Archaeology vs pseudoscience: some blunt realities from the former

 


 
So, just a little commentary from me this morning on how archaeologists are doomed to not have our voices heard, no matter how much public outreach we do, because that is what we are invariably guilt tripped with after a public kerfuffle over a well known pseudoscientist who has massive readership and publicity.
 
Do more public engagement.
 
Sure we can do outreach, big fan of it myself, in fact you are reading some right now, but there are a few problems associated with that fantasy:
 
1) Public engagement makes you a target for endless bile. It is not for the faint hearted in this age of online abuse. Not everybody in academia has that sort of intestinal fortitude. Universities on the other hand tend to emphasise to their staff that they represent the university and must behave accordingly - basically they are firmly advised to "play nice" in public fora. Pseudos are not constrained by the same expectations. I don't blame any of my academic friends for treading cautiously, it is barbaric out there. 

2) Who is funding it? The answer often is - nobody - many archaeologists are doing outreach, or debunking pseudo, like my blog, in their spare time, entirely for free, unless they have monetised themselves on Youtube, FB or Blogger, but if you are not a marketing concept like Ancient Origins, and pay a shitton to a website for exposure, your writing is not going to have a great deal of audience reach. 
 
 
3) Who is reading/watching it? - very few people - unless you monetise your product or have a celebrity promote your site. 
 
Case in point, which started me thinking about this: 2 weeks ago my partner posted one of my blog posts on a music celebrity's page, and the post went viral, off the chart busy with views and is still mildly active today. The same post shared on a group or page devoted to history, art or archaeology is lucky to get a few views at the time of posting, no matter if the site has a million followers.
 
Say what you like about the quality of my writing, the outcome is dependant on the message vehicle, not the message quality. 
 
Therefore, the only way to get widespread mainstream exposure for academic research is to produce a palatable product that is attractively packaged for the public, preferably sexed up, sensationalist and a bit mythico-magical. Then it has to be monetised and picked up by celebrities and influencers, because naturally then the media would gleefully follow in their trail with drool running from their lips, squabbling over who could write the stupider headline.
 
This is why archaeologists are fucked.
 
 
Andrea Sinclair
 
Dec. 2022 







Further reading on the issues of social media for scholars:
 
Mewburn, I. 2023, 'The Enshittification of Academic Social Media', The Thesis Whisperer - https://thesiswhisperer.com/2023/07/10/academicenshittification/?fbclid=IwAR003zMD_tH6AKLYm_Qa9cPMW0kXwytFSAytCfm13ZdbZsZt1tuCVoKhvjo
Tiller, N. 2022,  'From Debunking to Prebunking', Sceptical Inquirer -https://skepticalinquirer.org/2022/08/from-debunking-to-prebunking-how-skeptical-activism-must-evolve-to-meet-the-growing-anti-science-threat/
Trecek-King, M. 2022, 'How to Sell Pseudoscience', Sceptical Inquirer - https://skepticalinquirer.org/2022/08/how-to-sell-pseudoscience/?fbclid=IwAR3PLkXJUamTNMe3vMOobM8GxSp_LJCwBsaDqHMsmJsovjTyfD1Fi6DLSRY

Bullshit Memes #8: An ancient Egyptian cucumber

In June of 2021 the Metropolitan Museum of New York shared a photograph of one of their Egyptian artefacts on Twitter that subsequently went on to create a lot of ribald twatter, and this “nudge, nudge, wink, wink” hilarity then spread to other popular social media, such as Facebook and Reddit. 

At that time, I vaguely noticed the sniggering on a few Facebook history groups and moved on, because it really was just an opportunity for people to have a bit of a laugh at something that looked like a penis..... Cue smutty jokes about ancient Egyptian sexual peccadillos.

A year later my daughter was idly scrolling past another of these memes doing the rounds yet again on Twitter and foolishly pointed this out to me …. immediately receiving a brief bout of my infinite potential for pontification.

But this time I considered taking it on. Not because I have issues with smutty humour, btw. 

Go ahead, snigger away at the idea that people from an ancient culture might have indulged in creative sexual intercourse, honestly not my concern, and I totally get that for a few of you out there this is just a gag, and I should lighten up ....

Which is basically why I hadn't bothered with it until now... but it is also difficult not to resent the suggestion that I and other archaeologists can't differentiate between a salad vegetable and a penis.

And, to add insult to injury, this meme won't die a decent death, again probably because there might be a penis. Yet memes like this reinforce views that passive aggressively undermine the general public's faith in expertise.

 
Therefore, this post is aimed at those individuals who might actually believe the idea that archaeologists are incapable of recognising a penis, and because it also provides a convenient opportunity to explain why first impressions of ancient artefacts can be somewhat misguided. 
 
An explanation of why the ‘looks-a-bit-like’ method is amusing, yet dodgy af.
 

Why this object is not a penis (to an ancient Egyptian), or for that matter, a dildo:

1.    The Egyptians practiced circumcision; It is unlikely that they would omit the head of the penis if they were intending to make a penis, which we know they had no problem with representing: For example gods with erections, naked statues, erotic papyri, fecundity figurines and wooden votive penises that were left in temples…

A votive penis from the chapel of Hathor at Deir el Bahari, New Kingdom.
Royal Ontario Museum 907.18.900.1. Image (c) ROM.
  
And yes, archaeologists are somehow able to recognise the wooden ones.
 
The god Amen-Min, Louvre Museum, N3544.
Late Period. Image by RAMA @ Wiki.
 
All were circumcised. If the model was a ritual/funerary/domestic accessory type penis it would be their idea of realistic, not yours.
 
The hieroglyph for penis and male related activities from Kom Ombo
temple, Ptolemaic Period.  Image Thorpe117 @ IMGUR.
 
 
2.   It is fragile: The museum model is made from Egyptian faience, which is a vitreous material that was the immediate precursor to glass. This silica (sand) based composition is more fragile than stone and it is a lot more like a light coloured ceramic with a glaze, or an early glass…. 
 
Faience was porous, glassy and could break easily.... and yes that thought ought to make one whince just a little bit.

Food models from the tomb of Amenhotep II. New Kingdom.
Image (c) Wiese & Brodbeck 2004.
 

3.    It is too small: The Metropolitan Museum artefact is only 9.6 cm, or 3.78'' long, which is not the smallest of the examples of these in museums around the world, some can be as small as 6.27 cm. (2.4'') long… 

I am not sure what your expectations of penises are…

Faience phallic votive figurine, Late Period.
Image (c) British Museum, EA90380.
 

Why archaeologists identify them as cucumbers:

Context, it is super important: 

     1.   These models are found in tombs or in foundation deposits under important buildings. It was reasonably common for Egyptian tombs and buildings to have been provided with food offerings, often made of faience and smaller than lifesize. 
 
The Met Museum object was found with other model artefacts (image below) in a pit at Lisht in the Middle Kingdom cemetery near the pyramid of Senwosret, it is unclear whether these were in a tomb or part of a foundation deposit.

The Met model with other food models from Lisht, Middle Kingdom.
Metropolitan Museum. Image Hayes 1959.
 

      2.    They are normally found with other model foodstuffs and offering bowls, because food offerings were essential provisions for the tomb and the afterlife.

The Met Museum model was found with another similar model, plus a model jerboa, a little cat, tiny human servants, and more food, like grapes, figs and grains. A similar set of these in the Louvre (below) incidentally comes with model offering bowl, figs, grapes and peas.

Egyptian faience food models from Heliopolis, Middle Kingdom.
Louvre E14188. Image Caubet & Pierrat-Bonnefois 2005.
 

3.    The model was green: These models usually have a green-turquoise glaze, the most common colour for faience in Egypt, but often this glaze has worn away over time. You can even see traces of the original glaze on the museum object, but most has faded leaving the creamy coloured faience core underneath.
 
Ancient Egyptian penises would only be green when they are attached to a god of regeneration, human penises were the colour of human males, reddish-brown, pale or white would normally be more likely to indicate the female body.

Faience offering set from Lisht in the Metropolitan Museum.
Image (c) Met Museum, 15.3.125-130.
 

4.   Diet: The ancient Egyptians ate varieties of the vegetable Cucumis (melo L. var.), from the cucumber and melon family. They listed these vegetables among food offerings on the walls of tombs and in medical texts. 

Offerings on a Middle Kingdom coffin.
From Steindorff 1901.

Cucumis melo seeds and other plant remains have been found in Egyptian archaeological contexts dating from the Predynastic period (ca. 3200 BCE) to the Roman era 3000+ years later.

The faience models also resemble the cucumbers from food offering scenes painted on coffins, or temple and tomb walls.

Food offerings from Deir el Bahari temple, New Kingdom.

Photo (c) Bruce Allardice.


 5.    Finally, the looks-a-lot-like method of identification: When these artefacts still have the original glaze, they actually most resemble varieties of cucumber or pickling melon. There are unambiguous examples of these faience models that are clearly a long greenish gourd-like vegetable. 
 
Model from a Late Bronze Age tomb (84) at Enkomi, Cyprus.
Image (c) British Museum, 1897,0401.1204.
 
Some of these models are also false vessels, hence the hole in one end.

Model from a New Kingdom tomb at Sedment.
Image (c) Penn Museum, E15436.


What you do with your pre-glass, miniature cucumber is of course entirely your own business, but it is nonetheless still a model vegetable.


Conclusion

I guess the point of my writing this post is that while some of us may appreciate a joke after a sweaty day spent processing a bazillion Iron Age ceramic sherds in the middle of nowhere, archaeologists as a species do not use a photo from a museum in order to draw conclusions about the identity of an artefact.

They may have done so over 100 years ago when science was significantly less fussy about accuracy than now, and there was a lot less evidence available, but that sort of sloppy thinking has been binned long ago, although I cannot say the same attention to detail applies for pseudoscience publications, clickbait sites and social media.

Instead, archaeologists gather the available evidence, and when context, text, representation, colour and material all point in one direction, then conclusions may be drawn. And you may be confident that if they get this wrong some bright spark further up the food chain will point it out over a beer at the next conference, or in a peer reviewed paper, because we are a tough audience to please and disproving other people's theories is an occupational requirement.
 
Therefore, according to the evidence given above the Metropolitan Museum artefact is most likely a funerary food offering model of an ancient Egyptian variety of cucumber or melon.



Andrea Sinclair 
Nov. 2022



Images
Thanks to Bruce Allardice and the museum digital collections, plus:
Caubet, A. and G. Pierrat-Bonnefois 2005, Faiences de l'antiquite: de l'Egypt a Iran. Louvre Editions (fig. 70).
Hayes, WC. 1959, Sceptre of Egypt I. Metropolitan Museum of Art (fig. 225).
Steindorff, G. 1901, Der Sarg des Sebek-O: Ein Grabfund aus Gebelen. Spemann, Berlin (pl. II).
Wiese, A. and A. Brodbeck 2004, Tutanchamun, das goldene Jenseits (p. 161).
 
But don't just trust me, look these up:

References
Bisognin, DA. 2002, 'Origin and Evolution of Cultivated Cucurbits'. Cienca Rural 32: 715-23.
Germer, R. 2008, Handbuch der altägyptischen Heilpflanzen. Harrassowitz (Cucumis melo L: pp. 242-44).
Manniche, L. 2002, Sexual Life in Ancient Egypt. Kegan Paul. (circumcision pp. 8-9)
Pinch, G. 1997, 'Offerings to Hathor' (wooden penises as votive offerings to the goddess p. 146).
Pinch, G. and EA. Waraksa 2009, 'Votive Practices'. In UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, J. Dieleman & W. Wendrich (eds) - http://digital2.library.ucla.edu/viewItem.do?ark=21198/zz01nfbgg
Robins, G. 2007, 'Male Bodies and the Construction of Masculinity in New Kingdom Egyptian Art'. In Servant of Mut: Studies in Honor of Richard A. Fazzini, SH. D'Auria (ed), 208-15. 
de Vartavan, C., A. Arakelyan and VA. Amoros, 2010, Codex of Egyptian Plant Remains. SAIS (Cucumis sp. pp. 89-90).

Psychoactives in Ancient Egypt: Cannabis

I was aiming for tasteless and incongruous. Yet am still idly wondering if it is too subtle.

Tutankhamen and Ankhesenamen photoshopped with weed, image by A. Sinclair.
 
Some time ago I wrote two posts here on misinformation about drug use in the ancient world, both accidental outcomes of my travels around the internet. And at about the same time, interesting circumstances resulted in me collaborating with Lutz Popko on a translation of the papyrus that is most cited for medicinal herbs in ancient Egypt:

The Ebers Papyrus that is housed in the university library of Leipzig in Germany.

Because of this experience I have been made me acutely aware of the problems, and of the telephone games that occur when public media take information that experts are cautious about, and go on to turn these into assumed facts.

Since I wrote the first pieces I have ended up following other white rabbits into dubious burrows which resulted in me writing a presentation for a conference (‘High Times in Ancient Egypt’), and my partner (and cat) enduring that timeless catch phrase, ‘damn, this really ought to be a blog post too’.
 
I am not sure about you, but this looks like a backhanded compliment to me.
 

This post is dedicated to the false narratives that have been built around the ancient Egyptians knowing and using cannabis in medicine and cult during the pharaonic period.

Most of this artistic licence comes from publications regurgitating out of date information, assuming results from early academic studies are still valid, and reinterpreting the meagre evidence from Egyptology, often conveniently ignoring the part where Egyptologists say an identification is unconfirmed.

In this piece I am going to cite ten misleading claims that are spread around the web, in the media, but most disappointingly, also in some academic publications. At the end of each section I will provide academic references, misinformation sources will be at the end of the post.

Before we go anywhere and the usual suspects start screeching ‘suppression of the truth’, let’s get this clear, I personally support the legalisation of cannabis. What I absolutely do not support is the spread of misinformation.
 
 
While Lise Manniche did write that šmšm.t was cannabis in An Ancient Egyptian Herbal (1989) the rest is a mess.

 

1) The Egyptians called cannabis ‘shemshemet’  

This statement depends entirely on the assumption that the word for cannabis has been identified, with a plethora of weed toking sites, alternative culture and entheogen books, and even Wikipedia stating that Egyptian medical papyri contain remedies using cannabis as an ingredient.

All, and I mean all, variations on this claim assume that the plant shemshemet (šmšm.t) that is mentioned in a few of these papyri was Cannabis sativa.
 
 
This identification was proposed in 1934 by Warren Dawson, an expert in the Egyptian language, who argued support for his choice by citing a 4th Dynasty Pyramid Text where shemshemet cord is used by king Unas, because in his view rope is likely to be made from hemp.

Piankoff 1968, The Pyramid of Unas  

Unas has twisted the shem-shem-plant into ropes, Unas has united the heavens.

 
Image of a transcription of Unas line 514 from Sethe 1922.

Dawson 1934, ‘Studies in Egyptian Medical Texts III’

It is tempting to identify the plant with the Arabic SmSm, sesame, but the two can scarcely be identical, for sesame is constantly used for internal doses, whereas SmSmt never is. The word occurs in the Pyramid Texts (§ 514) with an elaborate determinative, and is spoken of as a plant from which ropes are made, which makes an equivalence with hemp, Cannabis sativa, much more likely.

Not everybody in Egyptology accepted this identification at the time, as there is no corroborating evidence. For this reason, this identification has been rejected by some experts on healing plants and medicine from Egypt.

Because – That is the entire evidence to support the identification; one word in one ritual phrase about a dead pharaoh as he dwells among the gods in the sky. A single phrase set in mythical time that was carved inside a pyramid in 2400 BCE.

On top of this –

Translations of the Pyramid of Unas texts do not translate shemshemet as hemp. Instead Egyptologists either use the original Egyptian word (which infers they don’t believe it to be identified), or they translate it as peppergrass, a type of cress.  

Allen 2005, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts

For Unis has tied together the peppergrass cords, Unis has united the skies.


None of the following translated šmšm.t as hemp:

Allen, J.P. 2005, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts. Atlanta.
Faulkner R.O. 1969, The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts. Oxford.
Mercer, S.A.B. 1952, The Pyramid Texts. Toronto.
Piankoff, A. 1968, Egyptian Religious Texts and Representations 5: The Pyramid of Unas. Princeton.
Shmakov, T.T. 2012, Critical Analysis of J. P. Allen’s «The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts». Omsk-Tricht.


It’s a bad sign when the tip-top experts are overly cautious, or is it?






2) Egyptians used cannabis for treating illness 

This claim is dependent on the identification of shemshemet being correct, and remember … this is one disputed proposal. 
 
Often in the media and general publications a lot of licence is taken with both the remedies and identification of the illnesses from medical papyri, claiming cannabis or even THC was used to treat cataracts, glaucoma, haemorrhoids, ingrown toenails, dermatitis, depression or gynaecological inflammation. So let’s just briefly look at the remedies.

There are 9 recipes from medical papyri containing shemshemet:

Ramesseum papyrus III (ca 1700 BCE), an eyewash that combines chopped šmšm.t with celery and is left overnight to steep.
 
Ebers papyrus (ca 1515 BCE), 2 remedies:
In one šmšm.t is combined with honey for a vaginal suppository intended to make the uterus ‘contract’. The other is a cream combining šmšm.t, honey, ochre, resin and ibu plant, that was an ointment for a sore toe.
 
Hearst Papyrus (ca 1450 BCE), 2 remedies, both matching the toe-cream above, except the word is mšmšm.t.
 
Ebers 821: Shemshemet is the 'robot face' bang in the middle.

 
Berlin Medical Papyrus (ca 1298-1187 BCE), 2 remedies: 
šmšm.t roots mixed with fat were used as an ointment for a skin inflammation. The other, for a ‘poison-seed caused by a god or dead person’, šmšm.t is combined with unidentified plants, fruits, an insect and ‘something from a launderer’, this was used as a fumigant.
 
Chester Beatty Papyrus (ca 1250 BCE), 2 enema treatments: 
In one water from šmšm.t, emmer, and an unknown plant, plus fat, puree, lotus and acacia leaves, were crushed together. The other combines šmšm.t, carob fruit and an unknown liquid, again used as an enema for ‘reducing kapu heat in the anus’.

As you can see, there is no clear indication of what the illnesses were.

The identification of hemp is based on the assumption that shemshemet was cannabis, and I would like to point out that even if this ingredient were C. sativa, medical use of roots or liquid derived from this plant does not justify a rationale for use of the flowers to get high.

None of these recipes is consumed, only one is fumigated, and it is to expel a ‘poison seed’, we simply don’t know what that might have been. 
 
And on that topic, these same papyri may prescribe finely ground children's poo for an eye injury (Ebers 349) … Not even close to medical grade poo, I might add... Or menstrual blood rubbed on the breasts of a woman to prevent sagging and excessive milk (Ebers 808).

Therefore, it is advisable not to overly glamorise their scientific knowledge or assume Egyptian medical skill was unanimously brilliant, like this clickbait site below does… the Egyptians were human and from a pre-industrial/modern medicine era... as a result their medical science is somewhat hit and miss. 
 
No idea how they went from recipe for a uterine douche to treating women for depression.
 

After having read over 875-ish remedies in the Ebers Papyrus (and rummaged around in other papyri), I for one would not be endorsing the curative powers of some of these remedies… some are downright unhygienic. 

For example, rubbing blood from a black steer, or a crow, on the head for preventing greying hair (Ebers 451 & 457). This is an example of imitative magic not medicine - i.e. believing that the blood from black animals will cause hair to blacken.

Nonetheless, I suspect eating crushed fruit for loosening the bowels could be quite effective... like I said, hit and miss.

But whatever… without a definite identification of the plant shemshemet, every citation of cannabis as a pharmaceutical ingredient in ancient Egypt is blowing smoke up your whatsit.


For the papyri online see (German/English):
Thesaurus Linguae Aegyptiae website - Medical Texts: https://aaew.bbaw.de/tla/servlet/OTTree?u=guest&f=0&l=0&oc=1626&db=0
Ebers Papyrus at Science in Ancient Egypt website: https://sae.saw-leipzig.de/en/documents/papyrus-ebers
Ramesseum Papyrus at Science in Ancient Egypt: https://sae.saw-leipzig.de/de/dokumente/papyrus-ramesseum-iii



 
3) New Kingdom tombs mention cannabis

This claim is also dependent on the identification of shemshemet being correct, and it relies on the reader not looking up the original texts. 

I am not that reader.

I looked up Graindorge, who was writing about onions, so only refers in passing to shemshemet. I then followed the citation trail to Hari 1981, who gave transcriptions of texts as well, which slowed down this whole process, because not one of the sources agrees on details or translation…

I might add, it is much more time consuming refuting misinformation than making it up.

Three 18th Dynasty tombs mention shemshemet: Neferhotep (TT 50), Amenemhab (TT 85) and Kenamen (TT 93). The texts are not identical, some are quite damaged, but they are fairly consistent with phrasing and details. Shemshemet is cited clearly in Neferhotep, but less clearly from the other tombs which do not exist in original condition.

Tomb of Amenemhab, transcribed by Virey in 1891.

Translations of these texts differ greatly, which has a had lot of influence on interpretation.

Amenemhab (above) is a very poor source, as large sections of the text are missing, and there appear to be incorrect signs, either from the scribe or from this copier. It is not a reliable example.

Tomb of Neferhotep text (Hari, p. 47-9)

May your mouth be open to the saret-plant from the garden, to the sspt-plants that grow (because of) Ptah, to the shemshemet plants created by Re, perfume in your mouth thanks to these. The garden has grown abundantly because of this (namely the shemshemet and the rushes). May you be given the plants of the earth (that grow) in the Fields of Iaru, may you sit on the shore, and your heart be satisfied by the waters of rejuvenation.

Only Neferhotep has been translated with ‘Re made shemshemet’, the others use the same phrase, but are interpreted differently. The tomb of Kenamen only refers to shemshemet as a comparison, referring to another plant, isu reed, ‘to which Re has given scent’. Therefore, it is possible these texts may be intended to be read with the sun god responsible for the aromas of plants.

Which makes sense, as Re was the creator of everything earthly.

However, this general notion of creation is then interpreted as the god specifically having created cannabis, because this sounds quite cool, and a magical narrative appears to be important to these sorts of pseudo-historical recreations. An Egyptian god granting humankind a plant or drug is a popular false fact, with examples such as Osiris bestowing mushrooms on humankind, or Thoth teaching physicians the use of opium (see earlier posts here and here).


Vexingly for the argument above from Bennett, it is not unclear what the nature of this offering was from these tombs, as the context of this text is the deceased and his wife in the fields of the afterlife enjoying the fruits of the garden. These were not offerings, but rather they express hopes for life after death. This too is set in mythical time.

The text promises the ka (soul/essence) of the dead person abundant vegetation and foods from the gardens of Sekhet Iaru: these are cucumber/melon, onion/garlic, reeds, shemshemet and two other unidentified plants, kheset (possibly bryony) and saret

There is no mention of incense or fumigation, these are examples of fresh garden produce.

Tomb of Kenamen text (Davies, p. 55)
 
… May men present to thee the isu (?) plant with flowering fronds and with (that part) to which Reᶜ has given scent; May there be chopped for thee cucumbers which Ptaḥ has made grow more (rankly) than grass*; May thy mouth open for onions, which spring in the plantations of Gēb (?).
*Davies translated shemshemet as ‘grass’, but suggested it could be sesame or melon in the notes.


These tombs are the only context for an association of this plant with funerary ritual in Egypt, as the many many offering lists that accompany a dead person in their afterlife, either on papyrus or the walls of their tomb/pyramid, do not mention shemshemet among the traditional offering herbs, beer, wine, resins and oils.

If cannabis were an important plant of egyptian temple and funerary ritual it would be recorded somewhere else than only a few New Kingdom tombs and an Old Kingdom pyramid.

In addition, the use of shemshemet in these symbolic scenes in Theban tombs does not indicate the nature of this plant, except that it grows lushly and may be paired with reeds in a garden setting, nor does it indicate any association with its use as a ritual intoxicant or medicine.
 

See:
Davies, N. de Garis 1930, Tomb of Ḳen-Amūn at Thebes I. Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Graindorge, C. 1992, ‘Les oignons de Sokar’. Revue d’Égyptologie.
Hari, R. 1985, La tombe thébaine du père divin Neferhotep (TT50). Editions des Belles-Lettres.
Virey, P. 1891, Sept tombeau thébains de la XVIIIe Dynastie. Mission Archéologique Française.





4) The earliest use of cannabis was rope

This claim is also piggy backing on the identification of shemshemet ‘cord’ from the Pyramid of Unas. Which means this statement only looks like more evidence until you realise that it is still based on the identification from Dawson in 1934.

The problem with this assumption by Dawson and others is that it is ethnocentric. English speakers may call rope and coarse fabrics hemp, because often these are made from a variety of cannabis. As a result, hemp has become a general word to describe rope, particularly in older research due to subjective ideas about what this would be. 

Therefore, citations of ‘hemp’ in early Egyptology publications are useless in the absence of scientific analysis. The only confirmed identification of hemp made from C. sativa comes much later from Egypt, in the Roman period when we know people in the Mediterranean were aware of the plant.
 

However, the Roman evidence is also sparse, because the Egyptians had their own local strong fibre options. Modern analyses from pharaonic Egypt have found the most common material used to make rope was papyrus, after that there is evidence for the use of jute, flax and other reed grasses.... no cannabis so far. 

Basically, if you asked an ancient Egyptian what rope would be made from, their ethnocentric answer would be - a sedge or reed. And they would stand a much better chance of being correct.

We have come a long way in 150 years of archaeology, so sensibly most experts now avoid the misnomer for identifying fibres, because there is currently no supporting archaeological evidence for hemp from pharaonic Egypt.


Ancient Egyptian rope
Borojevic, K. and R. Mountain 2013, “Microscopic Identification and Sourcing of Ancient Egyptian Plant Fibres Using Longitudinal Thin Sectioning,” Archaeometry 55/1: 1-32.
Veldmeijer, A. 2009, “Cordage Production,” in UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology.


And then there is the bleeding obvious: Hemp Hashish

Hemp fibre is not highly psychoactive, the flowers of the female cannabis plant are.

Many ancient cultures have used hemp for making textiles, basketry and rope, that doesn’t automatically equate with party use. Ancient Greek and Roman botanists for example are often cited to support this claim, but their texts tend to list cannabis for rope making, medicine and as a palate stimulant.

Herodotus, on the other hand, mentions throwing the seeds over hot stones for cleaning and purification in the Histories, but he is talking about Scythian funeral practices in central Eurasia in 440 BCE, not ancient Greek, nor Egyptian customs.

However, this claim may well be valid, as at least one Pazyryk tomb has coughed up seeds, and we know the plant was around the eastern Mediterranean in the middle of the 1st millennium BCE, but that doesn’t tell us whether the Egyptians valued it as a medicinal ingredient or ritual psychoactive.

There is no evidence anyone in Egypt was smoking it.

 
See:
Kühn, K.G. 1823, Galen, Opera Omnia VI, De alimenterum facultatibus.
Herodotus, Histories, Perseus Digital Library - http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hoppe/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0126%3Abook%3D4%3Achapter%3D75%3Asection%3D1
Rudenko, S.I. 1970, Frozen Tombs of Siberia: The Pazyryk Burials of Iron Age Horsemen. Berkeley and Los Angeles, p. 284-5.




5) The tomb of Akhenaten contained hemp

The Royal Tomb at Tell el Amarna in middle Egypt was intended for the burial of king Akhenaten and three other family members, but it is not known whether he or anyone else was buried in it, because the family returned to using the Theban necropolis after his death in around 1336 BCE.

This tomb was discovered by local Egyptians in the late 1800s, and had already been entered, robbed and substantially damaged many times in antiquity long before them. Since 1880 it had been damaged further, so very little remained in the tomb when it was finally studied by Egyptologists. Even less will have been original to the 18th Dynasty.

The citation by Rudgely (1998) that is popular around the traps claiming the tomb contained cannabis was taken from the excavation volume of Martin (1989) who concluded that C. sativa fibres found in 1982 were Roman period and not earlier. These fibres were identified visually by Germer who more recently (2008) rejects cannabis in Egypt before the Roman period, because there is no archaeological evidence.

The fibre is Roman, it does not date to the death of Akhenaten, a detail of context that is conveniently omitted by those authors with limited attention to accuracy or following up secondary citations, or who have specific goals like Bennett.

It also may not be C. sativa.

Ditto the three-ply hemp cord tied to a boulder and a mat bound with hemp from the living room of House 11, Main Street of the Eastern Worker’s Village at Amarna. This too is a classic example of the potential misuse of the term ‘hemp’ from an early 20th century publication, the fibre has not been identified.



See:
Martin, G.T. 1989, The Royal Tomb at El-ʽAmarna VII. ASE 39.
Abel, E. L. 1980, Marijuana - The First Twelve Thousand Years. New York.
Peet, T.E. and Woolley, C.L. 1923, City of Akhenaten I. Egyptian Exploration Society.
Rudgely, R. 1998, Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Substances. London.

 
Which brings us to that other old chestnut – 
 
 
 
6) The mummy of Ramses II contained cannabis

This claim stems from research done on the corpse of Ramses II in France in the 1970s (not 1881). The gentleman in question was a very long reigning Egyptian king of the 19th Dynasty who died at a grand old age in about 1212 BCE. No later scientific studies have confirmed this finding.

This is important, because if further studies have not confirmed data there is always a risk of contamination, or human error affecting the result. It is also best to keep in mind that Ramses’ elderly corpse was plonked in a museum more than 140 years ago, and in the bad ol’ days museums were happy to display artefacts without protection and to use insecticides to keep them bug free....oh, and many psychoactives were not illegal at the time.


Therefore, there is a decent chance this finding, if correct, is from contamination associated with early museum practices, or with the fact that before going ‘legit’, and moving to the Cairo museum in 1881 Ramses and a bunch of other royal mummies were lying in a reused tomb that had functioned as a looter’s income generator for about 10 to 20 years (Royal Cache TT 320).

The 1985 French study of plant pollens from this mummy found traces of cannabis pollen in the abdomen. In the same context, they also found cotton pollen, a plant that is not known in Egypt before the Ptolemaic period (so not before 325 BCE). Again, inferring contamination.

 
See:
Bickerstaff, D. 2005, ‘The Royal Cache Revisited’. JACF, Institute for the Study of Interdisciplinary Sciences 10: 9-25.
Leroi-Gourhan, A. 1985. ‘Les pollens et l’embaumement.’ In La momie de Ramsès II: recherches sur les civilisations, L. Balout and C. Roubet (eds), Paris, 162-6.
 

Hilliard wins the internet with this idiocy.

 
Apart from this study only a handful of mummies have provided vaguely similar results:

1) In 1992 a study of 9 mummified remains from Munich found hashish, nicotine and cocaine in the hair, tissue and bone of all samples. The 1st problem with this claim is that the date range is too large, anywhere between 1070 BCE and 395 CE (late Roman). Next, their publications lack the sort of data one might expect from sciency type science, as a single page is understated to say the least. Finally, all mummy bits were purchased in the 19th century and resided in the collection of the king of Bavaria for decades. Who knows what sort of parties he threw.

Balabanova, S., F. Parsche and W. Pirsig, 1992, ‘First Identification of Drugs in Egyptian Mummies.’ Naturwissenschaften 79: 358.

2) In 1987 a study of a Roman mummy in Lyon museum found cannabis pollen in the resin used for mummification. The problem here is this was also purchased by the museum in the 19th century, with no information available about its origin or preservation. So again, modern contamination cannot be excluded. This study also does not provide evidence of cannabis in Egypt before the Roman period.

Evin, J. 1987, ‘Datation par le Carbone 14.’ 111-12, & Girard, M. 1987, ‘Etude palynologique.’103-10. In Nouvelles archives du Muséum d’histoire naturelle de Lyon 25.

 
That is a grand total of 3 mummies, 7 heads and one mummy bit from 3 studies. All from over 30 years ago.

The glaring lack of evidence from any other mummies from a culture that has coughed up a metric shit-ton of data and a similar amount of dead people wrapped in spicy resinous linen, leans heavily against the reliability of the results cited here. Instead modern contamination either from exposure to the elements, contamination from pesticides or even laboratory contamination cannot be ruled out.

At this point in time there is no secure and uncontested archaeological evidence of cannabis from ancient Egyptian funerary contexts... Not tombs, nor the mummies of dead Egyptians, not a single mummy wrapping, no matter what clickbait pseudo-history sites like Ancient Origins say.

A nice example of terminal inaccuracy when citing the usual suspects, Amarna was founded ca. 1355 BCE btw.
 

For critiques see:
Buckland, P.C., and E. Panagiotakapolu, 2001, ‘Ramses II and the Tobacco Beetle.’ Antiquity 75: 549-56.
Counsell, D.J., 2008, ‘Intoxicants in Ancient Egypt? Opium, Nymphaea, Coca, and Tobacco.’ Egyptian Mummies and Modern Science, R. David (ed.), 211-5. Cambridge.

For ingredients actually used in mummification see:
Jones et al, 2018, ‘A Prehistoric Egyptian Mummy: Evidence for an Embalming Recipe and the Evolution of Early Formative Funerary Treatments.’ Journal of Archaeological Science - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0305440318304114.
Rageot et al 2023, ‘Biomolecular Analyses Enable New Insights into Ancient Egyptian Embalming.’ Nature - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05663-4#citeas


Some sources eh? Alarm bells should go off whenever you read that.


7) Kyphi contained cannabis

Kyphi is an interesting example of the technique of forcing unrelated data to fit your model, because we know the ancient Egyptians had a fondness for highly aromatic substances, like frankincense and myrrh. They were equally happy to depict this in their art and write about it in their literature, we even have the recipes.

Nonetheless, shemshemet is nowhere mentioned as an ingredient of the ancient Egyptian perfume and incense called Kyphi, neither in the pharaonic period, nor even in the Ptolemaic or Roman eras. 

In addition, the incense that was burned in grand scale ritual contexts in temples and used by Egyptian kings was called senetjer. This incense is recorded to have been sourced from Punt, south of Egypt, and it was most likely frankincense resin, although a good case has also been made for pistachio resin.

Ramses II offering senetjer at Karnak temple, image Hedwig Storch @Wikipedia.

Ebers Spell 852 (L. Popko/A. Sinclair)

Kyphi: An incense mixture: That which is done in order to make the odour of a house or of clothing pleasant: 

Dried myrrh, Phoenician juniper berries, frankincense, gw grass, East-African camphor wood (?), mastic (or: mash), marsh reed from Syro-Palestine, inktun and ḏemten drug, storax tree resin (?). 

To be finely ground. (And) made into a homogenous mass. (Something) from this is put on a fire.

As you can see the ingredients are mostly recognisable aromatic plants. Only two ingredients are unidentified and these are not shemshemet. Later Classical period recipes from Plutarch, Galen and Dioscurides are very similar to this one, but they can also include ingredients like raisins, wine, cardamom and cinnamon.

Still no cannabis.

Regardless of the weakness of this connection, Bennett above has posited that cannabis ‘might’ have been an ingredient of incense, because… hey… Egyptians burned incense and weed is burned right? ... Then he has spouted a creative fiction about mind altering substances, priests and gods to hammer his non-existent point home... more smoke and mirrors.

Every man and his dog uses this artwork to flog the idea that the Egyptians used cannabis.

 I would be grateful if someone could identify the artist, 
Ramses II offering incense to Amen by H. Tom Hall (thanks to Rebecca Le Get for the ID).
 
 
See:
Kyphi @ Ancient Egypt Online: https://ancientegyptonline.co.uk/kyphi/
Incense @ Swansea: https://www.egypt.swan.ac.uk/the-collection-2/the-collection/incense/#page-2


There is nothing quite as credible as citing a pharmacist from before Egyptology existed as a scientific discipline.

 
8) Homer said cannabis was an Egyptian drug

It is bog standard for this topic to cite Homer to argue the Egyptians had cannabis and brewed up a storm of wickedly powerful drugs in Thebes, the coolest of these being called nepenthes. This is, to put it politely, rather a wild exaggeration on the original texts. It would, in fact, put a few modern tabloids to shame for quality messing with the facts.

Firstly, there is one source for this claim: Homer’s Odyssey (7th c. BCE), other Greek and Roman writers are parroting Homer when they discuss nepenthes. And nobody opted for cannabis btw, Theophrastus, Rufus, Plutarch etc all had resourceful suggestions, some argued it was a type of wine, others that it was magical or metaphorical.

Next, Homer doesn’t say what the drug was, he simply says Helen, daughter of the god Zeus, I repeat, daughter of a god, puts a remedy into a wine krater that causes a person to forget their sorrows, even if a family member has been murdered brutally before them.

 

We don’t know what it was called, because the word nepenthes is a description of the drug (it means ‘no sorrow/no pain’) and it was intended to reduce the grief that Helen’s husband and the son of Odysseus were experiencing at this banquet.
 
We don’t know what it was, or if it was magical, herbal, wine, or a mixed potion. There have been many proposals, the most popular (and logical) being an opiate, but seriously, there are a few drugs that might cheer up a party of rich heroes in the fictional Late Bronze Age.


Egypt takes credit as the source for nepenthes because a little later in the same text Homer says this drug was given to Helen by an Egyptian woman, and you know those cunning Egyptians, they are descended from the god Thoth, and therefore were skilled in the medicinal arts.

600 years later Diodorus repeated Homer’s tale of Helen spiking the mixer, and then added that the women of Thebes were reputed to brew a powerful drug that cures anger and sorrow (in the Roman period).


But he doesn’t take it any further than that ... basically, Diodorus didn’t know what nepenthes was, nor did Theosphrastus, Dioscurides, or Pliny the Elder (the cool kids who wrote botanical treatises), and neither do we.

And it is probably worth adding that Homer’s story of the adventures of Odysseus is a fable, with umpteen magical creatures and a wily goddess who turns men into pigs, therefore the drug the daughter of Zeus used may simply have been artistic licence, a magical device to further his plot.

In support of this I might point out that the ancient Greeks had a perfectly good word for cannabis – kannabis… botanists wrote about its uses for rope, medicine and as a condiment…we have our word from them.... 

Homer could simply have said kannabis if he meant cannabis.

 

Therefore, zero support from classical writers that cannabis was nepenthes

If nepenthes ever existed.
 

Arata, L., 2004, ‘Nepenthes and Cannabis in Ancient Greece.’ Janus Head 7(1): 34-49.
Homer, Odyssey @ Perseus Digital Library, Tufts - http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0136%3Abook%3D4%3Acard%3D219
Diodorus Siculus, Library, Oldfather translation @ Penelope Uni. Chicago -https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Diodorus_Siculus/1D*.html
Osbaldeston, TA. and RPA. Wood 2000, Dioscurides, de Materia Medica. Johannesburg.



 

9) Egyptian amphorae contained cannabis

I have put this here, not because it is a common myth, but rather because it is a nice example of manipulative citation methods.

The research referred to above is misdirection, in that this study by Rosch (see below) did find ‘Humulus/Cannabis’ as a contaminant in clay vessels from the site of a Coptic church at Kom el Ahmar in Middle Egypt. Humulus is a variety of hops that may be used as a cannabis substitute, the paper never calls this Cannabis sativa.

The study found traces of humulus pollen in Coptic vessels (400 to 800 CE), which is quite a lot later than the ‘period in question’. Therefore, Bennett and McQueen have taken liberties with the data to suit their argument, because these vessels are not ancient Egyptian, nor was the pollen used as a wine mixer, it was too small a quantity to be anything except contamination from handling.
 
I think I am being restrained by calling this misinformation.
 

See:
Rosch M. 2004, ‘Pollen Analysis of the Contents of Excavated Vessels – Direct Archaeobotanical Evidence of Beverages.’ Vegetation History and Archaeobotany @ https://www.researchgate.net/publication/226062487_Pollen_analysis_of_the_contents_of_excavated_vessels_-_Direct_archaeobotanical_evidence_of_beverages


There is a lot to unpack here, silk weavers? ... Asherah? .... resin rubbed on the body?

10) A goddess of cannabis

Seshat was the Egyptian goddess of scribes and record keeping, basically she was the gods’ magical accountant and engineer, who recorded the length of a ruler’s reign and oversaw the foundation of major building projects. While it is possible to find claims that she was goddess of medicine, this was Thoth’s territory, the god of learning.

There is actually nothing associated with this goddess and her duties that would give reason to conclude she was the goddess of cannabis… nothing except the generous employment of the ‘looks-a-bit-like’ system of identification.

The source of this idea is a history hobbyist, Peter Aleff, who in the early 2000s claimed the symbol that is worn over the goddess’s head is a cannabis leaf. His idea was then adopted by Chris Bennett in the book Cannabis and the Soma Solution and the rest took it from there.


This error of judgement is then seamlessly backed up on dodgy sites like Wikipedia and Ancient Origins with images that take liberties with Egyptian art. To hammer the rationale home, these modern drawings make the goddess’s diadem green, when the original symbol is yellow, or on occasion red-brown… it is never green… 

Yes, I wasted a lot of time looking this up.

They also conveniently cherry pick images that most resemble a cannabis leaf (hello the Ramses II wall relief), preferably ignoring high-resolution images that show incongruous details, like a circle or knob at the centre of the petals. This detail varies over 2500 years, but it is on most representations of the symbol.

Left and centre image are the earliest examples of her symbol, Old Kingdom.

The identity of Seshat’s symbol is disputed within Egyptology, for sound reasons; as we are lacking a convenient explanation from an early text or images, but there is a good chance the same applies to Egyptian scribes and artists working after the Old Kingdom, because the symbol changes over time. By the New Kingdom they didn't know either.

Most academics favour the conclusion that it was originally based on a stylised flower or rosette placed on a pole, a few have also suggested a star on a pole, a stylised palm tree or a small hut viewed from above. Dagmar Budde, on the other hand, in her monograph on Seshat proposed that the symbol could be a writing instrument.

Whatever this headdress is, trying to make a stylised drawing from an ancient culture fit your model based on vague similarity to a handshaped leaf from a modern variety of psychoactive plant in the absence of any supporting evidence is unsound.

Altering colour to promote this argument is unethical.

What is more, if you are going to fish around looking for an appropriate goddess of intoxication, the goddess of divine bookkeeping is simply not that girl... the Egyptians had a goddess of ritual intoxication - Hathor.

Are you awake now?  This monstrosity is from prntrkmt.org - 'Bast'.

Elsewhere in contemporary media, the goddesses Bastet (above), Anukis (Unger 1858-9), Asherah (Korn 2020) and Isis (Rätsch 2001) may also be claimed willy nilly to be associated with or patronesses of cannabis in pharaonic Egypt. This too is unsubstantiated bollocks. 
 
It doesn’t really matter who you fancy, there is currently no evidence for a goddess of this plant…or for the plant...

Modern reception artworks are not evidence, they are just manipulative window dressing.

References:
Budde, D. 2000, Die Göttin Seschat, Kanobus 2. Leipzig.
Wilkinson, R.H. 2003, The Complete Gods and Goddesses of Ancient Egypt. London.
 

 
Conclusion

There is currently no evidence from Egypt for knowledge or cultivation of the plant cannabis before the Roman period, all 10 claims discussed above are disputed, exaggerated or downright false.

There is no evidence from royal tombs, from ritual vessels, botanic remains and no secure evidence for use in mummification over a cultural time span of about 3000 years. Therefore, there is no evidence for a ritual or recreational use of the plant in Egypt.

It is common knowledge that the ancient Egyptians had a soft spot for specific intoxicants, like alcohol, and were happy to go into detail about these in their texts and art. Yet in pseudo-science, alcohol consumption and the fact that the Egyptians had a penchant for incense, are deftly employed to prop up the idea that cannabis could have been used in ritual.

But it’s all, quite literally, smoke and mirrors, because one drug does not equal all drugs and incense is not evidence of drug use, or the feds would have raided my house years ago. Except I live in a country where they wouldn’t raid me for personal use, and where hemp by-products are a thriving industry. We quite like the bath oil, btw.

Facepalm.

 
Shemshemet

What is most important however, is there is no confirmed term for cannabis from pharaonic Egypt, apart from one disputed proposal from 1934 that was nonetheless subsequently adopted in some publications on ancient medicine, translations of papyri and hieroglyphic lexica (bearing in mind that these latter may also state that it is disputed). 

The proposal that the plant shemshemet is cannabis is more recently rejected by scholars of Egyptian medicine and botany, because research builds on knowledge, and over the passage of time weak, ethnocentric or unsound claims like this are weeded out.

This is incidentally why you should be wary of older publications, and of authors who cite older publications. I also might add that those academics who have not been cautious in their studies and in their assessment of the sources, must bear some responsibility for facilitating the spread of this myth.

Nonetheless, without confirmation and a consensus among experts that this plant is shemshemet every citation of cannabis from ancient Egyptian medicine is useless.



Andrea Sinclair 

Sept 2022


PS: A year ago after presenting a paper at a conference I was asked why it was necessary to create false histories about psychoactives, and upon reflection I believe there are a few factors, the most important being - profit - many online Weed and pop history clickbait sites are selling a product or adspace, it helps to promote this with cool stories about humankind’s long history with drugs and their possible association with religion: pharaohs, arcane rituals and drugs are easy targets for revenue generation....  

Sadly fairy tales about ancient Egypt sell way better than ‘disputed’.



References - General
Abel, E.L., 1980. Marihuana: The First Twelve Thousand Years. New York.
Emboden, WA. 1972. 'Ritual Use of Cannabis Sativa L.: A Historical-Ethnographic Survey.' In Flesh of the Gods, The Ritual Use of Hallucinogens, PT. Furst (ed), 214-36.
Samorini, G. 2019. ‘The Oldest Archaeological Data Evidencing the Relationship of Homo Sapiens with Psychoactive Plants: A Worldwide Overview.’ Journal of Psychedelic Studies 3(2): 63-8.

Scholars who reject the identification of cannabis in Egypt before the Roman period

Germer, R. 2008, Handbuch der altägyptischen Heilpflanzen. Wiesbaden.
Benson Harer, W., 2015, ‘The Marijuana Myth in Ancient Egypt.’ JARCE 51: 356-7.
Popko, L. 2021, ‘Lexikon zum Papyrus Ebers.’ In Papyrus Ebers: Die größte Schriftrolle zur altägyptischen Heilkunst, Popko, L. U.J. Schneider, and R. Scholl (eds), Darmstadt.
Sanchez, G. and W. Benson Harer, 2019. ‘Toxicology in Ancient Egypt.’ In Toxicology in Antiquity, I.P. Wexler (ed), 73-82. London. 
Sinclair, A. 2024, ‘High Times in Ancient Egypt.’ In Alternative Egyptology: Critical Essays on the Relation Between Academic and Alternative Interpretations of Ancient Egypt, B.J.L. van der Bercken (ed.). Sidestone.

Scholars most cited for cannabis in ancient Egypt

Manniche, L., 1989, An Ancient Egyptian Herbal. London. 
Nunn, J.F., 1996, Ancient Egyptian Medicine. London.
Rudgely, R. 1998, The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Substances. Boston.
 

Bibliography of misinformation

Aleff, H.P., 2015. ‘Maat Soul-mate Seshat Convicted for Possessing Pot and Undeclared Math’, at Recovered Science, http://www.recoveredscience.com/const289seshatemblem.htm
http://www.recoveredscience.com/const201seshathempmath.htm
Bennett, C. 2021. ‘Cannabis in Ancient Egypt’, at Cannabis Culture - https://www.cannabisculture.com/content/2021/02/18/shemshemet-cannabis-in-ancient-egypt/
Bennett, C., 2010. Cannabis and the Soma Solution. Walterville, OR.
Bennett, C. and N. McQueen, 2013. ‘Cannabis and the Hebrew Bible.’ In Entheogens and the Development of Culture, J.A. Rush (ed.), 51-84. California.
Brusco, R., 2017. ‘A Versatile Plant: What Were the Many Uses of Cannabis in Egypt?’ at Ancient Origins.
Hartman, B. 2021, ‘Marijuana in Ancient Times: A History of Cannabis’, at The Cannigma - https://cannigma.com/history/from-ma-to-cbd-history-of-medical-cannabis/
Hilliard, B., 2018. ‘Legalized Marijuana: Canada Comes Round to the Wisdom of Ages,’ at Ancient Origins.
Korn, L.E. 2020, Natural Woman: Herbal Remedies for Radiant Health at Every Age and Stage of Life. Shambahla Press.
Ledger, E. 2021, ‘Cannabis Use in the Ancient World: Ancient Egypt,’ at Canex - https://canex.co.uk/cannabis-use-in-ancient-world-ancient-egypt/
Rätsch, C. 2001. Marijuana Medicine: A World Tour of the Healing and Visionary Powers of Cannabis. Healing Arts Press.

Wikipedia: Medical cannabis and Wikitalk: Seshat (both viewed January 2021, some of that information has now been altered).


And many more












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