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The kingdom of Egypt Face of the God-Kings Despite the magnificence of their surviving buildings, many of Egypt's rulers remain for us. shadowy figures Reading their portraits from top to bottom we encounter: Zoser of the Old Kingdom. Cheops, builder of the Great Pyramid, and Amenmhet III. Then Queen Hatshepsut, her warrior step- son Tuthmosis III. and Ramesses II who reigned for 67 years; all dynamic rulers of the New Kingdom. As it runs through the barren Nonh African desert, the River Nile creates around itself a narrow strip of rich and fertile land - the country of Egypt. This long, narrow land, protected by rocky desert on either side, with its great river providing a highway for trade and administration from one end to the other, was the setting for one of the most enduring civilisations of the ancient world one which lasted over 3.000 years. The first people to live in the fertile Nile valley were prehistoric hunters, driven north from the drought-parched grasslands of central Africa. These tribesmen settled along the banks of the Nile, establishing small farming communities, and worshipping the ani- mal totems they had brought with them. (Later, these developed into the many local gods of Ancient Egypt.) Eventually, two distinct kingdoms emerged - Upper (southern) and Lower (northern) Egypt. Traditionally, the two kingdoms were united by King Narmer (also called Mcnes). ruler of Upper Egypt. An ancient stone palette has survived showing how Narmer triumphed over the people of the north. He is wearing the crown of Lower Egypt and has ten headless bodies (presumably northerners) lying at his feet. The history of Egypt can be divided into a number of distinct periods within which the dynasties, or ruling families, of kings can be groupedHMarmer was the first pharaoh of the 1st dynasty. A time of great prosperity for the country began with the rule of the IVth dynasty - the period called the Old Kingdom. This saw the building of the first great monuments to Egyptian power and skill: the pyramids, tombs of the pharaohs. The last pharaohs of the Old Kingdom were weak and power slipped from their grasp. The result was over 200 years of chaos, known as the First Intermediate period. The princes of Thebes emerged as rulers of the country after the civil war. From their capital at Thebes, the Middle Kingdom pharaohs of the Xlth and XI hh dynasties sent out trading and military expedi- tions, extending the southern borders of the country. But a time of peace and prosperity was destroyed once more by a series of obscure and apparently ineffectual pharaohs in the Xlllth and XIVth dynasties. The Second Intermediate period was one of the darkest in Egypt's history. The country was invaded and overrun by war-like nomads from the east, armed with horses and chariots. These people, the Hyksos, or ‘Shepherd Kings', overwhelmed the disorganised Egyptians and seized the country for over 300 years. Once again the rulers of Thebes asserted themselves and drove out the invaders after learning to use their enemies' weapons. The 400-year-span of the New Kingdom which followed was the most splendid epoch in Egyptian history. But the splendour and glory faded. During the Late Dynastic period the country was ruled by a succession of foreigners. With the death of Cleopatra, last of the Greek Ptolemies, the Egyptian empire became a mere province of Rome.
DYNASTIES AND DATES The «tend of Phitee. cult centre of tett M<ddir Kingdom Dynast.es Xt-XII 2133-1786 BC Old Kingdom Dynasties Ili-VI 2686-2181 BC New Kingdom Dynast.es XVIII-XX 1567-1085 BC Lote Oynottic ported Dynist.es XXI-XXX 1085 34| BC Dindan. cu<t cemr Hethor goddess of Second intermeddle period Dynast.es XII-XVII I 786 1567 BC m»c no* .<•'»> The fort Aed city of Kerma, trade centre for copper, gold, Kory and ebony Cataract die Nile, the fortresses of Semna and К umma were bwih to protect Egyptian trading posts m Nubia. •At Napata be the Sth Cataract ruins of the religious T capital of the Twenty-Fifth dynasty \ Three Millennia The time chart below illustrates the enormous span of time covered by the early Egyptian civilisation (yellow) compared with that of Rome (dark blue) and ancient Greece (light blue). • of Thebes stand the rub Nekhen. capital of Egypt's of the temple of Amun. Southern Kingdom before north the greatest »n Egypt and south were unified by Narmer . whose famous commemorative >g palette « shown here J Best known and most impressive of Ramesses 114 many works. the temple o< Abu Simbel and that of hts queen. Originally o*er eighty pyramids stretched along the west bank of the lower Nde. Among them. the Great Pyramid of Cheops the Bent Pyramid •nd Step Ryrwmd of Saqqara • the oldest free-standing stone structure »n the world • Here at Tell ei-Amarna Akhenaten founded hrs breakaway capital dedicated to Aten, the universal god
'WQ HISTORY) Land of the Pharaohs In EGYPT men have farmed the same fields for more than 6,500 years. There is no other country in the world where men have done this for so long. All the water for the crops of Egypt lias always come from the river Nile. Almost no rain falls in Egypt. So all the land is bare desert - except near the river. For most of the year the river Nile flows smoothly down to the sea like any other river. The river is low between its banks, and the fields on either side lie dry - too dry to grow any crops. Then, in June every year, the level of the water begins to rise. Soon the river is in flood. The waters rise higher and higher, and at last reach (he level of the river banks. The water spreads over the nearby fields. The dry- land gets very wet, and this is the time to sow the seed. Barley and wheat will grow fast in the hoi sun on the damp soil. The soil is more fertile, too, after (he flood, because the river has dropped a new layer of mud on the fields. The Egyptians started to farm the fields by the banks of the river Nile about 6,500 years ago. They knew that the floods would come every year, and on about the same day every year. But they did not know why the floods came. 'Fhey knew that the water did not come from rainless Egypt. But they did not know where the water really came from - for no man had ever seen the mountains of Ethiopia or the huge Lake Victoria where the Nile starts. So the Egyptians believed that the floods were great magic and the work of their gods. Eventually» all Egypt was rules! by onc^Cing: they called him the Pharaoh. The Egyp- tians thought that their Pha- raoh was a god, and that he arranged for the Ikxxls to come every year. So the Phi- л r.ioh of Egypt was all-powerful, If he was pleased, the magical flixxls would enme every year. If he was angry, the floods might not come at all, and then all Egypt would starve - for there would be no harvest. No men have ever been more powerful than the Pharaohs of Ancient Egypt. They owned all the fertile land. The Pharaohs deeded where ditches were to be dug from the river to the fields, and what crops were to be grown tn each field. The Pharaoh gave the orders, and his officials nude sure that they were obeyed. When the harvest was gathered, the Pharaoh dedded how much could be kept by the farmer for food for his family. All the rest of the harvest was taken to the Pharaoh’s great sturc-houscs. The Pharaoh and hn family and friends, his officials and the priests of the gods, all grew rich. The Egyp- tians did not use money as we do, but the Pharaoh was always able io buy whatever he wanted - because he had these store-houses full of food. Every Pharaoh wanted one thing above everything else - a safe tomb fur his body after his death. Many of the Pharaohs built huge pyranadf at tombs. Ijook at the twx> pyramids in the top picture. The pyramid in the background was built by Pharaoh Khufu - about 5,000 years ago. Its top was higher than any building that has ever been built in London - 481 feet. Every* visitor to Egypt wants to sec this pyramid, which hit always been one of the Great Wonders of the World. Imagine you lived in the days when Khephren, son of Khufu, was Pharaoh of Egypt. He also built a great pyramid as a tomb. In the picture below you can see i!»c Egyptians building it close to his father’s pyramid. Thousands of Egyptians took many years to build it. First, all the Stone for building had to be quarried and brought to the site. 5rr million lent of stone were needed, Some of u was brought down the nver m barges from 450 mile* away. All the great stones had to be hauled on rollers from the river to the site, and then up long sloping roads 10 the point which the builders had reached. All this work had to be done by the workers without machines - Io.* the Egyptians had invented none. Near hh pyramid Pharaoh Khephren built a great stone monster. It had the body of a lion with the head of a man - and it is probable that the face was made to look like Khephren himself. This huge beast was called a Sphinx. It was 239 feet long. The huge stone pyramids, however, did ПО! keep the bodies of the Pharaohs safe. And the Sphinx did nor frighten away thieves So the Pharaohs began to build tombs in faraway places, cutting eaves deep into the rock in some lonely valley. Down the right-hand side of this page you can sec some of the wonderful things found in the tomb of Tutankhamen. He was Pharaoh of Egypt about 1,700 years after Khufu. He w4S ftol a very important Pharaoh, for he came to the throne when only 10 yean old and he died before he reached the age of 18. Yet this is the only tomb of a Pharaoh of Egypt that was never robbed of all its treasures by thieves. This tomb was not discovered until 1922. Now all the beautiful things from it can be seen in a museum in Cairo.
I MANKIND IN THE MAKING No. 8 in our series about our Ancient European ancestors IN THE VALLEY OF THE HILE by MARY CATHCART BORER THE sun blazed down from a burning, brilliant blue sky on to the pebble-strewn sandy waste across which the body of the chieftain was _ carried. The ground was so hot that it burnt the boy’s bare feet and he could feel the heat of it on his body, through his thin, linen kilt, as though he were passing too close to some great furnace. The procession was making its way from the steaming jungle of the narrow Nile valley towards the white limestone cliffs, a mile or two to the west, which led up to the great desert, a region where he had never yet ventured, for fear of the strange and evil spirits that lurked there, In company with the lions, wild oxen and jackals. The grave was already prepared; an oval, shallow pit, dug in the sand and rock near the foot of the cliffs. The old man's two sons had been carrying his body in a sling made of woven papyrus stems. Now they laid him gently in the grave, from which he would shortly be re-born to his new life. The other mourners stepped forward and placed in the grave their offerings for his journey to the unknown land of the dead. The simple ceremony was soon over. The eldest son was now the chieftain of the tribe and he led the procession back to the valley and the familiar fields of his own village by the great river. The fields were small but very precious, for his people had cleared them from the jungle. No rain fell in this part of the valley, and each year the high desert grew more arid and stark. But every summer, with unfailing regularity, the Nile rose in flood, from some unknown source away to the south, spreading its life-giving waters over the fields. When they subsided again, four or five months later, they left rich, wet soil in which the villagers planted their seeds of wheat, barley and flax. The village was a cluster of some twenty or thirty frail huts, most of which were no more than reed screens, though one or two had been plastered over with mud to make them stronger. In the shade of a dusty acacia tree sat the women of the village. They wore long, flowing robes of fine, white linen, and as they laughed and gossiped together, their hands were never idle, for they were all spinning, the little spindle whorls fastened to the end of each thread flying round and round as their fingers deftly twisted the strands of flax. When the procession reached the village, the boy heard his friend calling him from the river bank and rushed towards him, regardless of the angry shouts of the village potter, whose wares were strewn across the ground blocking his way. He managed to jump over the pots without breaking them. These people were not the first inhabitants of Egypt. They had come from the east, perhaps from somewhere round the shores of the Persian Gulf, but they reached the Nile Delta some seven or eight thousand years ago. Over the years they made their way up the Nile to about where the town of Assult now stands. Near here, at Badari, many of their remains have been found, and they are known as the Badarians. They had already learned the arts which character- ise the great step forward in civilisation known as the New Stone Age, for they were able to cultivate plants, domesticate animals and make pottery, and their polished flint implements had reached the highest standard of efficiency and beauty yet dis- covered. They were skilled hunters, but also farm- ers, which meant that their lives were more settled. As the years passed, the Badarians* culture became Increasingly interesting and beautiful, and just before the first dynasty of Egyptian Pharoaohs was created, some six thousand years ago, they learnt to use copper and bronze. This marked the end of the New Stone Age in the Nile valley and the beginning of the Bronze Age.
Looking at history - 9 THE BRONZE AGE Farming probably began about 6000 b.c., at the start of the Neolithic Age. Early farmers lived in the river valleys of the Nile, Tigris-Euphrates and Indus. By around 3000 B.c. the farmers in these river valleys were beginning to use metals. This was the start of what we call the Bronze Age. Neolithic people had already found that it was easier and more economical to live together in villages than alone in smaller groups. Larger villages and towns had sprung up in places where transport could connect a whole district, and where food could be stored in large quantities. Kings and nobles People knew that trouble between villages was wasteful and destructive. So they welcomed any form of rule that could keep the peace. To begin with, this took the form of kings and nobles in the larger towns. At first the king was not much more than a hunting-band chief. He took in the pro- duce of the farmers. In return, he saw that they were protected. The irrigation system was kept up, grain was stored in prepara- tion for times of famine, trading was encouraged, and law and order was maintained. Travel became much easier because there were new and better methods of transport. Donkeys had been tamed so that they could be ridden. Wheeled vehicles had been invented, which could carry more people than one animal could. Strangers to each other The king could now reach many more people and control a bigger area. Communities had grown, and many people in each group were strangers to the king and to each other. Because of this, society became more complicated and formal. The king became a symbol of law, order and religion, a man who was also a god. Now that he had metal weapons and improved trans- port, the king became more and more powerful. But although the king had great riches and led a life of ease, the ordinary people still lived very simply, using polished stone and flint tools. Many peasants now became slaves to the king and his nobles. There were three very important inventions in the Bronze Age: the charcoal furnace with bellows, the wheel and shaft, and writing. A really hot furnace could bake a lot of bread very quickly, so that a large labour force far from home could be fed on the spot, as at the pyramids. A furnace could produce much more and much tougher pottery. It could smelt the ores of copper, tin, lead, silver and gold. Metals or alloys could be cast in all sorts of shapes that could not be made in stone, and much more quickly. Armour was beaten out of metal sheet. Metal nails, brackets and rimmed wheels made the fast, light war-chariot possible, and this completely changed warfare. We do not know whether the wagon had been invented before the Bronze Age. The wheel used on wagons prob- ably came after the potter’s wheel. Try to imagine what life would be like without wheels! You will soon see how much easier it became to move people and goods, once the wheel had been invented. As government and trade increased it became more difficult for officials to keep all the details in their heads. Some means of keeping records was needed, and gradually a system of writing grew up. Egyptian scribes used reed pens and papyrus; Sumerian scribes used the stylus (a kind of pen) to write on wet clay tablets, which were later baked. Mathematics and science To predict seasons, river-flooding and weather some sort of calendar was needed. In trade, standards of length, weight and volume had to be established. So began mathematics and science. Priests were already concerned with the weather, since it was their task to keep the gods friendly to the farmers. So science also became the work of the priests, and this increased their power. The main causes of crime and disorder in the land were the natural disasters like droughts and floods. Religion helped the peasant to face these things by giving him comfort and confidence, and so religion was also keeping order. For observing the religion was the same as obeying the law. Another force was needed to control people of other cultures who worshipped other gods. This was the armed force of the state. And so, in Egypt and Sumeria, two authorities grew up side by side. They were church and state. The king, who was also high priest, was head of both institutions. 10 11
Bronze is a mixture of copper and tin. It is harder than either metal by itself. Not all early metal-workers had tin. But the age when men first used metals we call the Bronze Age. It began in Egypt before 3000 B.c. Before the Bronze Age, men had banded together to form villages and towns. But during the Bronze Age much bigger communities grew up. They were kingdoms, with strong central governments. Under them, most men lived a better life than ever before. The new metal tools, weapons and armour made it easier to rule kingdoms. But the chief reason that kings could now govern many people was that transport was much better. The donkey was used to carry goods, and men began making carts with wheels. But the most important means of transport was by boat along the rivers. The River Nile flows straight through Egypt. The fertile land is only a few miles wide on each bank. You can sail up-river with the wind, and drift down-river with the current. The great King Menes united all Egypt into one kingdom. He could not have done it without the highway which was the River Nile. A system of canals The kingdom was divided into forty-two provinces, called nomes. The average population of a nome was 150,000. Each nome had a governor, organized its own farming, and looked after its own irrigation system. This was a system of canals that carried river water into the fields. The Egyptians sent the army to mine metal. They found copper and gold on the surface of rocks in the Sinai peninsula. At first they knocked the metal off and ham- mered it into shape. Then they realized that heat made it soft. So they tried putting a lump of the rock (called ore) into a furnace. The metal melted and separated from the other minerals, and could be poured off into moulds. The Egyptians were the first people to set up a govern- ment over a whole land with a large population. The king was head of the civil government, and also head of the religion with its priests and temples. Artists and craftsmen The civil government was divided into four parts. First was the palace. It had a large staff of secretaries, stewards, advisers, and priests. Artists and craftsmen lived and worked there for the king. Palace life was very formal. The sons of the king, and of nobles and high officials, were strictly brought up together at the palace school. They learned reading, writing, arithmetic, geometry, religion, gymnastics, swimming and good manners. Later, they could study advanced subjects at the temples. The chief justice was a prince, second only to the king in rank. He was head of the second department, which dealt with law, provincial governors and civil servants. The treasury, which looked after all the money was the third department. And finally, there was the department of scribes and secretaries. This system was simple compared with our modern governments. But 5,000 years ago it was the most com- plex in the world. 12
The rich and splendid civilisation of Ancient Egypt was based on a prosperous farming economy. From the rugged country of Upper Egypt (in the south) to (he gentler Delta (in the north), the land blossomed. Crops of wheat and barley, fruit and vegetables, and herd animals were all nourished by the rich black soil, watered by the Nile. The colour of the soil led the Egyptians to call their country Kerner, ‘the black land*. The life of the Egyptian peasants who laboured on the land was hard but they knew that their hard work almost always brought a just reward. The farming year was divided into three predictable seasons, which depended on the behaviour of the Nile. The inundation* (or flooding) lasted from June until September; then the Nile overflowed its banks and flooded the fields When the water went down it left the fields covered with a layer of rich silt which lasted until February. During this period, the peasants sowed their crops and dug the vitally important irrigation ditches. In the ‘drought’ that followed, from March to May. they harvested the crops. As well as cultivated crops, the Egyptians harvested the naturally-growing papyrus reed, from which they made paper, boats, baskets, mats, ropes and sandals SK hen the flood returned the peasants laboured on the pharaoh's great building projects. Huge stone blocks could be floated on rafts on the flood water. Of course, there were bad years, when the regular cy cle of flood and drought was broken and the crops failed. But food could be stored against a bad year - as Joseph advised the pharaoh in the Bible story to do during the ‘seven lean yean’ he foresaw in his dream and good irrigation systems helped too. 8
The fertile Delta At the end of Its 4.000-mile journey the ancient Nile emptied itself into the Mediterranean in seven separate waterways, making Lower Egypt the most fertile area in the country. Landowners raised fat cattle (A). p*p (B) and goats (C) here. Barley (D). grapes (E) and date palms (F) were grown, flax (G> for weaving linen and the sesame plant (H) for its oil*bearing seeds. Papyrus (I) grew in wild profusion and the waterfowl which lived in the marshes - cranes, geese and ducks - made excellent eating. The farmer's year This frieze, like those which decorate the temples and tombs of Egypt, shows the busy life of an agricultural people. In preparation for planting, the ground is broken up by hand or with wooden ploughs drawn by cattle. Grain is sown in the rich Nile soil. The harvest is cut with flmt-toothed sickles and stacked with wooden forks. Donkeys were used as beasts of burden, but here they thresh grain by walking over it. Papyrus reeds are gathered and the geese, which live among them, are driven home to be fattened. Honey is collected, as sugar was unknown to the Egyptians. Grapes are picked and pressed for their juice. Long-horned cattle, which were also slaughtered for meat, are being milked here. Farming is helped by the shaduf. a bucket on a pole used to FH the ditches which irrigate the drier land. By a guiding rope, the bucket is lowered into the Nile; a heavy counterweight on the other end of the pole raises it again, brimming with valuable water. 9
Life on the land The shaduf, made from a bucket and a heavy weight, raised water for irrigation. Egypt's settled way of life was based on agriculture which supplied both food and taxes. The hard-working peasants were at the bottom of the social scale, and their labor in the fields was watched over by officials who made sure that the correct amount of grain went to the government and temple granaries. Besides seasonal work in the fields, the peasants also had the task of maintaining the vital irrigation canals. These were dug early in Egypt's history and they crisscrossed the land, allowing water to flow from the Nile into the countryside during the dry season. In this Egyptian frieze, grain is sown in the nch soil: later, the crop is harvested and stacked Honey is collected from the bees, and grapes are picked and pressed. Papyrus is cut, and geese are driven home. Plowing and sowing Driving domestic geese home Cutting papyrus in the marshes 20
The farmer’s year__________________________ Every summer the Nile rose, flooding the land and depositing a rich layer of silt which made it fertile. During the fall and winter, crops were sown, and in March, as the soil began to dry out, they were harvested. The peasant farmers also kept pigs, cattle, sheep, goats and donkeys, which were used as "beasts of burden." They cut down the giant papyrus which grew in the marshes, and used it to make boats, baskets, rope and sandals. When the Nile rose again the peasants left the fields to work on the pharaoh's great building projects. The Egyptians liked to drink milk, but also used it to make butter and cheese. Cattle were also slaughtered for meat. Making wine and gathering honey 21
A Bushman using a primitive digging stick. Early Egyptian hoe. The first man-made boat may have been a bundle of reeds bound together to make a simple raft (above). The man needed to sit astride, rather than in or on this craft, so he could carry only the smallest of his belongings with him. Papyrus rafts with prows (inset) are still in use today on some African waterways. L An Ancient Egyptian An Ancient Egyptian A Stone Age forked branch hoe (top) and more advanced hoe with hafted wooden blade. From the combined ideas of a dug-out canoe and a raft with built-up sides came the first “ planked” boats. This planking (lengths of wood) was pegged together so that there was no longer any need for binding. In Egypt, by about 3,000 B.c., men had learnt to make use of the power of the wind by attaching a sail to their craft. If the wind was blowing strongly enough, the oars could be stowed in special places on board and the oarsmen could rest. These early boats (above) also had several huge oars at the back with one man to each of them. These were used to guide the craft through the strong currents of the Nile. Later this system was simplified, and the rudder was developed.
Shipping and trade Papyrus boat This was made of bundles of paptrus reeds tied together The world’s oldest picture of a boat comes from Egypt. The Egyptians—living on the banks of the Nile—used water trans- port more than any other kind. Prehistoric Egyptians pad- died down the river on papyrus rafts. As early as 3000 B.C., they built wooden ships with sails. Oars were used on the river, but in the narrow canals the crews walked alongside the water and pulled their boats by ropes. At the height of the Egyptian empire, the Nile was like a busy highway: flimsy reed boats and tiny ferries jostled with huge cargo ships, 200-foot long barges, and sleek gal- leys. Magnificent vessels carried the images of gods at festivals. Trading with the land of Punt Queen Hatshepsut sent a trading expedition to the land of Punt Pictures on the walls of her temple at Deir el-Bahn tdl the story of the expedition Five galleys sailed down the Red Sea. carrying necklaces, daggers, and hatchets, they returned filled with wood, ivory, trees, animal skim, and even a live panther Trading vessels like this one The Egyptians sailed out to the open sea early. The Old Kingdom pharaoh Sahure sent eight armed ships across the Mediterranean to attack Syria. Sneferu opened trade with Lebanon when he sent forty ships to buy wood. Egyptian power was at its peak in the New Kingdom. Sea and land trading routes were always busy. Since there was no money (coins were not used until the 4th century b.c.), Egypt bartered linen, papyrus, and other materials for foreign goods. They traded gold from Nubia for African ivory and animal skins. Horses, cattle, silver, bronze, and rare woods were brought in from Asia, chariots from Syria, and jewelry’ from Babylon. had special equipment for 12
Hatsnepsut s trading дэ! ay. 1500 В C Nee S3) »лд cran. 3000 В C. From the river to the sea At the bottom of the picture h a Nile sailing craft of 3000 b.c. Above it arc Sahure’s sea going ship* <2500 B.c ). Hatshepsut * galley (1500 b.c). and Ramso Ill’s warship (1200 b.c.)

The Egyptian people People believed that the pharaoh protected Egypt from disaster, but really it was the hard work of thousands of ordinary people that Top people The royal family lived in palaces, ate fine food, ' and enjoyed hunting and music. Some nobles became royal officials, such as governors. Others were generals or priests. kept the kingdom going. The pharaoh was at the head of Egyptian society. Beneath him were other members of the royal family. Below them were the nobles, followed by rhe wealthy middle classes. Ar rhe bottom were the peasants who farmed the land. Normally, only rich people could afford ro have their bodies turned into mummies. Peasants, unskilled workers, slaves Hard workers Most Egyptians had to work hard. Farmers planted crops and looked after cattle. They also had to help build huge temples or tombs. Slaves were usually foreign prisoners of war. They were often used to do dangerous jobs, such as mining.

Craftsmen Just below the administrators in social status were the craftsmen. Most of them were employed by the pharaoh, by nobles or in the temples. They labored together in organized workshops making sculpture, jewelry, furniture and many other beautiful articles. Their wages consisted of food and some clothing; sometimes they even lived in special craftsmen's villages. First strike!_______________________________________________ At times they went hungry - especially if funds in the royal treasury were low. In fact, the first strike in recorded history took place for this reason, when workmen at a building site near Thebes walked out because they had not been paid for two months. Chanting, "We are hungry," they did not return to work untilthey had received everything owed to them! 18
Working in wood Weighing gold ingots Cutting metal beads with a bow dnll Weaving Makingpottery 19
Trade and tribute The Nile was Egypt's lifeline. At the height of Egypt's power, it was like a bustling highway, carrying a huge volume of river traffic. Flimsy papyrus rafts and tiny ferries jostled with freighters loaded with cattle or grain, barges carried massive statues and slender galleys bore government officials on state business. Trading expeditions ______________________________________ The Egyptians ventured onto the sea, too, and there were organized trading expeditions. They journeyed to Lebanon to buy cedar, as they had no good timber of their own. Queen Hatshepsut sent a trade expedition to the mysterious land of Punt - modern-day Somalia - and her ships came back loaded with wood, ivory and incense. Tribute from both subject nations and allies poured into Egypt - gold and silver, copper, precious stones, scented woods, perfumed oils, horses, chariots and animal skins. Syrian noblemen bear gifts of a falcon, an ape. golden vessels and animal skins for this pharaoh; Nubian chiefs (below) bring slaves, a giraffe and more gold. 24
_ , , Nile sailing craft (3000 вс) From the nver to the sea: a Nile sailing craft (3000 вс); a sea going vessel (2500 вс); Hatshepsut’s trading galley (1500 вс). The papyrus riverboat was used from prehistoric times onward. Papyrus riverboat 25
daily lives, and the climate of their land. The life of the Egyptian countryside Irrigation makes it possible for the owner of this estate to use some land for a private garden - and to grow palm trees to shade his house In the foreground laborers are preparing the soil for a new crop of vegetables A house like this would be completely self-supporting in food, as well as producing gram for sale This would be stored in the granary behind the house Egyptians. AU houses, from rhe peasants’ hut to the most splendid royal palaces, were built of mudbrick. There might be door frames of stone, and columns of wood, if the owner could afford it. Poor peasants lived in one-roomed huts, but anyone who was better off would have a house with three sections. The outer room or group of rooms was for greeting strangers. 1Ъе central room or group of rooms was for entertaining friends, and beyond this were the family’s private quarters. Windows were small and placed high in rhe walls at ceiling level, to keep the house cool. In the hot season everyone spent as much time as possible on the roof, where they would fed any cool breeze. Noblemen's villas were very luxurious. The\ had many rooms - including bath- rooms - outhouses, and gardens, all hidden behind high walls. Country houses often had only one ston, but in cities, where land was A tomb model showing brewers bakers, and a butcher at work A WOMAN’S PLACE A woman m ancient Egypt could not hold public office (unless she was a powerful queen like Hatshepsut) But the legal rights of women m Egypt were better than in almost any other ancient society A father would usually leave most of hts property to his eldest son but daughters were also generously pro vided for If a man had no sons his daughters would inherit everything When a woman married her husband might look after the running of her property But it remained hers She was entitled to make a will leaving it to anyone she chose (In modern Europe most married women did not have these rights until the late 1800s до) No woman had to endure a cruel husband for divorce was easy Ahet a divorce, children would remain with their mother and she and they were guaranteed shares of the father s property Above A house belonging to one of the workmen who built the royal tombs at Thebes These men lived m a specially built village m the desert Most of the houses were m tightly packed rows, but must have been quite pleasant inside scarce and expensive, there were houses of three or more stories. The main streets of these cities may have been magnificent, but the side streets were probablx narrow, dirty, and teeming uith crouds Great cities like Memphis and ’I'hebes uerv built on the Nile and had quaxs for shipping Below The bustle of city life A Syrian merchant ship is unloading at the quay Egypt $ best means of transport was the rrver. so most big cities were built beside it Outside the narrow houses craftsmen have set up stalls to sell then work A splendid temple is in the background

— FINDING OUT A MODERN LIBRARY OF EDUCATION IN WEEKLY PARTS Every Monday 2/- NUMBER 71
The mastabas These were rectangular structures of unbaked mud-brick. Architectural versions of prehistoric burial mounds, they grew large enough to house stores as well as bodies. The step pyramid at Saqqara The world’s oldest stone building, raised by the architect Imhotep for King Zoser. consists of a million tonnes of solid rock. Imhotep became so famous that he was later worshipped as a god.
The Mountains of Pharaoh There are about 80 pyramids, dotted along the edge of the Nile. The Arabs called them The Mountains of Pharaoh*. To the Egyptians, the pyramids were vast tombs, built to ensure a glorious afterlife for their rulers. Until the lllrd dynasty all Egyptian buildings were of mud- brick. Then King Zoser built a step pyramid of stone instead of the usual mastaba. the subterranean, carth-covcrcd tomb of his ancestors. A century' after Zoser another ruler. Cheops, raised the most massive of the true pyramids, the Great Pyramid of Giza. At Giza, gangs of labourers, using copper chisels and saws. cut the stones from nearby cliff quarnes. then levered them on to sledges and hauled them with palm-fibre ropes to the site. The IS-tonne granite blocks were floated down the Nile on barges from Asuan. 800 kilometres away. Skilled masons hid a central core of solid masonry and chambers and passages were tunnelled deep into the heart of it. As the pyramid rose, trimmed blocks were dragged up great ramps of earth and rubble and levered into position on a skin of liquid mortar. The valley building, where the pharaoh's funeral procession would eventually disembark, was constructed by the river and a covered causeway was laid from it to the cere- monial mortuary temple. Finally, the pyramid itself w as faced with polished limestone or granite and the galleries inside were carved and painted with scenes from the pharaoh’s life. Cheops' son. Chephron. and his grandson, Myccrinus, built their own pyramids at the same site. Guardian of the dead The Great Sphinx, crouched in the sand at Giza, has defended the pyramids for 46 centuries. 29
Levers in Ancient Egypt Quarry-men lever a block of stone weighing tons on to a sledge. It will be dragged away by gangs to be trimmed and then levered on to a barge. In the flood season, the stone will be floated down the river to where a pyramid is being built. The men on the right are preparing to split the rock with water and wooden wed- ges. (See page 1180.)
Visitors to Egypt have marveled for thousands of years at the size and splen- dor of rhe pyramids. The group at Giza was one of the seven wonders of the ancient world and mosr people still think of these pyramids as the “Pyramids of Egy pt". Yet there are more than 30 royal pyramids scattered across Egypt and some 60 later royal pyramids in what is now the Sudan. These spectacular monuments arc tombs. Each pyramid was built to house the body and possessions of its owner. Building the pyramid of Khalre Some scholars think that a huge ramp was used to raise the stones. Hundreds of men dragged the stones to their position on sledges But skilled workers were needed, too. In the foreground tools are being sharpened for masons who are finishing off the stones A group of scribes are discussing the plans Below the ramp (he next sledges to go up are being loaded, so that the work can flow without delay But most important in these gigantic projects was the enormous number of laborers needed - not slaves, but peasants unable to work on the land during the Inundation to (heir date, but most have some things in common. They were built on (he west bank of the Nile - always in the desert, because all the fertile land was needed to grow food. ()n the edge of the cultivated land was the Valley Temple. Here embalming ceremonies were performed. A long passage the causeway - led from this temple to the Mortuary Temple, which was built against the pyramid. The pyramid's entrance was usually on its north side, well concealed. Inside it were a number of passages and chambers. The actual burial chamber might be in the body of the pyramid, at ground level, or underground. As well as the king's pyramid there would be one or more small pyramids nearby These belonged to the queen or to other favored wives. Old Kingdom pyramids were made of huge blocks of stone. These were brought from the quarry by boat up the Nile, then dragged from the river to the burial site by gangs of men. These men were not
they were made of mudbrick, with only an outer casing of stone. The New Kingdom pharaohs moved their capital from Memphis to Thebes, and changed their burial arrangements too. They were still buried on the west bank of the Nile, but in tombs cut out of the cliffs of a hidden valley. But they may have chosen this particular valley because towering above it is a rock in the shape of a pyramid. THE FIRST PYRAMIDS Some people think that the pyramids grew from rectangular mudbrick tombs called mastabas These were the burial-places of the earliest pharaohs and nobles. The outside walls had an elaborate. pattern of alcoves and insidi there was a mound covering-the grave Next came the- Step Pyramid of Sakk^ra This began as a stone mastaba but there-were two changes of plan while it was£eing.built The final result was a pyramid of six huge steps. More step pyramids were built At Meidum the steps of tone were filled in. turning it mtd a true pyramid with smooth sides Above After Egypt had been conquered by Alexander the Great, the rulers of the kingdom of Kush in Nubia continued some of the traditions of Egypt These included being buried in pyramids This group of pyramids is at Meroe. m the Sudan Top right The Step Pyramid was built for King Zoser. who died m about 2950 BC It is the oldest stone building in the world Right The pyramids of Giza have been Egypt s greatest tourist attraction for many centuries. In the center is the pyramid of Khafre. easily recognized because it still has some of its limestone casing The largest of all. the pyramid of Khufu, looks the smallest because of the distance between it and the others
Building an empire Symbols of royal power In eari) илю each province of Egypt had its own god. usually shown as an animal The tall, white crown of Upper Egypt had a cobra's head on it. while the red crown of Lower Eg>pt bore a vulture When the two kingdoms were united, the pharaohs of the two lands each wore a red and white crown, with both animals To the Egyptians, the pharaoh was the representative on earth of the sun god. Amon, and all the land and people belonged to him. Ceremonies and rituals were reminders of hi^godlike power. Some of the greatest pharaohs ruled during the New Kingdom. Thutmose I, of the Eighteenth Dynasty, fought a campaign in Nubia and extended the southern border as far as the third cataract (rapids) on the Nile. Another outstanding pharaoh of the same dynasty was Queen Hatshepsut. widow of Thutmose 11 and stepmother of Thutmose III. Like the male pharaohs she claimed divine birth, and statues show her wearing the double crown and even the ceremonial royal beard. After Hatshepsut’s death, her stepson removed her name and image from buildings and monuments. Then, for almost every spring of his rule, he sent military expeditions to Asia to subdue rebellious lands and demand tribute. With this treasure, he built grand hails and gateways to honor Amon, god of Thebes, at Karnak. The best-known pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty is Rainses II. ’’the Great.” His long reign (over 60 years) be- gan with almost 20 years of continuous war against the Hittites. After a decisive battle al Kadesh, in Syria, peace was established and Ramses devoted himself to building projects like the temple at Abu Simbel.
Queen Hatshepsuts temple An avenue of sphinxes once led to the shining limestone temple beneath the dirts at Deir el-Bahri. Scenes from the queen's life decorate the walls. Hatshepsut built the temple to honor Amon-Re. the sun god Moving a colossus Giant statues, or colossi, of the New Kingdom pharaohs show their power, and their pride. Over 170 laborers, using sledges, levers, and ropes, were needed to move a 60-ton statue
ЦАРИЦА ХАТШЕПСУТ (1525 -1503 гг. до н.э.) И ЕЁ ЗАУПОКОЙНЫЙ ХРАМ В ДЖЕСЕР - ДЖЕСЕРУ (ДЕЙР - ЭЛЬ - БАХРИ)
A revolutionary pharaoh In the 14th century B.C., the power of the priests and the old religion was challenged by a strange and fascinating pharaoh. Amenhotep IV (or Amenophis) was a revolu- tionary ruler; he caused great changes in many areas of life. He introduced a new religion and his reign saw (he Portrait of a pharaoh The statue below shows the defects Akhcnaton allowed his sculptors to portray. These may have been caused by a gland disorder founding of a new capital city, and the creation of a very different art style. For almost 2,000 years, Egyptians had prayed to a great variety of gods. Monotheism, the worship of one god. had never existed. The new pharaoh now chose Aton to be honored above all gods. The Alon was the sun’s disk—the visible part of the sun that sends its beams to earth, the source of light and life. To honor his god, Amenhotep took the name Akhen- aton (“he who serves Aton ") and his queen, the beautiful Nefertiti, adopted Nefer-ncferu-Aton (“fair is the goodness of Aton”). Akhcnaton left Thebes, the city of Amon, to build a new capital dedicated to Aton. Nearly 300 miles north, near the modern village of Tell el-Amarna, Akhet- aton was built, with lakes, gardens, painted walks, royal temples, and an immense palace facing the Nile. The build- ings were decorated with scenes of everyday life and portraits of people—even the pharaoh—in realistic poses. In the Amarna style (from Tell el-Amarna), tte family The sun's disk Aton had existed as a form of the sun god from early times II represented I he sun al l he highest point in the sky. and was show n as a red disk with rays reaching down to the earth. Akhcnaton circled the disk with a uratus. or rearing serpent the ancient sign of royal power- to show the royal position of Aton above all other gods. 20
life of the palace was shown in a natural manner: Nefertiti with a child on her knee, Akhcnaton and his queen holding hands, or kissing their daughters. Akhenaton’s appearance is surprising. He is shown with a long, thin head, drooping shoulders, a round belly, and fat thighs. This new naturalism in style and subject was a startling change. But the Amarna period was only a brief flicker in the long history of Egyptian civilization. When Akhenaton died, his successor, Tutankhamon. returned to Thebes and to the old religion and the old art. The beautiful Nefertiti Paintings found in the ruins of the palace of Akhctaton include many portrait groups of Nefertiti playing with her six daughters. One daughter became the wife of Tutankhamon. The city of Aton Constructed in record time, and abandoned equally quickly when its founder died. Akhctaton stretched for eight miles along the Nile. 21
•GROWING UP IN- Ancient Egypt \ ROSALIE DAVID
•GROWING UP IN- Ancient Egypt Illustrated by ANGUS McBRIDE Troll Associates
Ancient Egypt Egypt, in north Africa, has one of the world's oldest civilizations. Its northern shores lie on the Mediterranean Sea. To the east is the Red Sea. But the most important waterway in Egypt is the Nile River. The Nile flows from the south into a fan-shaped delta where it meets the Mediterranean. Egypt has very little rainfall, and without the Nile the entire country would be a desert. Before modern dams were built to hold the water back, the river would flood every year, bringing down thick, black mud from the mountains of central Africa and spreading it over the river banks. This fertile mud enabled the early Egyptians to grow plentiful crops. The ancient Egyptians named their country Kernel, which meant “black land,” because this was the color of the rich soil. The land beyond was called Deshret, or “red land.” ► This girdle of on Egyptian princess is a fine example of the jewelry buried in ancient Egyptian tombs. The pyramids were the tombs of the kings and queens of ancient Egypt.
MEDITERRANEAN SEA ► This map of Egypt shows the land in the Nile Valley and the delta, where the crops were grown, as well as the surrounding desert. Most pyramids were built in the north where these two areas meet. VaBey of the Kings SINAI UPPER KINGDOM
Cities, towns, and villages If you visit Egypt today, you can stand with one foot on rich cultivated land and the other in the desert. Thousands of years ago. the cultivated land was kept for growing food and raising animals. People used the desert to bury’ their dead. The poor people dug shallow graves and covered them with a mound of dirt and stones. The rich people built stone tombs. Stone was also used to build temples. Many of these stone buildings still survive. Most villages stood along the banks of the Nile. The towns, which were often quite large, were important market centers or special places where gods were worshiped. Building a royal tomb or pyramid was a major task, so the king sometimes decided that the workers and their families should be housed in a new’ town. Many children grew up beside the pyramids, and helped with the building as they grew' older. ▼ These houses were built on the bonks of the Nile. The houses hod flat roofs where people slept in summer.
▼ The pyramids and tombs were built further west in the desert. The Egyptians believed the "Land of the Dead" was in the west.
The countryside The Egyptians made as much use as possible of the rich soil provided by the Nile mud. They devised a system of irrigation to distribute the water. The shaduf was a lever and bucket that took the water from one level to another. The people grew cereals, vegetables, and fruit, and kept animals for food and leather. They kept cows, sheep, goats, pigs, and poultry. They also hunted wild animals on the edges of the desert. Flax was grown to make linen for clothes, and the papyrus plant gave them writing paper, ropes, boats, sandals, and baskets. Most people worked on the land. They grew enough to feed themselves and people who did not work on the land. There was a taxation system, but as money was not used until about 525 B.c.. people paid in food and goods. ► Peasants worked in ♦he fields, growing crops and looking after their animals. On the right is a shaduf, used to bring water from a channel up to the land.

The boy-king Tutankhamen The king of ancient Egypt was called a pharaoh. This name comes from the words “per aa,” which meant the great house or palace where he lived. The Egyptians believed that the pharaoh was half god and half human and was therefore able to ask the gods for their blessing for himself and for all Egyptians. They believed the pharaoh was very important to Egypt's security and prosperity. Today, Tutankhamen is the most famous of Egypt's kings because his is the only royal tomb in the Valley of the Kings that has been discovered almost untouched. It was found by the archeologist Howard Carter in 1922 after many years of digging. The king’s tomb contained his preserved body, called a mummy, a gold head mask, and three golden coffins, as well as clothing, jewelry, perfume, furniture, and games. The Egyptians believed that the dead needed their possessions to use in the next life. ► Tutankhamen met with his ministers at the royal court. He wore a double crown to show that he was ruler of Upper (south) and Lower (north) Egypt, and he earned the king's symbols of power, the crook and the flail (whip). 12 5,

Flail The land of Egypt The pharaohs ruled over the green lands around the Nile River and the dusty deserts beyond. They built great cities, tombs, and temples. ° »O4ftT The pharaohs Why did the ancient Egyptians turn bodies into mummies? They believed a dead person needed his or her body to enjoy life in rhe Next World. It was particularly important for the pharaohs to be made into mummies. The pharaohs were powerful kings who ruled Egypt for thousands of years. The ancient Egyptians believed that the pharaohs were living gods. If rhe magical link between the pharaohs and the Next World were broken, then the whole earth would vanish into darkness and chaos. M4*T4 H1AN4AN f4A Gifts for a living god The pharaoh and his queen received all kinds of gifts from people of other lands— ivory elephant tusks, animal skins, spices, gold, and jewels. Riches like these were placed in the pharaoh’s tomb so he could use them when he reached the Next World. Crook Scepters carried by the pharaoh
Society and the law Maat Tbc goddess Maat. whose symbol was an ostrich feather, stood for world order, truth, and justice. To the pharaohs, living by maat meant ruling justly; to the peasants, it meant working honestly The Egyptians believed the gods created the world and everything in it following a principle of truth, justice, and order they called maat. Since the world was just as the gods wanted, the people did not expect change, or try to change things themselves; and their society changed little in 3000 years. In art, as in other areas, everything was done in a fixed way. Figures on tombs from the New Kingdom are can ed in the same style as those on the palette of Narmer, the first king. The pharaoh personified maat, and his task was to es- tablish maat instead of disorder. In the Middle Kingdom, as Egypt grew more powerful, the pharaohs appointed officials to help govern. They were often scribes or clerks, for many records were kept—especially of taxes which were collected in real goods, like corn or animals. New Kingdom pharaohs appointed a chief official, called a vizier. The vizier and other officials, and the priests and nobles, were the upper class of society. Below* were scribes, soldiers, craftsmen, laborers, slaves, and peasants. The peasants* chil- dren remained peasants; those of craftsmen were trained in crafts; the sons of nobles inherited their positions. But the society was not all rigid. Ability to read and write was the best way to advance, but soldiers too could sometimes reach higher positions. And. unlike most ancient civilizations. Egyptian society gave women and slaves some legal right s- for example, they could own property . A court of law The trial scene (right) shows village chiefs accused of not collecting taxes properly. Tbc vizier, the pharaoh’s chief minister, acts as judge. I he scribes record everything that happens. Sometimes special scribes helped defendants prepare their cases. The vizier read written evidence, heard witnesses, and then announced his verdict. If found guilty, the defendant could be whipped.or imprisoned. The stone carving (bottom left) shows defendants kneeling before the court to beg for mercy. 14
15
takes you back to Ancient Egypt p°"T-n The workmen would go to Plah’s temple and ask questions of a bull. The bull was said to carry messages for the god. The priests in the temple said'they could understand Ptah’s answers to the questions by the way the bull behaved. It was believed that if the bull snorted and tossed his head, Ptah was thought to be angry at the question. Many farms were owned by nobles, or lords. Below wo can see a farmer showing the noble the crops and animals on his land. The noble has brought a scribe with him. This was a man who could read and write and his job was to make a long list of everything the farmer had produced. Many of the people living in ancient Egypt were farmers. Their farming tools were made of wood and the ploughs were pulled by oxen. The farmers grew wheat and barley, beans, leeks and cucum- bers. The animals they kept on their farms were sheep, goals, donkeys, ducks and geese. Donkeys carried the farmers’ corn and vegetables to the busy markets along the Nile. Many Egyptian cities came to be built around these markets. As a market became busier, more and more people came to live near it. As a result a town was created. Next issue: Merlin takes you back to ancient Greece.

Egyptian homes This picture of a house is based on a frieze found in an official’s tomb. His servants bring him a meal, and he is also shown at work in his office. The kitchen is on the roof, and the servants toil up and down the stairs, loaded down with food. Houses were built of unbaked mud-brick with roofs made from palm branches. In the towns they were crowded together along narrow streets and were several stories high. In the country they were lower and had exotic gardens full of trees and beautiful flowers, often laid out around a pool. Family life Families lived in a central room which was higher and larger than the rest. In smaller houses it served as a living, dining and bedroom, but richer families would have several bedrooms and women's quarters, as well as rooms for servants. The kitchen was usually in the open, or on the roof, and contained an oven, a hot plate, a handmill for grinding wheat and bins for storing food. Few types of furniture were used - stools and small tables were the most common. Most people had a bed, while chairs were a sign of wealth and high social status. 27
Life and leisure A noble's estate Although Egyptian art was very formal (except for the Amarna period), there were many human touches that show everyday activities. Tomb paintings show hunting scenes, feasts, parties, games, and dancing: all the activities the wealthy Egyptians hoped to continue after death in the next world. Only the upper classes—nobles, important soldiers, and officials—lived this well. Their large estates were managed by scribes who kept careful records of the crops and animals. Many servants worked in the vineyards, picking grapes and treading them for wine. They looked after the herds of cattle, goats, and antelope. The indoor servants Surrounded by high walls and formal gardens, a rich family’s country residence was like a well- planned village. Kitchens, workshops, servants’ quarters, storerooms, grain silos, and sheds for animals were separated from the main building. In the spacious mud-brick house, a large living area (with a ceiling resting on columns) led to the main bedroom, toilets, and bathrooms. Stairs led to the roof. cooked, brewed beer, laundered, wove linen, and served at table. The family could relax in the garden of their house. Girls practiced dancing and played. When not studying, boys wrestled or played tug-of-war. The adults enjoyed board or dice games. A popular sport was hunting on the banks of the Nile with throwing sticks. Feasts were very popular. Long tables were piled with meat, game, fruit, bread and pastries, and huge amounts of wine and beer, for the Egyptians enjoyed drinking. Both men and women wore eye makeup, and women also placed cones of greasy incense on their heads so that, as the feast continued, the melting grease perrumed their hair. Guests were entertained by singers, dancing girls, the music of harps and flutes, and by dwarfs and acrobats who performed tricks. 22
Living in harmony Children were part of a loving family group and were included in many adult activities. ‘Senet’ for instance, possibly an elaborate cross between chess and ludo, was enjoyed by adults and children alike, as well as more boisterous games and organised sports. I. Main entrance 2. Family temple 3. Central courtyard 4. Porch S. Vestibule 6. Principal reception room 7. Toilets and bathroom 8. Main bedroom 9. Harem (women’s quarters) 10. Guest rooms II. Bedrooms 12. Walled vineyard 13. Family living quarters 14. Estate offices 15. Servants’ court 16. Grain silos 17. Servants’ living quarters 18. Storerooms and kitchens 19. Cattle pens 20. Well 23
The house I Both rich and poor people built their houses of mud brick and wood. Mud brick was ideal building material in a hot country with little rainfall. In long-established cities and towns where space was limited, houses with two or more floors were built close together. In the new towns, wealthy people built single-level villas surrounded by gardens full of flowers and trees with a lake or pond. Even the smaller houses often had four rooms with an outside courtyard. The women cooked in pottery ovens built in the courtyard. Inside, the walls were plastered and painted with scenes of animals and the countryside. There were stools, chairs, low tables, beds, and boxes to hold clothes, make-up. jewelry, and household items. Some houses had windows with no glass, and oil lamps for extra lighting. Ordinary Egyptians prayed at home to gods such as Bes, a jolly dwarf-god, and his wife Tauert. the hippopotamus goddess. People kept statues of some of the gods in their houses. i ▼ In this house, the columns were carved in the shape of plants. The windows had no glass, but slots let light into the rooms. The house was the center of many activities such as cooking, eating, sewing, and entertaining.

Dinner time The rich soil from the Nile’s flooding meant that farmers could grow plenty of cereals, vegetables, and fruit. They grew barley, wheat, lentils, cucumbers, beans, leeks, and onions, as well as dates, figs, and grapes. Beef was the Egyptians' favorite meat, but they also ate lamb. pork, goat, fish, duck, and goose. The basic foods for poorer people w'ere bread, onions, and other vegetables and fruit. Rich people enjoyed much greater variety, including cakes sweetened with honey. „ 4
▼ Wealthier people had servants who helped them in the house. Ancient Egyptians did not use knives, forks, or spoons. They ate meat and poultry with their hands, and dipped bread into the other dishes. Food was cooked in clay ovens in the courtyard and served in pottery dishes at low tables. At midday, some women took a meal to their husbands in the fields and to their children at school. Priests in the temples served three daily meals to the gods’ statues so the gods would help the Egyptians. The food was later removed and divided among priests as payment for their duties.

THE WAY THEY LIVED - 4 Five thousand years ago Egypt grew rich and secure under her first Pharaohs. Our picture shows a landowner and his wife eating supper, waited on by their daughter. Servants’ quarters, kitchens and food stores faced inwards to the courtyard below. The master of the house ate, slept and received guests in the cool evening air on the roof. Dim light was provided by oil lamps. The stools were made of wood and leather, and the table tops could be taken off for cleaning.
Daily life Small children lived with their mother and other female relatives in a special part of the house. The children's clothes were simple and made of linen. Sometimes they had leather or reed sandals, and most wore a bracelet or necklace of beads. It was the custom to shave boys’ heads, leaving only one plaited lock. This was cut off when the child reached 12 years. When their sons were four years old. fathers began to train them in their own profession or trade. Most girls married and looked after the house and their children. The Egyptians loved their children, but sadly many died at birth or when they were small. Their parents tried to prevent accidents and illness by spells and charms. Many paintings and statues show children as important people in the family group. ► Children enjoyed helping in the house and around the village. The weather was hot, so they spent much of the daytime outside. Here, a mother grinds wheat to make bread. Her son holds a cat, the family's favorite pet. 16

At the market Each town held a market where people bought food, clothing, and household goods. People needed only simple clothes in such a hot, dry country, but they wore jewelry made of pottery or stone, or sometimes gold, silver, or copper. Rich people covered their heads, as protection against the sun, with wigs made of real hair or grass.
▼ Fruit, vegetables, animals, clothing, pottery vases, and dishes were exchanged at the market, which was held outdoors. Many people brought the food they had grown or the goods they had made, to sell by barter. Pottery cooking pots and serving dishes were for sale, as well as wooden furniture inlaid with ebony and ivory, or beautiful boxes for make-up. Egyptians had a lot of gold but not much wood, so they imported cedar wood from Syria. Other goods such as silver, ostrich feathers, ebony, and ivory came from Asia Minor, the Aegean islands, and Nubia, part of present-day Sudan.
THE WAY THEY LIVED - 7 In Egypt in 1500 B.c. all people who could afford it added gardens to their homes. In this hot, dry land a garden needed a lot of care. An Egyptian liked nothing better than to sit on his verandah with his family and friends, admir- ing the flowers. Blue lotuses grew in the pool, and on the sides were straight rows of tamarisk, oleanders and palm trees. The old gardener in the foreground is marking out another plot, helped by the master’s smallest son.
Z.iAmry a/Cwtfxw Dm David. A Rcealfe (A^” R<»aliei Crvwintt up in orxKTit E?vpi .' by Re«j_'ic David. dluu/ated by Ar.fUt McBnde p cm 1ш 1мг4ех nvfe* Summary De*cnbei daily kfc tn anorir her?’. diwuMing lift in the city life in the country pew and toy». meal». »t*J >«<brr aapnu ISBN G-ei6?-2?l7 l tub ad« ) ISBN О-6167-771Э-Х <pbk ) 1 E<vpt— Social life anЛ cut кив»—To 132 В С —Juvenile literature (I Ejprpt—Social life and cumcmb»—To 332 В C. | I Me Bude, Anyui iL 11 l itfe DT6I D5274 1993 932 Cl—dt20 91 40264 This edition published in 2002. Published by Troll Associates © 1994 Eagle Books All rights reserved. No port of this book may be reproduced or utilized in ony form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy ng, recording or by any storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Publisher. Design by James Marks Edited by Kate Woodhouse Printed in the U.S.A. 1098
Contents Ancient Egypt 4 Who were the ancient Egyptians? 6 Cities, towns, and villages 8 The countryside 10 The boy-king Tutankhamen 12 The house 14 Daily life 16 Pets and toys 18 Early education 20 At the market 22 Dinner time 24 Visiting the doctor 26 Getting married 28 Fact file 30 Index 32
Pets and toys Most Egyptian families had pets. These animals can be found in many of the painted wall- scenes in tombs. The cat was a favorite pet because it killed ruts and mice in the house. and the Egyptians believed that the cat-goddess, Bast, protected the home. Some cats may have been specially trained to help their masters when they hunted birds. ► Most families hod pet cats, monkeys, or birds. Rich people kept special dogs for hunting. Egyptian children played with many different kinds of toys. They had balls, tops, and pretty dolls with real hair fixed into holes drilled into the head. Some children took part in acrobatics or wrestling competitions. 18
Children had a variety of toys and games. Some of these toys were buried in children's graves so they could play with them in the next world. Other toys have been found in the remains of houses. There were dolls, balls, tops, animal toys.

Living in harmony Children were part of a loving family group and were included in many adult activities. *Senet’ for instance, possibly an elaborate cross between chess and ludo, was enjoyed by adults and children alike, as well as more boisterous games and organised sports.
The beautiful Nefertiti Judging from royal portrait groups found in the ruins, Nefertiti, loving mother and devoted wife, must have spent many happy hours playing with had always appeared in formal, traditional scenes. The domestic life of Akhenaten's palace was shown - Nefertiti with a daughter on her knee. Akhenaten and his queen holding hands, two of their daughters lolling on cushions. The appearance of Akhenaten him- self is disturbing: a distorted skull, drooping shoulders, pot belly
Early education Between the ages of 4 and 14. boys and girls attended school together, where they learned to read, write, and do mathematics. Those who were going to become doctors, lawyers, or scribes (writers) studied the sacred writing called hieroglyphics. Students had to copy out stories and religious writings. Some of these exercises survive today. The children also played games, wrestled, and learned to swim. When boys w'ere 14. they followed their father’s trade or profession, whkh could be working in the fields or joining the craftsmen in government or temple workshops. They could also go on to become doctors, scribes, lawyers, or government officials. Girls usually stayed at home with their mothers to learn how to look after the house. ► As the teacher read a story to the class, the children copied it onto pieces of broken pottery or flakes of limestone. Paper, made from papyrus, was too expensive for school work. The children wrote with reed pens and red or black ink. 20

Education and ambition Schools lor scribes A New Kingdom scribe studied for about 12 years to learn the more than 700 hieroglyphs used at the time. From the age of 5. boys spent hours copying individual signs, as well as long pieces. Older pupils learned letter- writing, bookkeeping, mathematics, and astronomy-the subjects they would need in their careers. Painted «oocten statue ct a New Kingdom scribe The beginner's materials Only fully trained scribes wrote on the beautiful paper made from papyrus. Students practiced hieroglyphs on chips of pottery or stone, or on wooden tablets. They used reed pens or brushes. The work of the scribe in ancient Egypt was like work in a modern office: making reports» writing letters» recording events, and keeping accounts. But because he could read and write, the scribe was an important person and could reach a high position. At school, boys were taught reading, writing, and mathematics to prepare them for careers as government officials, priests, or administrators for wealthy families. Handwriting and composition were learned by copying models. A scribe might first work at calculating land areas or numbers of stones quarried, or at recording taxes. He might work for a wealthy family, for the army, or among government officials or priests. If ambitious, he could rise to a powerful office, like chief of public works, royal architect, or even governor of a province. 24
Preparing papyrus The professional scribe wrote on clay tablets or papy- rus scrolls. The scrolls were made by first cutting thin strips of pith, the spongy center of a papyrus reed. These were put in layers across a stone. They were beaten with wooden mallets until the natural juice, acting like glue, bound them together. Single sheets were (hen pasted into a long roll. The Egyptians had learned to make paper in the First Dynasty, and their written language dates from this time. Hieroglyphs, or miniature pictures, sometimes stand for a whole word or idea, and are called ideograms. The word for house ci looks like an outline of a house. Other The Rosetta Stone hieroglyphs have a phonetic, or sound, value and are called phonograms. The owl 4 stands for the sound m and the snake for /. There were hundreds of signs and they could be written as the scribe pleased—from left to right, right to left, or in columns. I Hieroglyphs continued to be used for sacred writing, but a system called hieratic was developed for everyday use. Simple strokes replaced the symbols. Much later, in 700 b.c., demotic, or popular, script was developed. By the 4th century a.d., the meaning of the hiero- glyphs had been lost. It was not until 1822 that Jean Francois Champollion, a French scholar, worked out the hieroglyphs on the Rosetta Stone and opened the secrets of ancient Egypt. ГЬс slab of basalt, found near Rosetta in 1799, showed three scripts-hieroglyphic (A), demotic (B), and Greek (C). Groups of ringed hieroglyphs A (cartouches) were royal names and could be matched with the Greek names of the rulers. Champollion identified the symbols and sounds (p.o,/) that occur in the names of Ptolemy and Cleopatra, and worked out the other letters by their positions. At last the words on the Rosetta Stone could be read. ЛТОЛ6МАЮЕ c 25
Education and ambition Schools for scribes A New Kingdom scribe studied for about 12 years to learn the 700-odd hieroglyphs in use at the time. Five-year-old boys spent endless hours copying individual signs as well as whole passages from textbooks. Older pupils learned letter-writing, book- keeping, mathematics and astronomy - the subjects they might need in their careers. Painted wooden statue of a New Kingdom scribe circa 1500 BC

Getting married People in ancient Egypt married young. The boys were usually 15 and the girls were about 12. Most people died in their forties, so their lives were short. Young people chose their partner and wrote love songs to one another. The earliest love songs in the world come from Egypt. Although ▼ A newly married couple moved their furniture and other possessions into their new home. Neighbors made the couple welcome, with good wishes for a happy marriage. marriages were not arranged, parents and friends tried to ensure that boys and girls from similar homes and backgrounds met one another. Egypt today is a very different country. But many of the earlier writings and drawings have been preserved, so we have an excellent idea of what it was like to grow up in such an ancient civilization.
property. The house, furniture, and other goods were owned by both husband and wife. A man could divorce his wife, but she kept any valuable possessions she brought to the marriage, and her husband had to make payments to her. ▼ There were laws protecting marriage



Thu early Egyptian goldsmiths soon learned to beat out their gold into thin sheets, and to smelt it in primitive furnaces Our picture, taken from an old tomb painting, shows an Egyptian goldsmith preparing his gold and using a blow pipe to heat it on a chaff furnace to a temperature of 1.000 degrees Fahrenheit Our knowledge of the type of early Egyptians goldsmiths were of doing would have been had it not been for the Tutankhamen's tomb, in 1922 of WONDER No 23). Th* proved a veritable treasure-house of gold ob- jects. the like of which had never been discovered before
The clothes they wore in 2,000 B.C. The Egyptians were expert weavers of linen and wore it often. The king (left) is wearing a wig and false beard. The boy (kneeling) will keep his side-lock until manhnnd The littlp airl rarripc л wooden Razor 2,500 B.C.
The clothes they wore in 1500 B.C. EGYPT: Merchant's wife Ancient Egyptian archer The people of CRETE ruled the seas around them and lived in luxury. All Cretans wore their hair long. They kept their waists very small with tight belts. On the right stands a young king. His apron and boots are of coloured leather. Behind him a woman pours goat’s milk for her husband. Near her is some Cretan pottery. - A TURKEY: Hittite soldier with iron weapons.
Visiting the doctor Many Egyptians became ill from diseases caused by sand and water. Sand in the air caused lung disease and breathing difficulties, and sand in bread wore down people's teeth. Diseases carried by worms in river water caused many problems. The Egyptians also suffered from many illnesses we have today. The Egyptians probably had the world's earliest medical profession. There were doctors and nurses, and medical students were trained at the temples. Doctors performed operations and created medicines. Some medicines were unpleasant, to frighten away the evil spirit that was thought to cause the illness. Many treatments were recorded in ancient medical documents, with practical remedies as well as magical spells. There was even an attempted cure for the common cold. ► Here, a doctor attends to a boy's injured knee. An assistant reads out the ingredients and instructions for making a medicine, while another attendant prepares the treatment. 26
Childbirth was dangerous, and many mothers and babies died. There were special magical spells designed to protect the newborn and their mothers. Today, scientists gather information about the ancient Egyptians' diseases, diet, and lifestyle by examining their mummies. They x-ray the mummies, study their blood groups, and examine their body tissue under a microscope.
Лечение юного фараона Тутанхамона
FINDING OUT THE MODERN MAGAZINE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE EVERYWHERE Every Monday 2/- Vol. 9 No. 6
Merlin the Magician Hero. *nd girts. This is your friend Merlin the МадгсДО. This week we are gomg to v*sit ancient Egypt once again. There ks such a lot to ten you about these clever people, the Egyp* uans They made beautiful statues out of stone and they buitt wonderful buildings. The Egyptians wore the people who first divided tho yea^ •nto 36S days, and they made tho first paper out of papyrus, wtuch is a plant that grows along the shores of tho Rrver Nile, in Egypt. They were also very good discoverers of medicine and they had many clever doctors. The waters of the R/vcr Nile helped the ancient Egyptians mth needy everything they did The water flooded tho banks and when the flood receded, it left boh-nd good soil m which farmers grew their vegetab'es and wheat and com. for bread. Builders earned their stones for budding up and down the river it\ boats The Egyptians know that the ram. the sunshine and the winds were all-important to their lives, and they thought that there were gods in charge of an these elements. The Egyptian goddess of the sky was named Nut. Tho god of the air was Shu and the god of the sun was Ra On the loft you can see tome of the gods who were worshiped by the Egyptians Each of these gods had a temple—a kind of church—where the Egyptians prayed. Tho workmen and the stonemasons, who cut the bg blocks of stone for the pyramids and decorated tho buildmgs with beautiful carvings, also had their own god. Ho was ca-’Jed Ptah
NuT and Geb Sky goddess (covered in stars) and god of the Earth Ra (or Re) God of the Sun Osiris God of death and rebirth Isis Mother goddess, wife of Osiris Seth God of chaos and confusion Anubis God of burial and mummy-makers The Next World The ancient Egyptians believed that when they died they would travel to the Next World, the Kingdom of Osiris. They believed this kingdom was a wonderful place, and that whoever managed to reach it would live forever. However, rhe journey to the Next World was long and hard. On the journey, the dead needed f(x)d and drink. Their bodies had to be whole and strong. And the priests had to chant spells to protect them. A difficult journey The dead person asks a ferryman to help him cross a river into the Next World Then he must pass through seven closely guarded gates. He must fight snakes and crocodiles, and evil gods try to trap him in a net. But he also gets help from the god Atum, and food and water from Hathor. He must then face 42 judges before his heart is weighed against the feather of truth. If his heart is heavy with sin, he will be gobbled up by a monster. If it is light, he will be saved.
The many curious-looking gods worshipped in Ancient Egypt, with their human bodies and animal heads, look strange, even frightening to us today. To the Egyptians, however, they were a comforting and familiar part of daily life. The earliest gods, like those of most prehistoric peoples, were associated with natural forces beyond man's control - the sun, the wind, the rise and fall of the Nile. Many of them reflected animal qualities that were particularly feared or admired - the fierceness of a lion or the strength of a bull - and, at first, all the gods had animal forms. Before the kingdom of Egypt was united under the first pharaohs, it consisted of numerous tribal settlements, with their own totems, which gradually developed into local gods. Sometimes the influ- ence of one god spread beyond its own little centre. This happened with Amun, god of Thebes, who was originally represented as a ram or a goose. He grew in importance with the rise of Thebes as the capital city. By the time of the New Kingdom, Amun was recognised as the king of the gods and great temples were raised in his honour at Karnak on the opposite bank of the Nile. All that remained of his animal origins were the two feathers worn at the back of the god's head in his statues. Amun was also incorporated into the myths and stories con- nected with Re, the sun god - his name was combined with Re’s and they were worshipped as one god, Amun-Re. Later gods, Osiris, lord of the underworld, and his wife/sister Isis, the great mother goddess, were brought into the ‘family’ of the older gods in the same way. Horus the child Amun of Thebes 16
The creation of the world Egyptians pictured the sky as a star-spangled goddess called Nut and the earth as her husband- brother, Geb. Before the creation of the universe Geb and Nut lived together. But Re. the sun-god who emerged from the waters of chaos, ordered them to be separated. Their father, Shu. created space and light between them by causing a great wind to lift Nut’s body into the air. Shu became god of atmosphere. Geb lies below, forming the moun- tains and valleys of the earth. During the day, Re travelled across the arc formed by Nut’s body. At night the sky goddess descended to her husband, thus creating darkness. Geb and Nut were the parents of Osiris. Isis and Set. Osiris was murdered by his jealous brother, Set, but Isis, his sister-wife, embalmed his body and thus gave Osiris the power to live again. The Egyptians believed that by preserving the body they, too, could live after death. Khonsu Sons of Horus Hathor 17
«-Уййияг-- Servants feeding the sacred cats in a temple in ancient Egypt. For more about pet cats, see the article “ They were sacred” on page 14.
Legendary beasts SPHINXES Ixmg. long ago. when lions lived in the Egyptian desert, the people looked out towards the horizon, and believed that they had seen a sphinx. As the horizon marked the entrance to their “land of the dead** it was not surprising that sphinxes should be thought of as guardian spirits, and that statues of them should be erected by the tombs of the Egyptian kings. A sphinx also represented Horus the sun god. One day. an Egyptian prince. Thothmes. was out hunting lions in the desert. In the heat of the day he sought shade beside the great stone sphinx of Giza. Here he fell asleep and dreamed that Horus appeared to him and promised that, if his statue was cleared of sand and restored to its former glory, (he prince would be rewarded with the throne of Egypt, although he was not its present heir. This the prince did and later became King Ihothmes IV as promised. I o commem- orate this. Ihothmes erected a stone tablet between the paws of the sphinx, which can still be seen today. The sphinx is also found in Greek legend The most famous guarded the roads to Thebes, and stopped every traveller to ask: “What has four legs in the morning, two at midday and three m the evening?” Nunc could answer and each was devoured. Creon. governor of Thebes, promised the crown to the man who delivered the city from the sphinx Oedipus gained it when he replied: “Man, who first craw ls on four legs, then walks upright, and .supports him self with a slick in the evening of his life.” whereupon the vanquished sphinx threw herself into the sea.
АМАМАТ - ДРЕВНЕЕГИПЕТСКОЕ ЧУДОВИЩЕ, ПОЖИРАВШЕЕ СЕРДЦА ГРЕШНИКОВ ПОСЛЕ СУДА В ЦАРСТВЕ МЕРТВЫХ
Abu Simbel This mighty temple, cut out of a sandstone cliff, was dedicated by its builder. Ramses 11. to the sun god. Rc It was designed for the worship of the sun at dawn A row of babexms was cars cd across the top of the front of the temple They were sacred to the god of wisdom and to the rising sun. Four huge, painted statues of the pharaoh, each 65 feet high, guarded the entrance Temples and priests Egyptian temples were built to honor the gods and to record the deeds of the pharaohs who hoped to join the gods after death. Every ruler felt he or she should build a temple, or add shrines or statues to those already built. As certain gods grew in importance, the priests who served in their temples became more powerful. In the New Kingdom the mightiest god was Amon, patron of Thebes. Generations of pharaohs added to a tem- ple at Karnak that was dedicated to him. It grew from a small shrine into the greatest temple ever built. Rainses 11, the most ambitious builder of all the pharaohs, added the great Hypostyle Hall. (The name comes from a Greek word meaning “to rest on pillars.”) The hall's roof was supported by 134 columns, "each showing scenes of the pharaoh worshiping Amon. At Abu Simbel, Ramses built two more temples. The sanctuary of the larger is cut 60 yards into the rock. Only twice a year—on February 23 and October 23—do the sun’s rays reach the huge statues of Ramses and the gods inside. The vast temples were only part of an enormous area that included houses for the priests, a school, storerooms, and workshops. Priests had many duties. Some performed daily rituals in the dead pharaoh's temples. Others spent every fourth month serving the gods in their special temples. Only a few chosen priests were allowed inside the temple. Each day they entered the sanctuary and the high priest broke the clay seal on the doors of the shrine where the god's statue was kept. A ritual of prayers and bathing and dressing the statue was performed. It was then rescaled in the sanctuary with an offering of food and drink.

History oi tgyptian civilisation, wnen лкпепатеп aieo, ms suc- cessor. Tutankhamun, returned to Thebes and reinstated the old religion - and the old art. The Holy City Constructed in record time and abandoned equally rapidly on the death of its founder, Akhet- Aten originally stretched for eight miles along the Nile. At its centre lay a complex of palaces and temples, all of them revolving around the enormous Temple of the Sun’s Disk. 21
The Temple A temple had to be a home fit for a god. and was built with a magnificence denied the homes of mortals Priests dedicated their lives to looking after the god's daily needs Among the greatest buildings of Egypt are the New Kingdom temples. The most spectacular to have survived is Karnak the massive home of Amun-Re, the King of the Gods. It covers a huge site in Thebes Others, such as Luxor and Abu Simbel, are very impressive. The finest, however, is surelv the temple built b\ Scti I at Abydos to honor Osiris. ЧЪете in man) rooms rhe colors still glow as freshly as the day they were painted. The approach to a major temple was always impressive. An avenue of sphinxes led up to the pylon (ceremonial gate- way), before which were obelisks, flag poles, and royal statues. A high wall ran around the temple, its sacred lake, and offices A temple was considered to be the house of the god. so. like ordinary houses, it was divided into three sections: an open courtsard, beyond which no com- mon person could pass; a hypostyle (many columned) hall, where priests might enter, and the sanctuary, which The morning ritual in a temple of Amun The chief priest has opened the shone to wake the god and offer him food, incense purified water and flowers In the shadows stand priestesses, who sing hymns Each holds a sistrum a musical instrument played by shaking The priests and priestesses on duty Inted in the temple, so that they were always ready to perform the rituals Some times the king himself accompaniment of hymns and prayers, the doors of the sanctuary and the wooden shrine were opened to awake the god A religious service was not only an act of prayer and worship. The Egyptians believed that the gods needed food, shelter and clothing just as men did. All these necessities were provided during


The craft of war Prisoners of war Foreign captives were tied and branded as slaves. I hey included Libyans, Nubians, the Hittites. Syrians, and Mitanni of Asia. Semites from Palestine, and later, the Sea Peoples from across the Mediterranean The war machine The civilization of ancient Egypt was not based on military strength and conquest, although there were some noted battles. Scenes on tombs from the Old Kingdom show' the Egyptians had soldiers, and knew something about warfare and armor. But they did not have a national army. In an emergency, the governors of the provinces called up armies from among their peasants. The foot soldiers fought almost naked, with bronze- or copper-tipped spears, small axes, and bows. The rulers of the Middle Kingdom ended the old system of raising local armies—which local leaders could use against each other—and set up a trained, central army under their own command. This new Egyptian army was stronger, but was still no match for the Hyksos. In 1786 b.c. these Asiatic warriors swept into the Nile valley in horse-drawn chariots, armed with bronze swords and powerful bows. They con- trolled Egypt for about 200 years, until the Egyptians learned to use the horses, chariots, and weapons of their enemy and drove the foreigners out. The chariots that carried the 10
The New Kingdom pharaohs planned conquests against neighboring lands that were threatening. The pharaoh led his army, sometimes accompanied by a trained lion. The soldiers were professional, and had body armor and new weapons. The archers had strong bows and arrows, while other soldiers were armed with metal-tipped spears, axes, bronze daggers, and scimitars (curved swords copied from the Syrians). Chariots, each carrying a driver and an archer, raced past the enemy, shooting into their ranks. In the New Kingdom period, Egyptian troops won a famous sea battle in the Mediterranean. Ramses III met a fleet of ships raised by the Sea Peoples in 1190 b.c. Their vessels were swamped as a storm of arrows came from Ramses* solid wall of warships. The Egyptian empire of the New Kingdom was vast. Nubia, the land to the south, was held the tightest. An Egyptian viceroy ruled, and a 100-milc-long chain of forts guarded the road to the Nubian gold mines and protected Egypt from the warlike people of Kush, farther south. Frontier strongholds Egyptian forts had thick walls and massive towers of masonry and mud bncL Strong gates and a wide ditch protected them from attack. A military review Middle Kingdom foot soldiers were armed with bows and arrows, spears, slings, and axes They earned shields made of bull's hide 11
The war machine The chariots that sped the pharaohs into battle were light and strong. They could wheel and turn easily in a tight space.
An infantry review Middle Kingdom foot-soldiers were armed with bows and arrows, spears, slings and axes. For defence they relied on shields made of bulls’ hide.
were armed with bows and arrows, spears, slings and axes. For defence they relied on shields made of bulls’ hide.

Who were the ancient Egyptians? began to develop the way of life we call ancient Egyptian. They began to build large, mud brick tombs for their rulers, to make beautiful objects for their tombs and homes, and to use a kind of writing. People from Mesopotamia may have settled in Egypt at this time, but no one is sure about this. People have lived in Egypt for thousands of years. About 6.000 years ago, people in the Nile Valley
▼ The king drove into battle in his chariot, pulled by a pair of horses. He was armed with a bow and a quiver of arrows. Horses were introduced into Egypt in about 1550 B.C. Two kingdoms gradually developed, one in the north called the ‘Ted land" and another in the south known as the "white land.” Each had its own king, who wore a special crown. About 5.000 years ago the king of the south conquered the north, and Egypt was united. The king's name was Menes, and he founded Egypt’s first capital at Memphis. There were no more wars for hundreds of years.
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Prisoners of war Foreign captives were bound and branded as slaves. They included Libyans. Nubians, the Hittites, Syrians and Mitanni of Asia, Semites from Palestine and, later, the Sea Peoples from across the Mediterranean.
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Египетский (Фиванский) фараон ’ ' Камос (правил прибл. в 1554 - 49 гг. до н.э.) совещается с командирами и нубийских наемников на егип. службе во время войны с гиксосами.
The story of Africa part two By Mary Cathcart Borer Ancient Egypt nnd the Negroes IN the early days of Ancient Egypt, the southern boundary of the kingdom was the First Cataract (waterfall) of the Nile, where Aswan now stands. Beyond this was the country of the Negroes. The first Pharaoh of a united Egypt was King Meni, who founded the first dynasty, about 3,400 B.C. From this time until the Romans invaded Egypt in 30 B.C., there were thirty-three dynasties of Pharaohs. For centuries, Egypt was the most civilised and powerful country in the world. The Egyptians carved scenes of contem- porary events on the walls of their temples, and from the remains of a sun temple well over 4,500 years old we have learned a great deal about their activities. They sent ships to Syria to obtain cedar wood from the forests of Lebanon. From Sinai they obtained copper. They sent soldiers to the country between the First and Second Cataracts of the Nile, now known as Lower Nubia, to punish unruly Negroes. In the twelfth dynasty there was another important military expedition to the south, to subdue the Negroes. The Egyptians knew little of this hot, semi-desert region and called it the ‘land of the spirits’. However, they penetrated as far as the Third Cataract, a few miles above the site of the present town of Dongola, and established a new frontier there. This freshly- acquired territory was governed by an Egyptian prince who lived and eventually died there. The Negroes did not take kindly to Egyptian rule and a few years later there was more trouble. The Negroes reconquered the land between the Third and Second Cataracts and were reported to be moving down towards the First Cataract. The reigning Pharaoh ordered fortresses of sun-dried brick to be put in Lower Nubia and a great wall was built along the eastern bank of the Nile, at the First Cataract, to protect Egyptian vessels as they were hauled up and down the rapids. The Egyptians were obviously seriously concerned about the threat of Negro invasion. The Pharaoh reigning from. 1998 to 1959 B.C. established the southern Egyptian frontier at the Second Cataract, near the site of modern Wadi Haifa, and built three fortresses to protect it, one on either bank of the river and a third on an island in the middle. He also put up a large boundary stone, which Negroes were forbidden to pass. About 1800 B.C., Egyptian territory was invaded by Semitic tribes from the eastern deserts of Sinai and Syria, who came in horse- drawn, wheeled chariots, which the Egyptians had never encountered before. These Princes of the Desert were the Hyksos or Shepherd Kings, a mixed race of Semitic-speaking people, some of whom were very probably Israelites and descendants of the tribes of Abraham. Others were Syrians or Bedouin Arabs. In the course of the next sixty years, the Hyksos completed a conquest of the whole of Egypt, and for about another hundred years remained in control, though there were con- stant rebellions amongst the Egyptians, who continued to regard their own Pharaohs as the true rulers. There are many records of the activities of the Hyksos at this time. They sent expeditions as far as Baghdad and Crete, and many more entered Egypt. Gradually the Egyptians managed to turn the hated Hyksos out of. the country, but it was a slow and difficult struggle. "It happened that the land of Egypt was possessed by the Filthy- ones,” wrote one exasperated Egyptian. A few years later another Egyptian Pharaoh was writing: "No man remains but is wearied with serving the Asiatics . . . the Asiatics have all put their tongues out at us.'’ The writer was the Pharaoh Kamose, who launched a determined attack on the Hyksos and their ruler. King Apopi. Kamose gathered his forces and the campaign began. He used specially-trained Negro warriors, who were sent ahead of the Egyptian soldiers, "to search out the Asiatics and to destroy their positions". One renegade Egyptian prince who had sided with the Hyksos was "pounced upon like a hawk" and overthrown "at the moment when he was cleaning his teeth." Kamose died before his task was finished and it was Ahmose, the founder of Egypt’s eighteenth dynasty, who finally overthrew the Hyksos. His Negro levies became one of the
Illustrated by Angus McBride Left—the Egyptians built three fortresses to protect the Second Cataract, and put up a boundary stone which the Negroes were not allowed to pass. ~ ! «ft most dreaded fighting forces the world had ever known. It was during this long struggle between the Hyksos and the Egyptians that there occurred the oppression of the Israelites and their final expulsion from Egypt, which is described so vividly in the Old Testament. The eighteenth dynasty was the period of Egypt’s greatest imperial power and artistic achievement, and during the reign of Queen Hatshepsut the splendour of the Court was enhanced by ivory, ebony, ostrich feathers, gold and silver, baboons, monkeys and giraffes, brought by trading expeditions which had reached into the heart of Africa. The nineteenth dynasty was founded by Rameses I, and it was his successor who built the great sun temple of Abu Simbel in Lower Nubia. On the death of the twelfth Rameses, in noi B.C., the title of Pharaoh was assumed by the High Priest of the state god, Amen-Ra, and the refigion of the priest of Amen-Ra became the law of the land. Next week: Africa Three Thousand Years Ago Right—in his struggle against the Hyksos, Pharaoh Kamose instructed specially-trained Negro warriors in battle tactics. (Our illustration shows the sort of equipment Kamose would have taken with him on campaign. The small travelling chest would have contained clean linen, drinking cups and jewellery. On the folding stool rests his two-handed sword and his axe.)

Фараон Хоремхеб сражается с нубийцами в верховьях Нила, кон. 14 в. до н.э.
FAMOUS PETS Pharaoh's lions Rameses ii, of Egypt, was very fond of lions. When he sat in state, receiving foreign visitors, his lions sat near the throne, reminding everyone of his power. And when he went on one of his military campaigns his lions went with him. When the battle was at its height, and the Egyptian army was about to win yet another victory, Rameses would release a lion or two to turn the enemy’s retreat into panic-stricken flight. Unfortunately we do not know what these royal lions were called, but Rameses had a picture of one carved in a battle-scene at Karnak so that future genera- tions would remember his pets. 24
A canopy, symbol of authority in Egypt.
GALLERY THOTHMES HI, 1482 BC ANGUS McBRIDE Thothmes was born in c. 1510 BC; our sources arc open to differing inter- pretations of even basic chro- nology. He was the son of Thothmes II. fourth Pharoah of the great 18th Dynasty, and of a concubine named Ast. He should not, there- fore, have been in line for the throne; but his childhood coincided with the latter stage of one of those succession crises in which the need for a strong ruler clashed with the accepted principles of descent. When the dynastic smoke cleared, as it were, the child prince .found himself taken as consort — after his father’s untimely death — by the princess Hatshepsut: his father’s widow and half- sister, and his own aunt. For the next 22 years this formidable woman ruled the empire, while the growing prince was kept from any meaningful responsibility. She abrogated his rights; assumed the styles of royalty, and even of manhood; and devoted her attention to religious ceremonial, to the ruin of Egypt’s military pre- paredness. One result was an open rebellion by a coalition of Syrian princes led by the king of Kadesh, which threat- ened Egypt’s position throughout Palestine. During his years of powerlessness the young prince became renowned as an archer and big-game hunter. He may also have cultivated useful contacts among the military. There can be little doubt that he dreamed in f rustration of the glorious conquests, from Nubia to Mesopotamia, of his mighty grandfather Thothmes I. His chance came with I latshepsut's death in January of 1482 BC. After a swift and ruthless purge of all remnants of her rule, he assembled an army of perhaps 10,000 men near modern Qantara; and by April that year was leading them across Egypt's north- eastern border towards Gaza. From there he pressed on to the foot of the Carmel range north-east of Joppa; and learned that Kadesh and his allies had occupied the city of Megiddo on the tar side of the range. A council of war was held. Overmastering his gener- als, who preferred two easy but circuitous routes, the young king declared for the hard, direct route through the mountains. He had sworn at the outset ‘I shall not make my valiant soldiers march before my Majesty’; and he kept his word, leading the the rebel outposts in the pass, the Egyptians forced their way through without delay. The Syrians* extensive camp spread southwards from the walls of Megiddo. Inexplicably, they do not appear seriously to have interfered with the Egyptian army as Thothmes led it down out of the pass, and manoeuvred southwards, pitching camp along a small river. ‘On the morning of the 21st day of the 1st month of Summer, the feast of the nine gods, the King arose,’ says the chronicle of the scribe Tjaneni. ‘1 lis Majesty went forth in a chariot of electrum, arrayed in his weapons of war, like I lorus the Smiter, Lord of Power.’ Characteristically, Thothmes led the decisive division of his battle-line in person. This seems to have been the north- ern division, which drove between the flank of the rebels’ concave formation and the fortress. Their furious onset broke the Syrians’ line, and they fled — only to find that the citizens of Megiddo had locked them out. In des- peration they clambered over the walls on hastily-lowered lengths of cloth. An attack at this point might have proved decisive: but the Egyptian troops, long unused to campaign disci- pline, ignored orders and fell upon the huge booty of the Syrian camp. This reportedly included over 2,0(И) horses and 900 chariots, huge herds and grain stocks, and 200 lb. of gold and silver. Neverthe- less, Thothmes now faced a long siege before Megiddo fell to him at last. Over the next 12 years the warrior Pharoah conducted at least 15 more campaigns in Syria and Palestine. In his 33rd regnal year he marched through Kadesh; fought his way to Carccmish; and — using boats carried on ox-wagons from the Medi- terranean, 250 miles away — crossed the Euphrates into the territory of the Mittani. Here at last he was able to set up a boundary stele next to that of his revered grandfather. This remarkable king was a determined, charismatic gen- eral, inspiring great loyalty. The old soldier Amenemhab proudly recorded two occasions when he had saved Thothmes’ life: once at Megiddo, when the Syrians tried to make the Egyptian chariot horses unmanageable by loosing a mare among them; and once on a elephant- hunt. A remarkably strong and fearless hunter, he was interested in the flora and fauna of captured territories. He was pious, active in religious endowments, and is said to have displayed some artistic Hair. His foreign pol- icy was far-sighted; and he took great pains to train his son, Amonhotep 11, in mili- tary skills. His final passing in March 1450 BC was recorded by old Amenemhab: ‘Now the King had accomplished his length of days in many noble years of valour, strength and triumph . . .’ In the reconstruction on p. 52 the Pharoah stands out-^ side his camp east of Megiddo some time in December 1482 BC. After seven months the weary siege is coming to an end: the king of Kadesh and his allies have been starved into submission. Soon at least one of the Syrian princes will be forced to kneel before Thothmes, who will seal his victory in traditional fashion by braining the defeated 50
leader with his mace. Thothmes was only about 5 ft. 4 in. tall, but stocky, broad-shouldered and strong. He had a prominent nose, and brown hair — though this last would never have been seen by his subjects, since a Pharoah’s hair was always concealed cither by a wig or by a headdress of some kind. Interestingly, the Pharoah’s formal false beard was never worn with this particular headdress: the war-helmet or kepresh. The kepresh was introduced into the royal wardrobe in c. 1570 BC, at the rise of the New Kingdom. Its curious but graceful shape has no known antecedents, but remains much the same through succeeding centuries (though somewhat taller by the time of Rameses II, c. 1250 BC). No example survives, so the many painted and carved representations repay careful study. It is always painted as blue, but this was an Egyptian artistic con- vention for silver metal. It is often found covered with a pattern of circles, almost cer- tainly representing metal discs attached to a moulded leather base, probably over a wicker frame; and was tight- ened by two (or four) trailing, decorative streamers. Thothmes wears here a scale-armour corselet, but this is evidently not intended as serious protection; it is symbolic of the body-feathers of the hawk war-god Monthu, and the lightly- laced enamel scales leave the lower torso unprotected. Over the corselet he wears another very important sym- bol of divine protection: the wings of his tutelary deity Horus. The front tic has been turned into a symbolic clasp between the hawk’s claws, in which Thothmes’ name is written. Over his shoulders he wears the cape-like broad collar of the nobility, bal- anced by a hanging counter- poise behind the neck; the collar covers the upper laces of the wings. His bracelets bear his names, framed by cartouches and surmounted by the double feathers of Amon. The waist-belt of woven leather also bears his name, fhe skirt is of pleated linen, always white, and overlap- ping in front. I langing from the belt is the highly characteristic ‘apron’ of metal and semi-precious inlay on leather, also bearing the royal names, flanked, by sun- crowned cobras. The woven leather ‘tail’ hanging from the back of the belt is a stylised reminder of the bull’s tail car- ried as a symbol of strength and virility by the early kings. The simple sandals of woven rushes are purely functional, and will be handed to a servant (who Insit-biat Re M&n Kheper 5а Ke Tehuti - Me-s King of , _ the South Menkheperre Son of Re’ Tnothmes and North (Left) General arrangement draw- ing of the rear of the costume shown in colour on p. 52. (Top right) Details of the kepresh, the turned-up rim front and back pre- sumably acted as reinforcement, as did the prominent transverse ridge. The royal serpent motif is shown in the head-on drawing with hood and head omitted for clarity: note this exact arrangement of coils — as if about to strike — which is distinct from the meandering arrangement of the snake's body on other head- dresses. (Right) Details of the rear counterpoise of the collar; the enamel scales of the corselet; and the bracelets. places them on his left upper arm) when the Pharoah mounts his chariot. Highly decorated sandals, such as those accompanying the mummy of Tutankhamun, were intended for the harem, and had no place on campaign. While the person of the Pharoah is not protected physically in any meaningful way (in fact, many common soldiers were better equipped to withstand blows and mis- siles), he is well guarded by magic symbols — and to the Egyptian mind these were more potent protection by far. Moreover, in the van of battle (where Thothmes could usually be found) the king was surrounded by a human wall of personal guards: even his head was shaded by a wide fan carried by a footman. The Pharoah’s weapons were carried by one or more body-servants. The bow-case illustrated is from a contem- porary carving at Deir- el-Bahari; the curved sword from a number of sources; the bow and its decorative hand- grip from a contemporary tomb-painting; and the unusually-decorated mace head from the Seventh Pylon at Karnak, on which Thothmes is shown deliver- ing the death-blow to a whole cluster of‘Asiatics’. [Mil Sources: Encyclopaedia Britannica Cambridge Ancient History, 11, Pt.l* Atlas of Ancient Egypt, Baines, 1958 The Warrior Pharoahs, Cottrell, 1968 River of the Pharoahs, Montet, 1968 Egyptian Collections, British Museum, 1930 Egypt of the Pharoahs, Gardiner, 1961 Tutankhamen, Desroches Noblccourt, 1963 Jewels of the Pharoahs, Aldred, 1971 Histoire Universelie, Pleiades, 1956 (author’s trans.) Die Blutezeit des Pharaonenreichs, Steindorff. 1900 (trans. M. Dowdeswell) (*The source of the chronological conventions followed here — other authorities differ, by as much as 20 years.) Below left: The so-called 'Cleopatra's Needles', the one on the Thames Embankment and its pair in New York, were originally set up in Heliopolis by Thothmes Ш to celebrate his third jubilee festival These elements of his names and titles can easily be identified in the central column of inscription on each face of both obelisks. Thothmes* full title consisted of five names which proclaimed his divine status and the authority by which he ruled: ‘The Mighty Bull appearing in Thebes’; ‘The Glorious King like Re in Heaven’; ‘Magnificent in Rising’; ‘Made Strong in the Approval oj Re’; and lastly, ‘Child of Tehuti* or Tehuti-mes — transliterated vari- ously as Tuthmose, Tufhmosis or Thothmes (pronounced ‘Tot- meez’). We can only guess at the original Egyptian pronounciation. (The Babylonians used his fourth title *Mcn-Khcpcr-Re’ and pro- nounced it ‘Manakhpirriya’, which may be a fair approximation of the Egyptian.) 51


ФАРАОН РАМСЕС II ВЕЛИКИЙ ВЕДЕТ АРМИЮ В ПОХОД ПРОТИВ ХЕТТОВ. XIX дин. Ок. 1279 - 13 гг. до н.э.
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Хеттская колесница <Г
Муватгалис, царь хеттов,кон. 14 в. до н.э., и хеттские воины - колесничий и гвардеец
Хеттский воин



Египетские штандартеносцы и музыканты


Египетские лучник и конный вестник, кон. Нового Царства
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1:Нубинскнн лучник, 19 дин. 2 :Ф нлнстимля некий тяжело вооруженны и воин. 20 дин. З.Воин - шерден гвардии фараона,19 дин.
Морская битва с народами моря, ок. 1190 г. до н.з. * ... --


Египтяне построили три крепости для защиты Второго Порога Нила и воздвигли пограничный камень, отмечающий черту, которую было запрещено пересекать нубийцам.
Continuing . . . THE STORY OF AFRICA By Mary Cathcart Borer illustrated by: ANGUS McBHIDF The Negro Pharaohs FOR many centuries, Nubia was part of the Ancient Egyptian empire, and was ruled by an Egyptian governor. In about 900 B.C., the ruling governor declared its independence, calling his new kingdom Kush. He established his capital at Napata, near the fourth cataract, 800 miles south of Thebes, and from here he reigned as Pharaoh over his negro subjects. He and his successors spoke the Egyptian language, wore the dual red and white crown of Egypt and remained worshippers of Amen-Ra, for whom they built many ,temples. The people of Kush grew strong and wealthy, for they gained control of the valuable gold mines in the south-eastern desert and traded both with Egypt and the Arabian settlements along the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. About 725 B.C., there was a threat of civil war in Egypt, when trouble-makers from the North prepared to invade the southern part of the country. The Egyptian Pharaoh, reigning from Thebes, appealed to Kush for help. Kush had been established for 150 years by then and its Pharaohs had probably become more than half Negro. The reigning Pharaoh of Kush, Pienkhy, was an old man, but he gladly accepted the appeal for, being a worshipper of Amen-Ra, he was eager to defend the sacred city of Thebes. So he sent his Negro army to the Egyptian Pharaoh's aid. The Kush army travelled to Thebes by boat, and paused there to receive the blessing of Amen. Then they sailed on to meet the rebel armies, who were moving up to meet them. The rebels were routed and fled. The Egyptian Pharaoh, Osarkon, was safely on the throne again. But Pienkhy’s grandson, Shebeke, stayed behind in Egypt, as Commander-in-Chief of the Egyptian armies. After Osarkon's death there were more disorders, and by 713 B.C. Shebeke himself became Pharaoh of both Egypt and Kush, now united in one kingdom. For the next fifty years, the Negro Pharaohs reigned in Egypt, despite the resentment of the Egyptians of the Delta, many of whom had by now married Mediterranean people and had come to consider themselves racially superior to the Negroes. In the 7th century B.C., Egypt was invaded by the Assyrians, and the mighty city of Thebes was conquered. The Negro Pharaoh fled south to Napata and* the Kushites never returned to Egypt. The Assyrians did not stay long in Egypt but left an Egyptian nobleman from Lower Egypt on the throne as Pharaoh. Many Greek traders and travellers now came to Egypt, including the mathematician Pythagoras. They studied the art, religion and the philosophy of Egypt and many Egyptians learnt to speak Greek. There was a great flowering of Egyptian art during these days, but they were brief, for in 525 B.C. Cambyses, King of Persia, invaded and conquered Egypt. After Cambyses had been crowned Pharaoh of Egypt—which was still the richest country in the world—he tried to conquer Kush, but on the desert march south nearly all his army perished of hunger and thirst. Cambyses went mad with grief and despair. After his death, Persian rule relaxed for a while, but in 342 B.C. Artaxerxes of Persia invaded again and the reigning Pharaoh fled up the Nile into Nubia and was never heard of again. He was the last Egyptian to wear the crown of Ancient Egypt. The people of Kush were unaffected by the Persian invasion of Egypt and grew steadily more prosperous. They had learnt from the Assyrians how to use iron, and they were responsible for the ultimate spread of the Iron Age through Africa. Egypt had no iron but was dependent on supplies from Kush, where it was found in large quantities in the south, round Meroe, which now became .the new capital. It was Alexander the Great who delivered the Egyptians from the hated Persians, and on his early death, his general, Ptolemy I, sue ceeded him as Pharaoh. Fifteen Ptolemys ruled Egypt, from the third century B.C. till the Romans invaded in 30 B.C. when Egypt be came part of the Roman Empire. During the early years of the Ptolemys, Kush played an important part in the trade between Egypt, Greece and Hie Mediterranean. From the heart of Africa, Kush collected and exported not only ivory, ebony, ostrich feathers, animal skins, gold and silver, both northwards to Egypt and eastwards to Arabia, but, even more important, vast supplies of iron. The Kushites still kept their ancient beliefs, derived from Egypt. They regarded their kings as divine, and at Meroe and other centres they built temples, royal pyramids, palaces and tombs. By the first century A.D., however, more Semitic people had arrived in north-east Africa from Arabia. In Ethiopia they created an important trading centre at Axum and cap- tured Meroe’s Red Sea trade. The royal family of Kush grew poor and their tombs and pyramids became small and mean. In the 3rd century A.D. the people of Axum invaded Kush and conquered it. Meroe was burnt to the ground and the great Negro empire came to an end. 4

From the Assyrians, the people of Kush learned the many uses of iron, and they were responsible for spread- ing this knowledge through- out Africa. Egypt herself had no iron and relied on Kush to supply it. Iron smelting became a principal industry in KuSh, and remains of ancient iron workings can still be seen in her ruined cities.
Схватка между ассирийским пехотинцем и кушитским (нубийским) лучником во времена ассирийских вторжений в Египет. 677 - 663 гг. до н.э.

Царство Мероэ (Судан). 1-2 вв. н.э. 1. Мероитский (нубийский) воин 2. Воин одного из суданских племен. 3. Знатная мероитская женщина и её служанки
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Установка обелиска во времена римского владычества в Египте. 1 - й в. н.э.
АНТОНИЙ И КЛЕОПАТРА

Joseph in Egypt In Canaan there was famine too, and when Jacob heard about the corn in Egypt, he said to his sons, 'Why don't you do something about it ? Don't just stand there looking at one another; go to Egypt and buy some grain to keep us from starving.' So the ten brothers set out on the long journey southwards to Egypt. There was now one more brother, who had been born after Joseph, and his name was Benjamin. Benjamin was now Jacob's favourite in place of Joseph, and his father would not allow Benjamin to go to Egypt with the others, because he was afraid that something might hap- pen to the boy. So Benjamin remained at home. When the ten brothers arrived in Egypt, they had to go first to Joseph like everyone else. He was busy organizing the buying and selling. The brothers went and bowed low before him, and Joseph knew them immediately, but pretended not to; they did not recognize him in his Egyptian robes. Also he was talking in Egyptian and spoke to them through an interpreter. 'Where do you come from ?* he asked roughly.
Joseph in Egypt 'We’ve come from the land of Canaan to buy food,' they replied. 'You are spies?' said Joseph ‘You've come to find out where we are weak and open to attack.* 'Oh no. sir.’ the)' said. 'We have only come for food. We are all brothers, honest men not spies, sir. We were twelve brothers in all. but one brother you tell me about One of you must go back and bring him. while the rest of you remain here under guard. This is how I will discover whether you are telling me the truth.* And he put them all together in prison for three days. On the brother is dead and the youngest is at home.' Joseph wondered if they were sorry about the brother whom they thought was dead, and he decided to find out. 'I think you are spies.' repeated, 'but I will test you to find out. You not leave here until I have seen this ' .

Now Joseph is in Egypt. He works for a wealthy man named Potiphar. Joseph works hard. Soon Potiphar makes him head of his household. But Potiphar s wife tells ugly lies about Joseph, and poor Joseph is thrown into jail. There, God helps him by making everyone in jail like Joseph. Two men have strange dreams. They come to Joseph. God helps Joseph to tell them exactly what their dreams mean. Joseph tells them, “Do not forget me when you leave jail.’’ One man promises to tell the king about Joseph. When the men leave jail Joseph is alone again. But God has not forgotten him. Genesis 39-40 God our Father, thank You for never forgetting me. Amen. Гвох £ Who ivill never forget you? God! And your mom and 5 dad. Give each of them a big hug.
14. The King's Important Drea Pharaoh is king of strange dream. Pharaoh says, “1 see seven fat cows. And seven skinny cows eat them up. But the skinny cows stay skinny! What does it mean?" Nobody knows.Then suddenly one man remembers Joseph. Joseph is taken out of jail to help. Joseph says, "God has sent this dream. There will be seven good years. Then there w ill be seven bad years. Pharaoh must store away some food. Then the people will have food in the bad years." Pharaoh says,"I want you to work for me."
Joseph is happy. God has looked alter him well. Genesis 41 God our Father, thank You for knoiviny everything. * Amen. |~box н Put your thumb on the seven Jut coms. Point with your 5 little finger to the seven skinny coms. Ц Ъеге is Joseph?
15. Joseph Sees His Brothers Again Joseph is now an important man in Egypt. He makes sure that enough food is put away. I lungry people come from everywhere to buy food from him. Then ten men arrive to buy food.Joseph immediately sees that they are his brothers. But they do not recognize him! Joseph's brothers treated him badly. Do you remember? But Joseph is kind to his brothers. He gives them food. He doesn't even ask them to pay for it. Genesis 42
God our Father, thank You that I can help people. Thank You for loving all people. Amen. |“BOX 5Do you see Joseph’s brothers? God can use you to help mother people, and even people who are not kind to you. Do you know someone you can help?
16. Joseph Forgives His Brothers Joseph's brothers are back to buy food again.This time their youngest brother. Benjamin, is with them. Joseph is very happy to see him. He gives each brother a bag of wheat. In Benjamin's bag he hides his best cup. When they leave, Joseph sends people to catch them.They are scared! But Joseph says, “I am Joseph, your brother. 1 forgive you." He is not angry with them. Joseph sends his brothers to go get their father. Jacob. At last the whole family is together again. Genesis 42-46
God our Father, thank You for always making sure that every thing works out best for me. Amen. CHAT |“BOX What is in the bag? What is your best toy? How many donkeys do you see? Look carefully: one is hiding.
17. Moses in the Basket Moses is a baby. His mother and his sister. Miriam, arc worried because Pharaoh wants to kill all the baby boys. They put Moses in a basket and hide him between the reeds at the river's edge. His sister, Miriam, hides in the bushes to keep an eye on him. Pharaoh's daughter sees the baby in the basket. She feels sorry for him. Miriam conies closer and tells the princess.“I know a woman who can look after the baby.” So Mariam goes to get Moses' own mother! God takes care ot Moses in this way. Exodus 2
God our Father, thank You Jor qii’im] me a mom ami dad to take care of me. Amen. [“BOX н Il here is Moses, his mother, ami sister? 11 hat else do 5 you see? Hhen it is time to take a hath, put a small plastic container in the water. Hatch how it floats.
The Baby in the Bulrushes Some years later, after Joseph had died, a new Pharaoh came to rule over Egypt By this time Jacob's descendants, the Israelites, had been living in Egypt for many years, and there were now a great number of them. The new Pharaoh knew nothing about Joseph and all that he had done to save the people from starvation, and he said. 'These Israelites are getting so many that they are becoming a threat to us. If there was a war they might join up with our enemies. We must find a way to suppress them/ So the Egyptians put slave-drivers over the Israelites to make them work harder and harder, and they made them build store-cities for Pharaoh The more cruelly they were treated, however, the more the Israelites seemed to increase in numbers. The Egyptians grew to fear them and made their lives miserable by being cruel and forcing them to work even more ___
The Baby in the Bulrushes In the end Pharaoh issued an order that all baby boys bom to the Israelites should be killed as soon as they were bom Baby girls, however, should be allowed to live. The nurses to whom this order was given refused to obey it. because they feared God. so finally Pharaoh made an order to all the people saying that every new baby boy born to the Israelites should be drowned in the River Nile, but about this law. One family already had two children—a girl named Miriam and a boy named Aaron and to them another baby boy was born He was a fine baby, and the mother could not bear to see him drowned, so she managed to keep him hidden for three months. As he grew' bigger, the time came when she could hide him no longer, and so she and the that they could let the girls live. family had to think of another plan. She made him
The Plagues of Egypt and soon nut one locust was left in Egypt However the damage they had done was clear to everyone. Yet again. Pharaoh had failed to learn his lesson, and he did not let the Israelites go Then (kxi sent a great darkness over Egypt for three days, so that the Egyptians could not see one another—although the Israelites still had light where they lived because God was protecting them.
The Plagues of Egypt 'Go!' said Pharaoh to Moses. And take your women and children too—but leave your animals behind ’ But Moses refused to leave a single animal that belonged to his people and insisted that every donkey, ox. goal and sheep owned by the Children of Israel should be free to leave Egypt with their owners.
“ Я ЗНАЮ, ЧТО ЭТО ТОЛЬКО МОДЕЛЬ, НО Я, НА ВСЯКИЙ СЛУЧАЙ, ЕЁ СОХРАНЮ!”

Preparation for immortality An Ancient Egyptian thought that the land of the dead would be very much like the Nile valley. He believed that when he died he would travel there and live in eternal happiness with the gods. At first, only royalty was thought to enjoy an after-life, but, by the lime of the New Kingdom, nobles, and eventually commoners, believed that they would live for ever. If the dead man's ka, or spirit, was to survive, his body had to be preserved. The embalmer first removed the brain, then all the contents of the stomach and chest except the heart. The heart was thought to be the seat of intelligence and would be needed for judgement in the underworld. The empty body was then washed with palm wine and spices and covered with sodium salts for 70 days to dry it out. The intestines and other vital organs were mummified and put in four containers called the Canopic Jars. The dried body was packed with linen and spices, rubbed with oils
or wine and coated with melted resin. As the bandaging began, prayers were recited from the Book of the Dead. Sometimes sacred amulets (charms against evil) like the ankh, symbol of life, were swathed in the linen. Finally, encased in its coffin, the mummy was borne in procession from the east bank of the Nile, where priests and family performed ceremonies which would restore the dead man to life. Because the next world reflected, as in a mirror, the present one. the dead person was buried with furniture, hunting equipment, clothes, jewellery and models of his servants. Food for his ka was to be left daily in an adjoining shrine. The ka could only survive if it had nourishment (which could be ensured by reciting the right prayers too) and a habitation the tomb. The desecrations of the tomb robbers were regarded with horror because they destroyed the occupants' hopes of eternal life. Animals honoured in death Beasts associated with the gods were frequently mummified. The scarab beetle, crocodile and cat were all embalmed and buried either with humans or in their own sacred cemeteries. A ritual farewell The mummy is supported as the family and priests perform the Opening of the Mouth ceremony. They believed this gave the dead man the power to breathe. Travel in the next world Model boats similar to those which bore the dead pharaohs across the Nile, were often entombed. This one is carved with the head of Hathor. Judgement among the gods A feather, symbol of meet, or truth, is weighed against the dead man’s heart. Several gods look on as the balance is presented to the supreme judge. Osiris for his verdict. 27
Fact file The gods There were state gods (in control of the whole country and the king’s protectors) and local gods (each powerful in a specific town or area). These gods had temples and priests who were their "servants.” 1'here were also priestesses who sang and danced in the temples. Ordinary people prayed to and worshiped household gods in their own homes. Mummification After death, the bodies of rich people were mummified. The major body organs (except the heart and kidneys) were removed and the body and organs dried, using natron (a natural mixture of salts). The embalmers wrapped the mummy in layers of linen bandages. They placed special jewelry between the layers, to bring the person good luck in the life after death. The preparation of the mummy lasted for 70 days, and then the family buried the body in a tomb. ▼ Embalmers mummifying a body.
Mummification preserved the body so that the dead person’s soul (Ka) could recognize it when the Ka returned to the tomb. The Egyptians believed that the Ka then entered the mummy for a short time, so the dead person could eat the food that his relatives had brought to the tomb. The pyramids In some periods, the kings built pyramids as their tombs. These were perhaps intended to look like the sun’s rays and to provide a ramp for the dead king to join his father, the sun god. Near the pyramids at Giza, a “sun boat” was found and excavated. The Egyptians may have believed that the dead king used this boat to sail across the sky. The end of ancient Egyptian civilization Ancient Egyptian civilization lasted for about 5,000 years, but toward the end, the country was overcome and ruled by foreigners. First came the Assyrians and the Persians, followed by Alexander the Great in 332 b.c. When he died, the country passed to his general, Ptolemy. The Ptolemies then ruled Egypt, ending with Queen Cleopatra VII. The Roman general Octavian finally took Egypt in 30 b.c., and it became a province of the Roman Empire. Writing Egyptian language was w ritten in three scripts: hieroglyphics (usually used for texts about history or religious beliefs), hieratic, and demotic (both used for business and everyday matters because they were easier to write). Hieroglyphics were a form of picture writing with about 700 signs. In 1824. a Frenchman. Jean Francois Champollion. worked out how they should be read, using the Rosetta stone (now in the British Museum. London). This stone had an inscription written in Greek, hieroglyphic, and demotic, honoring King Ptolemy V. 31
=4*^* М. • ,* * • > Making a mummy e Welcome to the necropolis, the city of the dead! Here, the people who turned dead bodies into mummies worked. The skills of embalming, or mummy-making, were passed on from father to son. Embalmers learned how to remove a body’s insides, dry it with sain- crystals, then bandage it from head to roc. As they worked. a priest chanted prayers, or spells, from rhe Book of rhe Dead, to protect rhe dead person on his or her journey to rhe Next World. Book of the Dead The Book of the Dead contained over 200 spells in Egyptian picture writing, called hieroglyphs. 12 ^4^ *k • >

The judgement of Anhai. from a Book of i he Dead Annai. led by Horus, has her heart weighed by Anubis a jackal-god. while Thoth records the result A horrid creature waits below, ready to devour the unholy waa HIH UIV VHU Ml VUl mw v>* w vtwiiin ...». Seeing the effort that went into making pyramids and tombs, and the cost of decorating them, many people think that the Egyptians must have been a sad nation. Nothing could be farther from the truth. The Egyptians loved life and gaiety, and firmly believed that you could “take it with you" to the Next World. It was only sensible, they thought, to put a lor of wealth and effort into making sure of a comfortable eternity. There was of course a problem. You could not possibly take enough goods into the grave to last for ever. You could not even be sure that your relatives would go on offering food at your tomb. The Egyptians solved it by filling their tombs with models and paintings showing scenes of daily life especially the growing and making of food. It was believed that if the right prayers were spoken, these scenes would come to life. Then the figures in them would work for ever to supply the dead man and his family. Ideas of the Next World changed a little during Egypt's long history. In the early Old Kingdom it was believed that a dead king would join the sun god Re and sail across the sky every day in his holy boat. But by the end of the Old Kingdom, people began to believe that the king would become one with Osiris, the god of the dead. Egyptians of all ranks gradually turned to Osiris as their hope of eternal life.
wire hook. The internal organs were removed through a cut in the left side and preserved in the canopic jars - four covered jars made specially for this purpose. Then the body was covered with a salt called natron, which dried all the moisture from it. This process took many days. The body was then washed and anointed with oils and fragrant ointments, and the empty space inside was packed with linen. Finally the body was wrapped with layer upon layer of linen bandages, and placed in one or more coffins. The whole process of mummification took 70 days. rhe right answers-to any question? asked. At one stage the dead person had to face the Forty-two Assessors, who would ask questions about what sins he had committed. Eventually the dead person reached the Judgement Hall, and was greeted by Horus, the son of Osiris. In the presence of Osiris the ceremony of the Weighing of the Heart was performed. Anubis, the jackal-headed guardian of the dead, weighed the dead person’s heart against the Feather of Truth. A heart heavy' with sin out-weighed the feather, and a terrible fate awaited its owner. A virtuous man would have a light heart, and pass on to a happy eternal life in the Next World. The mummy and coffin of an unknown priestess. Notice the carefully bound wrappings of the mummy, and the painting on the inside of the coffin. The funeral procession of a New Kingdom pharaoh A group of professional women mourners walks in front of a chest containing the inner organs pulled on a sledge. Four yoked oxen follow drawing the sledge of the funeral boat, in which rests the coffin containing the mummy. The royal standard bearers accompany the boat. 35
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A funeral procession 1 £l ' A funeral procession is winding its M way from rhe city of Thebes along i rhe banks of the Nile River. Slowly, ir climbs toward rhe edge of rhe Opening of the mouth At a special ceremony, the priests “opened the mouth” desert, where a tomb has been carved in the rocky cliffs. Oxen haul the coffin over the stony ground on a boat-shaped sledge. of the mummy so the dead person could speak and move in the Next World. Meanwhile, priests sprinkle milk and burn sweet-smelling incense. Women weep and wail as rhe procession passes by.
Funeral boats Sometimes, mummies were carried on models of boats or show n on a boat in a painting in their tomb. This was a symbol of the journey by water to meet Osins.
Mast< Pyramii Sarcophagus Mud brick walls Underground burial chamber Underground burial chamber Types of tomb About 5,100 years ago, nobles were often buried in underground rooms below walled buildings. These are culled mastaba tombs. About 3,570 years ago, kings were buried in secret tombs, carved out of the rocky cliffs in the Valley of the Kings, near Thebes, Well (to dram water, and trap robbers) ч About 4,650 years ago, hug< pyramids were built above the pharaohs’ tombs. The most famous are at Giza, west of the Nile River. Over thousands of years, rich 1 | Egyptians built different kinds ' j jff of tombs for their mummies. Most mummies were buried in underground chambers. Some of these were carved out of solid rock. Some had a building with rooms built over rhe top. One room was used as a chapel for the dead. All the tombs served the same purpose. They had to protect rhe remains of rhe dead person and his or her possessions from sandstorms, robberies, and other disasters. Offerings to the dead Outside many tombs were special stone tables where food, drink, or other offerings could be left for the mummy’s ka. A priest, or a relative of the dead person, would pray lor the offerings to be accepted. The words of the prayers were carved on stone slubs uround the tomb.

Treasure hunters When French soldiers invaded Egypt 200 years ago, treasure hunters dug up manv mummies. Robbers! Robbers are breaking into a royal tomb in the Valley of the Kings. They have crept past the guard and have tunneled down to the burial chamber. They ure nervous. They may still fall into one of the wells built into the tomb’s passageways. And if they are caught, they will probably be killed. But if they can escape with even a tiny gold statue, they will be able to live in comfort for rhe rest of their lives. Mummy magic During the Middle Ages, people in Europe used stolen bits of mummies to make medicines.
FINDING OUT THE MODERN MAGAZINE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE EVERYWHERE Every Monday 2/* Vol. 8 No.10

Говард Картер и лорд Карнарвон заглядывают в гробницу Тутанхамона. 26 ноября 1922 г.
A secret tomb Imagine opening up the secret tomb of someone who has been dead for thousands of years. You peer into the darkness. Is that a glint of gold? You hold up a candle. The chamber is filled with treasure. Beyond, there are other chambers, too. In one of them, you hope to discover the coffin of a dead pharaoh, a king of ancient Egypt. What will be inside the coffin? A crumbling skeleton? Probably not. The bodies of the pharaohs were specially preserved, so that they would lust forever. Face of a mummy Meet Seri I. un Egyptian king. Scti died about 3,300 scars ago! When he died, his bod) was made into a mummy, to preserve if and keep it whole. Sometimes dead bodies become mummies naturally, dried out in sand or frozen in ice. But the ancient Egyptians made mummies on purpose.