Execration texts
Execration texts are ancient Egyptian inscriptions, typically in hieratic script, that invoke curses against enemies—ranging from foreign rulers and ethnic groups to domestic rebels or supernatural forces—through the ritual creation and destruction of objects bearing their names, such as red pottery vessels, clay or wax figurines, and papyrus documents.[1] These texts formed the core of execration rituals, a proactive form of apotropaic magic intended to neutralize threats symbolically by binding, piercing, smashing, burning, or burying the inscribed items, thereby ensuring the physical and spiritual defeat of the targeted foes.[2] Over a thousand such deposits have been discovered, highlighting their widespread use in both state-sponsored and private contexts to maintain cosmic order (ma'at) and protect the pharaoh, deities, and society from chaos.[1] The practice originated in the predynastic period, with possible early depictions in Hierakonpolis tomb paintings and the Narmer Palette showing bound captives, but it became systematized during the Old Kingdom (c. 2686–2181 BCE), as evidenced by deposits at Giza under kings like Pepi II.[2] It flourished in the Middle Kingdom (c. 2055–1650 BCE), when large-scale finds like the Mirgissa deposit in Nubia—containing nearly 200 inscribed red pots, hundreds of uninscribed vessels, and over 350 mud figurines—reveal targeted campaigns against Asiatic princes and Nubian chiefs, as cataloged in Georges Posener's seminal 1940 study Princes et pays d'Asie et de Nubie.[3] Execration continued into the New Kingdom (c. 1550–1070 BCE), appearing in royal inscriptions like those of Ramesses III against internal conspiracies such as the Harem Conspiracy, and persisted through the Late Period, Ptolemaic era, and even into Roman and Coptic times in temple rituals against chaos deities like Apep.[2] Ritually, these texts often followed standardized formulae, reciting spells (dd mdw) to declare the enemy's defeat, accompanied by acts like spitting, trampling, or stabbing with knives or nails, sometimes under priestly supervision and linked to Pyramid Texts spells such as Utterance 244.[2] Materials emphasized symbolic potency: red pots evoked blood and Sethian chaos, while bound figurines with pierced eyes or mouths mimicked execution, often buried in thresholds, cemeteries, or frontier forts like Mirgissa to invoke netherworld punishment.[1] Deities such as Heka (the personification of magic), Re, and Osiris were invoked to empower the curses, blending sympathetic magic with state propaganda to deter rebellion and affirm Egyptian dominance.[2] As a cornerstone of ancient Egyptian magical practice, execration texts illustrate the integration of religion, politics, and sorcery, distinguishing sanctioned royal rituals from illicit private curses against the king.[2] Their study, advanced by scholars like Robert K. Ritner and Kerry Muhlestein, provides invaluable insights into Egypt's geopolitical concerns, ethnic perceptions of "others" (e.g., the "Nine Bows" formula for enemies), and the mechanics of sympathetic destruction that influenced later traditions.[1]Introduction
Definition and Purpose
Execration texts are ancient Egyptian inscriptions, typically written in hieratic script on pottery vessels, clay or wax figurines, or other objects, that enumerate the names of enemies—both foreign rulers and internal threats—accompanied by curses invoking their destruction. These texts formed a core component of magical rituals aimed at neutralizing adversaries through symbolic acts, such as breaking, binding, piercing, or burying the inscribed items, which were believed to transfer harm to the named targets via principles of sympathetic magic.[4] The practice, attested from the Old Kingdom through the Greco-Roman period, utilized materials like red clay or wax to symbolize blood and chaos, enhancing the ritual's potency against disorderly forces.[4] The primary purpose of execration texts was to safeguard the cosmic and social order (ma'at) by proactively eliminating potential or actual threats to Egypt's stability, including foreign invaders, rebellious Egyptians, and malevolent supernatural entities like the chaos serpent Apep. By inscribing and then ritually destroying representations of enemies, the texts sought to inflict "social death"—erasing their identity and power—while invoking divine protection from gods such as Atum or Osiris to ensure the ritual's efficacy.[4] This apotropaic function extended to state-sponsored ceremonies in temples, where priests performed the rites to perpetuate royal dominance, as seen in examples from the Middle Kingdom where over a thousand fragments detail Asiatic and Nubian foes.[1] Such practices not only deterred rebellion but also reinforced ideological control, blending legal, religious, and magical elements to maintain pharaonic authority.[4] In broader terms, execration texts exemplified Egyptian magic's integration with religion, serving both calendrical temple routines and crisis responses, such as countering conspiracies or cosmic disruptions. Scholarly analysis highlights their role in psychological warfare, instilling terror among listed enemies, while the rituals' kinetic actions—like spitting or trampling—amplified the curses' symbolic violence.[4] Key publications, including Georges Posener's seminal edition of Middle Kingdom examples, underscore how these texts provided invaluable historical data on Egypt's geopolitical foes, beyond their magical intent.Historical Significance
Execration texts represent one of the earliest documented forms of exorcism in human history, serving as a cornerstone of ancient Egyptian magical practices aimed at preserving cosmic order (ma'at) by neutralizing threats through ritual destruction. These texts, inscribed on pottery, figurines, or papyrus and then shattered or buried, targeted a wide array of enemies, including foreign rulers, internal rebels, and supernatural entities like the chaos serpent Apep, reflecting the Egyptians' belief that naming and destroying an adversary's likeness could eradicate their influence. Attested from the Old Kingdom (c. 2686–2181 BCE) through the Roman Period, over 1,000 such deposits have been discovered, providing invaluable evidence of state-sponsored rituals that intertwined magic with governance to protect the pharaoh and society.[1] Politically, the texts underscore Egypt's proactive strategies for asserting dominance over neighboring regions, revealing detailed knowledge of foreign geography, rulers, and potential alliances that posed risks to Egyptian hegemony. Middle Kingdom examples, such as the Mirgissa deposit with nearly 200 inscribed red vases and 350 mud figurines, list specific Nubian rulers like Wttrrss of Kush and Asiatic leaders from places like Byblos (Kpnj), demonstrating how these rituals mapped and preempted threats from the Levant, Nubia, and Libya during periods of expansion and unrest. By cursing "those who plot rebellion" in the future tense, the texts functioned as apotropaic measures to maintain loyalty among vassals and deter invasions, highlighting the integration of magic into military and diplomatic policy.[1][3] Their enduring historical value lies in reconstructing Egypt's international relations and internal dynamics, as the named individuals and toponyms—such as Asiatic rulers in the Brussels figurines from Saqqara—offer rare glimpses into otherwise obscure political entities and ethnic groups beyond Egypt's borders. These artifacts, found at frontier sites like Mirgissa and urban centers like Thebes, illustrate evolving perceptions of enmity, from localized Old Kingdom threats to more expansive Middle Kingdom networks, and even personal applications in later periods. In 2025, a new intact deposit of Old Kingdom execration figurines, including those mentioning Nubian names, was discovered at Abusir/Saqqara, further enriching understanding of early practices.[5] Ultimately, execration texts illuminate the Egyptian worldview where ritual violence ensured stability, influencing subsequent magical traditions and providing scholars with primary sources for tracing the interplay of power, fear, and divinity across millennia.[1][3]Chronology and Development
Old Kingdom Execration Texts
The Old Kingdom execration texts mark the earliest attested phase of this magical genre, emerging during the Sixth Dynasty (c. 2345–2181 BCE) amid growing political fragmentation and external threats. Unlike the more elaborate lists on pottery from later periods, Old Kingdom examples primarily consist of inscriptions on small clay figurines representing bound prisoners, symbolizing the subjugation and destruction of enemies. These artifacts, crafted from unbaked Nile mud and measuring approximately 5–6 cm in height, feature flattened rectangular bodies with pinched heads, bound arms, and sometimes pierced backs for possible manipulation during rituals. Their purpose was to invoke curses against real or potential adversaries—often foreigners like Nubians or Asiatics, but also internal rebels—through symbolic acts that neutralized threats to the pharaoh and the state, thereby upholding ma'at (cosmic order). This practice reflects the integration of magic into royal and temple cults during a time of instability following the long reign of Pepi II.[2][6] Archaeological evidence for these texts comes mainly from pyramid temple complexes at Giza and Saqqara, where multiple caches indicate organized, recurring rituals. At Giza's Western Cemetery, George A. Reisner excavated four deposits during 1924–1925 expeditions: one containing 70 figurines in a redware jar (Reisner Cache 1), another with 90 (Cache 2, including a larger shattered figure), a third with 21 (Junker's Cache), and a fourth with 249 (Abu Bakr Cache), all dated to Pepi II's reign via associated inscriptions on beer jars reading "year after the 5th count." At Saqqara's Teti Cemetery, 12 similar figurines were found in a mastaba shaft, alongside a rectangular plaque inscribed with names like those in Giza deposits. The inscriptions, written in black hieratic ink (one red-ink example noted), typically list single enemy names or proto-formulae such as "[Every rebel of this land, all males, all eunuchs]," cursing them to impotence or death; some names suggest Nubian origins, highlighting border tensions.[6][7][2] Ritual use involved inscribing the figurines, binding or piercing them to represent captivity, and depositing them intact or damaged in sealed jars or shafts within sacred precincts, often near offering areas, to "bury" enemies in the underworld. While later execration rites emphasized breaking objects, Old Kingdom examples show minimal intentional destruction—some breakage likely from deposition—emphasizing symbolic burial over kinetic smashing. Scholar Robert K. Ritner interprets these as substitution magic, where the figurine proxies for the enemy, decapitation motifs (suggested by rudimentary head modeling) aligning with broader Egyptian techniques to sever life force. Six such ritual deposits are identified (four at Giza, two at Saqqara), with shared names indicating coordinated responses to specific threats, possibly annual temple ceremonies.[2][7][6] Parallel to these inscribed texts, execration motifs appear in the Pyramid Texts, the Sixth Dynasty funerary spells carved in royal pyramids at Saqqara, where curses target afterlife threats like serpents or spirits rather than human enemies. Utterance 244, for example, involves breaking red vases to terrify and destroy enemies, using formulae akin to those on inscribed objects. These spells protected the king's soul but represent a funerary adaptation, distinct from the state-oriented figurine rituals. Overall, Old Kingdom execration texts demonstrate magic's role in both political defense and religious safeguarding, with over 400 figurines recovered, though total exemplars likely higher due to perishable clay.[2]Middle Kingdom and Later Periods
During the Middle Kingdom (c. 2055–1650 BCE), execration texts evolved from Old Kingdom prototypes into more standardized and widespread ritual tools, reflecting Egypt's expanding geopolitical concerns and internal magical practices. These texts, inscribed on pottery sherds, bowls, and clay figurines, were used to curse enemies through sympathetic magic, often involving breaking or binding the objects to symbolically destroy threats. The practice became integral to state-sponsored rituals, protecting pharaonic authority against foreign incursions and domestic rebellions. Key assemblages date to the mid-12th Dynasty (c. 1991–1802 BCE) and early 13th Dynasty (c. 1802–1649 BCE), showing progressive development in formulaic language and scope.[2][8] Prominent examples include the Berlin Group, comprising approximately 100 reconstructed bowls from 323 sherds acquired in 1925, likely originating from western Thebes, which list Asiatic and Nubian rulers and toponyms such as Ashkelon, Hazor, and Jerusalem. The Brussels Group features over 120 clay figurines of bound prisoners from Saqqara's Teti cemetery, depicting enemies with inscribed names and pierced or decapitated features to enhance the curse's efficacy. A third major corpus from Mirgissa in Nubia includes 197 inscribed red pottery vessels from the mid-12th Dynasty, targeting local Nubian dynasties south of the Second Cataract, with formulas like "Every Nubian who will rebel..." to suppress potential uprisings. These finds, concentrated at sites like Saqqara, Helwan, Thebes, and Nubian fortresses such as Uronarti and Mirgissa, underscore Egypt's military control over Lower Nubia and interactions with Levantine polities during the Middle Bronze Age II period.[8][2][9] In the Second Intermediate Period and New Kingdom (c. 1650–1070 BCE), execration practices adapted to new threats, including Hyksos rule and imperial expansions. Texts continued on figurines and papyri, as seen in Papyrus BM 10188, which prescribes making figures of enemies for ritual destruction, and the Amada Stela of Amenhotep II (c. 1427–1400 BCE), describing the pharaoh's creation of such figures to avert rebellion. Temple reliefs at Medinet Habu under Ramesses III (c. 1186–1155 BCE) depict similar rites against Sea Peoples and Libyans, integrating execrations into broader victory celebrations. These rituals neutralized supernatural forces like the demons Seth and Apophis, using spells such as "Be spat upon; fall, turn back!" from Pyramid Texts adaptations.[2] The tradition persisted into the Late Period (c. 664–332 BCE) and Greco-Roman eras, with finds like Saite-period (26th Dynasty) pottery from Defennah fortress and Roman-era stone figurines, such as a limestone example in the Louvre pierced for cursing. Alabaster plaques from Helwan name specific internal foes, like the "deceased Intefiker," linking execrations to elite conspiracies under rulers like Amenemhat I and Ramesses III. Overall, over 1,000 exemplars attest to the rite's enduring role in maintaining cosmic and political order, evolving from royal to temple and private uses across millennia.[2]Archaeological Discoveries
Major Sites in Egypt
Execration texts and associated ritual deposits have been unearthed at numerous sites across Egypt, predominantly in necropolises, temples, and fortresses, with the majority dating to the Middle Kingdom (c. 2050–1710 BCE). These discoveries, often consisting of inscribed pottery sherds, figurines, and bowls ritually broken and buried, illuminate the geographical scope of the execration practice and its role in state-sponsored magic against perceived threats. Major Egyptian sites include Saqqara, Thebes, Giza, Helwan, Lisht, Abydos, Elephantine, and Memphis, where finds reveal both local and foreign enemies targeted in the rituals.[1][3] Saqqara stands out as one of the most prolific sites for Execration texts, particularly in the Cemetery of Teti I. In the 1920s, excavations north of the Pyramid of Teti uncovered the "Brussels Group," comprising about 100 clay figurines of bound male prisoners, each 30–34 cm tall and inscribed in hieratic with names of Nubian, Asiatic, and Libyan rulers and toponyms. These figurines, intentionally shattered and buried in a passage along the enclosure wall, date to the late 12th Dynasty and exemplify the ritual's focus on sympathetic destruction to neutralize enemies. Additional deposits at Saqqara, including inscribed pots and figurines, have been found in tombs and ritual contexts, underscoring the site's role as a hub for Middle Kingdom magical practices.[8][1][3] In Western Thebes, particularly the necropolis, significant finds include the "Berlin Group" acquired in 1925 from antiquities dealers, reportedly from a tomb or mortuary temple. This collection consists of 323 pottery sherds reassembled into about 100 red clay bowls inscribed with hieratic texts listing over 30 Levantine cities, Nubian rulers like ꜣwꜣw of Kush, and Asiatic leaders. Dating to the mid-12th Dynasty, these vessels were ritually broken as part of the "red pots" ceremony, highlighting Thebes' importance in royal and temple-based execrations during periods of expansion. Other Theban deposits, such as those near the temple of Amun-Ra, include papyri like P. Bremner-Rhind, which detail ritual procedures.[8][3][1] Giza and Helwan, both major Old and Middle Kingdom necropolises near Memphis, have yielded execration deposits primarily in cemetery contexts. At Giza, inscribed figurines and sherds were buried near tombs, targeting local officials and foreign threats, with finds from the Old and Middle Kingdoms and reflecting the site's elite funerary associations. Helwan, an important provincial cemetery, produced similar deposits of broken pottery and clay figures inscribed with enemy names, dating to the 12th Dynasty and indicating the ritual's adaptation in administrative centers south of Memphis. These discoveries emphasize the integration of execration into broader mortuary rites.[1][3] Further south, Lisht and Abydos reveal the ritual's presence in royal and sacred landscapes. At Lisht, near the pyramids of Amenemhat I and Senusret I, Middle Kingdom deposits including figurines and bowls were found in ritual interments, listing Asiatic and Nubian adversaries and dating to the 12th Dynasty. Abydos, centered around the temple of Osiris, yielded texts on papyri such as P. Louvre 3129 and P. British Museum 10252, alongside inscribed objects buried in temple precincts, which connect execration to Osirian mythology and resurrection themes from the Middle Kingdom onward.[10][1] Elephantine, a frontier fortress at the First Cataract, hosted execration deposits in military and temple contexts, with inscribed sherds and figurines from the Middle Kingdom targeting Nubian enemies, underscoring the site's strategic role in border defense rituals. Memphis, as the ancient capital, also produced texts in urban and cemetery settings, including references to local and foreign threats, though fewer intact deposits survive compared to Saqqara. Balat in the Dakhla Oasis yielded oasis-specific finds, such as inscribed bowls from the Middle Kingdom, illustrating the ritual's reach into remote settlements. Collectively, these sites demonstrate the widespread institutionalization of execration across Egypt's social and geographical spectrum.[1][3]Finds in Nubia and Beyond
Execration texts have been uncovered at multiple Middle Kingdom Egyptian fortresses in Lower Nubia, underscoring the role of these rituals in safeguarding military outposts against perceived threats from local populations and distant foes. The most prominent discovery occurred at Mirgissa, a fortress near the Second Cataract excavated by Jean Vercoutter's French mission between 1962 and 1968. In pits adjacent to the fortress cemetery, archaeologists unearthed approximately 200 inscribed red pottery vessels, along with over 400 uninscribed ones, nearly 350 broken mud figurines and four limestone figures depicting bound prisoners, a ritually severed human head buried upside down, and a flint knife. These artifacts, deliberately shattered as part of the ritual, date primarily to the early 12th Dynasty, around the reign of Senusret I (c. 1971–1926 BCE).[11][1] The Mirgissa texts, inscribed in hieratic script, form one of the four major corpuses of Middle Kingdom execration material (alongside the Berlin, Brussels, and Helwan groups) and are notable for their detailed listings of Nubian rulers from dynasties south of the Second Cataract, as well as Asiatic and Libyan leaders. Unlike Egyptian finds, which often emphasize internal or Asiatic enemies, the Mirgissa deposit uniquely targets Nubian entities, such as chiefs from Irtjet, Pnubs, and Wawat, reflecting the immediate geopolitical concerns of the frontier. This controlled excavation context provides rare evidence of the ritual's performance in a non-Egyptian setting, including human remains, the interpretation of which as sacrificial elements remains debated. The texts' formulas invoke destruction through breaking and burial, aimed at neutralizing rebellion and evil influences at the empire's edge.[12][13] Additional, albeit smaller, deposits appear at other Second Cataract fortresses, recovered during the 1960s UNESCO Nubian salvage operations ahead of the Aswan High Dam's construction. At Uronarti and Semna West, fragments of inscribed bowls and figurines were found in foundation deposits and refuse pits, dating to the mid-12th Dynasty under Senusret III (c. 1878–1840 BCE), cursing similar arrays of Nubian and foreign adversaries. Buhen, further downstream, yielded scattered sherds with execration formulas during British excavations in the 1960s, including references to Libyan and Asiatic threats alongside local Nubians. These peripheral finds, though fragmentary, illustrate the ritual's standardization across the Nubian chain of forts, from Mirgissa in the south to Buhen in the north, as a tool for psychological and magical control over conquered territories. No major execration deposits have been identified beyond Nubia, such as in the Kingdom of Kush further south, though the texts themselves reference distant regions like Kush and Yam, indicating the ritual's conceptual reach extended farther than physical Egyptian control.[3][14]The Execration Ritual
Ritual Procedures
The execration ritual in ancient Egypt involved a series of symbolic acts designed to neutralize threats from enemies, whether human adversaries, foreign powers, or supernatural forces, by destroying their representations and invoking curses through spoken spells. Performed primarily by priests or trained magicians in temple, state, or funerary contexts, the ritual emphasized sympathetic magic, where harm to the substitute object was believed to transfer to the named target, ensuring the maintenance of cosmic and social order (ma'at). These practices are attested from the Old Kingdom through the Late Period, with over 1,000 archaeological deposits identified at sites such as Saqqara, Giza, and Mirgissa.[4] Central to the procedure was the creation of ritual objects inscribed with the names of enemies, places, or malevolent entities, often in hieratic script on papyrus or directly on the objects themselves. Materials typically included red pottery vessels, symbolizing vitality and danger due to their association with Seth, or figurines crafted from clay, wax, limestone, wood, or stone, depicting bound prisoners in contorted poses to signify subjugation. For instance, at the Middle Kingdom fortress of Mirgissa, excavators uncovered approximately 200 inscribed red vases, 400 uninscribed ones, 350 mud figurines, and four limestone figures, alongside evidence of a human victim, highlighting the scale of state-sponsored rites. Additional tools comprised cords for binding, copper or iron needles for piercing, flint knives for cutting, and substances like spittle or urine for desecration.[4][1] The core steps unfolded in a structured sequence, often beginning with the inscription of curses identifying specific individuals, groups (e.g., Nubian chiefs or Asiatic nomads), or deities like Apep. The object was then bound with cords to immobilize the enemy, followed by aggressive destruction: piercing or stabbing multiple times (e.g., with 13 needles in some cases), decapitation, trampling underfoot, smashing with a pestle or striker, incineration in crucibles, or saturation with bodily fluids such as spitting or urinating. Accompanying incantations, recited aloud, invoked deities like Isis or Horus to empower the acts, with phrases emphasizing the enemy's laming, disturbance, or annihilation. Finally, the remnants were buried in pits, often filled with sand or placed upside down in liminal spaces like cemeteries or temple foundations, to prevent resurgence. In the "Book of Overthrowing Apep," a New Kingdom temple rite, wax figures of the chaos serpent were hacked, spat upon, burned over bryony flames, and scattered in the sunlight.[4][15][4] Variations occurred based on context and period. State rituals, such as those under the 12th Dynasty, focused on foreign threats and involved large-scale breakage of pottery deposits, as documented by Georges Posener in his analysis of texts from Memphis and Mirgissa. Personal or funerary versions targeted ghosts or rivals, using smaller wax or clay figures pierced and buried near tombs, as seen in Old Kingdom Giza deposits with shattered figurines. Supernatural rites against Apep or Seth incorporated repetitive cycles, such as daily spitting on images during festivals, to avert cosmic disorder. While pottery smashing remained consistent from the Old Kingdom onward, later Greco-Roman adaptations included papyrus lists or live animal substitutes, reflecting evolving magical practices. These procedures, as detailed in papyri like BM 10188 and the Bremner-Rhind Papyrus, underscore the ritual's adaptability while preserving its destructive core.[1][4][15]Symbolism and Magical Elements
The execration rituals in ancient Egypt were deeply rooted in the concept of heka, the personification of magic as a creative and destructive force wielded by gods, priests, and the state to maintain cosmic order (ma'at) against chaos and enemies. These texts and associated objects served as conduits for sympathetic magic, where inscribed names or depictions of adversaries—whether foreign rulers, rebels, or supernatural entities like the chaos serpent Apophis—embodied the targets' essence, making them vulnerable to ritual harm. The primary magical intent was apotropaic, proactively neutralizing threats through symbolic annihilation, as evidenced in the Pyramid Texts and later papyri like the Bremner-Rhind, where spells invoked deities such as Seth or Horus to enforce the curse.[4] Central to the symbolism were the material objects, such as red pottery vessels, clay or wax figurines, and papyrus sheets, which acted as effigies of the enemies. Red coloration, associated with chaos, blood, and the god Seth, heightened the objects' potency as symbols of danger and disorder, transforming them into vessels for destructive energy; for instance, red pots from sites like Mirgissa were smashed to represent the shattering of enemy power. Inscribing hieratic texts with detailed lists of names, titles, and curses linked the physical form to the living or abstract foe via the Egyptians' belief that a name held one's ba (soul) or identity, allowing ritual acts to affect the real target— a principle articulated in spells like those in Papyrus BM 10188, where the enemy's "name will not be in the mouth of the people." Procedures involved binding limbs on figurines to symbolize restraint, piercing with nails (as in Louvre E 27145, with 13 piercings), or trampling and spitting to degrade and expel the threat, drawing on creative precedents like Atum's spittle forming the world but inverted for harm.[4][1][16] Burial of these mutilated objects in sandy pits or jars further amplified the magical elements, associating enemies with the underworld and invoking the dead to aid in their eternal subjugation, as seen in Coffin Texts Spell 37. This disposal not only concealed the curse but symbolized the enemy's social and existential erasure, reinforcing ma'at by restoring balance. Performed by specialized priests like the chief lector from the House of Life, often during festivals or at specific hours (e.g., the sixth or eighth hour for potency), these rituals blended verbal incantations, kinetic destruction, and divine invocation to ensure both immediate protection and long-term efficacy against rebellion or invasion. Scholarly analyses, such as those by Posener on Middle Kingdom texts, underscore how this symbolism extended beyond mere superstition to a state-sanctioned tool for psychological and political control.[4][1][16]Content of the Texts
Enemies and Names Listed
The Execration texts primarily targeted enemies of the Egyptian state, focusing on foreign rulers, chieftains, and their associates from Nubia and the Levant (Syria-Palestine), as well as internal rebels and supernatural adversaries. These names were inscribed in hieratic script on pottery, figurines, or bowls, often accompanied by formulas invoking destruction upon the individuals, their families, followers, and any plots against Egypt. The lists reflect Egypt's geopolitical concerns during the Middle Kingdom, particularly under the 12th Dynasty, emphasizing threats from southern and eastern frontiers.[3] In Nubian-focused texts, such as those from the Mirgissa deposits and Berlin bowls, rulers and places from Kush and surrounding regions were prominently cursed. Examples include the Nubian ruler Wttrrss of Kush, ꜣktwỉ of Saï, and Tghḏw of ꜣwšḳ, with toponyms like Kush, Saï, and Wbꜣt-spt representing key southern strongholds perceived as hostile. These names often appear with bound prisoner determinatives, symbolizing captivity, and are extended to curse their "sons, warriors, and allies" to prevent rebellion. Similar patterns occur in the Brussels figurines, where Nubian enemies like Trỉꜣh of Kush and ḫꜣsꜣ of Saï are listed alongside groups such as "all the rebels" or "every evil-doer."[3][1] Asiatic enemies, drawn from Canaanite and Amorite (Amurrite) populations, dominate the texts from sites like Saqqara and Giza, highlighting Egyptian anxieties over Levantine incursions. The Brussels series, analyzed by Georges Posener, includes over 60 foreign names, such as the ruler ’Itỉmꜣỉbỉ of ḥꜣỉm and Mwrỉ of ’Isḳꜣỉ, tied to cities like Ullaza and Byblos. Other examples from the Berlin and Mirgissa texts feature ꜥꜣm of ’Ij-ꜥnḳ, ḫꜣwbꜣḥ of ’Ij-mw-ꜥr, Sỉnm of ’Iỉỉnḳ, and ’Ibỉỉmmw of ’Iỉỉnḳ, with toponyms including Byblos, Ullaza, and rwšlm (possibly Jerusalem). These Semitic names, often Amorite in origin, are prefixed with titles like "prince" or "chief" and suffixed with curses against their "courtiers, horses, and any who come from their land." Internal Egyptian threats, such as Asiatic mercenaries or Bedouin groups labeled "Shasu," occasionally appear, but foreign rulers predominate.[3][17][1] Supernatural or generalized enemies, like the chaos deity Apep or abstract forces such as "every evil god," are sometimes included to broaden the ritual's protective scope, though personal and political names form the core. The specificity of these lists—rarely exceeding 100 unique names per series—prioritizes high-threat individuals over exhaustive catalogs, underscoring their role in state-sponsored magic rather than mere records.[1][3]Places and Regions Mentioned
The Execration texts, spanning from the Old Kingdom through the Middle Kingdom and into later periods, enumerate numerous places and regions perceived as threats to Egyptian stability, primarily foreign territories in Nubia, the Levant (often termed "Asia" or "Retenu" in Egyptian sources), and Libya. These toponyms, inscribed on pottery, figurines, and other media, reflect Egypt's geopolitical concerns, including fortified city-states, tribal lands, and nomadic groups. While Old Kingdom examples focus more on southern Nubian polities, Middle Kingdom texts expand to include detailed lists of Levantine settlements, providing early evidence of Egyptian reconnaissance and diplomatic interactions.[8] In Nubia, the texts target regions south of the Second Cataract, emphasizing polities and dynasties that challenged Egyptian control over trade routes and resources. Key examples include Kush (a broad term for Upper Nubia, often centered around the Napata region), Irem (a southern Nubian entity possibly near the Fourth Cataract), and Sai (an island fortress site associated with local rulers). The Mirgissa corpus, discovered at an Egyptian fortress, lists rulers from Kush, Medja (a desert region inhabited by nomadic Medjay tribes), and Shat (a polity near the Third Cataract), illustrating ritual curses against organized Nubian opposition during the reigns of Amenemhat III and earlier Twelfth Dynasty pharaohs. These references underscore Egypt's efforts to neutralize southern expansionism through magical means.[3][12] The Levantine toponyms dominate the Middle Kingdom corpora, particularly the Berlin (ET A) and Brussels (ET B) groups, which name over 60 sites, many identifiable with archaeologically attested Middle Bronze Age cities. Prominent examples from southern Canaan include Ashkelon (a coastal fortress), Jerusalem (an inland settlement with defensive walls, identified as rwšlm—the earliest extra-biblical reference to the city), Shechem (a central hill-country center), and Aphek (a strategic plain site); further north, sites like Hazor (a massive upper Galilee stronghold), Akko (a Phoenician port), Tyre (a coastal hub), and Byblos (a key trading partner, sometimes referenced via its "tribes" rather than as an enemy) appear, suggesting a systematic north-south ordering in the lists. Ebla and possibly Hassum (a northern mountain region near modern Syria) extend the scope to the Euphrates frontier. These names, dated to the mid-Twelfth to early Thirteenth Dynasties, align with radiocarbon evidence of fortified urbanism in the region, indicating Egyptian awareness of political fragmentation and potential alliances.[8][18][19] Libyan references are sparser and more generalized, focusing on tribal confederations in the western desert rather than fixed settlements, reflecting perceptions of nomadic incursions. Common designations include Tjehenu (coastal Libyans near the Delta) and Tjemehu (inland Berber-like groups), with occasional mentions of broader "Libyan lands" or chiefs from unspecified oases. Unlike the detailed Levantine lists, these appear in shorter sections of the Brussels and Saqqara texts, highlighting diffuse threats from the west during periods of instability. Internal Egyptian places, such as nomes or cities linked to rebellious officials, occasionally appear but are secondary to foreign foci.[20][21]| Region | Representative Toponyms | Context and Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Nubia | Kush, Irem, Sai, Medja | Southern polities south of Second Cataract; targeted for control of Nile trade (Mirgissa corpus, ca. 1800 BCE).[3] |
| Levant | Ashkelon, Shechem, Hazor, Byblos | Fortified cities in Canaan and Phoenicia; reflect Middle Bronze II urban network (ET B, early 13th Dynasty).[8] |
| Libya | Tjehenu, Tjemehu | Nomadic tribes in western desert; symbolize border threats (Saqqara figurines, late Middle Kingdom).[21] |