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The Mechanics of Ancient Egyptian Magical Practice (Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization) (The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago) PDF

340 Pages·1997·21.59 MB·English
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oi.uchicago.edu STUDIES IN ANCIENT ORIENTAL CIVILIZATION * No. 54 THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO THOMAS A. HOLLAND, Editor Richard M. Schoen, Assistant Editor oi.uchicago.edu oi.uchicago.edu Internet publication of this work was made possible with the generous support of Misty and Lewis Gruber The Mechanics of Ancient Egyptian Magical Practice by Robert Kriech Ritner Is it not a silly sort of argument to reckon by the same works that one man is a god whilst his rivals are mere "sorcerers"? Celsus. On the True Doctrine R. J. Hoffmiann 1987, p. 66 THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO STUDIES IN ANCIENT ORIENTAL CIVILIZATION * No. 54 CHICAGO * ILLINOIS oi.uchicago.edu Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 92-61830 ISBN: 0-918986-75-3 ISSN: 0081-7554 The OrientalI nstitute, Chicago © 1993 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved. Published 1993. Printed in the United States of America. SECOND PRINTING 1995 (with minor corrections on pages 67, 69, 100, 140, 141, 152, 153, 204, 206, 231, 245, 275,293, 303, and 320) THIRD PRINTING 1997 (with minor corrections on pages 44, 195, 211, and 320) FOURTH PRINTING 2008 (with minor corrections on pages 59, 114, 1 15, 1 16, 193, 194, 198, 253, 282, 303, 304, 316, 317. and 320) Winner of the 1994 Heyman Prize for Outstanding Scholarly Publication in the Humanities, Yale University REVIEWS Robert Steven Bianchi. Journalo f the American Oriental Society 114 (1994): 513-14. Bob Brier. KMT: A Modern Journal of Ancient Egypt 4:4 (1993-94): 86-87. Heinz Felber. Enchoria 21 (1994): 119. Ogden Goelet. The Egyptian Book of the Dead ( 1994): 171. Willem Hovestreydt. Annual Egyptological Bibliography 1993 (1995): 214-16. LAszl6 Kikosy. Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 31 (1994): 223-25. Jean Vercoutter. Revue d'lgyptologie 46 (1995): 247-48. COVER ILLUSTRATION AND FRONTISPIECE Seth Bound and Stabbed before Osiris at Dendera (see fig. 14g, p. 167). oi.uchicago.edu TO MY PARENTS oi.uchicago.edu oi.uchicago.edu TABLE OF CONTENTS ix FOREWORD ................................................................................................ LIST OF FIGURES ........................................................................................... xi LIST OF TABLES .......................................................................................... xiii LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS ................................................................................ xv INTRODUCTION.............................................................................................. I 14 1. TOWARD A DEFINITION OF MAGIC.................................................................. 3 HEKA. .. .. .. .. .. .................... ........ .... .... ... .... ... ..................... ..... ....... ....... .. .... ..... ...... 2. THE VOCABULARY OF MAGIC......................................................................... 29 iwv....... .............................. ....... ..................................... ... ................. 30 RITE MAGIC AS SPEECH, PROPERTY, AND ............................................................ 35 ENCIRCLING ............................................................................................. 57 A DEFINITION OF MAGIC................................................................................. 67 3. SPITTING, LICKING, AND SWALLOWING ........................................................... 73 SPITTING AND SPITVLE................................................................................... 74 75 Creation by Spittle .................................................................................. Spittle as Remedy.................................................................................. 78 Spittle as Corruption, Curse, and Weapon ......................................................... 82 Blowing ............................................................................................. 88 Continuity and Christianization..................................................................... 89 LICKING ................................................................................................. 92 SWALLOWING ........................................................................................... 102 4. IMAGES AND INTERMEDIARIES ..................................................................... Ill THE BOUND PRISONER MOTIF........................................................................... 113 Trampling Underfoot ............................................................................... 119 THE EXECRATION TEXTS ............................................................................... 136 Binding ............................................................................................. 142 vii oi.uchicago.edu MAGICAL viii TH-E MECHANICS OF ANCIENT EGYPTIAN PRACTICE BREAKING THE RED POTS................................................................................ 144 Red ................................................................................................ 147 Breaking ....................................................................................... 148 THE M IRGISSA DEPOSIT ................................................................................ 153 Sand .......................................................................................... 155 Incineration ......................................................................................... 157 Figurines ...................................................................................... 159 Human Sacrifice ................................................................................ 162 Knives ........................................................................................ 163 Decapitation and Reversal ...................................................................... 168 Burial ......................................................................................... 172 DEAD.................................................................................. LETTERS TO THlE 180 PRIVATE VERSUS STATE MAGIC.................................................................. .. 183 5. PRIESTS AND PRACTITIONERS ...................................................................... 191 THE;E HARIM CONSPIRACY ............................................................................... 192 Papyrus Rollin....................................................................................... 193 Papyrus Lee, Column I ................................... ,.................................... 195 Papyrus Lee, Column 2 ........................................................................... 198 TI)I -/unWl.............................................................................................2.1 4 THE IDENTITY OF TIlE MAGICIAN ...................................................................... 220 6. FROM IiH'T O 2IK: QUEASNTDIO NS OF DEFINITION AND DECLINE .................................. 235 RELIGION, MAGIC, HEKA ...................................................................... 236 REFERENCES CITED ................................................................................. 251 INDICES ................................................................................................... 307 GENERAL INDEX.......................................................................................... 307 311 Egyptian Words................................................................................ Coptic Greek WWordosr.d..s.. ................................................................................. 331314 .............. .. ...... .. ...... ............ .......... . ......................... ... TEXTS OBJECTS 315 INDEX OF AND CITEt) ................................................................. oi.uchicago.edu FOREWORD The present publication is a revised and expanded edition of my 1987 doctoral dissertation at The University of Chicago. Chapter 3 is a wholly new addition, using material originally gathered for the earlier work. Other modifications in the body of the text are relatively minor; the passage of five years has entailed no changes in the original analyses or opinions but has necessitated an expansion of the footnotes to incorporate subsequent bibliography. The manuscript was closed as of May 1992, and only sources available to me by that date have been included. The reader may be struck by an apparent inconsistency in the use of hieroglyphic fonts throughout this volume. The use of "Normalschrift" fonts has been confined only to generic references to individual words and signs. In contrast, whenever a specific textual passage or edition is excerpted (whether in hieroglyphic, hieratic, or Demotic script), an attempt has been made to reproduce the original text or edition by computer scanner. It is hoped that any loss in aesthetics will be counterbalanced by an increase in accuracy. In the preparation of this study, I have benefited from the sagacity, experience, and endurance of many, and it is a pleasure to acknowledge their contributions. The original dissertation committee comprised Drs. Klaus Baer, Robert D. Biggs, Janet H. Johnson, and Edward F. Wente, chairman and early source of inspiration. As teachers and colleagues, they have contributed to the fruition of this project in countless ways. In particular, Janet Johnson has continued to provide unflagging support, and our association on the Chicago Demotic Dictionary Project has been of primary importance for my scholastic development. Her invaluable computer skills have also enabled the use of textual scans in this volume. The untimely death of Klaus Baer has deprived Egyptology of a singularly rigorous scholar and irreplaceable teacher. His insistence on precision in methodology and detail has shaped the themes of my own work, from our first lessons in the Egyptian language. His enthusiasm for the present study remains a source of pride. Dr. George R. Hughes, who came out of retirement to guide my initial study of Demotic, has been a constant source of encouragement-especially helpful on days when the thought of researching yet another footnote was unendurable. Additional thanks are due to colleagues and students who offered support, advice, or information: William Brashear, Hans D. Betz, Susan Clark, Walter Farber, Richard Jasnow, Charles Jones, Joe Manning, John Nolan, Martha Roth, Terry Wilfong, and the late David Wilmot. Proffered suggestions and references are acknowledged individually within the relevant footnotes; responsibility for all other phraseology, opinions, and citations remains exclusively that of the author. Family and friends have been unstinting in their support. Chief among them are my parents, Robert and Margaret Ritner, and my brother and sister-in-law, Richard and Jody Ritner, and their family. My parents, to ix oi.uchicago.edu THE MECHANICS OF ANCIENT EGYPTIAN MAGICAL PRACTICE whom this work is dedicated, have been instrumental in its completion, for without their exhortations to "finish the dissertation" I would still be inserting additional references to my discussion of phr. For enduring the brunt of my daily bouts with academia, an additional dedication is made to Dr. Neil J. Krakauer and Finghin. Neil in particular acted as a sounding board for each thought as I conceived it, each sentence as I penned it. His relief at the completion of this task can be no less than my own. To John Larson, Oriental Institute Archivist, I am especially indebted for the photographic material which accompanies this work. His efforts have been thorough, tireless, and far above the requirements of duty and friendship. Further thanks are owed to my dissertation editor, Joan Hives, who patiently labored with this manuscript in various incarnations through the endless petty tomfoolery of bureaucracy and computer. Her Herculean efforts have rendered the subsequent publication a simple matter. For overcoming the ultimate technicalities of publication, I wish to thank the Oriental Institute's Publications Office directed by Tom Holland, and especially my careful editor, Richard Schoen. A final, but heartfelt gratitude, is owed to my graduate students at Yale, Jennifer Houser, Mark Stone, and Pascale Teysseire, who assisted me in the laborious but crucial task of proofreading the completed manuscript. Dw?- i n (1I Itr.

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To date, no comprehensive treatment of Egyptian magic has focused on the practice of the magician. Both general studies and textual publications have emphasized instead the religious elements in the contents of recited spells, while the accompanying instructions, with their vignettes and lists of ma
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