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The Nile Valley Chapter 2:ie Life in Ancient Egypt. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”. Life in Ancient Egypt. [Image source: http://www.library.nwu.edu/class/history/B94/society.gif].
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The Nile ValleyChapter 2:ieLife in Ancient Egypt “The Land of the Pharaohs.”
[Image source: http://www.library.nwu.edu/class/history/B94/society.gif]
The nobility and priests who formed the top of the social order controlled both the religious and political affairs. [Image source: http://www.siue.edu/COSTUMES/COSTUME1_INDEX.HTML#Plate1]
The upper class lived a comfortable urban life with their immediate families. [Image source: The Age of the God-Kings, 3000-1500 B.C. (Time-Life Books)]
The middle class was made up of artisans, scribes, merchants, and tax collectors who lived a comfortable urban life. [Image source: http://www.comune.bologna.it/bologna/Musei/Archeologico/egizi/en/oggetti.htm#FUNERARY]
The lower class provided for the needs of the upper classes. [Image source: http://www.mfa.org/egypt/coll_high/]
The majority of of Egyptians were poor farmers who grew food. [Image source: http://www.kent.wednet.edu/curriculum/soc_studies/Egypt/life.html]
[Image source: http://www.uk.sis.gov.eg/pharo/html/bountfrm.htm]
[Image source: http://www.uk.sis.gov.eg/pharo/html/bountfrm.htm]
Some peasants ground grain and provided baked goods for the rich.
Still others herded and slaughtered animals for meat. [Image source: http://www.artchive.com/ftp_site.htm]
Some were potters who provided ceramic wares. [Image source: http://www-oi.uchicago.edu/OI/MUS/HIGH/OIM_10628.html]
Some slaves provided music entertainment . . . [Image source: http://www.natashascafe.com/cgi-bin/dbase.cgi?music]
. . . while other sang or danced. [Image source: http://www.pharaonicarts.com/egypt-banquet.htm]
Upper class urban-dwelling Egyptian families were often nuclear, including only the parents and their children. [Image source: http://www.uk.sis.gov.eg/pharo/html/dress01.htm]
Many lower class people lived in extended families that included grandparents and other relatives.
Women were originally viewed as the property of their husbands. [Image source: http://www.uk.sis.gov.eg/pharo/html/dress02.htm]
By the New Kingdom, women could buy, own, and sell property, testify in court, and initiate divorce and other legal proceedings. [ http://www.siue.edu/COSTUMES/COSTUME1_INDEX.HTML#Plate1]
Children were expected to cherish their mothers for bearing them, nourishing them, and loving and caring for them. [Image source: http://www.uk.sis.gov.eg/pharo/html/childfrm.htm]
Egyptians in each region worshipped local deities, but rulers and priests promoted the worship of specific gods and goddesses throughout the land.
As a result, Egyptian religion was based on polytheism, or the worship of many deities (gods). [Image source: http://members.aol.com/egyptart/crea.html]
Horus, the sky god.Pharaohs were often referred to as “the living Horus.” [Image source: http://www.windows.umich.edu/cgi-bin/tour_def/mythology/horus_sun.html]
Ra, the sun god, was also known as the “father of the gods.”Pharaohs were often referred to as the “son of the living Ra.” [Image source: http://members.aol.com/egyptart/list.html]
Amon, a fertility god, was the deity worshipped in Thebes. [Image source: http://phoebe.dws.acs.cmu.edu/~shawn/egypt/gods.html]
The Theban pharaohs combined their local deity Amon with the sun god Ra to create Amon-Ra. [Image source: http://members.aol.com/egyptart/amun.html]
Osiris, originally the powerful god of the Nile, became the god of life, death, and rebirth. [Image source: http://members.aol.com/egyptart/list.html]
Isis, the wife of Osiris, was the great mother-goddess. [Image source: http://members.aol.com/egyptart/isis.html]
Writing in Ancient Egypt [Image source: http://www.uk.sis.gov.eg/pharo/html/adminfrm.htm]
In A.D. 1799 French soldiers in Egypt uncovered a stone near Rosetta that was carved with Greek letters and hieroglyphs. [Image source: http://www.bc-freemasonry.com/biography/champollion_jf/rosetta.html]
In 1822 French archaeologist Jean-François Champollion succeeded in deciphering the Rosetta Stone. [Image source: http://www.bc-freemasonry.com/biography/champollion_jf/champollion_jf.html]
Champollion figured out how the Greek text on the Rosetta Stone matched the Egyptian texts. [Image source: http://www.cimmerii.demon.co.uk/therosettastone/index.html]
Because of the work of people like Champollion, scholars today are able to read Egyptian hieroglyphic texts. [Image source: http://www.kent.wednet.edu/curriculum/soc_studies/Egypt/hier.html]
For everyday business, Egyptians used a cursive script known as hieratic. [Image source: http://www.uk.sis.gov.eg/pharo/html/learnfrm.htm]
Egyptian architecture bears witness to the achievements of their artisans. [Image source: http://www.museum-tours.com/museum/roberts/roberts0.htm]
These works would not have been possible without advances in disciplines such as mathematics.
Egyptians used the principles of geometry to survey flooded land.
Egyptian priests worked out a 365 day calendar that made it possible to predict the annual inundation.
Egyptians learned about anatomy as a result of their practice of embalming their dead.
Other ancient cultures acquired much of their medical knowledge from the Egyptians. [Image source: http://web-owls.com/wp-content/uploads/2006/05/physician72_small.gif]