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Abstract ICE XI Florence 2015

A Good Season to die: Variability in Seasonality of Death in Late Period Cemeteries ...Read more
Zeinab El Said Hashesh Ministry of Anquies, Egypt A Good Season to die: Variability in Seasonality of Death in Late Period Cemeteries The spaal orientaon of Ancient Egypan interments is part of a larger system of funerary ritual and beliefs, which places the body of the deceased between the realms of the dead and the living through the liminal act of burial. Though burial orientaon changed over me, direconality was clearly important, and carried connotaons of symbolism related to the belief in the aſterlife. Interesngly, there appears to be two different symbolic connotaons at play, one connected with the direcon the dead were facing, and one with the posion of the body as a whole. Burial alignment was closely associated with the movement of the sun across the sky, parcularly from the New Kingdom onward, and the bodies of the deceased were oſten aligned east-west according to the seng sun, with the head to the west, towards the realm of Osiris, and facing east, towards the origin of new life. Assuming, then, that this orientaon was intenonal, we can use the variaon in alignment – caused by the movement of the earth around the sun - to calculate the seasonality of burial in cemetery samples using different methods such as archaeoastronomy and stascal analysis of field measurement data. This paper will compare the results of the burial alignment analysis at the Late period cemeteries at Memphis Necropolis.the variaon in seasonality between Cemeteries could be due to economic and religious reasons ,also the correlaons between certain diseases and seasonality of death
Zeinab El Said Hashesh Ministry of Antiquities, Egypt A Good Season to die: Variability in Seasonality of Death in Late Period Cemeteries The spatial orientation of Ancient Egyptian interments is part of a larger system of funerary ritual and beliefs, which places the body of the deceased between the realms of the dead and the living through the liminal act of burial. Though burial orientation changed over time, directionality was clearly important, and carried connotations of symbolism related to the belief in the afterlife. Interestingly, there appears to be two different symbolic connotations at play, one connected with the direction the dead were facing, and one with the position of the body as a whole. Burial alignment was closely associated with the movement of the sun across the sky, particularly from the New Kingdom onward, and the bodies of the deceased were often aligned east-west according to the setting sun, with the head to the west, towards the realm of Osiris, and facing east, towards the origin of new life. Assuming, then, that this orientation was intentional, we can use the variation in alignment – caused by the movement of the earth around the sun - to calculate the seasonality of burial in cemetery samples using different methods such as archaeoastronomy and statistical analysis of field measurement data. This paper will compare the results of the burial alignment analysis at the Late period cemeteries at Memphis Necropolis.the variation in seasonality between Cemeteries could be due to economic and religious reasons ,also the correlations between certain diseases and seasonality of death