LEISURE ACTIVITIES
- Which activities were practiced by nobility vs. ordinary people
- Leisure activities included sports, hunting, swimming and gymnastics. Both men women and children participated in sports. Social classes played a role n what activities were available.
Ordinary Egyptians / Nobility
- Leisure activities taking place evenings, after work, on days off – Deir el Medina had workers had one day off every 10 days
- Some holidays were annual – New Year, Harvest. Religious festivals such as Festival of the Valley and Royal celebrations (Sed)
- Leisure time spend in inns; Beer Houses; Brothels
- Tombs show banquets with larger number of guests
- Fashionable ladies shown with cones of scented fat on their heads attended by servant girls entertained by singers, musicians, dancers
- Gymnastics or athletics were popular leisure pursuits
- Archery, boxing wrestling and fighting with sticks
- SENET was a popular board game played on wood, stone, clay, bone, faience, or a grid cut into the ground
- TAW – ‘twenty years’ two people facing each other
- MEHEN – ‘snake game’ played by up to 6 people
- Hunting often the sport associated with the nobility
- New Kingdom tomb paintings Hunting undertaken in Delta and Marshlands of Upper Egypt
- Hunting season was at the end of the floods
- New Kingdom pharaohs saw hunting as advertising their prowess – Seen with Sety 1 engaging in a lion hunt with Ramesses III
- Historian MANNICHE argues that this was symbolic and indicated the tomb owners ability to master evil and danger
- Hunting of game from the chariot was conducted by nobles and pharaohs – dated from the reign of Thutmose IV
- Fishing was also popular
ACTIVITY / INDOOR / OUTDOOR / DESCRITPION
Hunting / outdoor /
- Bird hunts in marshland / Delta of Upper Egypt.
- Best time for hunting at the end of floods.
- Fishing also popular – sitting in armchairs around garden pools.
- Hippopotamus hunting also documented.
- Pharaoh’s involvement: Sety I’s lion hunt
- The first pylon at Medinet Habu depicts Ramesses II hunting wild boars pylons used as advertising propaganda for pharaohs prowess.
- Tombs scenes depict nobles hunting wild fowl and spearing fish.
Athletics activities e.g. archery, boxing, wrestling, stick-fighting, jumping, running, weightlifting / outdoor /
- Young men trained in most athletic disciplines.
- Often part of festivals like Heb-Sed along with music, dance and song – pharaoh also supposedly took part in distance run.
- Particularly beneficial to soldiers.
- First international stick-fencing contest held between Ramesses II’s young soldiers and units of foreign troops.
- Paintings show various wrestling hand holds and throws.
Festivals, holidays / outdoor /
- Festivals at time of New Year, Harvest, flood time, etc.
- Images of gods paraded in colourful processions throughout countryside.
- Flood time – effigy of Amun carried aboard a sacred barge up the Nile to Luxor.
- Lodged at temple for a month before returning to Karnak.
- Vast crowds cheered from the riverbanks as Amun processed up and down.
- Pilgrimages to Abydos for Osiris – annual reenactment of Osiris myth
- Images in tomb of Userhat of royal boat and offering to Osiris.
Leisure Activities of Egyptians in the Ramesside Period Dynasty XIX - XX