From an Egyptian temple to a Roman sarcophagus


Sacred ibis

Yesterday, there was a tour of the antiquities museum by Esther Holwerda, Egyptology student.

We started at the Taffeh temple.

It became a Christian church in 710.

In the nineteenth century, it was a stable.

And now, since President Nasser of Egypt gave it as a present to the Dutch government in recognition of Dutch archaeologists’ work to save Egyptian national treasures, it is the biggest exhibit of the museum.

There used to be religious paintings in the temple.

Unfortunately, these had been made on plaster; which could not stand the water when the Nile flooded.

Then, we went to the Egyptian mummies.

There are 31 human and 70 animal mummies here, which is more than in many bigger museums.

Some of those museums used to have more.

However, in the nineteenth century many mummies were searched for amulets and other objects, in ways which destroyed the mummies.

That did not happen here, so the mummies can still be seen.

Among the animal mummies is one of two crocodiles in one mummy, making it look like one big crocodile.

A baby crocodile.

Various cats.

Mice; and fish.

There are also mummies of sacred ibises.

This bird does not occur in Egypt any more now, only more to the south in Africa.

Introduced and escaped specimens also fly over The Netherlands.

In the Middle East department of the museum, there is a cylinder with a cuneiform text from Babylonian King Nebuchadnesar; a way to reproduce texts before printing presses existed.

In the Roman department, there were Roman age mosaics from the Greek island Melos.

Interesting in the Greek department was the funeral monument of the Athenian woman Archestrate, who had died young.

She was represented by a life-size statue, her monument being much bigger than most others.

One of the other monuments had originally been for a woman.

Later, when a man died, the monument was appropriated for him, by superimposing his sculpted head.

We finished our tour at the Simpelveld sarcophagus.

Other Roman age sarcophaguses have been found.

Decoration, if there is any, is on their outsides.

The inside decoration makes the Simpelveld sarcophagus unique.

I walked back from the museum.

In a canal, a great cormorant swimming.

Nubian temple of Debod, now in Spain: here.

Archaeology of Meroe: here.

US religious Right ‘loves Israel’, hates Jews


This video from the USA is called Lieberman Continues To Support Anti-Semitic Hagee.

From Alternet in the USA:

Over the past year, frequent and generally favorable media coverage of a new US national political lobbying group, “Christians United For Israel”, and its outspoken founder Texas megachurch pastor John Hagee‘s has helped cement pastor Hagee’s brand recognition, as a steadfast friend to Israel and has cast a favorable light on the new CUFI lobby that is designed to flex the political muscles of tens of millions of American evangelicals, ostensibly on Israel’s behalf.

However:

In “Jerusalem Countdown: A Prelude To war” Hagee has stated that Jews brought the Holocaust upon themselves by rebelling against God and that the Holocaust was God’s way of forcing Jews to move to Israel where, Hagee predicts according to his interpretation of Biblical scripture, they will be mostly killed in the apocalyptic Mideast conflict Hagee’s new lobbying group seems to be working to provoke and which John Hagee believes to be a necessary precondition for the “Rapture” that will lift Christians, but not Jews, bodily into Heaven to enjoy physical immortality amidst paradise.

When did Mr Hagee get those disgusting anti-Semitic ideas?

At a threesome with Ted Haggard and “Jeff Gannon”?

Hagee and AIPAC: here.

USA: lead bullet ban helps California condor to survive


This video from the USA is called Flying giants–rare California condors return to Utah skies.

From BirdLife:

Lead bullet ban to aid Condor recovery

05-03-2007

The conservation of California Condor Gymnogyps californianus – one of America’s most high-profile reintroduction projects – has received a helping hand from a 270,000-acre ranch that is home to the state’s largest private hunting program.

Tejon Ranch Company, working with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and Audubon California (BirdLife in the US) have announced they are to discontinue the use of lead hunting ammunition on their privately-owned ranch in California’s Tehachapi Mountains.

California Condor has declined rapidly throughout the 20th century, so much so that in 1987 the species became extinct in the wild when the last six wild individuals were captured to join a captive-breeding recovery programme.

Conservationists have attributed this drastic population decline principally to persecution and accidental lead ingestion from shot carcasses.

Today the wild population numbers some 70 reintroduced individuals.

See also here.

And here.

Perfume in ancient Greek and Roman society


Opium poppies in Afghanistan todayLike many aspects of its society, perfume in ancient Greece was influenced from Egypt.

Already in Mycenaean times, Egyptian perfume in Egyptian glass bottles was exported to Greece.

In Greece, crocuses and roses (including from Rhodos island) were important for making perfume.

Also, thyme and juniper.

After the Romans conquered Greece, there were many Greek influences on Roman culture.

However, there was resistance in Roman society to Greek perfume, seen as luxurious extravagance.

In the second century BCE, it was banned.

Also Augustus, the first emperor, did not like it.

Authors like Martialis and Pliny the Elder railed against it.

However, the resistance did not win.

In the third century, the emperor himself, Heliogabalus, was a big fan of perfume (as Nero, in the first century, had already been).

In Italy itself, production of perfume had got going by now.

Roses and violets were used for it in Latium around Rome.

However, most important was Capua and the Campania region around it, producing roses and olives for perfume.

Emperor Diocletian, 284-305, made a list of maximum prices for many goods, from which we can also get ideas about perfume prices.

All prices were for one Roman pound, about 327g; and in denarii:

cypress 20
iris 31
opium, made from poppies, from Egypt: 1000
saffron crocus from Arabia: 2000

Opium was also mixed into wine in antiquity.

Some authors think that Alexander the Great died from the consequences of this.

After Diocletian, the influence of the Christian church rose sharply.

It opposed perfume, and took measures against it.

However, it still used the religious aspects of smell we have talked about before; eg, frankincense.

What Perfume Did a Well-Heeled Etruscan Use? Here.

Sapeornis, bird from dinosaur age in China


This 2019 video says about itself:

Avialae. The evolution of birds.

Sapeornis chaoyangensis is a fossil bird, from the early cretaceous period in China, somewhat later than Archaeopteryx in Germany.

Eoconfuciusornis, a primitive confuciusornithid bird from China: here.

Life history of a basal bird: morphometrics of the Early Cretaceous Confuciusornis: here.

Dinosaur and bird genomes: here.

USA: Walter Reed squalid veterans’ hospital, and other scandals


Rumsfeld and US war wounded, cartoon by Tom TolesFrom Art Levine’s blog in the USA:

The Army Surgeon General, Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley, may be the next person fired or forced to resign in the wake of the Walter Reed outpatient care scandal that has already cost the jobs of the Secretary of the Army, Francis Harvey, and Walter Reed’s commander, Maj. Gen. George Weightman.

It was Harvey’s appointment of Kiley, who essentially brushed off for years concerns about the squalor and degrading care facing Walter Reed’s outpatients, to replace the fired Weightman that help[ed] trigger Harvey’s forced resignation on Friday…

But the Walter Reed scandal isn’t the first time that Kiley has covered up abuses.

He was a point person for the Army’s coverup of the torture and degrading treatment of detainees by health professionals, including psychologists, at Guantanamo and other unaccountable military detention sites.

He commissioned whitewashed “studies” of the problem that concluded that there wasn’t any abuse abetted by health professionals — even though his investigators never talked to any detainees or their attorneys.

The US Right and the Walter Reed scandal: here.

US trade union federation AFL-CIO: privatization contributed to Walter Reed scandal.

Bad conditions in other US veterans’ hospitals: here.

Walter Reed Army Medical Center to Close After 102 Years: here.

Los Angeles hospitals and the homeless: here.

Ideas for Iraq war memorial: here.

US soldiers kill 16 Afghan civilians in revenge


Afghan refugees demonstrate against being sent back to unsafe Afghanistan

By Bill Van Auken:

Highway massacre sparks anti-US protests in Afghanistan

5 March 2007

The slaughter of some 16 civilians and the wounding of at least two dozen more by US troops in Afghanistan Sunday sparked angry protests demanding a withdrawal of the occupation forces and the ouster of Washington’s puppet, President Hamid Karzai.

The killings took place on a main highway between the Afghan town of Jalalabad and the Pakistani border after a suicide bomber detonated a car loaded with explosives near a convoy of US Marines.

Both eyewitnesses to the incident and some Afghan officials described the US troops firing indiscriminately at civilians in their vehicles and on foot in angry retaliation for the suicide attack.

See also here.

Associated Press reports:

Afghan journalists covering the aftermath of a suicide bomb attack and shooting in eastern Afghanistan said U.S. troops deleted their photos and video and warned them not to publish or air any images of U.S. troops or a car where three Afghans were shot to death.

Other Afghan civilians elsewhere also killed: here.

And here.

And here.

Northern Afghanistan: here.

Tariq Ali on Afghanistan: here.