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A JOURNEY TO THE AFTERLIFE UNDER THE PROTECTION OF THE MISTRESS OF NAVIGATION: A ‘NEW’ FUNERARY BELIEF FROM ROMAN MEMPHIS*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2017
Extract
The study of Egyptian personal religiosity during the third century ad presents an interesting opportunity to explore the processes of cultural encounters between Egypt and the Roman Empire. The religious situation was more complicated and variegated than the textual evidence seems to suggest; sometimes one becomes aware of the existence of certain beliefs only through their iconographic record. For this reason, decorated stelae, coffins, and mummy wrappings are crucial materials for research into questions of religious exchange. This article presents the case of a third-century ad shroud from Memphis painted with a woman's portrait and funerary scenes, along with a representation of Isis navigans.
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- Copyright © The Classical Association 2017
Footnotes
I would like to express my deepest gratitude to Dr Carmen Alfaro and Dr Antonio J. Morales for their help. Needless to say, all errors remain my own responsibility. I would also like to thank the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung, Berlin, and especially its director, Dr Friederike Seyfried, for granting me permission to study, and publish images of, the wrapping that is featured in this article. Many thanks also to Dr Cäcilia Fluck for all her help.
References
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28 There are only a few cases in which Isis navigans is depicted alongside other divinities. See Bricault (n. 1), 71–80; R. Veymiers, Ἵλεως τῷ φοροῦντι. Sérapis sur les gemmes et les bijoux antiques (Brussels, 2009), 138–9 and 332–5; R. Veymiers, ‘Ἵλεως τῷ φοροῦντι: Sérapis sur les gemmes et les bijoux antiques. Supplément I’, in L. Bricault and R. Veymiers (eds.), Bibliotheca Isiaca II (Bordeaux, 2011), 241–242, 253, and pl. 12 (V.BBC 37 and 39–40); R. Veymiers, ‘Ἵλεως τῷ φοροῦντι: Sérapis sur les gemmes et les bijoux antiques. Supplément II’, in L. Bricault and R. Veymiers (eds.), Bibliotheca Isiaca III (Bordeaux 2014), 221 and pls. 12 (V.BBC 44) and 13 (V.BBC 45–6).
29 The closest parallel to this is found on the reverse side of a coin from Perinthus, Thrace, which shows a ship with Isis navigans on the bow, and at the boat's centre a man in Roman attire, who is being crowned by Serapis, while the god handles the stern. This scene has been interpreted as showing Severus Alexander en route to combat the Sassanids, and on this basis it has been dated to 231 ad (E. Schönert, Griechisches Münzwerk. Die Münzprägung von Perinthos [Berlin, 1965], 43 and 240–1; E. Schönert-Geiss, ‘Zur Geschichte Thrakiens anhand von griechischen Münzbildern aus der römischen Kaiserzeit’, Klio 49 [1967], 218–19 and 226). However, bearing in mind the new attribute of Isis navigans which is presented here, one would have to entertain the possibility that the scene was about apotheosis, and that the central figure may not be Severus Alexander.
30 For example, the decorated textile wrapping in the Louvre Museum, Paris, AF 6490: see Aubert, M. F., ‘Portraits sur linceul’, in Aubert, M. F., Cortopassi, R., Nachtergael, G., Amoros, V. Asensi, Détienne, P., Pagès-Camagna, S., and Hô, A. S. Le, Portraits funéraires de l’Égypte romaine. Cartonnages, linceuls et bois (París, 2008), 169–74Google Scholar.
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39 See Bricault (n. 1), 75–80.
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41 Identification suggested by R. S. Poole (n. 40), xciv, nos. 885–6 and pl. xxix (no. 886), and developed by L. Bricault (n. 1), 78–9.
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43 See Metzger, C., ‘Les bijoux’, in Baratte, F., Lang, J., Niece, S. La, and Metzger, C., Le trésor de Carthage. Contribution à l’étude de l'orfèvrerie de l'Antiquité tardive (Paris, 2002), 85–6Google Scholar, fig. 82 and fig. h.t. 5; Bricault (n. 1), 63, fig. 25, and n. 33; Á. Nagy, ‘Magical Gems and Classical Archaeology’, in Entwistle, C. and Adams, N. (eds.), Gems of Heaven. Recent Research on Engraved Gemstones in Late Antiquity c. ad 200–600 (London, 2011), 76Google Scholar and pl. 2.
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