Egypt's Unexplained Files (2019–…): Season 1, Episode 1 - Mystery of the Cannibal Crypt - full transcript

Mysterious tomb carvings provide dark evidence that ancient Egyptians practiced cannibalism, but we don't know why. New discoveries might finally answer this ancient mystery, and experts use modern-day tech to reveal more of Egypt...

Narrator: Pyramids, temples, tombs...

These ancient wonders
promise even greater secrets

still to be found under the sands of egypt.

Now cutting-edge science

decodes the mysterious
land of the pharaohs.

With modern technology,
we are gaining an insight

into the way ancient egyptians lived

and the manner in which they died.

Narrator: This time,
mysteries of villainy and vice

at the heart of ancient egypt.

Can cutting-edge science reveal evidence



of a 5,000-year-old homicide?

So like a forensic scientist,

we were able to reconstruct
a probable weapon.

Narrator: Does the discovery
of this mass cemetery

prove ancient egyptians
broke the ultimate taboo?

People are eating people.

Cannibalism.

Narrator: And can modern pharmacology

reveal the surprising antics

involved in ancient egyptian worship?

The aim of the game is
to get as drunk as you can.

Ancient egyptians were getting high.

Narrator: Ancient clues unearthed.

Long-lost evidence reexamined.



Precious artifacts brought
into the light of the 21st century.

These are "egypt's unexplained files."



The british museum, london...

Among the star exhibits,
two mysterious mummies.

They've been on display for over 100 years,

but egyptologists know
very little about them.

What secrets are held by one
of the most famous mummies

in the world today?

Narrator: Modern science, at last,

reveals some extraordinary
and unexpected clues.

We started to examine them
like a forensic scientist today,

like a cold case investigator.

It's right there in front of your nose,

and you had no idea it
was there the whole time.

Narrator: Now, five millennia later,

scientists in the 21st century
make a shocking discovery.

It is quite astonishing
that he would appear

to have been the victim of murder.

Narrator: Could experts
have uncovered evidence

of a 5,000-year-old murder?



Gebelein, in upper egypt,

25 miles south of modern-day luxor.

It's here in 1896

that a british archaeologist discovered

six bodies in the sand.

They appeared to have
been carefully buried.

These bodies were
found in the fetal position,

and the fetal position is very important

for the ancient egyptians
because essentially it's

returning a dead person
back to a rebirth context,

so they can be reborn
again in the afterlife.

Narrator: The bodies discovered at gebelein

are unlike other mummies
found preserved in egypt.

They are not embalmed,
nor are they wrapped in linens.

Instead, they were buried
directly into the sand.

Antoine: They weren't
intentionally mummified,

as far as we can determine.

These were preserved,
if you want, by accident.

A hot desert environment has led to

the natural drying out of the body.

Godenho: So when we discover these bodies,

they're preserved.

The sand desiccates the
body, draws the moisture out.

The male is better preserved of the pair.

He still has ginger hair.

Johnston: Within the museum community,

because he has these
little strands of ginger hair,

he has been known for
many years as "ginger."

narrator: In 1901, two of the bodies,

gebelein man and woman,

are brought to the british museum.

He is better preserved and put on display.

But egyptologists at that time

can decipher very little
about either of them.

They remain a mystery for over a century.

Then, in 2012, new scientific techniques

give forensic archaeologists daniel antoine

narrator: And renée friedman
the chance to finally unlock

the story of the gebelein mummies.

We did a lot of research on how old he was,

so we did carbon dating.

Probably lived between 3,000
because and 3,300 because.

Narrator: Incredibly, that
makes gebelein man and woman

among the oldest mummies
ever found in egypt.

They died before the
invention of mummification,

which explains why they were
buried directly into the sand.

This was a time before
even the earliest pharaohs.

The period in which
this person lived was right

before egypt becomes a state.

It wasn't like the pharaonic egypt

that happens a little bit later in time.

As we're dealing with some
of the very earliest periods

of egyptian history,

we're dealing with a period
where life is fairly savage.

It was a period we know was
very much filled with violence

because we have famous
egyptian pieces of art

that depict violence.

"this violent world is the first
clue when piecing together

the gebelein mummies' ancient story.

Daniel antoine now hopes
science will reveal even more detail

and turns first to the man.

Daniel uses the latest
c.T. Scanning techniques

to study ginger in detail,
unimaginable in the 19th century

when the bodies were first found.

So what's extraordinary
about this individual

is that he'd been on this

[indistinct] on and off for over 100 years,

and we knew relatively nothing about him.

I was very keen on getting new
insights into him as a person,

and this is why we took
him to get c.T. Scanned.

That's really revealed
so much new information.

So it's wonderful that
science is now stepping in

to tell us about these individuals.

The c.T. Scan produces a 3-d image

not just of the surface of the mummy.

It captures detail deep inside
to reveal brand new information

about ginger, the gebelein man.

Antoine: We were keen
to find out how old he was,

and one way to do that is to
actually look at his skeleton.

So you can see the head of the humerus

is in the process of fusing here,

suggesting he was a young man when he died,

probably between the ages of 18 and 21.

Narrator: Egyptologists now
know gebelein man lived during

a turbulent and violent
era of egyptian history,

and that he died as a young man.

But the c.T. Scan reveals these two facts

may be more than just coincidence.

What puzzled us is that there was damage

to his left shoulder blade.

If we look closely, we
can see there's damage

when you compare it to the right over here.

You can see that the
underlying bone is shattered.

You can see the fourth rib is also broken.

The c.T. Scan has uncovered
startling evidence gebelein man

suffered a brutal injury.

Daniel and renée study the wounds for clues

to what could have caused them and arrive

at a chilling conclusion.

This appears to be a single, violent blow

to his left shoulder blade.

He may have never seen it coming.

So like a forensic scientist today,

like a cold case investigator,

we were able to reconstruct
the probably weapon,

which was probably a
thin, metal stiletto dagger

that went all the way into the hilt.

Johnston: Gebelein man "a"
had been stabbed in the back,

and that's almost certainly
the cause of his death.

Narrator: It's a remarkable discovery.

100 years after gebelein
man was first discovered

and put on public display,

modern science has revealed he is,

in fact, the young victim
of a 5,500-year-old murder.

Johnston: It is quite
astonishing this individual

has been on display in the british museum

for over 100 years,

but it's only now that we discover

that he was the victim of murder.

Narrator: Modern science
has at last illuminated

one of the darkest eras of ancient egypt.

It reveals a violent world
where life was dangerous

and could be cut brutally short.

But the gebelein mummies
have even more secrets

to share from this ancient time,

and science is now ready to unlock them.



Johnston: In 2012, it was discovered

that gebelein man "a" had been murdered.

In 2018, something quite
different is discovered.

We had no idea that there
was some kind of richer evidence

to their cultural origins.

Narrator: Armed with new technology,

experts uncover another
clue hidden for millennia.

You're just looking through
the view finder and you go,

"oh, my goodness."

godenho: The egyptian
couple have what we can identify

as pictures on their skin.

Narrator: Experts ask what
this ancient body art could mean?

Could these marking be
♪ ancient egypt's oldest tattoos?



Narrator: Egyptologists daniel
antoine and renée friedman

have used the latest science
to reveal gebelein man

was murdered.

Then, in 2018, they turned to the woman

he was found buried beside,

to ask what secrets her body could reveal.

Acting on a hunch, renée
studies gebelein woman

with a handheld infrared camera.

Friedman: I got myself a little
pre-converted infrared camera,

which is generally used
for wildlife photography.

I hadn't really expected
there to be anything,

but you're just kind of
looking through the viewfinder

and you go, "oh, my goodness!"

narrator: Renée's infrared
camera revealed clear markings

on the woman's shoulder,
invisible to the naked eye...

A series of "s" shapes
and a stick or stave.

To see that it was an area
that was very well visible,

but we just... you just
can't see it without infrared.

Narrator: The only evidence
of tattooing in ancient egypt

had come from figurines and wall paintings.

This is the first example
of an actual tattoo.

Friedman: We had known from figurines

that there was a likelihood

that they did tattoo in predynastic egypt,

but I really never thought
that I'd actually find a tattoo.

Until now, evidence has only
shown that women were tattooed.

With the power of infrared technology,

renée is able to test that theory.

Could gebelein man have similar markings?

Renée examines his
body under infrared light

and is astonished by what she discovers.

The man's arm appears
to be tattooed with a bull

and a sheep.

You've got two horned animals.

The nuances of the
meanings of these animals

is something we're still trying to work out

from this preliterate age.

They didn't tell us exactly
what everything meant.

Narrator: It's an extraordinary discovery.

The first actual evidence
of an ancient egyptian tattoo

and the first proof that both
men and women were tattooed.

Not only that, gebelein man and
woman are over 5,000 years old.

The tattoos on these
mummies appear to be the oldest

known tattoos on the african continent.

The art on the egyptian
male is the clearest,

earliest example of actual body art

on any individual in the world.

Narrator: Renée now
explores what significance

these ancient markings may once have had.

She starts by trying to
understand how they were made.

Friedman: These were
definitely permanent tattoos

because they're subcutaneous,

which is why we can't
see it without infrared.

If they were just topical,

we would have been able to
see them painted onto the skin.

Additional scientific analysis showed

that the tattoos were applied
to the individuals during life,

probably using soot
directly into the dermis.

These tattoos are
carbon tattoos, so it seems

that people are scraping
soot out of the hearth fire,

collecting that black
substance, making it into a paste,

and then with a needle
applying it into the skin.

For renée, this is a sign that tattoos

were of enormous significance
to gebelein man and woman,

something they considered
worth risking their lives over.

I don't think the tattooing
was just decorative.

In ancient times, before
antibiotics, cutting the skin,

introducing a foreign
substance into your body,

even into the skin, could
be a death sentence.

Experts now ask why gebelein man and woman

took the risk of being tattooed.

They studied the markings further,

looking for clues to
their cultural significance.

Tattoos are of a wild
bull and a barbary sheep,

both of them important figures of power

in early egyptian history,

which suggests that this young
man was an important figure.

Altaweel: He had a fairly good position.

Snot necessarily the
highest upper ranks of society,

but someone who had some importance,

perhaps as a warrior class in the society.

With gebelein woman, the "s" shapes

are known from egyptian
pottery of a similar period

whereas the stave seems to be
some form of a ritual implement.

Again, this marks the woman out
as being a woman of high status

within the society.

Egyptologists conclude
the tattoos offer an insight

into the status held by gebelein man

and woman within their
tribe in predynastic egypt.

It seems that we have
animal markings on the man,

but on the woman, it's
more linear features.

Perhaps there's a
kind of sexual distinction

between male activities and power symbols.

Women would have specific types of tattoos,

men would have other types of tattoos.

They are a clear indication of
the groups that you belong to.

It's almost like... I guess
you could say gang symbols.

The gebelein mummies
were on display for 100 years,

yet no one knew their story.

Now modern science has at
last uncovered their secrets

to reveal a murdered warrior
and a woman of high status,

each bearing egypt's oldest tattoos,

the mark of their ancient tribe.

The science has really allowed
us to unlock these new insights

and get a better understanding
of who gebelein man was,

so that the public won't
see him as a mummy,

but to see him as a
person from the distant past.





Narrator: A dark and distressing discovery

is made during a routine
archaeological excavation.

A tightly packed cemetery of 9,000 bodies.

There is evidence to suggest grotesque

and disturbing activity.

People eating people... Cannibalism.

It's like something out of a horror movie.

Narrator: Experts now investigate

if something could have happened

that forced ancient egyptians
to break the ultimate taboo.



Narrator: 1999, northern egypt...

Excavations at the ancient city of mendes

reveal thousands of bodies.

One was almost tripping over corpses.

Narrator: Initial investigations
suggest all these deaths

came from a single moment
in ancient egypt's history

dating from around 2,200 bce.

It seems that everyone
died at the same time,

and that this coincides with
the end of the old kingdom.

Narrator: The old kingdom
is the most illustrious age

in ancient egyptian history,

a time when vast monuments were built.

The old kingdom is the
period of great building projects

like the pyramids and the sphinx.

Narrator: But in the final years,

construction of these great
works abruptly stopped.

What happened that brought
the old kingdom to a sudden end?

Investigators look for
any correlating events

in the ancient texts

and discover a time of
significant social unrest.

Manning: A period of about 150 years or so

of political chaos, of economic distress.

Hassan: You could not be sure
to be able to come back alive

if you leave your house.

Narrator: Egyptologists
search for more clues

to better understand this
key period in egyptian history.

They reexamine other
sites that date from this time.

In the 1920s, around
20 miles south of luxor,

laborers in the village of mo'alla

stumbled across an ancient
tomb dug into the side of a hill.

This tomb belongs to a man called ankhtifi,

who was an important
governor in his local area.

Narrator: This tomb dates to the same time

as the graves in mendes.

It bears inscriptions that
paint a vivid picture of the time.

It records for us this period of distress,

of really bad agricultural production

where there's probably very limited food.

Narrator: The texts hold a dark secret...

A distressing account of cannibalism.

Price: The text goes on in
rather sinister terms to say

that all of upper egypt
was dying of hunger,

to such a degree that people
had come to eating their children.

These words still send a
chill down your spine today.

Narrator: What could have sent
egypt into such a dire famine,

possibly even driving men and women

to turn on each other in
such inhuman fashion?

Scientists are looking for
answers from egypt's life blood,

the nile.



Narrator: Professor fekri hassan

of the french university of
egypt is a geoarchaeologist.

For decades, he has studied

the ancient cycles of the river nile.

Hassan: The nile valley, of course,

is the lifeline of egypt,
characterized by the nile,

which has annual floods
that come in the summer,

which render the flood plain as a fertile,

green, lush environment.

Narrator: The floodwaters would deposit

fertile sit on the fields,

replenishing the soil's nutrients

to produce a healthy crop.

Manning: Egypt gets lucky
because the flood of the river

that hits egypt hits it
at exactly the right time

for growing barley and for growing wheat.

Narrator: The nile's annual
floods provided extreme bounty.

If they should stop, egypt might starve.



We know that grain storage was sufficient

for a couple of years,

but if you don't have good
flooding for three years,

you're out of food.

Then what do you do?

Any upset to this annual cycle

would spell disaster
for the ancient egyptians.

Narrator: The disturbing hieroglyphs

at mo'alla in the south and the condition

of the thousands of bodies
at mendes in the north

all point to a widespread
and deadly famine.

The clues to the cause of
this tragic disaster lie in the nile.

The nile valley and the
channel and different deposits

that come every year have
been changing almost annually.

That is something that many people realize,

but it's extremely dynamic,

and it's only by
understanding this dynamism

that we begin to understand
egyptian civilization.

Narrator: Professor hassan has a theory

that the nile stopped flooding,

causing a mass famine, which
led to the end of the old kingdom.

To investigate his theory,

he uses a geological
technique called drill coring.

Naughton: Drill coring
allows archaeologists

essentially to lift a
column out of the ground.

Layers accumulate as time goes on,

and when the geologists,

archaeologists are looking at these layers,

it's almost like sort of a diary of events,

natural and human, which
occurred over this time.

You begin to see the mud layers

and sometimes you have indications

of very violent floods, so you get sand,

and when the floods were
gentle, you get finer clay deposits.

Narrator: As he studies the cores,

once sample catches his attention.

In the middle of this sequence of mud

was a layer of carbonated
deposits and iron deposits,

and that was quite exciting

because it meant that
water has stopped flowing,

evidence that for some
time there was no floods.

Narrator: Radiocarbon
dating of the sediments

allows professor hassan to pinpoint

the exact time the nile stopped flooding.

Extraordinarily, it correlates

with the date of the bodies at mendes

and the accounts of cannibalism.

When there is no flood,
the people in the villages

would have famine with pillaging
and violence and et cetera,

and, of course, enough
to destroy the state.

Narrator: This was a
time of extreme hardship.

The widespread famine caused mass deaths

and possibly even cannibalism,

as ancient egyptian society fell apart.

A collapse of the old kingdom

was due to low floods that led to famine.

People are reduced to eating
anything, attacking each other.

Horrific things happen in famine.

People are driven to extremes.

Narrator: When the
floods failed, egypt starved.

Faced with a choice between life and death,

some may have broken
humankind's ultimate taboo

as egypt's old kingdom
collapsed around them.

Narrator: An unidentified
mummy and a funerary box

stamped with a royal seal.

Could this be the mortal
remains of hatshepsut,

the female pharaoh they
tried to wipe from history?

There is a campaign of destruction

against her names and images.

Narrator: Now could 21st century technology

finally solve the case of
egypt's missing monarch?

It's detective work and then, ultimately,

science helping us solve this mystery.



Narrator: 2007, the museum of cairo.

Scientists use
state-of-the-art dna analysis

on an unidentified mummy.

They believe the body could be the remains

of the long-lost female pharaoh hatshepsut.

The female king.

A very capable, very smart,

and a very powerful woman.

She really is one-of-a-kind.

Narrator: 1479 bce.

Hatshepsut's husband,
pharaoh thutmose ii, dies.

She takes on the role of ruling egypt

until her infant stepson is
old enough to take the phone.

She initially makes herself regent,

but then gradually decides to make herself

the queen and ruler of all of egypt.



Narrator: She rules a
peaceful and prosperous egypt

for two decades and builds
some of its finest monuments.

Her crowning accomplishment
was her mortuary temple

at deir el-bahari.

But in a cave high above it,

ancient graffiti shows this female ruler

was not respected by all of her subjects.

Ikram: There are graffitos
showing her having sex,

so maybe it was a bit unnerving

that a woman could be so powerful.

There were people who wanted her to fail.

Ancient egypt was a man's world

in which hatshepsut had to appear strong.

That's why her statues
show her face with the body

and beard of a man.

Cooney: She morphs herself
into a masculine-type form...

Buff muscles, biceps, pecs, a strong chest.

Declaring herself a male
gave her a sort of legitimacy

that she wouldn't have otherwise had.



Narrator: But after her death,

her stepson thutmose iii
feared her rule would be a blight

on the male line of succession

and tried to erase hatshepsut from history.

There is a campaign of destruction

against her names and images.

Her memory is suppressed,

and she's written out of
ancient egyptian history.



Narrator: Although the whereabouts
of hatshepsut's tomb is known,

her body has never been identified,

and the hunt to find this queen's remains

has been unfolding for over a century.

1881... the valley of the kings.

A tomb is opened, revealing
50 members of egyptian royalty,

but hatshepsut is not among them.

She hasn't been preserved
with those other kings,

which is puzzling.

But archaeologists do discover
an intriguing piece of evidence.

There's a box with the name
of hatshepsut inscribed on it.

The box is thought to
contain funerary remains,

but over time has become sealed shut.

19th century archaeologists
are unable to open it,

so can't identify its contents.

The box is stored away in
the vaults of the cairo museum.

20 years later in 1903,

howard carter uncovers another
tomb in the valley of the kings.

He finds it has bits of
bandages, broken pots,

food mummies slightly
ripped apart, lying all over,

and it contains the bodies of two women.

One body was found on the ground,

but the other lay in a
sarcophagus with an inscription

that identified the mummy
inside as one of hatshepsut's staff.

The coffin is inscribed
for a woman called sitre-in,

who was the wet nurse of queen hatshepsut.

Carter could find no clues to
identify the second mummy.

With no exciting treasures,

he deemed the tomb of little significance

and had it resealed.

The burial chamber and
its unidentified mummy

lay forgotten for nearly a century,

until 1989.

American archaeologist
don ryan rediscovers the tomb

and reexamines the unidentified
mummy found on the ground.

Don ryan goes to
reinvestigate this tomb, kv60,

and documents and clears
and excavates it very carefully

and speculates that maybe
the body is queen hatshepsut.

Narrator: He concluded the mystery body

was a female who had died in her 50s.

Could these be the remains
of the long-lost pharaoh queen?

In 2007,

a team of archaeologists
from the egyptian museum

try to crack the case employing
new advances in technology.

The unidentified mummy is
taken to a hospital in aswan

for c.T. Scanning.

Meanwhile the ancient box
marked with hatshepsut's name

is retrieved from the
vaults of the cairo museum.

It, too, undergoes a c.T. Scan

to finally reveal its contents...

A human liver and something
archaeologists never suspected.

It contains, amongst other stuff, a molar.

Experts now analyze the c.T.
Scan of the unidentified mummy.

Incredibly, the imaging shows

that it is missing a molar tooth.

It seems a remarkable coincidence.

Using a digital model, the
investigators attempt to fit

the tooth into the mummy's tooth
and are astounded by the result.

The molar found in the box fit
into the mouth of the mummy

within a fraction of a millimeter.

So she probably is hatshepsut.



Narrator: But not everyone is
ready to accept this conclusion.

Further investigation is
required to confirm the theory.

So far, the evidence
for identifying this body

using this tooth is quite circumstantial.

Mummy's missing a tooth?

Oh, look, here's a tooth in a
box connected to hatshepsut.

I need to see more
detailed forensic evidence.

Narrator: Scientists turn
to the very latest advances

in dna testing and analysis.

They want to compare the
dna of the mystery mummy

with the dna from the known
relatives of queen hatshepsut.

Macca: Initial dna studies were done

using tissue from the body of the mummy

and comparing it to what we believe

was hatshepsut's grandmother,
and the results are intriguing.

The team find a positive match.

The mummy has a
genetic link to the royal line.

The dna evidence, together with the molar,

does indicate that this
body belongs to hatshepsut.



Narrator: Lost for thousands of years,

overlooked by several
imminent archaeologists,

21st century technology
now finally identifies

the long-lost body f queen hatshepsut...

A queen whose reputation,
life, and even death

was very nearly erased from history.



Beside the remains of a king's temple

the discovery of a mass grave.

Who are these people?

Is this a brutal act of genocide
or victims of a plague outbreak?

Were they strangled? Were they poisoned?

How were they killed?

Or were these people devoted subjects

ready to serve their king in the afterlife?

Why are servants being
buried with kings and queens?



Narrator: 2003.

Abydos, southern egypt...

A team from the university of pennsylvania

are excavating a temple complex

within a vast ancient burial site.

It dates to the time

of the first dynasty of egyptian kings.

This is the burial ground of
the earliest rulers of egypt.

Narrator: The temple complex
was built to mark the death

of the pharaoh hor-aha.

Bianchi: The pharaoh
hor-aha is generally considered

to be the first pharaoh of dynasty I,

which marks the beginning of the history

of the unification of
egypt as a united country.

Narrator: Around the temple,

the archaeologists make
a disturbing discovery...

Bodies upon bodies of young men.

All of the individuals are male,

all between the age of 20 and 25 years.

Altaweel: Why would there be
a mass grave in ancient egypt,

a place where mass graves
are not expected to be found?

Narrator: Experts examine
the skeletal remains of the dead.

Strangely, the bones
show no evidence of wounds

or any signs of disease.

There has been a great deal of speculation

about the means of death.

Were they strangled? Were they poisoned?

Narrator: The team search
for clues in the landscape itself

by using magnetic survey technology.

They find something curious in the dirt.

There are continuous
roofing areas over their graves,

which indicates that everything
was sealed at the same time.

Narrator: This leads to one conclusion...

Everyone died together.

Excavations have
revealed what at first glance

seems to be a rather macabre practice,

namely a number of individuals
who seem to have been

purposely, ritually murdered.

The discovery reignites an argument

that has raged for decades
in the archaeological world.

Is it possible that human
beings were sacrificed

in the very earliest
periods of ancient egypt?



Narrator: If this was
sacrifice, who were the victims

and did they willingly give up their lives?

The careful way the graves are laid out

and the presence of grave goods suggests

the people were well known to the pharaoh.

Piquette: There is a
series of smaller graves

that contain what we think are individuals

who would have served
the king or queen in life.

Johnston: These young men
who were buried alongside the king

would have continued to
serve him in the afterlife,

fulfilling the roles that
they had fulfilled in this life.

On the death of the pharaoh,

it's possible that his friends and servants

willingly gave up their lives
to be with him for eternity.

These servants, who would
have spent a lot of their time

with the king, with the
pharaoh, during his life,

their thought process
and their religious beliefs

may have compelled
them to accept sacrifice.

Johnston: One knows that
that's what the luxury of your life

will eventually entail,

then I suppose it goes with the territory.

Dodson: There is no evidence
that any of these people

were killed by violence.

They all align perfectly
peacefully in their tombs

with no signs of physical injuries.

Therefore one must assume

that they willingly accompanied
their king to the next world.

Narrator: Such devoted
service, both in life and death,

has been found with a
number of the early kings.

But history reveals that the
practice of human sacrifice

only lasted a short while.

The only evidence of human sacrifice

is from the first dynasty,

at the beginning of pharaonic times.

Bianchi: After dynasty I,
the practice seems to cease,

so it is a phenomenon that's
restricted in time and place.

Johnston: So very quickly,
the ancient egyptians think,

"this is lovely for the deceased king,

but actually, it's not
very good for those of us

who are continuing to live in this world."

so the ancient egyptians
very quickly decide

that retainer sacrifice
should come to an end.

Narrator: Instead of sacrificing people

to attend the pharaoh's
needs in the afterlife,

they created avatars.

Bard: There are small
figurines called shawabti,

usually glazed blue,

and shawabti means "answers,"
so these were servant figures.

Anthony: These are little
figurines that look like a mummy,

and on the front of them,
they have hieroglyphs,

and if you read the
hieroglyphs, it says essentially,

"I am here to work on
behalf of the deceased."

narrator: Ancient egyptians believed

these figurines would come to life

and act as the pharaoh's
assistants in the afterlife,

replacing the role of sacrificial victims.

What we see is different
magical practices...

Substitutes, statues, figures...
Later become common in tombs.

Narrator: Egypt's first dynasty rulers

had the power of life over death,

but as egyptian religion developed,

the barbaric practice of human sacrifice

was left to the past.



A new discovery at a famous temple suggests

ancient egyptians held drunken
celebrations at sacred sites.

The aim of the game is
to get as drunk as you can.

Narrator: What went on at these festivals?

And why were they held in temples?

Now, experts seek answers
using modern pharmacology.

Ancient egyptians were
partying on a Friday night.

People were getting high.



Narrator: 2004. Luxor.

A team from johns hopkins university

excavate a section of the
karnak temple complex,

one of egypt's holiest sites.

They're amazed when they
uncover a new set of hieroglyphs,

which describe a festival of drunkenness,

and find an area of the site
dedicated to getting drunk.

Finding a scene or
description of drunkenness

in what amounts to be
the vatican of ancient egypt

is very unexpected.

Narrator: The team widen
their search for clues.

They study tombs and wall
paintings from the same time

as the hieroglyphs and discover
evidence of heavy drinking.

Johnston: So we have
numerous banqueting scenes,

scenes of people drinking,
heavily in some cases.

We have a painted example
of someone actually being sick

because they are too drunk.

Enmarch: We see people having banquets

and the servants are bringing
out huge jugs of booze.

And the captions to these
scenes have the butlers

sometimes saying to the
ladies, "drink up, drink up."

mcginn: To put it bluntly,
the depiction looks like

egyptians partying on a Friday night.

Everyone is having just
an absolute great time.

So what was the drink of
choice at one of these festivals?

Archaeologists find evidence
all the time of breweries

being located in big cities.

Beer was fundamental to their diet.

Beer was common throughout
ancient egypt for good reason.

Beer is actually cleaner than nile water.

The fermentation process acts
in a limited way as a disinfectant.

Narrator: Experts trying to understand

the festival of drunkenness

study evidence from ancient tombs.

Intriguingly, these reveal beer
also had a spiritual purpose.

Enmarch: We have actual models made of wood

that were placed in tombs

which show baking and brewing taking place,

and the point of those
models is presumably to ensure

that in the afterlife you have servants

doing your baking and brewing for you.

Narrator: Experts even
find evidence of people

being buried with flasks of beer.

Ancient egyptians don't
want to just party in this life.

They also want to carry
that over into the next life,

and therefore burying someone with beer

is a great way to ensure that.

The role of beer in
rituals begins to explain

the significance of the
festival of drunkenness,

but there was more to the debauchery

than just alcohol.

We have evidence that
the blue lotus was used

by ancient egyptians.

Narrator: Modern day
pharmacology has revealed

that the flower and seeds

of the blue lotus contains
psychoactive compounds.

Eating the plant can give
people feelings of euphoria.

There are wall paintings
and contemporary references

which tell us that people
did use the blue lotus flower

as a means of getting high.

We see that on the tomb walls.

People wear it as a kind
of garland on their heads.

They're sometimes shown sniffing it

and sometimes you
see the head of the flower

being held above a cup,

possibly full of wine
or some other alcohol.

Narrator: Today, modern
medicine uses compounds

extracted from the blue lotus

in anti-anxiety drugs and sleep aids,

but when, as at the
festival of drunkenness,

it is mixed with alcohol,

the effects are even more potent.

You can actually steep
this flower in alcohol

and psychoactive chemicals

will then dissolve into the alcohol,

and then you can take it through drink.

Mixing a psychoactive drug
and a depressant like alcohol

can cause you to become
even more drunk and inebriated.

These wild celebrations were
not just about personal indulgence.

They were religious
ceremonies in which participants

became intoxicated in order
to commune with their gods.

These weren't simply
drunken, brawling events.

These were highly ordered ritual events

where the consumption of alcohol

was intended to induce a
sort of transcendent state.

They'd get totally blind drunk, pass out.

If they were lucky, they'd have a dream

and they'd see the goddess
they were worshipping.

Narrator: Experts turn to religious texts

to understand the origins
of this crazed celebration

and discover a myth about an angry goddess

defeated by the power of beer.

The festival of drunkenness

is almost certainly connected
with the goddess hathor.

She is sent to wipe human
beings out, to massacre them.

They manage to trick the
goddess by mixing beer

with a red pigment called ochre

and making a giant pool
of what looks like blood.

And the goddess drinks up this beer infused

with red pigment, gets drunk, passes out,

and the gods are able to
trap her, and, hey, presto.

Humanity is saved.

Narrator: It's the final clue to
explain a hedonistic phenomenon.

At the festival of drunkenness,
the aim of the game

is to get as drunk as you
can as an act of worship.

It was really a way for people
to commune with the gods.

It appears the ancient
egyptians used alcohol and drugs

to get out of their minds,

so they can celebrate in this world

and ensure eternal happiness in the next.