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Egyptian Civilization I. Geography and Resources The Unification of Egypt The Old Kingdom I. Geography and Boundaries. SW: Sahara Desert E: Sinai and Arabian Deserts W: Libyan Desert N: Nile Delta with its swamps S: 6 Cataracts (rapids) Resources: copper, minerals, limestone, sand stone
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Egyptian Civilization I Geography and Resources The Unification of Egypt The Old Kingdom I
Geography and Boundaries • SW: Sahara Desert • E: Sinai and Arabian Deserts • W: Libyan Desert • N: Nile Delta with its swamps • S: 6 Cataracts (rapids) • Resources: copper, minerals, limestone, sand stone • Nile: Flows S to N
Navigating • Upper Egypt: Thebes, Valley of the Kings • Upper Egypt is in the South (Upstream) • Lower Egypt:Memphis, Giza, the Delta • Lower Egypt is in the North (Downstream)
Early Political Organization • Egypt was a series of states (Nomes), each with capital city with a temple dedicated to a god • Nomes tended to be grouped or allied politically in N/S clusters • Around 3000 BCE these two groups united under a single ruler: Namar • History starts with Menes, the 1st Pharaoh, who was later killed by a hippopotamus
Establishment by Diffusion? • Influenced by Mesopotamia in architecture and religion • Use of cylinder seals • Art motifs show Near East Influence • Sudden appearance of writing • Writers of Chronicles dated entries by years after major events. • Isolationist vs. Diffusionist interpretations
A Land with Boundaries • Egypt has perfect natural boundaries • Usually little danger of invasion • Culture was perfectly adapted to the environment • Tended to be isolated and ethnocentric • Egypt reached its evolutionary plateau and then tended to stagnate • Resisted, for example, the use of bronze
Transportation and Communication • The Valley of the Nile too narrow for much traffic. Very few roads • Egyptians resisted the use of the wheel • Most traffic by boat. • Winds blowing South allow ships to sail against the current • Slow current allowed easy travel North • Barges used to haul grain and goods
Agriculture • Irrigation and water control a centralized national affair: tremendous annual planning required • Swamps around the Nile required draining • The Nile flooded early each summer • Water control necessary to use water and protect land • Required the use of canals, ditches, holding ponds and embankments • All required the coordinated use of (forced?) labor and to force labor required a powerful, centralized, respected government
Theocratic Government: The Answer • All power was concentrated in the Pharaoh • Called the “Good God”, and addressed as the son of patron deity • Worshipped as deity after death • Pharonic authority attained in the Old Kingdom and continued through the New Kingdom • Central authority over trade and economy • “Lord of the Two Lands”
Resources • Self sufficiency in many areas meant a slow development for long distance trade • Had to import wood from Lebanon • Possessed abundant stone for building • Gold from Nubia and copper form the Sinai • Production geared to local trade • No large cities appeared for a long time • Small trader class and no known law code
Sculpture and Architecture • Egyptians mastered stone architecture and sculpture early in their history • Colossal figures common (rare in Mesopotamia) • Egyptian buildings tended to be long and narrow with a succession of columned rooms and porches • Relief sculpture decorated the walls
Aspective Art Forms • Use of painted 2d relief sculpture led to fresco and wall paintings • Very often, painting is two dimensional and aspective: Some historians think Egyptians never learned to draw the human face • Actually sculpture shows their mastery of 3D Art. So..why 2D painting?
AspectiveArt:Head and legs are shown in profile.Torso and shoulders arefull frontal.Multiple simultaneousperspectives!
The Development of Writing • Pictographs similar to Mesopotamia • Pictograph forms then became radically different • Hieroglyphics were carved in stone not clay • Art became letter • Use of papyrus allowed for the development of heiratic and later demotic writing • Papyrus scrolls become the basic medium
Food, Produce, and Labor • Wheat was the major crop in Egypt • More cattle and poultry raised • Flax was the material used for cloth • Fish available primarily for the poor • Egypt has greater social mobility than Mesopotamia • Slavery in Old and Middle Kingdoms rare • Being a scribe: was a ticket upstairs!
Egyptian Chronology • Egyptian history divided into Kingdoms and Intermediate Periods • Egyptians recorded their history in terms of 30 Dynasties (rather late: Manetho 3rd century BCE) • These are the rules of successive families • Somewhat confusing method • Dynasties chronicled by Manetho, and Egyptian priest of the 3rd century BCE
The Problems of Manetho • The original work does not survive: Aegyptiaca a history of Egypt written an Egyptian priest • What survives are quoted selections and epitomes • Epitomes are summaries of book chapters. In a sense, a chapter by chapter abstract • This is further complicated by an ancient polemic: Jewish, Greek, and Egyptian “historians” had a centuries long battle as to which civilization was the oldest. • All used, changed, misquoted and made up portions of Manethos to denigrate the other sides!
Periods of Egyptian History • Archaic Period 3100-2700 (D 1 and 2) • Old Kingdom 2700-2200 (D 3-4) • First Intermediate Period 2200-2100 (D 7-10) • Middle Kingdom 2100-1700 (D 11-12) • Second Intermediate Period 1700-1570 (D 13-18) • New Kingdom 1570-1100 (D 18-20) • Third Intermediate period 1100-323 (D 21- 30) • Last Pharaoh?
Archaic Period 3100-2700 BCE Dynasties I and II • Egypt unified by Namar or Menes • Possibly a legendary figure • Wore both the Red and White Crown • Became “Lord of the Two Lands” • Egypt known as t3.wy (taa-wee) • Tomb type: Mastaba (raised bench)
The Archaic Period • Rapid build up of cities • Growth of Royal Hierarchy • Concentration of royal and divine power • 1st dynasty buried with retainers and servants • Further development of hieroglyphics • Development of Egyptian Theology • Mastaba indicates significance of royal afterlife
Kings of the 1st Dynasty 3200-2680 • Narmer/Menes/Aha/Scorpion • Zer • Zet • Wedymu • Azib • Semerkhet • Qaya
Kings of the Second Dynasty • Raneb • Hetep sekhemuwy • Neterymu • Peribsen • Sened • Khasekhem • Khasekhemuwy
King of Egypt • Pharaoh = Great House • Ruled as divine father and ruler: theocracy • Developed a bureaucracy of nobles, scribes and administrators • Used corvee labor to build state buildings during the flood season • Held a royal monopoly on long distance trade and gift exchange
The Five Classes of Egypt • The Royal Family • Priests and Priestesses • Wealthy Nobility • Scribes, merchants, artisans, officials • Peasant farmers • Later, after 1570 BCE: 2 more classes • Warrior Class (equal to scribes) and Slaves • These are a result of the expansion and conquests of Egypt during the New Kingdom
Old Kingdom (2700-2200 BCE) Dynasties III-VI • Builders of the Pyramids • Capital: Memphis • Powerful, centralized theocracy • Developed early literature, astronomy, arithmetic, geometry, medicine • Belief in immortality of the Pharaoh: “Pyramid Texts”
The Step Pyramid of Djoser at Saqquara: the first pyramid (2010)
First Intermediate Period (2200-2050 BCE) Dynasties VII-X • By 2200, Old Kingdom bankrupt and weak • Possibly high cost of pyramid maintenance but more likely due to drought, bad harvests and weak kings • Intermediate Periods” are times when the central government of Egypt is in disarray • Nomes (states) assert their independence • Sometimes foreigners dominate part of Egypt • Still active time for literature and art