‘Magic in Ancient Egypt’ explores the mystical rituals and practices integral to Egyptian religion and healing through spiritual power.
In Egyptian mythology, magic (heka) is a force used by the creator to shape the world, enabling symbolic actions to yield tangible results. Both deities and humans could harness this force, but its use followed specific guidelines.
Priests were the main practitioners of magic, seen as guardians of sacred knowledge from the gods aimed at protecting humanity from fate's challenges. The most respected were the lector priests, known for reading ancient magical texts and credited with extraordinary feats such as animating wax figures or controlling water flow.
Real lector priests originally performed magical rituals to protect their kings and assist the dead in rebirth. By the first millennium BC, this role shifted to magicians (heka), with healing magic often linked to priests of Sekhmet, the plague goddess. Lower-status practitioners, like scorpion charmers, used magic to eliminate harmful creatures, while midwives and wise women employed magic to identify the cause of afflictions.
Amulets were crafted by “protection-makers,” and magical practices were generally accepted, except when foreigners were accused of malevolent magic. It wasn’t until the Roman period that some magicians began to practice harmful magic for profit.
Magic was typically performed at dawn, requiring ritual purity, which included abstaining from sex and avoiding contact with those considered impure. Practitioners often bathed and donned clean clothing, with some using metal or ivory wands to symbolise their authority in summoning powerful entities.
During that time, written magic was highly valued, as only a small portion of the population could read. Magical texts were often passed down through generations and included protective or healing spells written on papyrus and worn on the body. A spell typically had two components: the spoken words and the actions to be performed. For effectiveness, especially when invoking deities, the words needed to be pronounced correctly. These words could activate the powers of amulets, figurines, or potions, which sometimes contained unusual ingredients like black dog blood or the milk of a new mother. Music, dance, and gestures, such as pointing or stamping, also played important roles in spell-casting.
In ancient Egypt, magic complemented medicine rather than replaced it. Surviving magical medical papyri include spells used by doctors and priests to combat supernatural illnesses. Knowledge of the names of these beings granted magicians power over them. Demons, drawn to foul things, could be repelled with dung, while sweet substances like honey could drive them away. Another method involved doctors drawing deity images on patients' skin for them to lick, absorbing the healing power.
Healing and protective spells were often inscribed on statues or stelae for public use. For instance, a statue of King Rameses III in the desert featured spells to banish snakes and cure snakebites. Cippi, magical stelae, depicted the infant god Horus defeating dangerous animals and included stories of his poisoning and healing by Thoth after his mother, Isis, pleaded for his life. The inscriptions were believed to carry magical power, able to heal the sick when water was poured over them and then consumed or used to cleanse wounds.