Sunday 7 August 2022

Scorpion king

This is the so called "Scorpion macehead", a 25 cm long decorated pear shaped limestone macehead found in the Ancient Egyptian temple of Horus at Hierakonpolis. Currently in the Ashmolean Museum

It is attributed to the Pharaoh (King) Scorpion (c. 3200–3000 BC) due to the glyph of a scorpion engraved close to the image of a king wearing the White Crown of Upper Egypt. This is the only known depiction of this Pharaoh (King)...

At least this is what some archaeologists think. The fact is that King Scorpion's name, title and even existence are of great dispute in modern Egyptology...

And here I would like to add some oil to this academic fire: I don't think that the scorpion on this macehead spells the name of the Pharaoh depicted next to it. I think that this is an animal calendar marker...🙂

Ashmolean guys interpretation of the macehead scene: "The King, followed by fan-bearers, wears the White Crown of Upper Egypt and a ceremonial bull's tail...before him, a man holds a basket, and another who carries a broom, wait to collect the earth removed by the king's hoe."


This description does not specify what the king is actually doing. The paper "Early Hydraulic Civilization in Egypt" interprets this scene as "Scorpion King ceremonially cutting an irrigation ditch..."

I don't think that this is Scorpion king or that he is cutting an irrigation ditch. I think that it is some Pharaoh performing the ceremonial "cutting of the first furrow", which marks the beginning of the sowing of grain...

Until the 20th century, agricultural year in Lower Egypt was divided into these three seasons: 

Aug-Nov flood which left a coating of fresh mud over the fields 

Dec-Mar sowing season for the staple crops of barley, emmer wheat and flax for linen

Apr-Jul, harvest season

During the late 4th millennium BC, Egyptians didn't have ploughs. So the furrows were made by hoes, like the one held by the Pharaoh depicted on the macehead, and like this one currently in the British Museum...

And in "A History of Ancient Egypt: From the First Farmers to the Great Pyramid" by John Romer we can read this interesting comment: 

"...Nile farmers tended to sow their muddy meadows in December and January, when the scorpions and snakes were hibernating..." 🙂

In 1912, Walter Tyndale published a beautifully illustrated book "An Artist in Egypt



In it we can read that:

"In early November scorpions are still active, and are not hibernating...As we got into December, we heard and saw little of scorpions, and, during the season of hibernation, I forgot about these creatures" 🙂

So the beginning of the hibernation of the scorpions in Egypt, their disappearance in late November, announced the beginning of the grain sowing season...

This is what the scorpion next to the Pharaoh with the hoe means. It is an animal calendar marker for Nov/Dec, beginning of the grain sowing season in Predynastic Egypt...It is not Pharaoh's name...

These are drawings of some of the small ivory tags showing the depiction of a scorpion, which were found in the Predynastic graveyards at Abydos, Minshat Abu Omar and Tarkhan...

They show the scorpion holding the hieroglyphic sign for "nome (area)/garden/land with irrigation channels"...Authors of the paper "Abydos tomb u-j of predynastic Egypt Abydos tomb u-j" say that the interpretation of the combination of symbols on these ivory tags is disputed...You can find the sign list here...


Some archaeologists say that this combination of signs has no deeper meaning. Some other archaeologists say that "the scorpion could represent King Scorpion II in his role as a ruler of a certain (but unnamed) nome (area)"...

I would say that this combination of signs does indeed have deeper meaning, and what it means is: saw your grain in your irrigated field when scorpions disappear...

Yeah right...

Well, did you know that archaeological evidence shows that the Early 4th millennium BC Egyptians were under "a surprisingly strong and extensive influence of Mesopotamian culture and religion"...

And guess what we find in Mesopotamia? Scorpion marking the beginning of the ploughing and grain sowing season...

When scorpions disappear, and cranes arrive from the north, and Sirius rises with the moon which points up and looks like a dish ready to catch the first rains, Oct/Nov, it's time to sow grain...I talked about this in my posts "Seven stars of scorpio" and "Ploughing

Oh, BTW, that "rosette" next to the scorpion on the Scorpion Macehead...Its meaning is also disputed (read: no one has any idea what it means)...See, it's a star on Mesopotamian grain sowing seals...Sirius which is visible during the night during sawing time

Sooooo...Is it time to say goodby to the Scorpion king? I think so...Bone fragment with a carving of a scorpion. Late Predynastic - early First Dynasty, about 3100 BC

That's it. 

Oh, have you seen this?

19/11/2021. According to CBS News, thunderstorms along the River Nile swept the scorpions...out of their hiding places where they stay during hibernation...into people's houses...


To read more about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, start here…then check the rest of the blog posts related to animal calendar markers I still didn't add to this page, and finally check my twitter threads I still didn't convert to blog post...I am 9 months behind now...

3 comments:

  1. Before, we knew you as the "Zodiac Killer"; now we shall have to add "Slayer of the Scorpion King" to your growing list of titles

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