The lifestyles of the rich and famous Egyptians
February 1st, 2010 - 3:28 pm ICT by ANILondon, Feb 1 (ANI): A new study reported in The Independent has suggested that the rich and famous people of ancient Egypt lived a decadent lifestyle with fine wine, sex, high fashion, and plenty of partying.
In ancient Egypt, the pharaoh was at the top of the ‘pyramid’ and his family, noble people who owned land, and the priests came after.
Scribes, architects and doctors were well off, and skilled craftsmen also had many privileges.
Peasants and unskilled workers were low down the scale of Egyptian society, but it was the servants and slaves that skirted the bottom of the class pyramid.
Men in the armed forces, army and navy were not afforded a high social status, and neither were entertainers.
As for the eating habits of the ancient Egyptians, arteriosclerosis (high cholesterol) found in ancient Egyptian mummies indicates that they loved to eat and drink well.
Different kinds of meat were available for the elite, like, beef, veal, antelope and gazelle meat.
Similarly to today perhaps, wine was the booze of choice for high society individuals.
Fine wines were labelled with the date, vineyard and variety as the tax assessors requested, such as the ones found in Tutankhamun’s tomb.
The houses built for the rich and powerful were obviously different from the ones built for labourers and farmers.
The two main differences were materials and space.
Furniture made of ‘good’ wood was only found in the homes of the rich, as were rugs from Persia, ebony and ivory pieces from African kingdoms, golden vases, jewellery and sculptures from Nubia, various precious stones and gold ornaments.
As for fashion, it literally thrived in ancient Egypt, with the rich people employing the use of wigs, made with sheep or real human hair.
These wigs were worn at parties and in domestic environments as well as at festival and important cults, along with jewellery and headdresses to complete the party look.
Talking about clothing, it seems from archaeological findings that everyone wore tunics. Men wore them down to their knees and women down to their ankles.
When you talk about parties, dinner parties, or banquets, were frequent in rich houses in ancient Egypt, with dancing, drinking and maybe sex included - just as today.
The love and sex lives of the Egyptians were as complicated as they are today.
Turin’s famous Erotic Papyrus assures us that the Egyptians were sexually adventurous, with a penchant for naked belly-dancing, and collections of love poetry from the Amarna era reveal that they were also big romantics. (ANI)
- Cats inspired Egypt's Pharaonic fashion rage - May 30, 2011
- How Egyptians erected their giant pyramids - Sep 26, 2010
- Egyptian secrets of sun worship revealed in new discovery - Nov 08, 2010
- Krishna heads to Egypt, Syria on agenda - Mar 02, 2012
- Celina Jaitley launches the new logo of Egypt - Feb 08, 2010
- Burials of 400 'poor' people unearthed near Giza - Nov 27, 2010
- Cancer was rare, but it did occur in Ancient Egypt: Scientist - Nov 21, 2010
- Pyramid builders were labourers, not slaves, reveal newly found Egyptian tombs - Jan 11, 2010
- Egypt voted best destination by travel writers - Aug 19, 2010
- Cairo calling: Krishna to head to post-revolution Egypt - Feb 27, 2012
- Germany rejects Egypt's request to return Queen Nefertiti bust - Jan 25, 2011
- Egyptian mummies who lived 3,500yrs ago 'had clogged arteries' - Apr 05, 2011
- Reminiscences of Egypt - Jun 16, 2009
- Egypt's oldest wines were spiked with meds - Apr 14, 2009
- Massive statue of Egyptian pharaoh Taharqa found deep inside Sudan - Jan 01, 2010
Tags: african kingdoms, ancient egyptian mummies, ancient egyptians, army and navy, domestic environments, ebony and ivory, egyptian society, famous egyptians, fine wine, fine wines, gold ornaments, headdresses, high cholesterol, ivory pieces, lifestyles of the rich and famous, london feb, people of ancient egypt, skilled craftsmen, space furniture, tax assessors