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ANCIENT EGYPT CHAPTER 3 http://prezi.com/cslinzw7senj/?utm_campaign=share&utm_medium=copy&rc=ex0share History of Ancient Egypt Video (partial Prezi) Mrs. Jacobs 2016 SECTION 1: GEOGRAPHY OF THE NILE OBJECTIVES • FIND OUT HOW THE GEOGRAPHY OF THE NILE CHANGES AS THE RIVER RUNS ITS COURSE. • LEARN ABOUT THE TYPES OF COMMUN ITES THAT FIRST APPEARED ALONG THE NILE, AND HOW THE NILE WAS USED FOR TRADE. SECTION 1: GEOGRAPHY OF THE NILE VOCABULARY • Nubia –ancient region in the Nile River Valley, on the site of present-day southern Egypt and northern Sudan. • Cataract – a large waterfall, any strong food or rush of water • Delta – a plain at the mouth of a river formed when sediment is deposited by flowing water • Silt – fine soil found on river bottoms SECTION 1: THE COURSE OF THE NILE RIVER • The Nile River is the world’s longest river. • It flows north from its sources in East Africa from the Mediterranean Sea for more than 4,000 miles (from New York to Alaska). • The Nile River has two sources: • The Blue Nile-rises in the highlands of present day Ethiopia and races down to the desert in thundering torrents • The White Nile-calmer than the Blue Nile, begins deep in East Africa and flows northward through swamps • Both rivers meet in present-day Sudan, then through desert sands to the Mediterranean Sea SECTION 1: THE COURSE OF THE NILE RIVER CONT. • Just north of where the Blue and White Nile meets, the northern tip of the S bend is at the city of Aswan. • This stretch of the Nile was Nubia, an ancient region in the Nile River Valley. • The Nubian section of the Nile contained 6 cataracts, or rock filled rapids. •Between the 1st & 2nd cataracts was Lower Nubia (low numbers) •Between the 2nd & 6th cataracts was Upper Nubia (upper numbers) SECTION 1: THE COURSE OF THE NILE RIVER CONT. • Lower Nubia – Desert and granite mountains lined the riverbank – Very little land for farming – Rarely rained in this area – People had to live close to the Nile for water supply • Upper Nubia – Rains – People planted in the fall and harvested in the spring – Farmland was very narrow, 2 miles wide on both sides of the river SECTION 1: THE COURSE OF THE NILE RIVER CONT. • The Nile ran for 700 miles through Egypt from the 1st cataract to the Mediterranean Sea through Upper Egypt. – About 6 miles of fertile soil on both sides of river • To the north, the Nile spreads out to form a fertile, marshy area called Lower Egypt. • Deserts stretched on each side of the riverbanks • At the end of the Nile to the north, the river splits into different streams that empty into the Mediterranean Sea. • These streams form a delta, a plain at the mouth of a river. SECTION 1: THE COURSE OF THE NILE RIVER CONT. • Every spring, waters began to rush downstream bringing a rich fertile sediment called silt, a fine soil found on river bottoms. • By late summer, the Nile spilled over its banks all the way to the delta, depositing a thick layer of silt, making the land ideal for farming. • Egyptians praised Hapi, the god of the Nile. • Ancient Egyptians called their land Kemet, the black land, because of the dark soil left by the floods. SECTION 1: THE COURSE OF THE NILE RIVER CONT. • The hot sands shielded Egypt and Nubia from foreign attacks, protection Mesopotamia didn’t have. • Over a period of 2,000 years, Egypt and Nubia faced few invasions. • Beyond the fertile river banks lay the RED LAND, desert, not friendly to human life, giving the Egyptians great protection form invasion. SECTION 1: THE GROWTH OF COMMUNITIES AND TRADE ALONG THE NILE • Settled hunting and fishing communities may have appeared in Nubia around 6000 B.C. • Nubians formed settlements before they began to farm, unlike the Mesopotamians. • Egypt’s early farming communities settled in the delta and valley regions of the Nile. • To the south, in Upper Egypt, people built scattered farming villages along the banks of the Nile. • Since Nubia had less farmland, they added to their diets by fishing and hunting ducks and birds. SECTION 1: THE GROWTH OF COMMUNITIES AND TRADE ALONG THE NILE CONT. • In Egypt, the Nile was used to transport goods. • Caravans loaded with gold, silver, copper, and fine pottery traveled overland trade routes. • Valuable goods such as cedar from the coast of the Mediterranean sea (remember Phoenicians) and gold from Nubia were sold in the bazaars of Egypt’s towns. SECTION 1: THE GROWTH OF COMMUNITIES AND TRADE ALONG THE NILE CONT. • Because of the cataracts through Nubia, people could not travel the river. • The Nubians developed trade routes by land, carrying goods from central Africa and Nubian into Egypt and southwestern Asia and brought other goods back. • One Nubian caravan of 300 donkeys carried ebony wood, ivory from elephant tusks, ostrich feathers and eggs, panther skins, and throw sticks, (a type of boomerang for hunting). Questions to consider: 1. What is the world’s longest river? 2. In which direction does the Nile flow from Central Africa? And then on to the_____ 3. How many miles does the Nile River stretch? 4. From which two United States would it stretch? 5. What are the two sources of the Nile River? 6. In which present-day country do the two sources meet? 7. What is the marshy region of the Nile River near the Mediterranean sea? 8. What is the significance of the ancient Egyptians calling their land “kemet-the black land? Why? 9. What is the “red land”? 10. What prevents people from traveling through Nubia? 11. How did the Nubians trade if they couldn’t travel the river? SECTION 2: THE RULERS OF EGYPT OBJECTIVES • LEARN ABOUT THE HISTORY OF KINGSHIP IN ANCIENT EGYPT. • FIND OUT ABOUT EGYPT’S ACCOMPLISHMENTS DURING EACH OF THE THREE KINGDOM PERIODS. • UNDERSTAND WHAT CHARACTERIZED THE RULE OF EGYPT DURING THE NEW KINGDOM PERIOD. SECTION 2: THE RULERS OF EGYPT VOCABULARY • Pharaoh – the title of the kings of ancient Egypt • Dynasty – a series of rulers from the same family or ethnic group • Absolute power – complete control over someone or something • Regent – someone who rules for a child until the child is old enough to rule SECTION 2: EGYPTIAN KINGSHIP • The history of ancient Egypt is the history of each of its dynasties, a series of rulers from the same family or ethnic group. • Egypt had 31 dynasties, until it was conquered in 332 B.C. • Historians group Egypt’s dynasties into three major time periods, Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom, and New Kingdom. • Remember, kingdoms are not places, they are time periods. – The gaps between time periods were times of troubles, such as wars, invasions, or weak rulers, but were rare, most of Egypt’s rule was stable. SECTION 2: EGYPTIAN KINGSHIP CONT. • According to legend, Egypt’s first dynasty began when a king named Menes united Upper and Lower Egypt. – Built a city named Memphis near present-day Cairo – He ruled both lands • Pharaohs had absolute power, complete control over their people. • Pharaohs could turn to advisors for help or appeal to Ma’at, the goddess of truth, either way, whatever the pharaoh decided became law. • Ancient Egyptians believed that their pharaohs were the earthly form of Horus, the falcon god, or god-kings. SECTION 2: EGYPTIAN KINGSHIP CONT. The Old Kingdom: • Also known as the pyramid kingdom, builders begin Great Pyramid • Pharaohs kept peace and traded with Nubia, with occasional conflicts. • Toward the end of the Old Kingdom, governors in the provinces began to challenge the power of the pharaohs government. • Egypt’s unity crumbled and the dynasties grew weak. • Great Sphinx statue is completed SECTION 2: EGYPTIAN KINGSHIP CONT. The Middle Kingdom: • The early rulers restored order and reunited the country. • Pharaohs spent the nation’s wealth on public works, like constructing buildings and irrigation projects, instead of wars. • Egypt grew richer. • Weaker and less able rulers followed. • Lost control of the country to foreign rulers. • Egypt expands to Lower Nubia. • Literature and art flourish. SECTION 2: EGYPTIAN KINGSHIP CONT. • The New Kingdom: – Egyptian princes became strong enough to drive out foreign invaders. – The first pharaohs of the New Kingdom wanted to build an empire. – They created foot soldiers, mounted warriors, and charioteers. – Bronze swords and body armor made the Egyptians nearly unbeatable. SECTION 2: EGYPTIAN KINGSHIP CONT. – King Tutankhamen ruled during this period while he was still a child, until his death at 18. SECTION 2: RULE DURING THE NEW KINGDOM • In 1504 Thutmose III, a child, began his reign. • Because he was a child, his stepmother was appointed regent, someone who rules for a child until the child is old enough to rule. • His stepmother was Hatshepsut, who was not happy being regent, so she proclaimed herself pharaoh, who ruled for 15 years. • Hatshepsut was a good ruler for Egypt. • She was a bold leader who is most known for creating a time of great peace and economic success. SECTION 2: RULE DURING THE NEW KINGDOM CONT. • She encouraged trade with faraway places, sending a famous expedition to the land of Punt, east coast of Africa. • Egyptian traders brought shiploads of ivory, leopard skins, and special trees used to make incense. • When Thutmose III grew up, Hatshepsut refused to give up her throne to him. • After her death, Thutmose III destroyed all her statues. • It is still unknown if Thutmose III had anything to do with her death. SECTION 2: RULE DURING THE NEW KINGDOM CONT. SECTION 2: RULE DURING THE NEW KINGDOM CONT. • Thutmose III became one of the greatest pharaohs of the New Kingdom. • He led his army in wars against Syria and Phoenicia. • His troops advanced as far east as the Euphrates River and south into Nubia. • Thutmose III was educated and loved to study plants. • He treated those he defeated with mercy, unlike most rulers of his time. SECTION 2: RULE DURING THE NEW KINGDOM CONT. SECTION 2: RULE DURING THE NEW KINGDOM CONT. SECTION 2: RULE DURING THE NEW KINGDOM CONT. • Toward the end of the New Kingdom, Egypt declined. • Civil war left Egypt weak and poorly defended. • In 332 B.C., long after the New Kingdom ended, Egypt fell to the famous conqueror, Alexander the Great of Macedonia. • The Macedonians ruled for 300 years. • In 51 B.C., Queen Cleopatra VII became the last Macedonian ruler of Egypt, sharing her throne with other members of her family until Egypt was conquered by the Romans. SECTION 2: RULE DURING THE NEW KINGDOM CONT. • Egypt became part of the Roman Empire in 31 B.C. • Cleopatra suspected that the Romans were going to parade her through Egypt to celebrate their victory. • To avoid this embarrassment, Cleopatra committed suicide by snake bite. • Egypt did not govern itself for another 2,000 years. SECTION 2: RULE DURING THE NEW KINGDOM CONT. SECTION 3: EGYPTIAN RELIGION OBJECTIVES • LEARN ABOUT EGYPTIAN GODS AND GODDESSES. • FIND OUT ABOUT THE EGYPTIANS’ BELIEF IN THE AFTERLIFE. • DISCOVER HOW AND WHY THE PHARAOHS’ TOMBS WERE BUILT. SECTION 3: EGYPTIAN RELIGION VOCABULARY • Afterlife – a life after death • Mummy – a dead body preserved in lifelike condition • Pyramid – a huge building with four sloping triangle-shaped sides, built as royal tombs in Egypt • Giza – an ancient Egyptian city; the site of the Great Pyramid SECTION 3: EGYPTIAN GODS AND GODDESSES • Like Sumerian city-states, each Egyptian town had their own gods and goddesses with their own temples. • These included gods who were often shown with human bodies with animal heads. • All Egyptians also worshipped certain principal gods, such as the sun god, Amon-Re, and Horus, the falcon god. SECTION 3: EGYPTIAN GODS AND GODDESSES CONT. • Amon-Re – Chief god – Protected the rich and the poor – Was born in the morning in the east with the sunrise – Died in evening with the setting sun, the reason the desert area to the west was believed to be the home of the dead SECTION 3: EGYPTIAN GODS AND GODDESSES CONT. • Osiris – God of the living and dead – Married to the goddess, Isis • Isis – Worshipped as the great mother who protected her children • Horus – Sky god – Child of Osiris and Isis ISIS OSIRIS HORUS SECTION 3: BELIEF IN AN AFTERLIFE • Ancient Egyptians believed the spirits of the dead made their way to the afterlife in heavenly boats. • If they pleased the gods, they would join Osiris and live a life of ease and pleasure, eating and drinking and visiting with friends who have died. • During the Old Kingdom, the afterlife was thought to be only for kings and their associates, but in the Middle Kingdom, people of all classes looked forward to an afterlife. • Before pyramids, most Egyptians were buried in shallow pits. Khufu’s ship, found in his temple, the Great Pyramid at Giza. SECTION 3: BELIEF IN AN AFTERLIFE CONT. • Egypt’s climate dried out a person’s remains creating a mummy, the preserved body of a dead person. • According to beliefs, the soul would leave the mummy, but return to it to receive food offerings. • The preserved appearance of the body allowed it to be recognized by the person’s spirit. • By the Fourth Dynasty, Egyptians had begun to practice mummification, artificially preserving the bodies before burial. SECTION 3: BELIEF IN AN AFTERLIFE CONT. • Mummification was expensive and took 2-3 months. 1. Workers removed the organs 2. The body was filled with a natural salt 3. It was stored for about 40 days, completely drying it out 4. The body was cleaned and bathed in spices 5. It was wrapped with long linen bandages. • Artisans were busy carving the coffin. • Pharaohs actually had 3 or 4 coffins nesting inside one inside another like boxes. • The inner coffin was shaped like the human body with a face painted on the cover. SECTION 3: BELIEF IN AN AFTERLIFE CONT. • 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 • https://youtu.be/L9k5NuJL UkQ • 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. SECTION 3: PHARAOH’S TOMB • Planning for a pharaoh’s tomb began soon after he was crowned. • Pharaohs of the Fourth Dynasty build the largest and most famous tombs. • Pyramids, huge building with four sloping triangleshaped sides. • Most pyramids were built during the Old Kingdom. • The largest is the Great Pyramid, for Khufu. • The Great Pyramid was built in the ancient city of Giza. • The Great Pyramid is made up of more than 2 million stones, each stone weighs about 5,000 pounds. SECTION 3: PHARAOH’S TOMB CONT. HISTORY OF OUR WORLD TEXT, PAGE 83 SECTION 3: PHARAOH’S TOMB CONT. • Building the pyramids required a great deal of organization. • Could take more than 20 years to build. • Built on the west bank of the Nile (land of the dead). • Engineers set the Pyramid square so that the sides faced the main points of the compass: N, S, E, & W. • Workers then cut the stones from nearby quarries. • Finer stone for the outside came from far away, some came from Nubia. • They were loaded onto barges and carried to the building site either along the Nile or along canals near the Nile. SECTION 3: PHARAOH’S TOMB CONT. • To get the stones into place, workers used sleds, wooded rollers, and levers. • They dragged and pushed the huge blocks up ramps of packed rubble to the level they were working on. • Dangerous work • Each year, lives were lost, crushed by falling blocks. • But the workers believed in the importance of their work. • Building a pyramid was an act of faith. • It ensured the pharaoh’s place in the afterlife. SECTION 3: PHARAOH’S TOMB CONT. https://youtu.be/uUPY71S9avo?list=UUQnbHbBc8d_a_nFrGhVPe7w (3 MINS.) https://youtu.be/lotbZQ55SgU (6.3O MINS.) https://youtu.be/K7HJNBiGcP0 DIGGING FOR THE TRUTH-PYRAMIDS (44 MINS.) SECTION 4: ANCIENT EGYPTIAN CULTURE OBJECTIVES • FIND OUT ABOUT THE EVERYDAY LIFE OF THE ANCIENT EGYPTIANS. • LEARN ABOUT WRITING IN ANCIENT EGYPT. • DISCOVER ADVANCES MADE BY THE EGYPTIANS IN SCIENCE AND MEDICINE. SECTION 4: ANCIENT EGYPTIAN CULTURE VOCABULARY • Hieroglyphics – pictures and other written symbols that stand for ideas, things, or sounds. • Papyrus –an early form of paper made from a reed plant found in the marshy areas of the Nile delta, the plant used to make this paper. • Astronomer –a scientist who studies the stars and other objects in the sky. SECTION 4: THE LIVES OF THE EGYPTIANS • Most of what we know about Egyptian life is based on paintings that cover the walls of tombs and temples and written records. • Historians use art to learn about Egypt’s social class. • People could rise in Egypt’s social classes through service to the Pharaoh. – Pharaoh – Priests, members of pharaoh’s court, nobles (small upper class) – Merchants, skilled workers (middle class) – Peasants (lowest class, also the largest) SECTION 4: THE LIVES OF THE EGYPTIANS CONT. • Prisoners captured in wars were made slaves. • Slaves formed a separate class that wasn’t very large. • Egyptian slaves had rights. – They could own personal items – They could inherit land from their masters – They could be set free • Peasants could own land, but usually worked the land of wealthier people. • However, during the flood season, they worked on roads, temples, and other building projects. SECTION 4: THE LIVES OF THE EGYPTIANS CONT. • As soon as the flood was over, they had to plant the fields, working quickly while the soil was still moist. • One farmer plowed the black earth with a team of oxen, while another followed behind, scattering seeds. • Harvest was the busiest season for Egypt’s peasants. • All men, women, and Children gathered the crops of wheat or barley, working from sunrise to sunset. • Once the crop was gather, the villagers feasted, offering food and drink to the gods in thanks. SECTION 4: THE LIVES OF THE EGYPTIANS CONT. • Egyptian women – Looked upon as living models of Isis, the wife of Osiris – They had most of the rights men had – They could own property, run businesses, and enter legal contracts – Traveled about freely – Supervised farm work or hunting – Formed roles of priestess to dancer • Noble Women (higher class) – In charge of temples or religious rites – Used their position to influence the pharaoh – Acted as regents (until the pharaoh was old enough to rule on his own) SECTION 4: WRITING IN ANCIENT EGYPT • In ancient Egypt, as in Mesopotamia, ideas were written down in picture like symbols called hieroglyphs. – Some pictures stand for ideas or things, other pictures stand for sound • Egyptians began to use hieroglyphs to keep track of the kingdom’s growing wealth. • At first, the Egyptians wrote on clay and stone, as the Sumerians did. • For convenience, they moved to papyrus, an early form of paper made from a reed found in the marshy areas of the Nile delta. https://youtu.be/mBnEMUvlNvI how to make papyrus SECTION 4: WRITING IN ANCIENT EGYPT CONT. • The meaning of Egypt’s hieroglyphics writing was lost in the 400s A.D. • Scholars couldn’t read the pictures. • In 1799, a soldier digging a fort near the Nile found a large black stone with three different types of writing on it. – 1. the upper part showed hieroglyphs – 2. the middle part showed a later Egyptian script called demotic – 3. the lower part showed Greek letters • This stone is called the Rosetta stone because it was found near Rosetta, a city in the Nile delta. • The 3 texts on the stone had all the same meaning. SECTION 4: WRITING IN ANCIENT EGYPT CONT. • Although it was difficult to use the Greek letters to read the hieroglyphs, in 1820s, a young French scholar, Jean Francois Champollion, finally figured it out. • This opened a new window into the world of ancient Egypt. SECTION 4: WRITING IN ANCIENT EGYPT CONT. • Math– Egyptians could add, subtract, multiply, and divide – They also used simple fractions – Used math to measure stone for pyramids – Used geometry to measure area to figure taxes of a plot of land SECTION 4: WRITING IN ANCIENT EGYPT CONT. • Medicine– Religion and medicine were closely related – Doctors were specially trained priests who used religious practices and their knowledge of illnesses to try to heal the sick. – Probably because of their work on mummies, the ancient Egyptians knew a great deal about the body, making them able to perform surgery , set broken bones, and treat minor injuries. – Understood herbalism, the practice of creating medicines from plates, to help ease everyday illnesses such as stomachaches and headaches. – Mothers prepared their own home remedies, or cures, to reduce children’s fevers. – Egyptians wrote medical knowledge on papyrus, later used by the ancient Greeks and Romans.