Vol. 33 Núm. 1 (2024)
Artículos

A Pack of Hounds and its Master? A Bi-Species Burial from the Necropolis of Deir El-Banat (Fayum)

Publicado enero 11, 2024

Palabras clave:

fayum (egipto), enterramiento canino, culto animal, animal de compañía, momificación
Cómo citar
Belova, G. A., Khasanov, B. F., Krylovich, O. A., Ikram, S., Vasyukov, D. D., & Savinetsky, A. B. (2024). A Pack of Hounds and its Master? A Bi-Species Burial from the Necropolis of Deir El-Banat (Fayum). Archaeofauna, 33(1), 81–100. https://doi.org/10.15366/archaeofauna2024.33.1.005

Resumen

Los enterramientos de perros en Egipto están documentados desde el período predinástico (ca. 3500 a. C.) hasta época romana. Se han avanzado una serie de interpretaciones para los distintos casos que abarcarían desde animales de  compañía/mascotas/acémilas, animales asociados con deidades o como meros guardianes del lugar. Este trabajo describe un singular enterramiento en el cementerio de Deir el-Banat en el Fayum (Egipto) donde un individuo fue enterrado con un grupo de perros. Las interpretaciones aquí discurren desde ópticas mágico-religiosas, entendiendo el depósito como un elemento protector del cementerio, a un depósito médico-religioso que implicó el sacrificio de una serie de animales.

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