“So seize the day!
hold holiday!
Be unwearied, unceasing, alive
you and your own true love;
Let not the heart be troubled during your
sojourn on Earth,
but seize the day as it passes!”
– The Harper's Song for Inherkhawy (Excerpt)
Be unwearied, unceasing, alive
you and your own true love;
Let not the heart be troubled during your
sojourn on Earth,
but seize the day as it passes!”
– The Harper's Song for Inherkhawy (Excerpt)
Those ever-loving ancient
Egyptians are well-known for their active sex lives. Archeologists
have uncovered much evidence of their relaxed attitudes about sex
between single, consenting adults. Sexuality in ancient Egypt was
considered just another aspect of life on earth – a staple on a
par with eating and sleeping. Reading about the lusty exploits of
these inhabitants of the lower Nile Valley reminds one of the Tina
Turner lyric “What's love got to do with it?” Just how free and
sensually insatiable were these ancient people?
Let's begin at the
beginning. In fact, the oldest depiction of sex on record, painted
sometime in the Ramesside Period (1292-1075 B.C.E.), is known as the
“Turin Erotic Papyrus.” It is so named because of its “discovery”
in the Egyptian Museum of Turin, Italy. The papyrus portrays frank
versions of ancient sex in a number of sexual positions – twelve in
all.
The illustrative
depictions on the papyrus “fall somewhere between impressively
acrobatic and unnervingly ambitious,” one even involving a chariot.
Maybe those sexual gymnastics can be partly attributed to popular
aphrodisiacs of the time – mandrake and pomegranate juice mixed
with wine. Or perhaps those ancient Egyptians in their linen
garments, which clung to their skin and were usually translucent,
faced ever-present desires.
Talk about sex? The
Egyptian language had many words for sexual intercourse, with the
most common being “nk” used to describe the male agent of
the sexual act. The term was perfectly acceptable in daily parlance.
Other sexual euphemisms include “to unite oneself with” and
“entering a house.” Poetry is a readily available source for
learning about the way sexual intercourse was discussed in ancient
Egypt.
“My sister (commonly
a word for 'lover') is unique – no one can rival her,
for she is the most
beautiful woman alive.
Look, she is like
Sirius,
which marks the
beginning of a good year.
The glance of her eye
is gorgeous.
Her lips speak sweetly,
and not one word too many.
Long-necked and milky
breasted she is,
her hair the colour of
pure lapis.
Gold is nothing
compared to her arms
and her fingers are
like lotus flowers.
Her buttocks are full
but her waist is narrow.
As for her thighs –
they only add to her beauty.”
(From the Chester
Beatty Papyrus)
Or how about this
deletable, and admittedly extended slice of poetic erotica?
“My beloved met me,
Took his pleasure of
me, rejoiced as one with me.
The brother brought me
into his house,
Laid me down on a
fragrant honey-bed.
My precious sweet,
lying by my heart,
One by one "tongue
making,” one by one,
My brother of fairest
face did so fifty times …”
There were no taboos
concerning sex and no stigma attached to any aspect of it except for
infidelity, and, among the lower classes, incest. In both of these
cases, the stigma was far more serious for a woman than for a man
because the bloodline was passed through the woman. However, men were
not granted a free pass: it has been recorded that in some
communities cheating husbands would experience social stigma for such
actions.
Why
would the royalty of such an advanced ancient civilization engage in
incest? Evidence supports that the rulers of ancient Egypt believed
they descended from the gods; therefore, they were very interested in
keeping their bloodlines "pure.” One of the most famous names
of ancient Egypt, King Tut, was believed to be a product of incest.
His parents were brother and sister and it's thought that Tut also
married his sister Ankhesenamun.
Temporary marriage was
known as a “year of eating” and enabled the couple to try out the
marriage and providing a quick exit should there be no children
during this time or if they decided it was not working. For the
majority of the population, actual marriage was undocumented. The
couple simply started cohabiting. However, wealthy couples would
often draw up contracts outlining the financial consequences of a
divorce.
The sex itself? Ancient
Egyptians apparently had no concept of virginity or any sort of
expectation for it. They possessed no particular stigma against
illegitimate children. And, they frequently used contraception such
as acacia gum, which when compounded essentially became a spermicide.
A nasty reference is even made about using other substances inside of
the vagina, including pessary (small soluble block) made of crocodile
dung.
It is written that the
ancients even employed primitive sex toys. On the Turin Erotic
Papyrus one can see a woman seated on a vase to pleasure herself
while it is believed that Cleopatra, with her excessive sexual
appetites, may have created a vibrator for herself employing a hollow
gourd full of angry bees.
After all, Cleo was known
as "Meriochane"
by the Greeks – a term that literally translates to "she who
gapes wide for 10,000 men." According to legend, she "fellated
100 men" in a single night. She supposedly used her affinity for
this act to seduce Julius Caesar. But, late research throws great
doubt on Cleo's “whorelike” qualities and posits claims exalting
Cleopatra's sexual prowess are less true to her nature than those
acknowledging her intellectual gifts. Was she even the beautiful
object of desire depicted in Hollywood films?
Sally Ashton, a Cambridge
Egyptologist, painstakingly researched ancient artifacts and records
in order to reconstruct Cleopatra's facial features. And after a year
of research, the following is the culmination. You decide for
yourself.
Prostitution was common.
As in ancient Babylon, prostitution was seen as a divine and
respectable act done for the gods. Prostitutes were afforded a
relatively high social status in ancient Egypt. Ancient Egyptian
prostitutes, however, were able to work openly and freely and would
tattoo themselves and wear red lipstick and other makeup to signify
and differentiate themselves from non-prostitutes. Pimping ancient
Egyptian-style certainly has modern fashion parallels.
The important role of sex
in Egyptian life didn't stop with death. Archeologists have found
prosthetic genitals attached to mummies (false penises to male
mummies and false nipples to female ones), as they believed that in
the afterlife these could be re-animated.
And,
there are reports of necrophilia. The Greek writer Herodotus (Who
also famously alluded to suggestions that Greek tyrant Periander had
defiled the corpse of his wife, employing a metaphor: "Periander
baked his bread in a cold oven.") said that in ancient Egypt,
one would want to let the bodies of their loved ones sit out for
three or four days in order to dissuade the embalmers from having sex
with the corpses, as embalmers wouldn’t want to have sex with a
body that was already beginning to rot. So, apparently, it happened
at least frequently enough for Herodotus to mention it.
Interesting Note –
In 2012, Egypt's parliament denied reports that husbands would soon
be legally allowed to have sex with their dead wives. The subject
grabbed headlines across the world after Egypt's state-owned
newspaper Al Ahram ran an article stating that Mervat
el-Tallawy, the head of Egypt's National Council for Women, had
complained the country's parliament was considering a piece of
legislation sponsored by Islamists to allow men to have sex with
their wives after their death.
Admission of Guilt
First of all, allow me to
admit this is a shameful post to attract readers in the name of
padding my blog page views. On September 29, 2010, I posted an entry
titled “Ancient Egyptians and Erotic Poetry.” That writing is
most most popular blog entry by far with 55,763 page views to date.
Writing an editorial blog is a not lucrative hobby. For
example, this month I have earned a whopping $1.13 and this is the
25th day of August. By the way, my other two biggest
entries are “How Women Flirt: A Non-Verbal Guide For Men (32,817
page views) and “Five Suicides in One Year at SOCF Corrections
(30,238 page views).
Sex sells. Who can deny
that obvious truth? We continue to have a fascination with the
mysterious, alluring, ancient Egyptian culture. Perhaps we envision
ourselves alive in those times as part of a culture with openly
relaxed sexual norms. For whatever reason, of all the topics I have
discussed on the blog, erotic ancient Egypt continues to top the the
list of 21st century readership. I wonder who will read
this latest adventure.
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