Ologies with Alie Ward - Egyptology (ANCIENT EGYPT) with Kara Cooney
Episode Date: September 18, 2018After a decade of fandom, Alie finally meets famed Egyptologist Dr. Kara Cooney -- and forgets her equipment. They meet again for a spirited history lesson on ancient Egypt: the pyramids, the monarchs..., the dynasties, the cats, the corpses, the curses. Kara also lays out the history of female kings and their parallels to modern Western politics, what it's like to talk to a mummy, and why we should stop overworking. Also: lost dongs and transparent toilets. This episode is one for the ages.Dr. Kara Cooney's on Facebook, Twitter and InstagramOrder "When Women Ruled the World: Six Queens of Egypt," released Nov. 6 2018More episode sources and linksBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a monthOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, pins, totes!Follow @Ologies on Twitter and InstagramFollow @AlieWard on Twitter and InstagramSound editing by Steven Ray MorrisTheme song by Nick Thorburn
Transcript
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Oh hey, it's your camp counselor who's only two years older than you, but seems just ancient.
Ali Ward.
Back with another episode of Allergies.
This episode has been roughly 11 years in the making.
Well I guess 5,000 years in the making.
Now listen, if you're already into Egyptology, this episode offers kind of a different look
at Egyptian history and its parallels to our culture now.
If you have no knowledge of Egyptology at all, don't worry.
We're going to talk about cats and tombs and hieroglyphs and ancient aliens.
That's going to happen also.
But first, a quick thanks to the patrons at patreon.com slash olergies who donate a dollar
or more a month just to keep the podcast going.
You're doing it.
This podcast, which this week was in the top 10 science podcasts on iTunes, thank you as
always for that.
It's made totally independently.
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for you.
5 million stars.
I heckin agree, man.
Okay, Egyptology.
Let's get into it.
Obviously, it is a study of Egypt.
Come on.
But where does the word Egypt come from?
It comes from a word meaning the temple of Ta at Karnak.
This is in Luxor, which is apparently not just a moderately priced theme hotel in Nevada.
In fact, it's near a place called Memphis.
Did you know there's a Memphis in Egypt?
It's on the Nile River and Memphis, Tennessee is on the Mississippi River.
That's why they named it that.
Did you know that?
I did not know that.
I already went down like an hour long rabbit hole researching this episode, we're still
in the intro.
Let's get onto it.
So on to theologist.
So 11 years ago, I was watching some late night TV and I saw an Egyptologist as a guest
on Craig Ferguson and I was like, what?
Egyptologists can be on late night talk shows, just chatting about tombs and monuments and
female rulers alongside people like Cedric the Entertainer, who was also on that episode
promoting a slapstick film about a corpse in a hotel room.
Anyway, I'm like, this Egyptologist rules and I started looking into her work and whenever
her name would come up in the news with a new book or a new show on discovery, I would
be like, yes, woman, get it.
So cut to me starting allergies thinking, dude, what if I did Egyptology and I got to
interview her?
Would I die on the spot?
There's only one way to find out.
So I emailed her and we set a date.
She was like, sure.
I drove an hour to our house, so excited, so nervous.
I started setting up my mics and I realized with some horror that my Zoom recorder was
not in my equipment bag and my face became very hot and red and sitting in her kitchen
table, I almost just died of sheer mortification, like mummy me up, I'm done.
But she was so understanding and I slinked off to my car, just defeated by my own idiocy.
We set another date.
I showed up again, this time with a bottle of Japanese whiskey as an I'm sorry token.
It was 10 a.m. so we did not drink it while recording, but we were off to the races.
I had my equipment, we did the interview and I wish this episode was like six hours long
because there are so many things I wanted to ask her.
There's so much to know about ancient Egypt, but we focused a lot on her really astonishing
work writing about female kings and the sociology of ancient and modern patriarchies and also
her work as an expert in coffins and if there's a mummy's curse and dongs of antiquity and
if you don't have a favorite Egyptologist, well, hot damn, you're about to.
She's a professor of Egyptian art and architecture at UCLA and she's been on archaeological digs,
curated museum exhibits, traveled the world, inspecting Egyptian coffins, has appeared
on multiple discovery channel and history channel archeology shows.
She wrote, the woman who would be king, hot chepsits rise to power in ancient Egypt and
has another book due out November called When Women Ruled the World, Six Queens of Egypt.
So straight out of the gate, we started talking about my forgetting equipment the first time
and the curse of multitasking and coffins and her double identities and she's just amazing
and I'm so honored to dig in to this chat with Egyptologist, Dr. Kathleen, aka Cara Cooney.
I have a recorder this time, it's very exciting.
You realize when you're doing too many things, when you forget stuff like when I showed up
in Egypt without any flashlights at all to look at the coffins and I realized and I had
to go to the store and buy some things and I didn't have a UV light, but I realized I
was just doing too many things.
Too many things.
Do you need a UV light to look at coffins?
It's very helpful because the UV you can see, you get an idea of whether the varnish is
modern or ancient because in museums they've messed up these coffins so much by over painting
them or varnishing them, restoring them and so then you have to figure out first what's
ancient and what's modern and this happens more in European museums than in Egyptian
museums.
It happens more in Protestant places than in Catholic places.
Really?
Why do you think that is?
Because there's this Protestant work ethic and people feel they should be doing something
and so they mess up their own pieces and the coffins north of the Protestant Catholic
divide in Europe are more fake than they are real and the amount of time it would take
to take all of that new paint and new varnish off is pretty extensive and nobody does it.
I saw one coffin in Leiden in the Netherlands and I was standing with the curator and we
took out the old publication and we realized the entire thing was repainted with new paint.
They just idle hands, idle hands are the devil's work?
I guess in places where you take more coffee breaks and where work is not as much of a
driver of human identity, there the coffins are less messed up.
Oh my God.
So it's funny.
Oh no, that's just a non-phiphany waiting to happen.
Do less.
Yeah, do less.
Do less.
Don't mess with your objects.
Okay.
You don't need to.
So I have a bazillion questions in my place.
I can.
In addressing you, Cara Cooney, Kathleen Cooney, or Dr. Kathleen Cooney.
Yes, it's a problem on many levels.
It's a problem that my mother started by naming me Kathleen, which is my grandmother's name
on my father's Irish side.
And yet she didn't like the name Kathy, so she nicknamed me Cara in advance.
And Cara obviously fits my personality better.
No one can pronounce Kathleen, Kathleen, Catherine, and I say, no, it's Kathleen and they look
at me like I'm crazy.
So that's my real name on every document that's official and Cara appears nowhere that's official.
So I use it to create kind of a double personality where Kathleen M. Cooney is my academic name
and Cara Cooney is my popular names.
I don't put the doctor in front of my name because I'm also, I think I have other things
that give me that authority.
I'm chair of my department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at UCLA.
I've been a professor there since 2009.
I have about 10 graduate students, many of whom have finished with their own PhDs and
call me Dr. Moutar.
So I'm cool with just Cara Cooney.
And Women in Power is something that definitely you were an authority on, especially looking
at it through the lens of Egyptology.
So your forthcoming book, which is so exciting when women rule the world, Six Queens of Egypt,
coming out on election day, was that an accident?
It wasn't an accident for the editors in that geo, but I didn't tell them to do that.
You know, these women, they keep following me and haunting me and lurking behind me and
filling my footprints as I walk because I didn't want to be known as the chiclet nonfiction
girl.
Before she became an author and a UCLA professor, Cara got her BA in humanities in German in
Austin, Texas and her PhD in Egyptian art and archaeology at Johns Hopkins University.
And she didn't intend to focus on female rulers for her literary career, but they kept
coming up in the classes she was teaching.
And she says by writing the books, she's seen new patterns in history that she hadn't
even seen in the classroom before.
But before we get to that, let's start at the very, very beginning.
Let's go way back.
Well, let's start at the beginning now.
Let's start about why you're an Egyptologist.
Okay.
And I know that this question comes up like daily for you and the answer is always like,
I don't know, kind of, you saw some books in your kid, your parents brought back some
books from the London Museum, right?
From the British Museum in London, yes.
And I remember when my mom brought those books home, she brought a book home on mummies and
she brought these, do you know the publisher Usborne?
It's a wonderful publisher.
They do children's books that have all kinds of drawings about daily life or little detailed,
you know, very detailed tiny drawings of people tanning hides or washing clothes or what it's
like to take a bath or whatever and all little animated figures and then little captions connect
to all of these pictures.
I just looked up these books by the publisher Usborne and I can confirm that they are cute
as hell.
And I had one for Rome, one for the medieval world, medieval Europe, one for Egypt and the
last one, I can't remember right now.
But Egypt was the one that just struck me as the most interesting.
It bit me and it never let go.
And yes, you're right, this is the question that I'm asked the most at any other.
Why are you an Egyptologist?
And I always give a two prong to answer.
Number one, I have no freaking idea.
It's the one question that an Egyptologist would never ask another Egyptologist or a
specialist of ancient Rome would never ask another Romanist because it's a ridiculously
stupid thing to do.
You have to spend eight years, eight to 10 years longer in school than everybody else.
You live a life of poverty in comparison to other people who have the same education level.
It's not a clever thing to do.
It is a calling.
It's something you do because you love it or you just, you have to solve these problems.
And so we don't ask each other that, but other people ask us that all the time.
And so my answer is, I don't know why it's something that is, that I'm curious about
myself, why I see the world better through the lens of an ancient authoritarian regime
than I do just by looking at my own world around me.
But it's the truth.
And then number two, the real answer to your question is I'm an upper middle class white
chick, which means that while my brother was encouraged to become a lawyer and he did,
even though he would be, would have been a great academic, I was allowed to follow my
heart as a woman.
And there was still, when I was growing up in the seventies and eighties, this idea that
I was not necessarily meant to be the breadwinner in my family.
And I was allowed to, to be more impractical, imprudent, and, and I was allowed to do that.
Just take note, the following should be considered a tutorial by Karakuni on acknowledging privilege.
She just nails it.
So and, and of course the upper middle class part is pretty clear.
I had the education level and access to these more difficult to acquire academic cultures,
spaces.
And, and so it was something that I was able to move into quite easily, that other people
have a much harder time finding their way into, or if you grow up African American in
this country and you're constantly assaulted with white privilege all around you, if you
have a chance to study the ancient world, you might do it through a different political
lens, through a lens of Afrocentrism rather than the lens of the classical white world
or what is perceived as the classical white world.
And most people who study ancient Egypt in the United States and in Britain and in Europe
are white people.
It's a very colonial science and it's off-putting for people of color.
And do you come up against any resistance or friction with that?
And, and kind of how do you grapple with that?
It's a very interesting subject to me, how the ancient world is politicized, claimed
and used to bolster certain kinds of identities.
It's something that we need to pay attention to.
There are reasons that when the LACMA exhibition for King Tut came out in 2005 and he was
depicted as a white barber strisand in the reconstruction that some French team made a
National Geographic put on their cover.
There's a reason that we have people picketing out front of the museum saying King Tut is
back and he's black, because there are claims about his racial and ethnic identity that,
that are done in a, in a way that is serving certain populations.
And if we, if we're not aware of that and why those things are happening, then we need
to step back and think about it.
So race and identity, these are things that I apply to my, my classes and that ancient
Egypt is very helpful because it provides a, a means of talking about these things,
but a thousand years removed.
Kara also explained that even some well known Egyptian born Egyptologists have been known
to whitewash ancient Egyptians because of just long entrenched colonialism and racism
that identifies power with European colonists.
And that misrepresentation of Egyptians is tragic.
And she says, pretty frankly, not accurate.
As I always say, if any of the Egyptians that I know lived in Alabama in the 50s, they
would have sat at the back of the bus or, or have reached a lot of, or created a lot
of problems for themselves.
So.
And how much of your work, your career as an Egyptologist is spent in Egypt and how
much is spent in museums around the world and in classrooms here in LA?
Oh, most of it is here.
So I have been to, in Europe, in the United States, probably 25 different museums.
It's a lot of museum work.
You go in, you figure out with the curators what your plan of attack is.
You go into storage, you open up for trains, if possible, you pull things out, if possible.
The train is a case in the museum viewing space.
So it's generally the word that Egyptologists use.
It's a very old fashioned word.
I thought it meant like a ceramic bucket of guts or a mummy case.
No, no.
Vitrine is essentially just a container, I think, probably a good Latin word.
We could look it up.
Okay.
So news to me, a vitrine is a glass display case.
Did you know that?
Like, if you tried to steal something from a museum, you would have to bust a vitrine
and also don't do that.
Now, the etymology for vitrine is Latin means glass.
It has nothing to do with a latrine.
And then I was like, I wonder if there are vitrine latrines.
So with much hesitation, I googled glass toilets and happened upon a public
bathroom in London, just in the middle of busy city foot traffic.
That's made of one way glass so no one can see in.
But when you're inside, you can still see out like everyone's just walking around
as if the walls were clear and it is a deeply anxiety provoking object.
And it's also rightfully listed as one of the six most terrifying restrooms in the
world by cracked.com.
Okay.
Back to it.
Before I ask Kara about Egyptian metriarchs, let's get to coffins.
But I'm not an Egyptologist who's doing dirt archaeology, who's opening up tombs,
who's excavating in any way.
And I wouldn't know how to do it, even if I was given the opportunity.
So leave that to the archaeologists.
And would you say that a lot of your work deals with coffins, with paperwork with,
I mean, when you are looking at artifacts, what's your bread and butter artifact wise?
Oh, my bread and butter artifact is a coffin, which is weird.
And I start my, I have a public lecture that I've been doing around the country,
a variety of them.
But one is the, you know, why women don't rule the world and why they should.
And I start with me looking at a coffin and I say that I'm a coffin expert.
And it always gets a laugh because it's the weirdest thing that you can possibly
imagine to tell people, oh yeah, I'm an expert in coffins.
You put any Egyptian coffin in front of me and I'll know early 18th dynasty,
late 18th dynasty, when in the 19th, if it's 20th or 21st.
And I can, I can talk all about the details of these coffins.
It's strange and weird.
And you're thinking to yourself, why ever would someone devote their life to that?
But if you, what was last wedding you went to?
Oh God, I feel like I go to like six a year, but I went to one like three weeks ago.
And when the bride hits the aisle, you turn and you see her dress.
And you can make snap judgments about everything, about her socioeconomic level,
her education level, her ethnicity, her religion, her political perspectives.
You can make snap judgments about all kinds of things.
Age, the age is staring you in the face, but maybe she's had really good plastic
surgery and so you can make some other conclusions about age.
Who knows?
So yeah, location, right?
Geographic regional identity.
We could throw that in as well.
A Hawaiian wedding is going to be very different from a wedding at the pier
and in New York.
And this is how I view coffins.
So the coffins for me are not, oh, the land of the dead and some sort of ritual
and all of this religion and the God, Thoth and Anubis and mummification.
And all of that is interesting, but it's been done to death.
And it's what Egyptologists have focused on the most.
So I look at these coffins as social documents, as ways of understanding
how the Egyptians themselves competed with the Joneses or the pun ebbs.
How they displayed their place in the world and maintained their social power
thereby. So they didn't have BMWs or Suzuki Samurais or Bentley's back then.
So it was like, that's cool.
We'll just wait until you're dead and then we'll scrutinize your coffin, buddy.
And so I look at coffins to see if a person, well, let me put it this way.
When you're hanging out with really rich people and they have conversations
that go over your head, because the details of what the really rich know
about clothing or fabrics or real estate or hedge funds is it goes over my head.
And I have no idea what the hell they're talking about.
Rich people are going to have a different cultural milieu.
And you can see the same thing in a coffin.
There are amongst the very rich, the very wealthy, there are details of separation
that only the knowledgeable would have been able to pick apart, critique, comment upon.
And everyone else would have been like, ooh, blue, gold, ooh, whatever.
And I like to see who's having a conversation with whom.
And who are they displaying to.
And I've applied this to mummies as well.
There's a particular time period in ancient Egypt, the 21st dynasty,
when the elites of Egypt tricked out their mummies like you cannot believe.
Really stuffed underneath the facial tissue, they would separate the skin from the muscle,
make incisions like we wouldn't almost in the same places that we make plastic surgery incisions
and stuff their faces full of this fatty sawdust material to give them a lifelike sort of look.
They put in glass eyes, they attached false hair, sometimes real humans, sometimes yarn.
They would plaster the face and then paint it a nice skin color,
giving it a kind of rouge.
If it was a female, they put peppercorns in the nose so it wouldn't collapse.
They even stuffed arms and chest when it got really, really extravagant.
And I looked at this and I'm like, that's the strangest thing because a mummy is meant
to be hidden, bound in these bandages and not meant to be seen by prying eyes.
And yet they're pulling all of their wealth and putting it into their bodies and making
their bodies into kind of standalone coffins.
And I was able to conclude that we're talking about a society of very wealthy elite
and exclusive people who are showing 10 other people, a dozen other people,
the bodies of their dead family members, and are able to compete that way,
keeping all of the unclean masses out of the conversation entirely.
And it's a competition that didn't last very long.
As soon as society changed a little bit, then this over the top mummification
stopped and people again started putting all of their wealth into the coffins
that contained the corpse on the outside rather than the inside, which is a very
human thing to do.
It's not a normal human thing to buy an amazingly beautiful diamond ring
and then never wear it, never show it.
Or maybe it's like MTV's Cribs.
I would compare it more to having a really nice bedroom that very few people
are able to see, but it's a tricked out, an amazing bedroom that you invite a few
people to see and then word of mouth spreads and people talk about it.
Or there's a some sort of feature done in a magazine, but it's many steps removed.
And there's a way of gaining prestige that way.
This is where it all goes down, folks.
This is where the magic happens.
So essentially when gender is not involved, all of my work involves social competition.
And and I think that's very much because of the way I grew up in Houston, Texas,
in a very competitive environment.
Big hair.
Oh, big hair, big cars, big everything.
And and I found it very tedious and annoying.
And so I'm interested in how people do it and why they do it.
Cara says that as a graduate student, she was reading about contracts and protocol
of ancient artists and her advisor, a very badass Egyptologist named Dr.
Betsy Bryan, suggested.
Well, why don't you look into coffins and look into this book by Yak Yon Sen called
and wait for it.
This is crazy.
This gives you an idea of how academics work.
Commodity prices in the Ramasit period.
Doesn't this sound like you want to kill yourself?
And I went through commodity prices in the Ramasit period, which is like a 700 page
tome and I found a section on coffins and I never looked back.
And I've been working on this stuff since, oh my God, 1998.
Do you care about modern day American coffins or just Egyptian?
Do you find yourself looking like when you go to funerals now?
Are you like, oh, it's pretty good.
Well, luckily, I haven't been going to as many funerals as I've been going to
weddings, but funerals, we don't usually think of them as display opportunities.
We put our display in other places.
And so the funeral here is not quite as interesting, but in our culture, I see
us avoiding the conversation until the very last possible moment and keeping it
very quiet.
We don't like to talk about these things or show it off.
For more about how Americans die, listen to the Thanatology episode with
Cole and Perry.
She's an expert on death and dying.
And I promise it's shockingly uplifting.
She's amazing.
Okay, but onward.
I do want to go back and just for like a primer on Egyptology, where do you begin
to understand it?
Because number one, there's like 50,000 dynasties.
Is a dynasty just a generation?
Why do we call them dynasties?
Oh my goodness.
Well, first of all, let me go back to the first part of your question, which is
what is Egyptology and essentially where it's a complicated thing because you're
taking a place and then you're applying all of these different academic pursuits
to it.
So you can be an art historical Egyptologist.
You can be an archaeologist who's an Egyptologist.
You can be a philologist, language specialist who is an Egyptologist.
You can be a historian.
You can apply all of these different perspectives to this one place.
And the reason that Egyptology separates itself out, which isn't necessarily good
for it, but there's reasons, is that we have 3000 years, the same culture, the same
religion, the same governmental structure, almost in an unbroken line.
Yes, with ups and downs of prosperity and then collapse, but this, this same rather
inward looking, rather protected place that maintains its cultural separateness
even to this very day.
And what is up with Egyptian dynasties?
Like what exactly are they?
Let's break this down.
So you start out with dynasty one, and then when that family changes, you move
on to dynasty two and three and four and in succession, right?
Sometimes dynasties can rule concurrently with one another.
So in time periods of great collapse and social problems, you can have dynasties
like seven and eight, nine and 10 ruling concurrently with one another and a great
deal of overlap and a great deal of regional contestation so that there would
be dynasty seven in one place and eight in another place, but at the same time.
Some dynasties get more of our attention as Egyptologists, like I would say dynasties
four, five and six of the Old Kingdom when the pyramids were created at Giza.
So side note, this era is known as Old Kingdom, around four to 5000 years ago.
Also known as the Age of Pyramids, because they built a lot of pyramids, which
served as tombs to kings.
An important figure during this era was Imhotep, credited as being a chief
architect of the steppe pyramids and also just a general cool smart dude.
Now, during the Old Kingdom, they built a bunch of stuff and kings were
thought to be godlike and they were buried in these huge, well-known tombs.
And then the Middle Kingdom, dynasties 11 and 12.
So known as a golden age, this Middle Kingdom was 3500 to 4500 years ago.
And it was known as a time of prosperity and stability, possibly due to
high river waters, which made the land more fertile.
Now, pharaohs were seen more as leaders of the people and they were buried
in secret tombs so that folks can come and steal their stuff.
They're like, get bent, grave robbers.
Get out of here.
And then dynasties 18 and 19.
So 3000 to 3500 years ago saw the new kingdom or the imperial age.
This was the peak of Egyptian power and military conquests.
Now, you got some famous as pharaohs during this time, like Chepsoot,
a lady king, Akhenaten and his wife, Nefertiti, King Tut.
So that's the briefest of rundowns because trust me, Egypt has more hot
goss than a million southern hair salons.
But let's continue.
These are the big dynasties that people like to focus all of their attention on.
Because you're dealing with the centralized government, you get more production.
You get grand temples being created.
You get artwork of the finest quality.
And you have more history being written down because people write down
more history when they're winning rather than when they're losing.
When you're dealing with civil war, it's not a time to sit down
and write thoughtfully about what's going on.
You're just trying to live.
And so you have a dearth of documentation for those time periods.
It sounds like social media.
Yes, yes.
And so social media, I mean, when people are going through really hard times,
they kind of disappear from Facebook.
They're like, not going to post, not going to post about this breakup.
You kind of disappear.
And then when things are happy again, you the pictures show up.
Right. I hadn't thought about it that way. That's nice.
I do know what you mean. That's great.
OK, so we'll compare Egypt to Facebook.
And and I think that works pretty well.
But it's so much to get a handle on this.
The other problem with Egyptology is that because it is so protected
geographically, it's less invadible and there's less competition going on.
Even today, like think of the Arab Spring and what happened in Libya
and Syria versus what happened in Egypt and Egypt.
People held hands and protected the Egyptian Museum in Cairo from being burned
by Molotov cocktails flung in the revolution by whom we don't know.
And people will discuss it forever in Syria.
You know, millions of people have had to leave.
It's it will never be the same.
The place is utterly destroyed.
These are geographic realities, but Egypt, this protected place,
means that more stuff will be preserved.
So you have a preservation that you don't have in other places,
which means for the Egyptologists, you have an embarrassment of riches
to commit to memory, to to figure out where these things are,
where they might have come from.
Millions of objects are swirling around in a given Egyptologist's head.
And it can be quite overwhelming.
And I haven't I haven't talked about the language.
So to be an Egyptologist who knows anything about anything,
you have to spend a year doing your Middle Egyptian grammar introduction
and learning your signs and figure out how to look words up
in the God damn dictionary, which takes forever.
And then you have to figure out how to read heretic,
which is the the handwriting that the ancient Egyptians used
is a shorthand for the hieroglyphic symbols.
When when you're start learning hieroglyphics,
do you just have a bunch of flashcards?
You do. Yes, we all make a bunch of flashcards.
And you start out trying to figure out the signs
because these signs are these abstracted real things.
And there's like, well, here, hold on just a second.
I'll put my microphone down and we'll get a book out and we can see what we start
bring on the hieroglyphs bring bring on the hieroglyphs bring bring on.
So at this point, Cara shot up from the kitchen table
and she rushed off to another room and like she was about to bust out
some old glamour shots or like a really great snack.
She excitedly came back with this hard bound reference tome.
She cracked it open.
And it was a compendium of these precise, perfect, hieroglyphic diagrams
with little English translation captions underneath.
And these symbols just have a thrilling aesthetic,
kind of like really elegant clip art of the ancient world.
Meets hipster, stick and poke tattoo flash, but obviously cooler.
But when you start learning how to find signs.
Oh my God, so many emojis, they're organized according to.
So let's start at the beginning, right?
Because people like to put themselves first.
So the human goes first and look at all the different signs
you have for the humans doing different things.
You have a human who's getting hit with a stick, a human who's hitting
somebody with a stick, a human who's got his arms up and prays.
Honestly, these are just like emojis.
It's crazy. It's true.
So then we go to the parts of the person.
You'll have the hand of phallus, a phallus emitting liquid.
I just looked down and saw phallus with liquid issuing from it.
And there's so many penises in Egyptian language and iconography and art.
And they're always erect.
It's crazy.
Dicapalooza here.
Yeah, it's true.
And then you get to the animals and then God help you, you get to the birds.
Now, when you're first starting out, these birds all look the same.
I don't know anything about birds, flying bird, nestling bird.
So how long do you study?
How long do you study all these symbols?
These symbols to commit to memory.
You still that's why the sign lists exist.
You're never going to be able to commit everything to memory.
Not all of this stuff is going to be in your head at any one time.
I do know people who have this stuff in their head.
I am not one of them.
Was there any point in learning all of this that you're like, you know what?
I'm just going to work in insurance.
There were nights when I would spend 12 hours on my on my Middle
Egyptian homework and I remember them.
I remember having a hard time looking things up.
I remember how time consuming it was for me.
Um, and I remember some days I would, I would give up a little bit, but the
interest in my, my bigger questions always continue to draw me.
So even though the language is something I can do and I can't teach, it's not
what drew me into Egyptology.
What drew me into Egyptology was all of the statues and the beautiful things
and the way the kings are displayed and the way people show themselves, the art
history of it.
That's really what, what pulled me in.
Um, and now it's the social history that, that keeps me there.
And getting to your book coming out, which I'm very excited about, um, I know
that there's six women who rule the world, six queens of Egypt.
Yes.
Now, female rulers were called kings.
Queens were just the wife.
That's like saying the first lady isn't the same as saying the president.
Yes.
Can you give me like a quick bio of each of the six?
If you were had to be like, let's say this were a cast of the real world and
you had to be like, this is the troublemaker.
This is the one who's always making sure everyone drinks up water.
I think I can do that.
Let's see.
So just the title of the book where we have six queens of ancient Egypt, when
women ruled the world and I kept thinking, should it be female kings?
No, because the first one was just a queen.
So they were all queens at one point.
And some of them were able to catapult into this position of female king.
And you're right.
The distinction is very clear.
A queen in ancient Egyptian language is just the vessel of the king, a helper,
a womb, if you like, but a king for male or a female, that's the leader of state.
And so the Egyptians, when that woman became leader of state, they gave her
the word and moniker a king.
That was that was what she deserved.
OK, all right, buckle up.
You're about to get a quick tour of six very remarkable figures in ancient Egypt.
And their stories, oh, these stories, they're more dramatic and triumphant
and tragic than like any true Hollywood story, like deaths and usurping
and gluing beards on ladyfaces and sibling romance.
Just get ready.
There's cobras.
They're stabbing.
Oh, OK.
So Kara is about to spill some tea.
And by tea, I mean red sarcophagus juice.
All right, let's go.
Now, the first is Merneth of dynasty one.
And she maintains her queenship.
She never becomes king, but she's buried like a king amongst kings
with 40 sacrificial victims around her.
Men and women who were murdered or encouraged to commit suicide, we don't know,
to accompany her into death.
Forty is nothing that her husband before her had hundreds upon hundreds
and her son after her had hundreds as well.
Oh, my God.
So it's a it's a it's a very interesting part of the book.
It starts out with a bloody bang.
If you like, killing their wives, brothers, sons, husbands right in front
of their eyes is probably one of the most powerful things that you can do.
And that keening that mourning that would have been created in those moments
is is very powerful indeed.
And Merneth was in charge of deciding who was sacrificed for her dead husband.
She's the one that's holding the bag, so to speak, that has the reins of power
in her hand when her husband dies and her son is too young to rule.
So she rules on his behalf as a queen regent, if you like.
But then when she dies and she's placed in the ground, she's buried
in this line of kings just like all the rest in the immortal words of Sean Carter.
So she flies below the radar and yet wields power that is that packs a visceral punch.
The next woman for whom we actually have evidence is named Nefru Sobek of
Dynasty 12, and she rules because there's no one else left.
She's the last gasp of her dynasty.
Her father was a great king, Aminemhet III, and he seems to have borne a son.
Aminemhet IV, whom Nefru Sobek married, probably her brother or half-brother.
And it may have been incest that made it so that there was nobody left to rule.
It's a good exclusionary tactic of keeping everybody out of rule, but it's not a very
good tactic for keeping a very healthy genetic line.
So there's a good way to end a dynasty, to come back to that dynastic question.
It's just bone, your brother.
Yeah, seriously.
And the line, there's the end of the train.
This train will terminate here.
All change.
Please ensure that you take all your personal belongings with you.
And there was nobody left to rule but her, and that was how they ended it.
And then we get to Dynasty 18, which is when we have for in Dynasty 18, we have two female kings.
And the first one is Hatshepsut.
Ooh, Hatshepsut.
OK, so this is a name that we should all know, but we don't.
She disappeared from records after her death.
Now, she started to rule on behalf of her nephew, who couldn't rule because he was
very busy being two.
Auntie, take care of this for a bit.
She's like, I got you.
And she ended up being crowned as king alongside this boy whom she could never eliminate.
And there was this co-kingship that stretched on until her death.
Even though he was a baby.
Well, she took the kingship when he was maybe nine years old.
OK.
And then it may be because he was nine years old, she realized she better do it now.
You know, she was able to rule with impunity without him interfering because what's an
eight year old going to do?
I have an eight year old.
He's starting to get difficult.
I mean, I don't have kids, but I don't even know if like nine
year olds can make their own macaroni.
No, she is the female king who did everything right, who was the most traditional, who ended
up even showing herself in depictions as a man.
Right.
Not necessarily because she wanted to, but because it was what was expected in
of course, she's really next to this young and vibrant young man.
She has to compete with him in a sense.
And she's the one whose name we don't remember.
Right.
She's the one whose name we can't pronounce.
She's the one who hasn't made it into our cultural memory.
Who's in our cultural memory?
Women who were thrown out of the window and eaten by dogs like Jezebel or Samira
Miss who slept with a different man every night in Assyria and had him murdered according
to the text or Cleopatra, who, of course, used her sexual wiles to get to Julius
user and Mark Antony and ended up having to commit suicide according to the text.
So one of my points in the book is that we remember the failures, the cautionary
tales, and trust me, historians make it very clear that we should remember them so
that we don't go down that dark path again.
Okay, back to Hatshepsut and it's okay if you don't know how to say this yet.
I'm pretty sure everyone's like Hatshepsut, what?
But the woman who did it all right, who ruled when Egypt was most prosperous, who
put Egypt with its best foot forward and left Egypt better than she found it,
Hatshepsut, we don't really remember her.
So she's the one that needs to be resuscitated.
And it reminds me how for us women in the workplace, when you do something really
well, then it's easy to take credit for it.
It's a very abstract thing.
It's a very fungible thing.
Whereas if you do something really badly, everyone's going to remember you having
messed that up and nobody's going to want to take credit for it.
So success, as many women listening to this will know, is pretty dangerous.
You have to do success, but you have to do it by putting your own spin on it if you
want to keep it.
Now, along those lines, it was Hatshepsut who just went for it.
Like gender-bending fashion ideals by wearing a short wig and the headdresses
of kings and a crown of rams horns, sometimes even depicted bare-chested and
with a false beard, making like pantsuit feminism seem very tame by comparison.
So she might be the icon we all needed, but never knew about.
And I'll admit that as I drove to Keras, I was repeating Hatshepsut's name like
some sort of ancient incantation.
So I wouldn't say it wrong.
And I had done some research so I wouldn't sound like a total ignoramus.
I already forgot half my equipment.
So like the deck was already stacked against me.
I had to compensate.
And now her nephew pretty much had her erased from memory once she died, right?
He did, but he waited a good 20-something years before he did it.
And it was when he put his son on the throne and claimed which son he was going
to have as king after him.
He decided he needed to remove her.
He knew that he wouldn't have been king at all if it weren't for her, that
somebody else would have ruled as king, somebody else would have moved him aside.
But she protected him.
And then he goes and erases her 20 years in.
It's problematic, but that's what patriarchy's do.
They have to create this perfected and uncontested line.
And a woman is, is messy and difficult.
They had to get rid of her depressing.
And then next is Nefertiti.
And I hope you notice a trend that all of these women are here protecting men.
If a three-year-old comes to the throne, what's going to happen?
Some strong warlord is going to come in, murder the kid, hold the bloody knife
and go, look at, I killed him.
And then he gets to be king in Egypt with divine kingship.
It's a different issue.
You can't do that.
It's a God that's standing in front of you.
So you invite a woman to come in and rule on his behalf.
Nefertiti is a little different.
She's ruling as a co-king alongside her husband, Akhenaten, who's created this
really weird and wacky new religion of autism, worshiping this one solar divinity
in the sky, changing Egyptians' temples, means of worship, funding the temples,
really pushing Egypt into great upheaval.
And during that time, he decides for whatever reason that the only person
he can trust is his wife, his greatest, his highest-placed wife.
He had many wives.
We can be sure that every king had a harem full of wives.
And Nefertiti's story is the one that's really been being uncovered now,
because when you think of Nefertiti, what do you think of?
Oh, I think of that bust, that like very tall hat, high cheekbones.
Yeah, I think of her as being like this regal sort of figure.
The paragon of beauty, this beautiful thing.
We don't think of her as as being a power broker, as being somebody who puts
Egypt back to rights again.
And that's really her story, that she needs to be resuscitated for moving
Egypt back in the direction of the old religious ways and kind of a truth
and reconciliation king.
Also, side note, Nefertiti had six daughters and everyone was like,
ah, congratulations, that sucks.
No sons.
So her husband was like, we'll shoot.
Okay, I'll just also marry my sister.
And together they had a boy baby named King Tutankhamen.
King Tut, as he is often called, maybe a little too casually.
I'm not sure, took the throne at nine, ruled for 10 years until his
untimely death around the age of 19.
Now experts suspect it was an infected leg fracture that took him down, but
he also had like several strains of malaria.
His mummy is the oldest known case of malaria on record, which is like pretty cool.
So another little feather in his cap.
Now he's said to have had a bit of a youthful temper, but he married, he had
two children who did not survive infancy, perhaps because his wife was also his
half sister, just normal political stuff.
So speaking of male versus female rulers, which brings up the question of do
females rule differently than men in Egypt today, anytime, do they?
When, well, I mean, if you're Sarah Huckabee Sanders and you're working on
behalf of the Patriarchy, look, everybody wants to make this an attack on a woman
and equality.
What about the constant attacks that he receives or the rest of us?
The answer is no, but if you're a woman who has a different perspective, not to
protect a patriarch, then I think the answer is yes.
And you might be more interested in cutting deals and thinking with
nuance in making decisions that please more rather than one faction.
I think that question needs still to be answered.
And we haven't allowed it to be answered because we don't let women into power.
That's a different question.
Did I mention that her new book comes out on November 6th, which is also voting
day for the midterms in the US?
Just saying, just circle that day, make a plan for it.
A lot of good things happening.
Our next queen to become king is a woman named Tal Wasret of
Dynasty 19, and she's really a badass because she comes in as a queen to a
king who dies precipitously and then acts as regent for a boy who's too young
to rule, who's not her own son.
And then when he dies, she rules as soul king on her own just for a couple of years.
Okay.
So this queen's husband dies.
She also helps out a baby king.
He dies maybe by her own hand, and then she becomes king.
And then she dies somewhat mysteriously.
So if we've ever been nervous about like getting a promotion at work or asking
for a raise, just go for it.
Nothing can beat the workplace anxiety of ancient bloodline monarchies.
Am I right?
She's involved in a civil war as a prime operator on her own, like no other woman.
And it seems she was punished for it.
It's always very vague.
But it seems that if she's the one that was, that was murdered, it makes sense
that she's the one that's not acting on behalf of a patriarch.
And we get a bit of a cautionary tale of what it means to be the woman who's
ambitious for her own self.
It's not a good place to be.
She'll be punished for it.
And then of course, the last one is the most well known, and that would be
Cleopatra of the Ptolemaic dynasty.
She's also punished for what she does.
But Cleopatra is more canny than Tawasra, and that she knows she can never rule alone.
She ruled first alongside her father, Ptolemy the 12th, and then she ruled
alongside two brother husbands in succession, Ptolemy the 13th and Ptolemy the 14th.
Ptolemy the 13th died in battle against her.
Ptolemy the 14th was poisoned by her.
And then she had Ptolemy the 15th, who is Caesarean, whom she bore after a great
romance with Julius Caesar.
And she's not shy about saying that this is Caesar's son and her heir.
And she realizes that if she's going to keep her son on the throne or keep
herself on the throne, that in the absence of any patriarchs around her, and
she's done with all of those men who are trying to murder her anyway, she's going
to move on to the most powerful men in the world.
And those are the Roman warlords.
And she picks well, she picks Julius Caesar, who's a growing in his authoritarian
power too quickly, too much.
And his links to Egypt is probably one of the many reasons that he was killed
on the steps of the Senate in the Ides of March.
And then she moves on to Mark Antony.
But he's perhaps not as strategic a choice, because if if he hadn't made
some of those boneheaded decisions in the Battle of Actium, perhaps we would
talk about Cleopatra and Mark Antony in a different way.
Mark Antony, quick primer, around 30 to 40 years BCE, before the Common Era,
which is a more factually accurate and less religious way to say BC or before
Christ. So Mark Antony was a buddy of the assassinated Julius Caesar.
Mark Antony, not to be confused with Jalos ex-husband, Mark Antony,
was part of a Roman triumvirate with Octavian.
Now, Octavian was an adopted son of Caesar.
Now, everyone in this little power triangle they had started getting
bitchy and power hungry with each other.
So Antony was like, you know what?
I'm going to marry Octavian's sister just to smooth things over.
But then he cheated on her and had three kids with Cleopatra, who already had
a kid with the dead Caesar.
Things started getting a little stormy.
Octavian ended up going to war with Antony and Cleopatra and Egypt.
And he creamed them in this naval battle at Actium.
Things get even wilder after that.
Man, if you like soap operas, you'll love Wikipedia.
But before we go there, what was Cleopatra's deal in life?
But she came the closest out of any of these women into setting up her own
dynasty from her own womb, which is an extraordinary thing to do.
Because if you think about divine kingship and why it works so well,
it's because you have one man who can produce theoretically 365 babies
outside of himself in a given year without any hormonal problems,
without any danger of dying in childbirth.
See hieroglyph from earlier.
A phallus, a phallus emitting liquid.
It's a very practical thing to give birth outside of your body.
Yeah.
Yeah.
A woman.
And I have done this and it's not an easy thing.
The childbirth is no fun.
It's no fun.
And I did it naturally so I can actually talk about what it might have
been for an ancient person.
It was okay.
That's a different interview.
And so Cleopatra, she produces one child with Julius Caesar and then three
children with Mark Antony.
She has twins with him and survives that or a deal.
It's amazing.
Not IVF.
And she sets each one up to be a king or queen of one of the parts of her
growing empire in the East.
If they hadn't lost in the battle of Actium, they would have been a competing
dynasty to the Roman warlords who are trying to take over the world.
But in the end, Cleopatra does not leave Egypt better than she finds it.
She loses.
Egypt becomes nothing more than a province of the Roman empire and loses much of
its, um, well, Egypt is never going to be under native control again after
Cleopatra until 1950.
Wow.
Now a bit of a like Romeo and Juliet situation there where she faked her
suicide to devastate Mark Antony and then he killed himself and then she killed
him herself, maybe with a needle, maybe with a snake.
What happened?
No one knows what happened.
And the only people that are telling us what happened are the Romans.
What better way, I argue in the book for than for Octavian to claim that
Cleopatra had committed suicide, abandoning Egypt, abandoning her children, locking
herself up in her tomb, trying to destroy all of her treasures so that he couldn't
have them.
She's, she's obsessed with her own fame and glory.
She's selfish to the end.
She tries out poisons on, on slaves so that she can see which one is, is less
painful according to the texts.
There's all kinds of rumors being created around Cleopatra's death.
The only one who knows how Cleopatra died is Cleopatra and she can't talk anymore.
I think Cleopatra was, was murdered.
I have no way of proving this.
I'll never know how she did it.
But a story is certainly woven to make her look, um, self-serving,
manipulative and, and mentally unstable.
And what do we use today to keep women out of power, but the idea that
they are hormonally unstable, that they're not somebody that we can have in
charge of our army and our military men, that we can't have them in combat
situations, their hormones, their, their emotionality, I think, is what will
always be used to, to take women out of the halls of power rather than
seeing that emotionality as the, the reason they should be there.
And also what, it just discounting the emotionality of men and power.
I mean, it's all one needs to do is open Twitter to see that on full display.
Well, I, I end my public lectures with, you were talking about emojis with a
series of emojis and it's a panel that shows a man's day and it shows these
faces and it starts out with this happy face.
And then this bland half-smile and then it's sleeping.
And then it says a woman's day and you can imagine the emojis start out with a
happy face and then she's mad and then she's crying and then she's happy again.
And it just goes up and down and all around.
And it's just this emotionality beyond anything and it's exhausting.
And I just put that slide up there and everyone, you know, they feel embarrassed
that they're laughing.
They feel embarrassed that there's truth in that slide, that women do, according
to scientists have more connection with not only their own emotions, but other
people's emotions, they're better at reading emotions on people's faces.
They're better at connecting with people and negotiating and figuring out how
somebody's feeling and what they might need to do at a given moment.
But, but these abilities are turned against them as something that is a liability.
But as I point out in my lecture, I say it's the man's lack of connection to
his emotionality, to what he's feeling and his lack of ability to try out the
motions without going all the way to the end that makes men throttle and rape
and commit mass suicide with their children and their wife and, and press
the red button and create wars and do all of these things that women with their
emotional connections and with their ability to try things out, talk it through.
What might that be like?
These are reasons why I think women need to be in power, particularly at this day
and age when we're really looking down the edge of a precipice of, of social
and civilized collapse.
So men, non men, everyone just feel your feelings.
It's healthy to feel your feelings and identify them so that you can address them.
Also, of those queens and lady kings, I do have opinions on who's a Miranda,
who's a Carrie, who's a Samantha.
But listen, I feel like it's someone insulting, but also I think that you
should think of that on your own and then you can just tweet me with your opinions.
Anyway, with Caris book coming out on election day, the discussion kind of
drifted toward how the fall of ancient civilizations is mirrored in modern politics.
Shirley Bassey is like.
You study kind of autocratic rule.
How do you, how do you liken that to what we are experiencing now?
And is there any hope at all?
You know, it's an interesting thing.
I didn't realize that I was studying an authoritarian regime until after I'd gotten
my PhD and I remember standing with my graduate students in front of Abu
symbol and these massive statues of Ramses the second and going, Oh my God,
of course it's like Stalin and it's a silly thing.
And I'm almost embarrassed to admit it, but I dare say that most people who are
attracted to Egypt and go to King Tut exhibitions don't think that they're
lauding an authoritarian regime that understood how to package power so that
it's safe and like puppies and rainbows and not, they packaged it so that they
weren't showing the bloodshed.
They packaged it to show the divine protection and we're drawn to that.
We want somebody to take care of us.
We want our, our divine father to come in and say, it's going to be okay.
You don't have to worry about anything.
This is very alluring and seductive for us.
And so it's, it's an interesting thing now to have this 20 years of experience
with this particular authoritarian regime and see our, my own country go down the
same path of authoritarianism and do it in a way so that people don't even know
what's happening to packages, to package that authoritarianism so that it seems
like it's decisive.
It's keeping you safe.
It's keeping the immigrants out.
It's keeping the woman in her place.
They may not say it directly, but it's still the father and very much with
evangelical Christianity thrown into this or Zionist Judaism, the divine father
coming in to protect us and keep us safe.
And the ideology behind what is happening today in the United States is so cleverly
done and so on a par with what the ancient Egyptians did when they presented
themselves that it's scary.
No, we don't see Donald Trump statues in, you know, giant granite relief.
And nor, nor should we expect it because we're too clever for that.
But we have figured out to create the state TV in a privatized context.
And we do have golden towers in the major cities bearing the name.
So, I mean, it's not that far off.
We do.
And we do have the same.
Now here, this is going to seem a little provocative.
And I talk about this in the book, but Donald Trump also understands that his
wife on par with him as a peer in term, well, not in terms of age, but in terms
of hierarchy, she has to keep within her place.
She has to keep quiet.
She has to worry about clothes.
She's supposed to just worry about those women, the womanly domestic things.
Whereas he allows his daughter to go out there and be much more of a power
broker and the way he talks about his daughter, sexualizes his daughter.
And Howard Stern interviews is very much akin to the ancient Egyptian
king marrying his daughters and elevating them to great royal wife.
And Ivanka Trump does play the role of the great royal wife in the ancient
Egyptian authoritarian regime, that way of viewing things.
So the the parallels to ancient Egyptian authoritarianism and what we see
in the modern day are pretty damn striking.
This idea of us versus them, exclusionary, xenophobic sorts of tropes.
It's all there.
Oh, do we have time for a few rapid fire questions?
A few quick rapid fire.
But before we take questions from you, our beloved listeners, we're going to
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OK, your questions.
I got this question a lot.
Emily Jackson, Ariel Belk, Iolante and Maria Spencieri all asked.
Cats, cats.
Why did ancient Egyptians worship cats?
Well, wouldn't you worship a cat?
I don't know.
I like dogs personally.
I mean, I don't like either.
I was a vegetarian for 20 years and I'm not anymore.
So I'm not an animal hater, but I'm definitely not an animal lover.
Some people just aren't animal people and I'm one of them.
The animals come up to me and I go, what do you want?
What's going on?
Well, OK, hear me out.
I looked it up and 68 percent of Egyptian land is desert.
So maybe I guess it's a kind of like a big sandbox.
Yes, a cat can be this sweet, calm thing.
And then when she's pissed off, that cat can destroy you.
Even a house cat could destroy your face if she wanted to.
They could kill me.
Yes, and the Egyptians identify with that.
Oh, my God, they loved that.
So the thing about the cat, they thought of the cat mainly as a female entity.
That's where they really put their attention and they put their attention
into this idea that the female cat can be this cuddly, sweet thing.
Or she will destroy this vehicle of keeping the patriarch safe, this vehicle
of making sure that the rebels will not come towards the king.
In many ways, the cat is Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the cat cult.
She's the one that then makes sure that the the barriers are put up to keep
the king at the center safe and to keep the maat to keep the truth
and justice of the authoritarian regime.
I'm never going to.
Well, she does have cat eyeliner, too.
The cat eye.
Yeah, she kind of does.
She kind of does.
And then she uses that ash to create a perfect smoky eye.
A bunch of people ask me this.
And I don't even know how you're going to answer this.
But simple question.
How are the pyramids built?
Do we know? Oh, no, we don't know.
And that's really cool that we don't that we don't know.
And that was an ancient aliens.
It was not ancient aliens, but that's what the Egyptian kings want you to believe.
So what better thing than for you to stand in front of those pyramids?
Have you ever done it? Have you been to you stand there and you look up
and you just go, holy God, how is this possible?
And boom, they've got you.
It's propaganda that never stops giving because you look at it
and you think that other worldly powers built those pyramids, then there you are.
Other worldly powers did build those pyramids, and it's called the Egyptian kings.
When people think that ancient aliens built them or just aliens,
you're buying into the propaganda of the authoritarian regime,
hook, line and sinker. So please don't do it.
OK, just because we don't know how it was done doesn't mean that doesn't mean
it was that you didn't have 100,000 poor shmucks dragging and pushing stones.
I mean, really draft labor of your own people is the best explanation.
The details of how, until we take that thing apart, we're not going to really know.
I hear that's going to be difficult.
Yeah, it's going to be difficult to take one of the eight wonders of the world
apart, the only last standing one.
It's going to be a really big renovation job.
Or seven, there's seven wonders and people add the eight.
Sorry, that was embarrassing.
No, I didn't even I couldn't even fact check you because I didn't know.
Seven wonders, yeah.
I felt like a real bozo that I couldn't remember all seven.
And then I looked them up and they're, are you ready?
Colossus of Rhodes, Great Pyramid of Giza.
Hanging Gardens of Babylon, Lighthouse of Alexandria.
Mausoleum at Halicarnassus, Statue of Zeus in Olympia, Temple of Artemis at Ephesus.
Confession, y'all.
I hadn't heard of five of those.
Had you?
OK, let me know how many you'd heard of because it's possible that the tourism
boards or the Seven Wonders PR team is just snoozing on the job.
Like, come on, get an Instagram account, tag things.
Wonders full, a little brand awareness for the Seven Wonders could go a long way.
Jessica Tubasing asks, do you have any belief in King Tut's curse or any other
Pharaoh's curse? Come on, get real with me.
Curses, yay or nay?
No, I don't believe in curses, but I believe in a lot more than you would think.
I mean, I may be an academic who's interested in science and data driven
arguments and I am.
But, you know, as I said, I don't know why I'm interested in ancient Egypt.
I don't have any good explanation for that.
I was going to ask if ever you thought maybe you were just being inhabited by
an Egyptian ghost? Who knows?
I have no understanding of what happens to me after I die.
If I was someplace before, these things are interesting to me.
But but wait, what was the question again?
Oh, King Tut's curse.
Yeah, there were lots of ways to die in the 20s before antibiotics came around.
And and so I wouldn't.
And Karnarvan was already of frail health.
And that's why he went to Egypt in the first place.
So if that's the way you're going to prove your curse, it's not going to work.
So four months after his presence at the opening of King Tut's tomb,
one lord, Karnarvan, got a mosquito bite, which he cut shaving.
Then he died.
Just something nothing Purell couldn't have stopped.
Maybe. Yeah.
Because it was that nicked infection on his cheek from shaving, right?
So they say.
And we don't even know how and why he died, blood infection possibly.
But there was probably other stuff going on with that poor guy
and the stress of finding that tomb. Oh, my God.
So maybe just the stress of a big discovery that could do it.
I've seen Egyptologists who have found amazing discoveries
and it can be very, very hard on the on the body, psyche and soul.
Really? All of that attention, all of the competition.
I'll just put it down to that.
It's the media destroyed, Karnarvan.
You don't need a curse when you have the interest of all of the people around you.
So you don't need a curse, but in case you want more background on this,
many tombs of the pharaohs were discovered in the Valley of the Kings
on the West Bank of the Nile across from modern Luxor.
Now, many Egyptian tombs in general bore clear warnings,
like one which read very straightforwardly, quote,
cursed be those who disturb the rest of a pharaoh.
They that shall break the seal of this tomb shall meet death
by a disease that no doctor can diagnose.
Like what? OK, duly noted.
I'm out of here.
But in 1922, Egyptologist Howard Carter was hired by George Herbert,
the fifth Earl of Carnivon, aka Lord Carnivon, to do some digging.
Like, does it get any more?
Hello, then, we're here to pillage your treasures.
It looked like a bust.
They weren't finding anything.
Then a water boy tripped on a stone
and revealed a hidden flight of steps leading to a chamber.
A few weeks later, Lord Carnivon arrived in Egypt
and going through these tunnels by candlelight.
He's like backseat excavating over Carter's shoulder.
And he asks, can you see anything?
And Carter sticks a candle through a small hole
into an undiscovered chamber glimmering with golden burial objects
and just says, yes, wonderful things.
And King Tut's tomb was discovered.
Roughly 5,400 items were found in the tomb,
including a solid gold coffin, face mask, thrones, archery bows,
trumpets, a chalice, food, wine,
sandals, fresh linen underwear,
and a dagger with an iron blade made possibly from a meteorite.
It's like a very intense and becursed episode of Storage Wars.
Now, remember, four months later, Lord Carnivon died
of, to borrow from Egyptian tomb warnings,
death by a disease that no doctor can diagnose.
It looks like a little on the nose, Ghost Kings, but I see why.
What about that sarcophagus found this summer in Alexandria
and filled with three skeletons and a bunch of magic red liquid?
Well, I did a dive on Kara's Facebook to see if she had any thoughts on the matter.
And in response to the question, should we drink it?
She just commented, um, no.
And there were eight M's in her arm.
Does she think it's cursed?
No, they think it's sewer water.
When asked by MPR, she said, sewage is enough of a curse, really.
So onward.
Danielle Duncanbrink asks, what's the strangest thing you've seen on or in a coffin?
So many dicks. Are there dicks on coffins?
There are, but in there are dicks, as you say.
Egyptologists like to say phalli.
You'll see phalluses, erect phalluses all over the place.
And you will see divinities standing there with their erect phallus all out and lovely.
And you might see some masturbatory images because the beginning of the world
and is from a masturbatory moment.
And Osiris remakes himself after his death by masturbating himself,
jacking himself off to a new life.
So you actually see dicks all over coffins.
So that's, um, but she asked about inside a coffin.
You might see an erect phallus figure depicted on the inside of a coffin.
And Tutankhamun was buried mummified with an erect phallus.
What? Yeah.
Yes, buried and with a mummified phallus in the erect position.
He's the only one known to have had that treatment
from the examination of the other mummies. Oh my God.
But, and you wonder how they did that, you know,
they stand the thing up and let it dry.
And it's a tiny little phallus because, you know, it's just, it's all dried.
And it reminds me of George Costanson's. I felt I was in the pool.
You mean shrink it? Yes.
And apparently the penis was knocked off of the mummy.
Google it, you guys, it's, it's fun.
Then they had to find it and I don't think they've reattached it.
He's just in there with the body.
Oh, no, like it just like a baby carrot.
They had dried up baby carrot.
Dried up baby carrot would work.
Yeah. And if you want, you can go to the Griffith Institute at Oxford,
has put all of the Harry Burton photos up live for you to see.
It's called Anatomy of an Excavation.
So put in Griffith Institute, Anatomy of an Excavation Tutankhamun
and you will be able to find, you could probably even do a tech search.
Hello. For penis and you might be able to find it.
So I did, I looked this up and I mean, listen.
Have you ever made beef jerky?
Because it loses a lot of volume.
Dehydration is a real bitch, but I did read that whoever
involved him may have positioned him in such an alert way as a little
F.B.U. to his dad, who is a pharaoh, who is more religious and I guess conservative.
And I think that that is both hilarious and very cool.
But lamentably, the member in question went missing in 1968 for almost 40 years
until someone found it in 2006 in the sand next to his body.
It's buried like a cat turd.
It's painful to even think about that level of disruption.
I would like to extend my sincere cosmic apologies to King Tutankhamun
that this happened just on behalf of all living humans and creatures left on earth.
Like curses are put there for a reason and I get it, this was not OK.
But Kara shares her own experience in this realm.
So coffins, craziest thing you've ever seen.
I've ever seen inside of a coffin, I guess, would be a dead body.
And, you know, that's pretty amazing, especially when they're one of those stuff.
Twenty versus dynasty varieties.
Those are pretty intense.
Are they still wrapped with makeup on underneath?
They're supposed to be wrapped, but most of the bodies that I've seen
have been unwrapped by people wanting to see what those mommies look like.
Usually at a time period when they didn't do it very carefully
and they were just cutting through the bandages.
So oh, so most of them are just displayed vulnerably exposed.
And should we wrap them again?
I don't know. I don't know when I see a body in a coffin.
I always say hello and I say I'm only here to look at your stuff.
I won't disturb you for very long and I'm so sorry to disturb you.
But how are you today?
And just just in my head, have a little conversation with the dead person right there.
And yeah, it doesn't happen as often as you would think,
even though I'm a coffin expert, most of the bodies have been removed from the coffins.
Just sad. I wish they were all kept together.
But when a piece goes into an art museum, they say, we are an art museum.
And this is not art.
And they send the body off to some anthropological museum
where it is usually disappears or something bad happens.
It's very sad.
That's why the 21st Dynasty individuals did that.
Why they tricked out their bodies so much, though, because coffin reuse,
because I didn't tell you that's the other thing I do with coffins,
is I look particularly for how these coffins were reused at this time period
of economic crisis, how often they were reused.
And they were reused so often that these 21st
Dynasty individuals made sure that their bodies could work
as a transformational device as a kind of coffin without being in the coffin,
because they knew that they probably were going to have their coffins taken from them
because they were taking their ancestors coffins and reusing them.
Oh, that's crazy.
Yeah, I'm sure that you can probably look for signs of varnish.
And yeah, you can see multiple layers, kind of like an archaeological
excavation where you're looking for a stratigraphy.
I looked it up.
That just means looking at multiple layers of an artifact.
I can sometimes see multiple decorative layers on a given coffin.
By the time the 21st Dynasty came to a close,
they were really good at reusing these coffins without people noticing
and taking off all the old previous decoration.
But there are still clues here and there that are that are useful for me.
You're going to need a flashlight, though.
I know you feel like because I'm heading back to Egypt this September.
You are. Oh, my God, for three weeks.
And yeah, Kyra Museum is the gift that keeps giving wonderful things in there.
And now what do you what do you hate about your job?
What sucks?
Email went off like six times, I know.
And I don't have the notifications going on because they would just
and every day I get, you know, good hundred emails and I'm chair of the department
and I have to deal with, you know, grading problems or disruptive students
or, you know, lectures who have problems.
But yeah, the the service of the job can be a little overwhelming and daunting.
And I just try to keep up with that as I can.
And that's why summer is my favorite.
I get to read and think and write.
And I don't get to do that that much during the year.
But I'm using September instead of reading more to go out into the field
and collect more data on coffins, on coffins, which is great.
But and I'm looking at coffins that are so fuggly, as I like to say,
that that everyone's ignored them.
And I'm really excited to look at these pieces.
They're coffins that when the high priesthood of Amun and dynasties
twenty and twenty one went through the Valley of the Kings and used it
as their own personal bank vault and took all of the golden and silver
and precious objects out of the tombs of Ramses the second.
I'm going to put up the third Ramses the third, all of those kings
and recycled them for their own use to fund their own regime.
They took those kings bodies out, stripped them of all of their valuables,
rewrap them and then put them in these fuggly coffins.
Reused ugly, ugly coffins.
And and I'm very excited to look at these pieces because it's rare
when ugliness enters a museum.
But because Ramses, the third is buried in one of these fuggly coffins.
He's that coffin is kept in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.
So I get to how ugly are they?
Though are they like crocs?
Are they just like one big croc with a well, the faces are a little off.
They're obviously not made for kings.
They're made for other people.
And their surfaces, if they were nice pieces, are often chiseled down
because they were covered with gold.
So a lot of that ugliness is because of theft.
So their faces have been marred.
But a couple of them are in coffins that were not made by very good coffin makers.
And they just look a little they're just a little off.
Like imagine that, you know, when you're looking at your Facebook or your social
media and someone makes a cake and they go, nailed it.
It's like some of those coffins are like this.
Their faces are just often weird.
And, you know, they didn't have the best coffin maker for some of these.
And it's interesting that they're going to be like,
ah, we have the most royal and divine Ramses, the third.
We have this coffin. So yeah, whatever, put him put him in there.
There's some ugly art out there in the world.
Oh, that's delightful, though.
Yeah.
So her son's babysitter was due home any minute.
Also, thank you so much, Kara, for making time for this.
So we wrapped it up with one last question.
Now, what is your favorite thing about Egyptology or your job?
Like the thing that just gives you butterflies that you're like, I love this so much.
Oh, that's hard.
But I think I know how to answer that. I do.
It's my great. It's a sword that cuts both ways.
It's my greatest weakness as well as my greatest strength.
And that would be my ability to communicate to people who don't do Egyptology
and my interest in talking to normal people
who don't devote their lives to these 30
dynasties with all of their intricacies and all of their
language and material complexities.
And I like telling a story.
I like connecting with an audience.
And I I I like making the ancient world come alive again.
And when I say that's my greatest weakness, it's because academics,
they like to make sure you're moving the field forward.
And so I have to constantly ask myself, am I moving the field forward
by doing this kind of work?
And so thus I have Kathleen M. Cooney and Kara Cooney.
And I have to negotiate both sides of my Egyptological being, if you will,
to try to move the field forward with my coffin's work, social history work.
And then to also communicate with the public and and tell people
why the ancient world is relevant at all.
So whether that gender studies work, my book, When Women Ruled the World
or the woman who would be king, move the field forward or not, might be debatable.
Yeah, the humanities are not building factories and the humanities
are perhaps not employing hundreds of thousands of factory workers.
But they're helping us to understand where we've come from, where we are,
where we're going, and it is as relevant as anything I can possibly imagine.
And where can people gently stalk you?
Where can they find you?
Oh, you can stalk me in so many places.
I have a Facebook page, which is still my biggest, but it's my favorite medium
because I can post articles and get more academic with what I'm saying.
And you'll find me on Facebook under Karakuni Egyptologist.
You'll find that I am an anthropologist at heart
and I'm interested in all kinds of stuff.
And I just post things that are of interest to me.
And then I have an Instagram page, Karakuni.
And I don't post on that quite as much, but I do is more personal, too.
So if you're interested in my private life, you could go there.
I hate LinkedIn. Oh, God, I hate it.
I get messages. If you ever try to write me on LinkedIn, forget it.
I don't look at it. I forgot my password on purpose.
I don't want to know anything that happens on LinkedIn.
No one will ping you there. OK, good.
And then circle back as they do. Good, good.
And the book comes out on November 6th. It does.
It's going to be an interesting November for everybody.
What are you going to be doing on November 6th?
Oh, I'll be watching the polls like everybody else.
I don't know how much TV I can handle.
I haven't been able to watch too much TV lately.
I like to consume my end of the world
apocalyptic narrative through print rather than picture.
And babysitters here, here's my women in power.
So you can pick up her 2014 book, The Woman Who Would Be King
or preorder her new one.
When women rule the world, six Queens of Egypt, which is out very soon.
You can also find her show out of Egypt or the secrets of history's
lost queen on Discovery Channel heads up.
I believe that is available on Amazon and Netflix.
She's also a recurring expert on the history channels, digging for truth.
So find her shows, streaming just in general, enjoy her presence on planet Earth.
To find more of oligies, we're at oligies on Twitter and Instagram.
I'm Ali Ward with one L on both.
And there's a Facebook oligies podcast group.
You have to answer a few secret questions to be admitted into our underground chamber.
Thank you, Aaron Talbert and Hannah Lippo for admitting.
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Head to oligiesmerch.com.
You can pick up some of the brand new fall stuff in mustards and maroons
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They're so delightful.
Thank you, Bonnie Dutch and Shannon Feltas for designing and handling merch.
And thank you to all four sister uncles for the wonderful time in Portland
this past weekend at the first ever camp oligies meetup group,
which was just a treasure trove of nice, curious people looking at bees and trees.
Thank you, melatologist Mandy Shaw and dendrologist Casey Klopp for coming out
and hanging out and teaching us so many good things.
Thank you to Stephen Ray Morris himself, very much a cat person who makes
each episode so much better.
Check out his kitty themed podcast, The Percast.
If you don't believe me, dude knows his cats.
It's an exceptional podcast.
Nick Thorburn wrote the theme song.
And now if you stick around to the very end of the show, you know, I tell you a secret.
This one is super, super embarrassing.
But that's the nature of getting you to listen through the credits.
OK, so the first time I went to record with Cara and my zoom wasn't
in my little vintage recording purse, I was mortified.
Like I was like, how could this happen?
How did I leave the house without this?
So we rescheduled.
I left to feed it.
I smothered my sorrows with a pastry at a cafe.
And I went to get my wallet out of my backpack and I found my zoom recorder in there.
So I had it with me the whole time.
It was just in the backpack and not in the vintage equipment bag where it should have been.
I could have recorded this the first time.
I didn't actually leave it at home.
It was right there.
So that's even more mortifying, I think, than just plain forgetting it, thinking you forgot it.
But really, it was next to you the whole time in a different bag.
So Cara, I'm so sorry.
I I hope that you stopped listening at the credits.
Anyone else if you're out there beating yourself up for making a mistake, just know
happens to all of us.
Even world renowned Egyptologists arrive without flashlights.
Let's all forgive ourselves.
Onward, upward.
All right, keep asking smart people stupid questions.
I swear they love it.
I think they love it.
I'm pretty sure they're OK with it.
I think they love it.
OK, bye.
Baby girl, cause I need to know.