Dying for a Drink on the Meroitic Frontier: Imported Objects in Funerary Assemblages at Faras, Sudanese Nubia

Autores

  • Henry Cosmo Bishop-Wright British Museum, Department of the Middle East

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2177-4218.v13i1p87-121

Palavras-chave:

Faras, Meroitic studies, Funerary archaeology, Frontier studies, Identity

Resumo

This paper examines the use of imported objects in funerary assemblages at the Meroitic cemetery of Faras in Sudanese Nubia (north Sudan). Excavated at the beginning of the 20th century by Francis Llewellyn Griffith (1862-1934), Faras was situated on the frontier between the Kingdom of Meroë (c.300 BCE – 350 CE) and Ptolemaic-Roman Egypt. Its location granted it access to wide-ranging commercial networks and imported objects were frequently utilised as grave goods. Drawing upon the author’s PhD research, this paper offers a nuanced assessment of how imports were selected and used in funerary practice at Faras. It disputes the traditional idea that the Meroitic frontier functioned as an acculturated buffer of the classical world and demonstrates that, despite centuries of material contact with Egypt, the people of Faras maintained a distinctly Meroitic identity expressed through local mortuary tradition.

Downloads

Os dados de download ainda não estão disponíveis.

Biografia do Autor

  • Henry Cosmo Bishop-Wright, British Museum, Department of the Middle East

    British Museum, Department of the Middle East

Referências

Adams, W. Y. (1976). “Meroitic North and South. A Study in Cultural Contrasts; Author’s Response”. Meroitica 2. Meroitic North and South. A Study in Cultural Contrasts, pp. 11–26, pp. 119–75.

Adams, W. Y. (1977). Nubia Corridor to Africa. London: Allen Lane.

Adams, W. Y. (1983). “Primis and the ‘Aethiopian’ Frontier”. Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 20, pp. 93–104.

Adams, W. Y., J. Alexander, and R. Allen (1983). “Qaṣr Ibrîm 1980 and 1982”. The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 69, pp. 43–60.

Arkell, A. J. (1976). “Response”. Meroitica 2. Meroitic North and South. A Study in Cultural Contrasts, pp. 27–28.

Bashir, M. S. (2019). “The Role of Sorghum Beer and Porridge in Meroitic Society”. The South African Archaeological Bulletin 74 (210), pp. 76–81.

Bishop-Wright, H. C. (2021). “Chronology and Connectivity at Meroitic Faras”. PhD Thesis (Unpublished), University of Exeter.

Bishop-Wright, H. C. (2023). “Glass Vessels from the Meroitic Cemetery at Faras, Sudanese Nubia”. Annals of the 22nd Congress of the International Association for the History of Glass.

Bonnet, C. (2019). The Black Kingdom of the Nile. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.

Bosanquet, R. C. (1912). “On the Bronze Portrait-Head”. In University of Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology, 4, pp. 66–71. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.

Budge, E. A. W. (1907). The Egyptian Sûdân Its History and Monuments. Vol. 1. 2 vols. London: Kegan Paul.

Burstein, S. M. (1981). “Axum and the Fall of Meroe”. Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 18, pp. 47–50.

David, R. (2019). “Ceramic Industries of Meroitic Sudan”. In Handbook of Ancient Nubia, edited by D. Raue, pp. 875–95. De Gruyter Reference. Berlin: De Gruyter.

Devries, C. E. (1973). “An Enigmatic Pottery Form from Meroitic Nubia”. Journal of Near Eastern Studies 32 (1/2), pp. 62–69.

Dumbrell, W. J. (1971). “The Tell El-Maskhuta Bowls and the ‘Kingdom’ of Qedar in the Persian Period”. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 203, pp. 33–44.

Duncan-Jones, R. (2018). “The Antonine Plague Revisited”. Arctos. Acta Philologica Fennica 52, pp. 41–72.

Dunham, D. (1957). Royal Tombs at Meroë and Barkal. The Royal Cemeteries of Kush 15. Boston, MA: Museum of Fine Arts.

Edwards, D. N. (1996). The Archaeology of the Meroitic State. New Perspectives on Its Social and Political Organisation. Cambridge Monographs in African Archaeology 38. BAR International Series 640. Oxford: BAR.

Edwards, D. N. (1999). “Meroitic Settlement Archaeology”. In Proceedings of the 8th International Conference for Meroitic Studies, pp. 65-110. London: British Museum Press.

Edwards, D. N. (2004). The Nubian Past, an Archaeology of the Sudan. London: Routledge.

Egri, M. (2017). “Connectivity and Social Change: Roman Goods Outside the Empire (100 BCE - 400 CE)”. In The Routledge Handbook of Archaeology and Globalization, edited by T. Hodos, pp. 537–52. Routledge Handbooks. London: Routledge.

Eide, T., T. Hägg, R. H. Pierce, and L. Török, (Eds.) (1996). Fontes Histroriae Nubiorum. Vol. 2. 4 vols. Bergen: University of Bergen.

Eide, T., T. Hägg, R. H. Pierce, and L. Török, (Eds.) (1998). Fontes Histroriae Nubiorum. Vol. 3. 4 vols. Bergen: University of Bergen.

Elliott, C. (2016). “The Antonine Plague, Climate Change and Local Violence in Roman Egypt”. Past & Present 231 (1), pp. 3–31.

Fernández, V. M. (1983). “La Cultura Alto-Meroitica Del Norte de Nubia”. Ph.D. Thesis, Madrid: Universidad Complutense de Madrid.

Fernández, V. M. (1984). “Early Meroitic in Northern Sudan: The Assessment of a Nubia Archaeological Culture”. Aula Orientalis 2 (1), pp. 43–84.

Firth, C. M. (1915). The Archaeological Survey of Nubia, Report for 1909-1910. Cairo: Government Press.

Francigny, V. (2007). “Faras Oublié”. Mélanges Offerts à Francis Geus, Cahiers de Recherches de l’Institut de Papyrologie et d’Egyptologie de Lille 26, pp. 99–106.

Francigny, V. (2014). “An Elite Meroitic Cemetery at Sai Island”. In The Fourth Cataract and Beyond. Proceedings of the 12th International Conference for Nubian Studies, edited by D. A. Welsby and J. R. Anderson, pp. 797–803. British Museum Publications on Egypt and Sudan 1. Leuven: Peeters.

Francigny, V. (2016). Les Coutumes Funéraires Dans Le Royaume de Méroé: Les Enterrements Privés. Orient & Méditerranée 22. Paris: Editions de Boccard.

Francigny, V., and R. David (2013). “Dating Funerary Material in the Meroitic Kingdom”. Mitteilungen Der Sudanarchäologischen Gesellschaft Zu Berlin e.V. 24, pp. 105–15.

Fuller, D. Q. (2014). “Agricultural Innovation and State Collapse in Meroitic Nubia: The Impact of the Savannah Package”. In Archaeology of African Plant Use, edited by C. J. Stevens, S. Nixon, M. A. Murray, and D. Q. Fuller, pp. 165–77. London: Routledge.

Fuller, D. Q. (2015). “The Economic Basis of the Qustul Splinter State: Cash Crops, Subsistence Shifts, and Labour Demands in the Post-Meroitic Transition”. The Kushite World. Proceedings of the 11th International Conference for Meroitic Studies Vienna, 1-4 September 2008. Beiträge Zur Sudanforschung. Beiheft 9, pp. 33–60.

Garstang, J. (1910). “Preliminary Note on an Expedition to Meroë in Ethiopia”. University of Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology 3, pp. 57–70.

Garstang, J. (1912). “Second Interim Report on the Excavations at Meroe in Ethiopia”. In University of Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology, 4, pp. 45–65. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.

Garstang, J., A. H. Sayce, and F. Ll. Griffith (1911). Meroë. The City of the Ethiopians. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Griffith, F. Ll. (1909). “Meroitic Inscriptions”. In Areika, by D.R. MacIver and C. L. Woolley, pp. 43–54. Eckley B. Coxe Junior Expedition to Nubia, Vol. 1. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania.

Griffith, F. Ll. (1912). Meroitic Inscriptions. Part II. Napata to Philae and Miscellaneous. Archaeological Survey of Egypt. Twentieth Memoir. London: The Egypt Exploration Fund.

Griffith, F. Ll. (1922). “Meroitic Funerary Inscriptions from Faras, Nubia”. In Recueil d’etudes Egyptologiques Dediees a La Memoire de Jean-Francois Champollion, pp. 565–600. Paris: Librairie Champion.

Griffith, F. Ll. (1924). “Oxford Excavations in Nubia”. University of Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology 11, pp. 115–25, pp. 141–80.

Griffith, F. Ll. (1925). “Oxford Excavations in Nubia”. University of Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology 12, pp. 57–172.

Guinea, M. A. G., and J. Teixidor (1965). La Necropolis Meroitica de Nelluah (Argin Sur, Sudan). Comite Español de La UNESCO Para Nubia, Memorias de La Misiόn Arqueolόgica 6. Madrid: Dirección General de Relaciones Culturales.

Hakem, A. M. A. (1989). ‘“Napatan” - “Meroitic” Continuity. Reflections on Basic Conceptions on Meroitic Culture’. Meroitica 10. Studia Meroitica 1984. The Fifth International Conference for Meroitic Studies, Rome 1984, pp. 885–94.

Hamilton, R. W. (1966). “A Silver Bowl in the Ashmolean Museum”. Iraq 28 (1), pp. 1–17.

Hayes, J. W. (1997). Handbook of Mediterranean Roman Pottery. London: British Museum Press.

Hedeager, L. (1987). “Empire, Frontier and the Barbarian Hinterland: Rome and Northern Europe from AD 1-400”. In Centre and Periphery in the Ancient World, edited by M. Rowlands, M. Larsen, and K. Kristiansen, pp. 125–40. New Directions in Archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Heidorn, L. (1992). “The Fortress of Dorginarti and Lower Nubia During the Seventh to Fifth Centuries B.C.” Ph.D. Thesis, Illinois: The University of Chicago.

Hofmann, I. (1977). “Der Feldzug Des C. Petronius Nach Nubien Und Seine Bedeutung Für Die Meroitische Chronologie”. In Ägypten Und Kusch., edited by E. Endesfelder, K. H. Priese, W-F. Reineke, and S. Wenig, pp. 189–205. Schriften Zur Geschichte Und Kultur Des Alten Orients 13. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag.

Hofmann, I. (1978). Beiträge Zur Meroitischen Chronologie. Studie Instituti Anthropos 31. St. Augustin bei Bonn: Verlag des Anthropos-Instituts.

Hofmann, I. (1991). “Der Wein- Und Ölimport Im Meroitischen Reich”. In Egypt and Africa: Nubia from Prehistory to Islam, edited by W. V. Davies, pp. 234–45. London: British Museum Press.

Hölbl, G. (1990). “Das Römische Militär Im Religiösen Leben Nubiens”. Akten Des 14. Internationalen Limeskongresses 1986 in Carnuntum 1, pp. 233–347.

Hölbl, G. (2001). A History of the Ptolemaic Empire. Translated by T. Saavedra. London: Routledge.

Horton, M. (1991). “Africa in Egypt: New Evidence from Qasr Ibrim”. In Egypt and Africa. Nubia from Prehistory to Islam, edited by W. V. Davies, pp. 264–77. London: British Museum Press.

Jameson, S. (1968). “Chronology of the Campaigns of Aelius Gallus and C. Petronius”. The Journal of Roman Studies 58, pp. 71–84.

Kirwan, L. P. (1957). “Rome beyond The Southern Egyptian Frontier”. The Geographical Journal 123 (1), pp. 13–19.

Kirwan, L. P. (1960). “The Decline and Fall of Meroe”. KUSH 8, pp. 163–73.

MacIver, D. R., and C. L. Woolley. (1909). Areika. Eckley B. Coxe Junior Expedition to Nubia, Vol. 1. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania.

Mainterot, P. (2010). “De l’exploration Des Sources Du Nil à La Découverte de Méroé”. In Méroé Un Empire Sur Le Nil, edited by M. Baud. Paris: Musée du Louvre.

Matić, U. (2018). “De-Colonizing Historiography and Archaeology of Ancient Egypt and Nubia Part 1. Scientific Racism”. Journal of Egyptian History 11, pp. 19–44.

Mattingly, D. (2004). “Being Roman: Expressing Identity in a Provincial Setting”. Journal of Roman Archaeology 17, pp. 5–25.

Maxfield, V. A. (2009). “Aswan and the River Nile: Frontier and Highway”. In Estudios Sobre La Frontera Romana. Roman Frontier Studies, 1, pp. 73–84. Madrid: C.S.I.C.

Minas-Nerpel, M., and S. Pfeiffer (2010). “Establishing Roman Rule in Egypt: The Trilingual Stela of C. Cornelius Gallus from Philae”. In Tradition and Transformation: Egypt Under Roman Rule. Proceedings of the International Conference, Hildesheim, Roemer- and Pelizaeus-Museum, 3-6 July 2008, edited by K. Lembke, M. Minas-Nerpel, and S. Pfeiffer, pp. 265–98. Leiden: Brill.

Morkot, R. G. (2000). The Black Pharaohs, Egypt’s Nubian Rulers. London: Rubicon.

Morkot, R. G. (2003). “On the Priestly Origin of the Napatan Kings: The Adaptation, Demise and Resurrection of Ideas in Writing Nubian History”. In Ancient Egypt in Africa, edited by D. O’Connor and A. Reid, pp. 151–68. London: Routledge.

Opper, T. (2014). The Meroë Head of Augustus. Object in Focus. London: British Museum Press.

Peacock, D. P. S., and D. F. William (1986). Amphorae and the Roman Economy: An Introductory Guide. Longman Archaeology Series. London; New York: Longman.

Pitts, M. (2019). The Roman Object Revolution. Objectscapes and Intra-Cultural Connectivity in Northwest Europe. Amsterdam Archaeological Studies 27. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press.

Pitts, M., and M. J. Versluys (2015). “Globalisation and the Roman World: Perspectives and Opportunities”. In Globalisation and the Roman World, World History, Connectivity and Material Culture, edited by M. Pitts and M. J. Versluys, pp. 3–31. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Priese, K. H. (1992). Das Gold von Meroe. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern.

Reisner, G. A. (1910). The Archaeological Survey of Nubia 1907-1908 (Vols. 1 and 2). Cairo: National Printing Department.

Reisner, G. A. (1923). “The Meroitic Kingdom of Ethiopia: A Chronological Outline”. The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 9 (1/2), pp. 34–77.

Rilly, C, and A. De Voogt (2012). The Meroitic Language and Writing System. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Rilly, C, and V. Francigny (2018). “Closer to the Ancestors. Excavations of the French Mission in Sedeinga 2013-2017”. Sudan & Nubia 22, pp. 65–74.

Rilly, C, V. Francigny, and R. David (2020). “Collective Graves and Ba-Statues. The 2018 and 2019 Campaigns at Sedeinga”. Sudan & Nubia 24, pp. 72–90.

Robertson, J. H. (1992). “History and Archaeology at Meroe”. In An African Commitment: Papers in Honour of Peter Lewis Shinnie, edited by J. Sterner and N. David, pp. 35–50. Calgary: University of Calgary Press.

Rodziewicz, M. D. (2005). Early Roman Industries on Elephantine. Elephantine XXVII. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern.

Rose, P. (2011). “Qasr Ibrim: The Last 3000 Years”. Sudan & Nubia 15, pp. 1–9.

Rowlands, M. (1987). “Centre and Periphery: A Review of a Concept”. In Centre and Periphery in the Ancient World, edited by M. Rowlands, M. Larsen, and K. Kristiansen, pp. 1–11. New Directions in Archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Säve-Söderbergh, T. (1987). Temples and Tombs of Ancient Nubia: The International Rescue Campaign at Abu Simbel, Philae and Other Sites. London: Thames and Hudson.

Sayce, A. H. (1910). “Meroë”. University of Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology 3, pp. 53–56.

Sayce, A. H. (1912). “Second Interim Report on the Excavations at Meroë in Ethiopia - Part II. The Historical Results”. University of Liverpool Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology 4, pp. 53–65.

Scheidel, W. (2002). “A Model of Demographic and Economic Change in Roman Egypt after the Antonine Plague”. Journal of Roman Archaeology 15, pp. 97–114.

Silvano, F. (2012). I Vetri Di Epoca Romana Dagli Scavi Di Medinet Madi (1998-2004): L’area Del Tempio C. Monografie Di ‘Egitto e Vicino Oriente’ 5. Pisa: Pisa University Press.

Speidel, M. P. (1988). “Nubia’s Roman Garrison”. Aufstieg Und Niedergang Der Römischen Welt 10.1, pp. 766–98.

Strong, D. E. (1966). Greek and Roman Gold and Silver Plate. London: Methuen & Co LTD.

Tomber, R. (2006). “The Pottery”. In Survey and Excavation at Mons Claudianus. Volume III. Ceramic Vessels & Related Objects, edited by V. A. Maxfield and D. P. S. Peacock, pp. 3–236. Cairo: Institut français d’archéologie orientale.

Török, L. (1987a). “Meroitic Painted Pottery: Problems of Chronology and Style”. Beiträge Zur Sudanforschung 2, pp. 75–106.

Török, L. (1987b). “The Historical Background: Meroe, North and South”. In Nubian Culture Past and Present. Main Papers Presented at the Sixth International Conference for Nubian Studies in Uppsala, 11 - 16 August, 1986, edited by T. Hägg, pp. 139–229. Stockholm: Almquist & Wiksell International.

Török, L. (1989). “Kush and the External World”. Meroitica 10. Studia Meroitica 1984. The Fifth International Conference for Meroitic Studies, Rome 1984, pp. 49–189.

Török, L. (1994). “Upper Egyptian Pottery Wares with Hellenistic Decoration and Their Impact on Meroitic Vase Painting”. In Hommages à Jean Leclant, edited by C Berger, G Clerc, and N. Grimal, 2, pp. 377–87. Cairo: Institut français d’archéologie orientale.

Török, L. (1997a). Meroe City an Ancient African Capital: John Garstang’s Excavations in The Sudan (Parts 1 and 2). London: Egypt Exploration Society.

Török, L. (1997b). The Kingdom of Kush: Handbook of the Napatan-Meroitic Civilization. Leiden: Brill.

Török, L. (2009). Between Two World, The Frontier Region Between Ancient Nubia and Egypt 3700 BC - 500 AD. Probleme Der Ägyptologie 29. Leiden: Brill.

Trigger, B. G. (1965). History and Settlement in Lower Nubia. Yale University Publications in Anthropology 69. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press.

Trigger, B. G. (1976). “Response”. Meroitica 2. Meroitic North and South. A Study in Cultural Contrasts, pp. 103–17.

Trigger, B. G. (1994). “Paradigms in Sudan Archaeology”. The International Journal of African Historical Studies 27 (2), pp. 323–45.

Vila, A. (1982). La Nécropole de Missiminia II, Les Sépultures Méroïtiques. Vol. 13. La Prospection Archéologique de La Vallée Du Nil Au Sud de La Cataracte de Dal (Nubie Soudanaise). Paris: Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

Wallace-Hadrill, A. (2008). Rome’s Cultural Revolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Wells, P. S. (1999). The Barbarians Speak: How the Conquered Peoples Shaped Roman Europe. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.

Welsby, D. A. (1996). The Kingdom of Kush, the Napatan and Meroitic Empires. London: British Museum Press.

Welsby, D. A. (1998). “Roman Military Installations Along the Nile South of the First Cararact”. Archeologie Du Nil Moyen 8, pp. 157–80.

Wenig, S. (1978). Africa in Antiquity. The Arts of Ancient Nubia and the Sudan. The Catalogue. Vol. 2. 2 vols. New York: The Brooklyn Museum.

Wilkins, A., H. Barnard, and P. Rose (2006). ‘Roman Artillery Balls from Qasr Ibrim, Egypt’. Sudan & Nubia 10, pp. 64–78.

Williams, B. B. (1985). “A Chronology of Meroitic Occupation below the Fourth Cataract”. Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 22, pp. 149–95.

Williams, B. B. (1991ª). Meroitic Remains from Qustul Cemetery Q, Ballana Cemetery B, and a Ballana Settlement (Parts 1 and 2). Excavations between Abu Simbel and the Sudan Frontier 8. Chicago: Oriental Institute of The University of Chicago.

Williams, B. B. (1991b). Noubadian X-Group Remains from Royal Complexes in Cemeteries Q and 219 and from Private Cemeteries Q, R, V, W, B, J, and M at Qustul and Ballana. Excavations between Abu Simbel and the Sudan Frontier 9. Chicago: Oriental Institute of The University of Chicago.

Witcher, R. (2017). ‘The Globalized Roman World’. In The Routledge Handbook of Archaeology and Globalization, edited by T. Hodos, pp. 634–51. Routledge Handbooks. London: Routledge.

Wolf, P., and U. Nowotnick (2021). “The Meroitic Heartland”. In The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Nubia, edited by G. Emberling and B. B. Williams, pp. 512–44. New York: Oxford University Press.

Woolf, G. (1997). “Beyond Romans and Natives”. World Archaeology 28 (3), pp. 339–50.

Woolley, L., and D. Randall-MacIver (1910). Karanòg, the Romano-Nubian Cemetery. Text and Plates. Eckley B. Coxe Junior Expedition to Nubia, Vols. 3 and 4. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania.

Yellin, J. W. (1995). “Meroitic Funerary Religion”. Aufstieg Und Niedergang Der Römischen Welt 18.5, pp. 2869–92.

Yellin, J. W. (2021). “The Royal and Elite Cemeteries at Meroe”. In The Oxford Handbook of Ancient Nubia, edited by G. Emberling and B. B. Williams, pp. 562–88. New York: Oxford University Press.

Downloads

Publicado

2022-12-23

Edição

Seção

Dossiê

Como Citar

Dying for a Drink on the Meroitic Frontier: Imported Objects in Funerary Assemblages at Faras, Sudanese Nubia. (2022). Mare Nostrum, 13(1), 87-121. https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2177-4218.v13i1p87-121