Yale researchers detect opium traces in ancient Egyptian vase

Scientists at Yale University have uncovered chemical evidence of opium in an ancient alabaster vase, suggesting that the drug was commonly used in ancient Egyptian society. The discovery raises the possibility that similar vessels from King Tutankhamun's tomb once contained opiates. This finding points to opium's role in daily life, medicine, and rituals across ancient civilizations.

Researchers from the Yale Ancient Pharmacology Program (YAPP) analyzed an ancient alabaster vase housed in the Yale Peabody Museum's Babylonian Collection. Using advanced methods to detect organic residues, they identified biomarkers such as noscapine, hydrocotarnine, morphine, thebaine, and papaverine—clear indicators of opium.

The vase, inscribed in Akkadian, Elamite, Persian, and Egyptian languages, is dedicated to Xerxes I, the Achaemenid emperor who ruled from 486 to 465 BCE. An additional Demotic script inscription notes it holds about 1,200 milliliters and stands 22 centimeters tall. Such intact vessels are rare, with fewer than 10 known in global museum collections, spanning the reigns of Achaemenid rulers from 550 to 425 BCE.

Andrew J. Koh, YAPP's principal investigator and lead author of the study, emphasized the broader implications. "Our findings combined with prior research indicate that opium use was more than accidental or sporadic in ancient Egyptian cultures and surrounding lands and was, to some degree, a fixture of daily life," Koh stated. He added that it is "possible, if not probable," that alabaster jars from Tutankhamun's tomb contained opium, part of an ancient tradition.

This evidence aligns with earlier detections of opiates in vessels from a New Kingdom tomb in Sedment, Egypt, dating to the 16th to 11th centuries BCE. Historical texts, including the Ebers Papyrus and works by Hippocrates and Dioscorides, reference the poppy plant in medicinal and ritual contexts.

Tutankhamun's tomb, discovered by Howard Carter in November 1922, yielded many alabaster vessels with unidentified sticky, dark-brown residues. In 1933, chemist Alfred Lucas examined them but could not pinpoint the contents, noting they were unlikely perfumes. Ancient looters targeted these jars, scraping out valuable interiors, as evidenced by finger marks.

Koh suggested the vases may have served as cultural markers for opium use, akin to modern hookahs for tobacco. The study, co-authored by Agnete W. Lassen and Alison M. Crandall, appears in the Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology and Heritage Studies. Further analysis of Tutankhamun's unlooted jars at the Grand Egyptian Museum could clarify opium's societal role.

"We now have found opiate chemical signatures that Egyptian alabaster vessels attached to elite societies in Mesopotamia and embedded in more ordinary cultural circumstances within ancient Egypt," Koh concluded.

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