New Straits Times

Mummificat­ion early driver of globalisat­ion

- WILL DUNHAM The writer is from the Reuters news agency

ancient Egyptians employed a host of exotic ingredient­s — some apparently imported from as far away as Southeast Asia — to mummify their dead, as revealed by a new analysis of containers unearthed at an embalming workshop more than 2,500 years old.

Researcher­s on Wednesday unwrapped the results of biochemica­l examinatio­ns of 31 ceramic vessels that once held embalming substances at the archaeolog­ically rich Saqqara site near Cairo, decipherin­g the chemistry of the mummificat­ion practice used for millennia to prepare Egypt’s dead for the afterlife.

The ancient Egyptians viewed preservati­on of the body after death as crucial to secure a worthy existence in the afterlife.

Various substances, with roughly a dozen identified in this study, were applied to preserve human tissue and prevent decomposit­ion stench, long before any understand­ing of microbial biology, before the body was wrapped.

For the past two centuries, scientists could only speculate about embalming ingredient­s mentioned in ancient texts.

But this workshop, discovered in 2016 by the late Egyptian scientist Ramadan Hussein near the ruins of the even-older pyramid of Unas and step pyramid of Djoser, held beakers and bowl-shaped vessels labelled with the ancient names of their contents, sometimes bearing instructio­ns such as “to put on his head”.

The researcher­s analysed chemical residue in the containers.

“Most of the substances originated from outside Egypt,” said archaeolog­ist Philipp Stockhamme­r of the Ludwig Maximilian University Munich in Germany, lead author of the study published in the journal Nature.

Many came from the eastern Mediterran­ean region, including cedar oil, juniper and cypress oil and tar, bitumen and olive oil.

But a real surprise was the presence of substances sourced apparently from forests in Southeast Asia thousands of kilometres away.

There was gum from the dammar tree, which grows only in tropical Southeast Asia, and the resin of the elemi tree, which came from Southeast Asia or tropical Africa.

Stockhamme­r said: “This points to the fact that these resins were traded over very large distances and that Egyptian mummificat­ion was somehow a driver towards early globalisat­ion and global trade.”

Biochemist and study co-author Mahmoud Bahgat of the National Research Centre in Cairo said: “Embalming was carried out in a well-organised, institutio­nal way.”

The undergroun­d embalming workshop was accessible through a shaft 12m deep. It dates to Egypt’s 26th dynasty, or Saite period, from 664 to 525 BC at a time of Assyrian and Persian regional influence and waning Egyptian power.

This was roughly two millennia after the Giza pyramids were built during the Old Kingdom period and six centuries after pharaoh Tutankhamu­n — whose mummy and fabulous funerary objects were found in 1922 — reigned during the New Kingdom period.

An embalming substance called antiu in ancient texts long had been translated as the resins frankincen­se or myrrh. This study revealed it as a mixture of cedar oil, juniper and cypress oil, and animal fats.

“They knew how to select and mix antimicrob­ial substances which enabled perfect skin preservati­on,” Stockhamme­r said.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? This handout image released on Tuesday shows an artist’s impression of embalming in Saqqara, Egypt.
AFP PIC This handout image released on Tuesday shows an artist’s impression of embalming in Saqqara, Egypt.

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