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PA G E A Cobblestone Publication TM EXPLORING WORLD HISTORY WHERE? WHEN? EGYPT 18TH Dynasty (c. 1570–1293 B.C.) 35 Mummy Mystery Solved wit h a Tooth F E A T U R E S 3 9 2 Most Noble of Noble Women 10 Symbols of Power by Joyce Tyldesley 12 Egypt on the March 4 Divine Kingship by Noreen Doyle by Charles F. Baker by Salima Ikram and Janice Kamrin 16 Eternal Egypt 34 Family Values 6 Women of Achievement: Queen Tiy 35 Who’s Who? 19 Foreman of the Foremen by Salima Ikram and Janice Kamrin by Angela Murock Hussein by Charles F. Baker 38 Queens Rule 24 Looking to the Future 7 The Woman Who Would Be King by Joyce Tyldesley by Angela Murock Hussein 28 Female Sphinxes by Joyce Tyldesley 42 Modern Women of Achievement by Charles F. Baker 30 Reversal of Fortune 9 What’s in a Beard? by Eric H. Cline by Ramadan B. Hussein DEPARTMENTS 2 Musings ACTIVITIES 41 Make Your Own Mummy Hand 15 Map: The World of Hatshepsut by Ken Feisel 44 An Obelisk of Words 15 Time Line by Charles F. Baker 22 Fun With Words 20 by Edward Brovarski by Ramadan B. Hussein by Janice Kamrin and Salima Ikram 14 33 Women of Achievement: Al-Khansa by Charles F. Baker 45 Off the Shelf 45 On the Net 46 Ask CALLIOPE 47 From Our Readers 48 FROM PAST TO PRESENT Legacy of a Female Pharaoh by Angela Murock Hussein 29 k out our Chec at acher’s guides te e onlin PUB.COM WWW.COBBLESTONE A Parents’ Choice Honor Winner George Washington Honor Medal Award Winner 35 Have a question about world history? CALLIOPE would love to answer it. Write to: CALLIOPE, 30 Grove St., Peterborough, NH 03458 or e-mail: [email protected] Indexed and/or Abstracted in: Children’s Magazine Guide, Primary Search and Middle Search, Readers’ Guide for Young People, Readers’ Guide to Periodical Literature, Vertical File Index, and at CobblestoneOnline.net Editorial and Marketing Office: CALLIOPE, 30 Grove Street, Peterborough, NH 03458. Telephone: 603-924-7209. CALLIOPE (ISSN 1050-7086) (USPS 000-943) is published 9 times a year, monthly except for combined May/June, July/August, and November/December issues by Cobblestone Publishing Company, a division of Carus Publishing Company, 315 Fifth St eet, Peru, IL 61354. Periodicals postage paid at Peru, IL, and at additional mailing offices. One-year subscription (9 issues) $33.95; $15.00 additional per year outside the U.S. (includes Canadian GST/HST). Please remit in U.S. funds (GST #130428204). Prices subject to change. Back issue prices available on request. For SUBSCRIPTIONS, CHANGE OF ADDRESS, and ADJUSTMENTS, write to CALLIOPE, P.O. Box 9306, La Salle, IL 61301-9306. Please give both new address and old address as printed on last label. Allow six to eight weeks for change of add ess. POSTMASTER: Please send change of address to CALLIOPE, P.O. Box 9306, La Salle, IL 61301-9306. Copyright © 2008 by Carus Publishing Company. All rights reserved. Rep oduction of the whole or any part of the content is illegal without written permission from the publisher. Not respons ble for unsolicited manuscripts or other material. All lette s assumed for publication become the p operty of Carus Publishing Company. For information regarding our privacy policy and compliance with the Children’s On-line Privacy P otection Act (COPPA), please visit our Web site at www.cobblestonepub.com or write to Carus Publishing/COPPA, P.O. Box 300, Peru, IL 61354. Editorial cor espondence: CALLIOPE, 30 G ove Street, Pete bo ough, NH 03458. Printed in the United States of America. Find every issue of CALLIOPE at CobblestoneOnline.net 48 CONSULTING EDITORS CALLIOPE would like to thank Eric H. Cline (archaeologist and Associate Director [USA] of the Megiddo Excavations in Israel), Noreen Doyle (Egyptologist), Angela Murock Hussein (archaeologist), Ramadan B. Hussein (adjunct professor of anthropology at Rhode Island College), Salima Ikram (professor of Egyptology at The American University in Cairo), Janice Kamrin (Egyptologist), and Joyce Tyldesley (lecturer in Egyptology at Manchester University and research fellow at Liverpool University) for their invaluable help with this issue. ABOUT THE COVER: “I’m Hatshepsut! Let me introduce you to my world!” This statue fragment was found at Hatshepsut’s mortuary temple at Deir el-Bahri (see pages 24–27). (PHOTO: © THE SUPREME COUNCIL OF COUNCIL OF ANTIQUITIES [SCA], EGYPT, AND THE HAWASS LIBRARY) 5 Lou Waryncia Editorial Director Ann Dillon Art Director Patricia Silvestro Rights & Pe missions Coordinator Marcia Lusted Editorial Assistant 2 The Nile has two main tributaries, the White Nile (named for its milky-like appearance) and the Blue Nile. The two tributaries join together in Sudan, and then flow north through Egypt to the Mediterranean Sea. 3 If you add the lengths of the Nile and its tributaries, the sum total is 4,132 miles, the longest river system in the world. 4 The source of the White Nile is in Rwanda; of the Blue Nile, Ethiopia. The water system, as a whole, Andre W. Carus Chai man and Publisher Marianne Carus Editor in Chief Jason Patenaude Chief Operating Offi er Amy Reisinger Marketing Manager Karen Dauck Production Manager CALLIOPE is pronounced kuh LIE o pee. In ancient Greek and Roman mythology, Calliope was the Muse of epic poetry and eloquence. The ancients honored the Muses as the goddesses of the arts and sciences. FACTS 1 CARUS PUBLISHING COMPANY ADVISORY BOARD Diane L. Brooks, Ed.D.: Director (retired), Curriculum Frameworks and Instructional Resour es Offi e, California Department of Education Ken Burns: Florentine Films Ross E. Dunn: Professor of History, San Diego State University Richard A. Gould: Chai man and Professor, Department of Anthropology, Brown University Donald James Johnson: Professor Emeritus, New York University Jean Elliott Johnson: Teacher and Director (Retired) of the Asia Society’s TeachAsia Project Martha S. Joukowsky: Professor Emerita, Brown University, Department of Anthropology Center for Old World Archaeology and Art; Director, Brown University Petra ‘Great’ Temple Excavations P. Ann Kaupp: Anthropology Outreach Offi e, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution Joseph M. Pucci: Associate Professor of Classics, Medieval Studies, and Comparative Literature, Brown University Heidi Roupp: Past President, World History Association Sandra Stotsky: Professor of Education Reform, 21st Century Chair in Teacher Quality, University of Arkansas NILE The ancient Egyptians called this waterway the “River of Life.” The ancient Greeks called it Neilos, “River Valley,” the root of its name today. TM Rosalie F. Baker, Charles F. Baker Editors Susan Gilzow Designer Stephen L. Thompson Copy Editor Eileen T. Terrill Proofreader NEWSY flows through 10 countries in Africa. 5 Unlike many of the world’s waterways, the Nile’s waters flow from south to north. S MUSING H AT S H E P S U T I have no enemy in any land, all countries are my subjects. —Inscription carved on the base of one of Hatshepsut’s obelisks at Karnak WHY DID HATSHEPSUT, A WOMAN, CHOOSE TO BE A KING? An interesting question—but one with a simple answer. In the ancient Egyptian language, the word for “king” was masculine and the word for “queen” meant “Great Royal Wife.” Thus, even though it was not a perfect fit, “king” seemed the best choice. There are, however, two other questions that are also intriguing: “How did Hatshepsut come to be king?” and “How did she perform in this role?” This time the answers are not so simple. In fact, scholars are still trying to find the most accurate answers. For the latest on one of history’s most intriguing personalities, read on! 2 Most Noble of Noble Women by Joyce Tyldesley H atshepsut may have been only 12 years old when she became the wife of Egypt’s king. Her husband, Thutmose II, was her halfbrother and had inherited the throne of Egypt from their father, Thutmose I, around 1492 B.C. Thus, Hatshepsut was the “King’s Daughter” and “King’s Sister.” And, Hatshepsut was the child of her father’s Great Royal Wife, Ahmose, while Thutmose II was the son of one of their father’s minor wives. Wife and Mother We know little about this stage of Hatshepsut’s life. Images of her at the time show a typical Egyptian lady wearing a tight sheath dress and a long wig. We know that she had a daughter, Above: Majesty and might still greet all those who visit Hatshepsut’s mortuary temple at Deir el-Bahri. Neferure, but no son, and that she took the important religious position of “God’s Wife of Amun,” a position that allowed her to participate in the religious rituals performed in the Karnak temple. And we know that she built a tomb in the Wadi Sikkat Taka ez-Zeida, a remote ravine on the west bank of the Nile at Thebes. A Suitable Tomb Hatshepsut had her tomb built high up a cliff, facing west. It was a site chosen to discourage robbers, and, indeed, it proved almost inaccessible for its excavator, Howard Carter. Actually, he managed to gain access to the tomb by dangling precariously from a rope. Carter discovered that the tomb consisted of an entrance stairway descending to a doorway that led to a gallery, an antechamber, and a second gallery with a burial chamber. One of the galleries housed a sarcophagus made of quartz. Its lid, which was found propped against a corner of the coffin, was inscribed with a prayer to the goddess Nut: young child or even a baby when he came to the throne. As Iset was not considered sufficiently royal to act on behalf of her son, Hatshepsut ruled for him. This arrangement, known as a regency, was not unusual. Rather, it was accepted practice that a widowed queen should rule for her minor son. Hatshepsut, however, was being asked to act on behalf of a boy who was not her own son. For several years, Hatshepsut allowed the records to show the young Thutmose taking precedence in all activities. She did, however, commission a pair of obelisks— tall, thin, stone shafts whose gold-coated tips shone in the strong sunlight. These were placed in front of the Karnak temple. By the time the obelisks were cut, Hatshepsut had become king of Egypt, and her new titles were engraved on the stone shafts. Joyce Tyldesley, a lecturer in Egyptology at Manchester University and a researcher at Liverpool University, is Dr. Dig for CALLIOPE’s sister magazine, DIG. O my mother Nut, stretch over me so that you may place me amongst the undying stars that are in you, and that I may not die. Hatshepsut’s tomb, however, had never been used. It was abandoned before the shaft, which had been cut into the floor of the burial chamber, could be completed. The Making of a Queen When Thutmose II died unexpectedly after just 13 years on the throne, the crown passed to Hatshepsut’s stepson, Thutmose III. He was the son of Thutmose II and a lady named Iset. His exact age at the time of his accession is unrecorded, but given that he reigned for more than 50 years and that his mummy was not that of an elderly man, we can conclude that he was a Hatshepsut (left) honors the creator god Atum in this relief carved on a pillar she had built at Elephantine, an island in the Nile River. 3 T he king of Egypt was the only person who could talk to the gods. In fact, he was considered a god himself. During his lifetime, he was thought to be the god Horus on earth. After his death, he became the god Osiris, and the new pharaoh became the new Horus. The story of Horus and Osiris played an important role in the Osiris Four sons of Horus Isis Divine Kingship by Salima Ikram and Janice Kamrin ancient Egyptians’ ideas about kingship. The Egyptians believed that long, long ago, during the Ques Have A t Golden Age before history, CALLI ion? As O Peter PE, 30 Gr k Me! Osiris and his wife Isis borou ove S t., gh, (who was also his sister) or e-m NH 0345 askca 8 a il: lliope ruled Egypt. Osiris and Isis @car uspu b.com had a brother named Seth, who was married to their other sister, Nephthys. Seth was jealous of Osiris, and wanted to be king himself, so he formed a plan to murder his brother. 4 An Evil Brother Seth hosted a party and invited his brother to come. During the party, he brought out a wooden box that he had had specially designed to match Osiris’ measurements. All the party guests tried out the box, as if playing a game. When it was Osiris’ turn, Seth watched as his brother stepped in and lay down, and then slammed the lid shut. With the help of his evil friends, he tossed it into the Nile. The box floated all the way to Byblos, on the coast of modern Lebanon, where it got magically hidden inside a tree. The tree was then cut down and used as a pillar in a palace. When Isis went looking for her husband, she found the box inside the pillar. The princess of Byblos gave her the pillar, and Isis brought it back to Egypt so that she could bury Osiris properly. Seth was very angry when he discovered that Isis had found Osiris’ body. He dug up the box and chopped the body into 14 pieces, which he scattered throughout Egypt. Isis, with the help of Nephthys, gathered all the pieces and magically put Osiris back together. She then brought him back to life. Osiris went down into the land of the dead and became king there. A Divine Challenge Isis had become pregnant after she brought Osiris back to life. Nine months later, she gave birth to a baby boy, whom she named Horus. While he was a child, she kept him hidden in the marshes of This gracefully carved figure of Ahmose shows her pregnant with Hatshepsut. The relief adorns Hatshepsut’s mortuary temple at Deir el-Bahri. Hatshepsut as Mut hen Hatshepsut was queen, she played the role of the goddess Mut. As the wife of the king of the gods, Amun-Re, Mut was not only the queen of the gods, but also a mother-goddess. This meant that she protected all females, including both humans and animals. She also helped women give birth and watched over children. In art, the Egyptians identified Hatshepsut with Mut by portraying her wearing a vulture headdress. The hieroglyph for Mut, which translates as “mother,” was a vulture. The connection was appropriate as vultures are very good mothers and guard their young with their lives. The figure of Mut at left shows her wearing a vulture headdress beneath the crown of Upper and Lower Egypt. W —Salima Ikram and Janice Kamrin 5 Seth slays Osiris. the Delta to stop his evil uncle Seth, who now ruled Egypt, from harming him. When Horus grew up, he decided to avenge his father’s death and seize the throne from Seth. To do so, he challenged his uncle to a series of contests. The two gods battled for many years, until finally Horus won. The council of gods awarded Horus his father’s crown and made him king of Egypt. Seth was given control over the desert, and became god of the areas surrounding Egypt. When Hatshepsut became king, she became, like all pharaohs, Horus on earth. Her father, Thutmose I, had become Osiris when he died. Therefore, Hatshepsut, as his child, was the living Horus and the rightful heir to the throne of Egypt. Salima Ikram, an Egyptologist, professor, and author, is presently studying the Kharga Oasis in Egypt’s Western Desert. Janice Kamrin, an Egyptologist and author, works for the American Research Center in Egypt at the Cairo Museum. A list of the names and accomplishments of women who have contributed much to Egypt’s history would extend far beyond the pages of this magazine. Historical accounts must, by necessity, focus on those aspects considered the most important and the most representative of each decade or century. Only by crossreferencing texts, novels, and journals can you begin to understand the roles Egyptian women have played through the centuries. The brief biographies of the Egyptian women highlighted in this issue will help illustrate this fact. Queen Tiy (c. 1387–c. 1340 B.C.) Queen Tiy was the consort of 18th Dynasty pharaoh Amenhotep III. A member of the Egyptian aristocracy and married to Amenhotep at an early age, Tiy became the Great Royal Wife. Her shrewd and capable mind won her husband’s respect and trust. Tiy’s name appeared with Amenhotep’s on official documents, and she participated in state affairs and public ceremonies. During this period of prosperity and peace, a great building program was initiated, including the main portions of the temple of Luxor in central Egypt. Tiy survived her husband and became advisor to her son Amenhotep IV (later Akhenaten). The renowned Nefertiti was her daughter-in-law. In 1976, Tiy’s mummy was identified and laid to rest in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, Egypt. 6 —Charles F. Baker The Woman Who Would Be King by Janice Kamrin and Salima Ikram Listen, all you noble people, and common folk— as many as you are—I have done these things by the device of my heart. I never slumbered as one forgetful, but have made strong what was decayed. I have raised up what was dismembered… 7 Hatshepsut wears the Jubilee, or Heb Sed, robes. A royal festival, Heb Sed honored the continued reign of a pharaoh and was celebrated after ruling for 30 years, and then every three years after. Hatshepsut, however, celebrated her Jubilee in her 15th ruling year. Thutmose II and became his Great Royal Wife. She also took on the important title of God’s Wife of Amun, making her the highest-ranking priestess in the land. Several monuments have been found that show Hatshepsut during this period of her life. In these, she is shown as a traditional queen, wearing the vulture crown that linked her with the goddess Mut, wife of the great god Amun. King, I Am! HATSHEPSUT is one of the best-known kings in Egyptian history. This is mostly because she was a female pharaoh, one of only a few women to claim this title. But it is also because she ruled for many years and built many beautiful monuments that have survived until today. When she was a young woman, Hatshepsut married her half-brother H AT S H E P S U T Khgnemet-Amun-Hatshepsut shall be the name of this my daughter… . My soul is hers… my crown is hers, that she may rule the Two Lands. —Mandate of the mighty god Amun, inscribed on the walls of Hatshepsut’s funerary temple at Deir el-Bahri 8 When Thutmose II died, his son by Iset, a less important wife, became king. His name was also Thutmose, like his father and grandfather, so we call him Thutmose III. Thutmose III was very young when he became king, so Hatshepsut, as the chief queen and most important royal woman, became the regent. During this period, she was still represented as a queen, much as before, but with Thutmose III instead of Thutmose II. After only a few years, however, she began to turn herself into a pharaoh. First, she took on a “throne” name. This was a special kind of name taken by kings when they came to the throne. Hatshepsut’s throne name was Maatkare. On temple walls, she began to show herself wearing royal crowns. She also called herself “King of Upper and Lower Egypt,” one of the main titles of the pharaoh. She was still shown with Thutmose III, but as his equal rather than just his queen. She continued to wear female clothing. By the seventh year of Thutmose III’s reign, Hatshepsut had begun to show herself not only as a king, but as a male king. Instead of a long dress, she wore a royal kilt, leaving her chest bare. Like any other What’s in a Beard? I n ancient Egypt, statues of kings and gods had special features, such as the cobra on the forehead (see page 10), the headdress known as the nemes (at right), and the false beard. Royal statues usually have a plain beard with a straight or squarish end, sometimes decorated with horizontal lines. A shorter type of royal beard is found in paintings that include high-ranking officials. The god’s beard, known as the “divine” type, is usually braided, and has a curved end. This curvedtype beard is also found on statues of dead kings, as a symbol of their deification. —Ramadan B. Hussein pharaoh, she wore a bull’s tail made of gold and semiprecious stones, and carried the royal crook and flail, symbols of kingship (see also page 10). In inscriptions, she sometimes used male instead of female pronouns. Daughter of a God Proclaiming herself pharaoh was very unusual, and Hatshepsut needed to prove to the people of Egypt that this was the right thing to do. Kings were supposed to be the children of Amun-Re, king of the gods. So Hatshepsut told the story of her divine birth on the walls of her memorial temple at Deir el-Bahri. According to this tale, Amun-Re came to her mother, Ahmose, disguised as Thutmose I. The god and the queen spent a night together, and Ahmose became pregnant. The child was Hatshepsut. Hatshepsut ruled for more than 20 years. She was a very active and energetic ruler. She built many temples to the gods, both in Egypt and in Nubia, and restored temples built by earlier kings that had fallen into disrepair. She had a pair of granite obelisks, stone pillars with small pyramids covered in gold on top, carved to honor Amun-Re. Modern scholars believe that Hatshepsut and Thutmose III were an excellent team. As soon as he was old enough, he took care of military affairs, while she focused on domestic matters. Their joint reign made Egypt prosperous and strong. Ahmose, Hatshepsut’s mother, wearing a vulture headdress 9 Symbols of by Charles F. Baker Symbols have played, and do play, an important role in history. Leaders use them to represent power and beliefs. So, too, do nations. Some symbols are short-lived, falling out of use when the person or country that relies on them loses power. Others outlive their designers and authors. The symbols used by the ancient Egyptian rulers to represent their power and relationships with the gods are among the few that have endured for more than 3,000 years. Uraeus —The uraeus was worn on royal crowns and headdresses. It was in the shape of a cobra, the form associated with Wadjet, the goddess of Lower Egypt. It was always positioned in the middle of the crown, just above the pharaoh’s brow and was designed to be rearing up. The cobra’s hood was extended as if to warn enemies to beware the Uraeus power of the king. While a queen’s uraeus usually included only a cobra, a king’s brow was also adorned with the head of the vulture goddess Nekhbet of Upper Egypt. Hekat (Crook) —The hekat represented 10 the pharaoh and his responsibility to protect and guard the people of the Nile River region, the way a good shepherd guards his flock. Flail —The flail represented the power of the Egyptian pharaohs. Sculptors usually fashioned statues of deceased pharaohs holding the crook and flail. Osiris, the Egyptian Hekat god of the Flail dead with whom the dead king was identified, always appeared in art holding both. Atef Hedjet —The hedjet was the tall white crown that represented Upper Egypt. Sometimes, it was called the wereret, meaning “Great Crown.” Deshret —The deshret was the red basket crown that represented Lower Egypt. Sekhemty —The sekhemty was the double crown that represented Upper and Lower Egypt. To form it, the hedjet was placed inside the deshret. Hedjet Sekhemty Deshret Power Coronation Rituals The heir to the throne was usually a Khepresh — pharaoh’s eldest son by his Great Royal The khepresh was Wife. His actual coronation, however, the war helmet used did not take place until the dead by the pharaohs. pharaoh had been buried properly. The process required that the body Khepresh be specially treated to prevent decay, Atef —The atef was a process that took approximately 70 days. the ram’s horn crown. The prepared body, or mummy, was then A pharaoh wore this, the laid to rest in the pharaoh’s royal tomb, most decorative crown, at his coronation which had been decorated inside with and on other solemn occasions. Atef religious texts to ensure his continued life Usually, the atef was a in the underworld. Tradition required that combination of the hedjet and each pharaoh attend the burial rites of uraeus, with the addition of his predecessor. two feathers and ram’s horns. The coronation always took place during a national festival that represented hope for Sma-tawy —This design showed the future. The ceremonies were elaborate the papyrus plant and a lotus (a type of and lasted several days. It was at these water lily) entwined. Found on thrones, celebrations that a new pharaoh formally royal boats, and palace and temple walls, received the symbols of Egypt. Various it represented the unification of Upper and crowns were place on his head to symbolize Lower Egypt. At the coronation ceremony, his responsibilities and powers. His name a stake with the sma-tawy twisted around was written in hieroglyphs, within a it was driven into the cartouche or oval. With the crook and ground in front flail in hand, the new ruler was led in a of the building procession around the walls of the where the capital city. new A His name was pharaoh Have sk Me! Serekh A ? t., inscribed on honored tion ove S QuesLIOPE, 30 Gr H 03458 the Egyptian the deities h, N CAL oroug ail: b r e t m Pe sacred tree of of Lower or e-m uspub.co r a c @ life. According to and Upper lliope askca Egyptian belief, the Egypt. deities inscribed each new pharaoh’s name on the leaves Serekh —The of this tree. serekh was a design representing the façade of a palace and associated with the Horus Charles F. Baker is the co-editor of CALLIOPE. falcon and the Horus name, or title, used by the king. 11 EGYPT on the March by Noreen Doyle ome historians believe that, as a woman, Hatshepsut had no interest in military matters. She preferred, they say, to boast about her peaceful achievements, such as moving enormous obelisks or dispatching a trading expedition down the Red Sea coast to the exotic land of Punt. Yet, the fragments of an inscription from Hatshepsut’s funerary temple at Deir el-Bahri indicate that the Egyptian army defeated Nubian rebels during her reign. The text records a “slaughter” of uncounted numbers of the enemy. In another inscription, found near the border between Egypt and Nubia, Chief Treasurer Ti claims to have witnessed the king herself defeating Nubians and destroying their lands. S 12 Propaganda? Whether these inscriptions are accurate or just propaganda to exaggerate Hatshepsut’s military talent, we will probably never know. What is certain is that Hatshepsut, like any other pharaoh, officially served as Egypt’s supreme military commander, heading a complex bureaucracy that ranged from the commander-in-chief and generals down to army scribes and infantrymen. In practice, of course, the king could not personally control everything. When Hatshepsut’s stepson Thutmose was old enough, she appointed him commanderin-chief of her army. Most of her soldiers came from towns and villages, recruited or drafted to become low-ranking infantrymen. Mercenaries also “Let’s go!” the five men urge each other. Hatshepsut’s soldiers march along with battle axes and standards of their army units. made up an important part of the Egyptian military, particularly Nubian warriors, who were especially prized for their skill as archers. As in a modern army, officers drilled and disciplined their troops at military camps. Each soldier received his pay in the form of bread, beer, and other food. Soldiers could also receive rewards of land, livestock, slaves, and other goods, especially upon retirement. Deadly Weapons Although infantrymen made up the bulk of the army, during the New Kingdom the key component of the Egyptian military machine was the chariot. Pulled by a pair of horses, each agile, two-wheeled vehicle served as a mobile archery platform. The charioteers formed an elite branch of the military, and their equipment and horses were expensive to maintain in proper fighting condition. Although Egyptians had been hunting and fighting with the bow and arrow since before recorded history, by the time Hatshepsut came to the throne, bowmakers had introduced improvements to these weapons. Using techniques first developed in western Asia, they began to make bows by gluing together layers of wood, horn, and sinew. With a range of up to 600 feet, The Hardships of a Soldier o the dismay of their teachers, some boys and young men found the life of a soldier attractive. In the Papyrus Lansing, written more than 300 years after Hatshepsut’s lifetime, a scribe warned his pupil why he should not abandon school to join the army: T A soldier had many superiors, who could wake him at any hour of the day or night, treat him as a donkey, and allow him no rest. The soldier was always hungry, because he was never given enough to eat, and the water he drank was salty and stank. The enemy surrounded him, and his body was weak from illness. After the battle, the spoils went to the king, while the soldier had to march home again with his knapsack on his back. But he would drop the sack because a captive woman would faint and he had to carry her instead. If he deserted the army, his family would be imprisoned. And, if a soldier died on the march, he was left behind in the desert, where no one would remember him. —Noreen Doyle 13 “Death to enemies of Egypt!” yells the pharaoh in his war helmet as he pulls his bow. The lion-headed Maahes was honored as the god of war. type, known as a khepesh, was similar in shape to the sickle. It had a cutting edge on the inside of its curved blade, which made it an excellent slashing weapon. The halberd, a long pole with a blade, was also good for slashing and kept the enemy at a greater distance. The Egyptian army also continued to use one of humanity’s most ancient weapons, the spear. For defense, in addition to shields, some 18th Dynasty soldiers wore armor made of metal disks sewn onto leather shirts. Egyptian troops secured their country’s borders and put down rebellions among the local populations in conquered territories. When Duty Calls a composite bow could shoot farther than one made only of wood, and it could rain heavier arrows down upon the enemy. Another weapon, the battle-ax, had become longer and narrower, capable of delivering an even deadlier blow. Daggers were now longer and sword-like. One H AT S H E P S U T Egypt was made to work with bowed head for her, the excellent seed of the god, who came forth from him. —Inscription recording the ascension of Hatshepsut and Thutmose III to the throne of Egypt, found in the tomb of the official Ineni 14 As the source of precious commodities and as trading partners, both Nubia and the Middle East played vital roles in Egypt’s economic well-being. Fortresses occupied by Egyptian soldiers safeguarded these trade routes and kept military headquarters informed of all activity, including even the number of nomads who passed by. Calliope says: A third century B.C. Egyptian priest and historian named Manetho compiled a list of Egypt’s kings, starting with Menes as the first historical king around 3100 B.C. As the last Egyptian king to rule in ancient times, he listed Nectanebo II, whose reign ended in 342 B.C. Manetho divided the kings into 30 family groupings, d now called dynasties. Historians later divide the dynasties into time periods: Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom, and New Kingdom. The years between these periods are referred to as the First, Second, and Third Intermediate periods. While Egyptologists do , not agree on the exact dates for each period the divisions are accepted universally. EUROPE Black Sea ASIA GREECE N W CYPRUS Mediterranean Sea E SYRIA • KADESH AFRICA S LIBYA NILE DELTA EGYPT •• (CAIRO) d Re MEMPHIS a Se LOWER EGYPT EGYPT NUBIA (SUDAN) Ni le Ri ve r R) UXO K (L A N ABYDOS KAR VALLEY OF THE KINGS •• • THEBES • DEI S RE L-B OF EN UPPER AH Y UE E RI L EQ EGYPT L A H V T ASWAN • LEGEND • ANCIENT SITE (MODERN SITE) • • COUNTRY • ANCIENT CITY ABU SIMBEL • (MODERN CITY) Sea or Ocean River ISLAND AREA CONTINENT Almost as soon as Thutmose became king, Egypt’s rival, the kingdom of Mitanni, incited a revolt among cities in the Middle East. The siege of the city of Megiddo, led by Thutmose himself, lasted seven months. Even after the Egyptians won, Thutmose spent about another 20 years waging war in the region, establishing an Egyptian empire and later earning the modern nickname “the Napoleon of ancient Egypt.” However, not every military campaign was part of a war. When the time came to transport Hatshepsut’s colossal obelisks from the quarry at Aswan to the temple at Karnak, the army supplied the labor. And, when she dispatched a trade expedition by sea to the land of Punt, miles away on the Red Sea coast, she sent the army. Noreen Doyle has degrees in anthropology, art history, nautical archaeology, and Egyptology. She lives in Maine, where she works as a writer and editor. PU NT Foreman of the Foremen by Angela Murock Hussein W ithout a doubt, Senmut was a close friend and confidante of Hatshepsut—and he even may have been more. From a humble background, he nevertheless held some of the most prestigious positions in Egypt. In fact, Senmut is one of the most important individuals we can identify from the reign of Hatshepsut. Most likely from the town of Armant in the south of Egypt, he was the son of Ramose and Hatnefer. His parents do not seem to have been involved in government or to have held any special titles. Life became more difficult for the family after Ramose died young, leaving his wife, Senmut, and at least Cradled in Senmut’s arms six other children. Hatnefer, is Neferure, holding a royal however, lived to see her son scepter in her hands. Note the traditional children’s achieve wealth and power hairstyle, a sidelock on the in the royal court. right side of her head. We do not know exactly how Senmut came to serve in the palace. The first evidence of his working for the royal family dates to the reign of Thutmose II, when he was made tutor to Princess Neferure, daughter of the king and his queen, Hatshepsut. Senmut was extremely proud of this prestigious title and commissioned many statues of himself holding the child. 19 Confidant of the Queen Senmut next became Great Steward to Hatshepsut herself, managing the affairs and household staff. Senmut was the person charged with carrying out her orders. At the time, she was still queen under Thutmose II. When Hatshepsut became pharaoh, Senmut became her closest advisor and was granted many honors and titles. His most important was that of the Great Steward of Amun, the overseer of the temple of the god at Karnak. He also was charged with supervising many significant building projects. It was Senmut who oversaw the transport of the two granite obelisks for the Temple of Amun, the opening of stone quarries south of Thebes for building stone, and the construction of the Temple of Mut (Amun’s wife) at Karnak. His most celebrated commission, however, was his supervision of Hatshepsut’s mortuary temple at Deir el-Bahri (see pages 24–27), for which he may have been the architect. Hatshepsut was so pleased with his handling of these projects that she allowed him to place small images of himself on the walls behind doorways in her mortuary temple, the temple of Mut, and presumably other shrines. Such an honor usually was reserved for members of the royal family. Therefore, for Senmut to be worthy of this type of favor was significant. He was also allowed to place statues of himself in temples, a privilege that also required royal permission. These images show him in many different guises, representing his many jobs. We have statues of him in his position as surveyor and architect, the tutor of Neferure, and the presenter of the name of Hatshepsut, a scene that represented his role of carrying out her wishes. 20 Below: Is this Senmut? Perhaps! The image was found carved on a piece of discarded limestone near his tomb complex. Opposite: A carved head of Hatshepsut. Hatsh Sen An Impossible Love t u s p e h + ut nm Close to Hatshepsut in life, he was near to her in death as well. The queen granted Senmut permission to construct his tomb complex next to her mortuary temple. This complex included a tomb for Senmut, as well as smaller tombs for his many family members, including Hatnefer and Ramose, whose remains were moved from an older tomb in Armant. Senmut does not, however, appear to have had a wife or children of his own. Some scholars believe that Senmut was more to Hatshepsut than a steward and assistant, that the two may have been in love. It is true that he was awarded honors usually reserved for royal individuals and evidently was especially favored by her above all the other officials. In addition, Senmut never married, and Hatshepsut never remarried after the death of Thutmose II. The two certainly worked as partners throughout her reign and were so close that rumors of their romance apparently circulated while Hatshepsut was pharaoh. In Senmut’s tomb complex at Deir el-Bahri, the builders left behind graffiti carved into the rock that showed Senmut and Hatshepsut together, implying that the workmen knew that they were a couple. Yet, in ancient Egyptian society, it would have been impossible for a commoner such as Senmut to marry Hatshepsut, a queen and mother of the daughter of a king. Any relationship between them would have had to remain private. Angela Murock Hussein is an archaeologist who has worked on digs in Israel, Italy, Greece, and Egypt. She lives in Providence, Rhode Island, with her husband and son. 21 FUN WITH WORDS WORD STORIES by Kimberly Reishus DESPOT WORD ORIGINS PATRIARCH Ever heard of “patriarch”? How about the phrase “patriarch of the family”? By definition, the word describes the father, ruler, or founder of a family, tribe, religion, business, or the like—quite appropriate if we dissect “patriarch.” It is actually a combination of the Latin noun pater (“father”) and the Greek verb archein (“to rule”). Here’s a word whose meaning has changed considerably over the centuries. The ancient Greeks used their term despotes to refer to those in charge of a household and to husbands. In time, however, the word was used to refer to rulers who acted like tyrants, masters who ruled with unlimited power, caring only for themselves and their concerns and having little regard for the people they governed. MONARCH A simple word, “monarch” is one of the first words we learn in history class. It refers to the sole ruler of a country, a person who usually has inherited the position from a mother or father. And, this definition exactly reflects its two Greek roots: monos (“alone”) and archein (“to rule”). 22 illustrated by Tom Lopes SOVEREIGN We all know that the word “reign” means “royal power or authority.” So why precede it with the letters “sove”? Perhaps the answer is just simply to make the word even more regal. Let’s dig a bit deeper into the history of “sovereign.” The syllable “reign” traces its roots to the Latin verb regere, meaning “to rule.” The letters “sove” are actually an adaptation of the Latin preposition super, meaning “above” and “over.” Next time, you want a word that means “above or superior to all others,” why not use “sovereign”? LET’S LEARN EGYPTIAN! Here are a few words—not written in hieroglyphs, but in our alphabet according to how Egyptologists think they were pronounced: EGYPTIAN COLORS MEANING desher red kem black khenet (or kenet) yellow khesbedj blue khedj white sab variegated (a variety of different colors together) wadj green EGYPTIAN GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS MEANING Deshret Egypt, the Red Land (desert area) Hwt-ka-Ptah House of the Ka (spiritual essence or soul) of Ptah— that is, the land of Egypt Khemet or Kmt Egypt, the Black Land (fertile Nile riverbanks) Ta-Seti Nubia (present-day Sudan) Ta-Meht Lower Egypt Ta-Resu Upper Egypt Uat-ur Mediterranean Sea (literal translation: “the Great Green”) 23 Harp player carved into the wall of Hatshepsut’s chapel Values I n family groups depicted on tomb walls or in statuary, wives have an arm around their husbands’ waists or shoulders and children cling to the staffs their fathers are shown holding. Clearly, there was great affection between the generations. But children were also expected to respect their fathers, be kind to their mothers, and love their siblings. Women’s Rights The status of women was freer in ancient Egypt than in many parts of the world today. They could inherit, own, and pass on property. There was no segregation of the sexes, and, at dinner parties, men and women intermingled. Even so, well-to-do ladies mostly stayed at home and supervised the chores of their servants. This may help explain why women are depicted with yellow flesh. In contrast, men worked primarily outside the home and got deeply sunburned in the process, which is why they are shown with red or red-brown skin. Among the social graces mastered by upper-class women were dancing, singing, and playing the harp, either for their parents and husbands or for the king himself. They also served “Let’s hunt!” And the tall figure of the deceased in this tomb painting prepares to hunt birds. His wife and son accompany him, and the family cat has already caught three birds. 34 as priestesses of the mother goddess Hathor and the creator goddess Neith. Sometimes they filled the same role as priestesses in the funerary cults of fathers or husbands. Some working-class women labored beside their men in the fields or at weaving, baking, and brewing; others were domestic servants in upper-class homes. Sometimes they acted in a supervisory capacity. Education Counts! Reading, writing, and arithmetic were important in ancient Egypt and most likely formed the route to advancement for many ambitious young men. Boys with a father or relative in an official position probably had an advantage, since most trades and crafts were learned by means of an apprenticeship system. Female physicians, even chief physicians, are known to have existed, and they, too, must have been able to read and write in order to use the medical texts. Edward Brovarski is an adjunct professor in Egyptian archaeology at Brown University. Hatshepsut’s mummy, displayed in Cairo, June 2007 by Salima Ikram and Janice Kamrin hen Hatshepsut was still a queen, she started building a tomb for herself in a place called Wadi Gabbanat el-Qurud, or Valley of the Monkeys. This is located on the west bank of modern Luxor, not far from the Valley of the Kings. The tomb was carved into the limestone mountains, and archaeologists found a beautiful sarcophagus made of yellowish-red stone inside it. Hatshepsut, however, was not buried here. As soon as Hatshepsut became pharaoh, she abandoned this tomb and started digging a new one for herself in the Valley of the Kings. Many Egyptologists think that this was the very first tomb in the Valley of the Kings. It is now called KV 20 (KV stands for King’s Valley). W ‘C’-Shaped KV 20 was cut deeply into the side of the Valley and actually looks like a long, narrow “C.” There are almost 650 feet of passageways and stairways that lead to an oval room. A short corridor connects this room to a rectangular chamber and three smaller rooms. Two wonderfully decorated stone sarcophagi were discovered inside the rectangular room. One was carved with the name of Hatshepsut; the other with the name of her father, Thutmose I. We do not know where Thutmose I was originally buried. We think that Hatshepsut took his mummy from his own tomb and 35 moved it to hers. She did this so that she could be buried beside her father, whom she loved very much. KV 20 was only one part of Hatshepsut’s tomb. The other part was her memorial, or mortuary, temple, also known as “Temple of Millions of Years.” This was built in a bay of cliffs and is now called Deir el-Bahri. Today it takes 20 minutes to drive from the Valley of the Kings to Deir el-Bahri, but the tomb and its temple are actually back-toback. If you dug a tunnel from the end of KV 20 to the temple, the tunnel would be only 820 feet long! Mysterious Package Neither the mummy of Hatshepsut nor the mummy of her father was found in the tomb. In fact, only two royal mummies Which is which? Close inspection of the two mummies has led Zahi Hawass (standing) to identify the mummy directly in front of him as that of Hatshepsut. 36 from the 18th Dynasty were discovered in their tombs—Amenhotep II’s and Tutankhamun’s. Most of the other royal mummies have been found in what are called caches, places where valuables can be hidden. In the 21st Dynasty—about 300 years after Hatshepsut—priests had moved the mummies from their own tombs to the caches to protect them from tomb robbers. But Hatshepsut and Thutmose I were not in any of the royal caches either. Many scholars thought that a mummy in the largest cache, which was tucked away in the hills not far from Hatshepsut’s temple, was Thutmose I, but analysis showed it was too young to be Hatshepsut’s father. Also, the mummy did not have his arms crossed over his chest, which is how kings were buried at this time. The only trace of Hatshepsut in either of the caches was a small wooden box with her name on it. Inside was a mysterious package. It was too big for the box and had been wrapped in linen and covered with black oils and resins. In 1903, Howard Carter (who later discovered the tomb of Tutankhamun) found a small tomb not far from KV 20. He called this KV 60. Inside the burial chamber were two mummies. One was in a wooden coffin; the other was lying on the floor. The mummy in the coffin was a short woman with long hair and one arm crossed over her chest. Carved into the coffin was the word In, the name of Hatshepsut’s nanny. The other mummy was a very fat woman, who also had one arm crossed over her chest. The Answer in a Tooth No one paid much attention to these mummies until, years later, an Egyptologist named Elizabeth Thomas suggested that the fat lady might be Hatshepsut. She thought that KV 60 was the tomb of Hatshepsut’s nanny and that 21st Dynasty priests had moved Hatshepsut’s mummy there for safekeeping. Other scholars argued that perhaps the smaller mummy was Hatshepsut, and the fat one was the nanny. In 2007, Zahi Hawass, the director of the Supreme Council of Antiquities in Egypt, decided to try and solve the mystery of Hatshepsut’s missing mummy. Using a CT scanner, a machine that takes thousands of pictures similar to X-rays but with more detail, he made a photographic record of the two mummies from KV 60, as well as two other unidentified female mummies from the royal caches. He also scanned the wooden box with the mysterious package inside. The results were astonishing. Inside the wooden box, along with other body parts, was a tooth. Study of the mummy of the fat Check out the X-ray of Hatshepsut’s mummy’s jaw. Now just imagine Zahi Hawass putting the tooth from the box into the hole! A Have sk Me! A ? t., tion ove S QuesLIOPE, 30 Gr H 03458 h, N CAL oroug ail: b r e t m Pe or e-m uspub.co r a c @ lliope askca lady had shown she was missing a tooth. When the tooth in the wooden box was put into the hole inside the mouth of the fat lady, it was a perfect fit! The fat lady was indeed Hatshepsut, and the mystery was solved. 37 UEENS RULE THE ANCIENT EGYPTIANS BELIEVED THAT THERE MUST ALWAYS BE A KING ON THE THRONE OF EGYPT. IDEALLY, THIS KING WOULD BE THE SON OF THE PREVIOUS, NOW-DEAD, KING. BUT, IF THERE WAS NO SON AVAILABLE, IT WAS ACCEPTABLE FOR A WOMAN TO RULE. AT LEAST SIX QUEENS RULED EGYPT AS “FEMALE PHARAOHS.” THE EARLIEST OF THESE QUEENS ARE MYSTERIOUS, SHADOWY FIGURES, AND WE KNOW LITTLE ABOUT THEM. THE LATER ONES LIVED IN MORE LITERATE TIMES, SO WE UNDERSTAND MORE ABOUT THEIR REIGNS. “Meritneith” is a female name. Egyptologists believe that she was the daughter of King Djer and the wife of King Djet. Following her husband’s early death, Meritneith ruled Egypt temporarily on behalf of her infant son, Den. Nitocris Legend tells us that near the end of the Old Kingdom (around 2152 B.C.), Egypt was ruled by the beautiful and brave Nitocris. Nitocris had succeeded her murdered brother on the throne and was determined to avenge his death. After drowning his murderers in a specially constructed underground chamber, she committed suicide. However, there is no archaeological evidence to support this story, and it is probably not true. Sobeknofru There is, however, good archaeological evidence that says Queen Sobeknofru, daughter of King Amenemhat III, ruled Egypt for three years, ten months, and twenty-four days at the end of the Middle Kingdom, around 1787–1783 B.C. We have three headless statues of the queen and some of her personal possessions, but her pyramid tomb has not yet been discovered. The royal necropolis at Abydos. Egyptians once thought it the burial place of Osiris and brought offerings. Today, the area is covered with shards, broken pieces of pottery. Meritneith Queen Meritneith, who reigned some time between 2920 and 2770 B.C., was buried in a huge mud-brick tomb in the royal cemetery of Abydos, in southern Egypt. The first Egyptologists to investigate the site thought that she was a male king, but it is now understood that 39 “Use them well,” counsels the Tawosret We know far more about Queen Tawosret, who ruled Egypt during the latter part of the New Kingdom, around 1198–1196 B.C. The wife of King Seti II, she was the stepmother of his son Siptah, who had inherited his father’s throne as a young boy. Siptah’s mummy has a twisted leg, suggesting that he suffered from cerebral palsy. Queen Tawosret helped her young stepson to rule and was supported by an important politician, the “Chancellor of the Whole Land, Bay.” For four years, Bay was the dominant figure in Egyptian politics. A simple brief note in an official document records his execution on unknown charges. Siptah died in his early 20s. With no children to succeed him, Tawosret become the female king: “Daughter of Re, Lady of Ta-merit, Tawosret chosen of Mut.” This was not a good time to rule Egypt, however. The empire was shrinking and suffered from both high inflation and occasional food shortages. In addition, along Egypt’s western border, Libyan tribes were threatening the security of the Nile Delta. Tawosret ruled Egypt for just two years. Her only substantial monuments are an unfinished mortuary temple and a tomb in the Valley of the Kings. Cleopatra VII Ancient Egypt’s last ruling queen, Cleopatra VII, came to the throne in 51 B.C., sharing power with her brother, Ptolemy XIII. Ptolemy was unhappy with this situation and plotted to have his sister killed. Warned in time, Cleopatra raised an army. By the summer of 48 B.C., the forces loyal to Tawosret shakes the sistrum (see back cover) in a relief carved into the walls of a temple in Nubia, to the south of ancient Egypt. 40 falcon-headed god Horus, as he gives pharaoh the symbols of royal power (see pages 10–11). Right: Goddess Isis, crowned with cow’s horns and the solar disk topped with the symbol for throne. Ptolemy and Cleopatra were preparing to fight each other in the Nile Delta when the Roman general Julius Caesar intervened. After summoning the two to Alexandria, Caesar declared his support for Cleopatra. Angered, the people of Alexandria rebelled, and Cleopatra and Caesar spent the winter trapped in the city. Roman reinforcements did not arrive until March 47 B.C. After the city was liberated, Ptolemy XIII fled and drowned in the Nile. Cleopatra was restored to her throne with Roman support, taking as her husband and co-ruler her 11-year-old brother Ptolemy XIV. When Ptolemy XIV died in 44 B.C., Cleopatra’s three-year-old son, Ptolemy Caesar (also known as Caesarion), became king Ptolemy XV, but Cleopatra VII remained the effective sole ruler of Egypt. Cleopatra now allied herself with the Roman Mark Antony. Together, they planned an empire to rival the growing might of Rome. But their loss to the Romans under Octavian at the Battle of Actium in 31 B.C. dashed their plans. In August of the following year, Cleopatra committed suicide in Alexandria. ACT IV Here’s your chance to feel like an ancient embalmer and freak out your friends at the same time. Your mummy hand won’t be just a scary sculpture, but will make a great paperweight, YOU NEED: doorstop, or even a back scratcher! chicken bones ITY modeling clay white glue by Ken Feisel white fabric Make Your Own paint an old toothbrush MUMMY HAND Attach the fingers to the palm with more modeling clay. Tear the fabric into strips about 1@ “ wide. Dip the strips into a mixture of equal parts white glue and water, then completely wrap your mummy hand. Allow it to dry thoroughly. Next time you eat chicken, save the leg and thigh bones (they will be the mummy fingers). Wash them thoroughly in soap and water and let them dry for a few days. While they dry, sculpt a palm and wrist, like the one above, out of modeling clay. Now make your hand look moldy and old, as if it came from the body of an ancient mummy. First paint it light brown, then use an old toothbrush to spatter it with several different colors of paint. The next time someone asks you to lend them a hand, you’ll be ready! 41 Ask C ? allIopE illustrat ed by He idi Graf Can you tell me what portolan maps are? —Amelia, Web post ASK Calliope 30 Grove St., Peterborough, NH 03458 or [email protected] 46 Portolan charts were first drawn in the late 1200s as mariner charts and were in use at the time of Christopher Columbus’ voyages. They offered a realistic picture of the lands and navigational hazards sailors would encounter in coastal waters. The term portolan traces its origin to the Italian word portolani, which originally referred to books of written lists or tables of sailing directions and information. I love CALLIOPE’s “Fun With Words”! Can you tell me the origin of the word “monk”? —Chris, Web post Sure! The word “monk” is a religious term and comes from the Greek adjective monos, meaning “alone.” Monks, especially in centuries past, often spent solitary lives seeking to know more about the meaning of life, the universe, and the creator of the universe in places away from the temptations and distractions of human society. What’s a midden? —Elizabeth, Web post The term “midden” is actually a shortened form of the phrase “kitchen midden,” which is actually a derivative of the Danish word kokkenmodding, meaning “a pile of muck.” By definition, a midden is a heap of shell, pottery, tool, and ash waste material that was used and then discarded by food gatherers, especially those who lived in prehistoric times. In other words, a midden is a pile of garbage, and that is exactly why it is so important. Are there really “talking drums”? From Our Readers EDITOR: Look here ea ch month for submissions from our readers. And, the Muse Calliop e looks forward to receiving yours soon! ANCIENT EGYPT —Quincy, 10, Web post Yes! For an example, let’s travel to West Africa, and the land of the Yoruba people. Long ago, when they wanted to send messages from village to village, they created a drum that imitated their intricate tonal language. The drum seemed to “talk.” Because it is narrow in the middle, it is often called an hourglass drum. Skilled Yoruba woodcarvers transform tree trunks into these hollow drums with bowl-shaped ends and slender waists that vary in length from one foot to two or more feet. The drums’ heads are made of goatskin and are beaten with a curved stick. To make the drum “talk,” a drummer squeezes the rawhide lacings with his left arm to tighten the drumheads, which, in turn, raises the tone. Egypt, with fabulous Pharaohs flamboyantly flaunting Pompous Pyramids proudly protruding, Shriveled Mummies abruptly disturbed, Voiceless Sphinx. Monotheist Akhenaten attempting change, Notable Tutankhamun pricelessly prized, Despairing Desert desolately depleted, Generous Nile. —KATHERINE KERSWELL FAIRLAWN, NEW JERSEY , and his EDITOR: We’re sure Akhenaten d this wife Nefertiti, would have enjoye with the poem. And, Katherine, great job alliteration! 47