live and you incorporate the strontium isotope of those soils, said Dominy.

There are alsomummified baboons from thePetrie Museum that the teamhopes to analyze. Those baboons date to the Ptolemaic Period which goes from the time that Alexander the Great conquered Egypt in 332 BC, to the death of Cleopatra in 30 BC. Textual sources indicate that voyaging to Punt had ended by this time so those baboons could be coming from somewhere else.

MOVIE: How Animal Mummies were made, explained by Dr. Salima Ikram

Click here to view the transcript of this video.

Discovering Tut – Tutankhamun’s Tomb, The ‘House of Gold’

Fiona, the 8th Countess of Carnarvon, discusses the underlying beliefs contained in the tomb paintings of the Tomb of King Tut (KV62) Click the image to skip to the video.“In most Egyptian tombs you’ve either got the wall paintings or the coffin.” Fiona, 8th Countess of Carnarvon says, stressing the uniqueness of Tutankhamun’s tomb, the greatest discovery in history. Its treasures may be well documented, less so the incredible wall paintings that greeted Howard Carter and Lord Carnarvon when they burst through in 1922 (Watch a special video on the discovery here).

Lady Carnarvon, herself a two-time author on the Tutankhamun phenomenon withCarnarvon& Carter(click here to buy) and Egypt at Highclere: The Discovery of Tutankhamun(click here to buy), seems totally engrossed in the walls she and husband George Herbert, 8th Earl of Carnarvon have replicated in the bowels of Highclere Castle. It’s clear Fiona has studied them for quite some time: and she effortlessly reels off the meanings behind their myriad symbols.

“(Egyptians’) lives here on Earth was transient, their houses were built of mud not brick,” Lady Carnarvon says. “Their tombs were made of stone, that’s why we still have records.” Gold was used as the main colour because of its immutability, representing eternity.

“We write in a linear fashion. The Egyptians wrote to fill up a space.”

At one point Anubis, “the Jackal guarding (Tut’s) treasury in the innermost room,” greets Tutankhamun on his way to the afterlife. “Anubis is behind (Tut) and I think it’s lovely,” says Lady Carnarvon. “It’s a protecting gesture on Tutankhamun’s shoulder saying, ‘Hey, you’re gonna come up with me to the next world.'” It seems sad that nearly all the treasures Anubis protected so well for over three thousand years have now disappeared 300 miles away to Cairo.

Black borders lining each wall represent the heavens to which Tut would hopefully ascend. His cartouche, a French term for the king’s name, labels him ‘Nebkheperura’: ‘Neb’ means Lord; ‘Kheperu’ signifies rebirth via the scarab, and Ra is the sun god which almost every Egyptian king had in his name.

The stunning tomb walls of KV62 feature 12 baboons - one to represent each hour. Image Copyright - Sandro Vannini.The beautiful walls’ many scenes show Tutankhamun at various stages of his quest towards resurrection. At one point he meets Nut, the goddess of the night – from whom we get our modern word for night. On the western wall are the twelve baboons, representing Thoth, god of wisdom. King Tut had to pass all twelve in a day if he could move on to the afterlife.

It’s a fascinating tour of one of the world’s truly great ancient landmarks, and one you can carry on yourself at any time with Heritage Key’s King Tut Virtual. You can also read about the tomb walls of KV62 in more detail here on Heritage Key and seeing a slideshow of beautiful images taken inside the tomb by Sandro Vannini. Also make sure you’re up to date on the latest news from KV62, concerning “brown spots” found on the tomb walls. It may have been reduced to a largely empty room over the last century, but there’s no doubting its immense beauty – worlds away from the schematic world we live in today. “Computer programs are linear, zero-one-zero-one,” says Lady Carnarvon, “we write in a linear fashion. The Egyptians wrote to fill up a space.” What a space it is.

HD Video: Discovering King Tut – Tut’s Tomb, House of Gold

(Click here to read a transcript of this video)

Look out for three more special Highclere videos, coming soon!You can watch a whole host of great videos here at Heritage Key – from the perils of Venice to the lost tombs of Thebes. Catch us here or on YouTube. Keep up-to-date with everything by subscribing to our RSS feeds, or by following us on Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, Flickr and iTunes.

You can also buy Fiona Carnarvon’s books right here:
Buy Carnarvon % CarterHERE
Buy Egypt at Highclere: The Discovery of Tutankhamun HERE

Honey for my Honey: Ancient Aphrodisiacs

Quartzite figure of baboon

Although Viagra was launched onto the market in 1998 as the new wonder drug for virility, what the makers didnt realise is that its actually been around naturally and has been used since the time of the pyramids. In ancient Egypt, the blue lily was linked to fertility and sexuality and now, thanks to the recent chemical analysis by the Egyptian section of Manchester Museum, it appears there is a scientific reason for this link – the chemical make-up of this plant contains phosphodiesters, the active ingredients of Viagra.

The blue lily wasnt the only libido-booster used by the ancient Egyptians. Lettuce rated highly and was said to be the favourite food of the fertility god Min. Fennel dates back to Egyptian times as a stimulant as does ginger, together with pomegranates and radishes mixed with honey. Honey has long been an ancient love drug and with good reason it contains boron, which stimulates the sex hormones in both males and females.

The Egyptians were also fond of coriander or pearls dissolved in wine and apparently – one Im not so sure of – baboon faeces, which were used to enhance aphrodisiac ointments. Perhaps this is because not only was the baboon admired in Egypt for its intelligence but also for its sexual lustfulness.

Those ancients were a saucy lot and the ancient Egyptians were not alone in their quest for virility-enhancing substances. Indeed, the father of medicine, Hippocrates, and the Greek philosopher Artistotle recommended lentils to help out in the bedroom department.

Aristotle also apparently advised Alexander the Great to ban his soldiers from drinking mint tea during campaigns because he believed it to be an aphrodisiac. Hippocrates would disagree with Aristotle on this one though, as he believed the frequent consumption of mint-diluted sperm hindered erection and tired the body either way, probably best not to let soldiers drink mint tea when they are about to go into battle.

A few years later, the Greek historian Plutarch suggested the way to a strong libido was to eat fassolatha (a bean soup and the national dish of Greece). Other ancient Greek libido-boosters include onions, garlic and leeks although one wonders if the partner would agree with this…. however, they were often eaten with other libido-boosters, honey and sesame seeds.

Oysters are renowned for increasing libido, and in a satire written in the 2nd Century AD by the Roman writer Juvenal, he described the wanton ways of women after drinking wine and eating giant oysters. Another legendary aphrodisiac from ancient Rome which has withstood the test of time is the truffle, which is still among the most prized ingredients of the culinary world today.

Bible in Coptic and Arabic

Moving over to Asia, the Chinese culture has always regarded sexual activity as very sacred, but it still needs a bit of help from time to time. The appropriately named horny goat weed and ginseng were (and still are!) recommended and Deer Antler is another ancient Chinese remedy for sustaining stamina in the bedroom. Liquorice also has its roots in ancient Chinese medicine and it is one for the girls. Apparently chewing on its root is meant to augment ones lust. Another one highly prized by Chinese women as an aphrodisiac is nutmeg but be warned, if eaten in quantity, it can have a hallucinogenic effect.

Even the Bible proffers advice and makes mention of the root mandrake for its potent qualities.

Weird, wacky or unusual as they seem, as the recent analysis of the blue lily shows, under the scrutiny of modern science many of these ancient aphrodisiacs may have chemical stimulants which contribute to maintaining sexual hormone levels and/or sparking neurotransmitters that trigger feelings of love or sexual arousal. So next time youre on a hot date, dont forget your baboon faeces.