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Ancient Egypt

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Title: Ancient Egypt


1
Ancient Egypt
Ancient Egypt
2
Egyptian Society
  • The PHAROAH was at the top of the social
    hierarchy.

Next to him, the most powerful officers were the
VIZIERS and HIGH PRIESTS, the executive heads of
the bureaucracy, and religion.
Next were the ROYAL OVERSEERS (administrators)
who ensured that the 42 DISTRICT GOVERNORS
carried out the pharaoh's orders.
At the bottom were the SCRIBES, ARTISANS,
FARMERS, LABORERS.
3
ROYAL PALACES, were CITIES IN THEMSELVES,
included separate residences, a temple and a
workers village.
4
The HOMES OF THE WEALTHY were larger and more
luxurious. SPACIOUS reception and living rooms
opened onto a CENTRAL GARDEN COURTYARD with a
fish pond and flowering plants. Each bedroom had
a PRIVATE BATHROOM, and the walls, columns and
ceilings were painted with BEAUTIFUL DESIGNS
inspired by nature. Elaborate and highly
DECORATED FURNITURE included beds, chairs, boxes
and tables. PAINTED CLAY POTS and vessels, as
well as ALABASTER BOWLS AND JARS, were also found
in the homes of the nobles.
5
A villa from the city of Amarna
6
CRAFTWORKERS lived in one- or two-storey
FLAT-ROOFED DWELLINGS made of mud bricks. The
walls and roof would have been covered with
plaster and painted. Inside, there was a
RECEPTION ROOM, a LIVING ROOM, BEDROOMS and a
CELLAR in which food and beverages were stored.
Food was prepared in an OUTDOOR KITCHEN equipped
with a mud-brick oven. Stairs on the exterior of
the house led to a ROOF-TOP TERRACE.
7
Ancient Egyptian Housing
Middle Class Homes
Peasant Homes
8
Social Roles
  • Role of Men
  • Head of the family
  • Men could have numerous wives but economically
    men had only 1 wife
  • Labourers, craftsmen
  • Jobs were hereditary
  • Jobs
  • Labour required for construction projects and was
    mostly filled by poor, serfs
  • Stability of Egypt thrived as skilled trades
    were passed from father to son
  • Children always learned the trade from parents
    seldom could choose occupation
  • Role of Women
  • Well treated and had considerable legal
    rightscompared to other civilizations
  • Same legal rights as men (land, property,
    divorce)
  • Women could be economically independent
  • Primary role was in domestic life
  • Common title for a married women in ancient Egypt
    was nebet per meaning the lady of the house
  • Bear and raise children

9
Scenes of Ancient EgyptianDaily Life
10
Making Ancient Egyptian Beer
11
Making Ancient Egyptian Wine
12
An Egyptian Womans Must-Haves
Mirror
Perfume
Whigs
13
Egyptian Nobility
14
Egyptian Priestly Class
15
Egyptian Scribe
16
Papyrus ? Paper
Hieratic Scroll Piece
Papyrus Plant
17
Hieroglyphics
18
Champollion the Rosetta Stone
19
  • What is the Rosetta Stone?
  • The Rosetta Stone is a stone with writing on it
    in two languages (Egyptian and Greek), using
    three scripts (hieroglyphic, demotic and Greek).
    It was carved in 196 BCE.
  • Why is it in three different scripts?
  • The Rosetta Stone is written in three scripts
    (hieroglyphs for religious documents demotic-
    common script of Egypt Greek- language of the
    rulers of Egypt at that time)
  • The Rosetta Stone was written in all three
    scripts so that the priests, government officials
    and rulers of Egypt could read what it said.
  • When was the Rosetta Stone found?
  • The Rosetta Stone was found in 1799 by French
    soldiers who were rebuilding a fort in Egypt (in
    a small village in Delta called Rosetta (Rashid)
  • What does the Rosetta Stone say?
  • The Rosetta Stone is a text written by a group of
    priests in Egypt to honour the Egyptian pharaoh.
    It lists all of the things that the pharaoh had
    done that were good for the priests and the
    people of Egypt.

Rosetta Stone
20
Hieroglyphic Cartouche
21
Hieroglyphics Alphabet
24 letters 700 phonetic symbols
22
  • History of Writing 1) pictograms (sun sun)
    2) ideograms (sun sun, daylight, warmth,
    light)3) phonograms symbols that suggest a
    particular sound related ideas and also sound
    (Sun sun, son, Sunday)
  • Each hieroglyph found in pyramids and tombs often
    symbolized more than one consonant. Not only
    that, but actual Egyptian hieroglyphs were a
    combination of sound-signs, pictograms, and
    ideograms. No wonder it was so hard to decode
    them!

23
  • New Kingdom 700 hieroglyphs in common usage,
    while rest were phonograms
  • 100 were strictly visual, while rest were
    phonograms
  • Eventually scribes adapted hieroglyphic symbols
  • By 700 BCE, script was refined to the demotic (or
    popular script) was used for secular matters such
    as letters, accounts and record keeping

24
Education
  • Original purpose of schools was to train priests
  • Subjects taught
  • Reading writing
  • Math
  • Religious ceremonies rituals
  • Eventually temple schools provided more general
    education
  • Usually schools attended only by the wealthy
  • Girls did not attend school
  • Taught domestic skills at home
  • Students took notes on scraps of pottery -
    Papyrus was expensive only used by advanced
    students
  • Strict discipline

25
Education
  • Contributed to stability and continuity of Egypt
  • All children, regardless of social class,
    received some education
  • Followed a moral and ethical guide Instructions
    in Wisdom
  • Goal for education was to ensure youth exhibited
    self control and good manners
  • At 14, young boys followed fathers in jobs, and
    girls learned from mothers in the household
  • Children of priests were schooled more formally
  • Literacy was stressed for government jobs
  • Education respected for creating a well rounded
    individual

26
Egyptian Math Draftsmenship

1 10 100 1000 10,000 100,000 1,000,000
What number is this?
27
legal traditions
  • Law was governed by religious principle of Maat
  • GODDESS MAAT represented truth, righteousness
    and justice balance and order
  • Laws were applied equally to all classes
    specifically protected the family (children and
    wives)
  • Punishments could be quite severe- act as a
    deterent or disgrace the guilty (Examples
    minor crimes had 100 lashed rapist were
    castrated corrupt officials had their hands
    amputated crimes that resulted in a death
    sentence could have choice devoured by a
    crocodile, suicide, burning alive)

28
Religion
Atum
  • The Egyptians were deeply religious people
  • religious roots were in the worship of nature
    deities their first gods were in animal forms
  • Those responsible for creation were the most
    important gods (Atum is the creator God)
  • They later developed national gods around the
    Middle Kingdom (Amon- local god of Thebes gods
    of Dead Osiris, Anubis, Horus and Thoth)
  • Religion was instrumental to stability of Egypt
    (life, social structure, education, laws, rule of
    Pharaoh, economy, death, afterlife)

29
Egyptian Gods GoddessesThe Sacred Trinity
Osiris Isis Horus
30
Creation Story
Gods and Goddesses
GEB
TEFNUT
NUT
  • ATUM
  • NUT

MAAT
HORUS
SHU
ANUBIS
ISIS
ATUM
Website Gods and Goddesses
31
Entering a Temple
32
(No Transcript)
33
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34
Life and Death
  • Life and death was measured in accordance to
    Maat the goddess and symbol of equilibrium of
    the universe and the king had to rule according
    to her principles
  • Death viewed as a new beginning
  • Afterlife common to all, regardless of social
    status (preparation varied as well as goods
    stored in tombs)
  • 2 Common Principles 1) body preservation
    in a lifelike form 2) the deceased must have
    items necessary for life in the afterworld
  • Personal belongings were usually placed in the
    tomb to make the Ka more at home and to assist
    the dead in their journey into the afterlife.
  • Text was read from the 'Book of the Dead' which
    was a collection of spells, charms, passwords,
    numbers and magical formulas for the use of the
    deceased in the afterlife.

MAAT-symbol of the equilibrium of the universe
35
Mummification
  • Mummification focused on Egyptian belief of the
    importance of preserving the body
  • Afterlife would be spent enjoying best of life
    experiences
  • Body covered with natron and dried for up to 70
    days
  • Body wrapped in linen coated with resins and oils
  • Middle Kingdom became customary to place a mask
    over the face
  • Removal of organs (lungs, stomach, intestines,
    liver) in Canopic Jars were closed with stoppers
    fashioned in the shape of four heads -- human,
    baboon, falcon, and jackal - representing the
    four protective spirits called the Four Sons of
    Horus.
  • brain was sucked out of the cranial cavity and
    thrown away because the Egyptian's thought it was
    useless.

36
Preparations for the Underworld
ANUBIS weighs the dead persons heart against a
feather.
Priests protected your KA, or soul-spirit
37
Materials Used in Mummification
1. Linen 6.
Natron2. Sawdust
7. Onion3. Lichen
8. Nile Mud4. Beeswax
9. Linen Pads5. Resin
10. Frankinsense
38
Preparation for the Afterlife
39
Egyptian Mummies
Ramses II1279-1212 B. C. E.
Queen Tiye, wife of Amenhotep II1210-1200 B. C.
E.
Seti I1291-1278 B. C. E.
40
Journey to the Underworld
The dead travel on the Solar Bark.
A boat for the journey is provided for a dead
pharaoh in his tomb.
41
Anubis
Horus Osiris
  • This scene depicts what occurs after a person has
    died, according to the ancient Egyptians.
  • panel of 14 judges
  • Ka (soul /spiritual duplicate), ba (personality)
    ankh (form mummy took in afterlife / the key of
    life)
  • Weighing of the heart vs Maat
  • Judgment of scale
  • record of the outcome

42
Egyptian Book of the Dead
43
Shabtis The Pharaohs Servants in the
Afterlife
44
Stepped Pyramid at Saqqara
45
Bent Pyramid of King Sneferu
46
Giza Pyramid Complex
47
Plan of the Great Pyramid of Khufu
48
Pyramids were part of a FUNERARY COMPLEX. The
complex includes a PROCESSIONAL CAUSEWAY that
links a FUNERARY TEMPLE to the pyramid, SOLAR
BARQUES buried on the four sides of the pyramid,
and MASTABAS and smaller pyramids where the
family of the king and nobles were buried
49
The Valley of the Kings
50
Archaeologist, Howard Carter (1922)
51
Entrance to King Tuts Tomb
52
King Tutankhamons Death Mask
1336-1327 B. C. E.
53
King Tutankhamon
54
King Tutankhamuns Tomb
55
Treasures From Tuts Tomb
56
The Valley of the Queens
Temple of Queen Hatshepsut
1473-1458 B. C. E.
57
Ankhenaton First Monotheist?
1352-1336 B. C. E.
58
The Ankh The Cross of Life
59
QueenNefertiti
60
Abu SimbelMonument to Ramses II
1279-1213 B. C. E.
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