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Author Topic: Tobacco, Cocaine, Drugs in Ancient Egypt
Wally
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The problem started in Munich. A forensic
pathologist specialising in toxins had been asked
to carry out what should have been a series of
routine tests on a number of whole and part
mummies to determine what drugs had been used by
the Egyptians and how widespread such use may

have been. It has long been known that the
Egyptians had and used a number of narcotics and
hallucinogens including mandrake, belladonna and
henbane - and lotus, one of the main icons of
Egyptian art and religion, was also known to
various ancient cultures as a powerful narcotic
and hallucinogen. Anyone familiar with Egyptian
art will be aware of just how important the lotus
was as an image, whether as the columns
supporting temples or in paintings and sculpture.
The flowers, for instance, were often shown in
art as being dipped into cups of drink.


What came as a bombshell, therefore, was the
apparent discovery of both cocaine and tobacco in
the mummy of a XXIst Dynasty priestess, as well
as a number of other bodies and body parts.
Disbelieving this incredible result, the
pathologist re-ran her tests only to obtain the
same results; she then sent samples from the
bodies to other laboratories expecting negative
results in which case she could have explained
her original results as being due to
contamination of the samples tested by her. To
her amazement, the results came back the same.
She then published her findings, only to come up
against the archaeological establishment; the
results were fraudulent; the results were the
caused by gross negligence due to the
contamination of the mummies and/or the samples;
anyway, the results were impossible. The
accusations of contamination were based on the
suggestion that earlier generations of
Egyptologists had been heavier smokers than those
of today and had been more careless in handling
the mummies. Stung by these accusations, the
pathologist then took further samples taken from
deep inside the mummies and had these analyzed as
well - still with the same result.

As a forensic pathologist with experience of
undertaking police work, she was experienced in
using what is known as the Hair Shaft Test, which
is regarded in courts of law the world over as
providing incontrovertible proof that a substance
found on or in a body was ingested during life
and could not be a post mortem contaminant. The
principle is that when someone consumes a
substance, it leaves traces in body tissue.
Although such traces may be very quickly
metabolised from soft tissue, eg the muscles, and
vanish from soft tissue within hours or days,
they will remain in the hair until the hair is
physically cut off. Traces may therefore remain
on the body, ie within the hair tissue, for many
months or even years after consumption. The Hair
Shaft Test is therefore used by police to detect
cases in which poisons have been administered
over a long period of time or by drugs testers on
athletes and people being treated for drug abuse
to determine precisely what drugs have been
taken, in what quantities and when.


For the test, the hair sample is thoroughly
washed to remove any surface contaminants. It is
then retested; if the hair still tests positive
this proves (to the satisfaction of courts of law
the world over) that the drugs are contained
within the hair tissue; they must therefore have
been ingested over a period of time and could not
be the result of later surface contamination by
careless researchers.


The pathologist was also able to show that the
tobacco concentrations found in some of the
mummies were up to 32 times those found in modern
smokers; such doses represented possibly lethal
levels for a living person so it is not
considered likely that they were ingested during
life. However, the presence of such massive
quantities of tobacco deep inside the bodies has
been interpreted as evidence of mummification
practices.


Deeply skeptical about the results, Dr David of
Manchester Museum ran similar tests on a number
of mummies in the Manchester collection. To her
utter amazement these also produced positive
results and showed that the Munich findings were
not isolated. In the past couple of years,
similar tests have been carried out on on bodies
in from places as far apart as China, the middle
east, Germany and Austria and ranging in date
from around the same date as the mummies in
question through to the European Middle Ages. The
presence of tobacco (if not cocaine) was found in
all these areas. Nor was it found in isolates
specimens, for some areas traces were found in
every body tested.


The German pathologist originally suggested that
an unknown species of tobacco had once grown in
Africa and Eurasia and had been used in various
ways until it was driven to extinction by
overuse. However, no evidence of an unknown
species of tobacco has ever been found in Africa
or Europe (unless Rameses II's bandages were
shown to be made of tobacco fibre from an unknown
specie - see below) - and besides that could not
account anyway for the presence of cocaine in the
mummies.


One theory which has emerged is that tobacco may
have been one of the herbs used in mummification.
Although it is known that embalmers and priests
kept recipes for blends of herbs and spices which
were used during the mummification process to
cleanse, purify or otherwise preserve the bodies,
such recipes were always kept as a ritual or
professional secret. Consequently our knowledge
of what was used for this process has almost
entirely come from autopsies on mummies rather
than from manuscripts or temple records, and to
some extent we are still unsure as to what herbs
and plants were used.


Ironically, some valuable evidence for the
presence of tobacco had emerged over 20 years ago
during tests and preservation work carried out on
the mummy of Ramesses II who was taken to Paris
in 1970s; as the body was found to have
deteriorated alarmingly and was in need of
rewrapping, part of the original bandages were
removed and a researcher was given fragments for
analysis. She discovered that they contained
considerable quantities of fibre from the tobacco
plant - results which were promptly "lost" and
disregarded for almost 20 years because they were
regarded at the time as "impossible".


The significance of the cocaine and tobacco
discovery in Egypt (if it is eventually upheld
and accepted by the archaeological establishment)
is that it effectively blows apart current
archaeological theories about the nature and
scale of world trade in the ancient world. Bear
in mind that, barely 40 years ago, the idea that
the Vikings could have crossed the Atlantic to
the Americas was considered utterly ludicrous.
Here is a suggestion, however, that world trade
was being carried on on a regular and organised
basis some 2,000 years earlier. Impossible!


The somewhat conservative archaeological
establishment is therefore having to wrestle with
the idea that international trade on a world
scale was regularly being undertaken from at
least as early as 1,000 bce. What is NOT being
suggested by anyone, however, is that the
Egyptians were trading directly across the
Atlantic with the Americas - with or without the
benefit of warehousing facilities on Atlantis!
Rather, it is suggested that trade was being
conducted across the Pacific, probably by the
Chinese, and that products from the Americas were
being traded westwards through south Asia and the
Middle East, eventually reaching Egypt. This
theory has received independent support from a
recent discovery of strands of silk amongst the
hair of another mummy from around the time of the
XXIst Dynasty, ie contemporary with our "junkie"
priestess. It is most likely that this silk came
via trade routes which ultimately linking Egypt
with China. Clearly, products traded that far
would have been luxuries and their use would have
been restricted to either the rich and powerful
or to those who had a religious or ritual use for
them - eg the priesthood, members of the court
and for the mummification of their bodies.


Leaving aside the trans-pacific trade theory, the
other possible explanations for the positive test
results are downright fraud or deliberate hoax
(which would involve both the German pathologist
and Dr David of Manchester and which is NOT being
suggested); carelessness in conducting the tests
(unlikely but not impossible by a forensic
pathologist with experience of working with the
police); contamination of some sort yet to be
clarified; or that both tobacco and cocaine in
some form had once grown in the Old World, or
that some other plants with similar chemical
constituents had once done so. The archaeological
world currently seems to be favouring the last
two possible explanations, ie contamination or an
Old World source of some kind. However, the
establishment is desperate not be seen to fall
for something which turns out to be a hoax or
fraud (memories of Piltdown still raise a
shudder), nor are those individuals who have
built their careers and reputations by arguing
certain points of view happy at the thought of it
all being swept away by a couple of bloody women.

Pure speculation ....

Another idea which I find intriguing (but which I
have not seen discussed elsewhere yet) relates
the later years of Rameses II. X-rays of his
skull show that he, like many other Egyptians of
the New Kingdom, suffered from appalling dental
problems. These were mainly due to the presence
of grains of sand in bread and other foods which
wore the teeth down almost to the gums and
allowed serious infections to develop in the
teeth and jaw. Rameses, poor old bugger, suffered
from a number of dental abcesses, the infection
from which had effectively hollowed out whole
sections of his lower jaw by the time he died. It
has usually been agreed that his later years must
have been filled with constant pain and therefore
pretty miserable. But were they?


If, as now seems at least possible, cocaine was
available in Egypt by about 1,000bce, is it
impossible that it was already available during
the XIXth Dynasty, a couple of centuries earlier?
The Andean Indians have chewed coca leaves for
centuries to relieve hunger pains, and cocaine
derivatives are still among the commonest dental
anaesthetics used today. Could the Egyptians have
used cocaine, for example by chewing coca leaves,
precisely to relieve dental pain, even if they
did not have the ability to treat the underlying
infection? Could Rameses' last years have been
spent in greater comfort than has hitherto seemed
possible, eased by the availability of
painkillers which we have arrogantly assumed he
could have have used? I'd love to know the answer!


I'd also like to bet that this discovery, if
upheld , will eventually revolutionise not only
our knowledge of international trade in the
ancient world, but also our knowledge of its
medical capabilities - especially in relation to
complex surgery and anaesthesia.

Posts: 3344 | From: Berkeley | Registered: Oct 2003  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Djehuti
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^ Many think the 'Lotus Eaters' met by Odysseus in North Africa consumed a species of lotus related to that found in the Nile. But the coccaine thing is very surprising indeed! This means only one thing AFRICA was in contact with the Americas. And not Egypt directly since Egypt was located in the northeast corner of the African continent. One needs to take a much closer look at West Africa.
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Nebsen
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It's been a while since I posted on E.S. it's good to be back !

A friend some years ago gave me a book that I never really read but only thumbed through tiled, "The Egyptian & Inca Gold Traders" by Donovan B. Grable

Mr. Donovan theory is that their was trade between the Egyptians & South America due too ancient & enigmatic pictographs on a cliff at Pena de Faical.

I will have to now really read this book, due too that this thread by Wally, has pecked my interest!

Posts: 135 | From: Bay Area | Registered: Jun 2007  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
Whatbox
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quote:
Originally posted by Djehuti:
This means only one thing AFRICA was in contact with the Americas. And not Egypt directly since Egypt was located in the northeast corner of the African continent. One needs to take a much closer look at West Africa.

While the existance of watercraft in West Africa throughout the ages since prehistoric times is documented in textual, pictoral, and physical evidence (Dafuna Canoe), the only thing out there [i'm aware of] we have for West African seafaring expeditions and vessels are records from around the timeframe of the medieval/early modern era.

We have to remember though the Kemetians ("ancient Egyptians") did weather the seas even in their Papyrus boats which have been proven to sea-sail smoothly (once good distance out from the rocky and turbulant shores) and reach the Americas not to mention their vassals the Phoenicians the ancient Champions of the Seas with whom the Kemetians were very much involved and which had a supply of wood withwhich to build better sea-faring vessels.

The thing about WestAfrican sea fairing is it has been hypothesized that direct West Africa Americas expedtions may/would have been thrown way off course because of the Atlantic Ocean's jet stream possibly explaining why many an expidition's ships never returned. Or possibly native America tales of wars with neighboring "dark" and "black" men, or, perhaps the European tales of what appear to have been (an) Islamic mosque(s) on some island explain why a lot of ithink Malian attempts returned nothing. I'm aware of the trade aquirement of the compass via the Chinese being instrumental in the European Age of Exploration and of China's gigantic vessels and historically documented sea and even trade contact with various areas in Africa and the Americas (btw, i'm curious Djehuti, did their vessels implement gun powder which they'd discovered even before their aquired gunpowder directions from Arabs?). I wonder however if any Africans ever had a compass or compass like "device" of some sort.

Posts: 5555 | From: Tha 5th Dimension. | Registered: Apr 2006  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

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