Finding the end of something is hard.
P/C David McEachan, from Pexels.com |
P/C Bera Yannick, from Pexels.com showing typical offerings--bread, beer, animal leg |
Pyramids and all of the funeral gear created by the ancient Egyptians was clearly intended to last forever. (They said as much in their tomb writings.)
Part of their religion included leaving offerings of food, drink, clothing, and ointments to their dearly departed. This would ideally happen often, maybe even daily, but certainly on special festival days.
But... the practice of delivering offerings to these places did not last forever. But how long did they last? That's this week's Challenge:
1. After the Pharaoh's death, how many years did people keep bringing offerings to the pyramids? Was it just a few years and then they gave up? How long did the offerings keep coming?
Finding the ending of something that was supposed to last forever can be a bit tricky. I wasn't expecting to find a memo (or a papyrus or ostracon) with a memo saying "Wajit just dropped off the last offering at the tomb of Wepwawet on this date, XXXX BCE."
So how can you approach a question like this?
I tried the obvious LLMs question:
[How long did ancient Egyptian funerary cults last? That is, after the death of a pharaoh, a cult would be set up to provide offerings to the dead king. How many years after the pharaoh’s death would the cult keep bringing food to the funeral site?]
The answer I got from ChatGPT was:
Ancient Egyptian funerary cults established to honor deceased pharaohs often lasted for centuries, though their duration varied significantly based on the era and the prominence of the pharaoh. In the Old and Middle Kingdoms, particularly, these cults could persist for several generations or even longer. The state-supported cults of powerful pharaohs, such as those of the great pyramid builders (e.g., Khufu, Khafre, Menkaure), were maintained for a few hundred years with dedicated priests offering food and performing rituals at mortuary temples.
However, over time, the continuity of these cults would depend on the resources allocated by subsequent rulers and the changing religious and political climate. By the end of the New Kingdom, many of the older mortuary cults diminished or ceased entirely as political instability and economic challenges led to a reduction in resources and attention given to maintaining such practices.
Thus, while the initial dedication and rituals following a pharaoh's death were intense and sustained, the active period could range from a few generations to potentially several centuries before gradually being reduced to nominal or symbolic remembrance.
A set of books that are "near" to "Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Egypt" at Archive.org. Very much like browsing the shelf in the physical library, but one with a very deep collection. |
So now, with these four resources, I started searching and reading each section that mentioned "cult" or "offering" or "generation." ("cult" because I wanted to read everything about the funerary and mortuary cults; "offering" because I wanted to read how "offerings" were taken to the tombs and for how long; "generation" because I was hoping to find something like "... and people kept bringing offerings for several generations..."
Suggested offerings for the care and maintenance of the dead, including head of cow, goose, and leg of gazelle. |
Page 22: "Since the [deceased] name was so closely linked with the prosperity of the bearer, survival of death was linked to remembrance of the name. It was necessary for it to be pronounced in the context of the offering ritual (see pp. 94 and 192-3), in order to provide nourishment for the dead. Failing that, funerary texts appealed to anyone who might visit the tomb in future years to pronounce the appropriate formula so as to supply offerings for the dead person; thus, as long as the name was remembered, the dead would continue to live."
“For an Egyptian, his hometown was the place not only of his own tomb but also of the tombs for which he, as descendant, was responsible. The meaning of this concept of burial in one’s place of origin was that in this way, the deceased did not fall out of the “connective,” life-giving structure of affiliation but rather remained included in his community. This inclusion took many forms. The most important, but also the briefest and least certain form was the organized mortuary cult; it seldom lasted more than one or two generations..."
Page 41:
Relatives bore the chief responsibility for maintaining the cult of the dead, a duty which fell above all to the eldest son. Inheritance of family property was linked to this act, but in any case providing for dead parents was regarded as an important filial duty (see p. 171). The dead, indeed, exercised considerable influence over the economy of Egypt, since substantial resources, manpower and material wealth were expended in equipping them for eternity.
Page 44:
The Egyptians were fully aware that even the most careful preparations for death could not avert the eventual decay or destruction of the tomb and the cessation of the mortuary cult. The positive, hopeful tone of the mortuary texts is balanced by a genre of literary compositions, mainly dating to the Middle Kingdom, which express skepticism about the worth of making elaborate preparation for the afterlife. This theme was taken up in the Harper's songs, the most famous of which is stated to have been inscribed in the tomb of one of the kings named Intef at Thebes. The general tone of these texts is that tombs fall into ruins, mortuary cults do not endure, and that no one returns from the realm of the dead and strengthen the hopes of the living. Therefore, one should live only for the present, enjoying the pleasures of life to the full….
Page 95:
Throughout most of the pharaonic period the sustenance of the dead was taken care of by magical means. Funerary texts indicate that it was not the physical body but the ka which required feeding (see Chapter 1) (see fig. 56). The ka was dependent on the world of the living to make this possible. This need was met chiefly through the establishment of a mortuary cult, served by relatives of the deceased or by priests, whose duty it was to present offerings to the dead in the context of a formal ritual. This took place in the tomb chapel, to which the ka ascended from the burial chamber below (see Chapter 5), passing through the false-door and taking up temporary residence within the statue of the deceased in order to receive its sustenance. In terms of its procedures, the offering ritual was closely related to the magical purification and provisioning of the images of the gods which took place every day in the great cult temples. The ka of the deceased, like the divinity embodied within the cult-statue in the temple, consumed only the essence of the foodstuffs placed on the offering table. The offerings then ‘reverted’, or, in other words, were eaten by the priests or by those who had performed the ritual. The underlying notion that physical digestion did not take place removed the obligation to ‘neutralise’ (through offering them to the dead) much-needed provisions which might otherwise be consumed by the living...
Mortuary cults were established with great care to ensure that the funerary rituals would continue to be performed from one generation to the next (see Chapter 5). However, despite the most elaborate precautions, it was the fate of all such cults ultimately to fall into abeyance. Though the spirits of long-dead kings might continue to be maintained through temple cults, with the support or consent of the reigning pharaoh, for non-royal individuals, cults of remote ancestors (even grandparents) were probably rarely maintained for more than a generation or two. The Egyptians were well aware of the futility of trusting to tomb and cult for eternal survival, as literary compositions often emphasized. (see p. 45).
2. A related question: How were the people who were the bringers-of-offerings organized? Was there a central church organization or division of the government that handled such long-lasting affairs? What were these organizations called?
I didn't have to do this search explicitly since the answers were scattered throughout the texts I read. For smaller funeral sites, the offerings were done by the familes for a generation or two. For larger (i.e., more important people), the work was done by a fund that supported the maintenance... until it didn't. For VERY important people, the offerings continued for many, many years, supposed by the state itself.
Unless, of course, the next regime took an active dislike to you and tried hard to erase all trace of your existence, a fate literally worse than death for the Egyptians. Around 1350 BC, Pharaoh Amenhotep IV decided that all the gods of Ancient Egypt were a lie, except for one: the sun God Aten. He build a new capital for him in the desert 200 miles south of Cairo, and changed his name to Pharaoh Akhenaten. The campaign of damnatio memoriae against Akhenaten and his successors was begun by a later pharaoh, Horemheb, who decided to erase from history all pharaohs associated with the unpopular Amarna Period, including, and especially Akhenaten. This happened more often than you'd believe. The pharaoh would be erased, and all of the mortuary cults that were dedicated to feeding him in the afterlife were, well, killed off.
Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and children from the time before Horemheb. |
Akhenaten literally erased from history. |
SearchResearch Lessons
1. Books are still incredibly valuable as resources! Don't underestimate the value of your local library. You might get inspiration from your AI model, but checking with the books to get the whole story (and the context!) is incredibly handy.
2. Online books are better in some ways. While the index in the back of a book is a labor of love, full-text indexing can show you things that you literally cannot find via the index. Learn how to use the various online book resources (e.g., Internet Archive's online texts; Google Books; Hathi Trust; various e-book systems, etc) that provide word-level searching, and then skim through the book text searching for the sections that talk about your topic of interest.
3. Don't underestimate the value of finding by accident. The shelf-like view of Archive.org's "closed related" texts is pretty great. Also keep track of things you run across in the course of your research. (I'll say it again: learning to keep notes as you work is incredibly valuable.)
Keep searching!
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