Skip to content
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Archaeology & Discoveries
    • Historical Events
    • Artifacts & Treasures
    • Ancient Civilizations
    • Unexplained Phenomena
    • Mythology
  • Subscribe
© Copyright AllThatHistory - 2025
Theme by ThemeinProgress
Proudly powered by WordPress
  • Home
  • Articles
    • Archaeology & Discoveries
    • Historical Events
    • Artifacts & Treasures
    • Ancient Civilizations
    • Unexplained Phenomena
    • Mythology
  • Subscribe
AllThatHistory
  • You are here :
  • Home
  • Archaeology & Discoveries
  • 2nd Century BC Drug Vase Shows Ancient Egyptians Knew How to Party
Drug vase
Archaeology & Discoveries

2nd Century BC Drug Vase Shows Ancient Egyptians Knew How to Party

Allthathistory November 18, 2024

A new analysis of a vase from ancient Egypt has revealed what we think everyone already knew: ancient Egyptians loved their psychedelics. The vase, fashioned in the likeness of the Egyptian party god Bes, contains a heady cocktail of hallucinogens and other mind-altering substances.

The study, headed up by Professor Davide Tanasi of the University of South Florida and published in Nature, involved a wide ranging and detailed assessment of just what substances made up the residue inside the vase, currently in the possession of the Tampa Museum of Art. The substances were subject to multiple tests to assess what they actually were. 

Professor Tanasi and his team used cutting edge techniques, including proteomics, metabolomics, genetics techniques, and synchrotron radiation-based Fourier Transformed Infrared microSpectroscopy (yeah, we don’t know either). And there was a lot to find, apparently. 

Inside the vase were bioactive, psychoactive, and medicinal substances including the poisonous Peganum harmala (wild rue), the hallucinogenic Nimphaea nouchali var. caerulea (a type of water lily) and some kind of Cleome, commonly called the spider plant. All three plants contain psychotropic compounds.

Read moreThe Cave of Hebron: Tomb of the Patriarchs?

Also found in the vase were what appears to be saliva, as well as some kind of fermented liquid and royal jelly from bees. It seems that this potent cocktail of drugs and alcohol was passed around at Egyptian parties (all right, “rituals”) but frankly we can only guess at what the combined effect was like.

Bes is a very interesting figure, depicted as a grimacing dwarf and apparently used as a totem at Egyptian festivals. He is one of a pair of Egyptian gods of Nubian origin and is the god of the household, a protector of pregnant women, and also the patron deity of having a good time. 

The vase dates from the second century BC, known as the Ptolemaic Period. By this time Egypt’s golden age(s) were long behind her, and it was under the Ptolemaic pharaohs that she would finally fall as an empire to mighty Rome.

Several such vases or mugs depicting Bes were long suspected of having a significant role in Egyptian rituals. With the confirmation of what was inside, we can now see exactly why they kept inviting Bes to their parties.

Read more3,000 Year Old Sword of a Pharoah Discovered in Egypt

But there is a deeper, mythological connection to Bes in such a wild concoction, as the study outlines. In the Myth of the Solar Eye, the goddess Hathor is calmed from a violent rage by Bes serving her an alcoholic drink which has been spiked with drugs.

The drink was disguised and made to resemble blood but it apparently hit the errant goddess like a freight train, sending her into a deep sleep. The analysis of the vase in the study suggests that it was also made to resemble blood, suggesting that it was an attempt to recreate this divine beverage.

Bes was one of the longest-running Egyptian gods and we find such Bes vases throughout much of Egypt’s long history. Other gods may come and go, but so long as Bes kept producing the goods it seems he had a devoted fanbase and a place in Egyptian life.

Header Image: Bes vases were common in ancient Egypt, apparently for drinking a cocktail of alcohol and drugs made to resemble blood. Source: Tanasi, D., van Oppen de Ruiter, B.F., Florian, F. et al. Multianalytical investigation reveals psychotropic substances in a ptolemaic Egyptian vase. Sci Rep 14, 27891 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-78721-8 / Nature.

You may also like

Ancient Rock Carvings Uncovered in Ecuador Point to Shared Amazonian Cultural Traditions

Stolen Hercules Fresco Finds Its Home After Decades in U.S. Collection

Ancient Rock Art in Texas-Mexico Borderlands Endured 4,000 Years

Were Wolves Kept and Nursed by Ancient Seal Hunters?

Ancient Peruvians Survived Climate Catastrophe Through Adaptation, Not War

Peru’s Mysterious “Band of Holes” May Have Been Ancient Marketplace and Accounting System

Allthathistory
Written by Allthathistory

Tags: alcohol, Bes, Egypt, god, party, psychoactive, Ptolemaic

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Ancient Rock Carvings Uncovered in Ecuador Point to Shared Amazonian Cultural Traditions
    Archaeologists have identified a panel containing approximately 30 ancient rock carvings in Santiago de Méndez canton, Morona Santiago province, marking
  • Stolen Hercules Fresco Finds Its Home After Decades in U.S. Collection
    Archaeologists at Pompeii have identified the original location of a looted fresco fragment depicting the infant Hercules strangling serpents, solving
  • Maya Medical Systems Used Living Organisms as Precision Surgical Tools
    Maya medical systems deployed living organisms as precision surgical tools centuries before germ theory existed. Recent archaeological evidence shows these
  • Ancient Rock Art in Texas-Mexico Borderlands Endured 4,000 Years
    Hunter-gatherers in what is now southwestern Texas and northern Mexico created rock art for more than 4,000 years, maintaining consistent
  • The Thermal Engineering Behind Tiwanaku’s Agricultural Success
    At nearly 3,850 meters above sea level, frost arrives almost nightly on Bolivia’s Altiplano. Modern visitors struggle to breathe. Yet
The Gnostic Gospels
Encounters at the Heart of the World: A History of the Mandan People
Substack Articles

Latest from AllThatHistory Weekly

What Really Destroyed Pompeii?

What Really Destroyed Pompeii?

On August 24, 79 AD, Mount Vesuvius erupted and buried Pompeii under nearly 20 feet of volcanic ash.

Read More →
Ancient Rome’s Concrete Secret: Why We Still Can’t Replicate It

Ancient Rome’s Concrete Secret: Why We Still Can’t Replicate It

The Pantheon has been standing for 1,900 years. Unreinforced. Roman harbor concrete built 2,000 years ago is still getting stronger. A 2023 study from MIT and Harvard finally figured out why and the answer involves a self healing mechanism that modern engineers are only now learning to replicate. Did we actually forget how to build things?

Read More →
The Minoans: Europe’s First Great Civilization and the Connections Nobody Is Making

The Minoans: Europe’s First Great Civilization and the Connections Nobody Is Making

The Minoans built the first palatial civilization in Europe.

Read More →
Was Atlantis a Real Place?

Was Atlantis a Real Place?

One source. That’s all there is. Plato wrote about Atlantis in two dialogues around 360 BC: a powerful naval civilization beyond the Strait of Gibraltar, swallowed by the ocean in a single day and night around 9,600 BC.

Read More →
Otzi the Iceman’s Last Meal and What It Tells Us About His Murder

Otzi the Iceman’s Last Meal and What It Tells Us About His Murder

Otzi the Iceman ate a large meal red deer, ibex, bone marrow about 30 minutes before someone shot him in the back with an arrow. He had defensive wounds from a fight days earlier. Blood from four different people was on his clothing. A 2023 DNA study completely changed what he looked like. This is the most detailed forensic file…

Read More →
The Silk Road’s Forgotten Travelers: Women, Merchants, and Diplomats History Ignored

The Silk Road’s Forgotten Travelers: Women, Merchants, and Diplomats History Ignored

The standard image of the Silk Road is male adventurers hauling silk and spices across deserts. New DNA and isotope analysis of Central Asian cemeteries is telling a different story: women traveled these routes in comparable numbers to men, traded independently, wrote letters from foreign cities, and served as diplomatic intermediaries between empires. A 1,700 year old letter from a…

Read More →
❮
❯

Subscribe to receive our newest archaeology articles, long-form investigations, and historical insights directly in your inbox.

© Copyright AllThatHistory - 2025