The Anasyrma Fertility Ritual in Ancient Egypt: from Hathor to Hermaphroditus

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2024

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Valentina Alessia Beretta, « The Anasyrma Fertility Ritual in Ancient Egypt: from Hathor to Hermaphroditus », HAL-SHS : études de genres, ID : 10670/1.a7s44i


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The Anasyrma is a fertility ritual in which a person or a divinity lifts up their skirt to show theirgenitals. The first Egyptian attestation is noted in the Chester Beatty I papyrus: Hathor lifts up her robe in front of the god Ra to make him laugh after he was offended by the god Bebon. In one hymn in Esna temple there is a sacred ritual linked to Hathor: on the twenty-ninth day of Athyr, two women expose their genitals and breasts in front of a representation of the goddess to bless the Pharaoh and the land. Herodotus (Historiae, II, 59-61) describes the festival of the goddess Artemis (Bastet) in Bubastis. He reports that, during the journey made by boat on the river Nile to reach Bubastis, some women lifted their vestment to show their genitals in front of villages and fields to bless them with fertility. This ritual can also be performed to be blessed by a god: Diodorus Siculus (Biblioteca Historica I, 84-85) writes that women went in front of the Apis bull lifting their robes to be blessed by his fertility powers. At the present moment, sixteen figurines depicting the god Hermaphroditus found in Lower Egypt, all dating to the Graeco-Roman period, and eight of them show Hermaphroditus Anasyromenos. This god was believed to be the inventor of marriage and to be part of the sacred cycles of Aphrodite and Dionysus, associated in Egypt with Hathor, the goddess of sexuality, and Osiris in his aspect of god of fertility. Even if we consider Anasyrma as an apotropaic ritual, in Egypt it has a strong link with fertility. In a time when having an abundance of resources was vital for the progress of the society and the survival of people, it was of great importance to assure a copious harvest also through religious practices.

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