How Po Makes Hand Drums, Portia Chapman, Uncategorized

The Sacred History of Frame Drums and the Empowerment of Women Across Cultures

The Sacred History of Frame Drums and the Empowerment of Women Across Cultures

By Po – Woman Drum Maker & Drum Artist, Kingston ON
https://loveartbypo.wordpress.com/product-painted-hand-drums-kingston-artist-portia-po-chapman/

For thousands of years, long before written histories, the heartbeat of the frame drum echoed through ceremonies, celebrations, healing practices, and spiritual rituals around the world. What many people don’t know is that the frame drum—one of the oldest known instruments—has an especially profound and empowering connection to women.

Across continents, cultures, and centuries, women were the primary keepers of rhythm, voice, and ceremony. The frame drum was not only an instrument; it was a symbol of feminine power, intuition, and the ability to bridge the physical and spiritual worlds.

As a contemporary woman frame drum maker and artist in Kingston, Ontario, I’m deeply inspired by this lineage. This article explores the rich, global history of the frame drum and its long-standing relationship with women’s empowerment.


Ancient Mesopotamia: Drumming as Divine Feminine Power

One of the earliest depictions of women drumming comes from ancient Mesopotamia, where priestesses of the goddess Inanna/Ishtar were shown holding frame drums in temple rituals. These women were spiritual leaders, healers, and cultural guides.

The drum, here, symbolized:

  • Women’s connection to sacred cycles
  • Their authority in ceremonial life
  • The rhythmic energy of creation itself

The frame drum wasn’t just an instrument—it was a tool of spiritual and social leadership.


The Middle East & Mediterranean: Priestesses, Midwives, and Healers

In cultures across Turkey, Egypt, Greece, and Rome, women were the primary drummers during rites of fertility, healing, birth, and death.

In ancient Egypt, women used frame drums in temple rituals dedicated to Hathor and Sekhmet—goddesses connected to feminine strength, intuition, and protection.

In Greece, the tambourine-like tympanon was played almost exclusively by women affiliated with goddess cults, such as those of Cybele and Dionysus.

In the Levant, women drummed during birth rituals, blessing the arrival of new life with rhythm.

Here, drumming represented the cyclical rhythm of womanhood—birth, transformation, creativity, mourning, and celebration.


Indigenous North American Traditions: Drums as Carriers of Story, Spirit, and Identity

Across many Indigenous cultures in North America, women traditionally played drums for:

  • Ceremony
  • Storytelling
  • Healing
  • Community leadership

The drum is often seen as the heartbeat of Mother Earth, carrying prayers and intention. While each Nation has its own practices, women have long held vital roles as singers, drummers, and creators of hand drums—especially in matrilineal societies.

Today, Indigenous women continue to reclaim and revitalize drum teachings, reinforcing cultural strength and identity. This reclamation is a powerful act of resilience and empowerment.


Northern & Eastern Europe: Women as Ritual Drummers and Seers

Archaeological and oral histories from Ireland, Scandinavia, the Baltics, and Siberia show that women used frame drums in shamanic and divination practices. The drum was believed to open pathways to the unseen world.

Women drummers were often:

  • Healers
  • Midwives
  • Ritual leaders
  • Carriers of ancestral knowledge

In Sámi culture, both men and women used ceremonial drums, but women were often recognized as strong intuitive leaders—those who could “hear” what rhythm was saying.

https://jwa.org/sites/default/files/mediaobjects/women_and_hand_drums_terracotta.jpg

Central Asia & the Middle East: The Daf and Women’s Healing Circles

For centuries, the daf, a large frame drum, has been central to women’s gatherings in Iran, Kurdistan, and surrounding regions.

Women used the drum to:

  • Celebrate weddings
  • Mark rites of passage
  • Perform healing dances
  • Build community solidarity

The daf carries a deeply spiritual vibration, and in Sufi tradition, women daf players continue to lead devotional music that uplifts and transforms.


When Women’s Drumming Was Suppressed—And When It Returned

As patriarchal systems grew across many cultures, women’s roles as drummers, spiritual leaders, and healers were gradually diminished or erased. Some places even banned women from drumming entirely.

But the beat never disappeared.
Women held onto drumming quietly in:

  • Kitchen gatherings
  • Birth rituals
  • Folk celebrations
  • Personal spiritual practice

By the late 20th and early 21st centuries, a global revival began. Women around the world started reclaiming the frame drum—remembering an ancient calling.


The Modern Revival: Drumming as Healing, Empowerment, and Reconnection

Today, the frame drum has re-emerged as a powerful symbol of women’s empowerment. Women are:

  • Making their own drums
  • Leading drum circles
  • Reconnecting with ancestral rhythms
  • Using drumming for trauma healing
  • Teaching drumming as a form of voice reclamation
  • Celebrating identity and community through rhythm

Contemporary female artists and makers—like myself—are part of a global movement restoring the drum’s original connection to feminine strength.

The frame drum reminds us:
We are rhythmic beings.
We are carriers of story.
We are creators.
We are connected.


Why I Make Drums as a Woman Artist

As a drum maker, painter, and musician in Kingston, ON, I create frame drums not only as instruments, but as carriers of meaning – a living storytelling art.

Each drum I paint or make by hand honours:

  • The strength of women
  • The historic lineage of feminine drumming
  • The healing vibration of sound
  • The power of personal storytelling
  • The beauty of Creation

Explore my hand-painted drums here:
👉 https://loveartbypo.wordpress.com/product-painted-hand-drums-kingston-artist-portia-po-chapman/

Every drum is nurtured – Every drum made with LOVE.

I look forward to making a custom drum for you!

Contact me to book your complimentary e-consultation and we can collaborate a drum design that reflects your voice, your journey, and tells your story.

Request a Custom Project Quote

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