Abstract

A description of the typical Egyptian treatment of the body from death to interment during Ptolemaic and Roman times will not differ in its main elements from a similar account of earlier periods: The dead were mourned at home and then transported to the embalming place, normally situated on the west bank of the Nile River, where the mummification of the body and accompanying rituals were executed. From there they were taken to be buried in their tombs. The tomb could still be an individual, new building, but even for persons of higher status, collective burials in large tomb complexes of earlier periods had become the standard solution. In the Roman period, the stelae marking the burial place of a person were successively abandoned, the mummy-labels maybe taking over this function. Therefore one can often read, and maybe correctly so, that during the periods treated here the focus of funerary cult shifted from the tomb closer to the body, i.e., to the mummy in its envelope and/or coffin(s). Equipping the deceased for an eternal existence in the necropolis was an integral part of Egyptian funerary practice. This is why several paragraphs here are devoted to categories of funerary objects. The high level of diachronic and synchronic variation testifies to their important position in cultural discourse. After the burial, the tombs were regularly visited by relatives and/or professional priests, especially the so-called choachytes (Egyptian wˀḥ-mw “water-pourers”), to renew the deceased’s existence in the afterlife by offerings and liturgical recitations. The direct link between the tomb and its equipment, on the one hand, and this funerary cult, on the other, makes tomb building and decoration an integral component of Egyptian funerary practice. This overview is mainly concerned with Egyptian practice, but this includes a mutual influence with Greek elements as visible in tomb architecture and decoration. As a rule, one can say that a clear separation between Greek and Egyptian burials, the former mainly being attested in and around Alexandria, gave way to more hybrid forms from the later Ptolemaic period onward, the portrait mummies from the Fayum region being only the most prominent example. The Coptic period is considered here mainly insofar as some Coptic practices testify to the continuity of older, “pagan” traditions, especially mummification and formal mourning, of which forms have survived until this day. With very few exceptions the publications listed here are of recent date and guide the reader to previous research.

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