Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Plant Portraits 7. Papyrus

According to the Old Testament book of Exodus, the baby 
Moses was placed in s papyrus basket and set adrift in the
Nile River by his mother, to protect him from the Pharaoh's 
decree to kill all newborn Hebrew boys. The river is lined 
with thickets of the papyrus plant.

  (Note images in this series were generated with the assistance of modern AI tools. No actual human individuals are portrayed here. See the first installment of the series for further explanation)

 

 I recently highlighted the incredibly useful bamboos, sources of fiber and wood substitutes for both ancient and modern societies. For ancient Egyptians, the magical source of useful fiber was the papyrus plant (Cyperus papyrus, Cyperaceae). It was used for everything plant fibers are good for:,mats, baskets, and even boats. Most important though was the manufacture of paper. The word paper in fact comes from the word papyrus, the Latin version of an even older word. 

The genus Cyperus contains at least 700 species, but only a handful are used for fiber or for food.  Many are short and grass-like, often appearing as lawn weeds.


 

Craftsmen in ancient Egypt are manufacturing paper from the long upright stalks of the papyrus plant. Papyrus was the standard writing material throughout the Mediterranean and surrounding areas for millennia.The stalks which may be six feet long or more are ideal for this purpose, as they consist of a single, uninterrupted internode with long straight fibers.

A fishing boat in ancient Egypt was made entirely of papyrus stalks. The explorer Thor Heyerdahl successfully crossed the Atlantic Ocean  in a papyrus boat in 1970, to support his hypothesis that ancient Egyptians had done so in prehistoric times, influencing the building of pyramids in the New World.

Yokot'an Mayan people of southern Mexico used the stems of Cyperus giganteus to make mats.

Hunter/gatherer cultures, and later agriculturists,  in Africa have been harvesting the edible tubers of Cyperus esculentus for millennia.
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