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Ancient Egypt. Geography. “Gift of the Nile” Offered protection from invasion limited where people could settle “Black Land”- fertile “Red Land”- desert. What was it about Egypt’s topography that promoted peace and prosperity?. Nile Valley was protected on 3 sides by desert
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Geography • “Gift of the Nile” • Offered protection from invasion • limited where people could settle • “Black Land”- fertile • “Red Land”- desert
What was it about Egypt’s topography that promoted peace and prosperity? • Nile Valley was protected on 3 sides by desert • natural barriers to invaders • didn’t have to use as much of their wealth for defense • Irrigation=cooperation
Why is Egypt referred to as “Gift of the Nile”? • Animals • Fish, ducks, geese, edible fowl • Papyrus-baskets, paper, sandals • Food-grains • Influenced art, religion etc. • Provided for basic survival • inspired civilization
What is a “Shaduf”? • Raised water from Nile to irrigate • Prevented salt from building up & destroying fertility of soil
How did flood patterns effect Egypt? • Emerged from south • Spring rains sent water downstream into Nile • Rich silt deposited • Cooperation was essential • Dikes, reservoirs, irrigation ditches channeled river & stored water for dry season
Lower • Upper
Small changes in amount of water led could lead to starvation or destruction Deserts reduced interaction with other cultures Led to self-sufficiency What were the environmental challenges?
Who was Narmer? • 3100 BCE, King of Upper Egypt united the two regions • Linked north & south • First united state • Significant trade with rest of Africa, Middle East & Mediterranean world • Sailboats, barges
What is a dynasty? • A ruling family • Power passed from family member • If no family member, then another was chosen • Pharaoh-”great house”
Who/What was Pharaoh? • Claimed divine support • Living God • Absolute power • Owned & ruled over all the land
What was Pharaoh’s job? • Preserve justice & social order- Ma’at • Depended on vizier or chief minister to supervise government
What did the Vizier do? • Managed the bureaucracy • Tax collection • Farming • Irrigation system • Thousands of scribes carried out his instructions.
Who was Ptah-hotep? • Trained many young officials • Wrote Instruction of Ptah-hotep • Advised his son how to avoid errors.
Old Kingdom (2700 BCE - 2200 BCE) • Pharaohs organize strong government • Khufu – harsh ruler, built Great Pyramid • Pyramid Age • giant pyramids at Giza • New developments in agriculture • Increased trade • Development of cities • Power struggles, crop failures, cost of pyramids caused collapse
Djoser2630 – 2611 BCE • fought off invaders and expanded territory • New developments in agriculture, increased trade, development of cities • constructed Step Pyramid at Saqqara • Ended a famine
Khufu2551-2528 BCE • Ruled a united Egypt • Used his relatives to help him • Harsh ruler who treated his subjects cruelly • Built the Great Pyramid at Giza
Middle Kingdom (2050 BCE – 1800 BCE) • Corrupt government • Frequent rebellions • Food shortages • People rebel • land drained for farming • Hyksos conquer Egypt
Senusret I(1971 – 1926 BCE) • fought against Nubia & Libya • built fortresses • Protected gold, copper, granite resources in Sinai • Encouraged cultural development • Supervised construction of buildings • created elaborate improvements to existing shrines & temples • Jubilee Chapel at Karnak • Craftwork & literature
Ramses II“The Great”(1290 -1224 BCE) • Most powerful ruler of the period • Battle of Kadesh- fought to standoff against much larger Hittite force • Signed 1st known peace treaty
New Kingdom Period • Time of Reunification • Hyksos expelled • Pharaohs created large empire • Traded w/ lands along eastern Mediterranean & Red Sea • Great temples built • Nubians, then others invaded
Queen Hatshepsut(1540-1482 BCE) • Daughter of one Pharaoh/ widow of another • Ruled in stepson’s name but then declared herself Pharaoh • Encouraged trade • Brought back ivory, spices, incense Hatshepsut’s Mortuary Temple at Deir el-Bahri-
Akhenaten (Amenhotep)1353 – 1335 BCE • Created new religion of one god-Aten • Controversy, disputes over his religious beliefs • Abandon Thebes & built new city • New spectacular, buildings, elaborate ceremonies, works of art • Married to Nefertiti • After death he was so unpopular that his city was abandoned- destroyed El Amarna
Nubia • Also known as Kush • Egyptians traded/ fought w/them • Gold, Ivory, cattle, slaves • Nubians served in Egyptian armies • Egyptian art shows Nubians as soldiers, musicians, prisoners • As Egypt declined, Nubia regained its independence • 750 BCE Nubian kings took control • Saw themselves as restorers of Egyptian glory • Ruled like earlier pharaohs-respected traditions • 650 BCE Assyrians w/ iron weapons conquered Egypt & pushed Nubians south
How did religious beliefs shape the lives of Egyptians? • Each soul had to pass test to win eternal life • Dead soul would be ferried across a lake of fire to the hall of Osiris • Osiris would weight the soul against feather of truth • Sinners would be fed to the crocodile-shaped Eater of the Dead • Worthy souls would enter the Happy Field of Food
Spells, charms, formulas for the dead to use in the afterlife Book of the Dead • “I have made no man to suffer hunger. I have made no one to week. I have done no murder…I have not encroached upon the fields of another. I have not added to the wrights of the scales to cheat the seller…I have not turned back water when it should flow… I am pure. I am pure. I am pure.”
Mummification • Afterlife was same as life • Body must be preserved • Originally a privilege for rulers and nobles • Eventually ordinary people won the right to mummify their dead • Led to knowledge of human anatomy
Egyptian Writing • Hieroglyphics a form of picture writing used for important records • Ideograms symbolized an idea or action • Demotic-simpler form of script for everyday • Papyrus
What was the Rosetta Stone? • Black basalt slab bearing an inscription dating from the year 196 BCE • Crucial key to the deciphering of Egyptian hieroglyphs, and the foundation of modern Egyptology. • discovered in 1799 by the French troops in Napoleon's military expedition • Deciphered by Jean Champollion • Hieroglyphics, demotic and Greek
Medicine • Belief in magic • Knew human body • Observed symptoms, diagnosed illness • Surgery, medicines
Science • Priest astronomers studied heavens, mapped constellations • Charted movement of planets • Practical geometry to survey land • Engineers for the pyramids and irrigation systems
Egyptian Painting and Sculpture • Statues, wall paintings • Everyday scenes of trade, farming, family life, religious ceremonies • Military victories • Unchanged style for thousands of years • Pharaohs & gods larger • Heads & limbs in profile • Eyes & shoulders facing viewer • Some humans have animal heads showing special qualities
Story of Sinuhe: Popular Egyptian Folk Tale • “His majesty said, “Behold thou art come. Thou has trodden the foreign countries and made a flight. But now elderliness has attach thee; thou has reached old age… Do not live in exile any loneg…I answer: What is it that my lord says to me? Behold, I am before thee… may thy majesty do as he pleases… • Tells us how Egyptians viewed both themselves and the people of the surrounding desert