TY - BOOK AU - Donker van Heel,K. TI - Dealing with the dead in ancient Egypt: the funerary business of Petebaste SN - 9781617979965 AV - DT73.T3HD9999.U53 D67 2021 U1 - 393.0932/3 23 PY - 2021/// CY - Cairo, New York PB - The American Univeristy in Cairo Press KW - Undertakers and undertaking KW - Egypt KW - Thebes (Extinct city) KW - Death care industry KW - Funeral rites and ceremonies, Ancient KW - Family archives KW - Egyptian language KW - Papyri, Hieratic KW - Thebes (Egypt : Extinct city) KW - Social life and customs KW - Social conditions KW - History KW - To 332 B.C KW - Civilization KW - Antiquities N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; The texts -- Previous study of the texts -- The choachyte Petebaste -- A family of clients -- So why was hieratic abnormal? -- Just a captive from Gaza -- Are you buying or leasing this man? -- What is this document doing here? -- Burying your grandparents -- The trial that backfired -- Did Petebaste own a field? -- Two accounts of a single funeral -- The second account -- Epilogue N2 - "Petebaste son of Peteamunip, the choachyte, or water-pourer, lived during the first half of the seventh century BCE in the reigns of the Twenty-fifth Dynasty Kushite kings Shabaka and Taharqa and was responsible for the comfortable and carefree afterlife of his deceased clients by bringing their weekly libations. But Petebaste was also responsible for a wide range of other activities--he provided a tomb to the family of the deceased, managed the costs of the personnel and commodities, and took care of all necessary paperwork, while also tending to the gruesome preparation of the mortal remains of the deceased. Drawing on an archive of eight abnormal hieratic papyri in the Louvre that deal specifically with the affairs of a single family, Donker van Heel takes a deep dive into the business dealings of this Theban mortuary priest. In intimate detail, he illuminates the final stage of the embalming and coffining process of a woman called Taperet ('Mrs. Seedcorn') on the night before she would be taken from the embalming workshop to her final resting place, providing fascinating insight into the practical day-to-day aspects of funerary practices in ancient Egypt"-- ER -