From ancient Egypt, 'Heads of Secrets' Find an afterlife
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From ancient Egypt, 'Heads of Secrets' Find an afterlife
In an undated image provided by Kanazawa University, terra-cotta figurines found at an excavation site at North Saqqara in Egypt. Archaeologists working in Saqqara recently unearthed three funerary masks at least 1,800 years old. (Kanazawa University via The New York Times)

by Franz Lidz



NEW YORK, NY.- When it came to the dicey journey to the afterlife, the more affluent citizens of ancient Egypt took no chances. In elaborate funeral ceremonies, protective spells were invoked, sarcophaguses were larded with amulets, and the faces of the dead were covered with death masks designed to guide the spirits of mummified remains into the next world — a placid field of reeds — then back to their final resting place in the body.

Recently, an expedition of Japanese and Egyptian archaeologists unearthed three such masks in a series of cut-rock tombs in the cliffs of Saqqara, a primary burial site for the Pharaonic capital of Memphis. In texts of the New Kingdom, a period spanning 1550 B.C. to 1070 B.C., a mask placed over the head of a mummy was called a sukhet, meaning “egg,” and sometimes tep en seshta, meaning “head of secrets” or “head of mysteries.”

Foy Scalf, an Egyptologist at the University of Chicago, said that the “secret” or “mystery” was a euphemism for the mummy itself, which, after the embalming and appropriate rites, took on a special nature. In cases of physical damage, a face covering helped preserve the head and provided a permanent idealized likeness of the deceased.

The masks, manufactured by artisans in workshops, would not have come cheap. Kara Cooney, a professor of Egyptian art and architecture at UCLA, said that although the masks were not always constructed of expensive materials, the pigments and labor were costly, and most working peasants would not have had the disposable income to afford them.

But Scalf said the sheer number of masks that have survived suggested that they were not restricted to the elites. “I don’t think it would be surprising if up to 35% of the population had the means to acquire them,” he said.

One of the newly unearthed Saqqara masks was discovered outside a Greco-Roman catacomb discovered in 2019. Made of clay, it was wedged above a human skull and surrounded by fragments of a striated wig.

“The color scheme of the wig indicates the dating from the Late Period and the Ptolemaic Period, roughly 713 B.C. to 30 B.C.,” said Nozomu Kawai, an archaeologist at Kanazawa University in Japan and the expedition leader.

The other two masks were found inside the catacomb along with terra-cotta figurines of Isis-Aphrodite — the goddess of childbirth and rebirth — and her son Harpocrates, the Greek version of Horus, the Egyptian god of silence who could protect himself from sickness and death.

“With infant mortality so high, one can imagine that Harpocrates was especially revered,” Cooney said.

The two masks have been traced to the second century A.D., a time when Egypt was an imperial province of the Roman Empire. Both masks were molded from cartonnage, a material similar to papier-mâché that is created by soaking strips of linen or old papyrus scrolls in a paste and laying them over a woodblock form or the actual head of a mummy. The masks were then covered with a thin layer of gesso and painted gold, believed to be the color of the gods’ flesh and considered an eternal and indestructible hue.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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