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A New Picture Of Ancient Ethnic Diversity (Egypt)
The State ^ | 12-8-2006 | Tom Avril

Posted on 12/08/2006 5:21:36 PM PST by blam

Posted on Fri, Dec. 08, 2006

A new picture of ancient ethnic diversity

By Tom Avril

The Philadelphia Inquirer

(MCT)

PHILADELPHIA - Scholars have long believed that ancient Egypt was a genetic stew of ethnicity, as the fabled kingdom was both a center of international trade and often the victim of foreign invasions.

Now, new evidence suggests that may have been true even in the upper echelons of society, according to researchers who have used a blend of art and science to re-create what the ancients looked like in real life.

They have used CAT scans to model the skulls of seven mummies from various museums, including one unveiled last month at Philadelphia's Academy of Natural Sciences, revealing physical features that range from Mediterranean to African.

All seven were buried with the trappings of a high status in society, including two clearly connected to the priesthood, said project leader Jonathan Elias, director of the Harrisburg, Pa.-based Akhmim Mummy Research Consortium.

He cautioned against drawing firm conclusions from such a small sample, and he stressed that ethnic traits were a small part of his research. But he said the findings suggested a society where race had little to do with class.

"They all identified themselves as Egyptians," Elias said. "These are people. You can't slice them up like they're chocolate cake or vanilla cake."

Philadelphia sculptor Frank Bender has created plaster busts from five of the seven skull models, including one of the anonymous young woman - dubbed Annie - whose 2,200-year-old remains are on display at the Philadelphia academy.

Bender sculpted her with a nose and cheekbones that Elias described as "northern Mediterranean" - the location of modern-day Greece and Turkey. Another one of the five has what Elias called "Sudanese" features: full lips and a "prognathous" profile - meaning the jaw protrudes farther than the nose. The others have a blend of ethnic facial characteristics.

Anthropologists who have heard Elias speak about the work have been impressed.

"In the past, Egyptology has been very much based on architecture and artifacts and text," said Robert Yohe, an anthropologist at California State University, Bakersfield. "You got reconstructions of culture based on things and people's impressions of things."

Now, he said, mummy reconstructions provide more direct information about the ancient people: their role and status in society, their physical health, and sometimes even how they died.

Such efforts are not of much value on an individual basis but are provocative when done for a series of mummies from a particular place and time, said Andrew Nelson, an anthropologist from the University of Western Ontario.

"There were people sloshing up from Africa and around the Mediterranean and all over the place," Nelson said. "I think it's extremely interesting to see that reflected in the face."

Eventually, Elias hopes to scan more than 20 mummies, most from the Ptolemaic period, an intriguing span of three centuries during which Egypt came under Macedonian and Greek influence.

It began after Alexander the Great invaded Egypt in 332 B.C. Ptolemy, one of Alexander's generals and also a boyhood friend, named himself king in 305 B.C.

One of his successors was dubbed Ptolemy Philadelphus - "brotherly love," like the city of Philadelphia - because he married his sister.

Much remains unknown about the period. Few U.S. scholars specialize in it, in part because it is a transitional period that requires a fair bit of interdisciplinary skill, said J.G. Manning, who teaches classics at Stanford University.

The Greeks left much of Egyptian society and customs intact, including its polytheistic religion. They even drew parallels between certain Greek gods and their Egyptian counterparts. The period saw flourishing international trade, wider use of coins, and prolific accomplishments in the sciences and literature.

"In a lot of ways, it's the beginning of the modern world," Manning said.

Yet ancient texts indicate there was political unrest and even rebellion, some centered in Akhmim, the burial site for the mummies that Elias hopes to study. The city is in southern Egypt and was a major center for textiles and trade; reasons for the unrest under the Ptolemaic kings are not fully understood.

The unveiling of the academy mummy head comes as Philadelphia immerses itself in Egyptology. Treasures from the tomb of Tutankhamun go on display at the Franklin Institute on Feb. 3. At the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, there is a new exhibit of artifacts from Amarna, the Egyptian city where Tut spent his childhood.

The academy has no firm plans yet on how to display Annie's bust.

The mummy project is unusual in that Elias, its director, is not affiliated with a university.

He founded his research consortium in 2005 in Harrisburg, Pa., where he once worked at the Whitaker Center for Science and the Arts. Project members include various universities and museums with Akhmimic mummies in their collections.

"He's a very engaging guy," Nelson said. "You have to have someone like that for this sort of project, to pull everyone together."

The work on the academy mummy began in April, when caretakers carefully drove it to Hahnemann University Hospital, using a makeshift stretcher wrapped in bubble wrap. A radiologist scanned the body with computed tomography - a CAT scan.

The images were then used to create a three-dimensional model of the skull at the University of Manitoba. A special 3-D printer was used to build up the model layer by layer, by spraying a mixture of plaster dust and a special polymer.

Then, Bender went to work.

Better known for helping law-enforcement agencies by sculpting the heads of missing persons, Bender relished the mummy project and even visited Egypt for inspiration.

He has sculpted five heads to date, marveling as history comes to life in his hands. He sculpted the Academy's anonymous mummy with flowing hair and a mouth opened as about to speak.

"She was beautiful," Bender said. "She was full of life, vibrant."

Another of the mummies conjures up a different sort of feeling, at least for Elias, the project director. Inscriptions on his coffin identify him as Djedhor, a heavy-set fellow whose remains are stored in France.

"He actually looks a great deal like my father-in-law," Elias quipped. "I try to get past that."


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ancient; diversity; egypt; ethnic; godsgravesglyphs; race; races; racial
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To: lepton
Yeah. They're not nearly light and fluffy enough.

But "with a Ginsu knife you can slice them so thin your inlaws will never come back."

21 posted on 12/08/2006 6:58:15 PM PST by r9etb
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To: Jedi Master Pikachu
Since the Japanese have two quite different tooth-types, the "Yamada race" hypothesis is rather threadbare.

For the most part the military ruling class (up to modern times otherwise known as the Samurai) consisted mostly of the people earlier identified as the Emeshi, and even earlyer known as Jomon ~ the Emperor's family lost its identity as Korean sometime in the Middle-Ages ~ and only recently has anyone noted that.

The Chinese rice-culture people and the wheat/rye growing Hakka (from North of the Great Wall in China) constituted most of the commoner classes from the time of the Emeshi takeover.

Other groups maintained collection stations for silkworm bolls from quite ancient times and we only know a little bit about them. Still, silk produced from that source made its way West over the Silk Road, so it's possible some of those agents were Caucasians or Indians.

No doubt the Japanese are as mixed as everybody else on Earth.

22 posted on 12/08/2006 7:14:05 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: blam
Some Egyptians were blond nordic types. This is a photo of Yuya, an adviser to Amenhotep III.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuya

I read somewhere the Antiquities dept. won't allow DNA testing.

23 posted on 12/08/2006 7:14:43 PM PST by Spirochete
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To: blam

Genetic diversity in conjunction with monoculturalism, seems to have been a very successful recipe for long-lived empires. Is the U.S following this model?


24 posted on 12/08/2006 7:16:59 PM PST by aristotleman
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To: docbnj

So, the Arabs were overrunning countries even back in Egyption times.


25 posted on 12/08/2006 7:28:05 PM PST by wizr (Live life with a Passion!)
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To: muawiyah
The Samurai And The Ainu
26 posted on 12/08/2006 7:37:14 PM PST by blam
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To: muawiyah
Origins Of The Ainu
27 posted on 12/08/2006 7:39:54 PM PST by blam
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To: blam
The Emeshi and Ainu share a common ancestry in the ancient past ~ however the Emeshi appear to have had a cultural contintuity with the Jomon who were the original settlers in Japan.

The Ainu, their cousins, lived on the Siberian coast and moved into more Southerly areas as the Emeshi were incorporated within Japanese society as the military component we know as the Samurai.

The Yayoi, to confuse and confound all analysis, are composed of two and maybe three different groups of Chinese from very different areas. All arrived in Japan before writing systems were widespread in China ~ and we know that because it was not until the arrival of the Koreans in the 500s that writing became known in Japan (as well as Buddhism).

The work on the Hakka, one of the Chinese components, has been done by Chinese themselves ~ kind of hard to find interesting stuff about them so you have to look for "Great Wall" in any searches. The Hakka are the folks the Han supposedly built the wall to keep out!

Didn't work. Anyway, the Hakka raised wheat. The other Chinese raised rice. Both moved to Japan pre AD.

I'm not sure who the settlers were who brought chickens, but they brought an interesting breed that with a little selection can grow enormously long feathers. Always wanted one of them.

28 posted on 12/08/2006 7:46:34 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: blam
It is an article of faith to the Afrocentrists that the Egyptians were black. Herodotus 2.104 can be read to mean that Herodotus considered the Egyptians to be black. (He's talking about the origin of the Colchians, whom he thinks to be of Egyptian origin...his words can also be taken to mean that he thought some Egyptians were dark-skinned, but not necessarily all of them).

The Roman tribune in Acts 21 mistakes St. Paul for an Egyptian--so he must have thought some Egyptians were white (it's St. Paul's ability to speak Greek that makes him question his initial assumption, so he wasn't thinking of a Greek from Alexandria).

29 posted on 12/08/2006 7:53:10 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: muawiyah
"The work on the Hakka, one of the Chinese components, has been done by Chinese themselves ~ kind of hard to find interesting stuff about them so you have to look for "Great Wall" in any searches. The Hakka are the folks the Han supposedly built the wall to keep out!"

Yup. The Hakka are an interesting group. They moved all the way across China (five major migrations) and to this day are known as the 'guests.' They apparently originally had some Caucasian features as there are records that indicate severe persecution and even death for those with such features during the migrations.

30 posted on 12/08/2006 8:06:21 PM PST by blam
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To: muawiyah
Hakka History, Origin And Background
31 posted on 12/08/2006 8:10:28 PM PST by blam
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To: blam

bttt


32 posted on 12/08/2006 8:34:55 PM PST by nopardons
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To: blam

That's the "nose story". I think it's really more about the Han than the Hakka.


33 posted on 12/09/2006 6:45:23 AM PST by muawiyah
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To: blam
The academy has no firm plans yet on how to display Annie's bust.
Show us your....oh, sorry.
34 posted on 12/09/2006 7:58:36 AM PST by ameribbean expat
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To: Grim

Looks like a young dianna rigg


35 posted on 12/09/2006 6:45:28 PM PST by mandingo republican (Libs are Moloch worshipers I tell ya! - FREE HK, CUBA & IRAN - SATAN was the first liberal!)
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