
Dogs in Ancient Egyptian times=
If the dog is not, as the proverb c=
laims,
man's best friend, he is at least one of our oldest. Man and dog have been
partners in hunting and friends around the campfire for untold thousands of
years.
In prehistoric Egypt,
long before the rise of the first Dynasty, humans and dogs lived and hunted
together in the Nile
Valley. In June 200=
0,
cave drawings were discovered near the Ain Sokhna Road, about 25 miles (40.2 km) south-east of C=
airo,
by George Cunningham, an American helicopter pilot working in Cairo, who was
indulging in his hobby of searching for fossilised
sea shells. There were several levels of civilisation<=
/span>
in the cave, but the earliest drawings, according to Egyptian scholars from=
the
Supreme Council of Antiquities, date to approximately 7000 BCE; they clearly
show men and women, armed with bows, hunting alongside domesticated dogs. T=
his
is not the only instance of such prehistoric representations of human-dog
hunting scenes being found in the Nile
Valley. One might t=
hink
that cats were the most venerated of animals in Egypt. While this may be true=
for
religious, (Bast worship) and practical (pest
elimination) reasons, the dog may have beaten the cat as the most beloved of
family pets, if only because the dog is closer to man in temperament, needs=
and
goals. Rare is the cat that will comfort his master at the end of hard work=
day,
but it seems to be the norm for most dogs.
The vast number of dog mummies and =
dog
cemeteries, especially in the vicinity of the city named Hardai
(called Cynopolis or "Dog City"
by the Greeks), stand as a silent testament to the bond of affection between
dogs and their Egyptian masters. Many masters had the mummies of their cani=
ne
companions placed in their own tombs, so the bond between them would contin=
ue
beyond death. Cynopolis and other cities where =
dogs
were lovingly interred were considered sacred to Anubi=
s.
The jackal-headed god who, like the dogs who venerated him, was a friend of
mankind; in other cultures as varied as the Greeks, Celts and Japanese, dogs
also provided an Anubis-like function, serving =
as
guides or companions to the dead. Unlike other animals, dogs were given nam=
es,
just like any other member of the family. Some of the names given to Egypti=
an
dogs were human names, just as we give them to our own dogs today. A common
component of dogs' names was the word "abu=
,"
which could have been the Egyptian equivalent of our "bow-wow." <=
o:p>
In addition to serving as family pe=
ts,
dogs were also hunters and, at times, war dogs. Some scholars believe it was
the Hyksos (the mysterious invaders of Egypt w=
ho ruled
from Avaris in the Delta) who popularised
the use of spike-collared dogs in war. Along with light and speedy
battle-chariots, both of which were used extensively during the New Kingdom, in particular by the expansionist Phar=
aoh Ramesses II, who all too often cried "havoc and =
let
slip the dogs of war." It is likely, howeve=
r,
earlier dynasties also used war dogs, though perhaps not to the extent seen
later. There is abundant evidence dogs were used as guardians of people and
places -- homes and temples -- and organised wa=
rfare
is a small step removed from sentry duty.
Breeds of Dog<=
/u>
While selective breeding of dogs be=
gan
almost as soon as domestication of the species, obsessive breeding as it is=
practised today is a relatively modern invention, dat=
ing
from not much later than the Middle Ages. Still, the Egyptians recognised certain techniques and were able to breed =
native
African and Middle Eastern dogs with certain distinctive characteristics.
Certain breeds (though, as indicated, the term must be used with caution) w=
ere
more highly valued than others, as is still true among dog fanciers; some w=
ere so
greatly prized that only the nobility of Egypt could own them. Then, j=
ust as
now, however, a dog did not have to be a pure-bred champion to be a beloved
family pet. Indeed, "muts" and
"mongrels" were just as common in ancient Egypt as in the modern =
world,
but infinitely better treated, since even the lowest cur was still a child =
of Anubis. It was illegal to kill a dog in Egypt. =
The Sloughi and the Saluki
are thought by some to be the world's oldest breeds. They are sleek, swift =
dogs
classified as "sight hounds" in modern nomenclature, and might ha=
ve
been used by the ancients to breed the Greyhound into existence. If, as some
people claim, the Sloughi and Saluki originally=
came
from Mesopotamia before the Fifth Millennium BCE, they must have been intro=
duced
to Egypt during a pre-Dynastic period, which might be an indication of the
level of trade existing in the Mediterranean region even at that early time=
.
As its name implies, the sight hound
depends upon its keen vision for its hunting skills, rather than its sense =
of
smell, which would seem appropriate in a desert terrain. They were great
hunters, going after hares, fennecs and gazelles; additionally they protect=
ed
sheep and cattle from hyenas and jackals. Because Slou=
ghis
and Salukis are gentle and affectionate dogs, protective of their homes and
steadfastly loyal to those dwelling within, they made excellent watchdogs a=
nd
pets. The beauty and grace of these ancient breeds have made them favourites throughout Northern Africa, Europe and North America, though at one time they were nearly
extinct.
Probably no dog is more identified =
with
the land of the pharaohs than the Egyptian Greyh=
ound.
While these sleek swift animals are thought by some to have been bred from =
the
older (perhaps) breeds of Sloughi and Saluki, t=
here
is no real way to tell. Greyhounds were kept by the royal families of Egypt; =
so
prized were they that the birth of a Greyhound was heralded with the same
excitement as would attend the birth of a prince. Greyhounds were a favourite subject of tomb-paintings, and appear on wa=
lls
more than any other dog, short of Anubis himsel=
f;
quite often, even Anubis was depicted with Grey=
hound
qualities, particularly that high sleek hip-structure so peculiar to the br=
eed.
It is probably that form which caused the Hebrews to refer to the Greyhound=
as
"girded in the loins," which is how it is referred to in the Bible
(Proverbs 30).
Despite the fa=
vourable
reference to the Greyhound in the Bible, dogs in general were held in low
regard in the lands outside Egypt.
Judeo-Christian writings paint them as vicious scavengers. This holds true =
in
the Islamic faith as well, where dogs are considered unclean animals.
Currently, in such countries as Iraq
and Iran=
,
there is something of a "slaughter of the innocents" going on, wh=
ere
dozens of dogs are murdered daily, rounded up by the government, and illegal
ownership of dogs is secretly practised only by=
the
richer classes. In America
and Europe, thousands of dogs are murdered, not from any religious impulse,=
but
simply for convenience, though matters of "public health" are oft=
en
cited; in the Far East, dogs are on the =
menu,
but let's not go there. The fleet Greyhounds, in partic=
ular,
are ill-treated, killed when they reach the end of their racing care=
ers,
if they are not rescued by charitable organisations,
and turned into dog food. The ancient Egyptians would not understand the
treatment dogs are accorded in the modern world, and neither do our dogs. <=
o:p>
Another dog kept by the Egyptians w=
as the
Basenji, a square-headed, prick-eared bre=
ed
that probably, like the Egyptians themselves, came out of the heart of Africa. It is a very distinctive dog, with short fu=
r that
it keeps clean by grooming (like a cat!), a wrinkled forehead and a curled-=
up
tail; what really separates the Basenji from other dogs, however, is the fa=
ct
that it does not bark -- it "yodels." Although its sound is calle=
d a
yodel, it does not at all sound like some Alpine mountaineer, and the only =
way
to really appreciate the sound is to actually hear it. Like its larger cous=
ins,
the Sloughi, Saluki and Greyhound, the Basenji =
is a
sight hound, able to run and hunt with the best of them.<=
/b>
The Ibizan Hound is often considered one of the most elega=
nt
breeds of dog found in the Mediterranean region, and in their playfulness t=
hey
can leap and twirl like a prima ballerina. Though dogs looking very much li=
ke Ibizan Hounds appear in Egyptian tomb paintings as ea=
rly as
the Second Millennium BCE, the traditional home of the species is Ibiza, an
island off the coast of Spain, south of Mallorca. How
did they get from Egypt to Spain? =
The
culprits were probably the Phoenicians, who were the mercantile masters of =
the Mediterranean Sea till their destruction by the Rom=
ans.
Unfortunately, the affection that the Egyptians surely had for the Ibizan did not follow it to its new home. The Spanish
inhabitants often ate the weaker ones and still consider it as a working and
hunting animal rather than a family pet. In countries outside of Spain,
however, the Ibizan Hound=
span> is
becoming recognised as an affectionate companio=
n. It
is very popular among those with an interest in things Egyptological,
as some people believe it to be the dog which looks most like Anubis
From the ancient land of Malta, hom=
e of
the most mysterious ruins in the world, comes the dog known as the Kelb Tal-Fenek (Maltese f=
or
Dog-Hunt-Rabbit), more commonly known as the Pha=
raoh
Hound. Some purists consider it a "misnamed
" dog, having nothing to do with Egypt at all. The name "=
Pharaonenhund" was applied in the late nineteent=
h or
early twentieth centuries by German dog-fanciers who detected a resemblance
between it and Great Anubis. While it is true t=
here
is no direct evidence connecting this animal with Egypt,
except for a resemblance to tomb paintings and statuettes, the same could be
said for other dogs that now range outside of Egypt. The fact that the Kelb Tal-Fenek now resides
exclusively outside =
Egypt
may be nothing more than an indication of how fluid history and geography t=
ruly
are.
What most people fail to realise about the ancient world is the tremendous amo=
unt of
trade carried on between Egypt
and the other cultures around the Mediterranean.
Although Egyptian merchants conducted trade within Egypt,
trade outside Egypt wa=
s a
different story, at least in Egypt's
early history, before events forced it to become part of the Mediterranean
"community." Extra-national mercantile activity was usually handl=
ed
by middle-men, either logistically by Phoenicians and other mariners, or
through ports-of-trade cities specifically set up by the Egyptians. Usually
these were set up in the Delta, for the purpose of providing a place where
outsiders and Egyptians could conduct commerce, exchanging trade goods while
keeping non-Egyptians out of Egypt
proper. Prior to the end of the Middle Kingdom, Egyptians considered Egypt =
to
be theirs alone, a gift of the gods, and rigorously protected their borders,
even going as far as posting "keep out" signs at the southernmost
boundary. Although the pharaohs were relatively successful, at least early =
on,
in keeping their subjects from being contaminated by the outside world, they
were markedly less successful in containing their culture. Thanks to marine=
rs
and ports-of-trade, Egyptian goods and ideas spread far and wide, at least =
as
far-west as the British Isles and eastward to the far border of India. =
Among
these goods were surely the dogs of Egypt. Wh=
ich is
how a dog like the Pharaoh Hound/Kelb Tal-Fenek could possibly have come to Malta. Although many p=
eople
argue in favour of the Kel=
b
Tal-Fenek as an indigenous species, its status =
as an
island practically mandates that all animals there, dogs and humans alike c=
ame
from somewhere else. Long before the Phoenicians ever started making landfa=
lls there, it was settled by an unknown people. The Maltese
language has ties with North Africa, but=
the
megalithic structures on the island argue for massive European influences, =
if
not origins. Along with Thera, at the other end=
of
the Mediterranean, M=
alta
has been mentioned as the origin of Plato's cautionary Atlantean
myth, evidenced by its ruins and the existence of elephant remains. If dogs
bred from Salukis, Sloughis and Greyhounds were
imported to Malta from Egypt early in the island's history, perhaps as earl=
y as
the Second Millennium BCE, they might have subtly evolved into the Pharaoh
Hound of today, for islands cause rapid changes in living organisms that la=
rge
land messes do not, one of the reasons why both Lyttal=
and Darwin were able to find so much evidence for their (r)evolutionary
theories within the closed bio-systems of islands.
The last breed to look at in connec=
tion
with ancient Egypt is =
the Mastiff, though the dog is now more closely
associated with Britain and France.
Mastiffs were used as war-dogs by the armies of the Caesars, and they were =
also
found within the battle groups of Alexander the Great and his generals. Ima=
ges
of Mastiff-like dogs have been found in Egypt, but only from relative=
ly
late in its history. While it is possible that the Mastiff could have been
introduced to Egypt by Alexander during the Macedonian Conquest, dogs simil=
ar
to Mastiffs were found in Nineveh, dating back to the Seventh Century BCE, =
and
Egypt traded with the civilisations found there=
from
very early times. While an early introduction of the Mastiff into Egypt i=
s uncertain,
it is not impossible.
Though the Egyptians preserved thei=
r dogs
and images of them, we really know very little about the dogs they kept.
Paintings, statues and mummies are illuminating, but they often raise more
questions than they answer. The entire subject of breeds is mostly unexplor=
ed
territory, with ancient images giving only the barest of clues; there were
probably far more kinds of "breeds" (both deliberate and natural)=
in
ancient Egypt
than we will ever know. Dogs like the Ibizan an=
d the Kelb Tal-Fenek exist almo=
st like
living fossils, hinting at an unknown and unknowable history.
Perhaps the only conclusion we can =
say
with any degree of certainty is that the Egyptians loved their dogs, and, in
turn, were loved unconditionally by them. In the eyes of his dog, even the
lowest Egyptian was both best friend and Pharaoh, for, just as dogs never l=
ie,
they never judge. <=
/span>
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age
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icles
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