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Fayum mummy portraits

Mummy portraits or Fayum mummy portraits are a type of naturalistic painted portrait on wooden boards attached to upper class mummies from Roman Egypt. They belong to the tradition of panel painting, one of the most highly regarded forms of art in the Classical world. The Fayum portraits are the only large body of art from that tradition to have survived. They were formerly, and incorrectly, called Coptic portraits.

Mummy portrait of a young woman, Antinoöpolis, Middle Egypt, 2nd century, Louvre, Paris.
This heavily gilt portrait was found in Antinoöpolis in winter 1905/06 by French Archaeologist Alfred Gayet and sold to the Egyptian Museum of Berlin in 1907.

Mummy portraits have been found across Egypt, but are most common in the Faiyum Basin, particularly from Hawara and the Hadrianic Roman city Antinoopolis. "Faiyum portraits" is generally used as a stylistic, rather than a geographic, description. While painted cartonnage mummy cases date back to pharaonic times, the Faiyum mummy portraits were an innovation dating to the time of Roman rule in Egypt.[1] The portraits date to the Imperial Roman era, from the late 1st century BC or the early 1st century AD onwards. It is not clear when their production ended, but recent research suggests the middle of the 3rd century. They are among the largest groups among the very few survivors of the panel painting tradition of the classical world, which continued into Byzantine, Eastern Mediterranean, and Western traditions in the post-classical world, including the local tradition of Coptic Christian iconography in Egypt.

The portraits covered the faces of bodies that were mummified for burial. Extant examples indicate that they were mounted into the bands of cloth that were used to wrap the bodies. Almost all have now been detached from the mummies.[2] They usually depict a single person, showing the head, or head and upper chest, viewed frontally. In terms of artistic tradition, the images clearly derive more from Greco-Roman artistic traditions than Egyptian ones.[3] Two groups of portraits can be distinguished by technique: one of encaustic (wax) paintings, the other in tempera. The former are usually of higher quality.

About 900 mummy portraits are known at present.[4] The majority were found in the necropolis of Faiyum. Due to the hot dry Egyptian climate, the paintings are frequently very well preserved, often retaining their brilliant colours seemingly unfaded by time.

History of research edit

Pre-19th century edit

 
Mummies' discovery by Pietro Della Valle

The Italian explorer Pietro Della Valle, on a visit to Saqqara-Memphis in 1615, was the first European to discover and describe mummy portraits. He transported some mummies with portraits to Europe, which are now in the Albertinum (Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden).[5]

19th-century collectors edit

Although interest in ancient Egypt steadily increased after that period, further finds of mummy portraits did not become known before the early 19th century. The provenance of these first new finds is unclear; they may come from Saqqara as well, or perhaps from Thebes. In 1820, the Baron of Minotuli acquired several mummy portraits for a German collector, but they became part of a whole shipload of Egyptian artifacts lost in the North Sea. In 1827, Léon de Laborde brought two portraits, supposedly found in Memphis, to Europe, one of which can today be seen at the Louvre, the other in the British Museum. Ippolito Rosellini, a member of Jean-François Champollion's 1828–29 expedition to Egypt, brought a further portrait back to Florence. It is so similar to de Laborde's specimens that it is thought to be from the same source.[5] During the 1820s, the British Consul General to Egypt, Henry Salt, sent several further portraits to Paris and London. Some of them were long considered portraits of the family of the Theban Archon Pollios Soter, a historical character known from written sources, but this has turned out to be incorrect.[5]

Once again, a long period elapsed before more mummy portraits came to light. In 1887, Daniel Marie Fouquet heard of the discovery of numerous portrait mummies in a cave. He set off to inspect them some days later, but arrived too late, as the finders had used the painted plaques for firewood during the three previous cold desert nights. Fouquet acquired the remaining two of what had originally been fifty portraits. While the exact location of this find is unclear, the likely source is from er-Rubayat.[5] At that location, not long after Fouquet's visit, the Viennese art trader Theodor Graf found several further images, which he tried to sell as profitably as possible. He engaged the famous Egyptologist Georg Ebers to publish his finds. He produced presentation folders to advertise his individual finds throughout Europe. Although little was known about their archaeological find contexts, Graf went as far as to ascribe the portraits to known Ptolemaic pharaohs by analogy with other works of art, mainly coin portraits. None of these associations were particularly well argued or convincing, but they gained him much attention, not least because he gained the support of well-known scholars like Rudolf Virchow. As a result, mummy portraits became the centre of much attention.[6] By the late 19th century, their very specific aesthetic made them sought-after collection pieces, distributed by the global arts trade.

Archaeological study: Flinders Petrie edit

 
Detail of a portrait within its mummy wrappings, Metropolitan Museum of Art, discovered by Flinders Petrie in 1911.

In parallel, more scientific engagement with the portraits was beginning. In 1887, the British archaeologist Flinders Petrie started excavations at Hawara. He discovered a Roman necropolis which yielded 81 portrait mummies in the first year of excavation. At an exhibition in London, these portraits drew large crowds. In the following year, Petrie continued excavations at the same location but now suffered from the competition of a German and an Egyptian art dealer. Petrie returned in the winter of 1910–11 and excavated a further 70 portrait mummies, some of them quite badly preserved.[7] With very few exceptions, Petrie's studies still provide the only examples of mummy portraits so far found as the result of systematic excavation and published properly. Although the published studies are not entirely up to modern standards, they remain the most important source for the find contexts of portrait mummies.

Late-19th- and early-20th-century collectors edit

In 1892, the German archaeologist von Kaufmann discovered the so-called "Tomb of Aline", which held three mummy portraits; among the most famous today. Other important sources of such finds are at Antinoöpolis and Akhmim. The French archaeologist Albert Gayet worked at Antinoöpolis and found much relevant material, but his work, like that of many of his contemporaries, does not satisfy modern standards. His documentation is incomplete, many of his finds remain without context.

Museums edit

Today, mummy portraits are represented in all important archaeological museums of the world. Many have fine examples on display, notably the British Museum, the National Museum of Scotland, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Louvre in Paris.[8] Because they were mostly recovered through inappropriate and unprofessional means, virtually all are without archaeological context, a fact which consistently lowers the quality of archaeological and culture-historical information they provide. As a result, their overall significance as well as their specific interpretations remain controversial.[8]

Materials and techniques edit

A majority of images show a formal portrait of a single figure, facing and looking toward the viewer, from an angle that is usually slightly turned from full face. The figures are presented as busts against a monochrome background which in some instances are decorated. The individuals are both male and female and range in age from childhood to old age.

Painted surface edit

The majority of preserved mummy portraits were painted on boards or panels, made from different imported hardwoods, including oak, lime, sycamore, cedar, cypress, fig, and citrus.[9] The wood was cut into thin rectangular panels and made smooth. The finished panels were set into layers of wrapping that enclosed the body and were surrounded by bands of cloth, giving the effect of a window-like opening through which the face of the deceased could be seen. Portraits were sometimes painted directly onto the canvas or rags of the mummy wrapping (cartonnage painting).

Painting techniques edit

The wooden surface was sometimes primed for painting with a layer of plaster. In some cases the primed layer reveals a preparatory drawing. Two painting techniques were employed: encaustic (wax) painting and animal glue tempera. The encaustic images are striking because of the contrast between vivid and rich colours, and comparatively large brush-strokes, producing an "Impressionistic" effect. The tempera paintings have a finer gradation of tones and chalkier colours, giving a more restrained appearance.[8] In some cases, gold leaf was used to depict jewellery and wreaths. There also are examples of hybrid techniques or of variations from the main techniques.

The Fayum portraits reveal a wide range of painterly expertise and skill in presenting a lifelike appearance. The naturalism of the portraits is often revealed in knowledge of anatomic structure and in skilled modelling of the form by the use of light and shade, which gives an appearance of three-dimensionality to most of the figures. The graded flesh tones are enhanced with shadows and highlights indicative of directional lighting.

Subjects and social context of the paintings edit

People of Fayum edit

Under Hellenic rule, Egypt hosted several Greek settlements, mostly concentrated in Alexandria, but also in a few other cities, where Greek settlers lived alongside some seven to ten million native Egyptians,[10] or possibly a total of three to five million for all ethnicities, according to lower estimates.[11] Faiyum's earliest Greek inhabitants were soldier-veterans and cleruchs (elite military officials) who were settled by the Ptolemaic kings on reclaimed lands.[10][12] Native Egyptians also came to settle in Faiyum from all over the country, notably the Nile Delta, Upper Egypt, Oxyrhynchus and Memphis, to undertake the labor involved in the land reclamation process, as attested by personal names, local cults and recovered papyri.[13] It is estimated that as much as 30 percent of the population of Faiyum was Greek during the Ptolemaic period, with the rest being native Egyptians.[13] By the Roman period, much of the "Greek" population of Faiyum was made-up of either Hellenized Egyptians or people of mixed Egyptian-Greek origins.[14] Later, in the Roman Period, many veterans of the Roman army, who, initially at least, were not Egyptian but people from disparate cultural and ethnic backgrounds, settled in the area after the completion of their service, and formed social relations and intermarried with local populations.[15]

While commonly believed to represent Greek settlers in Egypt,[16][17] the Faiyum portraits instead reflect the complex synthesis of the predominant Egyptian culture and that of the elite Greek minority in the city.[13] According to Walker, the early Ptolemaic Greek colonists married local women and adopted Egyptian religious beliefs, and by Roman times, their descendants were viewed as Egyptians by the Roman rulers, despite their own self-perception of being Greek. The dental morphology[18] of the Roman-period Faiyum mummies was also compared with that of earlier Egyptian populations, and was found to be "much more closely akin" to that of ancient Egyptians than to Greeks or other European populations.[19]

The portraits represent both descendants of ancient Greek mercenaries, who had fought for Alexander the Great, settled in Egypt and married local women,[13] as well as native Egyptians who were the majority, many of whom had adopted Greek or Latin names, then seen as 'status symbols'.[20][21][22][23] A DNA study shows genetic continuity between the Pre-Ptolemaic, Ptolemaic and Roman populations of Egypt, indicating that foreign rule impacted Egypt's population only to a very limited degree at the genetic level.[24]

Age profile of those depicted edit

Most of the portraits depict the deceased at a relatively young age, and many show children. According to Susan Walker, C.A.T. scans reveal a correspondence of age and sex between mummy and image. She concludes that the age distribution reflects the low life expectancy at the time. It was often believed that the wax portraits were completed during the life of the individual and displayed in their home, a custom that belonged to the traditions of Greek art,[25] but this view is no longer widely held given the evidence suggested by the C.A.T. scans of the Faiyum mummies, as well as Roman census returns. In addition, some portraits were painted directly onto the coffin; for example, on a shroud or another part.

Social status edit

The patrons of the portraits apparently belonged to the affluent upper class of military personnel, civil servants and religious dignitaries. Not everyone could afford a mummy portrait; many mummies were found without one. Flinders Petrie states that only one or two percent of the mummies he excavated were embellished with portraits.[26] The rates for mummy portraits do not survive, but it can be assumed that the material caused higher costs than the labour, since in antiquity, painters were appreciated as craftsmen rather than as artists.[26] The situation from the "Tomb of Aline" is interesting in this regard. It contained four mummies: those of Aline, of two children and of her husband. Unlike his wife and children, the latter was not equipped with a portrait but with a gilt three-dimensional mask. Perhaps plaster masks were preferred if they could be afforded.

 
Three-dimensional funerary masks of painted plaster from Faiyum (1st century), Montreal Museum of Fine Arts.

Based on literary, archaeological and genetic studies, it appears that those depicted were native Egyptians, who had adopted the dominant Greco-Roman culture.[24] The name of some of those portrayed are known from inscriptions; they are predominantly Greek.

Hairstyles and clothing are always influenced by Roman fashion. Women and children are often depicted wearing valuable ornaments and fine garments, men often wearing specific and elaborate outfits. Greek inscriptions of names are relatively common, sometimes they include professions. It is not known whether such inscriptions always reflect reality, or whether they may state ideal conditions or aspirations rather than true conditions.[27] One single inscription is known to definitely indicate the deceased's profession (a shipowner) correctly. The mummy of a woman named Hermione also included the term grammatike (γραμματική). For a long time, it was assumed that this indicated that she was a teacher by profession (for this reason, Flinders Petrie donated the portrait to Girton College, Cambridge, the first residential college for women in Britain), but today, it is assumed that the term indicates her level of education. Some portraits of men show sword-belts or even pommels, suggesting that they were members of the Roman military.[28]

Culture-historical context edit

Changes in burial habits edit

The burial habits of Ptolemaic Egyptians mostly followed ancient traditions. The bodies of members of the upper classes were mummified, equipped with a decorated coffin and a mummy mask to cover the head. The Greeks who entered Egypt at that time mostly followed their own habits. There is evidence from Alexandria and other sites indicating that they practised the Greek tradition of cremation. This broadly reflects the general situation in Hellenistic Egypt, its rulers proclaiming themselves to be pharaohs but otherwise living in an entirely Hellenistic world, incorporating only very few local elements. Conversely, the Egyptians only slowly developed an interest in the Greek-Hellenic culture that dominated the East Mediterranean since the conquests of Alexander. This situation changed substantially with the arrival of the Romans. Within a few generations, all Egyptian elements disappeared from everyday life. Cities like Karanis or Oxyrhynchus are largely Greco-Roman places. There is clear evidence that this resulted from a mixing of different ethnicities in the ruling classes of Roman Egypt.[29][30]

Religious continuity edit

Only in the sphere of religion is there evidence for a continuation of Egyptian traditions. Egyptian temples were erected as late as the 2nd century. In terms of burial habits, Egyptian and Hellenistic elements now mixed. Coffins became increasingly unpopular and went entirely out of use by the 2nd century. In contrast, mummification appears to have been practised by large parts of the population. The mummy mask, originally an Egyptian concept, grew more and more Graeco-Roman in style, Egyptian motifs became ever rarer. The adoption of Roman portrait painting into Egyptian burial cult belongs in this general context.[31]

Link with Roman funeral masks edit

Some authors suggest that the idea of such portraits may be related to the custom among the Roman nobility of displaying imagines, images of their ancestors, in the atrium of their house. In funeral processions, these wax masks were worn by professional mourners to emphasize the continuity of an illustrious family line, but originally perhaps to represent a deeper evocation of the presence of the dead. Roman festivals such as the Parentalia as well as everyday domestic rituals cultivated ancestral spirits (see also veneration of the dead). The development of mummy portraiture may represent a combination of Egyptian and Roman funerary practices, since it appears only after Egypt was established as a Roman province.[32]

Salon paintings edit

The images depict the heads or busts of men, women and children. They probably date from c. 30 BC to the 3rd century.[33] To the modern eye, the portraits appear highly individualistic. Therefore, it has been assumed for a long time that they were produced during the lifetime of their subjects and displayed as "salon paintings" within their houses, to be added to their mummy wrapping after their death. Newer research rather suggests that they were only painted after death,[8] an idea perhaps contradicted by the multiple paintings on some specimens and the (suggested) change of specific details on others. The individualism of those depicted was actually created by variations in some specific details, within a largely unvaried general scheme.[8] The habit of depicting the deceased was not a new one, but the painted images gradually replaced the earlier Egyptian masks, although the latter continued in use for some time, often occurring directly adjacent to portrait mummies, sometimes even in the same graves.

Style edit

The combination of naturalistic Greek portrait of the deceased with Egyptian-form deities, symbols, and frame was primarily phenomenon of funerary art from the chora, or countryside, in Roman Egypt. Combining Egyptian and Greek pictorial forms or motifs was not restricted to funerary art, however: the public and highly visible portraits of Ptolemaic dynasts and Roman emperors grafted iconography developed for a ruler's Greek or Roman images onto Egyptian statues in the dress and posture of Egyptian kings and queens. The possible combinations of Greek and Egyptian elements can be elucidated by imposing a (somewhat artificial) distinction between form and content, where 'form' is taken as the system of representation, and 'content' as the symbol, concept, or figure being portrayed.[34]

Coexistence with other burial habits edit

The religious meaning of mummy portraits has not, so far, been fully explained, nor have associated grave rites. There is some indication that it developed from genuine Egyptian funerary rites, adapted by a multi-cultural ruling class.[8] The tradition of mummy portraits occurred from the Delta to Nubia, but it is striking that other funerary habits prevailed over portrait mummies at all sites except those in the Faiyum (and there especially Hawara and Achmim) and Antinoopolis. In most sites, different forms of burial coexisted. The choice of grave type may have been determined to a large extent by the financial means and status of the deceased, modified by local customs. Portrait mummies have been found both in rock-cut tombs and in freestanding built grave complexes, but also in shallow pits. It is striking that they are virtually never accompanied by any grave offerings, with the exception of occasional pots or sprays of flowers.[35]

End of the mummy portrait tradition edit

For a long time, it was assumed that the latest portraits belong to the end of the 4th century, but recent research has modified this view considerably, suggesting that the last wooden portraits belong to the middle, the last directly painted mummy wrappings to the second half of the 3rd century. It is commonly accepted that production reduced considerably since the beginning of the 3rd century. Several reasons for the decline of the mummy portrait have been suggested; no single reason should probably be isolated, rather, they should be seen as operating together.

  • In the 3rd century the Roman Empire underwent a severe economic crisis, severely limiting the financial abilities of the upper classes. Although they continued to lavishly spend money on representation, they favoured public appearances, like games and festivals, over the production of portraits. However, other elements of sepulchral representation, like sarcophagi, did continue.
  • There is evidence of a religious crisis at the same time. This may not be as closely connected with the rise of Christianity as previously assumed. (The earlier suggestion of a 4th-century end to the portraits would coincide with the widespread distribution of Christianity in Egypt. Christianity also never banned mummification.) An increasing neglect of Egyptian temples is noticeable during the Roman imperial period, leading to a general drop in interest in all ancient religions.
  • The Constitutio Antoniniana, i.e. the granting of Roman citizenship to all free subjects changed the social structures of Egypt. For the first time, the individual cities gained a degree of self-administration. At the same time, the provincial upper classes changed in terms of both composition and inter-relations.

Thus, a combination of several factors appears to have led to changes of fashion and ritual. No clear causality can be asserted.[36]

Considering the limited nature of the current understanding of portrait mummies, it remains distinctly possible that future research will considerably modify the image presented here. For example, some scholars suspect that the centre of production of such finds, and thus the centre of the distinctive funerary tradition they represent, may have been located at Alexandria. New finds from Marina el-Alamein strongly support such a view.[6] In view of the near-total loss of Greek and Roman paintings, mummy portraits are today considered to be among the very rare examples of ancient art that can be seen to reflect "Great paintings" and especially Roman portrait painting.[8]

Mummy portraits as sources on provincial Roman fashion edit

Provincial fashions edit

Mummy portraits depict a variety of different Roman hairstyles. They are one of the main aids in dating the paintings. The majority of the deceased were depicted with hairstyles then in fashion. They are frequently similar to those depicted in sculpture.[citation needed] As part of Roman propaganda, such sculptures, especially those depicting the imperial family, were often displayed throughout the empire. Thus, they had a direct influence on the development of fashion. Nevertheless, the mummy portraits, as well as other finds, suggest that fashions lasted longer in the provinces than in the imperial court, or at least that diverse styles might coexist.[citation needed]

Hairstyles edit

Comparing the hairstyles on mummy portraits, it is revealed that the vast majority of them correspond to the fast-changing fashion of hairstyles used by the elite of the rest of the Roman Empire. They, in turn, often followed the fashion of the Roman emperors and their wives, whose images and coiffures can be dated through their depictions on coins.[citation needed] The female hairstyles are what is usually used for the dating of mummy portraits, because other than a number of elite boys who had long hair parted on the forehead and bound into a bun in the neck, male hairstyle does not differ by much. This is because Roman male was advised to avoid excessive attention to hairstyles as he may be criticized for unmanliness. Complex ringlets with nested plaits, and curls over the forehead was popular in the late first century, with small oval nested plaits popular in the time of Antonines. A later popular woman's hairstyle is one inspired by the Roman Empress, Faustina I, with longer strands at the middle of the scalp drawn back into twists or plaits that were then wound into a tutulus at the crown of the head. Central-parted hair-knots at the back of the neck were common later in the same period. Empress Julia Domna popularized fluffy waved hair. Straight hair was common in the same period while later plaits on the crown of the head were rarely present.[citation needed]

Clothing edit

Other than representations of their wealth and social status, the subject's clothing suggests their previous roles in their local communities. For instance, men depicted to show their bare upper torso were usually athletes. The most common attire is a cloak worn over a chiton.[citation needed] It is common to have a traditionally Roman decorative line, clavi, on the subject's clothing. Most of the decorative lines are dark colored. While painted mummy portraits are shown to bear the traditional Roman decorative lines, not a single portrait has been definitely shown to depict the toga. It should, however, be kept in mind that Greek cloaks and togas are draped very similarly on depictions of the 1st and early 2nd centuries. In the late 2nd and 3rd centuries, togas should be distinguishable, but fail to occur.[citation needed]

Jewelry edit

Apart from the gold wreaths worn by many men, with very few exceptions, only women are depicted with jewellery. This generally accords with the common jewellery types of the Graeco-Roman East. Especially the Antinoopolis portraits depict simple gold link chains and massive gold rings. There are also depictions of precious or semi-precious stones like emerald, carnelian, garnet, agate or amethyst, rarely also of pearls. The stones were normally ground into cylindrical or spherical beads. Some portraits depict elaborate colliers, with precious stones set in gold.[citation needed]

The gold wreath was apparently rarely, if ever, worn in life, but a number have been found in graves from much earlier periods. Based on the plant wreaths given as prizes in contests, the idea was apparently to celebrate the achievements of the deceased in life.

There are three basic shapes of ear ornaments: Especially common in the 1st century are circular or drop-shaped pendants. Archaeological finds indicate that these were fully or semi-spherical. Later tastes favoured S-shaped hooks of gold wire, on which up to five beads of different colours and materials could be strung. The third shape are elaborate pendants with a horizontal bar from which two or three, occasionally four, vertical rods are suspended, usually each decorated with a white bead or pearl at the bottom. Other common ornaments include gold hairpins, often decorated with pearls, fine diadems, and, especially at Antinoopolis, gold hairnets. Many portraits also depict amulets and pendants, perhaps with magical functions.[37]

Art-historical significance edit

 
Severan Tondo with images of Septimius Severus and his family. Antikensammlung Berlin.

The mummy portraits have immense art-historical importance. Ancient sources indicate that panel painting rather than wall painting (i.e., painting on wood or other mobile surfaces) was held in high regard, but very few ancient panel paintings survive. One of the few examples besides the mummy portraits is the Severan Tondo, also from Egypt (around 200), which, like the mummy portraits, is believed to represent a provincial version of contemporary style.[41]

Some aspects of the mummy portraits, especially their frontal perspective and their concentration on key facial features, strongly resemble later icon painting. A direct link has been suggested, but it should be kept in mind that the mummy portraits represent only a small part of a much wider Graeco-Roman tradition, the whole of which later bore an influence on Late Antique and Byzantine Art. A pair of panel "icons" of Serapis and Isis of comparable date (3rd century) and style are in the Getty Museum at Malibu;[42] as with the cult of Mithras, earlier examples of cult images were sculptures or pottery figurines, but from the 3rd century reliefs and then painted images are found.[43]

Gallery edit

In popular culture edit

The Fayum mummy images were used to recreate Jewish faces from first-century Judaea for the 2021 Israeli film Legend of Destruction.[44]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Berman, Lawrence; Freed, Rita E.; and Doxey, Denise. Arts of Ancient Egypt. p. 193. Museum of Fine Arts Boston. 2003. ISBN 0-87846-661-4
  2. ^ Examples still attached are in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo and the British Museum
  3. ^ Oakes, Lorna; Gahlin, Lucia. Ancient Egypt: An Illustrated Reference to the Myths, Religions, Pyramids and Temples of the Land of the Pharaohs. p. 236 Hermes House. 2002. ISBN 1-84477-008-7
  4. ^ Corpus of all known specimens: Klaus Parlasca (1969–2003). Ritratti di mummie. Repertorio d'arte dell'Egitto greco-romano Serie B, v. 1-4. Rome.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

    A further specimen discovered since: B. T. Trope; S. Quirke; P. Lacovara (2005). Excavating Egypt: great discoveries from the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, University College, London. Atlanta, Georgia: Michael C. Carlos Museum. p. 101. ISBN 1-928917-06-2.

  5. ^ a b c d Borg (1998), p. 10f.
  6. ^ a b Borg (1998), pp. 13f., 34ff.
  7. ^ Petrie (1911), p. 1.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Nicola Hoesch (2000). "Mumienporträts". Der Neue Pauly. Vol. 8. p. 464.
  9. ^ Wrede (1982), p. 218.
  10. ^ a b Adams, Winthrope L. (2006). "The Hellenistic Kingdoms". In Bugh, Glenn Richard (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to the Hellenistic World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-521-53570-0. The rest of Egypt was kept divided into the forty-two districts (called hsaput in Egyptian and nomos in Greek), which had been traditional for over 3,000 years. Here, some seven to ten million native Egyptians lived the same life they had always led.
  11. ^ Rathbone, D. W. (1990). "Villages, Land and Population in Graeco-Roman Egypt". Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society. 36 (216): 103–142. doi:10.1017/S0068673500005253. ISSN 0068-6735. JSTOR 44696684.
  12. ^ Stanwick, Paul Edmund (2003). Portraits of the Ptolemies: Greek Kings as Egyptian Pharaohs. Austin: University of Texas Press. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-292-77772-9.
  13. ^ a b c d Bagnall, R.S. (2000). Susan Walker (ed.). Ancient Faces: Mummy Portraits in Roman Egypt. Metropolitan Museum of Art Publications. New York: Routledge. p. 27.
  14. ^ Bagnall (2000), pp. 28–29.
  15. ^ Alston, R. (1995). Soldier and Society in Roman Egypt: A Social History. New York.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  16. ^ . Egyptology Online. Archived from the original on 8 August 2007. Retrieved 16 January 2007.
  17. ^ "Egyptian art and architecture – Greco-Roman Egypt". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Retrieved 16 January 2007.
  18. ^ Dentition helps archaeologists to assess biological and ethnic population traits and relationships
  19. ^ Irish, JD (April 2006). "Who were the ancient Egyptians? Dental affinities among Neolithic through postdynastic peoples". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 129 (4): 529–543. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20261. PMID 16331657.
  20. ^ Broux, Y. Double Names and Elite Strategy in Roman Egypt. Studia Hellenistica 54 (Peeters Publishers, 2016).
  21. ^ Coussement, S. 'Because I am Greek': Polynymy as an Expression of Ethnicity in Ptolemaic Egypt. Studia Hellenistica 55 (Peeters Publishers, 2016).
  22. ^ Riggs, C. (2005). The Beautiful Burial in Roman Egypt: Art, Identity, and Funerary Religion. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-191-53487-4.
  23. ^ Victor J. Katz (1998). A History of Mathematics: An Introduction, p. 184. Addison Wesley, ISBN 0-321-01618-1
  24. ^ a b Schuenemann, Verena; Peltzer, Alexander; Welte, Beatrix (30 May 2017). "Ancient Egyptian mummy genomes suggest an increase of Sub-Saharan African ancestry in post-Roman periods". Nature Communications. 8: 15694. Bibcode:2017NatCo...815694S. doi:10.1038/ncomms15694. PMC 5459999. PMID 28556824.
  25. ^ Encyclopedia Of Ancient Greece, Nigel Guy, Routledge Taylor and Francis group, p. 601
  26. ^ a b Borg (1998), p. 58.
  27. ^ Nicola Hoesch (2000). "Mumienporträts". Der Neue Pauly. Vol. 8. p. 465.
  28. ^ Borg (1998), pp. 53–55.
  29. ^ Borg (1998), pp. 40–56.
  30. ^ Walker & Bierbrier (1997), pp. 17–20.
  31. ^ summarised in: Judith A. Corbelli: The Art of Death in Graeco-Roman Egypt, Princes Risborough 2006 ISBN 0-7478-0647-0
  32. ^ Borg (1998), p. 78.
  33. ^ Nicola Hoesch (2000). "Mumienporträts". Der Neue Pauly. Vol. 8. p. 464. Other scholars, e.g. Barbara Borg, suggest that they start under Tiberius.
  34. ^ Riggs (2005), p. 11.
  35. ^ Borg (1998), p. 31.
  36. ^ Borg (1998), pp. 88–101.
  37. ^ Borg (1998), pp. 51–52.
  38. ^ Walker & Bierbrier (1997), pp. 121–122, Nr. 117.
  39. ^ Walker & Bierbrier (1997), pp. 123–124, Nr. 119.
  40. ^ . www.sikyon.com. Archived from the original on 3 May 2015.
  41. ^ Other examples: a framed portrait from Hawara,[38] the image of a man flanked by two deities from the same site,[39] or the 6th century BC panels from Pitsa in Greece.[40]
  42. ^ . www.aisthesis.de. Archived from the original on 12 May 2012.
  43. ^ Kurt Weitzmann (1982). The Icon. (trans of Le Icone, Montadori 1981). London: Evans Brothers Ltd. p. 3. ISBN 0-237-45645-1.
  44. ^ "כך שני אמנים חילונים בנו מחדש את בית המקדש" [This is how two secular artists recreated the Temple in Jerusalem]. Haaretz (in Hebrew). Retrieved 3 December 2022.

Bibliography edit

(chronological order)

  • W. M. Flinders Petrie (1911). . London. Archived from the original on 27 December 2007 – via ETANA (Electronic Tools and Ancient Near Eastern Archives).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Klaus Parlasca: Mumienporträts und verwandte Denkmäler, Wiesbaden 1966
  • Klaus Parlasca: Ritratti di mummie, Repertorio d'arte dell'Egitto greco-romano Vol. B, 1-4, Rome 1969–2003 (Corpus of most of the known mummy portraits)
  • Henning Wrede (1982). "Mumienporträts". Lexikon der Ägyptologie. Vol. IV. Wiesbaden. pp. 218–222.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Euphrosyne Doxiadis: The Mysterious Fayum Portraits. Thames and Hudson, 1995
  • Barbara Borg: Mumienporträts. Chronologie und kultureller Kontext, Mainz 1996, ISBN 3-8053-1742-5
  • Susan Walker; Morris Bierbrier (1997). Ancient Faces, Mummy Portraits from Roman Egypt. London. ISBN 0-7141-0989-4.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Barbara Borg (1998). "Der zierlichste Anblick der Welt ...". Ägyptische Porträtmumien. Zaberns Bildbände zur Archäologie/ Sonderhefte der Antiken Welt. Mainz am Rhein: Von Zabern. ISBN 3-8053-2264-X; ISBN 3-8053-2263-1
  • Wilfried Seipel (ed.): Bilder aus dem Wüstensand. Mumienportraits aus dem Ägyptischen Museum Kairo; eine Ausstellung des Kunsthistorischen Museums Wien, Milan/Wien/Ostfildern 1998; ISBN 88-8118-459-1;
  • Klaus Parlasca; Hellmut Seemann (Hrsg.): Augenblicke. Mumienporträts und ägyptische Grabkunst aus römischer Zeit [zur Ausstellung Augenblicke – Mumienporträts und Ägyptische Grabkunst aus Römischer Zeit, in der Schirn-Kunsthalle Frankfurt (30. Januar bis 11. April 1999)], München 1999, ISBN 3-7814-0423-4
  • Nicola Hoesch (2000). "Mumienporträts". Der Neue Pauly. Vol. 8. pp. 464f.
  • Susan Walker, ed. (2000). Ancient Faces. Mummy Portraits from Roman Egypt. New York. ISBN 0-415-92744-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Paula Modersohn-Becker und die ägyptischen Mumienportraits ... Katalogbuch zur Ausstellung in Bremen, Kunstsammlung Böttcherstraße, 14.10.2007–24.2.2008, München 2007, ISBN 978-3-7774-3735-4
  • Jan Picton, Stephen Quirke, Paul C. Roberts (ed): Living Images, Egyptian Funerary Portraits in the Petrie Museum, Walnut Creek CA 2007 ISBN 978-1-59874-251-0

External links edit

  • "Unraveling the mysteries of ancient Egypt's spellbinding mummy portraits" CNN feature on Getty Museum project
  • Mummy portraits 3 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine in the Petrie Museum
  • Proportion and personality in the Faiyum Portraits, A.J.N.W Prag, November 2002
  • Detailed discussion of mummy portraits (in English)
  • Detailed discussion of mummy portraits (in French)
  • Gallery of Fayum Mummy Portraits at Flickr

fayum, mummy, portraits, mummy, portraits, type, naturalistic, painted, portrait, wooden, boards, attached, upper, class, mummies, from, roman, egypt, they, belong, tradition, panel, painting, most, highly, regarded, forms, classical, world, fayum, portraits, . Mummy portraits or Fayum mummy portraits are a type of naturalistic painted portrait on wooden boards attached to upper class mummies from Roman Egypt They belong to the tradition of panel painting one of the most highly regarded forms of art in the Classical world The Fayum portraits are the only large body of art from that tradition to have survived They were formerly and incorrectly called Coptic portraits Mummy portrait of a young woman Antinoopolis Middle Egypt 2nd century Louvre Paris This heavily gilt portrait was found in Antinoopolis in winter 1905 06 by French Archaeologist Alfred Gayet and sold to the Egyptian Museum of Berlin in 1907 Mummy portraits have been found across Egypt but are most common in the Faiyum Basin particularly from Hawara and the Hadrianic Roman city Antinoopolis Faiyum portraits is generally used as a stylistic rather than a geographic description While painted cartonnage mummy cases date back to pharaonic times the Faiyum mummy portraits were an innovation dating to the time of Roman rule in Egypt 1 The portraits date to the Imperial Roman era from the late 1st century BC or the early 1st century AD onwards It is not clear when their production ended but recent research suggests the middle of the 3rd century They are among the largest groups among the very few survivors of the panel painting tradition of the classical world which continued into Byzantine Eastern Mediterranean and Western traditions in the post classical world including the local tradition of Coptic Christian iconography in Egypt The portraits covered the faces of bodies that were mummified for burial Extant examples indicate that they were mounted into the bands of cloth that were used to wrap the bodies Almost all have now been detached from the mummies 2 They usually depict a single person showing the head or head and upper chest viewed frontally In terms of artistic tradition the images clearly derive more from Greco Roman artistic traditions than Egyptian ones 3 Two groups of portraits can be distinguished by technique one of encaustic wax paintings the other in tempera The former are usually of higher quality About 900 mummy portraits are known at present 4 The majority were found in the necropolis of Faiyum Due to the hot dry Egyptian climate the paintings are frequently very well preserved often retaining their brilliant colours seemingly unfaded by time Contents 1 History of research 1 1 Pre 19th century 1 2 19th century collectors 1 3 Archaeological study Flinders Petrie 1 4 Late 19th and early 20th century collectors 1 5 Museums 2 Materials and techniques 2 1 Painted surface 2 2 Painting techniques 3 Subjects and social context of the paintings 3 1 People of Fayum 3 2 Age profile of those depicted 3 3 Social status 4 Culture historical context 4 1 Changes in burial habits 4 2 Religious continuity 4 3 Link with Roman funeral masks 4 4 Salon paintings 4 5 Style 5 Coexistence with other burial habits 6 End of the mummy portrait tradition 7 Mummy portraits as sources on provincial Roman fashion 7 1 Provincial fashions 7 2 Hairstyles 7 3 Clothing 7 4 Jewelry 8 Art historical significance 9 Gallery 10 In popular culture 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksHistory of research editPre 19th century edit nbsp Mummies discovery by Pietro Della ValleThe Italian explorer Pietro Della Valle on a visit to Saqqara Memphis in 1615 was the first European to discover and describe mummy portraits He transported some mummies with portraits to Europe which are now in the Albertinum Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden 5 19th century collectors edit Although interest in ancient Egypt steadily increased after that period further finds of mummy portraits did not become known before the early 19th century The provenance of these first new finds is unclear they may come from Saqqara as well or perhaps from Thebes In 1820 the Baron of Minotuli acquired several mummy portraits for a German collector but they became part of a whole shipload of Egyptian artifacts lost in the North Sea In 1827 Leon de Laborde brought two portraits supposedly found in Memphis to Europe one of which can today be seen at the Louvre the other in the British Museum Ippolito Rosellini a member of Jean Francois Champollion s 1828 29 expedition to Egypt brought a further portrait back to Florence It is so similar to de Laborde s specimens that it is thought to be from the same source 5 During the 1820s the British Consul General to Egypt Henry Salt sent several further portraits to Paris and London Some of them were long considered portraits of the family of the Theban Archon Pollios Soter a historical character known from written sources but this has turned out to be incorrect 5 Once again a long period elapsed before more mummy portraits came to light In 1887 Daniel Marie Fouquet heard of the discovery of numerous portrait mummies in a cave He set off to inspect them some days later but arrived too late as the finders had used the painted plaques for firewood during the three previous cold desert nights Fouquet acquired the remaining two of what had originally been fifty portraits While the exact location of this find is unclear the likely source is from er Rubayat 5 At that location not long after Fouquet s visit the Viennese art trader Theodor Graf found several further images which he tried to sell as profitably as possible He engaged the famous Egyptologist Georg Ebers to publish his finds He produced presentation folders to advertise his individual finds throughout Europe Although little was known about their archaeological find contexts Graf went as far as to ascribe the portraits to known Ptolemaic pharaohs by analogy with other works of art mainly coin portraits None of these associations were particularly well argued or convincing but they gained him much attention not least because he gained the support of well known scholars like Rudolf Virchow As a result mummy portraits became the centre of much attention 6 By the late 19th century their very specific aesthetic made them sought after collection pieces distributed by the global arts trade Archaeological study Flinders Petrie edit nbsp Detail of a portrait within its mummy wrappings Metropolitan Museum of Art discovered by Flinders Petrie in 1911 In parallel more scientific engagement with the portraits was beginning In 1887 the British archaeologist Flinders Petrie started excavations at Hawara He discovered a Roman necropolis which yielded 81 portrait mummies in the first year of excavation At an exhibition in London these portraits drew large crowds In the following year Petrie continued excavations at the same location but now suffered from the competition of a German and an Egyptian art dealer Petrie returned in the winter of 1910 11 and excavated a further 70 portrait mummies some of them quite badly preserved 7 With very few exceptions Petrie s studies still provide the only examples of mummy portraits so far found as the result of systematic excavation and published properly Although the published studies are not entirely up to modern standards they remain the most important source for the find contexts of portrait mummies Late 19th and early 20th century collectors edit In 1892 the German archaeologist von Kaufmann discovered the so called Tomb of Aline which held three mummy portraits among the most famous today Other important sources of such finds are at Antinoopolis and Akhmim The French archaeologist Albert Gayet worked at Antinoopolis and found much relevant material but his work like that of many of his contemporaries does not satisfy modern standards His documentation is incomplete many of his finds remain without context Museums edit Today mummy portraits are represented in all important archaeological museums of the world Many have fine examples on display notably the British Museum the National Museum of Scotland the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Louvre in Paris 8 Because they were mostly recovered through inappropriate and unprofessional means virtually all are without archaeological context a fact which consistently lowers the quality of archaeological and culture historical information they provide As a result their overall significance as well as their specific interpretations remain controversial 8 Materials and techniques editA majority of images show a formal portrait of a single figure facing and looking toward the viewer from an angle that is usually slightly turned from full face The figures are presented as busts against a monochrome background which in some instances are decorated The individuals are both male and female and range in age from childhood to old age Painted surface edit nbsp Mummy portrait of a man from Fayum Encaustic on limewood AD 80 100 British Museum nbsp Mummy portrait of a woman from Fayum Hawara modern day Egypt Encaustic on wood AD 300 325 British MuseumThe majority of preserved mummy portraits were painted on boards or panels made from different imported hardwoods including oak lime sycamore cedar cypress fig and citrus 9 The wood was cut into thin rectangular panels and made smooth The finished panels were set into layers of wrapping that enclosed the body and were surrounded by bands of cloth giving the effect of a window like opening through which the face of the deceased could be seen Portraits were sometimes painted directly onto the canvas or rags of the mummy wrapping cartonnage painting Painting techniques edit The wooden surface was sometimes primed for painting with a layer of plaster In some cases the primed layer reveals a preparatory drawing Two painting techniques were employed encaustic wax painting and animal glue tempera The encaustic images are striking because of the contrast between vivid and rich colours and comparatively large brush strokes producing an Impressionistic effect The tempera paintings have a finer gradation of tones and chalkier colours giving a more restrained appearance 8 In some cases gold leaf was used to depict jewellery and wreaths There also are examples of hybrid techniques or of variations from the main techniques The Fayum portraits reveal a wide range of painterly expertise and skill in presenting a lifelike appearance The naturalism of the portraits is often revealed in knowledge of anatomic structure and in skilled modelling of the form by the use of light and shade which gives an appearance of three dimensionality to most of the figures The graded flesh tones are enhanced with shadows and highlights indicative of directional lighting Subjects and social context of the paintings edit nbsp Portrait of a boy identified by inscription as Eutyches Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp A portrait from the late 1st century AD Walters Art Museum Baltimore nbsp Man with sword belt British Museum People of Fayum edit Under Hellenic rule Egypt hosted several Greek settlements mostly concentrated in Alexandria but also in a few other cities where Greek settlers lived alongside some seven to ten million native Egyptians 10 or possibly a total of three to five million for all ethnicities according to lower estimates 11 Faiyum s earliest Greek inhabitants were soldier veterans and cleruchs elite military officials who were settled by the Ptolemaic kings on reclaimed lands 10 12 Native Egyptians also came to settle in Faiyum from all over the country notably the Nile Delta Upper Egypt Oxyrhynchus and Memphis to undertake the labor involved in the land reclamation process as attested by personal names local cults and recovered papyri 13 It is estimated that as much as 30 percent of the population of Faiyum was Greek during the Ptolemaic period with the rest being native Egyptians 13 By the Roman period much of the Greek population of Faiyum was made up of either Hellenized Egyptians or people of mixed Egyptian Greek origins 14 Later in the Roman Period many veterans of the Roman army who initially at least were not Egyptian but people from disparate cultural and ethnic backgrounds settled in the area after the completion of their service and formed social relations and intermarried with local populations 15 While commonly believed to represent Greek settlers in Egypt 16 17 the Faiyum portraits instead reflect the complex synthesis of the predominant Egyptian culture and that of the elite Greek minority in the city 13 According to Walker the early Ptolemaic Greek colonists married local women and adopted Egyptian religious beliefs and by Roman times their descendants were viewed as Egyptians by the Roman rulers despite their own self perception of being Greek The dental morphology 18 of the Roman period Faiyum mummies was also compared with that of earlier Egyptian populations and was found to be much more closely akin to that of ancient Egyptians than to Greeks or other European populations 19 The portraits represent both descendants of ancient Greek mercenaries who had fought for Alexander the Great settled in Egypt and married local women 13 as well as native Egyptians who were the majority many of whom had adopted Greek or Latin names then seen as status symbols 20 21 22 23 A DNA study shows genetic continuity between the Pre Ptolemaic Ptolemaic and Roman populations of Egypt indicating that foreign rule impacted Egypt s population only to a very limited degree at the genetic level 24 Age profile of those depicted edit Most of the portraits depict the deceased at a relatively young age and many show children According to Susan Walker C A T scans reveal a correspondence of age and sex between mummy and image She concludes that the age distribution reflects the low life expectancy at the time It was often believed that the wax portraits were completed during the life of the individual and displayed in their home a custom that belonged to the traditions of Greek art 25 but this view is no longer widely held given the evidence suggested by the C A T scans of the Faiyum mummies as well as Roman census returns In addition some portraits were painted directly onto the coffin for example on a shroud or another part Social status edit The patrons of the portraits apparently belonged to the affluent upper class of military personnel civil servants and religious dignitaries Not everyone could afford a mummy portrait many mummies were found without one Flinders Petrie states that only one or two percent of the mummies he excavated were embellished with portraits 26 The rates for mummy portraits do not survive but it can be assumed that the material caused higher costs than the labour since in antiquity painters were appreciated as craftsmen rather than as artists 26 The situation from the Tomb of Aline is interesting in this regard It contained four mummies those of Aline of two children and of her husband Unlike his wife and children the latter was not equipped with a portrait but with a gilt three dimensional mask Perhaps plaster masks were preferred if they could be afforded nbsp Three dimensional funerary masks of painted plaster from Faiyum 1st century Montreal Museum of Fine Arts Based on literary archaeological and genetic studies it appears that those depicted were native Egyptians who had adopted the dominant Greco Roman culture 24 The name of some of those portrayed are known from inscriptions they are predominantly Greek Hairstyles and clothing are always influenced by Roman fashion Women and children are often depicted wearing valuable ornaments and fine garments men often wearing specific and elaborate outfits Greek inscriptions of names are relatively common sometimes they include professions It is not known whether such inscriptions always reflect reality or whether they may state ideal conditions or aspirations rather than true conditions 27 One single inscription is known to definitely indicate the deceased s profession a shipowner correctly The mummy of a woman named Hermione also included the term grammatike grammatikh For a long time it was assumed that this indicated that she was a teacher by profession for this reason Flinders Petrie donated the portrait to Girton College Cambridge the first residential college for women in Britain but today it is assumed that the term indicates her level of education Some portraits of men show sword belts or even pommels suggesting that they were members of the Roman military 28 Culture historical context editChanges in burial habits edit The burial habits of Ptolemaic Egyptians mostly followed ancient traditions The bodies of members of the upper classes were mummified equipped with a decorated coffin and a mummy mask to cover the head The Greeks who entered Egypt at that time mostly followed their own habits There is evidence from Alexandria and other sites indicating that they practised the Greek tradition of cremation This broadly reflects the general situation in Hellenistic Egypt its rulers proclaiming themselves to be pharaohs but otherwise living in an entirely Hellenistic world incorporating only very few local elements Conversely the Egyptians only slowly developed an interest in the Greek Hellenic culture that dominated the East Mediterranean since the conquests of Alexander This situation changed substantially with the arrival of the Romans Within a few generations all Egyptian elements disappeared from everyday life Cities like Karanis or Oxyrhynchus are largely Greco Roman places There is clear evidence that this resulted from a mixing of different ethnicities in the ruling classes of Roman Egypt 29 30 Religious continuity edit Only in the sphere of religion is there evidence for a continuation of Egyptian traditions Egyptian temples were erected as late as the 2nd century In terms of burial habits Egyptian and Hellenistic elements now mixed Coffins became increasingly unpopular and went entirely out of use by the 2nd century In contrast mummification appears to have been practised by large parts of the population The mummy mask originally an Egyptian concept grew more and more Graeco Roman in style Egyptian motifs became ever rarer The adoption of Roman portrait painting into Egyptian burial cult belongs in this general context 31 Link with Roman funeral masks edit Some authors suggest that the idea of such portraits may be related to the custom among the Roman nobility of displaying imagines images of their ancestors in the atrium of their house In funeral processions these wax masks were worn by professional mourners to emphasize the continuity of an illustrious family line but originally perhaps to represent a deeper evocation of the presence of the dead Roman festivals such as the Parentalia as well as everyday domestic rituals cultivated ancestral spirits see also veneration of the dead The development of mummy portraiture may represent a combination of Egyptian and Roman funerary practices since it appears only after Egypt was established as a Roman province 32 Salon paintings edit The images depict the heads or busts of men women and children They probably date from c 30 BC to the 3rd century 33 To the modern eye the portraits appear highly individualistic Therefore it has been assumed for a long time that they were produced during the lifetime of their subjects and displayed as salon paintings within their houses to be added to their mummy wrapping after their death Newer research rather suggests that they were only painted after death 8 an idea perhaps contradicted by the multiple paintings on some specimens and the suggested change of specific details on others The individualism of those depicted was actually created by variations in some specific details within a largely unvaried general scheme 8 The habit of depicting the deceased was not a new one but the painted images gradually replaced the earlier Egyptian masks although the latter continued in use for some time often occurring directly adjacent to portrait mummies sometimes even in the same graves nbsp Fayum mummy portrait of a man 1st century AD Oriental Institute Chicago nbsp Fayum portrait of a man mid 2nd century Myers Collection Eton College nbsp Fayum portrait of a woman 4th century Museo archeologico nazionale Florence nbsp Fayum portrait of a woman 2nd century Manchester Museum University of ManchesterStyle edit The combination of naturalistic Greek portrait of the deceased with Egyptian form deities symbols and frame was primarily phenomenon of funerary art from the chora or countryside in Roman Egypt Combining Egyptian and Greek pictorial forms or motifs was not restricted to funerary art however the public and highly visible portraits of Ptolemaic dynasts and Roman emperors grafted iconography developed for a ruler s Greek or Roman images onto Egyptian statues in the dress and posture of Egyptian kings and queens The possible combinations of Greek and Egyptian elements can be elucidated by imposing a somewhat artificial distinction between form and content where form is taken as the system of representation and content as the symbol concept or figure being portrayed 34 Coexistence with other burial habits editThe religious meaning of mummy portraits has not so far been fully explained nor have associated grave rites There is some indication that it developed from genuine Egyptian funerary rites adapted by a multi cultural ruling class 8 The tradition of mummy portraits occurred from the Delta to Nubia but it is striking that other funerary habits prevailed over portrait mummies at all sites except those in the Faiyum and there especially Hawara and Achmim and Antinoopolis In most sites different forms of burial coexisted The choice of grave type may have been determined to a large extent by the financial means and status of the deceased modified by local customs Portrait mummies have been found both in rock cut tombs and in freestanding built grave complexes but also in shallow pits It is striking that they are virtually never accompanied by any grave offerings with the exception of occasional pots or sprays of flowers 35 End of the mummy portrait tradition edit nbsp Fayum mummy portrait of a man named Herakleides 50 100 AD Getty Villa nbsp Portrait of a woman named Isidora from Ankyronpolis 100 110 AD Getty Villa nbsp Fayum portrait of a woman from Hawara 75 100 AD Getty VillaFor a long time it was assumed that the latest portraits belong to the end of the 4th century but recent research has modified this view considerably suggesting that the last wooden portraits belong to the middle the last directly painted mummy wrappings to the second half of the 3rd century It is commonly accepted that production reduced considerably since the beginning of the 3rd century Several reasons for the decline of the mummy portrait have been suggested no single reason should probably be isolated rather they should be seen as operating together In the 3rd century the Roman Empire underwent a severe economic crisis severely limiting the financial abilities of the upper classes Although they continued to lavishly spend money on representation they favoured public appearances like games and festivals over the production of portraits However other elements of sepulchral representation like sarcophagi did continue There is evidence of a religious crisis at the same time This may not be as closely connected with the rise of Christianity as previously assumed The earlier suggestion of a 4th century end to the portraits would coincide with the widespread distribution of Christianity in Egypt Christianity also never banned mummification An increasing neglect of Egyptian temples is noticeable during the Roman imperial period leading to a general drop in interest in all ancient religions The Constitutio Antoniniana i e the granting of Roman citizenship to all free subjects changed the social structures of Egypt For the first time the individual cities gained a degree of self administration At the same time the provincial upper classes changed in terms of both composition and inter relations Thus a combination of several factors appears to have led to changes of fashion and ritual No clear causality can be asserted 36 Considering the limited nature of the current understanding of portrait mummies it remains distinctly possible that future research will considerably modify the image presented here For example some scholars suspect that the centre of production of such finds and thus the centre of the distinctive funerary tradition they represent may have been located at Alexandria New finds from Marina el Alamein strongly support such a view 6 In view of the near total loss of Greek and Roman paintings mummy portraits are today considered to be among the very rare examples of ancient art that can be seen to reflect Great paintings and especially Roman portrait painting 8 Mummy portraits as sources on provincial Roman fashion editProvincial fashions edit Mummy portraits depict a variety of different Roman hairstyles They are one of the main aids in dating the paintings The majority of the deceased were depicted with hairstyles then in fashion They are frequently similar to those depicted in sculpture citation needed As part of Roman propaganda such sculptures especially those depicting the imperial family were often displayed throughout the empire Thus they had a direct influence on the development of fashion Nevertheless the mummy portraits as well as other finds suggest that fashions lasted longer in the provinces than in the imperial court or at least that diverse styles might coexist citation needed Hairstyles edit nbsp Depiction of a woman with curly hair wearing a violet chiton and cloak and pendant earrings British Museum nbsp The plaited hairstyle of this elite woman makes it possible to date this painting to the reign of Trajan 98 117 Walters Art Museum nbsp Depiction of a woman with a ringlet hairstyle an orange chiton with black bands and rod shaped earrings Museum of ScotlandComparing the hairstyles on mummy portraits it is revealed that the vast majority of them correspond to the fast changing fashion of hairstyles used by the elite of the rest of the Roman Empire They in turn often followed the fashion of the Roman emperors and their wives whose images and coiffures can be dated through their depictions on coins citation needed The female hairstyles are what is usually used for the dating of mummy portraits because other than a number of elite boys who had long hair parted on the forehead and bound into a bun in the neck male hairstyle does not differ by much This is because Roman male was advised to avoid excessive attention to hairstyles as he may be criticized for unmanliness Complex ringlets with nested plaits and curls over the forehead was popular in the late first century with small oval nested plaits popular in the time of Antonines A later popular woman s hairstyle is one inspired by the Roman Empress Faustina I with longer strands at the middle of the scalp drawn back into twists or plaits that were then wound into a tutulus at the crown of the head Central parted hair knots at the back of the neck were common later in the same period Empress Julia Domna popularized fluffy waved hair Straight hair was common in the same period while later plaits on the crown of the head were rarely present citation needed Clothing edit Other than representations of their wealth and social status the subject s clothing suggests their previous roles in their local communities For instance men depicted to show their bare upper torso were usually athletes The most common attire is a cloak worn over a chiton citation needed It is common to have a traditionally Roman decorative line clavi on the subject s clothing Most of the decorative lines are dark colored While painted mummy portraits are shown to bear the traditional Roman decorative lines not a single portrait has been definitely shown to depict the toga It should however be kept in mind that Greek cloaks and togas are draped very similarly on depictions of the 1st and early 2nd centuries In the late 2nd and 3rd centuries togas should be distinguishable but fail to occur citation needed Jewelry edit Further information Roman jewelry and Crown of justification Apart from the gold wreaths worn by many men with very few exceptions only women are depicted with jewellery This generally accords with the common jewellery types of the Graeco Roman East Especially the Antinoopolis portraits depict simple gold link chains and massive gold rings There are also depictions of precious or semi precious stones like emerald carnelian garnet agate or amethyst rarely also of pearls The stones were normally ground into cylindrical or spherical beads Some portraits depict elaborate colliers with precious stones set in gold citation needed The gold wreath was apparently rarely if ever worn in life but a number have been found in graves from much earlier periods Based on the plant wreaths given as prizes in contests the idea was apparently to celebrate the achievements of the deceased in life There are three basic shapes of ear ornaments Especially common in the 1st century are circular or drop shaped pendants Archaeological finds indicate that these were fully or semi spherical Later tastes favoured S shaped hooks of gold wire on which up to five beads of different colours and materials could be strung The third shape are elaborate pendants with a horizontal bar from which two or three occasionally four vertical rods are suspended usually each decorated with a white bead or pearl at the bottom Other common ornaments include gold hairpins often decorated with pearls fine diadems and especially at Antinoopolis gold hairnets Many portraits also depict amulets and pendants perhaps with magical functions 37 Art historical significance edit nbsp Severan Tondo with images of Septimius Severus and his family Antikensammlung Berlin The mummy portraits have immense art historical importance Ancient sources indicate that panel painting rather than wall painting i e painting on wood or other mobile surfaces was held in high regard but very few ancient panel paintings survive One of the few examples besides the mummy portraits is the Severan Tondo also from Egypt around 200 which like the mummy portraits is believed to represent a provincial version of contemporary style 41 Some aspects of the mummy portraits especially their frontal perspective and their concentration on key facial features strongly resemble later icon painting A direct link has been suggested but it should be kept in mind that the mummy portraits represent only a small part of a much wider Graeco Roman tradition the whole of which later bore an influence on Late Antique and Byzantine Art A pair of panel icons of Serapis and Isis of comparable date 3rd century and style are in the Getty Museum at Malibu 42 as with the cult of Mithras earlier examples of cult images were sculptures or pottery figurines but from the 3rd century reliefs and then painted images are found 43 Gallery edit nbsp Fayum mummy portrait of man thin face and with curly hair at MET museum gallery 138 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp In popular culture editThe Fayum mummy images were used to recreate Jewish faces from first century Judaea for the 2021 Israeli film Legend of Destruction 44 See also editAncient Roman art Coptic art Coptic Museum Pitsa panels Malibu PainterReferences edit Berman Lawrence Freed Rita E and Doxey Denise Arts of Ancient Egypt p 193 Museum of Fine Arts Boston 2003 ISBN 0 87846 661 4 Examples still attached are in the Egyptian Museum Cairo and the British Museum Oakes Lorna Gahlin Lucia Ancient Egypt An Illustrated Reference to the Myths Religions Pyramids and Temples of the Land of the Pharaohs p 236 Hermes House 2002 ISBN 1 84477 008 7 Corpus of all known specimens Klaus Parlasca 1969 2003 Ritratti di mummie Repertorio d arte dell Egitto greco romano Serie B v 1 4 Rome a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link A further specimen discovered since B T Trope S Quirke P Lacovara 2005 Excavating Egypt great discoveries from the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology University College London Atlanta Georgia Michael C Carlos Museum p 101 ISBN 1 928917 06 2 a b c d Borg 1998 p 10f a b Borg 1998 pp 13f 34ff Petrie 1911 p 1 a b c d e f g Nicola Hoesch 2000 Mumienportrats Der Neue Pauly Vol 8 p 464 Wrede 1982 p 218 a b Adams Winthrope L 2006 The Hellenistic Kingdoms In Bugh Glenn Richard ed The Cambridge Companion to the Hellenistic World Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 39 ISBN 978 0 521 53570 0 The rest of Egypt was kept divided into the forty two districts called hsaput in Egyptian and nomos in Greek which had been traditional for over 3 000 years Here some seven to ten million native Egyptians lived the same life they had always led Rathbone D W 1990 Villages Land and Population in Graeco Roman Egypt Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 36 216 103 142 doi 10 1017 S0068673500005253 ISSN 0068 6735 JSTOR 44696684 Stanwick Paul Edmund 2003 Portraits of the Ptolemies Greek Kings as Egyptian Pharaohs Austin University of Texas Press p 23 ISBN 978 0 292 77772 9 a b c d Bagnall R S 2000 Susan Walker ed Ancient Faces Mummy Portraits in Roman Egypt Metropolitan Museum of Art Publications New York Routledge p 27 Bagnall 2000 pp 28 29 Alston R 1995 Soldier and Society in Roman Egypt A Social History New York a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Fayoum mummy portraits Egyptology Online Archived from the original on 8 August 2007 Retrieved 16 January 2007 Egyptian art and architecture Greco Roman Egypt Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 16 January 2007 Dentition helps archaeologists to assess biological and ethnic population traits and relationships Irish JD April 2006 Who were the ancient Egyptians Dental affinities among Neolithic through postdynastic peoples American Journal of Physical Anthropology 129 4 529 543 doi 10 1002 ajpa 20261 PMID 16331657 Broux Y Double Names and Elite Strategy in Roman Egypt Studia Hellenistica 54 Peeters Publishers 2016 Coussement S Because I am Greek Polynymy as an Expression of Ethnicity in Ptolemaic Egypt Studia Hellenistica 55 Peeters Publishers 2016 Riggs C 2005 The Beautiful Burial in Roman Egypt Art Identity and Funerary Religion Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 191 53487 4 Victor J Katz 1998 A History of Mathematics An Introduction p 184 Addison Wesley ISBN 0 321 01618 1 a b Schuenemann Verena Peltzer Alexander Welte Beatrix 30 May 2017 Ancient Egyptian mummy genomes suggest an increase of Sub Saharan African ancestry in post Roman periods Nature Communications 8 15694 Bibcode 2017NatCo 815694S doi 10 1038 ncomms15694 PMC 5459999 PMID 28556824 Encyclopedia Of Ancient Greece Nigel Guy Routledge Taylor and Francis group p 601 a b Borg 1998 p 58 Nicola Hoesch 2000 Mumienportrats Der Neue Pauly Vol 8 p 465 Borg 1998 pp 53 55 Borg 1998 pp 40 56 Walker amp Bierbrier 1997 pp 17 20 summarised in Judith A Corbelli The Art of Death in Graeco Roman Egypt Princes Risborough 2006 ISBN 0 7478 0647 0 Borg 1998 p 78 Nicola Hoesch 2000 Mumienportrats Der Neue Pauly Vol 8 p 464 Other scholars e g Barbara Borg suggest that they start under Tiberius Riggs 2005 p 11 Borg 1998 p 31 Borg 1998 pp 88 101 Borg 1998 pp 51 52 Walker amp Bierbrier 1997 pp 121 122 Nr 117 Walker amp Bierbrier 1997 pp 123 124 Nr 119 Painting www sikyon com Archived from the original on 3 May 2015 Other examples a framed portrait from Hawara 38 the image of a man flanked by two deities from the same site 39 or the 6th century BC panels from Pitsa in Greece 40 image www aisthesis de Archived from the original on 12 May 2012 Kurt Weitzmann 1982 The Icon trans of Le Icone Montadori 1981 London Evans Brothers Ltd p 3 ISBN 0 237 45645 1 כך שני אמנים חילונים בנו מחדש את בית המקדש This is how two secular artists recreated the Temple in Jerusalem Haaretz in Hebrew Retrieved 3 December 2022 Bibliography edit chronological order W M Flinders Petrie 1911 Roman Portraits and Memphis IV London Archived from the original on 27 December 2007 via ETANA Electronic Tools and Ancient Near Eastern Archives a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Klaus Parlasca Mumienportrats und verwandte Denkmaler Wiesbaden 1966 Klaus Parlasca Ritratti di mummie Repertorio d arte dell Egitto greco romano Vol B 1 4 Rome 1969 2003 Corpus of most of the known mummy portraits Henning Wrede 1982 Mumienportrats Lexikon der Agyptologie Vol IV Wiesbaden pp 218 222 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Euphrosyne Doxiadis The Mysterious Fayum Portraits Thames and Hudson 1995 Barbara Borg Mumienportrats Chronologie und kultureller Kontext Mainz 1996 ISBN 3 8053 1742 5 Susan Walker Morris Bierbrier 1997 Ancient Faces Mummy Portraits from Roman Egypt London ISBN 0 7141 0989 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Barbara Borg 1998 Der zierlichste Anblick der Welt Agyptische Portratmumien Zaberns Bildbande zur Archaologie Sonderhefte der Antiken Welt Mainz am Rhein Von Zabern ISBN 3 8053 2264 X ISBN 3 8053 2263 1 Wilfried Seipel ed Bilder aus dem Wustensand Mumienportraits aus dem Agyptischen Museum Kairo eine Ausstellung des Kunsthistorischen Museums Wien Milan Wien Ostfildern 1998 ISBN 88 8118 459 1 Klaus Parlasca Hellmut Seemann Hrsg Augenblicke Mumienportrats und agyptische Grabkunst aus romischer Zeit zur Ausstellung Augenblicke Mumienportrats und Agyptische Grabkunst aus Romischer Zeit in der Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt 30 Januar bis 11 April 1999 Munchen 1999 ISBN 3 7814 0423 4 Nicola Hoesch 2000 Mumienportrats Der Neue Pauly Vol 8 pp 464f Susan Walker ed 2000 Ancient Faces Mummy Portraits from Roman Egypt New York ISBN 0 415 92744 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Paula Modersohn Becker und die agyptischen Mumienportraits Katalogbuch zur Ausstellung in Bremen Kunstsammlung Bottcherstrasse 14 10 2007 24 2 2008 Munchen 2007 ISBN 978 3 7774 3735 4 Jan Picton Stephen Quirke Paul C Roberts ed Living Images Egyptian Funerary Portraits in the Petrie Museum Walnut Creek CA 2007 ISBN 978 1 59874 251 0External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mummy portraits Unraveling the mysteries of ancient Egypt s spellbinding mummy portraits CNN feature on Getty Museum project Mummy portraits Archived 3 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine in the Petrie Museum Proportion and personality in the Faiyum Portraits A J N W Prag November 2002 History of Encaustic Art Petrie s report from 1911 Detailed discussion of mummy portraits in English Detailed discussion of mummy portraits in French Gallery of Fayum Mummy Portraits at Flickr Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fayum mummy portraits amp oldid 1206392089, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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