Monday, March 2, 2026

Solidifying the Dead: Material Innovation and Mortuary Meaning in the Gypsum Burials of Late Roman York

 by Mary Harrsch © 2026

Introduction

Among the most unusual mortuary phenomena in Roman Britain are the gypsum-encased burials of third- and early fourth-century Eboracum (modern York). These graves, characterized by the application of gypsum plaster around articulated corpses within coffins or sarcophagi, remain geographically concentrated in York and its immediate environs. Their rarity, technical distinctiveness, and apparent restriction to high-status contexts have prompted a range of interpretive proposals, including ethnic importation, military association, conspicuous consumption, ritual preservation, and apotropaic containment.

Two Roman adults and an infant covered with liquified gypsum found near modern-day York
 dated to the 3rd - early 4th century CE courtesy of the Seeing the Dead Project, University of Yorkshire, UK.

This article evaluates the gypsum burials within four interlocking frameworks: (1) the intensification of elite competition in York following its transformation into an imperial residence under Septimius Severus; (2) the broader third-century shift toward inhumation and heightened corporeal emphasis; (3) the hypothesis that gypsum encasement functioned as a deterrent against malevolent spirits and (4) hypothesis that encasement served to prevent post-burial desecration. It argues that the available archaeological evidence most strongly supports a model of locally developed elite differentiation embedded within late Roman funerary ideology, rather than ethnic importation, military burial adaptation, or defensive measure based on superstition or anxiety about desecration.


York as Imperial Capital and the Intensification of Elite Display

Between 208 and 211 CE, Septimius Severus resided in York during campaigns in northern Britain (Birley, 1999). His presence transformed the colonia from a provincial administrative center into a temporary imperial capital. Such elevation had profound social consequences. Provincial cities that hosted imperial courts experienced increased administrative traffic, military concentration, infrastructural investment, and intensified elite rivalry (Hekster, 2002).

Roman civic culture placed exceptional emphasis on visible status expression through architecture, patronage, and funerary display (Hope, 2009). In urban contexts newly exposed to imperial scrutiny, local elites frequently amplified competitive self-presentation. Funerary practice provided a durable and symbolically potent arena for such differentiation. The third century in particular saw increased elaboration of sarcophagi and tomb architecture across the empire (Borg, 2019).

Epigraphic Absence and Non-Military Status

However, no inscriptions, dedicatory altars, or structural evidence for epigraphy are associated with the gypsum burials. This is significant because Roman military elites relied heavily on inscribed tombstones to display rank, unit, origin, and service record (Hope, 2009; Anderson, 1984). Even lower-ranking soldiers in frontier Britain participated in this epigraphic tradition, as evident at sites such as Chester and along Hadrian’s Wall.

The gypsum burials include adult females and children, including infants under four months old, demonstrating that the practice was inclusive of entire elite households (Carroll, 2026). This demographic composition contrasts sharply with Roman military burial norms, which overwhelmingly commemorate adult males of service age (Anderson, 1984; Phang, 2001). Even Severan court officials relied on epigraphic titulature and military commemoration for public display (Hekster, 2002).

The presence of women and children indicates a household-oriented, domestic form of elite identity expression. It emphasizes familial status, care, and investment in ritualized mortuary practice rather than corporate, regimentally defined military identity.

The absence of epigraphy in gypsum burials, combined with the inclusion of women and children, effectively excludes a military interpretation. Likewise, the absence of inscriptions undermines the notion that these burials were related to Severan court members, whose mortuary practices relied on titulature and honorific display (Birley, 1999). Status signaling here was internalized into material care and ritual elaboration, rather than expressed via textual or architectural commemoration.These burials have not been found in proximity to known military cemetery zones either.

Within this context, gypsum encasement in York may be understood as a localized innovation emerging from heightened social competition. The material itself was not intrinsically luxurious; gypsum deposits were accessible in Yorkshire and widely used in Roman construction (Ottaway, 1993). Its funerary deployment, however, recontextualized a common building material into a highly distinctive mortuary medium. The cost signal lay less in raw material expense than in its controlled application within already high-status burial assemblages—often stone sarcophagi or lead-lined coffins. The practice appears socially restricted rather than broadly imitated, suggesting prestige boundary maintenance rather than simple economic display.


The Ivory Bangle Lady and the Question of Ethnic Transmission

The hypothesis that gypsum burial represents an imported North African or eastern Mediterranean tradition has been weakened by bioarchaeological findings from York itself. The fourth-century burial popularly known as the Ivory Bangle Lady has yielded isotopic and morphological evidence consistent with North African ancestry (Leach et al., 2010) like Severus himself. Her grave goods—including ivory jewelry and high-status artifacts—indicate wealth and cosmopolitan connections.

Crucially, however, her burial did not involve gypsum encasement. This absence is analytically significant. If gypsum burial were a transplanted North African funerary custom, one might reasonably expect it to appear in the burial of an elite individual demonstrably connected to that region. Instead, the Ivory Bangle Lady’s grave conforms to broader late Roman elite burial norms without adopting the York-specific gypsum practice.

This suggests that gypsum burial was not simply an ethnic import. Rather, it appears to have been a socially mediated, locally bounded practice operating within York’s elite milieu.


The Third-Century Shift to Inhumation and Corporeal Emphasis

The rise of gypsum burial must also be situated within the broader transformation from cremation to inhumation across the Roman Empire during the late second and third centuries (Rüpke & Woolf, 2021). Christianity did not initiate this shift; Christians were a very small demographic minority in the early third century. Instead, the change reflects complex cultural dynamics, including eastern provincial influence, evolving religious sensibilities, and increased emphasis on bodily integrity (Hope, 2009).

Key developments included the growth of mystery cults (e.g., Mithraism, Isis cult) with an increasing interest in personal salvation. This was accompanied by a heightened concern with the afterlife experience as philosophical Platonism and Stoicism expanded as well. Many of these movements emphasized the individual soul, postmortem identity, and bodily continuity in some form. Inhumation better accommodated beliefs that stressed bodily integrity — even if not literal resurrection.

Inhumation had long been more common in parts of Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt. As elites from eastern provinces gained prominence in the second and third centuries, burial customs may have diffused westward. This diffusion does not imply direct “importation” in a simple ethnic sense. Rather, it reflects cultural exchange, mobility of administrators and military officers, and intermarriage among elites.

Some scholars argue that cremation, which destroys the visible body, may have become less emotionally resonant in a period marked by political instability, plagues (notably the Antonine Plague and later crises), and increased mortality anxiety. Inhumation provided a continued physical presence, tomb visitation with a tangible body beneath, and stronger familial memory associations.

The growing popularity of sarcophagi and tomb sculpture in the third century reflects intensified interest in corporeal continuity and postmortem identity (Borg, 2019). Within this ideological environment, gypsum encasement may represent an extreme expression of corporeal stabilization: the body is not merely interred but materially solidified.


Evaluating the Apotropaic Hypothesis

The suggestion that gypsum encasement functioned to prevent the return of malevolent spirits requires specific archaeological correlates. In societies concerned with revenants, defensive burial features commonly include prone interment, decapitation, limb binding, stone weights placed over the body, nails or spikes driven through remains, or deliberate postmortem mutilation (Murphy, 2008). None of these are present in the York gypsum burials. Bodies are carefully arranged in conventional supine positions, often within costly containers.

Apotropaic anxiety is also frequently accompanied by magical inclusions or inscriptions. Roman Britain has yielded curse tablets (defixiones) at sites such as Aquae Sulis, demonstrating the presence of magical practice within the province (Tomlin, 1988). Yet gypsum burials in York lack systematic association with amulets, magical inscriptions, or ritual countermeasures.

Furthermore, apotropaic measures typically target socially marginal individuals—criminals, executed persons, or those perceived as dangerous. In contrast, gypsum burials are associated with high-status contexts and include women and children. Their demographic inclusivity and material investment are inconsistent with stigma or fear-driven containment.

The absence of physical restraint, magical paraphernalia, irregular body positioning, or epigraphic expressions of spirit anxiety weakens the deterrence hypothesis. While Roman culture acknowledged restless dead (lemures, larvae), ritual responses to such spirits were calendrical and domestic rather than architectural (Rüpke & Woolf, 2021). The archaeological tone of York’s gypsum burials is honorific, not defensive.

Gypsum encasement may have served as a practical deterrent to grave disturbance, however. While direct evidence of tomb robbing in Eboracum’s gypsum burials is lacking, the material properties of hardened gypsum would have created a formidable physical barrier to intrusion. Recent findings from the Seeing the Dead Project (University of York) suggest the plaster encasement would have effectively stabilized the coffin contents, limiting access to delicate textiles, personal ornaments, or skeletal remains (Carroll, 2026; Hitchens, 2026).

This deterrent effect could operate on both practical and symbolic levels. Practically, the labor-intensive and brittle nature of gypsum makes extraction or removal of items difficult without considerable effort and risk of damaging the contents. Symbolically, the encasement may have signaled to contemporaries that the burial was sanctified or specially treated, invoking social or religious sanctions against desecration. This is consistent with broader Roman mortuary attitudes, where high-status burial goods were both materially and ritually protected, and where interference with elite graves could provoke censure or superstition (Hope, 2009; Ottaway, 1993).

However, unlike explicit apotropaic measures—such as decapitation, binding, or placement of protective deposits—archaeological investigation in York has revealed no associated magical or ritualized restraints. The gypsum’s protective function appears primarily material and performative, combining care for the body with an implicit deterrent to post-burial interference rather than explicit magical protection.

In this sense, the encasement fulfills a dual role: it preserves the corpse for extended pre-burial viewing and ritual display while simultaneously reducing the risk of post-interment desecration, supporting both the household’s social prestige and the integrity of high-status grave goods.


Local Innovation within an Imperial Framework

The geographic concentration of gypsum burials in York, coupled with their absence in other British coloniae such as Camulodunum, Lindum Colonia, and Glevum, underscores their localized character. Other coloniae exhibit elite sarcophagi, mausolea, and lead coffins but lack systematic gypsum encasement traditions (Ottaway, 1993).

This pattern supports interpretation of gypsum burial as a micro-tradition—an innovation confined to a particular elite network in York. The city’s temporary status as an imperial capital under Severus likely intensified competitive display, creating conditions favorable to distinctive mortuary experimentation.

A critical feature of the gypsum burials is that the encasement is not visible after burial. This has led some to question whether the practice constitutes elite display. Roman funerary display, however, operated on multiple registers: public, semi-public, and internalized (Hope, 2009; Borg, 2019). Gypsum encasement aligns with the third category, functioning as an internalized and ritualized demonstration of care and status.

Recent analyses of preserved fingerprints in the gypsum indicate manual application (Carroll, 2026), highlighting tactile engagement with the corpse during funerary preparation. The process may have constituted a transformative ritual, converting the body into a hardened, stabilized form within the grave. Such treatment aligns more readily with preservationist ideology than with defensive containment. One additional interpretive advantage of gypsum encasement is extended pre-burial display. By stabilizing and preserving the body and its clothing, the plaster would have allowed the corpse to be viewed for a prolonged period during mourning rituals, even in the damp northern climate, before final interment (Rüpke & Woolf, 2021; Murphy, 2008). In this sense, the “display” was not public-facing in the sense of monumental visibility, but it was ceremonially performative and socially meaningful within the household and funeral context.

Rather than an imported ethnic custom or superstition-driven practice, gypsum burial appears best understood as a locally generated expression of elite identity within a broader late Roman revaluation of the preserved body.


Conclusion

The gypsum-encased burials of Roman York represent a rare and geographically bounded funerary innovation. Their emergence during and after the Severan occupation aligns with a period of intensified elite competition in an imperialized urban environment. The absence of gypsum in the burial of the Ivory Bangle Lady weakens claims of direct North African transmission. The lack of apotropaic indicators—physical restraint, magical paraphernalia, irregular positioning—diminishes the deterrent-spirit hypothesis.

Instead, the evidence most strongly supports interpretation of gypsum encasement as a socially restricted, locally developed elite practice embedded within third-century shifts toward inhumation and corporeal preservation. In York, a common building material was transformed into a medium of mortuary distinction—an internal monument to elite identity at the northern frontier of empire.

Future Research Directions

Several planned investigations under the Seeing the Dead Project (University of York) promise to substantially refine current interpretations of the York gypsum burials. Six complete or near-complete gypsum casings held in the Yorkshire Museum are scheduled for CT scanning at Nuffield Health York, with remaining fragments to be x-rayed using portable equipment, to detect objects or grave goods preserved within clothing and shrouds (Seeing the Dead Project, n.d-a.). If grave goods are confirmed within the encasement, this would provide direct material evidence for both the high-status character of the interred individuals and the deterrent function of gypsum against post-burial disturbance — two interpretive claims that currently rest on inferential rather than direct evidence.

Ancient DNA analysis, to be conducted at the Francis Crick Institute's Ancient Genomics Laboratory, will examine genetic sex, ancestral origins, and population affiliations of individuals selected for gypsum burial, as well as evidence of infectious pathogens (Seeing the Dead Project, n.d-b.). Carroll has noted that DNA potentially recoverable from preserved handprints in the gypsum represents a particular priority, describing the prospect of inferring the genetic sex of the individual who applied the plaster as "a huge result" (Carroll, 2026). Such findings could illuminate whether funerary preparation was performed by family members or specialist mortuary workers — a distinction with significant implications for the household-centered interpretation advanced here.

Complementing the genetic work, stable isotope analyses incorporating oxygen, strontium, lead, carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur signatures will reconstruct both the geographic origins and dietary biographies of the interred individuals, enabling direct comparison with local faunal baselines from Sherburn in Elmet, Castleford, and Doncaster (Seeing the Dead Project, n.d-c.). These analyses will address the ethnic transmission question more definitively than current evidence allows, though it should be noted that genetic ancestry and geographic mobility are distinct variables that need not align, and isotopic findings will require careful interpretation alongside the DNA results.

Perhaps most remarkably, tresses of human hair surviving from a female gypsum burial are to be examined using scanning electron microscopy and incremental isotope analysis, yielding a dietary and health history of the individual concerned (Seeing the Dead Project, n.d-c.). That such analysis is possible at all is itself significant — the survival of organic hair material directly reflects the preservationist properties of the encasement, and thus stands as tangible confirmation of the interpretation of gypsum burial as a deliberate act of corporeal care.


References


Anderson, A. S. (1984). Roman military tombstones. Shire Publications.

Birley, A. R. (1999). Septimius Severus: The African emperor. Routledge.

Borg, B. E. (2019). Roman sarcophagi. In B. E. Borg (Ed.), A companion to Roman art (pp. 286–300). John Wiley & Sons.

Carroll, M. (2026, February 18). Infants in Roman gypsum burials: New research from York. Seeing the Dead Project Blog. University of York.

Hekster, O. (2002). Commodus: An emperor at the crossroads. Brill.

Hitchens, S. (2026, February 23). Textiles in Roman gypsum burials: Analysis and implications. Seeing the Dead Project Blog. University of York.

Hope, V. M. (2009). Roman death: The dying and the dead in ancient Rome. Continuum.

Leach, S., Eckardt, H., Chenery, C., Müldner, G., & Lewis, M. (2010). A lady of York: Migration, ethnicity and identity in Roman Britain. Antiquity, 84(323), 131–145.

Murphy, E. M. (Ed.). (2008). Deviant burial in the archaeological record. Oxbow Books.

Ottaway, P. (1993). English Heritage book of Roman York. Batsford/English Heritage.

Phang, S. E. (2001). The marriage of Roman soldiers (13 B.C.-A.D. 235) : law and family in the imperial army. Brill.

Rüpke, J., & Woolf, G. (2021). Religion in the Roman Empire. Verlag W. Kohlhammer.

Seeing the Dead Project. (n.d.-a). Seeing the Dead: Unlocking the secrets of Roman gypsum burials. University of York. Retrieved March 2, 2026, from https://seeingthedead.ac.uk/

Seeing the Dead Project. (n.d.-b). Work package 4: Items within the gypsum casings. University of York. Retrieved March 2, 2026, from https://seeingthedead.ac.uk/research/wp4

Seeing the Dead Project. (n.d.-c). Work package 7: Burial bioarchaeology. University of York. Retrieved March 2, 2026, from https://seeingthedead.ac.uk/research/wp7

Tomlin, R. S. O. (1988). Tabellae Sulis: Roman inscribed tablets of tin and lead from the Sacred Spring at Bath. Oxford University Press.

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Friday, February 6, 2026

Hearing Power: Sound and Authority in the Ancient World

by Mary Harrsch © 2026

I was uploading closeup images I took of Shalmaneser III’s black obelisk to Wikimedia Commons and noticed this photograph with what looked like a court musician playing a cornu-like curved trumpet. I was curious whether the Romans had inherited this instrument from the Near East—or whether its resemblance was deceptive—prompting a deeper investigation into how sound functioned as authority across ancient empires.

Detail of a cast of the black obelisk of Assyrian king Shalmaneser III showing accompanying musicians and tribute bearers. I photographed this cast at the Institute of the Study of Ancient Cultures at the University of Chicago. The original is in the British Museum.

When we imagine ancient empires, we tend to picture monuments: towering walls, colossal statues, reliefs carved in stone. Yet power in the ancient world was not only something to be seen. It was also something to be heard. Long before amplification or mass literacy, rulers and states relied on sound—music, horns, trumpets, drums, and ritual noise—to make authority present, unavoidable, and legitimate.
Across ancient cultures, sound functioned as a technology of power. It marked sacred time, structured political ritual, summoned communities, and, eventually, commanded armies. Tracing how sound was used across imperial societies reveals not a single tradition but a series of distinct “acoustic regimes,” each reflecting a different conception of authority itself.
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Sound as Ritual Order in Mesopotamia
In the empires of Mesopotamia—Assyria and Babylonia above all—sound was inseparable from scenes of tribute, procession, or submission. Curved horns, long trumpets, lyres, and drums appear not as entertainment but as instruments of cosmic order. They framed events as ritually sanctioned and divinely approved. When foreign rulers bowed before the Assyrian king, as on the Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III, music marked the moment as part of a universal order upheld by the gods. The king himself is often silent; sound belongs to the ritual space, not to the mechanics of command or the ruler’s voice.
Here, authority is not shouted or signaled tactically. It is performed—made audible as harmony, continuity, and inevitability.
The Assyrian Empire is rightly famous for its military effectiveness, yet its use of sound differed fundamentally from later Roman practice. In Assyria, sound framed power ritually and psychologically, while control of troops relied primarily on visual command, pre-arranged action, and hierarchical proximity, not real-time acoustic signaling.
Royal reliefs frequently depict musicians accompanying scenes of tribute, procession, and submission. Curved horns and long trumpets appear prominently, but their role was not to issue battlefield instructions. Instead, they marked events as ritually sanctioned and divinely approved. When foreign rulers bowed before the Assyrian king, as on the Black Obelisk of Shalmaneser III, music transformed the moment into a public enactment of cosmic order upheld by the gods. The king himself is silent; sound belongs to the ritual space, not to the mechanics of command.
On the battlefield, Assyrian armies were controlled less by signal than by preplanned choreography. Movements were ordered in advance and executed according to expectation rather than continuous adjustment. Infantry advanced, missile troops fired, and cavalry exploited success in sequences that were understood beforehand. Once engagement began, there is no evidence for a codified system of horn calls equivalent to Roman advance, halt, or regroup signals.
Instead, Assyrian command relied on visual authority. Officers were positioned close to their units, commands were delivered by voice and gesture, and royal standards and banners acted as focal points for alignment. Reliefs emphasize proximity, eye contact, and the physical presence of authority. This system worked effectively so long as formations remained coherent and commanders visible.
Even Assyria’s pioneering use of cavalry followed this logic. Cavalry units did not maneuver independently in response to signals but were introduced at recognizable phases of battle—screening, pursuit, or exploitation once the enemy line collapsed. Their deployment was triggered by visible conditions, not acoustic command.
Sound, when present, served other purposes: intimidation, ritual framing, and psychological dominance. Drums and horns amplified fear and authority, but they did not encode instruction. Authority was performed, not transmitted.
This model of warfare suited Assyria’s strategic aims. Assyrian battle sought shock, terror, and collapse rather than prolonged tactical maneuver. Control flowed downward from visible authority, not outward through an abstract system of signals. When the king or senior commanders were present, command was absolute; when they were absent, resilience was limited.
In this sense, Assyrian power was ocular and hierarchical, not acoustic and systemic. Sound upheld cosmic order and royal legitimacy, but it did not manage complexity. That final transformation—sound as an autonomous instrument of command—would not occur until Rome.
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Egypt: Sound as Divine Presence and Status Change
In ancient Egypt, sound functioned less as command than as transformation. Music, noise, and trumpet blasts were believed to activate divine presence and sustain maat, the cosmic balance that ordered the universe. Instruments such as sistra, drums, and long trumpets were therefore not merely accompaniments to ritual and warfare; they were mechanisms through which a moment changed its status—from ordinary to sacred, from preparation to action, from action to completion.

A silver Egyptian trumpet found in the tomb of Tutankhamun. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor Suaudeau. Digitally enhanced.

Egyptian trumpets, attested visually in New Kingdom reliefs and materially in the famous silver and bronze examples from the tomb of Tutankhamun, were used to mark discrete phases of action rather than to direct tactics. A trumpet blast announced assembly, initiated movement or combat that had already been ordered verbally, marked transitions between phases of engagement, and signaled closure at victory or cessation. These were emphatic, limited signals—few in number, but heavy with meaning.
Crucially, the trumpet did not issue instructions. It ratified them. To hear the trumpet was to know that an action had entered a different ontological state: it was now sanctioned by the king and, through him, by the gods. In this sense, Egyptian military sound remained fundamentally ritual. Authority flowed downward—from deity to king to human actors—and sound served as audible proof that this transmission had occurred.
The design of Egyptian trumpets reinforces this role. Their narrow tonal range and construction favor short, piercing blasts rather than varied melodic signals. They were ideal instruments for marking beginnings, transitions, and ends—not for regulating complex maneuver in real time. Even in warfare, sound framed events rather than controlled them.
Thus, when an Egyptian trumpet sounded, it did not mean “advance,” “retreat,” or “reform ranks.” It meant something more absolute: the moment has changed. What followed was not commanded by sound but unfolded within the divinely authorized order that sound had just made present. Where Egyptian trumpets transformed the status of a moment by invoking divine sanction, in Rome sound was distilled to its primary essence and used to direct action instead.
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Threshold Sound in the Neo-Hittite and Levantine World
In the Neo-Hittite kingdoms of Anatolia and northern Syria, horns appear most often at liminal moments: enthronements, sacrifices, and processions. Sound here did not issue commands or summon communities but marked transitions of status—between sacred and profane, ruler and subject, ordinary time and ritual time. It framed kingship as a visible and audible performance, confirming dynastic legitimacy rather than enforcing obedience.
Neo-Hittite rulers governed small, unstable successor states after the collapse of the Hittite Empire (ca. 1200 BCE), where authority was local, fragile, and continuously negotiated. In this context, sound functioned as a compensatory technology of power, amplifying royal presence where coercive reach was limited.

Levantine traditions, especially those associated with the shofar (animal-horn trumpet), emphasized sound as a summons rather than a ritual display. The shofar called assemblies, announced divine presence, and bound communities to covenant. It did not glorify kings so much as remind the people of their obligations to law and deity. In Israel, kingship was derivative, not constitutive: the king ruled only insofar as he remained subject to YHWH’s law. Authority did not emanate from the king outward; it flowed from divine covenant downward and could be withdrawn.

My photograph of a historical reenactor depicting a Hebrew priest blowing a shofar. In the Iron Age Levant, horn blasts marked ritual transitions—sacred time, divine presence, or covenantal action—rather than serving as instruments of battlefield command.

This represents a fundamentally different acoustic politics—sound as communal accountability rather than imperial domination. In the Levantine world, authority was not projected outward from a monarch or empire but invoked through law and covenant, audibly binding a community to shared obligation rather than enforcing obedience through command.
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Greece: Sound and Civic Coordination
In the Greek world, sound began to move away from ritual toward coordination. The salpinx (a straight trumpet) was used to regulate movement in battle and maintain rhythm among hoplite ranks. One of the greatest dangers in hoplite warfare was loss of formation. If men advanced too quickly, the line stretched and broke; too slowly, and cohesion faltered under missile fire. So, the salpinx helped regulate tempo, not direction. Trumpet blasts signaled when to begin the advance. Sustained or repeated sounds helped maintain a steady pace. The goal was not speed, but unity.

Greek red-figured kylix depicting a warrior sounding a salpinx courtesy of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Hoplite combat depended on mass and pressure. Shields overlapped, and each man’s movement affected the next. Sound helped create a shared rhythmic framework, a sense of collective timing, and psychological reassurance that the line was moving as one body.
In some contexts, the salpinx worked in tandem with aulos players, whose double-pipes provided a steady rhythm. This is famously attested at Sparta, where advancing to music was a mark of discipline, not theatricality. The sound did not instruct individuals what to do—it helped them do the same thing together.
Like Egyptian trumpets (though in a more civic, secular register), the salpinx also marked phase changes from standstill to advance, from advance to engagement and possibly from engagement to withdrawal (though evidence here is thin)
There is no clear evidence for distinct calls for wheeling, flanking, or reforming or independent acoustic control once hand-to-hand combat began. Once shields met, sound largely yielded to proximity and instinct.
Greek armies were composed of citizen-soldiers, not professionals embedded in a rigid hierarchy. Authority was shared, not absolute. So the salpinx reflected this. It coordinated equals rather than commanding subordinates. It assumed prior agreement and training and reinforced civic order rather than imposing control.
Greek soundscapes were therefore civic, not imperial. Authority emerged from shared participation rather than imposed command.
This changed dramatically with the military innovations of Philip II of Macedon. The Macedonian army was a professional instrument with a complex, combined-arms structure. It relied on precise, timed movements between its core components: the legendary Macedonian phalanx (using the long sarissa), elite heavy infantry (hypaspists), and shock cavalry (the Companion Cavalry). Wheeling, flanking, reforming, and synchronized charges between infantry and cavalry were not occasional events but the essence of its tactical superiority. The salpinx (and likely other instruments like horns) had to evolve beyond signaling simple phase changes (advance/engage) to conveying specific tactical orders. Distinct calls for these complex manoeuvres became a necessity.
The Macedonian king was an absolute commander (basileus and autokrator), not a first among equals. The army was a hierarchical, professional institution. Sound, therefore, became a tool of imposed control and instantaneous obedience from a central authority. It commanded subordinates within a chain of command, rather than coordinating peers who had debated the plan in assembly. The acoustic signal’s authority was top-down, reflecting the new imperial, rather than civic, structure of power.
The Companion Cavalry was the hammer to the phalanx’s anvil. Cavalry actions require rapid exploitation of opportunities, sudden changes in direction, and coordinated strikes with infantry. Once engaged, cavalry cannot maintain a static line like hoplites. Therefore, sound had to retain its utility during combat. Trumpet calls would be essential to recall, redirect, or rally cavalry units mid-melee.
While explicit musical notation for Macedonian calls doesn’t survive, the historical accounts of their battles are replete with references to pre-arranged trumpet signals initiating complex actions. Arrian’s history of Alexander, for instance, depends on the assumption that readers understand signals were used to coordinate simultaneous attacks across vast battlefields. The salpinx itself may have been supplemented or modified, and Hellenistic art later shows examples of curved horns (keras), which might indicate a desire for a different, perhaps more penetrating, tone for battlefield control.
The Macedonian military revolution, pioneered by Philip II, demanded a new acoustic regime. Sound was no longer primarily a rhythmic framework for a collective body of citizens, but a system of precise, imperative commands for a professional, hierarchical, and combined-arms machine. The trumpet's blast evolved from a metronome for shared movement into a tool of dynamic, centralized control, enabling the complex tactics that built an empire. This shift mirrors the broader political transition from the participatory polis to the imperial monarchy, where authority was indeed imposed from the top, and the battlefield soundscape reflected this new, imperial order.
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Rome: Sound Becomes Command
Rome marks a decisive transformation. With the Roman Republic and Empire, sound ceased to be primarily ritual or symbolic and became directive.
The Roman army of the 4th century was transitioning from the hoplite phalanx to the manipular system. This new, more flexible formation required better command-and-control. However, contemporary evidence for a sophisticated Roman horn system is lacking. The tuba likely existed in a simple form for basic calls, but the iconic cornu—and the decentralized, hierarchical command system it represented—appears to be a later development.
The crucial catalyst was the Roman encounter with the sophisticated Hellenistic army of Pyrrhus of Epirus (280-275 BCE). In the subsequent decades of the 3rd century BCE, the Romans systematically developed their own tripartite system of brass instruments (cornu, tuba, bucina), embedding cornicines within centuries to provide the granular control their legionary structure required. Thus, the fully realized Roman military soundscape was less a spontaneous evolution than a deliberate institutional innovation, born of necessity and refined through direct exposure to the advanced 'acoustic technology' of their Hellenistic adversaries.

Cornicen on the Ludovisi sarcophagus in the Palazzo Altermps courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor Paolo Villa.

Cornicen depicted on Trajan's Column courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor Gaius Cornelius.

Roman mosaic depicting a cornicen from Nennig Germany courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor Villanueva.

Zliten mosaic depicting Roman musicians playing a tuba (straight trumpet) and buccinae. 1st - 3rd century CE.

Instruments such as the cornu and tuba were standardized, their signals codified, their players integrated into the military hierarchy. The cornicen was not a musician but a specialist whose sound carried legal authority. His signals ordered movement, attack, retreat—often independent of spoken command.
It is thought these Roman instruments were derived from Etruscan horns. Etruscan use of curved bronze horns emerged within a soundscape heavily influenced by Greek musical practice, particularly in banqueting and processional contexts. Yet the horn itself was not a Greek instrument. Its presence reflects Etruscan receptivity to Near Eastern concepts of sound as prestige acoustics, transmitted through Mediterranean trade especially with Phoenicians and Cypriot metalworkers. The result was a hybrid acoustic culture—Greek in ensemble, Near Eastern in symbolism, and Etruscan in ritual intent for divination, liminality, and spectacle— which Rome later transformed into a system of military command.
Rome inherited the Etruscan hybrid then stripped away ritual ambiguity and divinatory framing retaining the practical loudness, reach, and command potential. Rome inherited the form and prestige of the curved bronze horn from Etruscan ceremonial practice, but fundamentally altered its function.
The Roman cornu was redesigned for repeated use in the field: it was standardized in shape and pitch, cast in heavy bronze, and equipped with a reinforcing crossbar (crux) that rested against the player’s body to stabilize the instrument during prolonged sounding. These structural changes transformed the horn from a ritual marker of authority into a durable instrument of command. In Roman hands, sound no longer framed power symbolically; it executed it, issuing orders that regulated movement, timing, and collective action across the battlefield. Developing the instruments, establishing a signal code, training specialist tubicines and cornicines for each century, and integrating calls into camp routine represents a major institutional investment. The mid-to-late 3rd century BCE (after the Pyrrhic War but before the Punic Wars) is the most plausible period for this system to have been developed and standardized.
With the introduction of the cornu, Rome assigned its players to the class of principales within a century. The cornicen received double pay (duplicarius) and assigned to a centurion, although if his centurion fell in battle, he performed the commands of the optio, tribune, or other command officer. Cornu signals included marking advance and halt, coordinating movement between units, signaling formation changes, transmitting retreat or regrouping orders and maintaining temporal rhythm during maneuver. In contrast, tubae (straight trumpets) were used to distinguish camp duties and provide general signals while encamped, and buccinae were used to announce watches and provide night signals.
A cornicen did not persuade, exhort, or explain. His sound compelled action because it was embedded in a shared system of discipline and training. This marks a sharp break from Near Eastern and Etruscan practice, where horns framed authority symbolically. In Rome, sound was authority, temporarily delegated to a specialist.
Although no ancient source records a cornicen independently issuing commands after the death of a centurion, Roman military organization presupposed such continuity. As a ranked specialist attached to the century rather than to an individual officer, the cornicen transmitted orders on behalf of the command structure itself, ensuring that acoustic authority survived the loss of any single commander. It is entirely plausible, though, that a cornicen continued a previously ordered signal, sounded rally or regroup calls, and helped reconstitute order until an officer asserted control. This is where Rome truly departs from Assyria or Etruria where sound was tied to ritual presence and authority collapses when the central figure is absent.
In this sense, Rome created one of the earliest fully modern soundscapes of power.
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Listening to Empire
Returning to ancient images—such as musicians carved on Assyrian monuments—it is tempting to project later traditions backward. A curved horn may resemble a Roman cornu, but its function belongs to a different world. To ancient viewers, its sound would not have meant “advance” or “retreat,” but “the king is present,” “the ritual has begun,” “the gods approve.”
Empire was not only built in stone. It was built in sound.

To understand ancient power, we must learn not only how to look—but how to listen.
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Monday, January 26, 2026

From Ritual Wheels to War Machines: The Rise of Chariots from Tell Agrab to Kadesh

 by Mary Harrsch © 2026

This reproduction of a model wheeled vehicle from Tell Agrab that I photographed at the Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures at the University of Chicago is dated to around 2600 BCE. My research revealed while often described loosely as an early “chariot,” its form and archaeological context strongly indicate that it represents a ceremonial or symbolic conveyance rather than a functional military vehicle.

Model of a ceremonial wheeled vehicle from Tell Agrab (c. 2600 BCE), that I photographed at the Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures, University of Chicago. This Early Dynastic model reflects symbolic elite and ritual use, foreshadowing the rise of militarized chariots in the Near East.

The model depicts a solid-wheeled vehicle drawn by multiple non-equids, likely onagers or equid hybrids. Such vehicles could carry loads or serve in ritual and ceremonial contexts, but they were too heavy and slow for battlefield maneuvering. Moreover, controlling multiple powerful animals—especially for rapid maneuvers or coordinated tactics—would have been extremely difficult, even if the vehicle was lightly loaded.
Instead, as such vehicles were adapted to military use, two-horse teams predominated. Horses could sustain rapid charges and long-distance movement, whereas onagers and hybrids were slower and more temperamental. Coordinated chariot tactics, like flanking or retreating under pressure, required animals responsive to reins and voice commands.
Even in much later periods, such as Roman antiquity, professional charioteers were required to manage a four-horse quadriga usually on carefully prepared tracks. That this Early Dynastic model shows a single driver controlling several powerful non-equid animals suggests a focus on ritualized display, procession, or elite symbolism associated with divine movement, royal ideology, and controlled ceremonial motion, rather than practical transport or warfare. There is no evidence from Egypt, Hittite, Mitanni, or Mesopotamian sources that onagers, donkeys, or equid hybrids were used in actual combat.
The true technological revolution that made chariots militarily viable—the spoked wheel—did not originate in Mesopotamia. It first appeared among the Sintashta Culture (c. 2100–1800 BCE) located in the southern Urals and northern Kazakhstan, on the Eurasian stepp in the late third to early second millennium BCE, where lighter vehicles, improved traction, and increasingly sophisticated horse control were developed to meet the demands of long-distance mobility and open landscapes.
From the steppe, these innovations spread southward through cultural exchange rather than direct conquest, reaching Hurrian populations in northern Mesopotamia and Syria. Initially adopted as elite or prestige conveyances, spoked-wheel vehicles became fully militarized under the kingdom of Mitanni. During this period, horse training was formalized, chariot crews professionalized, and chariot warfare integrated into state military strategy.
In its earliest military applications, the Mitanni kingdom deployed spoked-wheel chariots primarily against neighboring Hurrian-speaking city-states in the upper Tigris–Euphrates region. These polities relied largely on infantry formations and heavy ox-drawn wagons, which were slow, cumbersome, and poorly suited to open-field maneuvering. Mitanni chariots, by contrast, were light, fast, and crewed by trained teams of drivers and archers, providing a decisive tactical advantage. In engagements across the fertile river valleys and rolling plains of northern Mesopotamia, the mobility of these vehicles allowed Mitanni forces to outflank infantry lines, strike quickly, and withdraw before local forces could respond effectively.
Rather than seeking outright destruction, the Mitanni often used chariot forces to enforce vassalage, extract tribute, and assert dominance over Hurrian elites, establishing political and military hegemony without necessarily obliterating local communities. Over time, the prominence of Mitanni chariots prompted some Hurrian city-states to experiment with similar vehicles, gradually militarizing their own transport technologies in response to the threat. This early period demonstrates that, for the Mitanni, the chariot was as much a tool of political control and prestige as a weapon of war, establishing patterns of elite dominance that would later influence the broader Near Eastern world.
Once Mitanni demonstrated the strategic effectiveness of chariot forces, neighboring powers—including the Hittites, Egyptians, and Mesopotamian states—were compelled to respond. In Egypt, exposure to the Hyksos’ spoked-wheel chariots during the Second Intermediate Period had already introduced the technology, but the Egyptians initially used chariots primarily for prestige, reconnaissance, and elite display rather than fully militarized operations. Observing Mitanni and later Hittite successes, Egypt accelerated the systematization of chariot training, crew organization, and battlefield integration, transforming chariotry from a symbol of status into a decisive military instrument. Across the eastern Mediterranean and Near East, chariotry was adopted not merely for its technological sophistication but as a strategic necessity, becoming a central feature of Late Bronze Age warfare, diplomacy, and elite identity.
Beyond the well-known battles of Megiddo and Kadesh, chariots played a decisive role in numerous campaigns across the Levant during the Late Bronze Age. Egyptian forces first encountered the tactical potential of chariots during the early 18th Dynasty campaigns against Hurrian-aligned or Mitanni-influenced polities in southern Syria and northern Canaan (c. 1550–1500 BCE). These light, fast vehicles outmaneuvered infantry formations and cumbersome ox-drawn wagons, serving both for reconnaissance, raiding, and intimidation as well as for establishing Egyptian authority over vassal states.
Following this, Egyptian armies deployed chariots against Canaanite city-states in the Beth-Shan region (c. 15th–14th century BCE), where infantry-heavy polities and fortified settlements relied on slow-moving wagons. The mobility of chariots enabled rapid strikes against multiple targets, compelling tribute and reinforcing Egyptian control over strategic northern routes.
By the mid-14th century BCE, campaigns against Amurru and Aleppo further showcased the offensive potential of chariots. Elite chariot crews executed rapid strikes, encircled cities, and enforced vassalage across dispersed fortified settlements, foreshadowing the larger, more famous battles to come.
Throughout the Late Bronze Age, chariots were also widely used by Hittite, Mitanni, and Egyptian forces in smaller-scale raids and skirmishes, projecting power across trade routes, supporting allied city-states, and intimidating rivals. In these operations, chariots provided speed, maneuverability, and shock force that allowed relatively small, elite units to dominate infantry-heavy armies. Their repeated success in both raids and pitched battles established the chariot as a decisive instrument of warfare, culminating in iconic engagements like Megiddo and Kadesh while shaping political and military dynamics across the Levant.
Viewed in a long-term perspective, the development of the chariot illustrates a gradual transformation from symbolic conveyance to battlefield instrument. The Early Dynastic model from Tell Agrab reflects an initial phase in which wheeled vehicles were primarily ritualized, ceremonial, and emblematic of elite or divine authority, rather than functional weapons. Centuries later, the Mitanni kingdom harnessed the spoked-wheel chariot to establish military dominance over neighboring Hurrian city-states, exploiting mobility and trained crews to outmatch infantry and heavy ox-drawn wagons. Observing this success, the Hittites and Assyrians adopted and adapted chariotry, integrating it into professional armies with coordinated tactics and standardized crews. The Egyptians, although exposed to chariots in the Levant as early as the early 16th century BCE, initially used them for prestige, reconnaissance, and elite display; only in the mid-14th century BCE, confronted with Hittite chariot forces, did Egypt fully systematize chariot training and integrate it into battlefield strategy. Across these cultures, the chariot evolved from a symbol of control and status into a transformative tool of warfare, reshaping the political, military, and cultural landscapes of the Near East and eastern Mediterranean.
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Monday, January 19, 2026

The Last Flight of the Ba: Reimagining the Afterlife at the End of Antiquity

by Mary Harrsch © 2026 

This Nubian ba-bird statue (Ballana Cemetery B, Tomb 245; ca. 225–300 CE) that I photographed at the Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures at the University of Chicago belongs to the final phase of a mortuary concept whose origins lie more than two thousand years earlier in ancient Egypt. My research revealed its presence in Nubia—and its sudden disappearance shortly thereafter—offers a striking case study in cultural transmission, adaptation, and rupture.

Sandstone Ba-bird statue from Ballana Cemetery B, tomb 245, Meroitic Phase IIIB-IV (225-300 CE) photographed at the Institute of the Study of Ancient Cultures, University of Chicago by Mary Harrsch

The ba first emerges in the Old Kingdom (3rd millennium BCE) as one component of the Egyptian conception of personhood. Initially textual and closely associated with royal and divine vitality, the ba represented mobility, individuality, and the capacity to move between the worlds of the living and the dead. By the Middle Kingdom, it acquired its canonical iconographic form as a human-headed bird, a visualization that stabilized during the New Kingdom and became ubiquitous in funerary papyri and tomb decoration. In this context, the ba was shown leaving the tomb by day and returning to reunite with the body, underscoring the continued importance of corporeal preservation.
From the Late Period onward, Egyptian theology increasingly treated the ba as part of a more integrated and abstract soul concept. In Roman-period Egypt, the ba did not disappear, but its visual prominence declined. While it continued to appear in hieroglyphic and Demotic texts, temple reliefs, and small-scale funerary objects such as amulets and shrouds, it was often absent from the dominant imagery of Roman-style coffins and mummy portraits, which emphasized individual likeness and social identity over explicit depictions of afterlife mechanics. The ba remained theologically intact, but visually implicit rather than central.
In Nubia, however, the trajectory diverged. Egyptian mortuary concepts had been selectively adopted since the New Kingdom and Napatan periods, but during the Meroitic and post-Meroitic phases they were reworked within a distinctly Nubian elite ideology. In cemeteries such as Ballana and Qustul (ca. 250–350 CE), the ba was not merely depicted but fully materialized as a three-dimensional stone statue placed within monumental tumulus tombs. These sculptures likely functioned as permanent anchors for the deceased’s spiritual essence, particularly in a funerary tradition that did not replicate Egyptian mummification practices in full. At precisely the moment when Roman Egypt was reducing the visual role of the ba, Nubia was giving it one of its most emphatic and sculptural expressions.
This tradition ended abruptly. By the mid–4th century CE, with the collapse of Meroitic political structures and a rapid transformation in burial customs, ba statues disappear entirely from the Nubian archaeological record. There is no evidence for their survival or reinterpretation in later X-Group, Makurian, or Christian Nubian contexts. Unlike in Egypt, where the ba was absorbed into evolving religious frameworks, in Nubia the concept appears to have been abandoned wholesale once the elite ideology that sustained it collapsed.
The Ballana ba-bird thus represents not a late survival of an Egyptian idea, but the closing chapter of a long and complex history: a concept born in Old Kingdom theology, reshaped through centuries of Egyptian religious thought, monumentalized in Nubia, and then brought to an abrupt end in the political and religious realignments of Late Antiquity.
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