Will anyone faint? – I hope not…

Dear 7B,

Actually, I have caused a student to faint in one of my classes. While I like to imagine that the cause was my magnetic personality, the reality is that I was describing brain operations in my Psychology class. None of my Year 7 students has ever felt seriously queasy during a class mummification. But you might be especially sensitive. We’ll find out this afternoon.

The grisly details are below. Read on.

Your chief embalmer,

Ms Green

playdough mummy

METHOD AND OTHER GRUESOME DETAILS

The ancient Egyptians had embalming down to a fine art. We know about their methods both from ancient sources (for example, the Greek historian, Herodotus) and modern analysis. The essential process was to dry the body out by removing as much wet stuff as possible and salting the rest. Sounds simple, doesn’t it? Not really. As you can no doubt imagine, many things can go wrong when you are working with a rotting body in sweltering heat, with jackals roaming around outside and the occasional incompetent embalmer thrown in for good measure.

brain drainMy students always seem to be most revolted by the first part of the process. After the body was washed with Nile water, the brain was extracted with an iron hook. This was a tricky task, made easier by the tendency of the putrefying brain to become quite liquid. The embalmers would break the ethmoid bone and push it up into the cranial cavity, then draw down the brain with the hook. Fragments might also be scooped out with a long-handled spoon. Much of the remainder could be allowed to drip out through the nose. The ancient Egyptians didn’t realise that the brain was an important organ. They thought the seat of reason and emotion was the heart. Therefore they left the heart in and let the brain drain.

Gives a whole new meaning to that phrase, “brain drain”, doesn’t it?

For the high-class corpse the next part of the task was to cut into the flank and remove the stomach, lungs, liver and intestines. Such care was not taken for the cheaper methods of mummification. I’m describing the version used for pharaohs and nobles here. After all, this is a high-class blog.

Ramses_II_-_The_mummy pdA photo of Ramses II’s mummy, provided by Wikimedia Commons and in the public domain

The cavity would be packed with aromatic substances and linen, and the body would then have natron, a type of salt, packed around it. For forty days the body would be left to dry out, and after this period it looked darker, shrivelled and leathery. To make it appear more life-like, oils might be massaged into the stiff skin; in the later period the emaciated arms and legs were sometimes stuffed with various substances to make them look rounder and more human. The problem was that the fragile skin could easily be torn. This leads me inexorably to the topic of things that could go wrong.

800px-Mummy-UpperClassEgyptianMale-SaitePeriod_RosicrucianM pd Wikimedia Commons

This picture is used courtesy of Wikimedia Commons and is in the public domain. It shows clearly how the skin of a mummy became thin and the limbs emaciated-looking through the process of mummification.

All jobs have their bad points and embalming, perhaps, had more than most. It was easy to make mistakes and difficult to fix them. Embalmers who over-stuffed the limbs of mummies, for instance, could cause havoc. The cheeks of one princess now in the Cairo museum had been padded so much that they burst and had to be restitched. Sometimes bits of bodies were lost, including nipples and penises; they would be replaced with artificial versions, if the embalmer had a conscience. Rats and mice were occasionally caught for ever in the wrappings and mummified along with the person. Some mummies, when unwrapped, have been found to be missing a vital bodily part, such as a foot. All of this serves to show that mummification was a tricky operation.

Anubis-attending-the-mummy-of-Sennedjem wwwfreeclipartnowcom pd

Anubis performing his role as the protector of the dead; picture provided courtesy of www.freeclipartnow.com (public domain)

Matryoshka dollAnyway, after the body was cleaned and repacked with fresh stuffing, it would be bandaged with linen and put into a coffin in the shape of a human being – sometimes several coffins, each nesting in the next like those Russian Matryoshka dolls.

drawing of mummy coffin public domain image from karenswhimsycomThis image is a drawing of Egyptian coffins, provided by www.karenswhimsy.com

No students are ever harmed during our class mummifications. In fact, most students find that the process, while a touch gruesome, is highly entertaining. I knew I had a winning lesson when students started taking pictures of the process with their mobile phones. But the question is, during our class mummification will you be a competent embalmer, or will you be the type about whom an ancient Egyptian might make disparaging remarks?

There’s no way I’m giving my body to that embalmer. She’d be bound to lose a leg or some other part of me that I need for my afterlife.

or…

Why, he can’t even get to class without losing something. And I’m perfectly certain that he can’t sew.

We’ll find out this afternoon!

A couple more sources to whet your appetite and help with your assignment:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34258529/ns/technology_and_science-science/

For a site that gives a detailed account of mummification, click HERE.

Emit Sets Off on his Adventure…

Dear 7B,

By now you should know quite a bit about the civilization of ancient Egypt. Test your knowledge by doing the little quiz below:

Your next steps are to do even more research, participate in a grisly mummification (that will take place next week, so prepare yourselves mentally) and begin writing your story.

Your story should be written in the first person, from the viewpoint of either Emit or Latiwonk. Emit could begin like this:

Phew. At long last I’m getting out of the office. Sure, ancient Egypt might be strenuous and even dangerous, but at least there won’t be any paperwork.

Looking down at ancient Egypt, at first all I can see is desert. But then I see the long strip of the Nile River, cutting through the plain, surrounded by greenness. Llatiwonk has been telling me about it (she never stops talking). Evidently the ancient Egyptians thought the yearly flood was a kind of miracle. It kept them alive, because the silt left by the flood was so fertile. They planted their crops in it. They dug ditches and canals to water their crops, because they knew that rain almost never fell on their land.

But all good things have their downsides: if the flood was too high it could sweep away whole villages. Weird, to be at the mercy of a river, to know that the melting snow in the mountains of Ethiopia could bring you a life-giving stream or a disaster…

Of course, if you are writing your story from Llatiwonk’s point of view, you could have a more “robotic voice”: 

Report: Ancient Egypt

Year: Reign of Tutankhamen

Landing: 5.4 kilometres from the Valley of the Kings, in the neighbourhood of the New Kingdom capital, Thebes

Season: The yearly flood has just receded. The peasant farmers are planting their crops and tending their lands.

First Impressions: The area around the Nile River is a hive of activity. Now that the flood has receded, the peasants are hard at work, planting their staple crops of wheat and barley. From these two crops they make bread and beer, the essentials of life, and of course they pay their taxes to their god-king, known as the pharaoh. He is not the only person who exploits them and takes advantage of their daily, endless labour, but he is the most powerful and the most important.

Notice that I have tried to put quite a lot of detail into my introductions. That’s what you should try to do too. At the link below, you can try a little fill-the-blank quiz in which you can read more of Emit’s story. This should help you to know what your own task involves and also provide more knowledge for your own assignment. 

Click here to try the little fill-the-blank quiz→Emit’s story goes on…

Stop Press:

A picture gallery of ancient Egyptian shoes, based on the discoveries in Tutankhamen’s tomb

Bad teeth tormented the ancient Egyptians (even the god-kings)

A gallery of photos from inside Tutankhamen’s tomb

The Pecking Order of Ancient Egypt

Chooks peck the chooks that are below them in status, while they submit to being pecked by those above them. This hierarchy is evident in many human interactions, though it is rarely quite so straightforward and predictable. In the society of ancient Egypt, people certainly knew their place; their position in society was unlikely to change much in the course of one lifetime. If you were born a peasant farmer, you were overwhelmingly likely to die a peasant – after a life of intensive labour and anxiety about survival. In comparison, these chooks seem very happy, even if some of them have to put up with a bit of pecking. Picture kindly provided by Ms Gordon.

Dear 7B,

Ancient Egyptian society was a kind of hierarchy in which some people had more power, status and importance than others. Some people got to boss others around, make them work and get them to pay taxes. Most of the people, who were peasant farmers, worked hard, were told what to do and paid taxes to those above them in the hierarchy.

Some anthropologists call this a kind of human pecking order.

The original type of pecking order was first observed by a biologist called W. C. Allee. He noticed in the 1920s that chooks peck each other according to their power or status in the farmyard. The most powerful chook pecks all the others. The least powerful chook is pecked by all the others. In between are the chooks who are pecked by those above them and who peck those below them. This concept of a pecking order is used to denote a hierarchy of power.

For instance, in our school Mrs Mitchell is above me in the pecking order and, I’m sorry to say, you are below me. Although I would never peck you, I do tell you what to do, badger you about your homework and talk endlessly about history while you feel more or less obliged to listen. That’s a bit like pecking, if you think about it.

Of course, human relationships are much more complex than those of chooks. In ancient Egypt, the people at the top had responsibilities as well as privileges, but they certainly wielded much more power than those at the bottom. The lowly peasant farmers had to work hard, sometimes on the pharaoh’s projects, sometimes on their own farms. The yearly ebb and flow of the Nile flood determined their existence.  In your new role as Emit and Llatiwonk, you need to describe and comment on this society.

The sources below will help you to find out about the Nile and the people who established their lasting civilization on its banks. Remember to write notes that will help you to complete your Emit Repoons/Llatiwonk assignment, which is due on Wednesday 27 March.

For those students whose assignment handouts mysteriously disappear into the dark, fathomless corners of their school bag, rapidly breaking down and becoming illegible and untouchable, download your assignment here: 

Emit Repoons 2013

Glossary
General Specific to Ancient Egypt

hierarchy

pecking order

status

power

role

privileges

artisan

scribe

pharaoh

Nile

yearly flood/inundation

vizier

hieroglyphics

mummification

nomarch

high priest/ess

This picture of an Egyptian peasant figure working a plough behind two oxen was kindly provided by the British Museum.

The importance of the Nile – BBC Website

Questions and answers about the Nile – an easy website

A day in the life of various ancient Egyptians – PBS Website

A fascinating account of archaeological evidence on who actually built the Pyramids – PBS website

Global Egyptian Museum for Kids 

The Role of the Pharaoh from the British Museum

The Role of Slaves in Ancient Eygpt 

History for Kids