Hassan (2001) - Soul Birds and Heavenly Cows
Hassan (2001) - Soul Birds and Heavenly Cows
Hassan (2001) - Soul Birds and Heavenly Cows
INTRODUCTION
This chapter explores issues of sex and gender in predynastic Egypt as may
be discerned from grave goods, figurines, palettes, and iconography. Each
of these categories provides a dimension to the multidimensional space
occupied by each sex as a gendered category. The predynastic is a period
pre-dating the emergence of the first Egyptian dynasties, around 3200 B.C.,
and is subdivided by ceramic assemblages into Nagada I (Amratian),
Nagada II (Gerzean), and Nagada III on the basis of a system of sequence
dating developed by Petrie (1900) and refined by Kaiser (1957).
Radiocarbon chronology of these predynastic units is established by Hassan
(1985). The ceramic zones of the predynastic are identified by reference to
ceramics from the Nagada region between Luxor and Qena on the west
bank of the Nile and at Armant (Petrie and Quibell 1896; Hassan 1988;
Ginter and Kozlowski 1994). Sites with Nagada-like ceramics are known
from many parts of Upper Egypt (fig. 3.1). Late Nagada II ceramics appear
in the Nile delta following the widespread occurrence of a ceramic
assemblage zone known as the Maadian. In Upper Egypt, the Badarian
(Brunton 1937, 1948; Brunton and Caton-Thompson 1928; Holmes and
Friedman 1994) pre-dates the Nagada ceramics.
We approach gender in predynastic Egypt with no favored statement of
the identity of men or women. We chose the subject because we became
aware of the lack of a systematic analysis of the role, position, status, or
identity of women in predynastic Egypt, excepting Ucko’s (1968) opus on
anthropogenic figurines of Predynastic Egypt. Except for sundry statements
on the prominence of women in predynastic Egypt based on cursory
impressions of the sizes of tombs and grave goods of certain women
(Baumgartel 1947, 1970), the subject has not been approached in the
systematic manner it deserves. Recently, a series of studies of grave goods,
focused primarily on an examination of social inequality, pursue the
approaches to mortuary studies developed in mainstream American
archaeology since the early 1970s (for an exhaustive review and critique,
see Carr 1995). Among such studies (Castillos 1979, 1982; Bard 1987,
1988, 1989; Anderson 1989, 1992; Griswald 1992), a study by Ellis (1992)
focuses specifically on gender issues. His analysis of protodynastic burials
(Nagada IIIa2—late First Dynasty, sequence dates 77–82) at Tarkhan
showed that women’s graves contained more types and more artifacts than
men’s graves. By contrast, men’s graves were more voluminous and more
variable. Slate palettes and beads were more common in female graves.
These items were regarded by Ellis as adornments. Another contribution by
Nordström (1996) on burials from the A-Group (contemporaneous with the
terminal predynastic/protodynastic period revealed that relative to male
burials, more female burials contained beads and pendants, amulets,
bracelets, mortars, grinders, copper awls, and collections of pebbles. More
male burials than those of females contained copper adzes, decorated
bowls, feather fans, leather caps and bags, and wooden objects. Both
showed a similar frequency of graves containing ordinary cups, bowls, and
jars; imported Egyptian pots and wine jars; mollusk shells; and stone
palettes. The significance of these differences cannot be easily explained in
terms of stereotypical views of male and female domains informed by our
current social conceptions and master narratives. The formulation of
differences, a function of our criteria and statistical tests, specifies
phenomenal forms. As such, it may mask unconceptualizable differences
(cf. Derrida 1967) and obscures the implications of such differences. The
differences as detected do not constitute the identity of women or define the
difference between the identity of men and women but only point to certain
dimensions of males and females and the potential (symbolic)
significance(s) of these differences. Our analysis aims not to distract from
or silence many other aspects of women or to define immutable qualities,
no matter how such qualities are perpetuated cross-culturally and
throughout history; rather, it aims to explore the momentary concretization
of a collective construction of gender: a moment in the fluid process of
making and unmaking the self. Neither do we claim here that we can single
out individual experiences, convey the emotional intensity of death, or
discuss the unspeakable experiences (Kristeva 1991). These are the
domains of poetry and art requiring no systematic investigation or
intersubjective validation, except inasmuch as we may validate and
acknowledge the feelings of others.
Figure 3.1. Location map of predynastic sites.
SEXING GOODS
One major source of information used here is the statistical examination of
grave goods from five predynastic cemeteries: the Main Cemetery, the B
Cemetery, and the T Cemetery at Nagada, and the cemeteries at Matmar and
Mostagedda in the Badari region. Grave goods from these cemeteries
(Baumgartel 1970) have been recently examined for evidence of social
hierarchy (Bard 1987, 1989; Anderson 1989, 1992). The sample consists of
all graves associated with a skeleton that was sexed, a total of 426 skeletons
(209 females and 217 males). Sex determinations were made on samples of
400 skulls or skeletons from Nagada sent by Petrie to England to be studied
(Fawcett and Lee 1902). Crania from excavations in the Badari region
(including Matmar and Mostagedda) were measured and sex determinations
made by D. E. Derry and B. N. Stoessiger (Morant 1935).
Predynastic cemeteries were adjacent to settlements. The Main Cemetery
at Nagada covered more than 17 acres and consisted of more than 2,100
graves (Petrie and Quibell 1896). At Badari, no segregation of burials by
sex was observed (Brunton 1937: 48). Occasional burials, especially of
children, occurred in the settlement. The bodies were typically placed in a
contacted position with head pointing south and facing west. The hands are
often near the face. Graves were dug as pits and occasionally roofed over
with a few interwoven branches and then covered with earth. Wood remains
are occasionally present and suggest that in some cases wood was used for
roofing, biers, or pit lining. Body wrapping was not reported for the Nagada
cemeteries, except for a mention of traces of cloth. One male skeleton was
wrapped in skin. At Matmar and Mostagedda, matting was placed under
and above the body and is nearly universal in occurrence during the
Badarian, Nagada I, and Nagada II periods. It declines in use through time.
Cloth remnants are occasionally present, but never in a condition that would
allow to determine its use. Skins of gazelle and goat are frequent during the
Badarian at Mostagedda, less so at Matmar, and likely represent a local
practice. By Nagada III, only one skin was found at each cemetery. The hair
side of the skins was placed next to the body and then wrapped in matting.
Some of the burials (4 percent) show evidence of preinterment mutilation or
secondary burial practices. In these cases, the head is often missing. In
others, it is misplaced or buried separately. Ribs, vertebrae, forearms, or
hands are also occasionally misarranged.
Although burial rituals are unknown, Petrie suggested that funeral feasts
were probably held at graveside, where offerings were burned and the ashes
with the sand beneath them placed in the grave (Petrie and Quibell 1896:
19).
FIGURING SEX
The analysis of grave goods provides one dimension of women as a social
phenomenon; anthropomorphic figurines (fig. 3.2) give us another. The
treatise by Ucko (1968) provides drawings (from more than one angle) of
70 figurines and photographs of 36 as well as a descriptive catalog of 226.
In the present study, 94 figurines from published illustrations were
analyzed. Sixty-eight come from mortuary contexts, two come from the
settlements at Badari, and 24 are of unknown provenances. The figurines
come from the cemeteries at Badari, Nagada, Ballas, Mahasna, Dispolis
Parva, Abydos, Mostagedda, Matmar, Mameriaya, Alawniyeh, and Kom El-
Ahmar. Forty-four are from Nagada I, four are from Nagada II, and 46
cannot be assigned to a specific predynastic stage. Assignments of sex were
based on genitals, breasts, and beards as biological sex identifiers. No
contradiction with other characteristics were encountered by this
assignment. The hip-to-waist ratio, following Ucko (1968: 174),
differentiates between females with a ratio of 1.9 to 1 by comparison to 1.4
to 1 for men, with very little overlap. Among the figurines, 72 percent were
females and 28 percent males (28 specimens). Thirty-two variables were
coded for each figurine. Five of these are qualitative, and the rest are
quantitative. Discriminant analysis revealed that female figurines were
more stylized, have a normal distribution of variables, and are more
consistent in their combinations of head height, body height, width, and
number of facial features. Regression analysis revealed that head height and
body height showed little deviation from the “norm” for females, with
greater deviation for male figurines. This may be a function of the absolute
size of the body. As female bodies approached that of males (modality 16 to
18 centimeters), the head height of female figurines became as
unpredictable as that of males. The association between certain features and
the presumed sex (based on one criteria but not necessarily the others) using
Cramer’s V-value suggests a strong association between what is identified
as a figurine’s sex with genitals, breasts, and body shape. The next
relatively strong associations are head, ear, mouth, and chin shape—
features related to the face. One hundred percent of cone-shaped heads and
85 percent of no-neck head type are on female figurines. Spool-shaped ears
are more common in male figurines. Leg position, presence of hair,
presence of a navel, presence of hands, shape of brows, or presence of a
necklace were not significant in distinguishing the sex of a figurine.
However, only female figurines have arms that are long and curved
overhead or curved under the breasts. Of the four males who have arms,
three of them have them in an ordinary position, long and down at the sides.
Twenty-eight percent of the figurines have no eyes. Eyeless females
accounted for 82 percent of the eyeless figurines. When they had eyes, the
eyes were round, by comparison to male figurines with “realistic” almond-
shaped eyes or with pupils and/or eyebrows.
Figure 3.2. Predynastic anthropomorphic figurines.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are most grateful to T. Kohler for assistance with the statistical analysis
and valuable comments. Linda Stone guided us through many of the gender
issues discussed here. Both served as committee members of Smith’s (1984)
thesis. Shelley Smith undertook all the statistical analyses and data
collection and entry and participated in the initial analysis and
interpretation. Fekri A. Hassan, however, is solely responsible for any
interpretative errors or theoretical blunders despite having had enlightening
and instructive discussion with Jeannette Mageo. Lana Troy shared her vast
knowledge of the secrets of Egyptian goddesses and queens. Her insights
were invaluable.