mostlydeadlanguages
Instructions from a Female Chemist (KAR 220, r ii 8'-10')

This Middle Assyrian text, dated to around 1200 BCE, is one of the first detailed descriptions of chemistry that we know of.  It is also attributed to a woman: Tappūtī-bēlet-ekallim.  Tappūti was described as a “female perfumer,” a well-attested occupation in Mesopotamia.  In the detailed but broken text (translated here and also here), “you” (the chemist) are instructed to distill and clarify a mixture of herbs, including calamus reeds, myrtle, and almonds, using various specialized vessels.

The text ends with three lines of identification:

Perfumery [recipe] for two units of refined cane oil, good enough for a king!
Excerpted from the dictation of Tappūtī-bēlet-ekallim, the female perfumer.
Month Muhur-ilāni, twentieth day, the year named for Qatnu-Qardu the steward.