The Ancients - Hieroglyphs
Episode Date: February 6, 2025From twisted flax to one-legged ibises, Egyptian hieroglyphs offer a window into the heart of ancient Egypt. But how did this script really work?In this episode of The Ancients, Tristan Hughes speaks ...with Egyptologist Hugo Cook to decode the symbols that adorned temples, tombs, and papyrus scrolls found up and down the Nile. Together they uncover how hieroglyphs recorded everything from poetry to peace treaties, the meanings behind their intricate designs, and why the ancient Egyptians believed they held power beyond words.Presented by Tristan Hughes. Audio editor is Aidan Lonergan, the producer is Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music courtesy of Epidemic SoundsThe Ancients is a History Hit podcast.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here:https://uk.surveymonkey.com/r/6FFT7MK
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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It's The Ancients on History Hit. I'm Tristan Hughes, your host.
Today we're exploring the story of arguably the most captivating script from antiquity,
the hieroglyphs of ancient Egypt.
When you visit Egypt today, or see Egyptian archaeology in museums, hieroglyphs are usually
never far away.
These pictorial symbols adorned the walls of temples, tombs and towering obelisks.
They were written down on papyrus and were used to record
everything from transactions to poetry to official peace treaties.
So how did hieroglyphs actually work? What did each symbol mean and how many were there?
Did the Egyptians believe these symbols had magical properties and for how long was this script
useful? Well, to answer all of this and much more, I was delighted to interview the Egyptologist
Hugo Cook.
Hugo teaches a course on hieroglyphs at the British Museum, he is an expert in ancient
Egyptian texts and his passion for the subject, well, it's undeniable.
It was great to interview Hugo all about hieroglyphs and how these symbols have become one of the
greatest gateways into ancient Egypt.
Hugo, it is wonderful to have you on the podcast today.
Thank you so much for having me. It's great to be here.
You are welcome. You contacted me about this and your expertise in the subject of hieroglyphs.
When you mentioned the word hieroglyphs, I was just like, okay, yep, definitely, because we've
never done an episode on it before. But hieroglyphs, like the pyramids, like Tutankhamun, it feels
like another of those central things that has become the definitive symbol of ancient
Egypt for all of us today.
Yeah, absolutely. There's so much allure about it. And I think it's an almost universal
experience going into a museum and seeing these amazing things, these
little pieces of art, and wondering about them and having some sense of wonder about them. Yet,
despite them being so iconic as an idea and as a literal symbol of ancient Egypt, there's very
little that's widely known about them, about how they were and why they're important and
why they should matter to all of us today.
I mean, do you think it is partly that mystery of these symbols and I guess their great age
that helps explain why, you know, when people go to a big museum today and they go to the
Egypt's gallery, they're always looking at these hieroglyphs and these symbols of
birds and other symbols and so on.
Do you think it is that mystery that contributes largely to why they have captured the public
imagination so greatly today? Yeah, I certainly think that must be part of it. The unknown of it
is appealing in and of itself, where people go in and wonder, what might this say? Although that said,
people often somewhat erroneously think they know what
it says because people often ask me, Hugo, why did the Egyptians talk so much about birds?
As you pointed out, there's a lot of bird symbols and people notice that and assume that means
the Egyptians are birds, sign means a bird. Quite a fair assumption, really, but not actually the case. The Egyptians
did now and then have a thing or two to say about birds, sure, but it wasn't the day-to-day
crux of their life. But yes, I think suddenly there's a bit of mystery and majesty around it,
and those are ideas which have long been wrapped up around the idea of ancient Egypt.
Often you'll see a book or a documentary with the word mysteries, the mysteries of ancient
Egypt, the mysteries of the pharaohs, something like this.
But the fact of the matter is we actually have so much information about ancient Egypt.
It's one of our best documented civilizations ever, thanks to these things, thanks to this
huge wealth of writing and
things like the Rosetta, which allowed us to read them.
Mason, I want to ask you another big question, but to kick it all off, just how much of a window
do hieroglyphs give us now? Once again, also they've been deciphered. Do they give us
into daily life, into ancient Egyptian society?
Mason, it's a great question and it's absolutely massive, the window. It's less of a window
and more of a smashed out wall in the side of the building. For a bit of an idea, there
are more texts surviving from ancient Egypt than there are from all of medieval Europe
put together. There are more texts surviving from ancient Egypt than there are
from ancient Greece and ancient Italy put together. As many people will know, a lot of our original
classical texts come from Egypt. Not only is this to do with the writing systems that they had,
it's also this is a country with a monopoly on papyrus, pretty much. You know, there's the famous story about how when Pergamon tried to
compete with the library of Alexandria, in terms of building an iconic
Hellenistic library, the Ptolemies shut down exports of papyrus to
Pergamon to say, okay, try and build a library without that.
And it supposedly led to them putting effort into creating parchment instead.
Pergamon, just to clarify, that was a great city that emerged after Alexander the Great in western
Turkey today. But by that time, Alexandria in Egypt was that intellectual center and
hieroglyphs were still being used on the papyrus. Absolutely, in terms of Pergamon, yeah.
In terms of hieroglyphs, one of the things we'll see is that it's not just hieroglyphs that
form the presence on all these sources. A lot of the things written in the library of Alexandria,
for example, would have mostly been in Greek. But even the native Egyptian language sources
aren't all in what we'd call hieroglyphs. I should give
a little bit of a terminological distinction for people to start with. Hieroglyphs aren't
the language of ancient Egypt. They're just the script. So just the symbols you use to
put your language, which we call Egyptian, into writing to shove it down on stone or
papyrus so that people thousands of miles away
and hundreds of years later
can see what you're trying to say.
And the Egyptians realized that
if you want to write a quick shopping list
or note down what you've set to the lawn direct,
real examples of sort of texts we find quite commonly,
you don't exactly want to draw an anatomically correct duck
for every single bit of it.
So they developed a couple of shorthats,
simpler systems of writing.
The one we see in use in the earlier periods.
So we're talking during the Bronze Age really.
So times of sort of Tutankhamun,
Ramsey's the Great, things like that times of sort of Tutankhamun, Ramesses the Great,
things like that.
We call hieratic and it looks,
a lot of the signs look the same as hieroglyphs,
just a sort of a squiggly aversion.
Think of like how a court stenographer historically
has used some sort of system to be able to write faster.
Well, they have this, but the birds,
things get so simplified down that the birds, they
kind of create new symbols for some of the birds because if you simplify a hundred different
birds down enough, they'll all look the same.
So they sort of make new signs for that.
This use of a shorthand, which we find lots with letters from, you know, two friends arguing
over a joke that's made them fall out or sisters
complaining that one of them stole another one's dress and she needs it for
a party to impress a boy.
You know, these sorts of very human things.
We'll see this shorthand use a lot of that.
And this evolves and a further, even shorter hand called Demotic arises in the first millennium BC.
And this one, well, you asked,
if you wanna know about sort of windows, this one is huge.
We have a massive amount of information
in this later script and language, Demotic.
This is the one Cleopatra would have learnt.
And a lot of this stuff just hasn't yet been translated.
People might think we've done it all,
that it's all out there, it's all sorted, but it's not.
Not only because some bits aren't found yet,
every year, some papyrus shows up on the art market
that's been locked in someone's attic
for the last century and a half.
But also even a lot of museums are just slowly working through this massive content of material.
And with the Demotic stuff, because it's later, you know, there's a higher chance of it surviving
more, literacy seems a little bit higher in the later bit. A rough estimate is that literacy in
ancient Egypt jumps from a whopping 1% around the time of
the pyramids to a dizzying 7% by the time of Cleopatra.
Which means that-
That's like 2000 Gs later, yeah. Okay.
Yeah, yeah. Two and a half even. So long civilization. It may sound like a very low number, the
literacy when we think of today, But this is actually quite high comparatively
for the world at that time.
And yeah, as a little bit of an insight into this Demotic,
one of the reasons so little of that has been deciphered,
yes, or translated, is that it's very,
very difficult to read.
Imagine taking a very difficult ancient language
and seeing it in doctor's handwriting,
which your doctor has tried as hard as he can to make cruel and impossible.
When I was doing my post-grad at Cambridge, I learnt two Egyptian
languages I hadn't yet learnt there.
Coptic, which is the later.
Yes, the priestly one, isn't it?
Yeah.
So this arises with the Roman empire. so it's quite associated with Christianity.
And indeed in Egypt, it still uses that liturgical language in the way the Catholics use Lactic today
in Egypt's Christian circles. And so I learned Coptic and the preceding phase, Demotic, same time,
started them at the same period, had the same tutor, same number of classes, you'd think
I'd have been at equal standard at both by the end, right? Well, when the exams came around
for the Coptic exam, you know, we got something like about three pages of translation, three to
eight pages of translation with commentary to do in three hours. With
the equivalent to Motic, we got eight lines to do in 72 hours. That's the sort of understood
difference between the difficulty there. And I should mention as well, I've said some of
these phases, we get roughly five phases of the Egyptian language because, as I mentioned,
this is a huge civilization. So we call them old, middle, and late Egyptian. These ones happen
during the Bronze Age mostly. And then we move on to Demotic, both a language and a script.
And finally, the Egyptians decide actually their script isn't necessarily the most practical
for learning, so they dump it mostly and pick up the Greek alphabet instead. Keep the same
language mostly with about a third of their vocabulary added from Greek, but just write
their language in Greek letters. And that's what we call Coptic, the final phase of the
Egyptian language.
And there's a fun little thing I should say about that
actually before we dig fully into hieroglyphs.
We'll all assume, oh, ancient Egyptian dead language.
But this may be the long, well, it certainly is
the longest attested language in human history.
And we may even want to consider it is still
just about alive today because in terms of it being the
longest attested, the Egyptian language is one of the first or second languages we can see. It's
either the first or second language to invent writing. So it appears super early in our record
and then it keeps being used for this long period. Once Egypt goes Christian
and then when it goes Muslim, Coptic is still spoken. You'll often look at timelines and they'll
say, ah, seventh, eighth century, boom, Arabic becomes Egypt's main language. But it was a much
slower thing than that. It was mostly when the Arab conquest of Egypt happened, originally the Arab armies
kept themselves in their camp and there was a policy of a lack of migration from local Egyptians
in and these Arabs out. And so cultures were kept very distinct still. Most people in Egypt
for a long time, although they slowly started as Islamic cities,
started to become more of a thing in Egypt. People might learn Arabic to get in with the
administration and things like that. But until the 17th century AD, you'd still find most
people in the countryside would still have spoken Coptic, this language of the pharaohs. And from the 17th century, it sort of quickly
declined. But today, there are a couple of families, these Christian families who still
speak Coptic as their first language, meaning it's their first language. And if something
is spoken as a first language, that's our usual definition of a living language. It's
dead once we only know it as a
second language and extinct once we don't know it at all. However, the matriarchs of the two families
interviewed have said that they're going to teach their children Arabic as the primary language going
forward to make it easier for them integrating into society. So we're actually probably witnessing
the death of the Egyptian
language, the longest suggested language in human history in our lifetimes in real time,
which is why it's always important to talk about this thing.
Very important. It's very interesting that you've highlighted straight away how the Egyptian
language is its longevity and the fact that to differentiate hieroglyphs, hieroglyphs obviously
interlinked, but it's a script of the Egyptian language and it goes alongside,
as you say, I believe the word is that these cursive short hands that you mentioned,
hieratic, demotic, and then Coptic and a huge period of time, thousands of years.
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wherever you get your podcasts. How do hieroglyphs work?
What do they mean?
Each symbol mean, I'm presuming a bird, as you said earlier, doesn't just mean a bird.
Why are those symbols picked and what do they represent?
Yeah, it's a brilliant question.
For this, it's best to think about the story of hieroglyphs themselves, the origin, where
they came from, why they were needed and where they go.
We get hieroglyphs like all of the original scripts we know.
So for context, there are four places in the world where we can confirm writing was invented.
Egypt and Iraq, with its
cuneiform, around the same time. About a thousand years later, Chinese, and about a thousand years
later, we get writing in Mesoamerica. And in all instances, the writing is somewhat pictographic.
It's based on art. I mean, we can see this still today in the Chinese script, but hieroglyphs are
obviously the clearest example of these
because they divorced themselves from art the least.
As we know for millennia, millennia, millennia,
humans have been using art to communicate ideas
and thoughts and hieroglyphs are an evolution of that idea
to make ideas much clearer and more precise. And so we start by seeing labels on things
like pots with symbols drawn on the labels to give an indication of what's inside the vessel.
That's the origin of hieroglyphs as we know it. But you can only get so far with that. You can only
do a couple of things easily by just drawing a picture.
Sure enough with a duck, you know,
if your vessel contains some duck meat,
it's easy enough to draw a duck
and you and I can look at it and say, okay, that's a duck.
But then what happens when we start getting
to more complex ideas like belief
and abstract words like that?
Because you can't just draw belief.
And let me ask you, Tristan, actually,
what would you draw as a simple symbol, if you want maybe two symbols, if you wanted
me or the audience to think, okay, that means belief?
Belief. Well, in a Christian world, I'd probably put two hands together in prayer or something
like that.
Sure. But that could either mean prayer, it could mean worshiper, it could even mean high five, it could mean karate
chop, it could mean lots of different things, because
pictures are quite hard often to give it one exact meaning to.
What the Egyptians might have done if they'd spoken our
language is they would have drawn a bee, like the buzzing
honey producing insect, and then a leaf, like the green thing
that falls from a tree. And then you've got the leaf. And this is B, like the buzzing honey producing insect, and then a leaf, like the green thing that
falls from a tree. And then you've got the leaf. And this is the basis of how hieroglyphs
work. Something called the Rebus principle, where a picture doesn't actually mean what
the picture looks like. It's about the sound that that picture has. And by taking a bunch of simple enough to draw and things that have
simple sounds attached to them, they could suddenly create a huge suite of syllables,
which they could then stack together like that bee and that leaf to make a word completely
separate. You know, belief has nothing to do with bees or leaves unless you believe in a god of
honey. But it's about the sounds. And this is how the majority of hieroglyphic words are constructed.
They're built up of these things. So for example, if you see an owl in a text, it may have nothing to do with an owl, but it's because earlier on, the word
for owl had an M sound in it, and so they used it as the letter M in lots of words that just need
an M. So this is one of the, it is the main type of the, what I should say, three types of hieroglyphs
are just these sound signs that work a little bit like how we might think of an alphabet today, but much bigger because it doesn't just include the simple alphabet we have, but it also includes whole syllables.
So while there's one sign for the letter M, there's another sign for the sound men, you know, common sounds in Egyptian so that they could build up longer words
with fewer hieroglyphs.
So that's the main thing we've got going on,
these sound signs.
We've also got some fossils
from that evolutionary period of hieroglyphs
when it's first appearing and they're just, you know,
drawing a duck on a label to show what's in something.
We have a few words which can be written
just by drawing that word.
So for example, if you want to say the word sun,
as in the big burning ball in the sky,
you can just draw a sun and that will make it clear
to the reader what you're doing.
These are, they appear with common words,
but there aren't many of them.
And then the final type of hieroglyphs, I love this.
This is why this is the best language I've ever studied.
Hands down.
I'm not biased.
I'm right.
And the third type is what we in Egyptology call the Terminatives.
Now usually when you're looking at a language and those of you who've learned other languages,
ancient languages, modern languages, you might have encountered something somewhat tricky
where a language often has to choose.
Is it going to be a very strict language
with very clear rules, which makes it easy to understand,
but doesn't always allow much room for poetry
and artistic flair, you know?
Whereas other languages might be a bit more relaxed
in their rules, which gives a writer a bit more flair
and room for it, but creates the complexities of not having a very fixed system.
Hieroglyphs and Egyptian using hieroglyphs says why not both? Let's have the best language ever
and be able to do whatever we want. So their language is nice and structured and rigid and clear, we get all those advantages. But one of the places I think they have this really unique way of adding
flair and where you really get to see that the thoughts and psychology of a writer behind a text,
even if this writer is just copying something down, we get to see a bit of who they are,
are these signs often appearing at the end of a word called a determinative? Now these are silent
symbols. They are completely unpronounced and these are where the Egyptians really harken back
to the artistic roots of hieroglyphs because what these symbols do is they categorize a word.
So for example, if you draw a little seated man at the end of a word, it means the word before
has something to do with men. It might be a man's name, might be a man's job. It's just something that's a man.
So it can help a reader in a number of ways. If it's a word you don't know, with my students
recently we were translating this text, this autobiography of this soldier, and then he talks
very proudly about joining the Navy and
sleeping on a hammock made of net. But this word for net that he's talking about is a hapax legomenon.
It's the only time in the language we see this word. And we wouldn't necessarily know what it
was, except it's got the determinative at the end for sort of fishing stuff. So we can guess
that this is probably net. And it's the fishing one. Is it like a little fish or is it something a bit different?
It's actually equipment for it. Yeah. And so it can help you with this. Bear in mind,
remember a lot of this country wasn't fully literate and you get literacy was more of a
gradient. You get some people who could read bits and bobs and useful things. Think of it less today,
how we see literacy
and more how we might see computer literacy,
where there are people more skilled, people less
and people who have certain abilities.
And so they can help with that.
They can also help distinguish between homonyms.
Like for example, the word set means both woman
and a species of duck.
But if you have the seated woman determinative at the end
versus a bird's determinative,
it's quite clear which one it is.
And brilliantly, I think,
the third and best use of it is it can show nuance.
So let's take, for example, this word ja'is,
which means disagreement, right?
If you draw it with a man touching his mouth at the end,
this is the symbol that shows the word
has something to do with oral action,
whether that's breathing, speaking, spitting,
kissing, anything like that.
And so if there's a man touching his mouth
at the end of the word for disagreement,
it means a sort of a verbal argument, right?
Spoken argument.
The same word can be written instead with a man holding a stick. This is the word for
crime and violence. Now it's a punch up, the disagreement. Now it's getting a bit violent
and hairy. And thirdly, you also see the word pop up with a different man. This time he's
holding a sword and shield. This is the determinative for war. And at this point, the disagreement is now a civil war. This is the word they use for civil war. Now I've got to say,
it's the same word. It's still pronounced the same in all three instances. It's just disagreement.
They're just adding a bit of nuance that only the reader can see through these little pictures.
And they're not all men. There's lots of different ones. For example, abstract ideas, like belief,
which I mentioned, they'll have a little papyrus role at the end. Because we mentioned earlier
how hard it is to draw abstract ideas because they're not physical. Well, the Egyptians
realized the only time abstract ideas are physical things is when you write them down.
So, a papyrus role was the physical image of an abstract idea.
And there are loads of these things and they are so much fun because it means that they're
completely mutable and changeable. A scribe or an author can decide whether to add them,
to omit them, to have several of them, to have none of them, to choose certain ones.
There's no set rule about what to use.
It's about creating an idea. So, you know, someone might write a story, this one story,
you know, about a man who's making some continually bad decisions and his name goes from having
that seated man sign, just showing he's a guy, to slowly starting his name, starts having
a mummy, to tell him to be the end, to give the reader this indication he's walking towards his own grave. Now, because often these texts were read out around a maybe, you know,
in a village or something like that, someone literate would have read these stories, the audience
would have had no indication of that because these are silent signs, but the reader can see this
little bit of information. And so it feels like this sort of extended idea of dramatic irony,
where the reader knows something, which the character really doesn't, because it's just not
as much part of the spoken languages.
So it's a story being read out. And also, as you say, the fact that not many people would have been
able to read the script so that one person who could would be reading it out. And it's an amazing
image to think of an Egyptian village, maybe they're all farmers during the day by the river Nile, and then they sit and they hear this story that's being read out to them on
papyrus and the man or woman who's reading it out, the scribe or whoever, is reading out those signs
and is able to tell the story, which is absolutely extraordinary. With the particular script of
hieroglyphs and the Egyptian language, how many thousands of years are we talking about that we
know that hieroglyphs are used as a particular script for the Egyptian language. I mean, how many thousands of years are we talking about that we know that hieroglyphs are used as a
particular script for the Egyptian language?
Ah, that's a great question. Hieroglyphs appear about 3100 BC,
our sort of first proto hieroglyphs start appearing as a
thing. And our first real grammatical sentences in them
appear a couple hundred years later. Our last ever-attested hieroglyphs used,
and it's quite wonderful. You can actually go see them, anyone who is listening and planning a trip
to Egypt anytime soon. I'd recommend you go to the beautiful Phili Temple in the south of Egypt.
And there's somewhat surreptitiously on a wall, it used to be hidden behind a big sort of super trooper light thing.
There's a little graffito from a local worshiper who writes in both hieroglyphs and Demotic a dedication next to an image of a god.
The god has been scratched out by Christians in shortly afterwards. And I always think it's quite beautiful that this little
dedication ends with something like, may my words last forever and ever. And these are the final
attestation of hieroglyphs we have. So we're talking as a thing in the sense that we see
hieroglyphs typically, they last for three and a half thousand years. Three and a half thousand years.
Which is just remarkable. They do earlier than that during this Iron Age period when
when Demotic becomes more of a thing, they do start getting relegated to becoming more of a
priestly thing and they start becoming not just something you can choose to use in official
contexts. So I should say earlier on when you've got just the options of hieroglyphs
versus that slightly shorter hand hieratic, you'll use hieroglyphs for something which
you want to look spectacular, right? These are effectively works of art.
It's worth pointing out in fact,
that the Egyptians didn't have a different word
between drawing and writing.
Most of it, you know, they could use this word for both.
And hieroglyphs were always meant to be artistic,
were meant to be visually beautiful.
And there are some wonderful ways that they accomplished
this and tie this in with art and show that
conceptually was a very similar thing to them. And so it might be in a private letter, you
would use hieratic, but on monuments, decrees, religious texts, things like that, you'd use
hieroglyphs. Later on, they start using Demotic Greek and eventually Latin for all those things. And hieroglyphs are really just
used in temple circles. They become something so old that they get associated with this ancient
religion and these ancient practices. And they're thought to have been gifts from the gods. The
common term for hieroglyphs in ancient Egypt, zesh Netruh literally means writing of the gods to differentiate
it from these other writing systems. These are the ones that the Ibis headed Thoth,
god of knowledge and wisdom, handed to the Egyptians as his good luck present to get on
going with civilization.
So are there mythological stories associated with hieroglyphs as a gift from the gods?
associated with hieroglyphs is a gift from the gods.
So it's something, I mean, mythology is often an interesting
one when we think about ancient Egypt, because you asked earlier about this window we have, how much do we know? It's not just
the number of the text that might astonish people about
ancient Egypt, but it's also the breadth. I remember once I was
with a very, very brilliant. I remember once I was with a
very, very brilliant classicist, and I was talking about Egyptian literature. And she
asked me, oh, the Egyptians had literature, because we mostly imagine when people go into
these museums and see these birds and zigzags decorating the stones around them, I think
the common assumption, if they're not assuming it talks about birds,
people quite naturally think, oh, these are, you know, the things we hear the Egyptians
talk about, sort of, grand praise for the king and things like that. But we get a huge,
wonderful variety of texts, everything from really brilliant works of philosophy. One of my favorite texts is
about a man whose soul leads his body because the man is contemplating taking his own life
and his soul steps out and they have a conversation about the merits of life versus death. The
man is saying he's trying to argue all the sort
of horrors of life and the soul is saying all the horrors of death.
One might as well say, you know, look at, you know, going down to the water and seeing
the glint of the sun and the water and the fishermen doing it. Isn't that, doesn't that
just make you want to seize life? The man says, yeah, but the fish stink. But it gets
a little deeper than that. And it's very interesting
text because it has a very dark negative view on death and the afterlife, which we don't usually
associate with ancient Egypt, too, when these people largely wrote about death, mostly out of
hope. And in context, when they're trying to achieve this outcome, they write about death as
some sort of wonderful thing, or
at least the afterlife will be pleasant. But we know they feared the idea of it. You'll
often get people say, the Egyptians loved, they didn't fear death. They spent their whole
life-
They're obsessed with it, that idea, isn't it?
They're obsessed with it, they loved it. But we know they hated it because in outside tombs,
where again, slightly contrary to modern expectations of how a grave works, tombs where against slightly country to modern expectations of our grave works tombs will often be somewhat semi public you want people to come in and make offerings and remember your name things like that and so a lot of them had what we might think of
adverts and billboards outside trying to encourage you a passer by in the necropolis to come into that particular one and give some nice.
into that particular one and give some nice Egyptian beer. And one of the most, and you know, today in marketing campaigns, they'll try and speak to everyone, but act as if they're speaking
to you as an individual. Well, they do a similar thing in ancient Egypt where they will address you
with, rather than just saying people, you know, they'll try and think of something that might
describe you, but that could describe anyone. And one of the most common ones we get on these adverts,
I say in adverting comments,
is to those who love life and despise death.
So, we know at the end of the day,
they saw it as an innate human value,
or at least an innate Egyptian value to despise death.
And so all this seeming love for death
was actually preparation for
something they weren't too fond about the idea of. So we get this huge breadth of that. And while I
mentioned philosophy on this tangent, the impact of this on wider things is huge. I mean, famously,
a lot of Greek philosophers went and studied in Egypt. And it's been suggested that this sort of dialogue
approach and things like the ones I mentioned might have some influence on Plato. And beyond
works of philosophy, you get epic words of fiction and literature, wonderful tales, poetic
and prosaic. But in terms of mythology, so earlier on, we don't actually find many
mythologies in the sense we might think of them, you know, a story about the gods. A
lot of what we can tell early on about mythology, we have to infer because the Egyptians already
knew it and they refer to it in things like spells and religious texts, and they might
refer to an episode, but they don't always write it down, especially earlier.
There's certainly an element of secrecy around religion in ancient Egypt.
For example, earlier on, to bring in the hieroglyphs quickly, you'll get certain religious texts
and spells written in what we call retrograde hieroglyphs,
which are where they are written in mirror writing to sort of encode them and make them
harder to read to give it this air of exclusivity.
And I should say that mirror writing is trickier because generally hieroglyphs could be written
left to right or right to left and you can see
where to start, which orientation they're going in based on the orientation of the signs. So,
for example, you know, if you want to, you know, people listening, if you want to go and witness
this in a museum or in Egypt, just look where the faces of the animals and things are looking.
That's the start of the line. But in some of this retrograde writing, they do it the other way. The animals
would face away from the start of the line. So you'd think the text might be reading right
to left, but it was actually reading left to right. And I can say sometimes it does
throw you, if you're a new student trying to work this out, but it might've been easily readable
for a lot of literate people,
but it still gave this air of coding.
And later on, during the Greco-Roman period,
when, as I mentioned, hieroglyphs really become
something closely associated with the priestly class
and not used in many other circles.
Pyroglyphs actually get much more complicated in a way. They jump up from about 800 signs in total
to several thousand signs. There's a lot of codes that rely on puns to give it this air of secrecy and mystery,
which goes in with this Egyptian attitude
that sort of anything really worth knowing
isn't gonna be known by everyone. So you get this kind of evolution and in the complexity of hieroglyphs as time goes on,
and these adding and adding more symbols to it.
There are so many examples of hieroglyphs surviving and you might immediately think
of hieroglyphs carved onto temples in stone and those examples,
as you've already highlighted, those on papyrus. It feels like a difficult question, but are there
the best surviving examples of hieroglyphs from a particular site or a particular place that we
should talk about? Well, it's a good question. There's a lot of talk that before the Greco-Roman
period, hieroglyphs are what a lot of Egyptologists called better quality because there seems to be more practice,
more use for them. They had wider use and maybe they're just being done by native Egyptian
craftsmen who know this stuff. You do often see some Greco-Roman period ones, which are
just dodgy, squiggly. I'm someone who looks a lot at that period
and says that, oh, often, you know, we dismiss these things. Sometimes the things we see
as worse in Greco-Roman Egyptian art is actually a deliberate change. But sometimes these hieroglyphs
do just look a little bit squiggly. But I would say in lots of places all over Egypt,
you've got amazing quality stuff. Earlier on, in the very early periods of ancient Egypt, in the sort of pyramid age,
things were very centralized. You'd have the king and his court all in one area and all the
sort of great artisans would be there too. And all our finest production is from there.
But after Egypt's first civil war, the crown never quite reclaims as much power or central
authority as it once had.
When is this civil war, by the way, Hugo?
It's about 2000 BC.
After that, after the end of the pyramid era, things are dispersed and you get much better
local centres of production with talented artists and scribes across the country.
From that period, we see brilliant, beautiful things all over the place. They certainly,
as I say, they did consider it a work of art. Sometimes they might do it quite quickly on a
piece of papyrus, but on a temple wall, they would put rich color and detail and excellent carving. Egypt was one of the
first places to really get monumental stonework going. They really perfected this art of doing
it. The link between hieroglyphs and art was pretty brilliant because they were very aware
of this. Sometimes you'll be reading
a biography in a tomb, let's say, and autobiographies, as you might imagine, often contain the word I,
you know, me. And this is usually done in Egyptian with, it has a picture, the word for I usually has
that same picture as a seated man that I mentioned earlier, or if you're a woman, a seated woman.
However, in these autobiographies, it's often missing, which seems strange because it feels
like writing an autobiography without the word I, it'd be like saying, name is Hugo,
I'm an Egyptologist, that sort of thing. The instances where they do that, it's because
next to the text is a huge statue of that person. And so they're using the statue as
a hieroglyph. The statue is a 3D one, which they're
inserting, you're supposed to insert that into the correct spots in the text. And they play around
with this a lot and have these wonderful visual puns. Ramsey's the Great was quite big on these,
you know, Ramsey's the Great. Why is he the Great? He wasn't the greatest conqueror. He wasn't the
greatest legislator. He was great at propaganda. He was a PR man, wasn't he?
He was a PR genius. And you can actually go to the Egyptian Museum in Cairo and see this very
wonderful statue, which looks like one thing. And it looks clear. It looks like we've got a falcon
standing behind young child Ramses. This is a fairly standard-looking image. Horus, the god who's the guardian of
kingship, often associated with falcons, is regularly shown standing behind a king, protecting
them as this god of kingship. But there's an interesting thing here. The little boy
who's shown by touching his finger to his mouth, which is the ancient Egyptian sort of equivalent of sucking your thumb,
is also carrying this little sedge plant.
And when we look at that sedge plant,
it frames the whole thing differently.
Because if we imagine that the falcon isn't Horus,
as is usually supposed in these contexts,
but is meant to be read as Ra,
the other famous falcon god and the Sun god. We've got Ra and then
the child of Ramesses, child in ancient Egyptian, the word for child is mess. And then the sedge
plant was, the word for sedge was sou. So together, this bird, this child, and this plant spell out Ramesizu. So they say the name of the king through this
using what looks like one thing, you're, you know, you look at it and think, ah, it's Horus
with the king, but then you think, ah, it's actually spelling out his name. And he does
this with a couple of statues, these kind of 3D hieroglyphs, which don't just have to
be, you know, written in the traditional way on a wall, but they
can really play with it like this.
Kugo, it's absolutely extraordinary. I'll bring up very quickly that Karnak temple complex
and the amazing hieroglyphs that you can see on the wall, carved into the walls, some of
them very much. I talk about Ramesses II as well, don't they? Absolutely extraordinary.
It does feel that that New Kingdom Egypt, there is a real zenith
in hieroglyph art. What I also remember from going to Garnak was actually, you see some of those
pillars, they're completely coloured. Well, they are coloured and they were coloured and they're
restoring them now. It's also, I guess, to think about hieroglyphs with an association with colour,
but also slightly different, but we'll merge these questions together with magic too. This idea of these animals being etched into stone or on papyrus. And I guess
that belief, I mean, could these animals come to life, especially if they're colourful animals
too? So reflecting the actual colours of an animal you'll see in your day to day life.
Yeah, absolutely. And I can think of a couple of great examples there that bring both those
points. With color, one thing we see is rich, beautiful color use on hieroglyphs. And a
lot can be said there. A common thing you see on papyrus particularly is the use of
the color red. Egyptian scribes, their toolkit of their trade was a sort of a wooden palette
with a black inkwell and a red inkwell.
The two very cheap colors to produce in Egypt, and black is what you'd use naturally for the
majority of writing, but sometimes you'll see on papyrus they switch to red. And this is because
hieroglyphs don't really have punctuation, like there's no full stops, no commas, no paragraphs,
no spaces even between words. What they did have was this use of
color instead. So when they wanted to note what we would think of as a new paragraph
or a new chapter or in something like the Book of the Dead, a new spell, they'll switch
to red to show a new section is starting. And just for a short bit, but funny enough,
you know, the ideas of religion, you know, Herodotus called the Egyptians the most religious
people on earth. These ideas of religion pervades every aspect of their culture, including their
writing traditions. And so even though red is a cheap colour to produce, and they can use it here
nicely, it's also considered a chaotic, evil colour in ancient Egypt.
I'm sorry, I was just going to scratch that. It's made from ochre, is it? And the black is
carbon, so ochre and carbon.
Absolutely, yeah. And because it was considered an evil colour, you shouldn't write a god's
name in it. So you'll see a text, this paragraph starter, what we call the rubric, where there's
a bit of red and then it switches back to black for a god's name and then it switches
back to red again, because you didn't want to anger the gods. They might have had interesting
ideas about sacrilege. We get one love spell where a guy threatens a Cyrus and he threatens to sort of burn down
a Cyrus's temples and palaces if he doesn't make the woman he loves fall in love with him. But they
were certainly cautious in these senses. So we get that. And that idea of religion pervading hieroglyphs
happens in some really wonderful magical tomb texts. And it's interesting you mentioned them coming to life,
because I've got an example of exactly that.
You'll see sometimes this very strange phenomenon
where you go in and you look at the text
and something's missing because all the animals are
literally missing pieces.
You might find birds drawn without their feet,
insects drawn without their wings,
even snakes drawn not just missing things but with
knives drawn stabbed in their backs or lions drawn with their heads clearly having been chopped off.
Really violent looking hieroglyphs that aren't the norm and people don't know what on earth is that.
But it's this process we call mutilation. Because they saw this very thin boundary between hieroglyphs, art, and reality, they worried that
the magic of the spell, the magic that's the force of creation in their religion, might accidentally
seep into the hieroglyphs and bring the hieroglyphs to life. And the last thing you want is a bunch of
owls flying around your tomb, eating all your tomb offerings. So they would mutilate the animals,
either cutting off bits of them or showing them murdered so that either the magic doesn't
recognize it as a full owl and doesn't bring it to life. Or if it does, it immediately dies again,
because it's chock full of knives in its back. I guess one would be crocodiles as well, wouldn't
it? That would be the big one. They're just like, we don't want a crocodile emerging.
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, that's the last thing you want, as well, wouldn't it? That would be the big one. They just said we don't want a crocodile emerging. Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, that's the last thing you want calling out.
As I mentioned, you can't advertise these tombs to people saying to all those who
love life and hate death and come in and there's a bunch of magical crocodiles
charging around the place.
And they did like their stories about, there are a few stories about magical
objects turning into crocodiles in these mythic and religious texts.
Magic and religion have their own impacts on it.
Hugo, what ultimately happens to hieroglyphs?
Do we just think the tradition of using this type of script for the Egyptian language as time goes on,
it becomes a bit more obsolete, less people know about it, and ultimately it becomes a lost script?
It's a really important question.
And it's a couple of things, as you say, one, the complexity of it means that that's
what causes it to be sequestered away as a religious thing.
As the Greek writing system takes over something easy to do, it's got vowels, which
make it easy to know how to pronounce, which hieroglyphs like other Afro-Asiatic
languages like Arabic and Hebrew don't show the vowels.
But the problem is it's sort of getting pushed into this role as a religious thing because then
it means when Egyptian religion falls, hieroglyphs fall with it. So when the Roman Empire goes
Christian, hieroglyphs go with it, go with the religion. We actually get this sermon recorded
from a Coptic Christian monk, Father Shinute. And Shinute writes this sermon
dow which he gave in church in the 1st millennium AD about the evils of hieroglyphs. And he talks
about that red color that I mentioned and some of the animals and how it seems satanic and barbaric
and that his disciples need to destroy them where they find them. They didn't
entirely. We see, for example, you mentioned Karnak earlier. There's one place there, which
is the longest running place of worship still in use today because it was an ancient Egyptian
temple with the Ramses' hieroglyphs in, and then it becomes a Greco-Roman temple and then
a church and then a mosque, and it's still used today as a mosque. And, you know, there are pillars with hieroglyphs in the mosque.
You know, hieroglyphs are everywhere in ancient Egypt.
They weren't able to destroy them all.
You did get some bits of iconoclasm earlier on.
There's this, I meant, funny enough, I actually mentioned this sign when I was
talking about, you might have a sign for the letter M, but a sign for the sound
men, that sign
for men we often find missing in places because throw things back a couple of thousand years
to the time of Tutankhamun-ish. His father, Akhenaten, famously banned the gods in an
effort to curb the power of the priesthood, and chiefly he banned the major god, Amun.
And he sent out craftsmen to go and destroy
hieroglyphs with Amun's name, but these craftsmen were clearly illiterates and they didn't know
Amun's name. They just learned to recognize the biggest hieroglyph in his name, which is that
men sound. And so they go and carve that out wherever they see it, even in words which have
nothing to do with Amun. So words like fortification and word like enduring
also have the same sign.
So you'll be reading a text about some mundane fortifications
and someone's come along with a chisel and knocked it out
because they thought it was a religious thing
when it wasn't.
It will be like, you know, someone trying to destroy
my name, Hugo, and destroying everything that had an H in it,
you know, a capital H just out of caution
because they weren't sure how to spell my name. So that's how they fizzle out. But your wish is my command in terms of other cultures using
hieroglyphs because this feeds in here. Hieroglyphs didn't have a complete death then because a long
time before that Roman period, hieroglyphs had sown the seeds of their legacy. Turquoise was a very
valuable and precious material to the Egyptians
and there was a good mine for it out in the Sinai desert. The problem is no one wants to go to the
Sinai desert. They often get civil servants talking about, are they threatening to send
their juniors there because it's sort of the worst job you can get. It's a desert, it's not fun.
But they needed this turquoise, so they'd send some overseers there to manage this mine, but they'd get most of their labor from the nearby Levant, rather than using Egyptian laborers. And these Levantine laborers would come and see these Egyptian overseers writing in hieroglyphs back in the Nile talking about things and also erecting monuments there. There was a temple of Hathor, the goddess of turquoise. And these labors thought, oh, that's a good idea. We should have some of that. And they
took these hieroglyphs and they adapted them for their own language. And they made these hieroglyphs
for their own sounds. And they brought them back home in this writing we call Proto-Sinaitic. And
this explodes outwards. So they bring it back to the Levant where it becomes the
Canaanite script and then the Phoenician script. Now the Phoenicians of what is today Lebanon,
the masters sailors and traders of the ancient world, spread this script everywhere. Went on to
become the Greek script which became the Etruscan script and the Latin script and today of course
our script. It also went eastwards and became the Aramaic script which became the Etruscan script and the Latin script, and today, of course, our script. It also went eastwards and became the Aramaic script, which became the Arabic script, and a bunch of others
from there. So much so that every country in the world outside a block in East Asia, every other
country in the world today uses a writing system primarily descended from ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs. And you can actually see it, you know, just take the first one, right? If you take a capital A, for instance, picture that in your head, sort of flip it upside down, and you can actually see the bull's head, which it descends from.
horns. Throughout our day, we go around and we see these things. We don't think much of our letters. We think, oh, you know, they're symbols made arbitrarily for some reason,
but they really root back to this turquoise mine in the desert and to Egypt and seeing
what images people were sticking onto sounds and how Egypt has influenced the entire world
in a way that it's not often given due credit for.
Well, Hugo, how about that?
The origins of the alphabet stemming back to this mine in the Sinai desert.
What a thought to leave it on there.
A lovely thought as well for emphasizing that great legacy of hieroglyphs too.
Hugo, your passion for hieroglyphs has been evident throughout this conversation,
this interview, and it just goes to me to say thank you so much for taking the time to come on the podcast today.
Thank you so much for having me.
Well there you go. There was Hugo Cook talking all of things hieroglyphs. I hope you enjoyed
today's episode. Thank you for listening. Please follow The Ancients on Spotify or wherever
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