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Ancient Egypt
by Joanne O'Brien, ICOREC
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The Red Crown
& White Crown
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The civilization of Ancient Egypt flourished for more than 3,000
years. In the predynastic period Egypt was divided into the kingdoms
of Upper and Lower Egypt, the King of Upper Egypt wore the white
crown and the King of Lower Egypt wore the red crown. After years
of bitter struggle between the kings of the north and the south,
the north was finally defeated, Egypt was united under the Southerner,
Menes, and the first dynasty was founded around 3100 BCE. The memory
of a predynastic Egypt lived on in the pharaohs' title King of Upper
and Lower Egypt. The most important periods of Egyptian history
are divided into thirty two dynasties which extend from the beginning
of the literate period, under the rule of Menes, until Egypt became
a Roman province around 30 BCE. The successive pharaohs of Egypt
were divided into these dynasties. Throughout her history Egypt
passed through periods of turbulent political upheaval and times
of peace, power and prosperity. The most stable and productive periods
of Egyptian history are marked by the Old, Middle and New Kingdoms.
At the end of the New Kingdom Egypt suffered a series of foreign
invasions and rulers and the great periods of Egyptian civilization
went into decline.
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Nile River looking south in Upper Egypt
(north of Esna).
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Life in Ancient Egypt revolved around the towns and villages of Egypt
which nestled alongside the River Nile. On either side of the river
the lands were green and fertile but beyond these narrow strips of
land the hot dry desert stretched as far as the horizon. Once the
harvest had been collected even the fertile land became hard and dry
under the hot desert sun. By late Spring, when the land was desperately
parched, the River Nile began to rise. The waters rose gradually,
slowly creeping over the land until the fields were hidden from view.
When the waters began to recede, leaving behind a thick black layer
of silt, villagers and workmen took up their tools and set to work
on the land, clearing, digging, surveying, ploughing and planting.
The land of Egypt could once more flower with new life, the people
would be fed, the taxes paid and the royal granaries well stocked.
Each year the land which had been dead was given new life, so at the
time of the yearly flood the people celebrated the festival of Osiris,
the god of vegetation. The pharaoh, the priests and the people sang,
danced and performed plays in his honor, praying for a rich and fruitful
harvest. Osiris would give new life to the land, he would also give
new life to those who had died, for he was the god of the underworld
and he welcomed the dead to his land, the Land of the West.
Until the Middle Kingdom the land of Upper and
Lower Egypt was divided into forty two administrative areas known
as nomes (maps of the nomes of Lower and Upper Egypt, 6Kb) each
governed by a nomarch. The officials of each nome assessed and collected
the taxes which were due on the lands which did not belong to the
temples and sorted out any minor legal problems in the towns and
villages. In theory, the pharaoh owned all the land in Egypt but
he gave gifts of land to his favorite subjects. Every large town
had at least one temple and the fertile temple lands were exempt
from certain taxes and given many privileges. In addition, the king
presented foreign booty to the temples and as a result the priesthood
became both powerful and wealthy. Sometimes, particularly in the
New Kingdom, the power of the priesthood threatened the power of
the king himself. The temple was primarily the house of the god
cared for by the priesthood and the position of priest was hereditary,
though many of the priests had another profession. A doctor could
be a priest of Sekhmet, goddess of disease and epidemic, and a lawyer
could be a priest of Ma'at, goddess of truth and justice. Once trained
these priests would return annually to the temple where they performed
religious duties as well as teaching and debating in the universities
attached to the temple. These educational institutions were known
as the Houses of Life. Doctors, scientists, lawyers, mathematicians
and scribes learned their professions alongside each other in the
House of Life and religion was interwoven in all these subjects.
The Egyptians put great emphasis on education because it was a
means of escaping dirty and often dangerous menial jobs. Before
acquiring a profession it was essential to know how to read and
write. Ancient Egyptian writing is known as hieroglyphs. Although
schoolchildren spent endless hours copying out hieroglyphic literature
it was only after training in the House of Life that the scribe
could fully master the hieroglyphic script. The Egyptians worked
out mathematical formulae for purely practical reasons. They had
to know how to divide land and measure area, it was essential to
keep exact measurements when the pyramids, tombs or temples were
built. While the plans for a building were drawn up by the architects
and mathematicians, the workers were busy quarrying the stones.
The most common building stones were sandstone, granite and limestone.
Since the River Nile was the main highway in Egypt the stones were
placed on flat-bottomed barges and floated up the river to the spot
nearest the building site. The horse and chariot were not introduced
into Egypt until the Middle to New Kingdom but even then the river
was the best highway for heavy cargo. With the use of ramps, pulleys
and roller sledges the enormous stones were eased up the river banks.
The monumental tombs and temples took many years to build so the
pharaoh would begin work on his pyramid or tomb during his lifetime.
The pyramids were built in layers with the four sides tapering equally.
Smooth pathways of earth were laid over stretches of stones so that
the stones could be heaved up on sledges with rollers beneath. The
Egyptians used the size of the human body to determine set lengths;
the main measurement was the cubit, equivalent to a man's forearm
from the elbow to the tip of the outstretched middle finger.
The desert edge and the eastern hills of Egypt were a rich source
of stone which could be cut for use in monumental buildings, for
statues or for delicate cosmetic dishes. Stone dishes, particularly
alabaster dishes, were made mainly for burial in tombs whereas clay
was the material for everyday domestic use. Often the Ancient Egyptians
used minerals to paint pots, walls and coffins. For example, soot
charcoal could be used for black paint, powdered malachite for green,
iron oxide for pink and red ochre for the bright reds. The pigments
were ground with a pestle on stone palettes and mixed with water
and with glue, gum or egg for adhesive. The abundant clay of the
River Nile was combined with water, straw and other vegetable matter
to make bricks, the common building material for houses. Clay from
the Nile and from the desert wadis was fired to make ceramic storage
jars, pots and bowls. Many of the pots were simple, practical and
unpainted, designed for use in the home. The Ancient Egyptians were
particularly fond of jewelry for decoration in this life and the
next. Necklaces, beads, earrings and amulets were made from gold,
silver, shell, carnelian, turquoise, amethyst and other precious
and semi-precious stones and metals.
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The "opening of the mouth" ceremony
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Jewelry was worn by both men and women, particularly on festive
occasions but the Egyptians wore very little jewelry and clothing
for everyday work in the fields. Most peasants would have worn a
small cloth girdle and frequently worked naked. Farming was an important
source of labor in Egypt particularly for the people in small villages
dotted along the Nile. There was also a demand for craftsmen in
the villages or in government workshops. Precious stones were cut
and carved to make jewelry for the nobles and the royal family,
stonemasons were busy fashioning stones into statues, vases and
bowls, carpenters carved fine furniture and statues for houses,
temples and tombs. Everybody worked to provide goods for this life
as well as the next. The Ancient Egyptians could not imagine the
afterlife to be any different from this life. They thought they
would still need food, furniture and clothing and to have someone
else to plow their lands and prepare their food. So those who could
afford it put servant statuettes in their tombs to carry out these
tasks. Even the owner of the tomb was usually buried with a statue
of himself in case anything should happen to his body. At the burial
the officiating priest brought everything to life with sacred words
and gestures, this ceremony was known as "the opening of the mouth."
The fertile land of Egypt was scarce and therefore very precious
so the dead were buried on the outskirts of towns and villages.
In the earliest times they were buried in shallow oval pits dug
in the sand with a few goods which they would need in the afterlife:
some food, bowls and jewelry. The sun was scorching hot and the
sand extremely dry so bodies dried out very quickly. It is possible
that sandstorms revealed dead relatives perfectly preserved, this
may have been why the people believed that their bodies must be
preserved in order to reach the next life. Ancient Egyptian burial
became more and more elaborate as time went on. The dead were buried
deeper often within a stone chamber and special buildings were put
up to mark the grave. These buildings looked like long, low benches
and are called "mastabas", an Arabic word for bench. Since the bodies
were far away from the drying effects of the sun the skin would
rot and eventually all that was left was a skeleton. A way of preserving
the body was found through trial and error and the Egyptians learned
how to dry out the body so that the skin and hair stayed as it had
been in life. This process is known as mummification. During mummification
the internal organs were removed by the embalmers through a cut
in the lower left hand side of the body. The organs and the body
were dried out with a special type of salt known as natron. They
were then treated with fragrant spices and perfumes and eventually
wrapped in bandages. Special prayers were said over the bandages
because each bandage was important, charms were placed next to the
skin and between the bandages. These charms are known as "amulets",
an Arabic word which means "something which is carried". In life
the Ancient Egyptians carried amulets to protect different parts
of their bodies and they believed that amulets would ward off evil
in the afterlife too.
The pharaoh was far greater than ordinary Egyptians, he was believed
to be the son of the great sun god Re. At death the pharaoh joined
the sun god in his day boat as he sailed across the sky. At night
the sun god changed to his night boat which sailed through the underworld.
The pharaohs of the Old Kingdom built huge pyramids of stone which
some people thought were like shafts of light coming from the sky,
others said it was the place where the pharaoh climbed up to join
the sun god. The pharaoh was buried deep inside the pyramid surrounded
by all the things he would need for the next life. The pyramids
could be seen from great distances and were an easy target for thieves
who could break into them at night. The later pharaohs wanted their
burials to be safer so they cut their tombs deep into rocks in secret
places but even so the thieves found ways of breaking into them.
The sun god Re was one of the most important and oldest gods in
Ancient Egypt but there were many others, some were human, some
animals while others had animal heads and human bodies. There were
favorite gods who would be worshipped on special occasions or in
special places. The jackal-headed god Anubis was the god of embalming
and guarded the burial place - the necropolis; Seth was the pig
god, the evil brother of Osiris, who brought disease and violence;
Thoth was the ibis-headed god, the god of writing and wisdom; Horus
was the falcon god, son of Osiris and Isis. One god who had an important
place in the everyday life of the Ancient Egyptians was the household
god, Bes. Bes was depicted as a dwarf deity with ' leonine features
and he was affectionately portrayed on bowls, head-rests, mirror
handles and other domestic objects. The temple was the house of
the god. Each temple was built in the style of the first temple,
a simple reed shrine. Tall stone columns carved in the shape of
lotus flowers or papyrus buds rose high above the officiating priests.
The temples were dark, lit only by windows high up on the walls.
The ceilings were painted with stars and the walls were covered
in sacred inscriptions and carvings of the gods. The main god of
the temple had his sanctuary at the back of the temple and each
day the pharaoh or the high priest approached the god's sanctuary
to perform the Daily Temple Ritual. The god was washed, fed and
dressed and then offered prayers and incense. This important ritual
was carried out three times a day in every temple in Egypt.
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The Step Pyramid, designed by Imhotep
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The monumental temples of Egypt must have appeared daunting to the
majority of ordinary people but popular cults did develop around
architectural features of the temple. At Memphis, for example, there
was a cult of Horus "on the corner of the southern door". Other
popular cults grew around the posthumous reputation of famous people,
for example, Imhotep, a renowned physician and architect of the
third dynasty step pyramid at Saqqara was later worshipped as the
god of medicine. Magic also played a central role in Egyptian religion
for rich and poor alike. Ritual words, gestures and objects were
believed to carry considerable power.
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Akenaten & his daughter. The
sun-god Aten is in the upper-right
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Throughout Egyptian history new gods were accepted into the extensive
Egyptian pantheon. At times, however, the literature of the New
Kingdom indicates the recognition of a central power behind these
countless deities, a power which could be reflected in many forms.
This was particularly evident after the reign of the 18th dynasty
pharaoh Amenophis IV, who changed his name to Akhenaten and tried
to introduce the worship of the Aten as the official Egyptian religion.
The Aten's creative power was manifested in the disc of the sun
and the pharaoh Akhenaten was his sole representative on earth.
After Akhenaten's death there was a move back to traditional cultural
practices.
Throughout Egyptian history the diversity of the Egyptian pantheon
was welcomed by both the powerful and the humble. The gods permeated
most areas of Egyptian life; they could help in sickness and in
times of sadness, they could be a cause for celebration or be used
as a political tool. Whatever their role they were an essential
part of Egyptian life.
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