ikhet_sekhmet: (Default)
Part one of my notes

I'm up to the papyri I'm most interested in -- the ones Niwiński calls "the new redaction [of the Book of the Dead] of the 21st Dynasty", ie the ones with all the strange new imagery. So I thought I'd start a new posting.

(p 132) Niwiński divides them into groups, starting with "the figural hieroglyphic papyri":

- more pictures than text
- the etiquette's on the right; you read the scroll right to left.
- the writing's in hieroglyphs (as opposed to hieratic), arranged in vertical columns
- the etiquette and vignettes, and often the border, are coloured
- the content is mostly chapters of the Book of the Dead, but there are new illustrations invented at the start of the 21st Dynasty
- included a limited repertoire of BD spells (some taking on the function of others, some changed)

"... among those belonging to the subtype under discussion, several "families", or groups of the papyri of analogous contents can be distinguished, being probably reflection of the origin of these papyri from the same workshop, where the same patterns of texts and scenes were used." That's extraordinary -- we're almost down to the individual artist here. I wonder where the new patterns came from? Perhaps a master artisan said, right, this is what we're doing now? Maybe after discussions with a priest?

The judgement scene (BD 125, and also representing BD 30B) is the most common scene on Niwiński's papyri, often accompanied by BD 126. (I'm confess I don't know my BD chapters very well so I'm going to have to look some of this up. Can't wait for more libraries to have The Oxford Handbook to the Book of the Dead). There's a new scene of purification, called BD 195, on many papyri, and many have BD 149/150. BD 186, the Hathor-cow emerging from the mountain, is popular on papyri and coffins (p 140). Rituals are sometimes represented (p 143).

(p 139) "The creativity of the Theban artists of the period expressed itself in a great number of figural variations of the same theme, each papyrus being, practically, a unique combination of the motives, even within the same family', or series of papyri." In the judgement scene, Osiris can be replaced by the sun-god.

As well as variations on chapters from the Book of the Dead and other afterlife books, there were new theological compositions, such as the scene with Geb lying beneath Nut (p 147). In a small number of cases, scenes from the Amduat crop up on a papyrus titled "Book of the Dead" and vice versa (p 150).

(p 151) This type of papyrus first appears at the start of the 21st Dynasty and is in full swing by the middle, until the end of the reign of the High Priest Pinudjem II. There are still "sporadic" examples after this, but they've disappeared by the 22nd Century.


The next subcategory of papyrus Niwiński considers (p 152) is similar to the above, but:

- in black ink only, with occasional use of red
- quality of the drawings varies
- many more pictures than text
- probably got started under the High Priest Menkheperre and went until the end of the 21st Dynasty

(Fig 45 is the bizarre version of Osiris that got this whole obsession going. I love all this crazy post-New Kingdom iconography, the crazier the better. You get so used to the staid, traditional representations in coffee table books, and then bam, Osiris has a donkey's head and Sekhmet is a hedgehog.)


Niwiński puts the papyrus of Nesitanebetasheru (aka the Greenfield Papyrus) into its own category, with 87 chapters of the Book of the Dead and lots of extra hymns etc, written in hieratic, all illustrated in black ink.


Almost all of the other papyri Niwiński considered have the Amduat. Some have just the last four hours of the book, some include content from the Book of the Dead, and some have contents closer to the Litany of Re, even though they're entitled the Amduat.

The Amduat starts out in royal tombs, as does the Litany of Re. Amduat papyri for private individuals were introduced at the start of the 21st Dynasty, or the end of the 20th, in what Niwiński calls "the Renaissance Era under Ramesses XI and the HP Herihor". Mummies were usually buried with two papyri, a Book of the Dead and an Amduat (but sometimes it's only the title that tells you which is which -- p 236).

Niwiński groups the Amduat papyri into four main groups:
- the ones that resemble the Litany of Re (and perhaps BD 168)
- the more traditional ones, closer to those found in royal tombs
- the ones that resemble the Book of the Dead
- the bonkers ones (my favourite)

The first group, the Litany of Re-like papyri, are divided into many panels, each one containing one form of the "united Osirian-solar aspects of the Great God", each one labelled with that form's name. These appeared while Herihor was High Priest and disappeared under Pinudjem II. There are also two papyri which have, as well as the catalogue of the forms of the Great God, "additional iconographic representations".

The next group is based on the Amduat as it appears in royal tombs. Typically there's the etiquette at right, then the last four hours of the Amduat, read left to right, so that the 12th hour is up against the etiquette. The papyri are illustrated in black and maybe red. They first appear in the middle of the 21st Dynasty.

There's a variation where, instead of the normal 3 registers, the figures are laid out in 1 or 2 registers, presumably because the papyrus was too small! The content of these may be "transformed under the influence of other iconographic compositions, and owing to an individual artistic invention of the drawer." Another variation from the late 21st Dynasty is short, usually lacking the etiquette; the four hours are represented by a few figures each.

Next up are the papyri which include motifs from both the Amduat and the Book of the Dead -- how much from each varies from papyrus to papyrus. Ideally, mummies were buried with a BD (in a papyrus sheath) and an Amduat (wrapped with the mummy -- p 213), so even if there were Book of the Dead content, the papyrus must have still been seen as an Amduat. On the other hand, for some burials such as those with only one papyrus, they might have played the role of both texts at once.

The last group comprises papyri which include stuff from the Amduat, the Book of the Dead, and other compositions as well, such as the Book of Caverns, Book of Gates, and Book of the Earth. One subgroup of similar papyri have the deceased worshipping a series of figures from the BD (p 192-3). There's a tendency to cram as much stuff onto the papyrus as possible -- figures, symbols, etc. The figures are often transformed from their original appearance, and new scenes invented by the 21st Dynasty artists appear. This group includes the papyri sometimes called mythological papyri, although Niwiński argues against using this term. Similarities between some of the papyri suggest that the same artist would prepare both of the papyri for the same burial. OTOH sometimes there is a "striking contrast" between them (p 214).


A few bits and pieces:

(p 219) "Poor people buried without coffins or papyri could only rely on the magical protection furnished by the religious texts and representations on papyri and coffins belonging to other deceased persons lying in the same tomb-cachette."

(p 220) The decorations on coffins were an extension of the papyri -- they didn't duplicate their contents. eg Sutimes' outer coffin has the Litany of Re type figures, instead of the expected papyrus (though there's a bit of repetition of the BD stuff on the inner coffin, eg the Weighing of the Heart scene). In the late 21D/early 22D there was more duplication.

(p 236) The fact that papyri vary so widely in quality indicates that you didn't have to be high-status and rich to be entitled to a funerary papyrus.

(p 237) In the 22nd Dynasty the papyri soon settle down into hieratic BD without pictures and traditional Amduats. In turn the Amduat papyri disappear some time during the later Third Intermediate Period.

Good grief, I'm finished!

Andrzej Niwiński. Studies on the Illustrated Theban Funerary Papyri of the 11th and 10th Centuries BC. Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 86. Göttingen, Vandenhoeck u. Ruprecht, 1989.

ikhet_sekhmet: (Default)
A few notes. (Not a definitive summary of the book, just whatever caught my eye. Which I admit was a lot.)

(p3) The artists who worked on the 21st Dynasty funerary papyri and coffins must have worked from "artists' patterns". As often happens, that detail seemed to bring them alive in my mind's eye.

(p3-5) With some exceptions, in the New Kingdom, middle- and upper-class Egyptians and even queens could only use the Book of the Dead, while other funerary texts like Amduat and the Litany of Re were reserved for the king.

(p 7) Post-Amarna, funerary papyri started being contained in elaborate "papyrus sheaths" such as this one.

(p 8) When researchers started studying BD they thought it was like the Bible, with a standard, immutable text, so they took the best copy they could find (belonging to a Ptolemaic Egyptian named Iufankh) and divided it up into the chapters still in use. (I need to get my head around the different "redactions" / "recensions".)

(p 13) "Most of the funerary papyri begin with such a big adoration scene before a god sitting in a chapel. We will designate the initial scene, where a legend with the titles and names of the deceased and his spouse is usually encountered, with the term 'etiquette'." (Example here?) In the NK this is on the leftmost end of the scroll, in the 21D on the right.

(p 17) "Papyrus was rather expensive, and the value of a ready exemplar of the Book of the Dead... was 1 deben of silver, according to some materials from Deir el-Medina." Papyrus was sometimes reused (p76).

(p 18) Books of the Dead were pre-made and the owner's name filled in after purchase; but some were made to order, sometimes by the owner themselves, so they might have chosen which chapters and vignettes to include. (I've wondered if something similar happened with the yellow coffins.)

(p 19) In post-Amarna / Ramesside times, vignettes get bigger and better drawn, while text has more errors. (Hilariously, the start of the scroll tends to be the best-drawn, coloured, and written, which suggests only the start was shown to the customer!) Niwiński argues that the Egyptians were following a principle he calls pars pro toto -- a part for the whole -- wherein just part of the book can stand for the entire thing. So scrolls have a selection of chapters, summaries of chapters, shortened chapters, and vignettes taking the place of the text. A single spell might stand for two or even many spells. Even texts with errors, or that had been combined and no longer made sense, counted as the real thing. (This approach wasn't due to indifference or lack of ability. (p 44))

(p 32) Decorations from the BD on the tomb walls could probably substitute for a papyrus. In the 21st Dynasty, tombs were undecorated, with all the decoration going to papyri and coffins: at Thebes, "tombs of the Third Intermediate Period have the form of rock caches containing the shaft, the corridor and one or more rough chambers, the walls of which are even not smoothed." (p 35) But tomb robberies continued. "Better results were assured only through the founding of a well-protected cemetery with some huge mass tomb-caches (like Bab el-Gusus) in later years of the Dynasty." (p 37)

(p 37) For economic reasons, 21st Dynasty funerary papyri were shorter and about half as tall as their New Kingdom equivalents. (Mostly 22-25 cm high, and mostly less than 2 m long, p 74.) This made it necessary to use the pars pro toto rule to represent chapters by a fragment of text, a title, or just a vignette. The title was usually written on the back on the right-hand side (p 76).

(p 38) "A series of new iconographic compositions were then created, which represented complicated conceptions of cosmogony, cosmology and eschatology by means of a limited number of figural symbols. All these scenes were an illustration of the principal theological idea of the period: the solar-Osirian unity of the aspects of the Great God, with whom the deified deceased was identified... During the travel the deceased as a form of the Sun passed through an infinite number of transformations that were at the same time understood as multiplex creations of Osiris 'with many faces' (š3 ḥrw) , or 'with many forms' (š3 ḫprw) , or else 'with many names' (š3 rnw)". The idea of Osiris with many forms, and an eternal journey with the sun, reflects the contents of the Litany of Re and other books. Papyri didn't have enough room to hold all of this; so the inner coffins were covered in vignette. (Outer coffins continued to be decorated with traditional motifs (p 42).

(p 39) The new scene included
-- Shu lifting Nut
-- Osiris on the Double Staircase protected by the Great Serpent
-- the solar barque above chopped-up Apophis
-- the Sycamore Goddess
-- the Cosmic Cow going forth from the Western Mountain

(p 42) "Since the early years of the Dynasty, until at least the middle of the 9th century B.C. each typical funerary ensemble comprised two papyri: the BD-manuscript in the papyrus-sheath, and the 'Amduat' -papyrus bandaged together with the mummy, usually placed between its legs." The need for two papyri per burial meant an increase in the number of workshops. Some of the workers were better than others, and some clients might have been able to pay for better quality products than others. They worked from many different patterns of the texts and pictures. (p 43)

The papyri are very various, in size, length, and content.

(p 44) "some papyri entitled pry m hrw do not resemble the Book of the Dead of the New Kingdom at all... often one finds himself faced with quite new texts and scenes without any analogy."

(p 45) "There are coloured papyri with their vignettes painted red, white, blue, green, brown, pink and even gilded ones, and the figures and some other papyri of the same period are only outlined in black." Some are mostly text; some are almost entirely pictures.

(p 71) After a discussion of the history of the study of the papyri, Niwiński concludes we should drop "mythological papyri" as a third category (after Book of the Dead and Amduat). Not sure I follow this yet.

(p 77) For some papyri, such as those depicting the BD or the Amduat, the artist didn't have a lot of choice about content. But they did control some details, such as the border decoration.

(p 93) The texts on the papyri fall into these groups: (a) BD excerpts, (b) hymns and "litany-like incantations" illustrated by "the Great God in his different forms": Osiris, Re, the door guardians, the judges; (c) Amduat excerpts; (d) excerpts from the Books of the Underworld (the Book of Gates, Book of Caverns, Book of the Earth, etc); (e) offering formulas.

(p 95) The illustrations fall into these groups: (a) BD vignettes; (b) illustrations to hymns and litanies; (c) Amduat illustrations; (d) Books of the Underworld illustrations; (e) the original 21st Dynasty images.

(Never seen the door guardians and the judges of the weighing of the heart referred to as aspects of Osiris-Re before, though I suppose it makes sense!)

(p 97) Most papyri included an "etiquette", a large opening vignette with the deceased's name and titles, often with a portrait of the deceased worshipping a god (most often Osiris (p99)). (Here's Pinedjem II's, which includes no other illustrations. And here's Maatkare's, with the God's Wife depicted as a divinity herself, receiving offerings.)

(p 105) Papyri which were given a title might be entitled the Book of Coming Forth by Day (ie the Book of the Dead), or the Amduat. Book of the Dead papyri included those where images take up 90% of the decorated space, including the newly devised images, which don't illustrate BD chapters. Niwiński calls these "the new redaction of the 21st Dynasty (p 123). (There are also new images added to the traditional Book of the Dead illustrations, such as Amentet with a hieroglyphic head and the mouse-headed god who holds a hand to his snout. (p 123).

This way to part two of my notes!
___
Andrzej Niwiński. Studies on the Illustrated Theban Funerary Papyri of the 11th and 10th Centuries BC. Orbis Biblicus et Orientalis 86. Göttingen, Vandenhoeck u. Ruprecht, 1989.








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