You are on page 1of 10

Eg noblewomen.

lec

Life at the top: the life of women in the wealthy classes For women in richer families, these ancient Egyptian women had the best of opportunities. Although they still faced the problems of a world without secure contraception and the consequent perils of childbirth, richer women had better food and clothing and more comfortable homes, as rich women do today. Few of them had an opportunity to partake in working or religious activities outside the home, but some women were involved in the cult of the god Amen in Thebes. Unfortunately, not much is known about the princesses and queens who were at the peak of society: these

women will be discussed in later lectures. The roles of upper class women in the New Kingdom were mainly confined to domestic life, such as the securing of food and liquid supplies for the family, the spinning and weaving of cloth, the care of children and the few pleasures that the neighbourhood afforded, such as visiting friends refer to your handout. Some of them appear to have had training in the playing of musical instruments, as some of the Old and Middle Kingdom tomb decoration reveals. The harp is the favoured musical instrument and can be in the hands of either wives or daughter, but women are shown striking the circular drum and the wife of the noble, Ny-ankh-Pepy of Meir, is entitled percussionist ( xnwt).1 (Other percussionists are known from temple scenes in the OK as well as the MK.) Those women who were at the peak of the upper classes will have had an opportunity to be present in the royal court as attendants. Many of these would have served the queen, although what their actual duties were we are not certain. Fischer2 has pointed out that a few women are involved in the temple rituals depicted in the jubilee of Niuserre at the Abu Ghurob sun sanctuary, but we do not know either their position or what duties they were performing. It is possible, however, that these women are xntyt-S: female officials who received

H.G. Fischer, Egyptian Women of the Old Kingdom and of the Heracleopolitan period, MMA (New York, 2nd edn, 2000), 24.
2

Ibid., 25. 3

wages for assisting in the royal mortuary temples at Abusir. Some of those women also had the title of percussionist (xnwt). One outstanding courtier was Neferesres [OHT], who had a string of courtly titles. She was a khekeret-nswt courtier (the less elevated grade of courtier), a sole khekeret-nswt (the upper grade of courtier), an Overseer of Pleasures, and Overseer of all the beautiful pleasures of the King. She was the Overseer of the royal Ibu Dancers, Overseer of the royal Khener Troupe and she carried the epithets: She who sees the Beauty of her Lord every day and She who pleases the Heart of the King of Lower Egypt in all his places. She does not appear to have been married perhaps she was a career woman and she shared a tomb with Nymaatre, the Overseer of Singers, with whom she probably worked. (Nymaatre himself was married to someone else.) He might have been her brother. Women with strong voices might join the ranks of the Dryt, or professional mourners. Special singing groups of merit singers seemed to have been present on royal occasions during the Old Kingdom. Other young girls might be trained as professional singers, dancers, or musicians for the cults of the gods or, sometimes, for musical troupes at the court of the king. Amongst the few Middle Kingdom professions for women there is one Hsyt m bnt a singer who was also a harpist.3 There were several different groups of dancers that performed at different functions. We know from reliefs found at Abusir 4 that there was a khener of dancers who performed for the king and, from the tomb records of Neferes-res, we know that they provided entertainment for the king and were sometimes under the direction of a female overseer. Other khener groups were present at funerals, but we do not know many details about them, other than their
3

W. Ward, Essays on Feminine Titles of the Middle Kingdom and related subjects, American University (Beirut, 1996), 12.
4

Z. Hawass & M. Verner, Newly Discovered Blocks from the Causeway of Sahure, Mitteilungen des Deutsches Archologisches Institute Kairo 52, (1996), 177 - 186.

representation on many tomb walls. They usually operated with singers and a small orchestra. Since we have a number of tomb reliefs with the wives or daughters performing with such groups, it is not impossible that prestigious khener groups could consist of high-born women (called a xnrtt). Men were also included in the khener troupes. It is probable that the khener were the more prestigious group of dancers, but there were the more vigorous ibu dancing troupes. Yet a third group of dancers was the Sndt, dancers of the Acacia House (singular dancer, Sndtt), which was a religious function in which women were permitted. 5 Much more prestigious than the kheneretet were the courtly attendants. While we do not know what exactly they did, we know how to find them in the records because of their titles. The lowest grade were the Spswt nswt, noble women of the king. They are present in small numbers throughout the Old Kingdom and early Middle Kingdom periods, but we know nothing about their roles. More elevated than these are the Xkrt nswt, the adorned ones of the king in reality, the lower grade female courtiers. Above them in rank are the Xkrt nswt watt: the Sole Female Courtiers, who must have waited on the royal family. Outranking them, however, were the rxt nswt, those who were known to the king. While there is some elasticity about all these titles, the meaning of rxt nswt is the most contentious. It might mean someone whom the king recognised in some way, or it might even extend to a descendant of a king, for many of these people can be shown to be grandchildren of Egyptian rulers. All of them were courtiers, and, usually, only the Xkrt nswt watt or the rxt nswt will have a place in a royal necropolis. Some of the more fortunate women in New Kingdom times might have gained added status as a Singer of Amen, Min or one of the other gods. Occasionally, the wife of the High Priest or some favoured courtier became the
5

E. Edel, Das Akazienhaus und seine Rolle in den Begrabnisriten des alten gypten, MS (Berlin, 1970). 5

Superior of those singers, but those women belonged to the highest ranking in society and were often attendants of the royal court. One woman is recorded as the wife of Min (the god); her title is Hmt Mnw.6 It is the first of the elevated titles associated with the priesthoods of women; another from the Middle Kingdom is entitled Hnwt nt Imn the Lady of Amon. This may have been a prelude to the later Gods Wife of Amen, which was only available to royal women. A select few amongst the most privileged women might attain the rank of Adoratrice of Amen particularly if their daughters became wives or concubines of the king, but very few women had any other type of employment unless they were workers dependent on their work for a living. Amongst those women were basket-makers, cooks, beer-brewers, kitchen hands, gardeners and meal grinders. The less skilled worked alongside the men in the fields. In the New Kingdom, there appear to be very few women who have administrative or professional positions of any kind other than within the context of temple service. But does this reflect the reality of the period? Male bias cannot be divorced from the representations of women in both written texts and painted images. The reliefs and paintings that adorn the walls of tomb chapels were executed by men and were oriented toward men, with women playing a passive role. A study of the texts from tombs reveals that, despite the presence of women within the reliefs and paintings, the texts were concerned with the Afterlife of the male tomb owner. No men are ever shown mourning a wife, yet many women died before their husbands did. In the Old Kingdom, indeed, a large percentage of the tombs of family men do not feature a wife at all. 7 Furthermore, none of the essentially female tasks, such as upper class women weaving or performing domestic tasks is discovered within our sources though weavers and nurses of the lower classes are depicted within tomb reliefs and paintings especially of the Middle Kingdom.
6

N. Kanawati, The Rock Tombs of El-Hawawish III, fig. 26.

See, for example, A.M. Roth, A Cemetery of Palace Attendants (Giza Mastabas 6), MFA (Boston, 1995), 44; see also the articles in the Bibliography by V.G. Callender. 6

In the later New Kingdom era, women of the upper classes may be seen in some tombs engaged in ceremonies associated with their husbands. On the face of it, it looks as though they are active participants in funerary ritual. In fact, though, they are praising their husbands and performing gestures that would ensure that he has a happy Afterlife. Women did not have equality with men in ancient Egypt, except before the law, in regard to property and in connection with taxation. Both men and women could own property and dispose of it as they liked, and both were punished if they committed crimes, although the punishment inflicted differed between men and women. Both were liable for taxation during the Middle Kingdom, for we have cases of women who ran away to escape their labour obligations, but the position of the upper class woman does not appear in our records. The monuments belonging to women also tell us a lot about the attitudes society has towards them. Most monuments are made for men. If their husbands thought it proper, many of them included their wives on their memorials. But quite a number of men are featured alone on their stelae, although some of them may include a son or a daughter in effigy or in the text. The will of Prince Nikaure mentioned in the literature section is an example where Nikaure is arranging for a mastaba-tomb for his daughter near the pyramid of Khafre, the second of the three great pyramids on the Giza plateau. There are scores of private tombs around these three pyramids, so many that excavation still continues after more than a century, and their publication lags behind their discovery by as much as 50 years. In Khufus western cemetery, Prince Merib did the same for his daughter, Nensedjerkai. We will look at these examples next week.

In contrast to those provisions for upper class women, some women cannot be found in the tomb record of their husbands; if they are lucky, they can be depicted in the tombs of their sons or daughters. 8 While the stelae of the Middle Kingdom feature not only wives, but children, parents and other relations, on other occasions, in different eras, the mistress of the house is not even mentioned in the husbands tomb or on his stele. We do not know the reasons for this. There are in the New Kingdom as in earlier periods, too quite a number of stelae in which women appear on their own. [OHT] In this example, this temple Singer lifts her hands in praise of the goddess Hathor, but the phrase, nbt pr, indicates that she is a married woman. Her husbands name does not appear on the stele, however. Gay Robins 9 has observed that there are unwritten rules in Egyptian art which she calls gender decorum about which we are in the dark. For example, when a female is the rare owner of a tomb, her husband is always absent because of some protocol about which we are ignorant. It may be that, as it is the females tomb, and as men are nearly always shown as being larger than their female companions, the male presence in a tomb would result in the uncomfortable visual situation of a female tomb owner being shown as being larger than the male. In a similar situation, when a husband omits his wifes name from his stele, this, too, is probably in accordance with the rules of gender decorum, as Robins believes. Perhaps religious fashion may have played a part, because in certain periods of history, such as the late 5th Dynasty and the Amarna periods, women are surprisingly absent from the tombs of their husbands. Of the forty-six tombs at Amarna, for example, only one (the tomb of Aye) contains wall reliefs featuring the wife of the tomb owner.10 This makes the tomb of Maia really exceptional.
8

Henry G. Fischer records two false doors, CG 1501 and LD Text I, 19 (Egyptian Women of the Old Kingdom and of the Heracleopolitan period, MMA (New York, 2nd edn, 2000), 60 note 51). In addition, there is Princess Sedit, well represented in the tomb of Merib of Khufus Western Field, at Giza. 9 Gay Robins, Reflections of Women in the New Kingdom , Michael C. Carlos Museum, Emory University, 1995), 7
10

Alain Zivie,

Tutankhamens Nurse, Maia 8

Egypte, Afrique & Orient,

Maias tomb is similar in construction to the tomb of Aper-el, Akhenatens vizier, whose tomb was discovered by Zivie at Saqqara. Her name is spelt in several ways throughout the tomb: Maia, Mtia and may have been a pet name for Mut + something perhaps even Mutemwia but Mwt was a banned name during the Amarna period. She has several titles, some of which are merely extension variations, but the main ones are mnat nswt, mnat nswt Sd(.t), mnat nswt Sd(.t) Haw nTr, rdt snq n nTr nfr, Hsyt n nTr nfr being among them. (Translated, these mean: royal nurse, Nurse who nourishes the king, She who nourishes the divine body of the king, She who gives milk to the perfect god, She who is a praised one of the perfect god.) Maia is represented many times throughout her tomb, always with a long full wig ending in ringlets [slide]. Her portrait is most frequent on the pillars in her tomb, where she wears the shebyu collar of two rows of golden disc beads. Although such collars are worn by kings from the time of Thutmose IV onwards, and, during the Amarna period are seen as prize gifts being given to the highest officials, few females are so honoured by being awarded the collar. Ayes wife, Tey, who was the nurse of Nefertiti, is distinguished in this way, however. Maia may, in fact have been represented at Amarna carrying Tutankhamen, for several nurses are shown in the Royal Tomb of Akhenaten, in the so-called Princesses Suite. Royal nurses there are indicated with a fan being held behind them and the child within their arms. Although she must have been married and must have born a child (as the kings wet nurse, she needed to be lactating), Maias own family is not represented within her own tomb. This has perhaps to do with what Gay Robins has called the gender decorum of mortuary monuments: males are sometimes without their wives and females without their spouse, as we saw a little earlier.

Ward has observed that It is frankly difficult to offer a satisfactory overall generalization about women in public life outside the temples. I have the impression that a rather small minority of Egyptian women entered what we would term secular professions, he says. There do not seem to have been any particular societal barriers preventing them from doing so, so it would be rather a matter of choice on the part of individual women themselves. To a certain extent, we lack enough documentation, but this is not the whole answer. The women who were educated and therefore eligible to enter public life belonged to the upper classes and it was these very women who already had extensive responsibilities over their large households. It may be that few women of this class had the time to engage in public professions. The working mom was just not a role that most women could take on even if they wished to do so. In summing up his excellent essay on the status of women, Professor William Ward has concluded that The best [he] can offer as a general rule of thumb is [the view that while] public life was the domain of men, women had the vast responsibility of private life. The number of women who were able to move into the public professional sector was relatively small and those that we can identify are the exceptions.11

11

Wm Ward, The Status of Women, internet lecture: www.stoa.org/diotima/essays 10

You might also like