UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Elite Theban Women of the Eighth-Sixth Centuries BCE in Egypt: Identity, Status and Mortuary Practice Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/1gh4d9j2 Author Li, Jean Publication Date 2010 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Elite Theban Women of the Eighth-Sixth Centuries BCE in Egypt: Identity, Status and Mortuary Practice By Jean Li A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor in Philosophy in Near Eastern Studies in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in Charge: Professor Carol Redmount, Chair Professor Meg Conkey Professor Todd Hickey Professor Benjamin Porter Fall 2010 Abstract Elite Theban Women of the Eighth-Sixth Centuries BCE in Egypt: Identity, Status and Mortuary Practice by Jean Li Doctor of Philosophy in Near Eastern Studies, Egyptian Art and Archaeology University of California, Berkeley Professor Carol Redmount, Chair. The roles and status of women in ancient Egyptian society remain imperfectly defined particularly in the Third Intermediate and Late Periods. Egyptology has generally examined women from the perspective of fertility and sexuality, thus defining the social roles of women as wives and mothers who derived their status from their male associations. This dissertation discusses women’s roles by investigating the ways in which elite Theban women constructed and displayed their identities in their mortuary practices during the eighth-sixth centuries BCE (Dynasties 22/25-Dynasty 26). In Thebes, the archaeological remains of the eighth-sixth centuries demonstrate conspicuous identity displays by men, but where and how women fit into this period of “big personalities” has not been analyzed in detail. This dissertation argues that the eighth-sixth centuries BCE was not a time of decay, as it is traditionally characterized in Egyptology, but instead a dynamic era in which its cultural products, especially mortuary practices, exhibited a creative tension between tradition and innovation. Identity construction by the ancient Egyptians during a time of rapid socio-political change is manifested in this tension of tradition and innovation. Women featured prominently in the innovations of cultural practices such as kingship, religion, art and mortuary practices, which suggest that they fully participated in the societal-wide preoccupation of identity construction. Therefore, the eighth-sixth centuries BCE provides a rare opportunity to examine the nuances of elite female identity constructions. The material evidence for elite Theban women derives primarily from mortuary contexts. Therefore, this dissertation uses the mortuary practices of elite Theban women in the eighth-sixth as its evidentiary core. Relevant mortuary evidence was compiled into two databases: the Tombs and Contents corpus and the Funerary Objects corpus. The first contains information on the Theban tombs and their contents that attested to the presence of women or belonged to women. The Funerary Objects corpus contains information on unprovenanced mortuary objects belonging to women that are attributed stylistically to Thebes. The information in these databases was analyzed for patterns in the allocation of titles, the spatiality of tombs and distribution and type of funerary objects. Furthermore, this project used different theoretical lenses of memory, landscape, gender and identity to analyze elite female mortuary practices in Thebes. The application of these theoretical lenses to the 1 mortuary data revealed the ways elite women created and displayed important elements of their status and identity in death. The results of the holistic analysis of elite female mortuary practices reveal that elite Theban women of the eighth-sixth centuries operated as active agents to more forcefully express their identities, especially status, albeit within the traditional societal modes and boundaries. Elite female strategies of identity construction were polysemic and complex. Elite female mortuary practices suggest, that, in contrast to traditional Egyptological understanding of women, elite Theban women of the eighth-sixth centuries did not derive their status and identity solely from their male relatives. Instead, their burial practices often reveal a concern with their own status independent of male associations. Elite Theban women’s concern for the display of their identity independent of men has implications for a number of issues concerning the social status of women in ancient Egypt, including the issue of mandatory celibacy of women in the Amen clergy. Another implication of this work is that Egyptology needs to expand beyond traditional frameworks of gender when analyzing women. By analyzing groups of women in their individual historical and socio-cultural contexts, this dissertation expands discussions of ancient Egyptian women beyond the monolithic categories of mother and wife. The archaeological analysis of the burial practices of elite Theban women of the eighth-sixth centuries suggests that ancient Egyptian women were active participants and contributors in societal trends of identity constructions. Elite female strategies of identity construction demonstrate complexities of identity conceptions by women that extend beyond the traditional scholarly characterizations that developed women’s identities solely by reference to men. 2 FOR MY FAMILY i TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Figures .................................................................................................v List of Tables ................................................................................................vi Acknowledgments...............................................................................................vii INTRODUCTION.................................................................................................1 I. Ancient Egyptian Women and Egyptology.......................................................1 I.i. Ancient Egyptian Portrayals of Women......................................................1 II.ii. Egyptology and Gender...........................................................................3 II. Methodology .................................................................................................5 III. Organization of Dissertation..........................................................................6 CHAPTER ONE: A Historical Overview of the Eighth-Sixth Centuries in Egypt: Tradition, Innovation and Women.......................................................................8 Introduction .................................................................................................8 Historical Overview............................................................................................9 Tradition and innovation: kingship, religion, art, burial practices and women....11 Kingship ...............................................................................................12 Religion ...............................................................................................16 Art ...............................................................................................17 Burial Practices..............................................................................................19 Conclusions ...............................................................................................21 CHAPTER TWO: Feminine Titles, Status and Identity........................................ 23 Introduction ...............................................................................................23 I. Axes of Identities..........................................................................................23 II. Corpus of Elite Female Titles........................................................................ 26 II.i. “Honorific”Titles..................................................................................... 26 II.i.a. Lady of the House (nbt pr)........................................................28 II.i.b. Noblewoman (špst/špst-t).........................................................29 II.ii. Titles Denoting Occupations..................................................................30 II.ii.a. Musicians.................................................................................31 II.ii.a.i. Singer in the Residence of the Temple of Amen (ḥsy.t n(t) ẖnw n pr Imn)..............................................................31 II.ii.a.ii. Chantress of Amun (šmy.t n Imn)...................................34 II.ii.a.iii. Sistrum Player (ḫy.t)......................................................34 II.ii.a.iv. Dancer...........................................................................35 II.ii.b. Other Occupational Titles........................................................35 II.ii.b.i. Nurse (mn.t)...................................................................35 II.ii.b.ii.Scribe and attendant (sš sḥm.t, šms.t)................................36 III. Distribution of Titles in Corpora..................................................................38 IV. Titles and Familial Affiliations....................................................................45 ii V. Discussion and Comparanda........................................................................ 47 V.i. Third Intermediate Period........................................................................ 47 V.ii. New Kingdom........................................................................................48 V.iii. Old Kingdom and First Intermediate Period..........................................51 VI. Concluding Remarks...................................................................................53 CHAPTER THREE: Landscape, Memories and Elite Female Burials of the Theban Necropolis......................................................................58 Introduction ...............................................................................................58 I. Examining Mortuary Landscapes...................................................................58 II.Burial Practices in the Theban Necropolis......................................................65 II.i. Temple Reuse........................................................................................67 II.i.a. The Ramesseum.......................................................................67 II.i.b. Madinet Habu..........................................................................73 II.i.c. Deir el-Bahri............................................................................87 II.i.d. Discussion of Temple Reuse by Elite Women in the Theban Necropolis..............................................................94 II.ii.Tomb Reuse............................................................................................95 II.ii.a. The Valley of the Queens.........................................................95 II.ii.b. The Asasif..............................................................................101 II.ii.c. Dra’ Abu el-Naga....................................................................108 II.ii.d. Discussion on Tomb Reuse.....................................................109 II.iii. New Constructions..............................................................................111 II.iii.a. The Ramesseum.....................................................................112 II.iii.b. Scarp of the Ramesseum........................................................115 II.iii.c. Medinet Habu........................................................................118 II.iii.d. The Asasif.............................................................................120 II.iii.e. Discussion on New Constructions..........................................126 III. Concluding Remarks: The Theban Mortuary Landscape and Elite Female Identity Expressions...........................................................127 CHAPTER FOUR: The Symbolic Economy of Elite Female Mortuary Practices ..........................................................................................133 Introduction ..............................................................................................133 I. Typical Burial Assemblage of the Period.......................................................134 I.i. Stelae ..............................................................................................135 I.ii. Coffins ..............................................................................................140 I.iii. Funerary Papyri.....................................................................................144 I.iv. Shabtis and Containers...........................................................................145 I.v. Canopic Jars..........................................................................................147 I.vi. Miscellaneous Items.............................................................................149 I.vii. The Value of the Burial Assemblage....................................................150 II. The Analysis ..............................................................................................150 II.i. Tombs and Contents Database...............................................................151 II.ii. Funerary Objects Database...................................................................157 II.iii. Conclusions..........................................................................................157 iii III. The Economics of Burial............................................................................158 IV. Discussion: Economic and Social Capital and the Creation of Status and Identity..........................................................161 IV.i. Bourdieu and Capital............................................................................162 V. Concluding Remarks: Capital and Status in Elite Female Burial Practices.......................................164 SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS..................................................................189 BIBLIOGRAPHY ..............................................................................................194 APPENDIX A: Tombs and Contents Corpus......................................................222 APPENDIX B: Funerary Objects Corpus...........................................................661 iv LIST OF FIGURES Chapter One Figure 1. The tomb chapels of the God’s Wives of Amen...............................20 Figure 2. The superstructure of the tomb of Ankh-Hor as an example of typical layout of the Saite tombs..........................20 Chapter Two Figure 1. Breakdown of titles in the Tombs and Contents Database................40 Figure 2. Breakdown of titles in the Funerary Objects Database..................... 43 Chapter Three Figure 1. The Theban Necropolis...................................................................64 Figure 2. The Ramesseum necropolis of the eighth-sixth centuries.................69 Figure 3. Third Intermediate Period/Late Period tombs at Medinet Habu.......76 Figure 4. Plan and photo of Tombs 5 and 6....................................................79 Figure 5. The inner area of the Great Temple.................................................82 Figure 6. Third Intermediate Period burials at Deir el-Bahri...........................93 Figure 7. The principal wadi of the Valley of the Queens...............................97 Figure 8. Eighth-sixth centuries BCE reuse of the tomb of prince Khaemwaset...........................................................99 Figure 9. Carter “Site 5”................................................................................104 Figure 10. Carter excavation.........................................................................107 Figure 11. The Ramesseum necropolis of the eighth-sixth centuries centuries showing reuse..............................................................114 Figure 12. Tomb chapels near the Ramesseum..............................................116 Figure 13. The Asasif in the eighth-sixth centuries........................................122 Chapter Four Figure 1. Aston's type I-IV stelae..................................................................136 Figure 2. Aston’s type V and VI stelae..........................................................137 Figure 3. Aston’s type VII and VIII stelae.....................................................138 v
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