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Standard(s) 15.Describe the culture of ancient Egypt including: class structure/governance beliefs, including polytheism and monotheism accomplishments. Ancient Egypt. The Nile River Valley. The Geography. Egypt is surrounded by desert
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Standard(s) 15.Describe the culture of ancient Egypt including: • class structure/governance • beliefs, including polytheism and monotheism • accomplishments
The Geography • Egypt is surrounded by desert • The Nile River runs north, 4,000 miles to the Mediterranean Sea • Through modern Uganda, Ethiopia, Sudan, and Egypt • From May until September is the rainy season
Egypt • Northern Egypt is called Lower Egypt because it lies downstream on the river • Upper Egypt in the south is “upstream”
At the Mediterranean Sea the Nile deposits much of its silt Then divides into a fan-shaped delta Very fertile, flat land made of silt The Nile River
The Importance of the Nile • The Nile River flooded every year. • But every April the ancient Egyptians' waited for it
“The Gift of the Nile” • The floods helped ancient farmers turn the Nile Valley into a fertile agricultural area.
Times of High Water or Hunger • Too much water • villages were destroyed and farm animals drowned • Too little • crops failed.
In October, farmers planted wheat, barley, and other crops, and flax Flax is a plant that makes linen In March farmers harvested Nile Farming
Irrigation • Ancient Egyptians dug canals • And used a shadoof to lift water into their fields
The Nile River was the center of ancient Egyptian civilization. • Annual floods provided rich soil for their fields • The river was used for irrigation and transportation
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The Kingdoms of Egypt • Egypt was a thriving culture • Surplus crops • Crafts workers • Tools • Pottery • Jewelry • Trade along the river • Cooperation among communities
3100 B.C. Menes, king of Upper Egypt overthrew the king of Lower Egypt Designed the double crown Represented the unification of Egypt King Menes
Menes - The First Pharaoh • Pharaoh refers to the “great palace” where the rulers of Egypt lived • Later it became the name given to the rulers
From about 2700 B.C. to about 2200 B.C. A time when Egypt’s pharaohs worked to build unity in the country Old Kingdom
Egypt’s Government • Menes made Memphis his capital
The pharaoh made local leaders serve the new government • To collect taxes • To serve as judges • To make sure canals and storage pools were shared fairly
Egypt’s pharaohs had religious duties “The sun god … entrusted me with what he protected.” Egypt had many gods with a variety of responsibilities Religion
Horus • The god who united the two Egypts. • The Egyptians believed the pharaoh was the “beloved of Horus”
Isis • The most important goddess • The mother of Horus • Protected people from sickness and harm
Ra • The most important god • The sun god • Gave life to Earth • Just as the pharaoh, the child of Ra, gave life to Egypt and its people
Ancient Egyptians believed they would need their bodies in the afterlife. They preserved the bodies of the dead They anointed the body with spices Wrapped the bodies in cloth Then encased them in wood or stone cases Mummification
Huge stone structures built as tombs, or burial places, for the pharaohs The first was for Pharaoh Zoser Around 2780 B.C. A stepped pyramid The Pyramids
The three largest pyramids are at Giza near Cairo The largest pyramid built was for Pharaoh Khufu in 2600 B.C. It took 22 years to build About 100,000 people worked on it The Great Pyramid
Building pyramids was expensive • Most of the collected taxes were used to feed and cloth the workers • It put a strain on Egypt’s people and economy • Then local rulers began to demanded pyramids • Which weakened the unity of Egypt
Egyptian writing system It had about 800 picture signs Each sign could stand for an object or a sound Hieroglyphics
Travelled around Egypt keeping records, and preparing letters and contracts Only boys could become scribes Training began at about 10 years old Scribes
A reed plant that grows along the Nile It was pressed together to form a kind of paper A sharpened reed was used as a pen Reeds were dipped into red or black ink Papyrus
Scribes also had to be good at math • To keep accurate records of taxes and the pharaoh’s goods
Lost Meaning • Around 300 B.C. Egypt was conquered by the Greeks • Egyptians stopped using hieroglyphics • The meanings became a mystery
Found by French soldiers near the Egyptian city of Rosetta The stone had Egyptian hieroglyphics, a later Egyptian writing called demotic, and Greek In 1822 Jean Champollion figured out how to read hieroglyphics The Rosetta Stone
Hieroglyphic records tell us the Egyptian economy was based on a surplus of crops The pharaoh collected taxes which could include Part of a farmers crops Portions of products Leather goods, linen cloth, baskets Days of work The Egyptian Economy
Slaves • Were prisoners of war • Some worked in government owned gold mines • Others were trusted with government positions
Middle Kingdom • The Old Kingdom of Egypt ended around 2000 B.C. • The Middle Kingdom was a time of change and prosperity • Egyptians gain new rights • The Pharaohs increased their control over Egypt
Nubia • Located to the south of Egypt • Was a wealthy kingdom with important gold mines • Was conquered by pharaohs of the Middle Kingdom
Trade Expeditions • Expeditions were sent from Egypt to Greece and to the Fertile Crescent • As trade grew people from Asia began to settle in the Nile area
The Hyksos • Were people who lived in the hills of western Asia • They were skilled in warfare • They conquered Lower Egypt and ruled for about 100 years
The New Kingdom • Pharaoh Ahmose I led an Egyptian army and defeated the Hyksos • He made Egypt the strongest military power in its part of the world
Egypt Becomes an Empire • Egypt’s armies captured nearby lands • The pharaohs created an empire from Kush in the south to the Euphrates River in the north
Was a wealthy kingdom Controlled trade routes with other African Kingdoms Traded gold, copper and precious stones for ebony, leopard skins, and elephant ivory Enriched the economy of Egypt Kush
Amenhotep I • Made allies and traded in Africa, Asia, and southern Europe • He was one of Egypt’s great builders
Hatshepsut • One of Egypt’s few female pharaohs • During her reign Egypt enjoyed a long period of wealth and peace • She is known for her burial temple
The Empire Weakens • Amenhotep IV • Angered Egypt’s priests • Forbid the worship of Amon • Chief god • Replaced Amon with Aton • God of the sun
He renamed himself Akhenaton • In honor of Anton • Practiced monotheism • He was unpopular • After his death the Egyptian restored Amon and returned to the worship of many gods
Tutankhamen became pharaoh after Akhenaton’s death He restored the old gods But he only ruled for a few years and died young Reconstruction of Tutankhamun’s face. Changes in the Empire
The last strong pharaoh Ruled for 67 years The kingdom collapsed about 100 years after his death The empire was followed by many small kingdoms Ramses II
Egyptian Medicine • Most doctors were priests • Could measure a person’s heartbeat • New that moldy bread prevented infections • Today antibiotics are often made from molds