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Mummy - Body, Antiquity, or Medicine?

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2017
2323.pdf (840.5Kb)
Autori
Vasiljević, Vera
Babić, Staša
Članak u časopisu (Objavljena verzija)
Metapodaci
Prikaz svih podataka o dokumentu
Apstrakt
In the Renaissance Europe, along with the keen admiration for Egyptian antiquities, a custom has been recorded of production and consumption of a powder healing a number of ailments, produced by grounding mummies. The practice extended into the 20th century. The belief in the remedial effects of this substance is derived from the Classical and Arabic written sources, and may have been augmented by the ideas about the mystical wisdom of the ancient Egyptians, running throughout the European history and originating among the Classical Greeks. This exceptional example raises the problem of various ways in which the material remains of the past are perceived and classified. In the case of an Egyptian mummy, the object is a human body prepared for Afterlife in a culturally specific manner. Reception of ancient Egypt in subsequent epochs shrouded the practice of mummification, along with other aspects of this culture, in the veil covering the original character of the materialized trace. A h...uman body - ecofact, subjected to a ritualized treatment, thus became an antiquity - artefact, whose possession insured social prestige. At the same time, precisely because its cultural affiliation, it was perceived as a source of healing powers, in the same way as some natural substances derived from plants or animals. The case of the Egyptian mummy illustrates the porosity of demarcation lines between the material traces of the past categorised as natural/cultural, artefact/ecofact, further leading to specialized and insufficiently integrated archaeological interpretations.

Ključne reči:
reception of antiquity / mummification / human body / ecofact/artefact
Izvor:
Etnoantropološki problemi, 2017, 12, 3, 785-800
Izdavač:
  • Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Odeljenje za etnologiju i antropologiju, Beograd
Finansiranje / projekti:
  • Gradski život u antici: ekspanzija gradova i urbane civilizacije na Balkanu i u susednim oblastima od helenističkog do pozno rimskog perioda (RS-177005)
  • Arheološka kultura i identitet na zapadnom Balkanu (RS-177008)

DOI: 10.21301/EAP.V12I3.6

ISSN: 0353-1589

WoS: 000419254200006

[ Google Scholar ]
URI
http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2326
Kolekcije
  • Radovi istraživača / Researcher's publications - Odeljenje za arheologiju
Institucija/grupa
Arheologija / Archaeology
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Vasiljević, Vera
AU  - Babić, Staša
PY  - 2017
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2326
AB  - In the Renaissance Europe, along with the keen admiration for Egyptian antiquities, a custom has been recorded of production and consumption of a powder healing a number of ailments, produced by grounding mummies. The practice extended into the 20th century. The belief in the remedial effects of this substance is derived from the Classical and Arabic written sources, and may have been augmented by the ideas about the mystical wisdom of the ancient Egyptians, running throughout the European history and originating among the Classical Greeks. This exceptional example raises the problem of various ways in which the material remains of the past are perceived and classified. In the case of an Egyptian mummy, the object is a human body prepared for Afterlife in a culturally specific manner. Reception of ancient Egypt in subsequent epochs shrouded the practice of mummification, along with other aspects of this culture, in the veil covering the original character of the materialized trace. A human body - ecofact, subjected to a ritualized treatment, thus became an antiquity - artefact, whose possession insured social prestige. At the same time, precisely because its cultural affiliation, it was perceived as a source of healing powers, in the same way as some natural substances derived from plants or animals. The case of the Egyptian mummy illustrates the porosity of demarcation lines between the material traces of the past categorised as natural/cultural, artefact/ecofact, further leading to specialized and insufficiently integrated archaeological interpretations.
PB  - Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Odeljenje za etnologiju i antropologiju, Beograd
T2  - Etnoantropološki problemi
T1  - Mummy - Body, Antiquity, or Medicine?
EP  - 800
IS  - 3
SP  - 785
VL  - 12
DO  - 10.21301/EAP.V12I3.6
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Vasiljević, Vera and Babić, Staša",
year = "2017",
abstract = "In the Renaissance Europe, along with the keen admiration for Egyptian antiquities, a custom has been recorded of production and consumption of a powder healing a number of ailments, produced by grounding mummies. The practice extended into the 20th century. The belief in the remedial effects of this substance is derived from the Classical and Arabic written sources, and may have been augmented by the ideas about the mystical wisdom of the ancient Egyptians, running throughout the European history and originating among the Classical Greeks. This exceptional example raises the problem of various ways in which the material remains of the past are perceived and classified. In the case of an Egyptian mummy, the object is a human body prepared for Afterlife in a culturally specific manner. Reception of ancient Egypt in subsequent epochs shrouded the practice of mummification, along with other aspects of this culture, in the veil covering the original character of the materialized trace. A human body - ecofact, subjected to a ritualized treatment, thus became an antiquity - artefact, whose possession insured social prestige. At the same time, precisely because its cultural affiliation, it was perceived as a source of healing powers, in the same way as some natural substances derived from plants or animals. The case of the Egyptian mummy illustrates the porosity of demarcation lines between the material traces of the past categorised as natural/cultural, artefact/ecofact, further leading to specialized and insufficiently integrated archaeological interpretations.",
publisher = "Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Odeljenje za etnologiju i antropologiju, Beograd",
journal = "Etnoantropološki problemi",
title = "Mummy - Body, Antiquity, or Medicine?",
pages = "800-785",
number = "3",
volume = "12",
doi = "10.21301/EAP.V12I3.6"
}
Vasiljević, V.,& Babić, S.. (2017). Mummy - Body, Antiquity, or Medicine?. in Etnoantropološki problemi
Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Odeljenje za etnologiju i antropologiju, Beograd., 12(3), 785-800.
https://doi.org/10.21301/EAP.V12I3.6
Vasiljević V, Babić S. Mummy - Body, Antiquity, or Medicine?. in Etnoantropološki problemi. 2017;12(3):785-800.
doi:10.21301/EAP.V12I3.6 .
Vasiljević, Vera, Babić, Staša, "Mummy - Body, Antiquity, or Medicine?" in Etnoantropološki problemi, 12, no. 3 (2017):785-800,
https://doi.org/10.21301/EAP.V12I3.6 . .

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