S2E5: The Pee Test: Pregnancy and Childbirth in Ancient Egypt

 
 

With Dr. Ada Nifosì

Dr. Ada Nifosì tells us about the gymnastics of ancient Egyptian birth, why Egyptian women ate donkey balls and their cats ate penis cakes,  and why the god Seth should be avoided at all costs.

Childbirth was a scary time for women, and that desire for safety and comfort is reflected in their stories about their gods. The most important goddess, Isis, was enshrined in Egyptian mythology as giving birth in dangerous circumstances.  Women turned to amulets, charms, midwives and wise women, their families, for assurance.

 
The most important goddess of Egypt gave birth alone and almost lost her child. If she made it—and she was the most important goddess—then every mother can make it.
— Dr. Ada Nifosì


BIO

Dr. Ada Nifosì is Lecturer in Ancient History at the University of Kent. She researches and writes on the social and legal status of women in the Egyptian and Greco-Roman world, as well as religious ritual, children, and toys. She holds a BA in Classical Archaeology from the University of Padua, an MA and MPhil in Egyptian Archaeology from the University of Bologna, and a PhD from the University of Kent. In 2009 she published a book on Ptolemaic and Roman period amulets, Catalogo degli amuleti di Bakchias. Her newest monograph, Becoming a Woman and Mother in Greco-Roman Egypt, explores the life-cycle of women in that period. Ada received the 2015 Faculty of Humanities Research Prize for Postgraduate Research for her study of Egyptian amulets at the Beaney Museum of Art and Knowledge. She is completing another book on funerary commemorations of young, unmarried women across the Mediterranean.

 
 

Cover Image

Childbirth in the ancient world was dangerous, and women helped each other through it. This Roman relief depicts a woman giving birth with three women (midwives?) attending. One guides the baby out of the birth canal. The mother’s face turns toward another midwife as if drawing strength from her presence.

Image Credit:

Marble plaque showing parturition scene, Roman, from Ostia, Science Museum Group Collection. The Science Museum, accession number A129245. Credit: Racchi, CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 Licence.

 

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Women Who Went Before is written, produced, and edited by Rebekah Haigh and Emily Chesley. This episode was fact-checked by Emily G. Smith-Sangster. The music is composed and produced by Moses Sun.

Sponsored by the Center for Culture, Society, and Religion, the Program in Judaic Studies, the Stanley J. Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies, and the Committee for the Study of Late Antiquity at Princeton University

Views expressed on the podcast are solely those of the individuals, and do not represent Princeton University.

 
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S2E6: Bad Blood: The Period Talk in Rabbinic Judaism and Zoroastrianism

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S2E4: Blemished Brides: Women’s Bodies and Disability in Ancient Judaism