Medieval funeral poetry inscribed on an ostrich egg
Archaeologists have uncovered a 500-year-old ostrich egg covered in Arabic poetry. The verses mourn the death of a loved one.
The egg was found in the Red Sea port of Quseir, Egypt. In the
fifteenth century, Quseir was a hub for trade between the Middle East
and India, and a stop on the pilgrim route between North Africa and
Mecca...
The shell is covered with quotations from the Koran and poetry: "It
describes the soul's journey from death to life," says historian
Dionisius Agius, of the University of Leeds, who is analysing the text.
Eggs bearing Arabic writing are rare, although another was found in
Quseir 20 years ago. The ancient Egyptians used ostrich eggs for perfume
containers and drinking cups, and the country's Coptic christians hung
them as lanterns in their cult halls.
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