The burial of animals is attested in Egypt from the pre-Dynastic period through to Roman times. This phenomenon is observed across different animal species and involves varied funerary practices, although mummification is the most significant. Against this background, a series of burials of small animals, under excavation since 2011 at Berenike, suggests a unique example of pet-keeping rather than the religious or magical deposits found in the Nile Valley.
CITATION STYLE
Osypińska, M. (2016). Pet cats at the Early Roman Red Sea port of Berenike, Egypt. Antiquity, 90(354). https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2016.181
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