Mark pointed out for World History Encyclopedia in 2017, medical papyrus scrolls like the recently discovered one often had two sides-the recto (front) and the verso (the back). On the 68th day, workers placed the mummy in a coffin the final two days of the process were dedicated to rituals that facilitated the deceased’s safe journey to the afterlife.Īs Joshua J. The face embalming process took place during this second wrapping period, notes the statement. Next, they dried out the body with a type of salt called natron before encasing it in layers of linen and resin. The entire mummification procedure took 70 days to complete, with the first 35 days focused on dehydrating the body and the next 35 on wrapping it.Īccording to the Smithsonian Institution, specially trained priests began by removing the brain, stomach, liver and other organs (aside from the heart, which was left in place as “the center of a person’s being and intelligence”). In between these intervals, embalmers would cloak the corpse with cloth and aromatics-infused straw to keep insects and scavengers at bay. “The red linen is then applied to the dead person’s face in order to encase it in a protective cocoon of fragrant and anti-bacterial matter,” says Schiødt in the statement.īrooke Taylor of CTV News reports that this process-like many covered in the manual-was repeated every four days. The Papyrus Carlsberg Collection, University of CopenhagenĪmong the insights offered by the newly identified manual is a list of ingredients for a plant-based embalming concoction used to coat pieces of red linen. These two segments were previously housed in private collections, and the whereabouts of several other sections of the papyrus remain unknown, according to the statement.Ī fragment of the nearly 20-foot long papyrus scroll One is housed in the university’s Papyrus Carlsberg Collection, while another is held at the Louvre Museum in Paris. Previous research on the ancient medical text has been complicated by the fact that it’s split into multiple pieces. “It also aids in reading difficult signs when you can zoom in on the high-res photos.” “This way we can move displaced fragments around digitally, as well as enhance colors to better read passages where the ink is not so well-preserved,” she tells Live Science. As Mindy Weisberger writes for Live Science, Schiødt translated the double-sided text using high-resolution photographs, which helped streamline the process. The second-longest ancient Egyptian medical papyrus, the Papyrus Louvre-Carlsberg dates back to 1450 B.C., making it older than comparable mummification manuals by more than 1,000 years. “Some of the simpler processes, the drying of the body with natron, have been omitted from the text.” “The text reads like a memory aid, so the intended readers must have been specialists who needed to be reminded of these details, such as unguent recipes and uses of various types of bandages,” says Schiødt in the statement. The nearly 20-foot-long manuscript, which focuses mainly on herbal medicine and skin conditions, contains a short section outlining embalming methods, including how to preserve a dead person’s face. Per a statement, Sofie Schiødt, an Egyptologist at the University of Copenhagen, uncovered the guide while translating a portion of the Papyrus Louvre-Carlsberg for her doctoral thesis. Now, reports Amanda Kooser for CNET, a newly discovered, 3,500-year-old manual may shed more light on mummification’s mysteries. But until recently, researchers had only identified two ancient documents detailing the embalming process. Egyptian mummies have fascinated the public for centuries.
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