Expedition Magazine | Ostrich Eggs (2024)

Volume 29 / Number 3

Expedition Magazine | Ostrich Eggs (1)

The exotic and easily recognized ostrich egg is found surprisingly often by archaeologists working all around the Mediterranean. Evidence for its use is found as early as the 7th millennium B.C. While it yields large amounts of protein and is thus best known as a dietary supplement, it has many other uses, and is therefore of substantial inter­est to scholars who study ancient art, crafts, trade, and religion (Caubet 1983, Finet 1982, Laufer 1926, Reese 1985). A survey of these may help us to understand why the ancient Libyans offered whole ostrich eggs to the Egyptian, Pharaoh as items of tribute, and why broken shells ended up in occupation debris on Bates’ Island.

Expedition Magazine | Ostrich Eggs (2)
An ostrich egg weighs up to 2 kg when full, with a capacity of more than 1 liter. It is equivalent in volume to about two dozen domestic hen’s eggs, so that an omelet made from one ostrich egg can feed at least 12 people I The egg measures about 15 by 13 cm, while the shell itself is about 2 mm thick. Its surface is usually quite smooth, varying in color from tan to ivory.

Once emptied, it may serve as a cup, a vessel in which to carry or store water, or a container for powders and liquids such as body paints (Figs. 7-9). Such uses are especial­ly common among peoples without ceramic vessels. Already used as a container in North Africa before the Bronze Age, the ostrich egg was best known in the Late Bronze Age Aegean world as a rhyton. This was an often highly decorated vessel which might sometimes have been used in religious ceremonies; ex­amples of ostrich egg rhyta are known from mainland Greece, the Aegean islands, and Cyprus (Fig. 10).

Besides serving as a container, the emptied ostrich egg has other practical uses. For example, various ancient peoples shaped the shell into arrow heads and potters’ combs. Babylonian and Assyrian texts record its medicinal as well as its magical values (Finet 1982:75), and ground ostrich eggshell is still said to be able to protect one from blindness.

The use of ostrich eggs for religious purposes is well docu­mented. Eggs were offered in an­cient Greek sanctuaries, where they served as a symbol of fertility and prosperity, and are still displayed in churches. Empty ostrich eggshells, often decorated with painted or in­cised designs, were placed in graves as early as the 5th millen­nium B.C. This practice is relative­ly common, and is documented for cultures dated from the 4th to the 2nd millennia B.C. including Predynastic and Pharaonic Egypt; Early Dynastic Nubia; and Bronze Age Greece, Crete, Cyprus, Syro-Palestine, and Mesopotamia (Fig.11). In the later 1st millennium B.C., ostrich eggs were used as grave goods by the Punic Phoenicians and Etruscans, symbolizing resurrection and eternal life, as well as providing “food” for the deceased. Today, ostrich eggs are still used by Mos­lems to honor the dead, being hung near or above the place of burial.

Ornamental uses of the ostrich egg are also numerous. In modern times they hang from the ceilings of North African dwellings, and have been observed adorning the roofs of straw huts in the Sudan. The eggs may even be gilded and placed in chandeliers, as known from a monastery in the Sinai. The rela­tively thick, smooth shells make an excellent raw material for small or­naments. Disc beads and other shapes cut from the egg’s relatively thick shell have been used in pen­dants, necklaces, belts, and anklets since Neolithic times, and are still made by the (Kung San people of the Kalahari desert in southern Africa (Fig. 8).

This short article comes from the full article,On Ostrich Eggs and Libyans–Traces of a Bronze Age People from Bates’ Island, Egypt

Cite This Article

Conwell, David. "Ostrich Eggs." Expedition Magazine 29, no. 3 (November, 1987): -. Accessed June 07, 2024. https://www.penn.museum/sites/expedition/ostrich-eggs/

This digitized article is presented here as a historical reference and may not reflect the current views of the Penn Museum.

Report problems and issues to digitalmedia@pennmuseum.org.

Expedition Magazine  | Ostrich Eggs (2024)

FAQs

How hard is the ostrich egg? ›

Answer and Explanation:

It has been said that an ostrich egg may withstand a weight of over 480 pounds vertically but less than that horizontally. Given that the ostrich may weigh 320 pounds it is safe to say that the eggs will definitely withstand more than 320 pounds of weight.

Can you eat one ostrich egg a day? ›

The answer to "Can you eat ostrich eggs?" is clear. Yes, and there are many benefits to doing so. Ostrich eggs are loaded with healthy micronutrients and macronutrients that make them a great choice for your health. They also taste similar to eggs and could make a group cooking get-together fun and adventurous!

What does the ostrich egg symbolize? ›

In the later 1st millennium B.C., ostrich eggs were used as grave goods by the Punic Phoenicians and Etruscans, symbolizing resurrection and eternal life, as well as providing “food” for the deceased. Today, ostrich eggs are still used by Moslems to honor the dead, being hung near or above the place of burial.

Does the male ostrich sit on the eggs? ›

Ostriches do not bury their heads in the sand! Ostriches Co-parent — the female will sit on the eggs during the day, and the males will at night. The female's light coloring helps her blend into the sand better during the day, while the male's darker coloring offers nighttime protection of the nest.

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