The History of Ancient Egypt

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Read this article, which discusses the emergence and longevity of ancient Egyptian society and culture. Why do you think Egyptian artistic styles were so long-lasting, given what you know about their society and its history?

Egypt's impact on later cultures was immense. You could say that Egypt provided the building blocks for Greek and Roman culture and, through them, influenced all of the Western traditions.

Today, Egyptian imagery, concepts, and perspectives are everywhere; you will find them in architectural forms, on money, and in our day-to-day lives. Many cosmetic surgeons, for example, use the silhouette of Queen Nefertiti (whose name means "the beautiful one has come") in their advertisements.

Photo of the Pyramid of Khafre at Giza

Pyramid of Khafre at Giza, c. 2520-2494

Longevity

Ancient Egyptian civilization lasted for more than 3,000 years and showed an incredible amount of continuity. That is more than 15 times the age of the United States, and consider how often our culture shifts; just a few years ago, there was no Facebook, Twitter, or YouTube.

While today we consider the Greco-Roman period to be in the distant past, it should be noted that Cleopatra VII's reign (which ended in 30 BCE) is closer to our own time than it was to that of the construction of the pyramids of Giza. It took humans nearly 4,000 years to build anything taller than the Great Pyramids. Contrast that span to the modern era; we get excited when a record lasts longer than a decade.


Consistency and Stability

Egypt's stability is in stark contrast to the Ancient Near East of the same period, which endured an overlapping series of cultures and upheavals with amazing regularity.

The earliest royal monuments, such as the Narmer Palette carved around 3,100 B.C.E., display identical royal costumes and poses as those seen on later rulers, even Ptolemaic kings, on their temples 3,000 years later.

Photo of the Palette of Narmer

Palette of Narmer, c. 3000-2920 B.C.E. (left) and Ramses III smiting at Medinet Habu (1160 B.C.E.) (right)


A vast amount of Egyptian imagery, especially royal imagery governed by decorum (a sense of what was 'appropriate'), remained stupefyingly consistent throughout its history. This is why, especially to the untrained eye, their art appears extremely static – and in terms of symbols, gestures, and how the body is rendered, it was. It was intentional. The Egyptians were aware of their consistency, which they viewed as stability, divine balance, and clear evidence of the correctness of their culture.

This consistency was closely related to a fundamental belief that depictions had an impact beyond the image itself – tomb scenes of the deceased receiving food or temple scenes of the king performing perfect rituals for the gods – were functionally causing those things to occur in the divine realm. If the image of the bread loaf was omitted from the deceased's table, they had no bread in the Afterlife; if the king was depicted with the incorrect ritual implement, the ritual was incorrect, which could have dire consequences. This belief led to active resistance to change in codified depictions.

Photo of the Painted raised relief offering table in the Temple of Seti I

Painted raised relief offering table in the Temple of Seti I at Abydos (New Kingdom)


The earliest recorded tourist graffiti on the planet came from a visitor from Ramses II, who left their appreciative mark at the already 1,300-year-old site of the Step Pyramid at Saqqara, the earliest of the massive royal stone monuments. They were understandably impressed by the works of their ancestors and endeavored to continue that ancient legacy.


Geography

Egypt is a land of duality and cycles, both in topography and culture. The geography is almost entirely rugged, barren desert, except for an explosion of green that straddles either side of the Nile as it flows the length of the country. The river emerges from far to the south, deep in Africa, and empties into the Mediterranean sea in the north after spreading from a single channel into a fan-shaped system known as a delta at its northernmost section.

The influence of this river on Egyptian culture and development cannot be overstated – without its presence, the civilization would have been entirely different and most likely entirely elsewhere. The Nile provided not only a constant source of life-giving water but created the fertile lands that fed the growth of this unique (and uniquely resilient) culture.

Photo View from the high peak of the Theban hills showing the sharp delineation between the lush Valley and the barren desert

View from the high peak of the Theban hills showing the sharp delineation between the lush Valley and the barren desert.


Each year, fed by melting snows in the far-off headlands, the river overflowed its banks in an annual flood that covered the ground with rich, black silt and produced incredibly fertile fields. The Egyptians referred to this as Kemet, the "black lands," and contrasted this dense, dark soil against the Deshret, the "red lands" of the sterile desert; the line between these zones was (and in most cases still is) a literal line. The visual effect is stark, appearing almost artificial in its precision.


Time – Cyclical and Linear

The annual inundation of the Nile was also a reliable and measurable cycle that helped form their concept of the passage of time. In fact, the calendar we use today is derived from one developed by the ancient Egyptians.

They divided the year into three seasons: akhet "inundation," peret "growing/emergence," and shemw "harvest." Each season was, in turn, divided into four 30-day months. Although this annual cycle, paired with the daily solar cycle that is so evident in the desert, led to a powerful drive to see the universe in cyclical time, this idea existed simultaneously with the reality of linear time.

These two concepts - the cyclical and the linear - came to be associated with two of their primary deities: Osiris, the eternal lord of the dead, and Re, the sun god who was reborn with each dawn.


Early Development: The Predynastic Period

The civilization of Egypt obviously did not spring fully formed from the Nile mud; However, the massive pyramids at Giza may appear to the uninitiated to have appeared out of nowhere. They were founded on centuries of cultural and technological development and experimentation. "Dynastic" Egypt – sometimes referred to as "Pharaonic" (after "pharaoh," the Greek title of the Egyptian kings derived from the Egyptian title per aA, "Great House") which was the time when the country was largely unified under a single ruler, begins around 3100 B.C.E.

The period before this, lasting from about 5000 B.C.E. until unification, is referred to as Predynastic by modern scholars. Before this were thriving Paleolithic and Neolithic groups, stretching back hundreds of thousands of years, descended from northward migrating Homo Erectus, who settled along the Nile Valley. During the Predynastic period, ceramics, figurines, mace heads, and other artifacts, such as slate palettes used for grinding pigments, begin to appear, as does imagery that will become iconic during the Pharaonic era – we can see the first hints of what is to come.


Dynasties

It is important to recognize that the dynastic divisions modern scholars use were not used by the ancients themselves. These divisions were created in the first Western-style history of Egypt, written by an Egyptian priest named Manetho in the 3rd century BCE. Each of the 33 dynasties included a series of rulers, usually related by kinship or the location of their seat of power. Egyptian history is also divided into larger chunks, known as "kingdoms" and "periods," to distinguish times of strength and unity from those of change, foreign rule, or disunity.

Table of certain historical periods and their dates


The Egyptians themselves referred to their history in relation to the ruler of the time. Years were generally recorded as the regnal dates (from the Latin regnum, meaning kingdom or rule) of the ruling king so that with each new reign, the numbers began anew.

Later, kings recorded the names of their predecessors in vast "king-lists" on the walls of their temples and depicted themselves as offering to the rulers who came before them – one of the best-known examples is in the temple of Seti I at Abydos.

These lists were often condensed, with some rulers (such as the contentious and disruptive Akhenaten) and even entire dynasties omitted from the record; they are not true history, rather they are a form of ancestor worship, a celebration of the consistency of kingship of which the current ruler was a part.


The Pharaoh – Not Just a King

Kings in Egypt were complex intermediaries that straddled the terrestrial and divine realms. They were, obviously, living humans, but upon accession to the throne, they also embodied the eternal office of kingship itself.

Image of Horus in the tomb of Khaemwaset

Horus in the tomb of Khaemwaset


The ka, or spirit of kingship, was often depicted as a separate entity standing behind the human ruler. This divine aspect of the office of kingship was what gave authority to the human ruler.

The living king was associated with the god Horus, the powerful, virile falcon-headed god who was believed to bestow the throne to the first human king.


Image of Horus is regularly shown guarding and guiding the living ruler; as in this image of a falcon (Horus) wrapped behind

Horus is regularly shown guarding and guiding the living ruler; as in this image of a falcon (Horus) wrapped behind the head of Ramses III in the tomb of Khaemwaset.


Horus's immensely important father, Osiris, was the lord of the underworld. One of the original divine rulers of Egypt, this deity embodied the promise of regeneration. Cruelly murdered by his brother Seth, the god of the chaotic desert, Osiris was revived through the potent magic of his wife, Isis.

Through her knowledge and skill, Osiris was able to sire the miraculous Horus, who avenged his father and threw his criminal uncle off the throne to take his rightful place.

Osiris became ruler of the realm of the dead, the eternal source of regeneration in the Afterlife. Deceased kings were identified with this god, creating a cycle where the dead king fused with the divine king of the dead, and his successor 'defeated' death to take his place on the throne as Horus.

Image of Osiris

Osiris (from QV44 in the Valley of the Queens)


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Source: Smarthistory, smarthistory.org
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Last modified: Wednesday, February 14, 2024, 4:18 PM