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'Blood Is Thicker Than Water' - Non-Royal Consanguineous Marriage in Ancient Egypt - An Exploration of Economic and Biological Outcomes (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,166
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'Blood Is Thicker Than Water' - Non-Royal Consanguineous Marriage in Ancient Egypt - An Exploration of Economic and Biological Outcomes (Paperback)
Series: Archaeopress Egyptology
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Discussions on consanguineous marriage within Egyptology usually
focus on brother-sister marriages recorded in census returns from
Roman Egypt, or royal sibling marriages amongst the ruling
Ptolemies. However, no wide-ranging review exists of non-royal
consanguineous marriage in ancient Egypt despite the economic and
biological implications of such relationships. This is the first
time that evidence for nonroyal consanguineous marriage in ancient
Egypt has been collated from select sources spanning the Middle
Kingdom to the Roman Period and a method created to investigate the
potential economic and biological outcomes of these unions,
particularly beyond the level of sibling and half-sibling unions.
The working definition of consanguineous marriage used throughout
this study is that used by clinical geneticists: unions contracted
between cousins biologically related as second cousins or closer
biological kin. This research argues that for some families, and
under certain conditions, consanguineous marriage was a preferred
economic strategy in terms of gifts given at marriage and in
inheritance, and that families who married consanguineously may
have received greater levels of intra-familial support without the
expectation of reciprocity. Although there may have been adverse
biological outcomes arising from congenital anomalies and genetic
disorders in the offspring of consanguineous marriages, the
research suggests that it is unlikely that these physical or
cognitive disorders were distinguished from other medical disorders
in the general health environment of ancient Egypt. The
investigation focuses primarily on ancient Egyptian documentary and
archaeological sources, including human remains, and is informed by
research on consanguinity from a range of disciplines including
anthropology, demography, economics and pathology.
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