ACCOUNTING, THE DIVINE AND THE SYMBOLIC: THE MEMORIAL TEMPLES OF ANCIENT EGYPT*
Mahmoud Ezzamel Cardiff Business School
Cardiff University Aberconway Building
Colum Drive Cardiff CF10 3EU
E-mail: [email protected]
Second draft: March 2003 * An earlier draft of this paper was presented at the staff seminar series, in the Department of Sociology, Cardiff University and the Accountancy, Finance and Information Systems Department, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand, September-October 2002. I am grateful to my son, Adam, for translating some of the source material from French into English.
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ACCOUNTING, THE DIVINE AND THE SYMBOLIC: THE MEMORIAL TEMPLES OF ANCIENT EGYPT
Abstract
This paper explores the symbolic and ceremonial roles of accounting in organisations and society. These roles are explored further in this paper by examining the link between accounting and the unique setting of religious and cosmic order in the New Kingdom (1552-1080 BC), ancient Egypt. Accounting is conceptualised as an integral part of the constellation that formed the heavenly order that was deemed by the ancient Egyptians to have underpinned their world. This constellation brought into a fragile equilibrium a complex assemblage of relations between the gods in the sky, the Pharaoh representing the gods on earth, the dead and the living. Central to these conceptions were carefully articulated notions of time and space. Any destabilising of this order was considered catastrophic, and accounting, just like writing, was considered instrumental in ensuring that this necessary equilibrium was observed and maintained. In this setting, accounting was strongly intertwined with conceptions of religion, cosmic order, and sacred time and space. Accounting inscriptions were frequently combined with linguistic texts and pictorial scenes as well as religious monuments to produce a powerful discourse that made possible the construction and perpetuation of this orderly universe.
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ACCOUNTING, THE DIVINE AND THE SYMBOLIC: THE MEMORIAL TEMPLES OF ANCIENT EGYPT
The symbolic role of accounting in organisations and society has been recognised for
some time. For a few decades, researchers have been attributing roles for accounting that
emphasise ceremonial, ritual, mythical and magical dimensions (e.g Cleverley, 1973;
Gambling, 1977, 1985; Burchell et. al., 1980; Meyer, 1986; Ezzamel and Bourn, 1990).
For example, Gambling (1977; 1985), Burchell et. al. (1980) and Ezzamel and Bourn
(1990) have explored the role of accounting in legitimising favoured courses of action,
and in providing ammunitions to discredit the arguments of opposition. Meyer (1986) has
noted how accounting operates as an institutionalised practice that can lead to a de-
coupling between declared intentions and organisational action in order to preserve the
status quo. Gambling (1977) has drawn parallels between some aspects of modern
accounting and traditional witchcraft practices in considering both as providing
complicated rituals in response to uncertainty. Just like witchcraft, Gambling contends
that accounting can operate in a manner that renders possible the accommodation of
‘awkward facts’ whilst not undermining the fundamental beliefs which form the fabric of
society. Other writers, e.g. Cleverley (1973) have even asserted that accounting and
budgeting systems function as a sort of religious ceremony – a rain dance.
These extensions beyond the roles traditionally ascribed to accounting have significantly
enriched and broadened our understanding and conceptualisation of accounting. In these
studies, any new roles attributed to accounting are typically teased out in a context where
both the traditional and non-traditional roles intermingle. In many cases, this has led to
situations of contested claims by different schools of thought (see for example the debate
on the ‘traditional’ versus ‘new’ accounting history, e.g. Edwards and Newell, 1991,
Edwards et. al., 1995; Miller and Napier, 1993; Hopper and Armstrong, 1991). Those
who see the role of accounting as exclusively traditional would claim that an attribution
of non-traditional roles is the outcome of the discretion of the researcher in interpreting
the data, rather than being underpinned by concrete evidence (Fleishman et. al., 1996;
Fleischman and Tyson, 1997). In contrast, those attributing new roles to accounting
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would argue that researchers denying these roles are handicapped by an obsession with a
demand-response paradigm (Carmona et. al., 1997; Ezzamel and Hoskin, 2002).
This paper aims to contribute to this debate by focusing upon the symbolic role of
accounting drawing upon evidence from the New Kingdom (1552-1080 BC), ancient
Egypt.1 The historical evidence is in the form of accounting inscriptions related to royal
memorial temples. These inscriptions were either engraved on the walls (external or
internal) of the temples, frequently combined with linguistic texts and pictorial scenes, or
written on papyri. The temples played very significant religious activities that were
integrated with the political and economic dimensions of the state. They employed large
numbers of staff and owned considerable amounts of land. The emphasis of this paper is
radically different from previous work that explored the role of accounting in religious
institutions which in the main had a strong functional focus (e.g., Flesher and Flesher,
1979; Laughlin, 1988; Swanson and Gardner, 1988; Booth, 1993; Duncan et. al., 1999;
Lightbody, 2000; but for an exception see Quattrone; 2002).
The historical material on which this paper draws is of an altogether different type
compared to accounting and administrative practices used in these previous contexts.
First, most of the inscriptions examined here were recorded at one point in time but
covered many years after the succession of the Pharaoh, sometimes written shortly after
his death. These inscriptions exhibit the attributes of a final, completed text intended to
last for perpetuity, rather than being the ephemeral record-keeping intended for day-to-
day monitoring and control. Some could argue that these were summary records which
must have been drawn from more detailed, regular accounts that could have been used for
functional purposes, but given the lack of evidence it is not possible to either support or
contest such a claim. Either way, a functionalist interpretation does not fully explain why
these summary accounts were inscribed so much later, in some cases over thirty years,
after the dates in which they occurred (see Papyrus Harris I). Secondly, most of the 1 Egyptologists typically divide ancient Egyptian history into Pre-dynastic and Dynastic eras. The Dynastic era is further divided into Early Dynastic Period (3300 – 2700 BC), the Old Kingdom (2700 – 2200 BC), the Middle Kingdom (2050 – 1780 BC), the New Kingdom (1552 – 1080 BC) and the Late Dynastic Period
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entries deal with aggregate annual amounts of expected deliveries of goods and resources
to the temple but without corresponding entries showing actual deliveries and any
shortages. Hence, these amounts seem to correspond to aggregate theoretical deliveries
only and would therefore be insufficient on their own for monitoring and control
purposes. Thirdly, the papyri on which a vast number of entries were recorded were
intended for burial in the tomb of the dead Pharaoh (see later) thereby indicating yet
again the unlikelihood that they were intended for monitoring and control purposes.
The unquestionable ceremonial nature of these inscriptions provides a unique opportunity
to further our understanding of the symbolic role of accounting. Any doubts about the
purpose of the inscriptions which has clouded the investigations of earlier researchers
examining accounting practices in less ‘pure’ ceremonial settings can therefore be laid to
rest in order to clear the way for a more focused investigation of accounting symbolism.
Having said this, it is important to avoid any binary schemes that see the functional and
symbolic as purely distinct, unrelated categories. The symbolic role may emerge as an
unintended consequence of accounting practices that were designed with the functional in
mind, and equally the functional potential of accounting may become only evident from
its use in symbolic contexts. Further, even if accounting practices were intended to
function in a purely symbolic capacity, important insights could be gleaned concerning
their technical structure and organisation that may have implications for accounting’s
potential functionality.
A whole host of questions could be raised in this context. Who were the intended
audiences of such ceremonial inscriptions? Was it the gods? Or was it humans, those who
were living at the time and those to come in the future? If the sole (or at least main)
purpose of these inscriptions was ceremonial, why did they take this apparently precise
format, with units enumerated either through counting of similar identities, or via a
‘money of account’ that brought different commodities into equivalence instead of other
forms of inscription? What is it about accounting inscriptions that rendered them more
(1080 – 332 BC). These latter four Periods were interspersed with Intermediate Periods each lasting for a considerable number of years.
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‘desirable’ as a form of writing intended for the divine and spiritual? How was
accounting implicated in the diverse and varied activities of the temple, and in the
conceptualisation of the temple as the loci of secular and sacred time and space? How,
and to what extent, did accounting underpin the notion of Maat (order, justice, right,
pristine condition of the world), so fundamental to the order of the ancient Egyptian
universe? What symbolic roles did accounting play in re-affirming the divinity of the
dead Pharaoh? What insights can be gleaned from such ceremonial accounting
inscriptions about the potential form, substance, and functioning of accounting and
administrative practices in the society of ancient Egypt specifically and more generally?
Addressing such questions is extremely important if we are to gain a more informed
understanding of the roles of accounting in organisations and society. However, at this
embryonic stage of investigation, it is the raising of these questions that is of greatest
concern to this paper.
This paper argues that accounting was conceptualised as an integral part of the
constellation which formed the heavenly order that underpinned the world of the ancient
Egyptians. This constellation brought into a fragile equilibrium a complex set of relations
between the gods in the sky, the Pharaohs representing the gods on earth, the dead and
the living. Any destabilising of this order was considered catastrophic, and accounting,
just like writing, was considered instrumental in ensuring that this necessary equilibrium
was observed and maintained. In this setting, accounting was strongly intertwined with
conceptions of religion, cosmic order, and sacred time and space. Accounting inscriptions
were frequently combined with linguistic texts and pictorial scenes, as well as religious
monuments to produce a powerful discourse that made possible the construction and
perpetuation of this orderly world.
The remainder of the paper is organised as follows. The next section offers a brief
discussion of the sacred domain of the temple, drawing on the myth of creation,
conceptions of the existent/nonexistent and notions of sacred time and space. This leads
to a reference to the potentially symbiotic relation between the gods and the Pharaoh
(king) which opens up the space for examining the ceremonial role of accounting. In two
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following sections, the paper provides some detailed analysis of accounting practices in
various types of ceremonial texts. This leads to an extended discussion and conclusions
section that develops further the possibility that accounting practices were an
indispensable part of the overall order of the ancient Egyptian universe, draws together
the main arguments of the paper and considers their wider implications for the theorising
of accounting.
THE MYTH OF CREATION, TEMPLES AND ACCOUNTING This section explores briefly a number of themes beginning with the concept of creation
and progress through the emergence of the world (order), development of religion,
including conceptions of sacred time and space, to building temples for the gods, as
distinct from temples for the Pharaohs. There follows a description of the context of the
New Kingdom era from which is drawn the main material used in the paper. The section
concludes by a discussion of the ‘Temples of Millions of Years’ which provide the main
monumental cites of religious and spiritual activities analysed here.
The Myth of Creation: Order/Disorder; the Existent/Nonexistent
The myth of creation is fundamental to the development of any discussion of
order/disorder, or the existent/nonexistent; such socially constructed qualities that had a
profound impact on the world of ancient Egypt. The myth is extremely complex, with
many variations of it being advanced by different scholars (see for example the accounts
given by Hornung, 1996; Hare, 1999; Assmann, 1995, 2001, 2002). Told in a most
straightforward manner, the myth proceeds as follows. In the beginning there was the
Nun, god of the primeval waters. This is a state identified by the ancient Egyptians as a
form of chaos that sustains and regenerates the world (precosmic and extracosmic chaos;
Assmann, 2002, p. 207). It is the condition to which the world would revert at the end of
time; hence it is neither nothingness nor nonexistent, but an undifferentiated unity. From
these waters, the creator god Atum/Re (the All; the Complete One) arose by himself (i.e.
created himself) and subsequently created, without the help of a female, two more gods:
Shu (male, signifying air/light/life) and Tefnut (female, signifying moisture/order/Maat).
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The union of Shu and Tefnut resulted in the birth of Geb (male, signifying earth) and Nut
(female, signifying sky), whose union led to four more gods; Isis (female), Osiris (male;
god of the netherworld) Seth (male), Nephthys (female). Osiris and Isis produced Horus
(male). When Atum was alone in the primeval waters, that state designated preexistence;
a condition not susceptible to description through time or space simply because it is
before either time or space could be conceived. The creation of Shu and Tefnut ushered
in the beginning of primeval time, or cosmic time, known as First Time (time associated
with the First Creation). The arrival of the remaining five gods heralded the beginning of
historical time (Assmann, 2001, p. 121) and also endowed space with meaning. The
world in ancient Egypt was made up of two spheres, the cosmos (air and flood) and
society (gods and humanity).
Ancient Egyptian society, comprising the gods, the Pharaoh, the dead and the living, had
three realms: earth, sky and the netherworld. As Shafer (1998, p. 1) has noted: “These
three realms converged in temples and cohered in rituals. There the power of creation
was tapped, chaos was bridled, and cosmic order was renewed. There a hierarchy of
relationships and values was negotiated and maintained. There beings were transformed
and even transposed between realms.” The cosmos and society were linked together
through the all-important concept of Maat, which signified ‘right’, ‘truth’, ‘justice’,
‘order’, and ‘cosmic-social harmony’ (Lichtheim, 1992). For the ancient Egyptian, Maat
was a way of life and of doing things “projected back into the timelessness before
time…[it] was the concept that gave meaning to life by structuring both the human and
divine worlds” (Bell, 1998, p. 128). Assmann (2002, pp. 127-128) coined the translation
‘connective justice’ to Maat which has been defined in Middle Kingdom texts in terms of
“The reward of one who does something lies in something being done for him. This is
considered by god as ma’at.” So, restitution and reciprocity lie at the very heart of Maat;
this reciprocity has a temporal dimension reflecting human capacity for recollection and
subsequent reward or acting for those who acted for you. As Asmmann (ibid, p. 129)
notes: “This emphasis on time and memory gives the Egyptian concept of reciprocity, of
doing-something-for-one-another, a markedly recollective quality. Action is
remembering, inaction forgetting.” In the New Kingdom, particularly after the end of the
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traumatic Amarna period2 and the reassertion of all the gods of the Egyptian pantheon,
this concept of connective just gave way to a new expression. From then on, Maat came
to signify a connectivity not residing in human action but rather stemming from god’s
will. Assmann (2002, p. 230) notes that during the New Kingdom, being just “no longer
means integrating oneself into the network of the community via self-effacement and
solidarity, but now requires giving oneself up in humility and obedience to the will of
god, who… ‘gives maat to whom he pleases.’” For the Egyptians of the New Kingdom,
Maat became reflected in the will of god.
Maat also signified the pristine condition of the world; it is a quality that had its roots in
creation or existence, when the cosmos existed in perfect harmony. In contrast to the
existent there was the nonexistent (uncreated). Being unbounded, the nonexistent
penetrated the boundaries of the existent. Much of the nonexistent, e.g. darkness and
desert, signified hostility, chaos, and disorder. Chaos which the ancient Egyptians
equated with the nonexistent, or nothingness, was the outcome of the destructive force of
Apep, a huge serpent that always threatened to drink all the primeval waters dry, leading
to entropy and the collapse of the world. In contrast to the first form of chaos, this was
'inner chaos'. There were three aspects to disorder: collapse of the cosmic order; inversion
of social relations; and dissolution of interpersonal bonds (Assmann, 2002, pp. 176-177).
Disorder was much feared for it threatened the status quo, or equilibrium, established
since creation, as reflected in order and harmony both on earth and in the cosmos.
Disorder was the very antithesis of Maat. For the ancient Egyptian, at least ideologically,
the ‘here’ (this world) and the ‘there’ (the spiritual; the underworld) were not separate but
were two spheres that cohered into a single sphere of belonging. The worldly was so
coupled with the spiritual that if harmony and order on either sphere were destabilised
disruption in the other sphere was certain to follow. In this scenario, “Maat, the
quintessence of the laws that welded humans into a community, was regarded as the
holiest of the holy, the supreme essence of all life-serving and salvational values
(Assmann, 2002, p. 170).
2 This was a period when Pharaoh Akhenaten (1365-1349 BC) abandoned the worship of all gods and replaced them with the solar disk (the Aten) as the sole god.
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Conceptions of time were similarly interconnected among themselves and also with
conceptions of space. For the ancient Egyptians, secular time was similar to
contemporary conceptions of linear, or ‘concrete’ time; it signified the un-relentless
forward march of time, such as the passage of time through the differing phases of life
cycles that can neither be avoided nor repeated. This linear, historical time was the
prerogative of the Pharaoh ruling on earth as reflected in his fate-determining actions. In
contrast, sacred time was abstract and entrusted to the gods as cosmic time. To signal
such abstract quality, two words were used; the first, djet, designated timelessness: the
stability of the changeless realm of Osiris, Lord of the Dead where beginning and end, or
first and last, coincided. The second word, neheh, referred to cyclical time, which
involved a regular or periodic return to the original starting point at the completion of
each cycle, signifying perpetual recurrence of things. As Bell (1998, f.n. 10, p. 283)
notes, both these two words with their associated concepts of time “define overlapping
aspects of eternity or infinity, and both are connected with the redemptive aspect of
sacred time that permits escape from the constraints of secular time’s relentless forward
flow.” The two concepts neheh and djet should not be viewed as binary extremes of
opposition, rather they are a complementary duality that defines and encompasses total
time.
To clarify the distinction between the two conceptions of time, the key characteristics of
each concept are shown below:
Neheh Djet
Day/Re /Life/Sun Night/Death/Osiris/Earth Dynamic/Change/Occurence Static/Duration of the completed Cyclical Perpetuity Suspended Time/Permanence Flow of Time/virtuality Resultativity (continuation of the Result of completed actions Associated with Becoming Associated with Everness Plenitude of time Endurance Renewed Continuity Discontinuity Imperfectivity Perfectivity
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Time is not cyclical 'in itself': "Cyclicality is rather a cultural form imposed on the world
by semantic and ritual efforts" (Assmann, 2002, p. 207). The rituals ensure the salvation
of the world, not in terms of redemption but in the form of a renewal that defies death and
destructive inner chaos. In ancient Egypt, cyclical time was manifest in numerous
observable aspects: for example succession of day and night; rotation of the seasons;
phases of the moon; and migration of fish and birds. These phenomena were marked
daily, weekly, monthly and annually through the invention of the religious and civil
calendars. As secular time belonged to the immortals, it encompassed the life cycle of the
gods and kings: “The divine king and the other gods participated in an eternal cycle of
death and rebirth in which they maintained their personal identity – a characteristic that
set them apart from the world of mortals” (Bell, 1998, p. 130). In this context, life and
death were seen as reciprocal states of existence. Cyclical, sacred time was therefore a
time of orientation and renewal, a spiral of patterned repetition and rebirths. The purest
moment of sacred time was when creation occurred, when the orderly existent emerged
from the chaotic nonexistent. Thereafter, time became vulnerable to disorder; for
example during the interval between sunset and sunrise, until the sun was born again the
following morning. Hence, cyclical time is inextricably bounded with the notion of
creation not as a singular unique and unrepeatable moment, but as “a series of ‘first
times’, of sacred regenerative moments recurring regularly within the sacred space of
temples through the media of rituals and architecture” (Shafer, 1998, p. 2).
Djet is “the sacred dimension of everness, where that which has become – which has
ripened to its final form and is to that extent perfect – is preserved in immutable
permanence” (Assmann, 2002, p. 18). Hence, as a concept of eternal time, djet is
associated with notions of stability, lasting, permanence, discontinuity, endurance,
resultativity, and perfectivity. Just because it is seen as the opposite of cyclical time,
neheh, djet does not signify linear time but rather it is the suspension of time, for it refers
neither to the past, nor to the future. Time in djet is at standstill and only moves in neheh.
Throughout the Old and Middle Kingdoms, random occurrences were susceptible only to
the power of magic and considered extraneous to the sphere of doing and faring as
reflected in the notion of Maat as connective justice. After the Amarna period in the New
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Kingdom, as Maat became manifest in god’s will, random occurrences were rescued
from the power of magic and entrusted to the will of god, and in doing so they entered the
domain of meaningful time. As Assmann (2002, pp. 243-244) notes “Neheh (cyclical
infinitude) and djet (unchanging permanence) were joined by ‘history’ as the third aspect
of time…The time created by Amun encompassed the events-themselves the work of
Amun’s will-that happened in it.”
The New Kingdom
The decline of the Middle Kingdom was followed by the Second Intermediate Period
(1780-1552 BC, see footnote 1 above), which witnessed the collapse of central authority
and the emergence of several centres of local power, and invasion by the Asiatic Hyksos.
With the defeat of the Hyksos, the New Kingdom (XVIII-XX Dynasties: 1552-1080 BC)
was born (Kuhrt, 1997, p. 173) and it soon embarked on foreign conquest and the
building of a large empire, and boasted immense wealth and a high degree of stability,
power and maturity (Kemp, 1989, p. 183). Expansion through empire building was a
radical difference from past Kingdoms, where Egypt sought her security through
subordinating, or building alliances with, its neighbours. The restructuring of the state
and its economy involved the introduction of centralised control over the provinces. The
political, social and economic systems continued to be assumed, as in the Old and Middle
Kingdoms, to be part of an immutable order of the universe symbolised by Maat.
Kingship was propagated and promoted as a heavenly-rooted right and a necessary
condition for securing order and observing Maat (Kemp, 1989; Kuhrt, 1997).
With the exception of the Amarana revolution, The New Kingdom placed considerable
emphasis upon the sun god, Amon, along with the other gods of the Egyptian pantheon
such as Re and Ptah. The daily journey of the sun god from sunrise to sunset and through
the night into the dawn of a new day signified the cycle of death and perpetual recurrence
of life. Accolade to the sun god was celebrated through an abundance of sun hymns
recited daily on a scale never before paralleled in ancient Egyptian history. As Assmann
(1995, p. 1) has noted “No other period of Egyptian history, indeed no other culture, has
produced such an abundance of poetry in praise of the sun god.” The New Kingdom
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witnessed two other key developments. First, full-time priesthood began for the first time
in ancient Egypt, signifying the increased importance of conducting ritual temple practice
(Shafer, 1998, p. 9). Secondly, during the reign of Hatshepsut (mid 15th century BC) that
the joint office of Town Governor that previously linked government and temple was
abolished and temple matters became entrusted to a High priest or Overseer as a trusted
prince, who ultimately became a very powerful person (ibid, p. 13). The temple on the
New Kingdom played a crucial role in the world of the ancient Egyptians. As Shafer
(1998, p. 8) has noted “The temple was a branch of cosmic government and participated
in the order of the universe by sun and king. It served pharaonic governance by
maintaining the cosmos ritually.”
Royal Temples
The temple was the loci of not only perpetual struggle and opposition between order and
chaos but also the interaction of time and space. It was the location whereby secular time
and space existed along sacred time and space. Hence, the temples of ancient Egypt are
unique cites for examining the roles of accounting and administrative practices in
sustaining and underpinning these secular and sacred conceptions of time and space.
Concepts of order and disorder, the existent and nonexistent, were bounded by important
conceptions of space and time, with immediate implications for the role of the temple and
also accounting. Sacred space was where orientation to the cosmos and immersion in
primordial order occurred; a space where the ‘dead’ Pharaoh came into direct contact
with divinity, where gods and Pharaoh became transparent to one another. It was there
that the ‘dead’ Pharaoh experienced truth and regeneration of life (Shafer, 1998). Despite
the paradoxical passage from one mode of being into another in this sacred space, it was
presumed that over time sacred space had a stable and permanent quality that defied the
passage of time; it was an invariant space that never grew old or lost any of its parts.
Side-by-side with sacred space, secular space existed whereby the mundane activities of
the living in charge of the temple took place. This was the space not only where acts of
worship and cult preservation by the priests took place, but also where maintenance and
building work, security, provision and distribution of offerings, and a whole host of other
administrative and accounting activities occurred. The temple was the loci of both types
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of spatial concepts, which while distinguishable from each other remained strongly
connected for the ancient Egyptians.
Traditionally, it has been assumed that the temples of ancient Egypt divided into two
main types: those dedicated to the royal cult (funerary/mortuary/memorial/royal) and
those dedicated to the cults of the gods (divine). More recently, Egyptologists have begun
to acknowledge that this binary distinction between ‘mortuary’ and ‘divine’ temples can
be misleading for three reasons (see Shafer, 1998, pp. 2-9).
First, it implies that cultic practices in a particular temple were restricted to either
Pharaoh or god. There is sufficient evidence to suggest that throughout ancient Egyptian
history the cults of the gods (or deities) and of dead Pharaohs merged in the same temple
because of the mutual support between both types of cult (e.g. Arnold, 1998; Haeny,
1998; Bell, 1998). As Quirke (1997, p. 46) has pointed out, we should always beware that
“at all periods all royal cult involves the gods, but equally that all cult of the gods
involves the king – in Egypt all cult is royal cult.” Secondly, this binary distinction
implies that the Pharaoh as a recipient of mortuary rituals was not divine, which runs
counter to the conceptualisation of the Pharaoh as god and a conduit between his mortal
subjects and the gods. Also, the so-called ‘mortuary’ temples were places where rituals
were performed on the ‘dead’ Pharaoh to transform him into a divine being. Similarly,
‘divine’ temples were the spaces where the gods went through the process of death and
regeneration and where the realms of sky, netherworld and the living were symbolised.
Thirdly, this dichotomy suggests that the ancient Egyptians held the same distinction
between the two types of temple and the specific rituals and functions performed within
them. As Shafer (1998, p. 4) neatly sums up this debate about the distinction between
‘mortuary’ and ‘divine’ temples: “the temples functions and symbolic representations
were on the one hand too varied and on the other hand too intertwined. Inasmuch as
‘mortuary’ cult complexes like the pyramids served the god of the state embodied in the
king, they were parts of the divine cultus. Inasmuch as the sanctuary of the cult
complexes like Edfu symbolized the place of the sun god’s death as well as birth, ‘divine’
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temples had a significant mortuary aspect.” Much of the accounting material analysed in
this paper relates to the so-called temples of Millions of Years.
The Temples of Millions of Years:
The temples of Millions of Years date back at least to Dynasty 13 (Middle Kingdom), but
became more frequent during the New Kingdom (Haeny, 1998) when they shared one
common feature: they were built to pay homage to the Pharaoh and consolidate his union
with divinity. They also aimed to immortalise the conformity of the Pharaoh with Maat
and to celebrate and glorify his achievements (Leblanc, 1997). To honour the gods, not
only were their names glorified in prayers, but also offerings were made to them to
maintain communications and good relations between earth and the surrounding cosmos.
The organisation of frequent and lavish festivals, presided over by the reigning Pharaoh,
was one way of reinforcing this intimate relationship between Pharaoh and gods, and
population and cosmos, so that order and Maat were seen to be preserved. Offerings to
gods were part of an essential reciprocal relationship by giving back to god something
(e.g. foods) in return for what god gave the Pharaoh and Egypt (stability and order). This
reciprocity, in terms of receiving and giving, was also an expression of Maat and the
divinity of the Pharaoh: [god = Maat; Pharaoh = Maat; Pharaoh = god]. Pharaoh and
Maat merged into a common identity fusing into one body; an intimate symbiosis existed
between Pharaoh and Maat (Leblanc, 1997) which rendered the Temple of Millions of
Years both a material and spiritual memorial to perpetuate the cult of the Pharaoh.
The Temple of Millions of Years was the site where numerous texts and images
celebrating the youthfulness, regeneration, strength, wisdom and power of the Pharaoh,
and kingship in general, were constructed. As Leblanc (1997, p. 54) has suggested:
“In effect, the scenes which cover the walls…Political images, military sequences, cultural events, and family pictures most certainly established the authority of the King, and in a more general way, that of the monarchy. They also give an account of the glory of a Pharaoh, who knew how to lead his people, who knew how to defeat foreign invasions, who honoured the sacred world by the duty of his cult, and who insured, by his procreating actions, the continuation of life because, by his offspring, the institution remained perpetuated. But, what one must not lose sight of
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is that all of the themes give, above all, the clearest illustration of intimate symbiosis that existed between the King and Maat… the temple of ‘millions of years’ became both a material and spiritual memorial.”
During the New Kingdom, the conceptualisation of kingship became even more refined
with the terrestrial and celestial dimensions both demarcated and conjoined more
elaborately. This development had its roots in the reign of Queen Hatshepsut, and
continued through the reign of Amenophis III and thereafter until the end of the
Ramesside period. The divine nature of the Pharaoh was acknowledged as embracing
Osiris (god of the Underworld) and Re (the creator, sun god), thereby combining both
Eternity and Divine Unity. The cult of the dead Pharaoh was celebrated in honour of his
living image, and perpetuated long after his death, combining both notions of sacred time,
djet and neheh. According to Leblanc (1997, p. 55):
“For the Pharaoh, death no longer seemed to be an incarnation, since by being confirmed by his divine power, he had already during his life – at least from the New Empire onwards – earned his immortality. His terrestrial entity would be fused in Osiris (= the royal tomb), his celestial hypostasis would be absorbed by Re into the cosmos (= the temple of the royal cult): he would be ‘Osiris when he reposes in Re – Re when he reposes in Osiris’, that is to say Osiris-Re, or djt-nhh, the two unified principles of Eternity and Divine Unity.”
ACCOUNTING IN CEREMONIAL TEXTS
The Pharaohs pledged to the gods a continuous flow of offerings. As one typical example
of the types of offerings, consider the following text from the reign of Ramesses II:
“I have endowed for him [god] the sacred offerings: regular daily offerings, (lunar) feasts whose days come on their appointed dates; and annual calendar feasts throughout the year, over and above the food offerings that are forthcoming in the (divine) presence, at the head of the sacred offerings for Ptah.” (Kitchen, 1996, p. 570)
16
In the above text, godly offerings span various temporalities, ranging from the daily
through the monthly to the annual. Underpinning such temporal designations of offerings
is the basic tenet that offerings by the Pharaoh will be always higher than “over and
above” those offered by the Pharaoh’s predecessors. The rhetorical nature of the text is
clear, as is the case in virtually all the documents examined in this paper. In this and the
following section, however, the aim is to tease out and examine the accounting content of
such texts, and consider their ceremonial implications. The texts included dedication
texts, calendar of feasts, offering lists, scenes in temples and tombs, and papyri. The first
four types are examined in the remainder of this section, while the next section is devoted
to papyri documents.
Dedication Texts
Dedication texts were inscriptions, carved on temple walls or stelae, to bring to the
attention of gods new temple restorations or buildings initiated by the Pharaoh. While
these texts typically describe the building or restoration activities, they also frequently
refer to provisions of resources as offerings. One example is where Amenhotep III boasts
of the wealth he amassed for the god in the temple of the Memnon Colossi (Breasted,
1906/1988, Part Two, pp. 356-357):
“It is supplied with a ‘Station of the King’, wrought with gold and many costly stones…Its storehouses contain all good things, whose number is not known…its cattle are like the sand of the shore, they make up millions.”
The intention of the above dedication text is not to provide a precise enumeration,
counting and valuation of economic resources given to the divine temple. Rather, the text
is more concerned to establish a claim of a dedication by the Pharaoh to the god whereby
nothing is apparently spared: “all good things”, of such large numbers as to make their
counting meaningless “whose number is not known” because, in the case of cattle for
example, they are countless like “the sand of the shore”. Thus, even when enumeration is
used, “they make up millions”, the text remains silent as to exactly how many millions.
To the extent that such dedication texts contain any numbers, these numbers should not
be taken at face value, but rather as a means of rendering the giving by the Pharaoh as
generous as can be imagined. The aim of the text therefore is to impress as befit a great
17
Pharaoh and to underscore the intimate symbiosis between him and the gods via his
observation of Maat (the reciprocity established by giving to the gods in return for what
the gods have given to Egypt).
One of the exceptions to the above general rule is the text on the third pylon in the
Karnak temple during the reign of the same Pharaoh. In this text, the weights of the
monuments built are stated in deben3, a money of account, along with other items
(Breasted, Part two, pp. 367-368). Even though we here encounter apparently more
precise numbers stated as a money of account (e.g. Malachite: 4,820 deben), the message
remains very much the same as before: it is one of showing the generosity and greatness
of the Pharaoh, his attention to gods and his observation of Maat.
These practices concerning dedication texts continued for hundreds of years thereafter,
with very similar patterns. During the reign of Ramesses II numerous dedication texts
were inscribed containing the familiar statements of gifts and provisions expressed in the
most general terms (e.g. Kitchen, 1996, p. 403). During the reign of Ramesses III more
specific items of dedication to the god Amun-Re began to be mentioned, such as grain,
bread loaves, beer, cattle, desert animals, and jar stands of gold and silver (Breasted,
1906/1988, Part Four, pp. 7 and 150) with the number of feasts and the amounts of
provisions being doubled (ibid, p. 40). Overall, three, perhaps subtle, attributes can be
discerned in these dedications. First, items of offering or dedication began to be identified
by type more clearly. Secondly, increasingly, items began to be expressed in terms of a
money of account. For example, one dedication text included the following enumeration
(Breasted, 1906/1988, Part Four, p. 16):
“1. Gold of Kush. 2. Gold, 1,000 deben. 3. Gold of the mountain. 4. Gold of the water, 1,000 deben. 5. Gold of Edfu. 6. Gold of Ombos, 1,000 deben.
3 The deben is a member of a family of ‘monies of account’ in ancient Egypt. It was equivalent to approximately 91 grams of the particular object to which it was related, eg., gold, silver, etc. (Janssen, 1975a, pp. 101-102).
18
7. Gold of Coptos. 8. Lapis lazuli of Tefrer.”
We note here not only the differentiation of precious metals by type (gold; lapis lazuli)
and source (e.g. gold of Kush; gold of Edfu), but also on three occasions the gold is
valued in terms of deben. It is possible that the values mentioned of 1,000 deben do not
signal a precise number, but even if this were the case it is significant that the Pharaoh
and his scribes decided to introduce this money of account valuation so that “I (Ramesses
III) might present them to thee by the measure” (ibid, p. 16). Rather than a pure listing of
dedications by type or source, the placing of what is seemingly more precise valuation in
the form of deben demarcates these items much more clearly than in previous cases as
items are now presented “by the measure”. Here, accounting calculations intervene to
endow the offerings at least with a myth of more precise quantification, compared to
statements such as “I multiply for thee wheat in heaps, thy granary approaches heaven”
(Breasted, 1906/1988, Part Four, p. 7). Hence, accounting calculations began to ‘creep in’
more frequently into dedication texts.
This quest for the more explicit use of “measures” or valuation via a money of account in
dedication texts is further reinforced by an increased tendency towards accounting and
administrative-like inscription where reference is made to such things as revenues, taxes,
supply and provisions in fixed rations. Ramesses III declares to Amun (ibid, p. 7) “I bring
to thee the tribute of every land, in order to flood thy treasury and thy storehouse.”
Similarly, the same Pharaoh states (ibid, p. 82) “I taxed them (conquered countries) for
their impost every year, every town by its name, gathered together, bearing their tribute,
to bring them [to] thy ka, O lord of gods.” Further, the Pharaoh announces (Haring, 1997,
pp. 44; 47) “I made Your fixed portion festive with bread and beer… The provision of
the Ennead is in accordance with their number….Others are at their tasks in every work,
in order to provide for Your fixed portion of daily requirements.” An administrative cycle
of collection and provision of goods begins to unfold in these dedication texts, with
accounting calculations determining the “fixed portion” sufficient for the god’s “daily
19
requirement” and of the fixed allocations for members of the Ennead, depending upon
their numbers.
The third attribute of dedication texts is the increased tendency to recognise the
importance of stating dedications by stating them in writing. Thus, Ramesses III declares
to the god: “All the products of the Southland are in the writings of Thoth; they are for
thy house of millions of years” (Breasted, ibid, p. 18), Thoth being the god of the moon,
writing and record-keeping. Inscribing dedications through the medium of sacred writing
(and accounting) seemingly endowed dedications to the god with more express sacred
and divine qualities. Inscription was also seen to fulfil another role, that of ensuring godly
ownership of dedicated items. Thus, Ramesses III states to the god Amun (Breasted, ibid,
p. 82), “I have put its (property) positions into writing, that I might inclose them in thy
grasp. I made for thee thy property lists, that they might be forever and [ever] in thy
name.”
In summary, even in the case of dedication texts, arguably the least likely texts to be
subjected to the intervention of accounting and administrative practices, it has been
possible over time to discern a gradual and sustained encroachment of accounting
terminology and calculations. These dedication texts had no obvious direct link to the
mundane daily concerns of the administrators and scribes overseeing the functioning of
the temples. The most likely explanation is that these dedication texts were primarily
concerned with the symbolic and ceremonial dimensions of the ancient Egyptian world,
and that greater intervention by accounting came to be recognised over time as a means
of enhancing, or at least reinforcing, these dimensions and of underpinning the symbiotic
relationship between the gods and the Pharaoh.
Calendars of Feasts and Offering Lists
Offering lists were inscribed in stone on the outside walls of temples, and were typically
stated in the form of royal decrees stipulating revisions in the offerings established
previously in calendar lists. Hence, temporally, offering lists have tended to post-date
calendar lists (Haring, 1997, p. 93). Given this similarity, the discussion in the remainder
20
of this part will be concerned with calendar lists with the same conclusions applying to
offering lists.
Calendars of feasts and offerings record pledges of significant offerings for feasts, such
as the royal coronation, the Opet feast, and the feast of the Valley. The practice of
inscribing them in stone dates back to the Old Kingdom and continues through the
Middle Kingdom to the New Kingdom. The length of festival activities seems to have
varied over time, but it was nonetheless quite considerable, reaching approximately one
day in three throughout the year during the reign of Ramesses III (Breasted, 1906/1988,
Part Four, p. 84). From the earliest times these calendars contained details of offerings
such as bread, beer, meat, fowl, honey, milk, figs, etc. Initially, the offerings were
inscribed in little detail, but gradually quantities of items, their sources, and the baking
ratios (conversion ratios of raw material into finished good) were stated for different
loaves of bread and types of beer. Moreover, the summing up of amounts of cereals was
apparently introduced in the Eighteenth Dynasty (Haring, 1997, p. 57).
During the New Kingdom, the most important calendars were those of Ramesses II and
Ramesses III; the latter which is much better preserved is generally acknowledged by
Egyptologists to have been copied in the most part from the former. The calendar of
Ramesses III was also replicated in its entirety on papyrus (Papyrus Harris I) which will
be analysed in more detailed in a following section. Hence, the discussion here will focus
more on the overall significance of such calendars but without commenting in detail upon
their contents.
The layout of the calendar seems to have changed little over the years. Typically, these
lists contain entries indicating the occasion of the offering, the recipient, an enumeration
of the items of the offering and their sources, and in the case of bread and beer their
baking ratios, a pictorial representation of the items and the relevant numbers, and the
grand total. The calendar was divided into two main sections with bread and beer (and the
corresponding amounts of different grains required) entered in the first part and non-
21
cereal items (e.g. meat, wine, vegetables) entered into the second part. Figure (1) below is
a typical example from the Abydos Temple, reign of Ramesses II.
INSERT TABLE (1) ABOUT HERE
Table (1) shows with the offering list of one day of the feast of Osiris. Having designated
the precise date, month and season, the list then enumerates the quantities of foods
relating to that day. The most prominent item is bread, which is divided initially into
broad categories, such as bit bread (conical loaves made of barley), psn bread (flat,
circular loaves made of emmer wheat), white bread, etc. To demarcate finer categories
still, the baking ratio is used, so that for example there are four different types of bit
bread differentiated by baking ratios ranging from 5 per hekat to 100 per hekat.4 A further
conversion is made via which a given number of bread loaves with a particular baking
ratio is translated into the equivalent in oipe as a common denominator or money of
account. In the list, this is achieved by dividing the number of bread loaves by the baking
ratio; for the first entry 15 loaves are divided by a baking ratio of 30 to obtain ½ oipe.
Similarly, for the fourth entry 25 loaves are divided by a baking ratio of 100 to obtain ¼
oipe. In the case of beer the number of jugs is divided by the brewing ratio to obtain the
equivalent in oipe. Thus, it was possible for the scribes to convert bread loaves with
differing baking ratios into one common denominator. They were also able to do the
same across different categories of bread and beer, hence these entries were inter-
translatable via this money of account. At the end of this first part a series of aggregations
takes place. First, there is the totalling of the assorted bread loaves (165), followed by the
cakes (5) and the beer jugs (30). Another aggregate is made in terms of oipe which can
now be achieved by summing up the final column of the list across all types of bread and
beer (entered as 3+7) of 10 oipe. The second part of the list merely enumerates fowl,
wine jars, baskets of incense and bouquets and baskets of fresh flowers.
4 The hekat was a member of a family of capacity measures used in ancient Egypt which included also the Khar, the oipe and the hin. The Khar was 76.88 litres, the oipe one quarter of the Khar (19.22 litres), and the hekat ¼ of the oipe (4.8 litres). The hin (0.48 litres) was 1/160 of the khar (see Janssen, 1975a, pp. 108-111)
22
Other calendar lists, such as the Ramesseum (Ramesses II) and the Medinet Habu
(Ramesses III) involved significantly larger amounts of foodstuffs compared to those of
the Abydos temple discussed above. In contrast to the daily offerings of 10 oipe (2 ½
Khar) in the case of the Abydos Temple, The Ramesseum and Medinet Habu temples
each had a minimum of 30 ½ khar daily offerings, rising in the case of feast days to more
than 171 khar (Haring, 1997, p. 78). It is beyond doubt therefore that these temples were
extremely large and supported a huge number of priests, administrators, scribes,
craftsmen and workers. Given the sheer volume of these offerings, the calendar lists
suggest that they were expected to be supplied to the Temple of Amun-Re by different
sources including royal domains, royal granaries, royal gardens, the royal treasury, and
other temples.
The intervention of accounting practices in the construction of the calendars of feasts and
offerings is evidently much more intensive than in the case of dedication texts. The
calendar lists were accounts of provisions and offerings to the gods. A much more
elaborate set of accounting measures were also used, as we have seen in the case of using
baking ratios to convert bread into oipe equivalence as a form of money of account. This
preponderance of accounting intervention has led some Egyptologists to attempt to piece
together a picture of ancient Egyptian administration from these calendar lists. Haring,
for example acknowledges that calendar lists “must be treated with caution when used as
a source of administrative and economic information” because they are the result of
“repeated copying of an original text” (ibid, p. 62). Yet, he goes on to suggest that “In
view of their layout and their accounting procedures, their original version cannot be so
old as to be considered entirely outdated, and the amounts they record are in keeping with
the size of the temple for which they were presumably used” (ibid, p. 62). For these
scholars, the calendar lists “must therefore to some extent reflect administrative reality”
(ibid, p. 61). Even if Haring’s contention is tenable, the focus of this section is upon the
ceremonial and symbolic roles of calendar lists rather than administrative reality.
Because calendar offering-lists were recorded on the outside walls of temples, they
tended to focus upon totals rather than individual items/objects; for example they stated
23
types and amounts of animals rather than naming and counting parts of animals. They
focused upon resources pledged for the temple, and hence for some they may be seen to
be a reflection of administrative ‘reality’ although care should be exercised in using this
term given the intertwining of the domains of the secular and the divine in temple
activities suggested earlier. The inscriptions on these calendar offering-lists have
undergone considerable variations across time and space, and Haring (1997) contends
that given their administrative focus these variations may have been in response to
accounting and administrative demands. The ritual offering-lists were located in the inner
rooms or private tombs within the temple enclosure. Their style tended to remain
standardised throughout ancient Egyptian history, and they were concerned with detailed
items (e.g. different parts of an ox rather than the whole ox). Items inscribed on ritual
offering-lists did not contain any of the items mentioned in the calendar offering-lists, but
the reverse is true: calendar offering-lists frequently included items inscribed on ritual
offering-lists. These differences, however, could mask a closer relationship between the
two types of list. Haring (1997, p. 58) has suggested that it is justifiable to regard “the
offering-lists on the outside of the temples as the administrative ‘translations’ of the
offering-cults going on inside, being copies on stone of papyrus documents that may with
good reason be called ‘ritual’, but which incontestably have administrative aspects as
well.” In my view, Haring reads far too much ‘rational’ administrative intent in these
inscriptions, particularly given their aggregate nature and their inscription as a once and
for all incidence, which renders them highly inflexible and non-responsive to variations
in context which may demand frequent fine-tuning by the administrative machinery.
A particularly relevant observation relates to the calendar inscriptions on the outside
walls of the Medinet Habu Temple (Ramesses III). Haring (1997, pp. 73-74) notes that
virtually all the offerings inscribed on that list were intended for the Temple of Amun-Re
in Karnak. An intriguing question then is why were these lists inscribed on the walls of
the Medinet Habu Temple rather than the Karnak Temple? Haring attempts to provide a
number of plausible explanations, including for example the availability of the clean
walls of the newly established Medinet Habu Temple for inscription compared to the by
then fully inscribed walls of the Karnak Temple. But he then offers another possible clue
24
which relates more to the domain of the symbolic and ceremonial: “the initial position of
lists 1-5 [parts of the calendar list] gave prominence to the king’s own endowments
(albeit mainly for another temple), and in that way prevented the whole Medinet Habu
calendar from becoming a mere copy of its original on the Ramesseum” (ibid, p. 74).
Given this symbolic and ceremonial emphasis, why was such obsession with detailed
accounting entries deemed essential to making the endowments of the Pharaoh
prominent? Why were these texts inscribed on the outside walls of memorial temples
rather than simply being recorded in internal administrative documents? Why were such
accounting entries put on public display? These, and similar, questions are germane to the
remainder of the material discussed in this paper and will be addressed together later.
Scenes in Temples and Tombs
Pictorial scenes engraved on the walls of temples and tombs celebrated daily and festival
offerings in some considerable detail. These pictorial scenes were frequently supported
by inscribed linguistic and numerical texts. They were not always a substitute for other
texts, such as calendar lists and offering lists, but frequently they somewhat replicated the
contents of these lists on the walls of the same temples or tombs, though not in exactly
the same detail. Reasonably preserved examples from the New Kingdom include the
Temples of Medinet Habu, Abydos, and Luxor. Depending upon the space available on
the walls, the scenes for festival and daily offerings were either clearly separated
(Abydos) or merged (Medinet Habu). The procession shows individuals carrying various
items of foodstuffs, such as bread of different types, flour, grain, cakes, sweets, dates and
other fresh fruits, beer, vegetables, and animals such as oxen and calves.
In the case of bread, beer, gold and incense, more details were provided. For example,
bread loaves were differentiated pictorially by shape into bit bread, psn bread, white
bread, etc. with supportive inscriptions indicating the baking ratio as well as their specific
sources of supply (Haring, 1997, p. 109). Beer was differentiated by type of jar and
brewing ratio (for example 4 & 8, and 5 & 10; the latter figure of every pair being the
exact double of the former, see Haring, ibid, p. 113). In the case of gold, it was
differentiated by source (gold of water; gold of Kush; gold of the desert, etc.) which
25
presumably indicates quality, but also the amounts were in the order of 1,000 deben,
leading Haring (ibid, p. 133) to suggest that these round figures, while not excessive,
“clearly have a fictive character”. We have already encountered these same round figures
when discussing dedication texts, and whether these figures had a “fictive character” or
had become a ‘milestone’ of what counted as acceptable offerings to the gods is
impossible to establish. Similarly, incense was measured in deben.
The representations of offerings typically stated that they were of a fixed allocation; for
example daily offerings are supported by the inscription “the divine offering of the fixed
portion of every day” (Haring, 1997, p. 112). The scenes were of generally impressive
scale, reaching at times over 25 meters across, but each appears to be in relative
proportion to the size of the temple to which the offerings were intended, which could be
taken to suggest a possible real life matching between offerings and temple requirements
(ibid, pp. 103, 106). Although subject to some variation, the procession of offerings was
led by a high ranking priest (burning incense) and the scribe of divine offerings. The roles
of the scribes and priests added a further aura of symbolism and divinity to the scenes. In
the latter case, accounting and divinity were brought into an immediate symbiosis. There
was more to the role of the scribe than what seemingly resembled a simple and static
representation. The scribe of divine offerings was shown to receive the carriers of
offerings at the doorway of the temple (Abydos Temple). Further, a temple scribe (a
different category of scribe) is shown urging the carriers of meat to the temple to hurry
(Haring, ibid, p. 123), with the supportive text “Hurry up! [take] the meat-portions to the
temple, which is open(?),. Come and carry out [your] tasks” (ibid, p. 126). Responsibility
for receiving and monitoring offerings were divided, so that the scribe of the temple dealt
with meat only (presumably because it was deemed valuable) whereas the scribe of
divine offerings dealt with the remainder of offerings. Yet a different category of scribe
was that of ‘scribe of the god’s sealed things’ who was attached to the temple treasury
(ibid, p. 127). The scribe of the treasury was shown to weigh the quantities of gold,
precious stones and incense delivered to the temple accompanied with the following
inscriptions (Haring, ibid, p. 136):
26
“(Ineni) inspecting the [silver] and gold […] turquoise […] incense of the monthly requirement […] for the Ennead […] d’m gold […] by the overseer of the treasury…] Ipet[sut…] of Amun […] (Puyemre) [counting/weighing?] incense for the temples … which are in the retinue of the House of Amun, in the treasury of the temple”
Far from being a static, discrete set of scenes, these pictorial re-presentations, frequently
supported by inscriptions, offer a dynamic narrative that depicts a rich tapestry of scribal
involvement in different types of offerings, the process of such involvement in terms of
receiving, monitoring, weighing, counting offerings and motivating other personnel to
carry on with their tasks as efficiently as possible. This narrative creates a ‘reality’,
whether fictitious or not, of an orderly, highly organised, efficient and exact process of
offerings as befit the administration of a great Pharaoh who observes Maat.
A series of inspections during the reign of Ramesses III, in his fifteenth regnal year, were
recorded to have been performed by Penpato, the chief archivist of the royal treasury on
the walls of the temples of Karnak, Tod, Edfu and Elephantine. Penpato was appointed
by Ramesses III to consecrate all the temples of Egypt, to inspect the treasuries and
granaries, and to double the divine offerings that had been allocated to them previously
(Spalinger, 1991, p. 22). Spalinger surmises that this series of inspection and doubling of
offerings was a way of redressing the neglect that the temples had suffered for some time
because of economic dislocations caused by several significant wars (ibid, p. 24). This
also attests to the power of the reigning Pharaoh in redistributing and redirecting
resources across temples and other state institutions on a significant scale, a tendency that
was by no means restricted to Ramesses III but rather occurred frequently throughout
ancient Egyptian history (ibid).
Such proliferation of accounting entries and the artistic representations/inscriptions of the
scribes being involved in the measurement, receiving and doubling divine offerings, have
led to the amazement, almost dismay, of some Egyptologists:
27
“the reliefs call to life the dreary administrative accounts and allow us a glimpse of the daily and festival offering-practice. As part of the temple decoration, just like the calendars, they present an ideal image of the customs connected with the offering cult.” (Haring, ibid, p. 116)
It is precisely the lack of appreciation of the symbolic and ceremonial role of accounting
practices that leads some writers to view the intervention of accounting in divine settings
as a “dreary” and unwanted encroachment. That accounting could have a ‘divine’
dimension to it in the thinking of the ancient Egyptians is not an idea that many
commentators would contemplate.
ACCOUNTING IN THE TEMPLES OF MILLIONS OF YEARS: PAPYRUS
HARRIS I
This section is devoted to examining the symbolic and ritualistic nature of Papyrus Harris
I which dates to the reign of Ramesses III. The text, which is identical to the calendar list
on the walls of the Medinet Habu Temple referred to earlier, was composed shortly after
the death of Ramesses III covering his full reign of thirty-one years. The text is the
largest papyrus extant, measuring 133 feet long, about 95% of it devoted to gifts and lists
(Breasted, 1906/1988, Part Four, p. 88). Complete translations of the papyrus are
provided by Breasted (ibid) and Grandet (1994). Breasted (ibid, p. 88) describes this
Papyrus thus: “Written in a magnificent hand, it is the most sumptuous manuscript left us
by ancient Egypt.” Five scribes (deduced from their distinct writing styles) were
employed each in inscribing one of the main sections: the Theban, Heliopolitan,
Memphite, General (small temples), and Historical. The purpose of the papyrus was
stated explicitly (ibid, p. 110):
“He (Ramesses III) tells, in praise, and laudation, the many benefactions and mighty deeds, which he did as king and as ruler on earth, for…”
Thereafter, the text lists as beneficiaries Amun (god of Thebes), Re (god of Heliopolis),
Ptah (god of Memphis), all other gods and goddesses of Lower and Upper Egypt and the
28
people of the land of Egypt and every land (presumably the remainder of the Empire).
The material contained in the text covers the following types of wealth/income: (1) god’s
estate; (2) god’s income; (3) offerings to god; (4) grain for old feasts; (5) offerings for
new feasts; and (6) offerings to the Nile god. Offerings to each god are clearly
demarcated in detail under a separate section and the order of these sections remains
exactly the same from year to year. While the Theban god Amun claims the lion’s share
of temple income compared to the other temples, it is the Heliopolitan god Re who claims
by far the highest share of the offerings.
The earlier parts of the text initially contain some prayers by Ramesses III to the main
gods, followed by parts that are very similar in style and content to those of the
dedication texts. In these parts, various statements of offerings are made by the Pharaoh
which take various forms. First, we encounter the ‘non-enumerated’ form with the
implication being that the numbers are too great to count:
“ships laden with barley and wheat for transport to its (the temple’s) granary without cessation” (ibid, p. 115). “bread, beer, oxen, fowl, wine, incense, and fruit without number” (ibid, p. 120). “its (the temple’s) granaries approached heaven, its herd were multiplied more than the sand” (ibid, pp. 122-123).
Another form used provides some enumeration, but these cannot be taken at face value
and are clearly more suggestive of symbolism than precision:
“I filled its treasury with the products of the land of Egypt: gold, silver, every costly stone by the hundred-thousand” (ibid, p. 114) “I made for thee herds in the South and North containing large cattle, fowl, and small cattle by the hundred-thousand” (ibid, p. 120) “I made for thee wine-gardens in the Southern Oasis, and the Northern Oasis likewise without number; others in the South with numerous lists; they were multiplied in the Northland by the hundred-thousand” (ibid, p. 121).
29
INSERT FIGURE (1) ABOUT HERE
The Papyrus then goes beyond dedication texts by providing more detailed, and
seemingly very precise lists of income and offerings. Some of these are examined below,
where extracts of the lists are used to analyse their significance as symbolic texts. The list
of god’s estate typically enumerate the numbers of individuals ‘owned by’, or better
attached to, the estate along with some mention of other resources such as cattle heads,
gardens, lands, galleys, workshops and towns. These entries are no more than counting of
items or objects and will not be discussed further here. The remaining categories deal
with income and offerings (see Figure 1 below which provides an overall schema of the
offerings lists), and because of some similarities and space limitations the remainder of
this section will only deal with income, offerings, and grain for old feasts. It is in these
income lists and offerings that we begin to encounter the use of monies of account in
Papyrus Harris I to reflect the relative values of the different types of offerings.
INSERT TABLE (2) ABOUT HERE
Table (2) provides a list of the income stated as a form of impost exacted from the
population for the benefit of the various temples of Amun. The list then shows different
items which can be divided into three finer classifications. First, items valued in deben
and kite (kidet); the deben (91 grams in weight) and the kite (1/10 of the deben). These
items were clearly judged as less bulky and more valuable than the others, as they include
gold, silver, copper, and yarn. The second type is grain, in this case barley, which is both
bulky and of critical nutritional value, for which a capacity measure, the khar (76.88
litres) or 16-fold hekat (4.8 litres), is used as a money of account. The third type includes
the remaining items for which simple counting of identities is used; for example jars of
wine, bundles of vegetables, bales of flax, rolls (presumably) of linen, and heads of cattle.
Hence, side-by-side, the income list deploys two different types of money of account
(weight and capacity) and straight enumeration of items. In the case of precious metals,
different types of gold are differentiated by source, valued in deben and kite, and then all
gold is totalled. Silver is then listed and its value added to that of gold. Copper is valued
30
similarly but is not added to the total of gold and silver possibly because it was deemed
less valuable. When similar items were enumerated via counting, they were also added
together, such as the boats made of cedar and acacia.
INSERT TABLE (3) ABOUT HERE
Table (3) lists the Pharaoh’s gifts to Amun. As usual, the list is preceded by a text stating
the kinds of goods given as gift. The list then shows the details of the individual types of
goods given, so that, for example, gold is differentiated according to whether it is fine or
white gold, and the state of the gold product is also mentioned: hammered work,
ornaments, finger rings (raised work, beaten work or inlay), vases, amulet cords, and
beads. Through the common denominator of the deben and kite, these monies of account
are then used to place specific values on each quantity of gold, thereby bringing them all
into additive quantities of monies that could be summed up across all items, hence the
totals mentioned in the list. Objects made of other metals, in particular silver and bronze,
are treated similarly, using the deben and kite, and oils (myrrh) are also converted into
deben, hekat and hin. Linen, is enumerated through simple counting of identified and
differentiated objects, and incense, honey, butter, oil and fats, are enumerated through
counting numbers of jars (presumably of standard sizes). Other goods, such as grapes and
cinnamon are measured by the bunch or crate, and fibre by ropes or loads, whereas salt
and natron by bricks, etc. What is evident from Table (3) is the use of a combination of
measures, each presumably deemed appropriate to the particular type of good recorded,
to enlist each good at a precise quantity or value.
INSERT TABLE (4) ABOUT HERE
Table (4) shows only a small part of the offerings made by Ramesses III containing only
bread and cakes (the remainder of the long account documents other goods ranging from
cattle and fowl through oils, herbs and incense to statues and wood). The key points to
note about the bread and cakes entries are that: (1) they are listed by type and enumerated
by number or measure; and (2) because of knowledge of dilution measures such as the
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baking ratio (psw; see earlier), the equivalent of the amounts of bread and cakes offered is
measured in a precise number of hekat, hence different quantities of breads and cakes are
inter-translated via the money of account (hekat) into one aggregate number.
Apart from the remarkable clarity of the connections between the various types of lists,
the accounts contained in these lists share several important characteristics. First, the
entries were carefully arranged under carefully designated sections in an order that was
adhered to throughout the whole document. Secondly, different measures were assigned
to different goods/items, and more or less consistently used throughout the accounts.
Different measures, e.g. the deben, or khar, were clearly differentiated from each other
via different entries. Thirdly, a precise system of inter-translatability underpinned all the
different monies of account used, so that items recorded in any of them could be easily
reduced to any other money of account as a common denominator, thereby ensuring
‘adding apples with apples’. Fourthly, the entries, along with quantifications either via
counting or valuing, created an aura of order, clarity, transparency and precision. Fifthly,
the use of these quantification and valuation techniques had important symbolic
significance beyond merely equating different items; they served to visualise the
magnitude of the offerings made by the Pharaoh to the gods in their diversity and great
value as a manifestation of reciprocity and observation of Maat.
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: ACCOUNTING AND DIVINE ORDER
This paper has examined a number of ways in which accounting inscriptions were
utilised to record and enumerate gifts given by the Pharaoh to the gods of ancient Egypt.
These accounting inscriptions found their way into dedication texts, calendars of feasts
and offerings, offering lists, scenes in temples and tombs and papyri frequently along
with pictorial scenes and linguistic texts. Now it is relevant to re-ask some of the
questions posed earlier in the paper: Why such level of detail in inscribing all the
offerings and gifts? Why the enumeration by item, the counting, and valuation via a
‘money of account’ of different forms? Why is the obsession with aggregating and
comparing totals and with feeding subtotals into totals? For whose benefit (humans; gods;
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see also Haring, 1997, p. 158-160) were these inscriptions intended, given the very small
percentage of literate people in ancient Egypt? Why were pictorial scenes and linguistic
texts frequently combined with accounting numbers in monumental texts? Even though
there may have been some functional roles intended for these accounting inscriptions, I
have suggested already that recognition of their ceremonial nature is inescapable. This
section seeks to advance the argument that these accounting inscriptions can be viewed as
an intertwined element of order in the divine world of the ancient Egyptians. To clarify
the contribution of this paper, this section is organised around a number of key issues.
The Divine Genesis of Accounting
At the most straightforward level, the connection between accounting and divinity can be
sought through the medium of writing, itself a divine aspect of ancient Egypt. Language,
and also writing, constituted a dimension of divine presence, with the hieroglyphic script
being canonised as “divine speech” (Assmann, 2002, p. 238). Accounting as a form of
inscription would have been equally endowed with this dimension of divinity. To develop
the connection between accounting and divine order further, it is necessary to refer to the
myth of Osiris. In the latter myth, Osiris was killed and dismembered by his brother Seth
who buried each part of Osiris’ body in one of the nomes of ancient Egypt. Isis, the wife
and sister of Osiris, patiently searched for and rediscovered the dismembered parts of her
dead husband, except for his penis that was thrown by Seth into the Nile. A new penis
was made, and along with the other parts of the body re-assembled into a ‘full’ but dead
Osiris. So, we observe here an ‘economy’ of restitution whereby the body of Osiris is re-
membered by Isis (Hare, 1999). The restitution is not complete, however, as the original
penis is replaced by an alternative (artificial!) but functional one that was subsequently
deployed to impregnate Isis to give birth to Osiris’ son and heir Horus. Thoth, the good of
writing, was also the god of record-keeping, time (the latter signified in the
representations of Thoth by a moon placed above his head), and the patron of scribes to
whom they prayed and made offerings. As the god of record-keeping, the connection
between Thoth and account-keeping is fairly evident, and as god of time, with time and
space for the ancient Egyptians being indivisible, it can be seen that in this myth there is a
strong link between accounting, time and space. If this observation has any validity, then
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it could be argued more generally that the association between Thoth and accounting
implies that from its inception accounting is both temporally and spatially embedded.
Thoth also figures quite prominently in the myth of Osiris; specifically in the restoration
of the Eye of Horus (son of Osiris) in the battles he waged against Seth to avenge the
death of his father and reclaim his throne. After Seth had decimated the eye of Horus,
Thoth states:
“I came seeking the eye of Horus, that I might bring it back and count it. I found it [and now it is] complete, counted and sound, so that it can flame up to the sky and blow above and below…” (Clark, 1978, p. 225)
Four immediate implications follow on from the above quote. First, Thoth, as the god of
record-keeping counts and re-assembles the scattered parts of the Eye of Horus, so there
is a sense of restitution taking place here. Secondly, like representation, restitution is
never entirely perfect or complete (just as we observed in the case of Osiris), so the parts
of the Eye of Horus that Thoth counts and re-members add up only to 63/64 of the
complete eye! Restitution produces or reconstructs a different reality. Thirdly, The Eye of
Horus ever since becomes an indispensable counting tool in the hands of the scribes in
their measurements and accounting calculations, as it is then used as a system (known as
the Horus Eye fractions) that arranges fractions into a descending geometric series ½ , ¼,
1/8, …, 1/64. Fourthly, this system of fractions is intertwined with a new way of seeing
and using parts of integer numbers, for now the scribes can exercise their numerical skills
in a manner that allows them to partition anything, be it a fraction of a bull or even a loaf
of bread, into minutely small parts, thereby facilitating a new level of economic and
social reciprocity. The link between the Eye of Horus and visualisation of accounting
numbers, or the metaphorical seeing through accounts, is evidently there!
Pictures, Words and Accounting Numbers
Invoking the hermeneutic approach, texts (be they pictorial, linguistic or numerical)
exhibit three dimensions: fictionality; intertextuality; and reception (Weinsheimer, 1991;
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Loprieno, 1996). Fictionality creates a mutual complicity between the author and his/her
model reader so that the representation of the world in the text does not necessarily have
to perfectly map onto what may be perceived as a ‘factual’ reality. Intertextuality reflects
the dialectic interrelations between texts. Reception implies the existence of an audience
or a readership that converts the dialectics between author and text into a three-way
interaction.
It is important to note from the outset that these three modes of re-presentation are not in
a relation of complete replication of each other. For example, Davis (1992, p. 240) has
warned against “treating the pictorial text as merely a re-production or illustration of that
other text”, and Bryan (1996) refers to the disjunction of (written) text and (pictorial)
image in Egyptian art. The different meanings that different modes of re-presentations
engender occur not only because the author may intend to use them to signal different
things, nor only because we as readers may read different meanings in them. Also
importantly, these modes differ in their accessibility to the audience and in their re-
presentation capacity. In a largely illiterate culture, like that of ancient Egypt, the
illiterate will not be capable of reading words and numbers, but would be likely capable
of reading various meanings from pictorial presentations, even though these could differ
from one reader to another. Further, structural semiologists (e.g. Barthes, 1977) would
argue that written (or numerical) texts can be treated as discrete texts where separate
signs (words, numbers) can be identified. In contrast, individual signs are not capable of
being singled out in pictorial representations, so that for example a figure cannot be
detached from its context as the same brushstroke establishes simultaneously the figure
and part of its background. In that sense, the whole scene is read as a single sign (as a
whole). Other researchers (e.g. Elgin, 1983) have also noted that pictorial representations
are generally far more dense compared to words or numbers. Thus, a small alteration in a
pictorial re-presentation effectively annuls that re-presentation and creates another. In
contrast, words and numbers are less dense and less restrictive; for example A, a, a,
would all be taken to signify the same letter of the alphabet.
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In seeking to understand the dialectics between pictorial, linguistic, and numerical signs it
is important to note the broader context within which these modes of re-presentations
were employed in ancient Egypt. As Wilkinson (1994, p. 149) notes, “Because these
royal activities were often depicted in official representations with summary written
‘captions’, there was from the earliest times an important interaction in Egyptian culture
between the function of writing and the use of representational works of art”. Egyptian
hieroglyphs were assumed to be endowed with magical qualities not only within written
texts but also as artistic re-presentations. The rebus rules were used at times to write (and
re-present) the names of Pharaohs and other influential individuals. Similarly, objects or
individuals were re-presented in the form of hieroglyphic signs to convey symbolic
messages. There are numerous examples of this union of picture, word and indeed
numbers in ancient Egyptian art, as Wilkinson (1994, p. 152) notes “The embedded or
‘encoded’ hieroglyphic forms also frequently interact to some degree with the texts or
inscriptions with which they are associated, for the use of hieroglyphic form in Egyptian
art rarely occurs in complete isolation from the written word.” In this context, “Figures,
registers, and images tend to be organized hierarchically with no extraneous or competing
pictorial matter. They can be accompanied by hieroglyphic texts, rebuslike signs, and
other symbols that perform complementary, parallel, or identical referential operations…,
with ‘picture’ and ‘hieroglyph’ often working together to constitute the ‘image’” Davis
(1992, p. 4). There are three implications I wish to emphasise here in relation to the
material on pictorial images, writing and accounting discussed above.
First, Engravings and pictures create a lasting image and can also be ‘read’ by the
majority of the Pharaoh’s subjects who were illiterate and hence could not decipher
written texts and accounts. Inscriptions endow images with more precision via the use of
numbers and, designation of space and time as well as the precise individuals involved.
As Assmann (1994) has argued, with the combining of pictures and inscriptions into one
representation, a complete fluidity and a mutual determination is attained between the
text and the illustration. Assmann notes that this mutual determination creates three
functions in writing; the first is to explain the picture; the second is to identify the persons
or objects (such as the offerings); and the third is to supplement the rendering of
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speeches, i.e. to record sound, in multiple media. In line with the argument advanced
earlier that pictorial, written and numerical re-presentations are not redundant replications
of each other, Bryan’s (1996, p. 164) comments ring true: “Although it often does, art
does not necessarily coincide with text in the meaning it conveys. Nor, then, does text in
monumental uses necessarily purely caption the art, as most writers have suggested it
does. Rather, art may provide a different version of the same subject expressed in
accompanying text.” Hare (1999, p. 71) sums up the effects of such a combination of
picture and inscription thus: “The interaction, then, of picture and writing creates an
integral whole that can scarcely be attained in writing systems like the Greek or Roman
alphabet, relying as they do on conventional and arbitrary relations between sound and
the written word, and insensible, as they are, to the iconic dimensions of writing that was
so important and so engaging to the Egyptians.” The combination of the pictures of
offerings and their inscription using the accounting signs, or numbers, yields more
sophisticated knowledge of what is going on than either representation alone could
achieve. These different modes of re-presentation were monumental statements of the
greatness of the Pharaoh, his observation of Maat, his preservation of cosmic and worldly
order, and his gratitude to the gods.
Secondly, the use of accounting numbers in artistic representations (such as numbers of
jugs of beer) can be linked to the symbolic nature of numbers in ancient Egypt. The
Rhind Mathematical Papyrus, dating at least to the Twelfth Dynasty, presents itself thus:
“Accurate reckoning [or Rules for reckoning, i.e.,] for inquiring into things, and the
knowledge of all things, mysteries…all secrets” (Clagett, 1999, p. 122). Accurate
computations were thus seen, or rather construed, as the gateway to knowledge of all
things, mysterious and secret. For the ancient Egyptians, the use of numbers in temple
inscriptions and scenes may therefore have been part and parcel of the orderly
equilibrium of the world and the cosmos. As Wilkinson (1994, p. 126) has argued, “Just
as verbal and ‘visual’ puns were felt to reflect an important aspect of reality, the
relationships between the abstract numbers found in myth and in nature were also seen as
meaningful patterns reflecting divine planning and cosmic harmony.”
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Thirdly, of all items of foodstuffs, why was bread accorded so much detail, not only
being differentiated by type, but also accurately enumerated with the precise baking ratio
delineated? Bread was frequently considered synonymous with life, and the ankh, the key
of life, was at times represented artistically in the form of an offering table loaded with
bread loaves (see Wilkinson, 1994, figure 126, p. 169; see also p. 160). Bread therefore
symbolised life-giving power. Further, the most common values of the baking ratios were
4 and 5 and their multiples, with the symbolic meaning of totality and completeness
accorded to these numbers by the ancient Egyptians (Wilkinson, 1994, pp. 133-138).
Perhaps it is stretching things too far to single out bread for a special significance in
offerings, since all food may carry equal signification. Shafer (1998, p. 25) has argued
that “ there must have been religious as well as socioeconomic meaning to partaking of
god’s food, particularly since the food symbolized life, order, the self of good, and the
selves of the donor and officiant. Those Egyptians sharing in the food must have
experienced a sense of privileged communion with god and king that shaped their
ritualised bodies and enhanced their feelings of unity, efficacy and power.”
Accounting and Sacred Time
The material examined here testifies to a symbiotic relationship between accounting and
notions of sacred time and space. Accounting can be seen to be linked strongly to the
conceptions of neheh (regularly recurring, cyclical time) and djet (unchanging,
permanent, suspended time). Neheh is reflected in the periodicity of accounting entries,
with the cyclical recurrence of days of the week, weeks of the month, months of the year
and the years covering the duration of every royal reign. The offering lists, calendar of
feasts, and the account-keeping of gifts in Papyrus Harris I are all examples of neheh as
regularly recurring, cyclical time. In all these examples, the motion of time is captured
and given concrete meaning by accounting entries. These accounting entries also set an
expectation for new gifts, new temple income, new feast offerings, etc. to recur every
day, week, month or year. Such expectation, and its subsequent honouring by the
Pharaoh, reinforces the idea of restitution with the gods and endows the concept of Maat
with the quality of recurrence. For the gods protected and provided for Egypt every year
38
on a recurrent basis and so the Pharaoh must reciprocate via ‘valuable’ offerings to the
gods to retain this symbiotic balance and to observe Maat on a regular, recurring basis.
In life, reciprocating underscored the divine nature of the Pharaoh; for when the Pharaoh
offers gifts we have the equalities: god = Maat; Pharaoh = Maat; Pharaoh = god. To the
extent that accounting practices functioned in a manner that underpinned Maat, by
quantifying, measuring and rendering visible ‘valuable’ offerings to the gods then
accounting may be seen as an indispensable mechanism through which the divinity of the
Pharaoh was expressed and re-affirmed. Through the intervention of accounting an
intimate symbiosis was forged between the Pharaoh and Maat, whereby their identities
could be fused together into one coherent and integrated whole thereby ensuring the
perpetuity of the material and spiritual memorial of the cult of the Pharaoh. In ‘death’, the
Pharaoh as a terrestrial entity is fused in Osiris (the royal tomb), while his celestial
hypostasis is absorbed by Re into the cosmos (the temple of the royal cult). This
transformation which renders the ‘dead’ Pharaoh at once Osiris-Re effectively combines
the two qualities of time, djet-neheh, bringing together the two concepts of Eternity and
Divine Unity. It is through accounting for offerings and gifts and the ability to
demonstrate the keeping of Maat, that the ‘dead’ Pharaoh could ensure the fulfilment of
this transformation, by which Eternity and Divine Unity are unified in him.
Whilst reflecting cyclical time, periodicity and recurrence (neheh), accounting
simultaneously underscored and underpinned the suspended, unchanging concept of time
(djet). For through emphasising recurrence, the repetition of the flow of offerings and
gifts from the Pharaoh to the gods on a regular basis creates a sense of permanence,
endurance, resultativity and perfectivity. At the same time every month, year or festival
season, the giving by the Pharaoh is repeated as if nothing changes! This continuity of
offerings and gifts in a cyclical fashion acts to reinforce the continuity of time itself, and
constructs a reality of a static world in which all that is expected is both a reflection of the
past and a continuation into the present and future projected into Eternity (djet).
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A document from the reign of Sesostris I, Middle Kingdom, makes more explicit the
connection between provision of offerings and the Pharaoh’s quest for eternity by
emphasising the dimensions of time; neheh and djet (Assmann, 2002, pp. 60-61):
“I have come as Horus… to establish the offering cakes of the gods, to accomplish the building works in the temple of my father Atum, to make him rich even to the degree that he had made me take rule, to provide his altars with food on earth. ……….. ……….. Neheh-eternity it means, to create the salvational. A king who is named for his work does not die, ………. ………. The things of djet-eternity do not die
This text shows just how by building temples and sanctuaries for the gods, and by
providing offerings and gifts the Pharaoh sought to immortalise himself. Accounting
provided an indelible record of these achievements, not only through counting numbers
of buildings or offerings, but by also placing a relative valuation, through the use of
monies of account and rendered these offerings in their great ‘value’ visible to all, to
signal more clearly the esteem with which the gods were held by the Pharaoh.
Accounting therefore be said to have endowed the deeds of the Pharaoh with salvational
and eternal qualities.
Accounting in the temples performed two important and highly complementary roles.
First, as a set of institutionalised rituals, it bonded the human world with its daily routine
with the sacred circularity of cosmic life. To see how critical this first role is we only
need to note how undesirable to the ancient Egyptian the state of the non-existent or
disorder was. If the worldly was not brought into the cosmic, then disorder and decay
were expected to ensue, with all that this entailed. By bringing the two realms together,
accounting practices as rituals secured regeneration as a form of ‘First Time’ is ensured,
and with it continuity of life after death. Secondly, by making it possible to observe
Maat, for the ancient Egyptians accounting practices could be seen to have served to
40
sustain cosmic circularity and continuity. In commenting on the significance of the
calendar, Assmann (2002, p. 72) has observed:
“The ritual calendar was not just a representation of the cosmos, but a cultural form that stabilized the cosmos it represented. The motive for repetition was … the conviction that the cyclical stability of the cosmos is constantly in jeopardy and has to be sustained by ritual repetition. The ritual institutionalization of permanence thus has a cosmic significance: it generates cultural order with a view of sustaining cosmic order; memoria is raised to the rank of cosmogony. The world is commemorated in order to counterbalance the perpetual drift toward decline, inertia, entropy, and chaos.”
Virtually everything Assmann states about the significance of the ritual calendar to the
cosmic order of ancient Egypt extends to accounting. The repetition of accounting entries
and their periodicity produced an institutionalised cultural order that underpinned the
concept of neheh time as circular and recurring, ensuring the sustaining of cosmic order.
This accounting-inspired order acted as a counterbalance to the destructive forces of
disorder and the non-existent to ensure the cyclical continuity of the cosmos. Accounting
as ritual and ceremony is well equipped to function as a discourse that acts to sustain
beliefs in cosmic order and harmony. The ritual aspects of both architecture and
accounting practices issue new discourses that underpin each other’s ability to promote
such perceptions of order and harmony for eternity. Again, as Assmann (2002, p. 73) has
succinctly put it:
“Th[e] sustenance of renewal of time through ritual complements the construction of the sacred permanence through monumental discourse. In this conjunction, we discern the two aspects of Egyptian thinking in connection with time, neheh and djet. Neheh, the generic term for all regularly recurring units of time is cyclical; it is formed and kept in motion by the rites. Djet, the unchanging permanence of that which has achieved perfection, is mirrored in the sacred spatial dimension of permanence constructed through the medium of monumental discourse.”
Accounting and Sacred Space
The three realms of ancient Egyptian society, earth, sky and netherworld, converged into
the sacred space of the temples and cohered in rituals that took place into that space
41
(Shafer, 1998). Accounting played a crucial role in rendering this convergence and
coherence possible. Accounting practices became super-imposed upon this sacred space
of the temple, and accounting rules and procedures became a form of ritual that provided
coherence to what went on in the temples. The space of the temple became the location
whereby the receipt of gifts and offerings was recorded and monitored in an orderly and
precise manner through the intervention of accounting. It was in this space that the
Pharaoh could demonstrate through gifts and offerings, as a form of restitution or
reciprocity, the intertwining link between his subjects (earth) and the gods (sky). Such
restitution was crucial for the conceptualisation of the ancient Egyptian netherworld: for
only through this restitution can the dead be granted safe passage through the
netherworld. The secular space that was the location of the worship and cult preservation
activities of temple priests, as well as the activities of all other personnel not performing
religious duties, e.g. administrators, scribes, builders, artisans, guards, etc., was also the
site of accounting intervention and monitoring. The tasks assigned to these individuals
were carefully noted, work targets were set for most of them and regular reporting on
their achievements compared to targets took place as part of daily scribal activities
(Ezzamel, 2002d). The intervention of accounting rituals into the sacred and secular
space of the temple ensured the existence of a measure of coherence, order, and
equilibrium in the temple that mirrored cosmic order.
The idea that inscriptions and monuments can be combined to yield a powerful discourse
is not new. I have already alluded to some of the comments in this respect made by Hare
(1999). In a similar vein, in commenting on this union of inscription and monumental
work, Assmann (2002) has noted that:
“The idea of inscribing texts onto walls and other parts of buildings suggests itself more obviously in Egypt than elsewhere. The stone of which these buildings for eternity were constructed was also the writing surface for the hieroglyphs. Unlike hieratic cursive, hieroglyphic writing is writing on stone. It was designed for the inscription of monuments, just as monuments were designed to be inscribed with hieroglyphs. In Egypt, stone structures and inscription - building and language - achieve a unique connection, constituting a ‘monumental discourse’ that reflects an unprecedented attempt to construct sacred time.”
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By forcing its discourse upon both the inner space, be it sacred or secular, and the surface
(outer space) of temple walls and other monuments accounting became completely
intertwined and intermingled with these monuments in their entirety. For as we have
seen, the inscriptions on the outside walls were not exclusively and only writing and
pictorial scenes, but importantly included detailed accounting entries. Accounting
discourse colonised both the interior and exterior of the temple: the activities conducted
within were underpinned by accounting-inspired restitution and reciprocity, and the
outside walls covered by the entries of gifts and offerings. The inner space of the temple,
and the outer surface of temple walls became converted into a malleable space subjected
to accounting inscription and intervention. The resulting combination, a monumental
discourse endowed with calculative, seemingly precise, accounting terminology,
produced stunning visual evidence, but only for the literate elite, of how a great Pharaoh
attended to the gods and observed Maat.
Accounting and Order
These connections between accounting, time and space on the one hand, and the role of
accounting rituals in constructing and underpinning economic restitution and reciprocity
on the other hand provide a platform on which to make a number of fundamental
statements linking accounting to order in the world of the ancient Egyptians, with both its
sacred and profane dimensions. Before the role of accounting in shaping and securing
ancient Egyptian conceptions of order are explored, it is worth noting the technical and
linguistic attributes that accounting had at its disposal from its earliest genesis in ancient
Egypt. First, it made use of a numbering system to enumerate objects and endow them
with values (monies of account). This numbering system is highly structured and rule
bound. As Porter (1995, p. xi) has noted, numbers and systems of quantification can be
very powerful in supplanting human judgement by quantitative rules which instil a sense
of impersonal order. Secondly, accounting had a linguistic, technical and fairly specific
vocabulary that developed entirely for its own use; terms such as revenue, expenditure,
receipts, remainders, sub-totals, totals, etc. Thirdly, when inscribed in accounts and
journals numbers and values were contextualised in specific times and spaces, so that
43
they had the ability to function as ancient temporal and spatial ordering devices (in terms
of days, weeks, months, or years, but not hours as in contemporary industrial societies).
Fourthly, accounting had a means of combining numerical and linguistic signs and
organising them into formats such as the grid structure, or the duality of debits and
credits, or equity and balance, with their visibility being further facilitated through the
use different ink colours (see Ezzamel, 2002e).
Given the above, accounting can be viewed as a set of inscribed, calculative practices
conceived by the ancient Egyptians as an essential tool for preserving the cosmic order of
the world. In this context, accounting would be part and parcel of the divine/sacred
world, a mechanism that is the operational counterpart of Maat, the pristine condition of
the universe and the very essence of truth, justice and order. For the world of the ancient
Egyptians, as we have seen, rested on a precarious notion of equilibrium, an equilibrium
if disturbed would give rise to the forces of chaos, disorder and the nonexistent, bringing
catastrophic consequences to the Egyptian world. As a set of ritualised practices,
accounting functioned not simply as an instrument of power, but as power in itself,
helping construct and legitimise cosmic and social order. Accounting rituals helped place
each component of the ancient Egyptian realms in a particular location and in a position
of relation to the other components. Accounting rituals regulated and formulated these
relationships so that the position of the parts was clear whilst maintaining integration of
the whole. Emphasising either duality (such as debits and credits; receipts and payments)
or organisation (such as the grid structure of temple income accounts, or the temporally-
ordered sntries) through the combining of numerical and linguistic signs helped to create
a sense of visibility, transparency and order in the accounts. Such order could be easily
taken to drive chaos out of existence, and instil an ethic of coherence and balance that
mirrors the image of cosmic and worldly order aspired to by the ancient Egyptians.
If accounting can be premised to be part of a primordial world, at the very genesis of
ancient Egyptian history, as implied by its roles in restitution in the myths of Osiris and
Horus, and in the symbolic roles of the god Thoth, then its role can be readily extended to
that of underpinning the relationship between the gods and Pharaohs. The ruling Pharaoh,
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as god on earth and representative of the creator god Atum/Re could through inscribed
accounting entries demonstrate, not only to the few literate mortals of his subjects but
more importantly to fellow future Pharaohs and to the gods, and to a wider audience
through pictorial scenes, that he is a great Pharaoh who observes Maat in his relationship
with the gods. Such greatness was underpinned by the inscribing of the large, quantities,
and also importantly the high values of the precious goods the Pharaoh offered to the
gods. For as god himself, he is able to show, via accounting, how he upholds and
observes Maat in his dealings with the gods. The offerings were a way of thanking the
gods for what they have bestowed on the world of the Egyptians, by creating and
protecting Egypt in the first instance, by providing for its people, and by securing the
harmony of their world. The offerings were therefore the means by which the cycle of
reciprocity was squared, something in return for what the gods have given and continue
to give.
While no precise numerical equivalence has been established in such ‘exchange’, so that
we are not witnessing a precise ‘measure for measure’ reciprocity, the point remains that
the more the Pharaoh gives, the more satisfied the gods are assumed to be. The
enumeration by quantity and valuation via monies of accounting makes it possible for the
values and plenitude of the goods offered to be visualised. In the case of those few of his
literate subjects who could decipher the accounting entries enumerating the gifts, the
Pharaoh demonstrated that he led by example, showing just how important the observing
of restitution is for preserving the order of the world. In all these scenarios, accounting
inscriptions provide a permanent and indelible record for all to see, gods and humans
alike. Related to this is the role of accounting and the dead, or accounting for the
underworld. Accounting practices, it has been argued elsewhere, forged strong
relationships between the dead and the temple priests (in the form of inscribed wills as
contracts to be effected after the principle had died) and provided a link between the
living and the dead (Ezzamel, 2003). Hence, orderly relations between the dead, the
living, and the gods (the three realms) can be seen to be underpinned via the intervention
of accounting. Playing on this possible link between accounting, cosmic order and
religion, Gambling (1977, p. 147) notes “Since the accountants are also the priests who
45
conduct the ceremonies [of drawing formal accounts], the extraordinary compound of
fear and reverence which surrounds them is readily understood.”
These accounting roles should not be seen as a form of unwanted, profane intervention in
what is otherwise a sacred and divine domain of activities. In this context, accounting in
itself is part of the divine and sacred. This role, however, can be complemented by the
secular, more familiar roles of accounting ‘of this world’, or what we have referred to in
the case of ancient Egypt as ‘society’ as contrasted with the ‘cosmos’ (Assmann, 2001, p.
175). For the Egyptians, society also rested on the observing of important values, again
captured by the term Maat, but on earth meaning morality and equality (justice, fairness,
order) for all humanity. In the realm of society, accounting played several important
roles. It provided the basis on which a form of order within state institutions could be
observed; this involved setting performance targets, organising work, reporting,
monitoring and controlling activities, and regulating private exchange of goods in semi-
barter transactions. In this context, accounting practices operated as ancient time-space
monitoring devices, and facilitated control at a distance (Ezzamel, 2002c; 2002d).
Further, accounting ensured the functioning of the centralised state through accounting
for taxation, in a full cycle that entailed assessment of taxable capacity, measuring actual
crops, levying tax liability, collecting taxes, and transporting taxes to state stores. These
accumulated state resources were later issued in the form of re-distributions to the
population as wages in kind or provisions (Ezzamel, 2002a; 2002b). Both these sets of
activities entailed some notion (no matter how basic it may seem to us today) of
reciprocity or restitution between subjects as tax payers to the state and scribes as
officials working on behalf of the state in the first instance, and the state as a provider for
its citizens in the second instance.
What import, if any, do these observations have for the debate on the nature and
theorising of accounting in contemporary contexts? Perhaps once the ramifications of
accounting explored in this paper have been fully appreciated and developed further, we
may become more receptive to suggestions made by contemporary writers that would
otherwise pass for, or dismissed as, mere assertions. For example, Cleverley’s (1973)
46
suggestion that accounting and budgeting systems function as a form of religious
ceremony – a rain dance, can begin to be taken seriously, and its full implications
explored much further. Similarly, the parallels drawn by Gambling (1977) between
accounting practices and witchcraft can begin to be subjected to greater scrutiny. No
longer should such arguments be made behind an ‘apologetic’ mask. A much more
expansive approach could be fruitfully adopted to explore the functioning of accounting
in these contexts than has hitherto been possible.
For example, the rationalisation offered by Gambling (1977) for the role of accounting in
terms of rendering possible the accommodation of ‘awkward facts’ or simply dealing
with uncertainty is too restrictive to admit to the analysis the much richer, more complex,
and more contingent roles of accounting explored in this paper. Similarly, the possible
link between accounting and the supernatural, or cosmic, need not be dismissed out of
hand, at least in certain cultural contexts. When Gambling (1977, p. 150) observes “As it
stands, accounting is not a matter of the supernatural, but seems to have something of
political activity about it, all be it with a small p!” this may be of relevance only to
contemporary Western society. What this paper has shown is that, at least in the context
of ancient Egyptian culture, a symbiotic relationship between the cosmic/supernatural
and accounting was forged, with far reaching implications for those living in that society.
Further, just because linkages between accounting and the supernatural could be forged,
this should not be taken to imply that as a discipline, accounting is not susceptible to
systematic and scholarly enquiry. Again, to quote Gambling (1985, p. 421): “we do have
an underdeveloped science here, which is underdeveloped because it is almost impossible
to research it! This ought not to surprise anyone, because it must be a very odd sort of
science, which deals with social reactions to the uncertainties of the universe.” Contra
Gambling, my contention is that, it is precisely because of these remarkable possibilities
that new and very exiting research agendas in accounting are beginning to open up.
47
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52
Table 1*
Offering List: 5th Standard Feast of Osiris – 6th Day
Heading 109. [4th Akhet, x]: 6th day of the feast of Osiris; offerings for Osiris and his Conclave on the feast of this day.
List 110 [bit bread BR30] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 15 Making ½ oipe 111 [bit bread BR40] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 15 Making ¼ + 1/8 oipe 112 [bit bread BR60] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 15 Making ¼ oipe 113 [bit bread BR100] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 25 Making ¼ oipe 114 [psn bread BR5] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 5 Making 1 oipe 115 [psn bread BR10] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 20 Making 2 oipe 116 [good notched psn bread BR10] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 5 Making ½ oipe 117 [psn ssrt bread BR20] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 40 Making 2 oipe 118 [psn … bread BR10] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 5 Making ½ oipe 119 [….. bread BR20] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 5 Making ¼ oipe 120 [white bread BR20] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 5 Making ¼ oipe 121 [bit cakes BR10] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 5 Making ½ oipe 122 [white fruit bread BR80] Ratio per heqat, 1 Loaves 10 Making 1/8 oipe 123 [beer BR20] Ratio per heqat, 1 Jugs 30 Making 1+1/2 oipe Summation
124 [Total, assorted loaves] for the sacred offerings, 165 bit cakets, 5; beer, jugs, 30; making grain, 3 oipe related to (?) 7 oipe.
125 [Total? ordinary fowl 5 Wine, jars 1 Incense, baskets 5 126 [Total? ….] , baskets 2 Fresh flowers, bouquets 5 Fresh flowers, baskets 5 * Source: K. Kitchen, Ramesside Inscriptions, Volume II, Oxford: Balckewell, 1996, pp. 336-337.
53
Table 2*
Income of the Temples of Amun
Pl. 12a
Things exacted, the impost of all people and serf-labourers of “The House (h t)-of-King-Usermare-Meriamon,-L.-P.-H.,-in-the-House-of-Amon” (Medinet Habu temple), in the South and North under charge of the officials; the “House (pr)-of-Usermare-Meriamon-L.-P.-H,-in-the-House-of-Amon” (small Karnak temple), in the (residence) city; the “House (pr)-of-Ramses-Ruler-of-Heliopolis,-L.-P.H.,-in-the-House-of-Amon” (Luxor temple); the “House (h t)-of-Ramses-Ruler-of-Heliopolis,-L.-P.-H.,-Possessed-of-Joy-in-the-House-of-Amon-of-Opet” (southern Karnak temple); the “House-of-Ramses-Ruler-of-Helipolis,-L.-P.-H.,-in-the-House-of-Khonsu” (Konsu-temple); the five herds made for this house, which King Usermare-Meriamon, L. P.H., the Great God, gave to their treasuries, storehouses and granaries as their yearly dues: Fine gold 217 deben 5 kidet Gold of the mountain, of Coptos 61 deben 3 kidet Gold of Kush 290 deben 8½ kidet Total, fine gold, and gold of the mountain 569 deben 6½ kidet Silver 10,964 deben 9 kidet Total, gold and silver 11,546 deben 8 kidet Copper 26,320 deben Royal linen, mek-linen, fine southern linen, colored southern linen, various garments
3,722
Yarn, deben 3,795 Incense, honey, oil, various jars (‘cc) 1,047
Pl. 12b Shedeh and wine, various jars(‘cc) 25,405 Silver, being things of the impost of the people (rm-t) given for the divine offerings
3,606
deben
I
kidet
Barley [-], of the impost of the peasants (yhwty), 16-fold heket
309,950
Vegetables, bundles 24,650 Flax bales 64,000 Bulls, bullocks of the bulls, heifers, calves, cows, cattle of[-] cattle of [-] of the herds of Egypt
847
Bulls, bullocks of the nege-bulls, heifers, calves, cows, being impost of the lands of Syria (H’-rw)
19
Total
866
Live geese of the exactions
744
Cedar: tow-boats and ferry boats 11 Acacia: tow-boats ‘canal’-boats, boats for transportation of cattle, warships, and kara-boats
71
Total, cedar and accacia: boats 82 Products of the Oasis in many lists for the divine offerings * Source: J.H. Breasted, Ancient Records of Egypt, Part Four, London: Histories and Mysteries of Man Ltd., 1906/1988, pp. 127-128.
54
Table 3*
The Pharaoh’s Gifts to Amun
Pl. 13a
Gold, silver, real lapis lazuli, real malachite, every real costly stone, copper, garments, jars, fowl, all the things which King Usermare-Meriamon, L.P.H., the Great God, gave as gifts of the King L.P.H., in order to provision the house of his august fathers (sic!), amon-Re, King of gods, Mut and Khonsu, from the year 1 to the year 31, making 31 years. Fine Ketem-gold; 42 ‘-‘ (dmd-t), making 21 deben Fine gold in ‘raised work’ 22 finger rings, making 3 “ 3 Kidet Fine gold in inlay; 9 finger rings, making 1 “ 3½ Kidet Fine gold in ‘raised work’ and inlay of every real, costly stone, a ‘ring’ of the column of Amon, making
22
“
5
“
Fine gold in hammered work; a tablet, making 9 “ 5½ “ Total, fine gold in ornaments 57 “ 5 “ Gold of two times, in ‘raised work’, and in inlay; 42 finger rings, making,
4
“
5½
“
Gold of two times; 2 vases 30 “ 5 “ Total, gold of two times 35 “ ½ “ White gold: 310 finger rings, making 16 “ 3½ “
Pl. 13b White gold, 264 beads, making 48 “ 4 “ White gold in beaten work: 108 finger rings for the god, making
19
“
8
“
White gold: 155 amulet cords, making 6 “ 2 “ Total, white gold
90
“
7½
“
Total, fine gold of two times and white gold
183
“
5
“
Silver: a vase (with) the rim of gold, in ‘raised work’, making
112
“
5
“
Silver: a seive for the vase, making 12 “ 5 “ Silver: a sifting-vessel for the vase, making 27 “ 7 “ Silver: 4 vases, making 57 “ 4½ “ Silver: 31 large panniers with lids, making 105 “ 4 “ Silver: 31 Caskets with lids, making 74 “ 4 “ Silver: 6 measuring-vases (crk), making 30 “ 3 “ Silver: in hammered work, a tablet (cwl), making 19 “ 3½ “ Silver in hammered work, 2 tablets (cnw), making 287 “ ½ “ Silver in scraps 100 “ Total, silver in vessels and scraps
827
“
Pl. 14a
Total gold and silver in vessels and scraps 1,010 “ 61/4 “ Real lapis lazuli: 2 blocks, making 14 “ ½ “ Bronze,c in hammered work: 4 tablets (cnw), making 822 “ Myrrh: deben 51,140 Myrrh: heket 3 Myrrh: hin 20 Myrrh wood: logs 15 Myrrh fruit in measures (ypt) 100
55
Royal linen: garments (dw) 37 “ “ upper garments (dw) 94 “ “ hamen-garments (dw) 55 “ “ mantles 11 “ “ wrapping of Horus 2 “ “ __d garments 1 “ “ garments (ydg’) 690 “ “ tunics 489 “ “ garments for the august ‘statue’ of Amon 4
PL 14b Total, royal linen, various garments 1,383 Mek-linen: a robe 1 Mek-linen, a mantle 1 “ “ in a ‘cover’: a garment for the august ‘statue of Amon
1
Total, mek-linen: various garments
3
Fine southern linen: garments (dw) 2 “ “ “ __ garments 4 “ “ “ upper garments (dw) 5 “ “ “ garments (ydg’) 31 “ “ “ tunics 29 “ “ “ kilts 4 Total, fine southern linen, various garments
75
Colored linen: mantles
876
“ “ tunics 6,779 Total, colored linen, various garments
7,125
Total, royal linen, mek-linen, fine southern linen, southern linen, coloured linen, various garments
8,586
Pl. 15a
White incense: (mn) jars 2,159 White incense (mn) jarsd 12 Honey: (mn) jars 1,065 Oil of Egypt: (mn) jars 2,743 Oil of Syria (H’-rw): (m-s’-hy) jars 53 Oil of Syria (H’-rw): (mn) jars 1,757 White fat: (mn) jars 911 Goose fat: (mn) jars 385 Butter: (mn) jars 20 Total, filled jars
9,125
Shedeh: colored (mn) jars
1,377
Shedeh: (k’bw) jars 1,111 Wine: (mn) jars 20,078 Total, shedeh and wine jars (mn I k’bw)
22,556
Hirset (hrst) stone: sacred eye amulets
185
Lapis lazuli: scared eye amulets 217
56
Pl. 15b Red jasper: scarabs 62 Malachite scarabs 224 Bronze and Minu (mynw) stone: scarabs 224 Lapis lazuli: scarabs 62 Various costly stones: sacred eye amulets 165 Various costly stones: seals as pendants 62 Rock crystal: seals 1,550 Rock crystal: beads 155,000 Rock crystal cut: hin-jars 155 Wrought wood: seals 31 Alabaster: a block 1 Cedar bp’-ny-ny 6 Cedar tpt 1 Neybu (N’y-bw) wood: 3 logs, making (deben) 610 Cassia wood: 1 log, making (deben) 800 Reeds: bundles 17
Pl.16a Cinnamon: measures (msty) 246 Cinnamon: bundles 82 Grapes: measures (msty) 52 Rosemary (nkp’ty): measures (msty) 125 Yufiti (Yw-fy-ty) –plant: measures (msty) 101 Dom-palm fruit of Mehay (M-h’-yw): measures (msty) 26 Fruit: heket 46 Grapes: crates 1,809 Grapes: bunches 1,869 Pomegranates: crates 375 B’-k’-y’ plant, in measures (yp’t) 1,668 Various cattle 297 Live geese 2,940 Live turpu (Tw-r-pw) geese 5,200 Live water-fowl 126,300
Pl. 16b Fat geese from the flocks 20 Natron: bricks 44,000 Salt: bricks 44,000 Palm-fiber: ropes 180 Palm-fiber: loads 50 Palm-fiber: ‘-‘ 77 Palm-fiber: cords 2 Sebkhet (sbh’t) plants 60 Flax (ps’t) bekhen (bhn) 1,150 Ideninu (Ydnynyw) 60 Hezet (hd’t) plant: measures (msty) 50 Pure ‘-‘, deben 750 * Source: J.H. Breasted, Ancient Records of Egypt, Part Four, London: Histroies and Mysteries of Man Ltd., 1906/1988, pp. 128-133.
57
Table 4*
Offerings Founded by Ramses III
“Books of the Nile-god,” which King Usermare-Meriamon L.P.H., the Great God, founded 48 years, making 31 years; Books of the Nile-God”, making: Fine bread of the divine offerings: various loaves (by’t) 470,000 Fine bread of the divine offerings: person (pr-sn) loaves, white loaves, and seshu (ssw) loaves
879,224
Cakes: various measures (yp t) 106,910 Kunek (kwnk) bread: loaves (wdnw-nt) 46,568 Beer: various jars 49,432 Making Clean grain: 16 fold heket 61,172½ Bulls 291 Bullocks of the bulls 291
Pl. 38a
Calves 51 Cows 2,564 Total 2,923
• Source: J.H. Breasted, Ancient Records of Egypt, Part Four, London: Histories and Mysteries of Man Ltd., 1906/1988, p. 157.
58
Figure (1)* Types of Lists in Papyrus Harris I
(*) Source: translated from P. Grandet, Le Papyrus Harris I, Vol. I, (1994), p. 64.
General Offerings (Supply) LIST C
Goods consumption LISTS B-F
Average production LIST A
Allocation for unexpected circumstances LISTS C-F
Regular Annual Allocations LIST B
Specific offerings (Cult) LISTS D-F
Grain LIST D
Other goods LISTS D-F
Goods offerings made by Ramesses IIIto institutions created by him LISTS OF PAPYRUS HARRIS I
59
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