Body height of mummified pharaohs supports historical suggestions of sibling marriages
Date
2015
Authors
Habicht, M.E.
Henneberg, M.
Öhrström, L.M.
Staub, K.
Rühli, F.J.
Editors
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Type:
Conference paper
Citation
American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 2015, vol.157, iss.3, pp.519-525
Statement of Responsibility
Michael E. Habicht, Maciej Henneberg, Lena M. Öhrström, Kaspar Staub and Frank J. Rühli
Conference Name
84th Annual Meeting of the American-Association-of-Physical-Anthropologists (AAPA) (25 Mar 2015 - 28 Mar 2015 : St Louis, MO)
Abstract
Body height is an important factor in reconstructing health conditions and it serves as an indicator of socio-economic status. Researchers rely on ancient data to analyze evolutionary aspects of human health and its interrelation with environmental influences. This study presents body height estimates from all periods of ancient Egyptian history and compares the general population with the existing mummies of the members of royal families. A sample of 259 adult Egyptian mummies originating from various collections and published sources with body lengths (long bone measures or/and overall measurements, CT data) were analyzed, and royal mummies were scored with respect to the level of consanguinity. Male royals were taller than males in the general ancient Egyptian population, while female royals were shorter than females in the general population. The body height variation of the royals is significantly reduced when compared with a pool of non-royal mummies. This provides evidence for inbreeding resulting from consanguineous marriages. However, there appears to be no correlation between the level of inbreeding and individual body height. The random sample of general population does not show signs of inbreeding. Due to the present lack of larger, technically and ethically challenging genetic studies, the selected non-invasive approach of body height is the most reliable indicator of sibling marriages of pharaohs based on direct physical evidence.
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Dissertation Note
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© 2015 Wiley Periodicals Inc.