Darnell 2020
Darnell 2020
Darnell 2020
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1 Stan Hendrickx, ‘The Dog, the Lycaon Pictus, and Order over Chaos in Predynastic
Egypt’, in K. Kroeper, M. Chlodnicki and M. Kobusiewicz (eds.), Archaeology of Early
Northeastern Africa, Studies in African Archaeology 9 (Poznan: Poznan Archaeological
Museum, 2006), pp. 728, 736–9; John Coleman Darnell, ‘The Wadi of the Horus Qa-a:
A Tableau of Royal Ritual Power in the Theban Western Desert’, in R. F. Friedman and
P. N. Fiske (eds.), Egypt at its Origins 3, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 205 (Leuven:
Peeters, 2011), pp. 1151–93; Gwenola Graff, Les Peintures sur vases de Nagada I – Nagada II:
nouvelle approche sémiologique de l’iconographie prédynastique, Egyptian Prehistory
Monographs 6 (Leuven: Leuven University Press, 2009), pp. 91–112.
2 Bruce Beyer Williams and Thomas J. Logan, with William J. Murnane, ‘The
Metropolitan Museum Knife Handle and Aspects of Pharaonic Imagery before
Narmer’, Journal of Near Eastern Studies 46.2 (1987), 245–85; Winfried Barta, Das
Selbstzeugnis eines altägyptischen Künstlers (Stele Louvre C 14) (Berlin: Verlag Bruno
Hessling, 1970), pp. 104–20.
3 John Coleman Darnell, ‘Homo Pictus and Painted Men: Depictions and Intimations of
Humans in the Rock Art of the Theban Western Desert’, in D. Huyge and F. van Noten
(eds.), ‘Whatever Happened to the People?’ Humans and Anthropomorphs in the Rock Art of
Northern Africa (Brussels: Royal Academy for Overseas Sciences, 2018), pp. 397–418.
182
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The Ritualisation of Military Violence in Ancient Egypt
providing the template for much of the imagery, iconography and later
literature of pharaonic warfare. As late as the New Kingdom, major military
campaigns could coincide with hunting expeditions. At the dawn of the New
Kingdom an association of a hunting expedition with military activity appears
to be in place, a grouping repeated throughout the first half of the
Eighteenth Dynasty.4 So Thutmosis I (c. 1504–1492 B CE ) in northern Syria
fought a battle with human enemies from Mitanni (northern Mesopotamia)
and hunted elephants in Niye; Thutmosis III (c. 1479–1425 BCE ) on northern
campaign repeated the hunting of elephants in Niye, and added as
an aside to a campaign in Nubia the hunt of rhinoceros.
183
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The Ritualisation of Military Violence in Ancient Egypt
12 Detlef Franke, ‘Schlagworte: Über den Umgang mit Gegnern in Memorialtexten des
Mittleren Reiches’, in H. Felber (ed.), Feinde und Aufrührer: Konzepte von Gegnerschaft in
ägyptischen Texten besonders des Mittleren Reiches, Abhandlungen der Sächsischen
Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig, phil.-hist. Klasse 78/5 (Leipzig: Verlag der
Sächsischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig, 2005), pp. 89–110.
13 Amaury Pétigny, ‘Le Châtiment des rois rebelles à Memphis dans la seconde moitié du
Ier millénaire av. J.-C.’, in L. Bares, F. Coppens and K. Smoláriková (eds.), Egypt in
Transition: Social and Religious Development of Egypt in the First Millennium BCE
(Prague: Karolinum Press, 2010), pp. 343–53; X. Droux, ‘Une representation de
prisonniers décapités en provenance de Hiérakonpolis’, Bulletin de la Société
d’Égyptologie de Genève 27 (2005–7), 33–42.
14 Robert Kriech Ritner, The Mechanics of Ancient Egyptian Magical Practice (Chicago:
Oriental Institute, University of Chicago Press, 1993), pp. 153–80.
15 Kyle van Leer, ‘A Textual Analysis and Commentary on the Tod Inscription of Sesostris
I’, unpublished senior essay, Yale College, 2013, 68–79.
16 Françoise Labrique, ‘“Transpercer l’âne” à Edfou’, in J. Quaegebeur (ed.), Ritual and
Sacrifice in the Ancient Near East, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 55 (Leuven: Peeters,
1994), pp. 175–89; Dirk Huyge, ‘Detecting Magic in Rock Art: The Case of the Ancient
Egyptian “Malignant Ass”’, in H. Riemer et al. (eds.), Desert Animals in the Eastern
Sahara: Status, Economic Significance and Cultural Refiection in Antiquity, Colloquium
Africanum 4 (Cologne: Heinrich Barth Institut, 2010), pp. 293–307.
185
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17 Hermann Junker, ‘Die Feinde auf dem Sockel der Chasechem-Statuen und die
Darstellung von geopferten Tieren’, in O. Firchow (ed.), Ägyptologische Studien
(Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 1955), pp. 168–75; Renate Müller-Wollermann, Vergehen und
Strafen: zur Sanktionierung abweichenden Verhaltens im alten Ägypten, Probleme der
Ägyptologie 21 (Leiden: Brill, 2004), pp. 209–16.
18 Sethe, Urkunden der 18. Dynastie, p. 8, ll. 14–19, l. 5; Vivian Davies and Renée Friedman,
Egypt (London: British Museum Press, 1998), p. 110; Erik Hornung, The Ancient Egyptian
Books of the Afterlife, trans. David Lorton (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1999),
pp. 38–9; John C. Darnell, The Enigmatic Netherworld Books of the Solar Osirian Unity:
Cryptographic Compositions in the Tombs of Tutankhamun, Ramesses VI, and Ramesses IX
(Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2004), pp. 209–16; Andrea Klug, Königliche Stelen
in der Zeit von Ahmose bis Amenophis III, Monumenta Aegyptiaca 8 (Brussels: Fondation
Égyptologique Reine Élisabeth, 2002), pp. 351–2.
19 Peter Beylage, Aufbau der königlichen Stelentexte, vom Beginn der 18. Dynastie bis zur
Amarnazeit, ÄAT 54 (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2002), pp. 267–8, 696–700; Klug,
Königliche Stelen, pp. 278–92.
20 Alfred Grimm, ‘Ein Käfig für einen Gefangenen in einem Ritual zur Vernichtung
von Feinden’, Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 73 (1987), 202–6; Alfred Grimm, ‘Der Tod
im Wasser: Rituelle Feindvernichtung und Hinrichtung durch Ertränken’, Studien
zur Altägyptischen Kultur 16 (1989), 111–19; Yvan Koenig, Magie et magiciens dans
l’Égypte ancienne (Paris: Pygmalion Editions, 1997), pp. 149–56.
186
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The Ritualisation of Military Violence in Ancient Egypt
elements of the chariot – such as lynch pins – that could be carved in the
shape of the heads of foreign enemies.21
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john c. d A rnell
ritual events), and again during Naqada III (as a more prominent element
within a depiction of what may be a ritual celebration of the aftermath
of a conflict).25 In both of those examples the event occurs outside of battle,
within a ritual context, and the same striking pose could appear in other
rituals as a consecratory gesture.26 Evidence from bodies of soldiers
dating to the early Twelfth Dynasty suggests that such a blow was
indeed given as a coup de grâce to hopelessly wounded combatants, and
at least some versions of the smiting scene may have been acted out
within a ritual setting.27 The reigns of both Akhenaton and Merneptah
indeed provide evidence for the revelation of royal victory going beyond
the display of corpses to the otherwise rarely attested use of impalement
of defeated enemy leaders.
According to the texts and iconography of pharaonic power, Egyptian
deities both sanctioned warfare and influenced the Egyptians’ martial
success. By the New Kingdom the Egyptian ruler clearly derives his
authority to make war from the gods, who present him with
a weapon – usually a sickle sword – while the king adopts the smiting
pose; this presentation is common in iconography, and is even attested to
as the subject of a dream appearance of the god Ptah. The divine ruler
himself would also trample enemies beneath his feet. The bases of
statues, the pavements of ritual structures and palaces, and the soles of
sandals could bear images of bound enemies, and the handle of a royal
sceptre might take the form of an enemy bent in the back-breaking pose
of the object of the king’s wrath in the gesture of waf-khasout, ‘bending
back the foreign lands’.28
188
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The Ritualisation of Military Violence in Ancient Egypt
Combat in Earnest
Although evidence for human conflict during a time of climatic change
is present in the form of ‘overkilled’ human remains from a Palaeolithic
cemetery at Gebel Sahaba in Nubia (at least 11,600 years ago), the
earliest continuous and iconographically informative evidence for the
imagery of human conflict begins in Upper Egypt and Lower Nubia
around the cusp of the fifth and fourth millennia BCE . Parallel to the
ritual equation of hunting and warfare, organised conflict in ancient
Egypt emphasised speed and manoeuvre over the clash of major oppos-
ing forces that would underpin hoplite battles of the second half of the
first millennium BCE . This general eschewing of shock tactics led to the
increased employment of mercenaries, particularly during later phases of
the Pharaonic period, with resulting implications for Egyptian society. 29
Nevertheless, military training could be violent itself, and may have
involved considerable exercise in hand-to-hand combat, along with the
development of the physical stamina necessary for rapid movement over
long distances.30 Scenes in the Middle Kingdom tomb of Baket at Beni
Hasan show what appear to be 220 different wrestling positions/holds,
in decoration that depicts military activity that involves the storming of
a fortified position.31
Both the pictorial evidence and human remains suggest that the
majority of injuries resulting from both projectile weapons and the
crushing blows of close combat were to the chest and abdomen.32
Although not referenced in any royal monument, conflicts both within
Egypt and on the periphery thereof could take the form of a monomachy
29 Colleen Manassa, The Great Karnak Inscription of Merneptah: Grand Strategy in the 13th
Century BC, Yale Egyptological Studies 5 (New Haven, CT: Yale Egyptological Seminar,
2003), pp. 77–82; Dan’el Kahn and Oded Tammuz, ‘Egypt is Difficult to Enter: Invading
Egypt – a Game Plan (Seventh-Fourth Centuries BCE)’, Journal of the Society for the
Study of Egyptian Antiquities 35 (2008), 37–66.
30 Ricardo A. Caminos, Late-Egyptian Miscellanies, Brown Egyptological Studies 1
(London: Oxford University Press, 1954), pp. 91–5; Hartwig Altenmüller and
Ahmed M. Moussa, ‘Die Inschriften auf der Taharkastele von der Dahschurstrasse’,
Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur 9 (1981), 57–84; Wolfgang Decker and Frank Förster,
‘Sahures tranierte Truppe. Sporthistorische Bemerkungen zu einem Relief aus der
Pyramidenanlage des ägyptischen Königs Sahure (2496–2483 v. Chr.)’, Nikephoros 24
(2011), 17–70.
31 Abdel Ghaffar Shedid, Die Felsgräber von Beni Hassan im Mittelägypten, Zaberns
Bildbände zur Archäologie 16 (Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 1994), p.
31, figs. 43–5.
32 Gonzalo M. Sanchez, ‘A Neurosurgeon’s View of the Battle Reliefs of King Sety I:
Aspects of Neurological Importance’, Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 37
(2000), 143–65.
189
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33 David Klotz, ‘Emhab versus the tmrhtn: Monomachy and the Expulsion of the Hyksos’,
Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur 39 (2010), 211–41; Bernard Mathieu, ‘Du conflit
archaïque au mythe osirien: pour une lecture socio-politique du mythe dans l’Égypte
pharaonique’, Droits et Cultures 71 (2016), 20, n. 76.
34 Kurt Sethe, Urkunden der Alten Reiches, 2nd edn (Leipzig: J. C. Hinrichs’sche
Buchhandlung, 1933), vol. I, p. 103, l. 6–p. 104, l. 4.
35 Susanna Heinz, Die Feldzugsdarstellungen des Neuen Reiches: Eine Bildanalyse (Vienna:
Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2001), p. 239.
36 Kenneth A. Kitchen, Ramesside Inscriptions, Historical and Biographical 2 (Oxford:
Blackwell, 1979), p. 354, l. 5; Epigraphic Survey, Reliefs and Inscriptions at Karnak 3: The
Bubastite Portal, Oriental Institute Publications 74 (Chicago: Oriental Institute,
University of Chicago Press, 1954), pl. 16 C, l. 34.
190
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The Ritualisation of Military Violence in Ancient Egypt
37 William J. Murnane, Texts from the Amarna Period in Egypt (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1995),
pp. 101–3; Manassa, Great Karnak Inscription, p. 100.
38 Müller-Wollermann, Vergehen und Strafen, pp. 197–8.
39 Krzysztof M. Cialowicz, Les Palettes égyptiennes aux motifs zoomorphes et sans
décoration, Studies in Ancient Art and Civilization 3 (Cracow: Uniwersytet
Jagiellonski, 1991), pp. 56–7; Spalinger, Icons of Power, p. 63, n. 17 and p. 64, n. 3. See
Jacques Vandier, Mo‘alla, la tombe d’Ankhtifi et la tombe de Sébekhotep, Bibliothèque
d’Études 18 (Cairo: Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale, 1950), pp. 220–5 for food
as a weapon in internal Egyptian conflicts.
40 Zbynek Zába, The Rock Inscriptions of Lower Nubia (Czechoslovak Concession) (Prague:
Universita Karlova, 1974), inscription no. 73; Christopher J. Eyre, ‘The Semna Stela:
Quotation, Genre, and Functions of Literature’, in S. Israelit-Groll (ed.), Studies in
Egyptology Presented to Miriam Lichtheim (Jerusalem: Magnes Press, 1990), pp. 134–65.
191
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The Ritualisation of Military Violence in Ancient Egypt
45 John Coleman Darnell et al., Two Early Alphabetic Inscriptions from the Wadi el-Hôl: New
Evidence for the Origin of the Alphabet from the Western Desert of Egypt , Annual of the
American Schools of Oriental Research 59/2 (Boston: American Schools of Oriental
Research, 2005), pp. 87–90.
46 Manassa, Imagining the Past, pp. 91–4.
47 John Coleman Darnell, ‘The Stela of the Viceroy Usersatet (Boston MFA 25.632), his
Shrine at Qasr Ibrim, and the Festival of Nubian Tribute under Amenhotep II’, Égypte
Nilotique et Méditerranéenne 7 (2014), 239–76, http://recherche.univ-montp3.fr/egypto
logie/enim.
48 Silke Roth, Gebieterin aller Länder (Freiburg: Universitätsverlag, 2002), pp. 26–9;
Epigraphic Survey, Reliefs and Inscriptions at Luxor Temple 1: The Festival Procession of
Opet in the Colonnade Hall, Oriental Institute Publications 112 (Chicago: Oriental
Institute Press, 1994), pls. 28–9; Friedhelm Hoffmann, ‘Warlike Women in Ancient
Egypt’, Cahiers de Recherches de l’Institut de Papyrologie et d’Égyptologie de Lille 27 (2008),
49–57.
193
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Bibliographic Essay
For warfare and hunting see the following: Stan Hendrickx, ‘L’iconographie de la chasse
dans le contexte social prédynastique’, Archéo-Nil 20 (2010), 106–33; Stan Hendrickx et al.,
‘Late Predynastic/Early Dynastic Rock Art Scenes of Barbary Sheep Hunting from Egypt’s
Western Desert. From Capturing Wild Animals to the “Women of the Acacia House”’, in
H. Riemer et al. (eds), Desert Animals in the Eastern Sahara: Status, Economic Significance and
Cultural Refiection in Antiquity, Colloquium Africanum 4 (Cologne: Heinrich Barth Institut,
2010), pp. 189–244; Wolfgang Decker and Michael Herb, Bildatlas zum Sport im alten
Ägypten. Corpus der bildlichen Quellen zu Leibesübungen, Spiel, Jagd, Tanz und verwandten
Themen, Handbuch der Orientalistik XIV 1–2 (Leiden: Brill, 1994).
Overall studies of warfare and military imagery are as follows: Juan Carlos
Moreno Garcia, ‘War in Old Kingdom Egypt (2686–2125 BCE)’, in J. Vidal (ed.), Studies
on War in the Ancient Near East: Collected Essays on Military History, Alter Orient und Altes
Testament 372 (Münster: Ugarit Verlag, 2010), pp. 5–41; Anthony J. Spalinger, War in
Ancient Egypt: The New Kingdom (Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2005); Rolf Gundlach and
Carola Vogel (eds.), Militärgeschichte des pharaonischen Ägyptens: Altägypten und seine
Nachbarkulutren im Spiegel aktueller, Forschung, Krieg in der Geschichte 34 (Paderborn:
Ferdinand Schöningh, 2009); Susanna Heinz, Die Feldzugsdarstellungen des Neuen Reiches:
Eine Bildanalyse (Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften,
2001).
Discussions of ritualised violence are Alan R. Schulman, Ceremonial Execution and Public
Rewards: Some Historical Scenes on New Kingdom Private Stelae, Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 75
(Leuven: Peeters, 1988), and Kerry Muhlestein, Violence in the Service of Order: The Religious
Framework for Sanctioned Killing in Ancient Egypt, BAR International Series 2299 (Oxford:
Archaeopress, 2011). For Magic and military violence see Robert Kriech Ritner, The
Mechanics of Ancient Egyptian Magical Practice, Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization 54
(Chicago: Oriental Institute, 1993).
For weapons see Walter Wolf, Die Bewaffnung des altägyptischen Heeres (Leipzig:
J. C. Hinrichs’sche Buchhandlung, 1926); Yigael Yadin, The Art of Warfare in Biblical
Lands in the Light of Archaeological Study (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1963); Ian Shaw,
Egyptian Warfare and Weapons (Princes Risborough: Shire Publications, 1999); and
Gregory Phillip Gilbert, Weapons, Warriors and Warfare in Early Egypt, BAR
International Series 1208 (Oxford: Archaeopress, 2004). For the physical impacts of some
of those weapons, see J. M. Filer, ‘Ancient Egypt and Nubia as a Source of
Information for
Cranial Injuries’, in John Carman (ed.), Material Harm, Archaeological Studies of War and
Violence (Glasgow: Cruithne Press, 1997). On the chariot see Mary A. Littauer and Joost
H. Crouwel, Selected Writings on Chariots and other Early Vehicles, Riding and Harness,
Culture and History of the Ancient Near East 6 (Leiden: Brill, 2002), and André
J. Veldmeijer and Salima Ikram (eds.), Chasing Chariots: Proceedings of the First
International Chariot Conference (Cairo, 2012) (Leiden: Sidestone Press, 2013). On nautical
aspects of the Egyptian military see Shelley Wachsmann, Seagoing Ships and Seamanship in
the Bronze Age Levant (College Station and London: Texas A&M University Press and
Chatham Publishing, 2008), and David Fabre (ed.), Le Destin maritime de l’Égypte ancienne
(London: Periplus Publishing, 2004).
196
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