Multiple Materialities of the Offering in Egypt: The Case of mnpḥ
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. The Earliest Representations of a Curious Object
: Chassinat 1935, pl. CCLXXIX), while in the temple of Edfu, the king presents it filled (
: Chassinat 1933, pl. CCCXV). In the latter instance, the word mnḫt “clothes” is written using the very same image.
and its variants, when it comes to offering the clothes or the clothes associated with mḏḥt ointment, we can see that the king is most often presenting just a single strip (Figure 2a, Chassinat 1929, pl. XI and XII), two plain strips of cloth (Figure 2b, Chassinat 1928a, pl. LXXXIX; Cauville 2000, pl. 126; Hamed 2008, pl. CLXVII and CLXXII), or a strip with an unguent pot (Figure 2c, Chassinat 1928a, pl. XCIII; 1929, pl. LXIII). These are not manufactured garments.3. The Myth
has long been reconstructed by Philippe Derchain (1962, pp. 30–36) from various allusions scattered in late texts. His analysis has been generally accepted and then supplemented (Ryhiner 1995, pp. 8–9; Kurth 2019, p. 411). The starting point is the animal, i.e., the oryx, whose head can be seen at one end of the object. Like other antelopes, the oryx was hunted since prehistoric times, just like gazelles, in the savannah that once bordered the Nile valley. It was an animal slaughtered for a long time and Derchain (1962, pp. 10–11) has supposed that the rite of sacrificing the oryx, which first appears depicted under Amenhotep III, was inspired by traditional butchering practices (see pictures in Lortet and Gaillard 1908, p. 172). In his study of this rite and its related textual comments, he highlights a passage that gives us a better understanding of the role and implications of the oryx (Chassinat 1932, p. 323, lines 14–16). The text is difficult and several slightly different translations have been proposed. It is useful to compare the most relevant ones.Derchain (1962, p. 41): “J’ai tué l’oryx avec mon couteau, pour que son corps soit transformé en vêtements pour toi tandis qu’ils fabriquent la barque de Sokaris”.
Kurth (2004, p. 617): “Ich machte die Oryx-Antilope … mit meinem Messer nieder. Ihr Leib ist bestimmt als deine <⌜Kleidung⌝>, indem sie (die Kleidung) zur Barke des Sokar verarbeitet wird”.
Leitz (2012, pp. 194–95): “Ich Erbeute die Oryxantilope und ich […] ihnen Leib zu deiner Kleidung und ich verarbeite sie zur Barke des Sokar”.
cannot reasonably designate a piece of clothing, but should be a boat (Kurth 2004, p. 617 n. 5). To support this point of view, he refers to a scene of the king offering the clothes (Chassinat 1933, pl. CCLVIII), in which he presents the object on a plate
, just like Ramses II did in the relief from the temple of Karnak (Figure 1c). Yet, it cannot be a boat since the narrow band under the object does not represent the water-line but a plate. Moreover, the texts from Edfu here examined distinguish between what is intended for clothing and what is intended for the Sokar boat. Leitz’s translation maintains such a difference and is the one that fits best to the written evidence.
and its variants could be used as a logogram for the term mnḫt “fabric” and thus designate not the “clothing”, stricto sensu, but strips of garments (Figure 2a,b). The nuance is relevant as it makes us wonder whether the string ẖt=f r mnḫwt=k means “his body is intended for your clothing” or “your body is intended for your garments”. We will see that it is the second solution that should be adopted (infra § 4). There remains to be explained the verb mḏḥ, which usually refers to the work of naval carpentry, but this is hardly suitable for the remains of an oryx. We will return to this.“Je sacrifie l’oryx, je découpe (?) son corps destiné à tes étoffes, <je> le travaille pour la barque de Sokar” (ḥbn=j mḥ (< m(ȝ)-ḥḏ) [d]m=j ẖt=f r mnḫwt=k mḏḥ=<j> s(j) n wjȝ n Skr).
“The territory of Mḥ is named after the navigation (mḥ) […] that Horus made for his father Osiris. Ḥbnw (the capital) is so named because the Evil One was struck ḥw bjn), (namely) the oryx from whom the udjat-eye was taken back. As for the travelling boat (?) (smḥ bnw), the Ba was carried there in a mnpḥ ()—a journey southwards as it is called—in order to make intangible (ḏsr) the […] of the god as he started taking care of his father’s relics, which he had taken back from That One (pfy). The son of Osiris is on the back of the Evil One (nbḏ), the august falcon that is on the oryx (mȝ-ḥḏ)”.
4. The mnpḥ
, with the sign of the breast
reading as npḥ and the globular pot being engraved instead of the rope
(Rochemonteix and Chassinat [1897] 1984, p. 126 line 3 and p. 126a n. a). If one accepts that it is an oryx, it is thus the ventral part of the body remains that would have been removed, which would require skinning the animal by means of a dorsal cut, whereas the standard practice proceeds with a ventral cut (Van Driel-Murray 2000, pp. 300–1; Ikram 2000, p. 657). Now, this is seemingly the case of the mnpḥ, if certain representations are to be taken seriously.
(see § 4 in fine). The protective value of mnpḥ (cf. § 4 in fine), moreover, is implied by its very name, which is once marked by the breast determinative, as we have just seen, thus suggesting a regenerative envelope comparable to the maternal breast.
(Rochemonteix and Chassinat [1897] 1984, p. 129, line 3) and
(Daumas 1959, p. 254, line 15; see infra Figure 4h). The term msq apparently replaces the ancient mskȝ, which had the same meaning but had fallen into disuse, undoubtedly because msq ended up specialising as an almost exclusive designation of the hide of the slaughtered animal assimilated to the gods’ enemy. Apart from this case, it recurs in the expression ʿrt nt msq “leather roll” as a writing support (Chassinat 1928b, p. 347 ligne 12; Kockelmann and Winter 2016, p. 61 n° 54b=Crevatin 2006, p. 2). It thus refers to oryx hide that has been tanned or similarly processed.
alone (Chassinat 1929, pl. XXIb; 1933, pl. CCLX) [var.
(Beinlich 2011, photo B0320=Bénédite 1893, p. 76 ligne 15)] or in combination with the ointment-jar (Chassinat 1960, pl. CXX), or again on its own but with more detailed content (see below Figure 5). As proposed by Kurth (2019, p. 411 n. 2), the writing in Figure 4h is to be understood as mnḫt n(t) mnpḥ and translated as “hide garment”. The writing in Figure 4c might strengthen Kurth’s interpretation: the combination of the signs
clearly and deliberately evokes the combination
mȝ-ḥḏ for “oryx”. We could therefore think of a “oryx hide garment”. Indeed, this translation should be re-assessed if only because mnḫt—it has already been said—designates a piece of fabric and not a garment ready to be worn. It might be even considered to render, in all cases, mnḫt n(t) mnpḥ as “the fabric of mnpḥ”, meaning the one contained within the mnḫt. In that hypothesis, mnpḥ would become a chest, endowing the garment it contains with a particular character or function, as the writing in Figure 4d apparently suggests (see also infra § 6). This is confirmed by some texts.Presenting the offering mnḫt-mnpḥ in the temple of Edfu, the king declares before Horus accompanied by the gods of weaving and garment (Rochemonteix and Chassinat [1897] 1984, p. 129 ligne 4 et p. 129a n.b):
“Receive the oryx filled with pure clothes” (mn n=k mḥ (<mȝ-ḥḏ) mḥ=tw m wʿbw). The oryx hide is therefore a container for garments. At Kom Ombo, in a procession of genii carrying economic products, a female being whose name is lost is thus described (Gutbub 1995, p. 117 n° 90):
“the mnpḥ with her containing the Great Eye of Horus” (mnpḥ m-ʿ=s ẖr jrt-Ḥr-wrt), Great Eye of Horus being a designation, among others, of the garments offered to the gods (Rochemonteix and Chassinat [1897] 1984, p. 296 ligne 9; Chassinat 1935, p. 256 line 13). The mnpḥ as a container is illustrated by some scenes of the offering of clothes (Figure 5).
5. The Boat
in the offering text from Philae (Bénédite 1893, p. 76 line 14=Beinlich 2011, photo B0320). But it is a scene from the temple of Esna that gives us a better understanding of the nature of this connection. Its title runs as follows:
“offering the jar with the ointment and the mnpḥ with fabric” (ḥnk bȝs ẖr mrḥt mnpḥ ẖr mnḫt) (Sauneron 2009, p. 72 lines 1–2). If we look at the representation that such text introduces (Figure 6), it is difficult at first glance to understand how the text explains the image.
or
. It is in this bulge, then, that the cloth, or rather, what it has to protect, is to be placed. The king offers not just a strip but also a jar containing the mrḥt-oil. These are the two fundamental elements of mummification. The text accompanying the scene is quite clear. The king declares to Sokar-Osiris, “Receive the ointment to rejuvenate your bones, the bitumen to make effective your body clothed in the robe of Renenutet, white, green, and red strips (…) to wrap your flesh” (mn n=k jḫt-nḥḥ r snḫn ȝḫȝḫw=k mnnn r smnḫ ẖt=k ḏbȝ=tw m ḏbȝ-n-Rnnt ḥḏ wȝḏ jrtj (…) r sṯȝm ḥʿw=k) (Sauneron 2009, p. 72 line 9). Again we find the coloured garments mentioned above. What is here enclosed in the falcon-headed bulge is the mummified body of the god. Similar texts accompanying the offering of the mnpḥ also refer to the protection and clothing of the deceased god (Bénédite 1893, p. 76 line 15–16=Beinlich 2011, photo B0320; Cauville 1997, p. 408–10). In a scene from the temple of Philae showing the solemn procession of the Sokar bark, this one is designated by three different words:
ḥnw, the traditional name of the boat,
mfḫ, the name of the cradle on which the mnpḥ lies, here used to indicate the whole boat, and
ḏtḏr (for ḏndrw) (Kockelmann and Winter 2016, pp. 34–35=n° 32). The latter name has been known since the Pyramid Texts and identifies the bark of Sokar as the reliquary keeping the relic of the god (Wilson 1997, p. 1238; Goyon 1985, pp. 316–17; Coulon et al. 1995, pp. 218–19; Backes 2016, pp. 580–82), as will be shown below (infra § 6 in fine).
dpt-nṯr, a “divine boat” known as early as the Pyramid Texts (e.g., Sethe 1908, p. 290 § 563c [N]). It is also mentioned on the Palermo Stone, in the section dedicated to the reign of Sahure:
(Schäfer 1902, p. 36). As indicated by the canal sign under the boat in the example from the Pyramid Texts, it is a real vessel belonging in the category of the boats with an animal head at the prow, which usually bears a positive meaning. It is not yet a specifically Sokarian bark and is not to be confused with the sledge-boat. Sokar, just like any other deity, could navigate in one boat and be dragged in the other during his own ceremonies. Such a distinction is still apparent on some 11th Dynasty plastered tablets dedicated to Sokar. The traditional sledge-boat only appears in one instance (Caire JE 43215, Rosati 2007, p. 44 pl. 1b; Rosati 2016, p. 216 and pl. XXVII). Two more boats have the prow decorated with an oryx head; they resemble the dpt-nṯr (
Metropolitan Museum of Art 26.3.237; Hayes 1953, p. 330 and Figure 218; Graindorge-Héreil 1994, vol. 2, p. 42 pl. LXIII; Caire CG 1623, Rosati 2007, p. 43 pl. 1a; Rosati 2016, p. 213 and pl. XXVIII). Finally, two others show an ordinary bow without animal head (BM EA55278, Bierbrier 1987, pl. 1; Rosati 2016, p. 215 and pl. XXVI; Metropolitan Museum of Art 27.3.50, Rosati 2016, p. 211).
, Habachi 1985, pl. 21a). Here, we find again the sign of the canal, but the oryx head has been replaced with an ibex head at each end of the boat. Jan Quaegebeur has well demonstrated that this head manifests the idea of renewal of life and regeneration (Quaegebeur 1999, p. 37). Insofar as the ibex takes the place of the oryx, we may assume that the two animals were deemed as interchangeable and that the oryx did not have a negative connotation in this case.6. The Materiality
instead of the usual
to write the word mnḫt, “cloth” (Allen 1936, p. 64; Ray 1987, p. 170–71 and pl. X line 4). As we have seen, the connection can be explained by the fact that the hide imbues the garments with a protective quality. These are obviously used to clothe the divine statues or to produce the blankets for the divine children. Finally, the mnpḥ was included in the fabrication of the Sokar sledge-boat as the container of the divine corpse protected by the bandages of mummification. A scene from the temple of Kom Ombo may allow us to extend the analysis. There we see the goddess of waiving Tayt presenting the numerous products of her art (Rickert 2011, p. 112 et pp. 116–19), including coloured stripes already noticed several times, clothes, but also four filled mnpḥ apparently lying on the ground, as is also the case on the relief from the temple of Karnak (see Figure 1c). The mnpḥ are not mentioned in the texts accompanying the two scenes; they are only presented here as containers. As such, they play a similar role to that of the four mrt chests, which contained garments, including coloured clothes, used to adorn the god as well as for the mummification of Osiris (Egberts 1995, pp. 179–84). In this regard, one might compare the role of the oryx hide to that of skin (mskȝ) taken from the sacrificial victims and wrapped around the tknw participating in the funerary rites of the Middle and New Kingdoms. This tknw, certainly a ritualist, simulated the deceased’s sleep and subsequent awakening to renewed life (Serrano-Delgado 2011).
“mnpḥ-fabric of the Akh-menu” (mnḫt-mnpḥ m (=n) ȝḫ-mnw). A translation as “mnpḥ cloth in (m) the Akh-menu” is equally possible but less plausible; it would indicate that there was a different mnpḥ for each of the main sectors of the temple and their related ceremonies. The use of the phrase mnḫt-mnpḥ might refer to a piece of fabric enclosed in the mnpḥ, as noted above (§ 4 and Figure 4). In the present case, also considering the place of discovery of the object, the Akh-menu can only be that of the great temple of Karnak.Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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), alone (a,b) or in association with the mḏḥt ointment (c). Drawing by the author.
), alone (a,b) or in association with the mḏḥt ointment (c). Drawing by the author.





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Meeks, D. Multiple Materialities of the Offering in Egypt: The Case of mnpḥ. Religions 2024, 15, 1023. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15081023
Meeks D. Multiple Materialities of the Offering in Egypt: The Case of mnpḥ. Religions. 2024; 15(8):1023. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15081023
Chicago/Turabian StyleMeeks, Dimitri. 2024. "Multiple Materialities of the Offering in Egypt: The Case of mnpḥ" Religions 15, no. 8: 1023. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15081023
APA StyleMeeks, D. (2024). Multiple Materialities of the Offering in Egypt: The Case of mnpḥ. Religions, 15(8), 1023. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15081023





