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Deir el-Medina

Deir el-Medina (Egyptian Arabic: دير المدينة), or Dayr al-Madīnah, is an ancient Egyptian workmen's village which was home to the artisans who worked on the tombs in the Valley of the Kings during the 18th to 20th Dynasties of the New Kingdom of Egypt (ca. 1550–1080 BCE)[1] The settlement's ancient name was Set maat ("Place of Truth"), and the workmen who lived there were called "Servants in the Place of Truth".[2] During the Christian era, the temple of Hathor was converted into a Monastery of Saint Isidorus the Martyr (Coptic: ⲡⲧⲟⲡⲟⲥ ⲙ̄ⲫⲁⲅⲓⲟⲥ ⲁⲡⲁ ⲓⲥⲓⲇⲱⲣⲟⲥ ⲡⲙⲁⲣⲧⲉⲣⲟⲥ)[3] from which the Egyptian Arabic name Deir el-Medina ("Monastery of the City") is derived.[4]

Deir el-Medina
دير المدينة
Coptic: ⲡⲧⲟⲡⲟⲥ ⲙ̄ⲫⲁⲅⲓⲟⲥ ⲁⲡⲁ ⲓⲥⲓⲇⲱⲣⲟⲥ ⲡⲙⲁⲣⲧⲉⲣⲟⲥ
Ruins of Deir el-Medina
Location within Egypt
LocationLuxor
RegionUpper Egypt
Coordinates25°43′44″N 32°36′05″E / 25.72889°N 32.60139°E / 25.72889; 32.60139
Part ofTheban necropolis
History
BuilderThutmose I
Site notes
ArchaeologistsErnesto Schiaparelli (1905–09)
Bernard Bruyère (1922–51)
Criteriai, iii, vi
Designated1979
Part ofAncient Thebes with its Necropolis
Reference no.87
RegionEgypt

At the time when the world's press was concentrating on Howard Carter's discovery of the Tomb of Tutankhamun in 1922, a team led by Bernard Bruyère began to excavate the site.[5] This work has resulted in one of the most thoroughly documented accounts of community life in the ancient world that spans almost four hundred years. There is no comparable site in which the organisation, social interactions, working and living conditions of a community can be studied in such detail.[6]

The site is located on the west bank of the Nile, across the river from modern-day Luxor.[7] The village is laid out in a small natural amphitheatre, within easy walking distance of the Valley of the Kings to the north, funerary temples to the east and south-east, with the Valley of the Queens to the west.[8] The village may have been built apart from the wider population in order to preserve secrecy in view of sensitive nature of the work carried out in the tombs.[9] It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[10]

Statue from the intact Tomb of Kha and Merit (Turin Museum)

Excavation history edit

 
Ra slays Apep (tomb scene in Deir el-Medina)

A significant find of papyri was made in the 1840s in the vicinity of the village and many objects were also found during the course of the 19th century. The archaeological site was first seriously excavated by Ernesto Schiaparelli between 1905–1909 which uncovered large amounts of ostraca. A French team directed by Bernard Bruyère excavated the entire site, including village, dump and cemetery, between 1922–1951. Unfortunately through lack of control it is now thought that about half of the papyri recovered were removed without the knowledge or authorization of the team director.[11]

Around five thousand ostraca of assorted works of commerce and literature were found in a well close to the village.[12] Jaroslav Černý, who was part of Bruyère's team, went on to study the village for almost fifty years until his death in 1970 and was able to name and describe the lives of many of the inhabitants.[13] The peak overlooking the village was renamed "Mont Cernabru" in recognition of Černý and Bruyère's work on the village.[14]

Village edit

 
Tomb at the entrance of Deir el-Medina

The first datable remains of the village belong to the reign of Thutmose I (c. 1506–1493 BCE) with its final shape being formed during the Ramesside Period.[15] At its peak, the community contained around sixty-eight houses spread over a total area of 5,600 m2 with a narrow road running the length of the village.[16] The main road through the village may have been covered to shelter the villagers from the intense glare and heat of the sun.[5] The size of the habitations varied, with an average floor space of 70 m2, but the same construction methods were used throughout the village. Walls were made of mudbrick, built on top of stone foundations. Mud was applied to the walls, which were then painted white on the external surfaces, while some of the inner surfaces were whitewashed up to a height of around one metre. A wooden front door might have carried the occupants' name.[17] Houses consisted of four to five rooms, comprising an entrance, main room, two smaller rooms, kitchen with cellar and staircase leading to the roof. The full glare of the sun was avoided by situating the windows high up on the walls.[1] The main room contained a mudbrick platform with steps which may have been used as a shrine or a birthing bed.[1] Nearly all houses contained niches for statues and small altars.[18] The tombs built by the community for their own use include small rock-cut chapels and substructures adorned with small pyramids.[19]

Due to its location, the village is not thought to have provided a pleasant environment. The walled village reflects the shape of the narrow valley in which it's situated, with the barren surrounding hillsides reflecting the desert sun and the hill of Gurnet Murai cutting off the north breeze, as well as any view of the verdant river valley.[20] The village was abandoned c. 1110–1080 BCE during the reign of Ramesses XI (whose tomb was the last of the royal tombs built in the Valley of the Kings) due to increasing threats from tomb robbery, Libyan raids and the instability of civil war.[21] The Ptolemids later built a temple to Hathor on the site of an ancient shrine dedicated to her.[22]

Historical texts of Deir el-Medina edit

 
Fragment of relief of Khawy, Servant in the Place of Truth. 19th Dynasty. From Tomb 214 at Deir el-Medina, Egypt. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London

The surviving texts record the events of daily life rather than major historical incidents.[23] Personal letters reveal much about the social relations and family life of the villagers. The ancient economy is documented by records of sales transactions that yield information on prices and exchange. Records of prayers and charms illustrate ordinary popular conceptions of the divine, whilst researchers into ancient law and practice find a rich source of information recorded in the texts from the village.[11] Many examples of the most famous works of ancient Egyptian literature have also been discovered.[24] Thousands of papyri and ostraca still await publication.[25]

Village life edit

 
Scene from the Tomb of Sennedjem

The settlement was home to a mixed population of Egyptians, Nubians and Asiatics who were employed as labourers, (stone-cutters, plasterers, water-carriers), as well as those involved in the administration and decoration of the royal tombs and temples.[26] The artisans and the village were organised into two groups, left and right gangs who worked on opposite sides of the tomb walls similar to a ship's crew, with a foreman for each who supervised the village and its work.[1]

 
Sarcophagus of Nubnen from Deir el-Medina, early 18th Dynasty, National Museum, Warsaw

As the main well was thirty minutes walk from the village, carriers worked to keep the village regularly supplied with water. When working on the tombs, the artisans stayed overnight in a camp overlooking the Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut (c. 1479–1458 BCE) that is still visible today. Surviving records indicate that the workers had cooked meals delivered to them from the village.[5]

Based on analysis of income and prices, the workmen of the village would, in modern terms, be considered middle class. As salaried state employees they were paid in rations at up to three times the rate of a field hand, but unofficial second jobs were also widely practiced.[27] At great festivals such as the heb sed the workmen were issued with extra supplies of food and drink to allow a stylish celebration.[28]

The working week was eight days followed by two days holiday, though the six days off a month could be supplemented frequently due to illness, family reasons and, as recorded by the scribe of the tomb, arguing with one's wife or having a hangover.[29] Including the days given over to festivals, over one-third of the year was time-off for the villagers during the reign of Merneptah (c. 1213–1203 BCE).[30]

 
Harvest scene from the Tomb of Sennedjem

During their days off the workmen could work on their own tombs, and since they were amongst the best craftsmen in Ancient Egypt who excavated and decorated royal tombs, their own tombs are considered to be some of the most beautiful on the west bank.[29]

A large proportion of the community, including women, could at least read and possibly write.[31]

The jobs of the workers would have been considered desirable and prized positions, with the posts being inheritable.[32]

The examples of love songs recovered show how friendship between the sexes was practised, as was social drinking by both men and women.[33] Egyptian marriages amongst commoners were monogamous but little is known about the marriage or wedding arrangements from surviving records.[34] It was not unusual for couples to have six or seven children, with some recorded as having ten.[35]

Separation, divorce and remarriage occurred. Merymaat is recorded as wanting a divorce on account of his mother in-law's behaviour. Female slaves could become surrogate mothers in cases where the wife was infertile and in doing so raise their status and procure their freedom.[36]

The community could move freely in and out of the walled village but for security reasons the only outsiders allowed to enter the site were those with good work-related reasons.[5]

Women and village life edit

 
Toilet box from the Tomb of Kha and Merit (Turin Museum)

The records from this village provide most of the information we know about how women lived in the New Kingdom era.[37] Women were supplied with servants by the government to assist with the grinding of the grain and laundry tasks.[38] The wives of the workers cared for the children and baked the bread, a prime food source in this society. The vast majority of women who had a particular religious status embedded in their names were married to foremen or scribes and could hold the titles of chantress or singer, with official positions within local shrines or temples, perhaps even within the major temples of Thebes.[37] Under Egyptian law they had property rights. They had title to their own wealth and a third of all marital goods. This would belong solely to the wife in case of divorce or death of the husband. If she died first it would go to her heirs, not to her spouse.[39][40] Brewing of beer was normally supervised by the Mistress of the House, though the workmen considered the monitoring of the activity as a legitimate excuse for taking time off work.[41]

Law and order edit

The workers and their families were not slaves but free citizens with recourse to the justice system, as required. In principle, any Egyptian could petition the vizier and could demand a trial by his peers.[42] The community had its own court of law made up of a foreman, deputies, craftsmen and a court scribe, and were authorised to deal with all civil and some criminal cases, typically relating to the non-payment of goods or services. The villagers represented themselves and cases could go on for several years, with one dispute involving the chief of police lasting eleven years.[29] The local police, Medjay, were responsible for preserving law and order, as well as controlling access to the tombs in the Valley of the Kings.[29] One of the most famous cases recorded relates to Paneb, the son of an overseer, who was accused of looting royal tombs, adultery and causing unrest in the community. The outcome is not known but surviving records indicate the execution of a head of workmen at this time.[43]

The people of Deir el-Medina often consulted with oracles about many aspects of their lives including justice. Questions could be put in writing or orally before the image of the god when carried by priests upon a litter. A positive response could have been indicated by a downward dip and a negative response by a withdrawal of the litter.[44] When a matter of justice came up that wasn't resolved by a tribunal, the god's statue could be carried to the accused and asked "Is it he who stole my goods?" and, if the statue nodded, the accused would be considered guilty. However, at times, the accused would deny guilt and demand to see another oracle or, in at least one case when that failed, he asked to see a third. When guilt was determined, a judgement would be passed and the accused would have to make reparations and receive punishment. The Egyptians also believed the oracle could bring disease or blindness to people as punishment or miracle cures as rewards.[45]

Medical care edit

 
This wood and leather prosthetic toe was used by an amputee to facilitate walking

The records and ostraca from Deir el-Medina provide a deeply compelling view into the medical workings of the New Kingdom. As in other Egyptian communities, the workmen and inhabitants of Deir el-Medina received care for their health problems through medical treatment, prayer, and magic.[46] Nevertheless, the records at Deir el-Medina indicate some level of division, as records from the village note both a “physician” who saw patients and prescribed treatments, and a “scorpion charmer” who specialized in magical cures for scorpion bites.[47]

Health texts from Deir el-Medina also differed in their circulation. Magical spells and remedies were widely distributed among the workmen; there are even several cases of spells being sent from one worker to another, with no “trained” intermediary.[48][49] Written medical texts appear to have been much rarer, however, with only a handful of ostraca containing prescriptions, indicating that the trained physician mixed the more complicated remedies himself. There are also several documents that show the writer sending for medical ingredients, but it is unknown whether these were sent according to a physician's prescription, or to fulfill a home remedy.[50]

Popular piety edit

 
Stela of Irinefer, Servant in the Place of Truth, Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt. From Tomb 290 at Deir el-Medina, Egypt. Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London
 
Offering table of Penrenu, servant in the place of truth. Nineteenth Dynasty. From Deir el-Medina, Egypt. Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London
 
Meretseger, a natural pyramid-shaped mountain overlooking and protecting the Valley of the Kings

The excavations of the royal artisans community at Deir el-Medina have revealed much evidence of personal religious practice and cults.[44] State gods were worshipped freely alongside personal gods without any conflict between national and local modes of religious expression.[51]

The community had between sixteen and eighteen chapels, with the larger ones dedicated to Hathor, Ptah and Ramesses II. The workmen seem to have honoured Ptah and Resheph, the scribes Thoth and Seshat, as patron deities of their particular activity. Women had particular devotion towards Hathor, Taweret, and Bes in pregnancy, turning to Renenutet and Meretseger for food and safety.[52] Meretseger ("She Who Loves Silence") was perhaps locally at least as important as Osiris, the great god of the dead.[52]

The villagers held Amenhotep I (c. 1526–1506 BCE) and his mother, Queen Ahmose-Nefertari, in high regard over many generations, possibly as divinized patrons of the community.[53] When Amenhotep died he became the centre of a village funerary cult, as "Amenhotep of the Town". When the Queen died, she also was deified and became "Mistress of the Sky" and "Lady of the West".[54] Every year the villagers celebrated the Festival of Amenhotep I, where the elders acted as priests in the ceremonies that paid honour to their own local gods who were not worshipped anywhere else in Egypt.[55]

Prayers were made and dedicated to a particular deity as votive offerings, similar in style to the Penitential Psalms in the Tanakh, which express remorse and thanksgiving for mercy.[56] Steles record sorrow for human error and humbly invoke a god for forgiveness and mercy. In one instance Meretseger is petitioned to bring relief to one in pain. She answer the prayer by bringing "sweet breezes".[57] On another stele, a workman writes, "I was a man who swore falsely by Ptah, Lord of Truth, and he caused me to see darkness by day. Now I will declaim his might to both the ignorant and the knowledgeable.”[5] Amun was considered a special patron of the poor and one who was merciful to the penitent. A stelae records:

[Amun] who comes at the voice of the poor in distress, who gives breath to him who is wretched..You are Amun, the Lord of the silent, who comes at the voice of the poor, when I call to you in my distress You come and rescue me... Though the servant was disposed to do evil, the Lord is disposed to forgive. The Lord of Thebes spends not a whole day in anger, His wrath passes in a moment, none remains. His breath comes back to us in mercy... May your ka be kind, may you forgive, It shall not happen again.[58]

 
Scene from the Tomb of Sennedjem

Dream interpretation was very common.[59] A book of dreams was found in Scribe Kenhirkhopeshef's library that was old even in his time. This book was used to interpret various types of dreams. These interpretations lacked precision and similar dreams often had different meanings. In many cases the interpretation was the opposite of what the dream depicted, for example a happy dream often signified sadness, a dream of plenty often signified scarceness etc.

Examples of how the dreams are interpreted include the following:

  • If a man sees himself dead this is good; it means a long life in front of him.
  • If a man sees himself eating crocodile flesh this is good; it means acting as an official amongst his people. (i.e. becoming a tax collector)
  • If a man sees himself with his face in a mirror this is bad; it means a new life.
  • If a man sees himself uncovering his own backside this is bad; it means he will be an orphan later.[60]

Also in the temple to Hathor, a few of the craftsmen built stelae in honour of her. One such stela is the stele of Nefersenut, in which he and one of his son's kneeling and giving offerings to her in human form.[61]

Strikes edit

The royal building service was usually well-run, in view of the importance of the work it carried out. Paying proper wages was a religious duty that formed an intrinsic part of Maat. When this system broke down it indicated problems in the wider state.[62] The coming of the Iron Age and the collapse of the empire led to economic instability, with inflation a notable feature. The high ideals expressed in the code of Maat became strained and this provided the background to workers unrest.[63]

In about the 25th year of the reign of Ramesses III (c. 1170 BCE) the tomb laborers were so exasperated by delays in supplies that they threw down their tools and walked off the job in what may have been the first sit-down strike action in recorded history. They wrote a letter to the vizier complaining about lack of wheat rations. Village leaders attempted to reason with them but they refused to return to work until their grievances were addressed. They responded to the elders with "great oaths". "We are hungry", the crews claimed; "eighteen days have passed this month" and they still had not received their rations. They were forced to buy their own wheat. They told the leaders to send to the pharaoh or vizier to address their concerns. After the authorities had heard their complaints they addressed them and the workers went back to work the next day. Several strikes followed. After one of them, when the strike leader asked the workers to follow him they told him they had had enough and returned to work. This was not the last strike but they soon restored the regular wheat supplies and the strikes came to an end for the remaining years of Ramesses III. However, since the chiefs supported the authorities the workers no longer trusted them and chose their own representatives.[64] Further complaints by the artisans are recorded forty and fifty years after the initial dispute, during the reigns of Ramesses IX and Ramesses X.[65]

Tomb robbing edit

 
Pyramidion of Nebamun. Possibly top of a stela. Limestone. 19th Dynasty. From Egypt. Bought in the Thebaid (Thebais) but probably it came from Deir el-Medina. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London

After the reign of Ramses IV (c. 1155–1149 BCE) the conditions of the village became increasingly unsettled. At times there was no work for fear of the enemy. The grain supplies became less dependable and this was followed by more strikes. Gangs of tomb robbers increased, often tunnelling into a tomb through its back so that they wouldn't break the seal and be exposed. A tomb robbery culture developed that included fences and even some officials who accepted bribes. When the Viziers checked the tombs in order to determine whether the seals had been disturbed, they wouldn't report the tomb as having been opened. When they finally did catch tomb robbers, they used limb-twisting tactics to interrogate them and obtain information about where the plunder was and who their accomplices were.

The Abbott Papyrus reports on one occasion, when some officials were looking for a scapegoat, they obtained a confession from a repeat offender after torturing him. However the Vizier was suspicious at how easily the suspect had been produced, so the Vizier asked the suspect to lead them to the tomb that he had robbed. He led them to an unfinished tomb that had never been used and claimed that it was the tomb of Isis. When they retrieved the plunder, they didn't return it to the tombs; instead, they added it to the treasury.[66][67]

Deir el-Medina in fiction edit

The French Egyptologist and author Christian Jacq has written a tetralogy dealing with Deir el-Medina and its artisans, as well as Egyptian political life at the time.

Deir el-Medina is also mentioned in some of the later books of the Amelia Peabody series by Barbara Mertz (writing as Elizabeth Peters). The village is the setting for some scenes, and late in the series the fictional Egyptologist Radcliffe Emerson is credited with excavations and documentation of the site.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Oakes, p. 110
  2. ^ Lesko, p. 7
  3. ^ "Monastery of Saint Isidorus Martyr". An Archaeological Atlas of Coptic Literature.
  4. ^ Bierbrier, p. 125
  5. ^ a b c d e "Pharaoh’s Workers: How the Israelites Lived in Egypt", Leonard and Barbara Lesko, Biblical Archaeological Review, Jan/Feb 1999
  6. ^ Cambridge Ancient History, p. 380
  7. ^ Lesko p. 2
  8. ^ Cambridge Ancient History, p. 379
  9. ^ "Archaeologica: the world's most significant sites and cultural treasures", Aedeen Cremin, p. 91, Frances Lincoln, 2007, ISBN 0-7112-2822-1
  10. ^ "Archaeologica: the world's most significant sites and cultural treasures", Aedeen Cremin, p. 384, frances lincolln, 2007, ISBN 0-7112-2822-1
  11. ^ a b Lesko, p. 8
  12. ^ "Archaeologica: the world's most significant sites and cultural treasures", Aedeen Cremin, p. 91, Frances Lincoln, 2007, ISBN 0-7112-2822-1
  13. ^ "Life of the ancient Egyptians, Eugen Strouhal, Evžen Strouhal, Werner Forman, Editorial Galaxia, p. 187, 1992, ISBN 0-8061-2475-X
  14. ^ Romer, p. 209
  15. ^ McDowell pp. 18, 21
  16. ^ McDowell p. 9
  17. ^ McDowell pp. 11–12
  18. ^ Paul Johnson, "The Civilization of Ancient Egypt", p. 131, Book Club Associates (org pub by Weidenfeld & Nicolson), 1978
  19. ^ Donald B. Redford (Editor), "Oxford Guide to Egyptian Mythology", p. 378, Berkley Reference, 2003, ISBN 0-425-19096-X
  20. ^ Lesko, p. 2
  21. ^ Bierbrier pp. 119, 120
  22. ^ McDowell p. 4
  23. ^ Lesko, p. 2
  24. ^ Lesko pp. 132, 133
  25. ^ McDowell p. 8
  26. ^ Cambridge Ancient History, pp. 379–380
  27. ^ Lesko, p. 12
  28. ^ Wilson (1997), pp. 118, 222
  29. ^ a b c d Oakes, p. 111
  30. ^ Romer, p. 48
  31. ^ Wilson (1997), p. 72
  32. ^ Lesko, p. 22
  33. ^ Lesko p. 34
  34. ^ Lesko p. 35
  35. ^ Meskell, p. 74
  36. ^ Meskell, pp, 95–98
  37. ^ a b Lesko p. 28
  38. ^ Lesko p. 36
  39. ^ Time Life (1992) pp. 134–142
  40. ^ Romer
  41. ^ Wilson (1997) p. 69
  42. ^ Lesko p. 38
  43. ^ "Archaeologica: the world's most significant sites and cultural treasures", Aedeen Cremin, p. 91, Frances Lincoln, 2007, ISBN 0-7112-2822-1
  44. ^ a b Donald B. Redford (Editor), "Oxford Guide to Egyptian Mythology", p. 80, Berkley Reference, 2003, ISBN 0-425-19096-X
  45. ^ Romer, pp. 100–115, 178
  46. ^ McDowell, p. 53
  47. ^ Janssen, Jac. J. "Absence from Work by the Necropolis Workmen of Thebes" Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur bd. 8 (1980): pp. 127–152
  48. ^ Lesko, p. 68
  49. ^ McDowell, p. 106
  50. ^ McDowell, p. 57
  51. ^ "Religion and Magic in Ancient Egypt", Rosalie David, p. 277, Penguin, 2002, ISBN 0-14-026252-0
  52. ^ a b Lesko p. 90
  53. ^ Lesko, pp. 7, 111
  54. ^ Tyldesley (1996), p. 62
  55. ^ Wilson, p. 118
  56. ^ Donald B. Redford (Editor), "Oxford Guide to Egyptian Mythology", p. 313, Berkley Reference, 2003, ISBN 0-425-19096-X
  57. ^ Egyptian Myths, George Hart, p. 46, University of Texas Press, 1990, ISBN 0-292-72076-9
  58. ^ "Ancient Egyptian Literature", Miriam Lichtheim, pp. 105–106, University of California Press, 1976, ISBN 0-520-03615-8
  59. ^ John Romer, "Testament", p. 50, Guild Publishing, 1988
  60. ^ Romer, pp. 68–72
  61. ^ "Ancient Egypt", Loarna Oakes and Lucia Gahlin, pp. 176–177, Anness Publishing, 2006
  62. ^ Paul Johnson, "The Civilization of Ancient Egypt", p. 110, Book Club Associates (org pub by Weidenfeld & Nicolson), 1978
  63. ^ "The Burden of Egypt", John A. Wilson, pp. 278–279, University of Chicago Press, 1951, 4th imp 1963
  64. ^ Romer, pp. 116–125
  65. ^ "The Burden of Egypt", John A. Wilson, p. 278, University of Chicago Press, 1951, 4th imp 1963
  66. ^ Romer, pp. 145–210
  67. ^ Time Life (1992) pp. 134–142

Bibliography edit

  • Jaroslav Černý, "A Community of Workmen at Thebes in the Ramesside Period", Kairo 1973.
  • Leonard H. Lesko, ed. (1994). Pharaoh's Workers: The Villagers of Deir El Medina. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-8143-0.
  • Wilson, Hilary (1997). Peoples of the Pharaohs: From Peasant to Courtier. Brockhampton Press. ISBN 1-86019-900-3.
  • Romer, John (1984). Ancient Lives Daily Life in Egypt of the Pharaohs. Hold, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 0-03-000733-X.
  • Time Life Lost Civilizations series: Egypt: Land of the Pharaohs. 1992.
  • Tyldesley, Joyce (1996). Hatchespsut: The Female Pharaoh. Viking. ISBN 0-670-85976-1.
  • A.G McDowell, “Village Life in Ancient Egypt: Laundry Lists and Love Songs”, Oxford University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-19-924753-6
  • M. L. Bierbrier, "The Tomb-builders of the Pharaohs”, American University in Cairo Press, p. 125, 1989, ISBN 977-424-210-6
  • Edited I.E.S Edwards – C.J Gadd – N.G.L Hammond- E.Sollberger, “The Cambridge Ancient History: II Part I , The Middle East and the Aegean Region, c. 1800–13380 B.C”, Cambridge at the University Press, 1973, ISBN 0-521-08230-7
  • Lorna Oaks, “The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Pyramids Temples & Tombs of Ancient Egypt", Previously Published as “Sacred Sites of Ancient Egypt”, Southwater, 2006, ISBN 978-1-84476-279-8
  • Lynn Meskell, "Private life in New Kingdom Egypt", Princeton University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-691-00448-X
  • "Ancient Egypt", Lorna Oakes and Lucia Gahlin, pp. 176–177, Anness Publishing, 2006
  • Davies, Benedict (2018). Life within the Five Walls. A Handbook to Deir el-Medina PDF. Abercromby Press. ISBN 978-0-670-85976-4.
  • https://www.britannica.com/place/Dayr-al-Madinah

External links edit

  Media related to Deir el-Medina at Wikimedia Commons

  • Images of Deir el-Medina : Past & Present
  • YouTube video clip of Deir -el-Medina 1.
  • YouTube video clip of Deir -el-Medina 2.
  • A Survey of the New Kingdom Non-literary Texts from Deir el-Medina – Leiden University (Database) 2017-11-05 at the Wayback Machine

deir, medina, egyptian, arabic, دير, المدينة, dayr, madīnah, ancient, egyptian, workmen, village, which, home, artisans, worked, tombs, valley, kings, during, 18th, 20th, dynasties, kingdom, egypt, 1550, 1080, settlement, ancient, name, maat, place, truth, wor. Deir el Medina Egyptian Arabic دير المدينة or Dayr al Madinah is an ancient Egyptian workmen s village which was home to the artisans who worked on the tombs in the Valley of the Kings during the 18th to 20th Dynasties of the New Kingdom of Egypt ca 1550 1080 BCE 1 The settlement s ancient name was Set maat Place of Truth and the workmen who lived there were called Servants in the Place of Truth 2 During the Christian era the temple of Hathor was converted into a Monastery of Saint Isidorus the Martyr Coptic ⲡⲧⲟⲡⲟⲥ ⲙ ⲫⲁⲅⲓⲟⲥ ⲁⲡⲁ ⲓⲥⲓⲇⲱⲣⲟⲥ ⲡⲙⲁⲣⲧⲉⲣⲟⲥ 3 from which the Egyptian Arabic name Deir el Medina Monastery of the City is derived 4 Deir el Medinaدير المدينةCoptic ⲡⲧⲟⲡⲟⲥ ⲙ ⲫⲁⲅⲓⲟⲥ ⲁⲡⲁ ⲓⲥⲓⲇⲱⲣⲟⲥ ⲡⲙⲁⲣⲧⲉⲣⲟⲥRuins of Deir el MedinaLocation within EgyptLocationLuxorRegionUpper EgyptCoordinates25 43 44 N 32 36 05 E 25 72889 N 32 60139 E 25 72889 32 60139Part ofTheban necropolisHistoryBuilderThutmose ISite notesArchaeologistsErnesto Schiaparelli 1905 09 Bernard Bruyere 1922 51 UNESCO World Heritage SiteCriteriai iii viDesignated1979Part ofAncient Thebes with its NecropolisReference no 87RegionEgypt At the time when the world s press was concentrating on Howard Carter s discovery of the Tomb of Tutankhamun in 1922 a team led by Bernard Bruyere began to excavate the site 5 This work has resulted in one of the most thoroughly documented accounts of community life in the ancient world that spans almost four hundred years There is no comparable site in which the organisation social interactions working and living conditions of a community can be studied in such detail 6 The site is located on the west bank of the Nile across the river from modern day Luxor 7 The village is laid out in a small natural amphitheatre within easy walking distance of the Valley of the Kings to the north funerary temples to the east and south east with the Valley of the Queens to the west 8 The village may have been built apart from the wider population in order to preserve secrecy in view of sensitive nature of the work carried out in the tombs 9 It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site 10 Statue from the intact Tomb of Kha and Merit Turin Museum Contents 1 Excavation history 2 Village 3 Historical texts of Deir el Medina 3 1 Village life 3 2 Women and village life 3 3 Law and order 3 4 Medical care 3 5 Popular piety 3 6 Strikes 3 7 Tomb robbing 4 Deir el Medina in fiction 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksExcavation history edit nbsp Ra slays Apep tomb scene in Deir el Medina A significant find of papyri was made in the 1840s in the vicinity of the village and many objects were also found during the course of the 19th century The archaeological site was first seriously excavated by Ernesto Schiaparelli between 1905 1909 which uncovered large amounts of ostraca A French team directed by Bernard Bruyere excavated the entire site including village dump and cemetery between 1922 1951 Unfortunately through lack of control it is now thought that about half of the papyri recovered were removed without the knowledge or authorization of the team director 11 Around five thousand ostraca of assorted works of commerce and literature were found in a well close to the village 12 Jaroslav Cerny who was part of Bruyere s team went on to study the village for almost fifty years until his death in 1970 and was able to name and describe the lives of many of the inhabitants 13 The peak overlooking the village was renamed Mont Cernabru in recognition of Cerny and Bruyere s work on the village 14 Village edit nbsp Tomb at the entrance of Deir el Medina The first datable remains of the village belong to the reign of Thutmose I c 1506 1493 BCE with its final shape being formed during the Ramesside Period 15 At its peak the community contained around sixty eight houses spread over a total area of 5 600 m2 with a narrow road running the length of the village 16 The main road through the village may have been covered to shelter the villagers from the intense glare and heat of the sun 5 The size of the habitations varied with an average floor space of 70 m2 but the same construction methods were used throughout the village Walls were made of mudbrick built on top of stone foundations Mud was applied to the walls which were then painted white on the external surfaces while some of the inner surfaces were whitewashed up to a height of around one metre A wooden front door might have carried the occupants name 17 Houses consisted of four to five rooms comprising an entrance main room two smaller rooms kitchen with cellar and staircase leading to the roof The full glare of the sun was avoided by situating the windows high up on the walls 1 The main room contained a mudbrick platform with steps which may have been used as a shrine or a birthing bed 1 Nearly all houses contained niches for statues and small altars 18 The tombs built by the community for their own use include small rock cut chapels and substructures adorned with small pyramids 19 Due to its location the village is not thought to have provided a pleasant environment The walled village reflects the shape of the narrow valley in which it s situated with the barren surrounding hillsides reflecting the desert sun and the hill of Gurnet Murai cutting off the north breeze as well as any view of the verdant river valley 20 The village was abandoned c 1110 1080 BCE during the reign of Ramesses XI whose tomb was the last of the royal tombs built in the Valley of the Kings due to increasing threats from tomb robbery Libyan raids and the instability of civil war 21 The Ptolemids later built a temple to Hathor on the site of an ancient shrine dedicated to her 22 Historical texts of Deir el Medina edit nbsp Fragment of relief of Khawy Servant in the Place of Truth 19th Dynasty From Tomb 214 at Deir el Medina Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London The surviving texts record the events of daily life rather than major historical incidents 23 Personal letters reveal much about the social relations and family life of the villagers The ancient economy is documented by records of sales transactions that yield information on prices and exchange Records of prayers and charms illustrate ordinary popular conceptions of the divine whilst researchers into ancient law and practice find a rich source of information recorded in the texts from the village 11 Many examples of the most famous works of ancient Egyptian literature have also been discovered 24 Thousands of papyri and ostraca still await publication 25 Village life edit nbsp Scene from the Tomb of Sennedjem The settlement was home to a mixed population of Egyptians Nubians and Asiatics who were employed as labourers stone cutters plasterers water carriers as well as those involved in the administration and decoration of the royal tombs and temples 26 The artisans and the village were organised into two groups left and right gangs who worked on opposite sides of the tomb walls similar to a ship s crew with a foreman for each who supervised the village and its work 1 nbsp Sarcophagus of Nubnen from Deir el Medina early 18th Dynasty National Museum Warsaw As the main well was thirty minutes walk from the village carriers worked to keep the village regularly supplied with water When working on the tombs the artisans stayed overnight in a camp overlooking the Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut c 1479 1458 BCE that is still visible today Surviving records indicate that the workers had cooked meals delivered to them from the village 5 Based on analysis of income and prices the workmen of the village would in modern terms be considered middle class As salaried state employees they were paid in rations at up to three times the rate of a field hand but unofficial second jobs were also widely practiced 27 At great festivals such as the heb sed the workmen were issued with extra supplies of food and drink to allow a stylish celebration 28 The working week was eight days followed by two days holiday though the six days off a month could be supplemented frequently due to illness family reasons and as recorded by the scribe of the tomb arguing with one s wife or having a hangover 29 Including the days given over to festivals over one third of the year was time off for the villagers during the reign of Merneptah c 1213 1203 BCE 30 nbsp Harvest scene from the Tomb of Sennedjem During their days off the workmen could work on their own tombs and since they were amongst the best craftsmen in Ancient Egypt who excavated and decorated royal tombs their own tombs are considered to be some of the most beautiful on the west bank 29 A large proportion of the community including women could at least read and possibly write 31 The jobs of the workers would have been considered desirable and prized positions with the posts being inheritable 32 The examples of love songs recovered show how friendship between the sexes was practised as was social drinking by both men and women 33 Egyptian marriages amongst commoners were monogamous but little is known about the marriage or wedding arrangements from surviving records 34 It was not unusual for couples to have six or seven children with some recorded as having ten 35 Separation divorce and remarriage occurred Merymaat is recorded as wanting a divorce on account of his mother in law s behaviour Female slaves could become surrogate mothers in cases where the wife was infertile and in doing so raise their status and procure their freedom 36 The community could move freely in and out of the walled village but for security reasons the only outsiders allowed to enter the site were those with good work related reasons 5 Women and village life edit nbsp Toilet box from the Tomb of Kha and Merit Turin Museum The records from this village provide most of the information we know about how women lived in the New Kingdom era 37 Women were supplied with servants by the government to assist with the grinding of the grain and laundry tasks 38 The wives of the workers cared for the children and baked the bread a prime food source in this society The vast majority of women who had a particular religious status embedded in their names were married to foremen or scribes and could hold the titles of chantress or singer with official positions within local shrines or temples perhaps even within the major temples of Thebes 37 Under Egyptian law they had property rights They had title to their own wealth and a third of all marital goods This would belong solely to the wife in case of divorce or death of the husband If she died first it would go to her heirs not to her spouse 39 40 Brewing of beer was normally supervised by the Mistress of the House though the workmen considered the monitoring of the activity as a legitimate excuse for taking time off work 41 Law and order edit The workers and their families were not slaves but free citizens with recourse to the justice system as required In principle any Egyptian could petition the vizier and could demand a trial by his peers 42 The community had its own court of law made up of a foreman deputies craftsmen and a court scribe and were authorised to deal with all civil and some criminal cases typically relating to the non payment of goods or services The villagers represented themselves and cases could go on for several years with one dispute involving the chief of police lasting eleven years 29 The local police Medjay were responsible for preserving law and order as well as controlling access to the tombs in the Valley of the Kings 29 One of the most famous cases recorded relates to Paneb the son of an overseer who was accused of looting royal tombs adultery and causing unrest in the community The outcome is not known but surviving records indicate the execution of a head of workmen at this time 43 The people of Deir el Medina often consulted with oracles about many aspects of their lives including justice Questions could be put in writing or orally before the image of the god when carried by priests upon a litter A positive response could have been indicated by a downward dip and a negative response by a withdrawal of the litter 44 When a matter of justice came up that wasn t resolved by a tribunal the god s statue could be carried to the accused and asked Is it he who stole my goods and if the statue nodded the accused would be considered guilty However at times the accused would deny guilt and demand to see another oracle or in at least one case when that failed he asked to see a third When guilt was determined a judgement would be passed and the accused would have to make reparations and receive punishment The Egyptians also believed the oracle could bring disease or blindness to people as punishment or miracle cures as rewards 45 Medical care edit See also Medical Ostraca of Deir el Medina nbsp This wood and leather prosthetic toe was used by an amputee to facilitate walking The records and ostraca from Deir el Medina provide a deeply compelling view into the medical workings of the New Kingdom As in other Egyptian communities the workmen and inhabitants of Deir el Medina received care for their health problems through medical treatment prayer and magic 46 Nevertheless the records at Deir el Medina indicate some level of division as records from the village note both a physician who saw patients and prescribed treatments and a scorpion charmer who specialized in magical cures for scorpion bites 47 Health texts from Deir el Medina also differed in their circulation Magical spells and remedies were widely distributed among the workmen there are even several cases of spells being sent from one worker to another with no trained intermediary 48 49 Written medical texts appear to have been much rarer however with only a handful of ostraca containing prescriptions indicating that the trained physician mixed the more complicated remedies himself There are also several documents that show the writer sending for medical ingredients but it is unknown whether these were sent according to a physician s prescription or to fulfill a home remedy 50 Popular piety edit See also Ancient Egyptian religion nbsp Stela of Irinefer Servant in the Place of Truth Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt From Tomb 290 at Deir el Medina Egypt Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Offering table of Penrenu servant in the place of truth Nineteenth Dynasty From Deir el Medina Egypt Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Meretseger a natural pyramid shaped mountain overlooking and protecting the Valley of the Kings The excavations of the royal artisans community at Deir el Medina have revealed much evidence of personal religious practice and cults 44 State gods were worshipped freely alongside personal gods without any conflict between national and local modes of religious expression 51 The community had between sixteen and eighteen chapels with the larger ones dedicated to Hathor Ptah and Ramesses II The workmen seem to have honoured Ptah and Resheph the scribes Thoth and Seshat as patron deities of their particular activity Women had particular devotion towards Hathor Taweret and Bes in pregnancy turning to Renenutet and Meretseger for food and safety 52 Meretseger She Who Loves Silence was perhaps locally at least as important as Osiris the great god of the dead 52 The villagers held Amenhotep I c 1526 1506 BCE and his mother Queen Ahmose Nefertari in high regard over many generations possibly as divinized patrons of the community 53 When Amenhotep died he became the centre of a village funerary cult as Amenhotep of the Town When the Queen died she also was deified and became Mistress of the Sky and Lady of the West 54 Every year the villagers celebrated the Festival of Amenhotep I where the elders acted as priests in the ceremonies that paid honour to their own local gods who were not worshipped anywhere else in Egypt 55 Prayers were made and dedicated to a particular deity as votive offerings similar in style to the Penitential Psalms in the Tanakh which express remorse and thanksgiving for mercy 56 Steles record sorrow for human error and humbly invoke a god for forgiveness and mercy In one instance Meretseger is petitioned to bring relief to one in pain She answer the prayer by bringing sweet breezes 57 On another stele a workman writes I was a man who swore falsely by Ptah Lord of Truth and he caused me to see darkness by day Now I will declaim his might to both the ignorant and the knowledgeable 5 Amun was considered a special patron of the poor and one who was merciful to the penitent A stelae records Amun who comes at the voice of the poor in distress who gives breath to him who is wretched You are Amun the Lord of the silent who comes at the voice of the poor when I call to you in my distress You come and rescue me Though the servant was disposed to do evil the Lord is disposed to forgive The Lord of Thebes spends not a whole day in anger His wrath passes in a moment none remains His breath comes back to us in mercy May your ka be kind may you forgive It shall not happen again 58 nbsp Scene from the Tomb of Sennedjem Dream interpretation was very common 59 A book of dreams was found in Scribe Kenhirkhopeshef s library that was old even in his time This book was used to interpret various types of dreams These interpretations lacked precision and similar dreams often had different meanings In many cases the interpretation was the opposite of what the dream depicted for example a happy dream often signified sadness a dream of plenty often signified scarceness etc Examples of how the dreams are interpreted include the following If a man sees himself dead this is good it means a long life in front of him If a man sees himself eating crocodile flesh this is good it means acting as an official amongst his people i e becoming a tax collector If a man sees himself with his face in a mirror this is bad it means a new life If a man sees himself uncovering his own backside this is bad it means he will be an orphan later 60 Also in the temple to Hathor a few of the craftsmen built stelae in honour of her One such stela is the stele of Nefersenut in which he and one of his son s kneeling and giving offerings to her in human form 61 Strikes edit The royal building service was usually well run in view of the importance of the work it carried out Paying proper wages was a religious duty that formed an intrinsic part of Maat When this system broke down it indicated problems in the wider state 62 The coming of the Iron Age and the collapse of the empire led to economic instability with inflation a notable feature The high ideals expressed in the code of Maat became strained and this provided the background to workers unrest 63 In about the 25th year of the reign of Ramesses III c 1170 BCE the tomb laborers were so exasperated by delays in supplies that they threw down their tools and walked off the job in what may have been the first sit down strike action in recorded history They wrote a letter to the vizier complaining about lack of wheat rations Village leaders attempted to reason with them but they refused to return to work until their grievances were addressed They responded to the elders with great oaths We are hungry the crews claimed eighteen days have passed this month and they still had not received their rations They were forced to buy their own wheat They told the leaders to send to the pharaoh or vizier to address their concerns After the authorities had heard their complaints they addressed them and the workers went back to work the next day Several strikes followed After one of them when the strike leader asked the workers to follow him they told him they had had enough and returned to work This was not the last strike but they soon restored the regular wheat supplies and the strikes came to an end for the remaining years of Ramesses III However since the chiefs supported the authorities the workers no longer trusted them and chose their own representatives 64 Further complaints by the artisans are recorded forty and fifty years after the initial dispute during the reigns of Ramesses IX and Ramesses X 65 Tomb robbing edit nbsp Pyramidion of Nebamun Possibly top of a stela Limestone 19th Dynasty From Egypt Bought in the Thebaid Thebais but probably it came from Deir el Medina The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London After the reign of Ramses IV c 1155 1149 BCE the conditions of the village became increasingly unsettled At times there was no work for fear of the enemy The grain supplies became less dependable and this was followed by more strikes Gangs of tomb robbers increased often tunnelling into a tomb through its back so that they wouldn t break the seal and be exposed A tomb robbery culture developed that included fences and even some officials who accepted bribes When the Viziers checked the tombs in order to determine whether the seals had been disturbed they wouldn t report the tomb as having been opened When they finally did catch tomb robbers they used limb twisting tactics to interrogate them and obtain information about where the plunder was and who their accomplices were The Abbott Papyrus reports on one occasion when some officials were looking for a scapegoat they obtained a confession from a repeat offender after torturing him However the Vizier was suspicious at how easily the suspect had been produced so the Vizier asked the suspect to lead them to the tomb that he had robbed He led them to an unfinished tomb that had never been used and claimed that it was the tomb of Isis When they retrieved the plunder they didn t return it to the tombs instead they added it to the treasury 66 67 Deir el Medina in fiction editThe French Egyptologist and author Christian Jacq has written a tetralogy dealing with Deir el Medina and its artisans as well as Egyptian political life at the time Deir el Medina is also mentioned in some of the later books of the Amelia Peabody series by Barbara Mertz writing as Elizabeth Peters The village is the setting for some scenes and late in the series the fictional Egyptologist Radcliffe Emerson is credited with excavations and documentation of the site See also editServant in the Place of Truth Christian Jacq Egyptologist and author of historical novels on Ancient Egypt a tetralogy having to do with Deir el Medina and its artisans Will of Naunakhte the will of a free woman from Deir el Medina Jaana Toivari Viitala Egyptologist who worked on the role of women at Deir el MedinaReferences edit a b c d Oakes p 110 Lesko p 7 Monastery of Saint Isidorus Martyr An Archaeological Atlas of Coptic Literature Bierbrier p 125 a b c d e Pharaoh s Workers How the Israelites Lived in Egypt Leonard and Barbara Lesko Biblical Archaeological Review Jan Feb 1999 Cambridge Ancient History p 380 Lesko p 2 Cambridge Ancient History p 379 Archaeologica the world s most significant sites and cultural treasures Aedeen Cremin p 91 Frances Lincoln 2007 ISBN 0 7112 2822 1 Archaeologica the world s most significant sites and cultural treasures Aedeen Cremin p 384 frances lincolln 2007 ISBN 0 7112 2822 1 a b Lesko p 8 Archaeologica the world s most significant sites and cultural treasures Aedeen Cremin p 91 Frances Lincoln 2007 ISBN 0 7112 2822 1 Life of the ancient Egyptians Eugen Strouhal Evzen Strouhal Werner Forman Editorial Galaxia p 187 1992 ISBN 0 8061 2475 X Romer p 209 McDowell pp 18 21 McDowell p 9 McDowell pp 11 12 Paul Johnson The Civilization of Ancient Egypt p 131 Book Club Associates org pub by Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1978 Donald B Redford Editor Oxford Guide to Egyptian Mythology p 378 Berkley Reference 2003 ISBN 0 425 19096 X Lesko p 2 Bierbrier pp 119 120 McDowell p 4 Lesko p 2 Lesko pp 132 133 McDowell p 8 Cambridge Ancient History pp 379 380 Lesko p 12 Wilson 1997 pp 118 222 a b c d Oakes p 111 Romer p 48 Wilson 1997 p 72 Lesko p 22 Lesko p 34 Lesko p 35 Meskell p 74 Meskell pp 95 98 a b Lesko p 28 Lesko p 36 Time Life 1992 pp 134 142 Romer Wilson 1997 p 69 Lesko p 38 Archaeologica the world s most significant sites and cultural treasures Aedeen Cremin p 91 Frances Lincoln 2007 ISBN 0 7112 2822 1 a b Donald B Redford Editor Oxford Guide to Egyptian Mythology p 80 Berkley Reference 2003 ISBN 0 425 19096 X Romer pp 100 115 178 McDowell p 53 Janssen Jac J Absence from Work by the Necropolis Workmen of Thebes Studien zur Altagyptischen Kultur bd 8 1980 pp 127 152 Lesko p 68 McDowell p 106 McDowell p 57 Religion and Magic in Ancient Egypt Rosalie David p 277 Penguin 2002 ISBN 0 14 026252 0 a b Lesko p 90 Lesko pp 7 111 Tyldesley 1996 p 62 Wilson p 118 Donald B Redford Editor Oxford Guide to Egyptian Mythology p 313 Berkley Reference 2003 ISBN 0 425 19096 X Egyptian Myths George Hart p 46 University of Texas Press 1990 ISBN 0 292 72076 9 Ancient Egyptian Literature Miriam Lichtheim pp 105 106 University of California Press 1976 ISBN 0 520 03615 8 John Romer Testament p 50 Guild Publishing 1988 Romer pp 68 72 Ancient Egypt Loarna Oakes and Lucia Gahlin pp 176 177 Anness Publishing 2006 Paul Johnson The Civilization of Ancient Egypt p 110 Book Club Associates org pub by Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 1978 The Burden of Egypt John A Wilson pp 278 279 University of Chicago Press 1951 4th imp 1963 Romer pp 116 125 The Burden of Egypt John A Wilson p 278 University of Chicago Press 1951 4th imp 1963 Romer pp 145 210 Time Life 1992 pp 134 142Bibliography editJaroslav Cerny A Community of Workmen at Thebes in the Ramesside Period Kairo 1973 Leonard H Lesko ed 1994 Pharaoh s Workers The Villagers of Deir El Medina Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 8143 0 Wilson Hilary 1997 Peoples of the Pharaohs From Peasant to Courtier Brockhampton Press ISBN 1 86019 900 3 Romer John 1984 Ancient Lives Daily Life in Egypt of the Pharaohs Hold Rinehart and Winston ISBN 0 03 000733 X Time Life Lost Civilizations series Egypt Land of the Pharaohs 1992 Tyldesley Joyce 1996 Hatchespsut The Female Pharaoh Viking ISBN 0 670 85976 1 A G McDowell Village Life in Ancient Egypt Laundry Lists and Love Songs Oxford University Press 2002 ISBN 0 19 924753 6 M L Bierbrier The Tomb builders of the Pharaohs American University in Cairo Press p 125 1989 ISBN 977 424 210 6 Edited I E S Edwards C J Gadd N G L Hammond E Sollberger The Cambridge Ancient History II Part I The Middle East and the Aegean Region c 1800 13380 B C Cambridge at the University Press 1973 ISBN 0 521 08230 7 Lorna Oaks The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Pyramids Temples amp Tombs of Ancient Egypt Previously Published as Sacred Sites of Ancient Egypt Southwater 2006 ISBN 978 1 84476 279 8 Lynn Meskell Private life in New Kingdom Egypt Princeton University Press 2002 ISBN 0 691 00448 X Ancient Egypt Lorna Oakes and Lucia Gahlin pp 176 177 Anness Publishing 2006 Davies Benedict 2018 Life within the Five Walls A Handbook to Deir el Medina PDF Abercromby Press ISBN 978 0 670 85976 4 https www britannica com place Dayr al MadinahExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Deir el Medina at Wikimedia Commons Images of Deir el Medina Past amp Present YouTube video clip of Deir el Medina 1 YouTube video clip of Deir el Medina 2 Photographs of Deir el Medina A Survey of the New Kingdom Non literary Texts from Deir el Medina Leiden University Database Archived 2017 11 05 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Deir el Medina amp oldid 1213141560, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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