by Mary Harrsch © 2026
This Middle Kingdom female figurine (late 12th–13th Dynasty, ca. 1900–1700 BCE) that I photographed at the Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures at the University of Chicago exemplifies a funerary strategy in which regeneration was embodied directly in the human form. Its green surface, invoking Osirian rebirth, and its tattooed dancer iconography, associated with ritual performance and Hathoric vitality, mark the figure as a magically operative body, not a representation of a household woman.
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| Middle Kingdom female figurine (late 12th–13th Dynasty, ca. 1900–1700 BCE) photographed at the Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures at the University of Chicago by Mary Harrsch |
Early Egyptological scholarship—shaped by late 19th- and early 20th-century assumptions about sexuality and the afterlife—interpreted such figures as literal sexual companions for the deceased, giving rise to the term “concubines of the dead.” This label reflected a tendency to read Egyptian funerary belief through a modern, literalizing lens, conflating erotic symbolism with sexual service and overlooking the ritual and cosmological dimensions of the imagery.
Over the past several decades, this interpretation has been largely abandoned. Comparative analysis of tomb contexts, iconography, and Middle Kingdom religious developments now situates these figures within a broader system of apotropaic and regenerative objects. The tattooing—closely paralleling that worn by female dancers and musicians in ritual scenes—signals mythic and liminal status, not social identity. Sexuality here is not biographical or relational, but cosmic and functional, operating as a force of renewal essential to rebirth in the Osirian afterlife.
The contrast with the New Kingdom is instructive. New Kingdom female figures—human and divine—are typically rendered in naturalistic yellow or light ochre skin tones, emphasizing social identity, lineage, and narrative presence. Regenerative power does not vanish; instead, it is re-encoded materially and textually. Osirian rebirth is made explicit through funerary texts identifying the deceased by name as Osiris, while regeneration is distributed across faience amulets, scarabs, shabtis, resin-treated mummies, ritual substances colored green, blue, or black, and vegetal "corn mummies.”
“Corn mummies” were small, mummiform figures made of soil mixed with grain (usually barley or emmer) and wrapped like a corpse. As the grain germinated, the figure enacted the Osirian cycle of death and rebirth, transforming decay into new life. These objects made regeneration materially visible and biologically active, reinforcing the identification of the deceased with Osiris as a being who dies, germinates, and is reborn eternally.
Seen in this light, the Middle Kingdom figurines once called “concubines of the dead” represent a fundamentally different metaphysical solution to the same problem later addressed through texts and materials. They are embodied regeneration, not erotic accessories—mythic instruments designed to guarantee renewal in perpetuity.
I was curious, though, if the emphasis on potency, was legislated by the pharaoh as it later was codified legally in Augustan Rome. But my research revealed during the Middle Kingdom (ca. 2055–1650 BCE) there were no decrees, edicts, or legal texts mandating marriage, childbirth, or minimum family size, no tax incentives, land grants, or exemptions explicitly tied to reproduction, and no surviving administrative records framing population growth as a state policy goal. However, fertility was strongly promoted through religious, social, and economic norms, especially after the instability of the First Intermediate Period.
Texts such as royal inscriptions and wisdom literature, such as "The Instruction of Ptahhotep" and "The Instruction for Merikare" frame prosperity and order as dependent on stable families, legitimate heirs and proper transmission of property and cult obligations. Funerary cults required descendants to maintain offerings and the cults of Hathor, Taweret, Bes, and Min placed ritual emphasis on rebirth, regeneration, and sexual potency.
The New Kingdom, however, reorganized the infrastructure of regeneration. Pharaonic divine kingship became ideologically absolute—particularly after Ahmose's expulsion of the Hyksos established the 18th Dynasty pharaoh as cosmic restorer. Imperial administration expanded dramatically, incorporating tribute from Nubia and the Levant, massive temple economies, and professionalized priesthoods. Within this transformed landscape, regenerative power became institutionally mediated: funerary texts required scribal production, proper materials needed temple workshops, correct rituals needed trained priests.
The Middle Kingdom figurines had operated as autonomous magical technologies, concentrating regenerative power in portable, ritually activated objects. The New Kingdom system distributed that same power across standardized mechanisms embedded within state cult infrastructure. Rebirth remained central, but its material expression shifted from concentrated embodiment to coordinated assemblages of texts, amulets, ritual substances, and temple performance.
The decline of tattooed female figurines was not abandonment of their function but displacement of their method—decentralized, symbolically dense objects gave way to centrally produced, textually coordinated systems. This shift aligned with broader New Kingdom patterns of theological standardization and administrative consolidation, making regeneration legible and controllable within imperial frameworks.




