Title: Ancient Egypt
1Ancient Egypt
- app. 10,000 sq. miles
- the same as Sumer and Akkad
- radically different in shape
- a ribbon of fertile land 600 miles long
- half a dozen miles wide for most of its length
- compared to 165 miles in Mesopotamia
2Egypt, cont
- more arid and more fertile than Mesopotamia
- divided into two parts
- the Delta (Lower Egypt) and the Upper Nile
- south, not north is the important direction
3Earliest Villages ??
- 4500 B.C.
- but recent studies may push it back
- one thousand years or more
4Two Kingdoms, 3,500 B.C.
- two kingdoms
- upper and lower Egypt
- same culture
- same language
- same gods
5Unification
- tradition is the only source
- Date? around 3000 (3200?) B.C., or so....
- Menes (Namar) the first pharaoh
- reigned for 62 years
- killed by a hippopotamus (ah, well...)
6Culture and Civilization
- Egyptian culture distinctive and peculiar
- already set prior to unification
- continued to evolve through the Old Kingdom
period - by the Pyramid Age (3-4th dynasties, ca. 2700
B.C.) - it was set and would not change for 2,000 years
7Origins of Egyptian Civilization
- sui generis ??
- diffusion from Mesopotamia ??
- and how do you tell, anyway ??
- writing ??
- cylinder seals ??
8Formative Period
- ended by 2700 B.C.
- theocratic
- highly centralized government
- Primary Phase, which will last about 1,000 years
9Historical Schema
- The Old Kingdom (2700-2200 B.C.)
- First Intermediate Period (2200-2000 B.C.)
- The Middle Kingdom (2000-1800 B.C.)
- Second Intermediate Period (1800-1500 B.C.)
- The New Kingdom (1500- 1100 B.C.?)
10The Hyksos
- ended the Middle Kingdom by invasion
- Semites
- generate an imperialist response
- the New Kingdom
11Comparison and Contrast with Babylon
- profound differences
- because of environmental conditons
- Mesopotamia open to invasion
- Egypt isolated by geography
- invasion as culturally stimulating ????
12C. and C., cont
- effects on Egypt positive and negative
- E. culture perfectly adapted to the environment
- lines of development logical and obvious
- evolutionary manimums reached early in the
culture - Egyptian culture static, outwardly opposed to
innovation
13Agriculture
- depended on irrigation
- nationally controlled
- annual flooding of the Nile (Gift of the Nile)
14Transportation
- Mesopotamia wheeled vehicles and boats
- Egypt boats (The Nile as Highway)
- sailboats still a major means of transportation
- Old and Middle Kingdom wheeled vehicles rare
15Architecture
- lacks timber
- used mud-brick
- main building STONE
16Sculpture
- early and sophisticated development
- human figures and archicectural forms
- led to great expertise in painting and other
representational arts
17Writing
- hieroglyphic scripts
- for architectural and monumental purposes
- hieratic and demotic scripts
- papyrus paper
18Other Features
- wheat, instead of barley
- cattle and poultry
- flax
- slavery virtually unknown
- high degree of social mobility
19Dynastic Chronology
- Egyptians divided their history into dynasties
- not always chronologically successive
- Manetho, gave the chronology to the Greeks
- the system is confusing, but maintained by
Egyptologists
20Theocratic Government
- all Egyptian government was theocratic in form
- all power was concentrated in the Pharaoah
- the pharaoh was the head of a planned and
organized economy - modern comparisons ???
21The Nature of Kingship and Religion
- modern perceptions
- ancient ideas
- even politics had a religious base
22Unification
- the most important event in Egyptian history
- what role did Menes play in religion and politics
? - how was unification maintained ?
23Egyptian Kingship
- Mesopotamian kings (and Hebrew)
- Semitic in their concepts
- acted as mediators between gods and the people
24Kingship, cont
- Pharaoh link between the gods and people
- Pharaoh divine
- his rule eternal and absolute
- Egypt was not just ruled for the gods
- but by a god
25Distinctions ?
- human vs. divine ??
- They could tell the difference
- in practice whoever held the throne was divine
- including women, foreigners, commoners
26The Pharaoh
- shed his impermanent and human status
- assumed the eternal and unchangeable divine
status - became the embodiment of the divine
- led a divinely unified Egyptian state
27Theory of the New State
- maat
- basis of justice and authority
- meaning truth, justice, order, righteousness,
balance - a cosmic or divine force for harmony and
stability, - dating from the beginning of time
28Maat, cont
- good rule and administration embodied maat
- these confirmed, consolidated and perpetuated the
rule of the Pharaoh - this unified and stabilized the state
29Egyptian Religion
- each city had its patron deity
- emergence of national government caused some to
be more important - as dynasties changed, the primary gods changed
- why??
30Examples
- Memphis Ptah
- later, as the center of power changed, Re/Ra
- or Horus
- etc.
31The Gods
- Mesopotamian gods mostly anthropomorphic
- Egyptian gods vary wildly
- animals, human, celestial bodies, etc.
32Cosmology
- Gods created Order out of Chaos
- various stories
- not mutually exclusive
- like the monotheistic religions
33Early Creation Story
- Atum
- primeval mound of mud (Annual inundation of the
Nile?) - godly masturbation (How do you get a date when
there is nobody there but you?) - generation of the gods
34Different Perspectives
- Mesopotamians pessimistic
- life is unpredictable, their gods unstable, their
afterlife indistinct and undesirable - Egyptian religion inspired confidence
- in the eternal, stable order of the universe
35Different Perspectives, cont
- divinely guided, rhythmic cycle of life and death
- and belief in a final, eternal bliss
36Egyptian religion
- extremely tolerant of difference
- extremely tolerant of many gods
- as opposed to, say.. Hebrew religion
- the principal deity (national/Pharoahs deity)
allowed other gods to flourish - the number is considerable
37Egyptian religion oddities
- overlap of functions
- syncretism
- expansion and contraction of cults
- amalgamation of cults
- worship of the Pharaoh was nationwide
38Religion as a Unifying Force
- Mesopotamia master-slave relationship
- Egypt gods conceived of as shepherd
- who cherish and care for the people
39Religion, cont
- probably the origins of the idea of
Jehovah-as-shepherd - especially in the Psalms
- which are pre-dated by Egyptian psalms
- Akhenatons Hymn to the Sun
40Permanence of the Cycle of Life
- everything was a cycle
- eternal, unchanging
- life and death
- continuous and rhythmic
- human life existed in a never-ending interchange
of natural and universal elements
41The Gods
- immanent in nature
- existed in a sphere of divine activity
- consubstanital they are existent in everything
42The Temples
- controlled by temple corporations
- producing those things necessary for the god
- maintaining maat
- maintaining the very existence of the universe
!!!! - if they get slack, were screwed...in a major way
43The Idea of the Cosmos
- religious ideas rooted in a static and
changeless universe - influenced every aspect of Egyptian life
- influenced every aspect of Egyptian development
- gave very strong resilience to Egyptian culture
- survived virtually unchanged for 3,000 years
44The Pharonic State Ancient Economy
- the pyramid model
- pharaoh as capstone
- pharaoh as commander-in-chief
- pharaoh as royal administrator
- pharaoh as owner of Egypt
45The Pharonic State Corvee
- the annual inundation
- conscription for public works
- dependence on irrigation
- cooperate work essential
46Achievements of the Old Kingdom
- efficient, centralized authority
- astronomy, arithmetic, geometry
- medicine
47The Most Important
- Solar calendar
- pyramids
- belief in immortality
48Solar Calendar
- Egyptian solar calendar 3rd millennium B.C.
- Connected with the rising of Sothis
- the Dog Star (Sirius)
- companion of Orion
49Solar Calendar, cont
- length of the solar year and the rising of Sothis
are virtually identical - only a few minutes difference
- we get our solar calendar from the Egyptians
- by way of the Romans
50Pyramids
- Imhotep architect and developer of the calendar?
- Imhotep physician, architect, doctor, miracle
worker, giver of wisdom - designed the Step Pyramid of Zoser
- processor of the Pyramids of Giza
51Pyramids, cont
- eternal home for the immortal pharaoh
- insured their divinity for all eternity
52Pyramids, cont
- Khufu, Khafre, Menkure
- Cheops, Cehphren, Mycerinus
- amazing architecture
- how?
- necropolis
53Belief in Immortality
- first to really develop the idea
- sophisticated consciousness
- another order of existence
54Decline of the Old Kingdom
- Old Kingdom the most stable period
- the Pharaoh dominated life
- forstalled the emergence of provincial power
- but gradually lost power to royal officials
- gradual drying of the environment
- failure of the Nile to flood on time
55Decline of the Old Kingdom
- Pepi II ruled 94 years
- at his death rapid decline
- followed by Nitocris
- collapse of central power
56First Intermediate Period
- 2180-2050 B.C.
- localism, anarchy, short reigns, palace coups,
assassinations - seventy kings in seventy days
- reversal of established order
- dissolution of law and order
- disruption of trade and agricultual production
57The Middle Kingdom
- 2050-1800 B.C.
- united under the Eleventh Dynasty
- from Thebes, not Memphis
- followers of the god Amon
- elevated to the rank of primary god
- modern examples??
58The Middle Kingdom
- solidification of Egyptian borders
- military garrisons on the borders
- new office the vizier
- separate administrations of Upper and Lower Egypt
- suppression of the nobility rise of the middle
class
59The Middle Kingdom
- decline with the Twelveth Dynasty
- Pharaoh Sobekeneferu
- beginning of the Second Intermediate
60Second Intermediate Period
- 1800-1570 B.C.
- Thirteenth and Fourtheenth Dynasties
- contemporaries
- invasion by the Hyksos
- Semitic peoples from Palestine
- Hyksos dynasty by 1650 B.C. (Fifteenth Dynasty)
61The New Kingdom
- rise of the Seventeenth Dynasty
- Thebes
- beginning of the imperial period
- reconquest of Egypt
- We had to destroy this village to save it.
62The New Kingdom
- 1570-1150 B.C.
- reaction to control by a foreign people
- policy of planned aggression
- create a buffer zone (cordon sanitare) in
Palestine - any modern examples ???
63The New Kingdom
- more cosmopolitian
- international trade
- large, professional army
- the usual bureaucracy
64Imperialism 18th Dynasty
- Thutmoses I
- Hatshueput I
- Thutmoses III
- conquest of an Asian Empire
- successor had problems
65Akhenation the Amarna Revolution
- worship of the Aton
- the solar disk
- elevated the worship of the Aton
- suspended the worship of other gods
- particularly Amon
66Amarna Revolution Political Terms
- struggle with the priests of Amon
- innovation vs. conservative stagnation
- monotheism ???
- henotheism / monolatry
67Lost of Empire
- to Indo-European states
- emerging in Asia Minor and other areas
68King Tut
- Pharaoh Tutankhaten succeeded Akhenaten
- Restoration of the gods
- Probably murdered by a guy named Ay
69High Point
- Nineteenth Dynasty
- Rameses II
- pharaoh of the Exodus ??
- New Kingdom collapse
- ca. 1150 B.C.