Egyptian mummy thought to be a priest actually pregnant woman
In the only known instance of a fetus being embalmed, a mummy mistakenly thought to be a priest for over 150 years was actually a pregnant woman.
By JERUSALEM POST STAFF , APRIL 30, 2021
Egypt mummy 311 (photo credit: AP)
A pregnant mummy
once assumed to be the embalmed remains of a priest has been discovered
by researchers from the University of Warsaw, according to a new study.
The
team had been working on the Warsaw Mummy Project with the Warsaw
National Museum and were nearing the completion of their project when
they examined the x-ray of a mummy that has been in Warsaw since 1826
for the first time.
The
mummy had been kept in a coffin engraved with the name of a male
priest, Hor-Djehuti, and it wasn't until 2016 that researchers realized
that they had in-fact mistaken a young woman for the priest.
However,
while examining x-rays one final time before the completion of their
project, the researchers discovered what appeared to be the hand and
foot of a fetus inside the ancient mummy's womb. Upon examining it
further they discovered that the young woman, estimated to have been
between the age of 20-30, had been 26-30 weeks pregnant at the time of
death.
The approximate age of the fetus was estimated by taking measurements of the skull, which had remained intact. However, due to poor preservation of the child itself, the rest of the skeleton was unreadable and offered no further insights.
As
this is the only known case of a fetus being embalmed with the mother,
it is unclear why this decision was made. Possible explanations are that
there may have been an attempt to hide an unplanned pregnancy, or that
perhaps the fetus could not be removed due to ritual beliefs of birth
and the afterlife.
According to ancient Egyptian beliefs, the name of a
person is an integral part of their being, and had the unborn and
unnamed baby been separated from the mother it would not have been able
to enter the afterlife.
First well-preserved pregnant Egyptian mummy discovered, National Post, Apr 29, 2021
Another possibility is simply that it was too difficult for the
embalmers to remove the fetus from the deceased mother without damaging
both her and the unborn child.
The embalmed woman is thought to have resided in Thebes and lived around the 1st century BC, although the high quality of the embalming means it is possible that she lived even earlier than the current estimate.
Wojciech
Ejsmond of the Polish Academy of Sciences called this the "most
important and most significant finding so far, and continued on to
explain the possibilities that this discovery could open up.
As this is
the first known instance of a pregnant woman being embalmed, it could
reveal important and currently unknown information about the process and
potential complications of pregnancy in ancient times
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