Ancient Egypt: History in an Hour

Ancient Egypt: History in an Hour
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Love history? Know your stuff with History in an Hour.Learn about the Egyptian gods, mummification and how the Egyptians built the only wonder of the ancient world still standing – the Pyramids of Giza.Exploring the historic rise of Egyptian civilizationand its continued influence on the world today, Ancient Egypt in an Hour is an excellent companion to a mysterious and enthralling period of history.Know your stuff: discover ancient Egypt in just one hour.

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Ancient Egypt

History in an Hour

Anthony Holmes


About History in an Hour

History in an Hour is a series of ebooks to help the reader learn the basic facts of a given subject area. Everything you need to know is presented in a straightforward narrative and in chronological order. No embedded links to divert your attention, nor a daunting book of 600 pages with a 35-page introduction. Just straight in, to the point, sixty minutes, done. Then, having absorbed the basics, you may feel inspired to explore further.

Give yourself sixty minutes and see what you can learn…

To find out more visit: http://historyinanhour.com or follow us on twitter: http://twitter.com/historyinanhour

Contents

Cover

Title Page

Introduction

Ancient Egyptian Civilization

The Dynastic Period: c.4000 BC–3100 BC

The Old Kingdom: 2649 BC–2152 BC

First Intermediate Period: 2160 BC–2055 BC

The Middle Kingdom: 2055 BC–1650 BC

Second Intermediate Period: c.1650 BC–1550 BC

The New Kingdom: 1550 BC–1069 BC

Third Intermediate Period: 1075 BC–664 BC

The Late Period: 664 BC–332 BC

The Ptolemaic Period: 332 BC–30 BC

The Legacy of Ancient Egypt

Appendix 1: Key Players

Appendix 2: Timeline of Ancient Egypt

Copyright

Got Another Hour?

About the Publisher

Introduction

The history and mystery of ancient Egypt stirs our imagination and stimulates our desire to understand more about the most influential civilization of the pre-Christian era. The ancient Egyptians preserved their dead in decorated tombs and built magnificent monuments, while other nascent cultures still dressed in skins and lived in rudimentary dwellings. They built in stone, and their choice of construction material has been a boon to those who have tried to unravel the 3,000-year history of their civilization. Painted and inscribed rock-cut tombs, sandstone temples and granite statues have provided us with a comprehensive understanding of their life and culture.

The Egyptians believed in strange animal-headed gods; they mummified their dead in preparation for their journey into the afterlife; they built imposing and enduring stone structures using only Bronze Age tools and their country remained virtually inviolate, unconquered and unchanged for over more than three millennia.

Where did they come from? How did they achieve and maintain a cohesive cultural identity over all that time? What secrets have already been discovered by archaeologists and what revelations might still be waiting to be found hidden in the desert sands of Egypt? Finally, what legacy did they leave to us as we enter the third millennium AD?

This, in an hour, is Ancient Egypt.

Ancient Egyptian Civilization

‘Egypt is the gift of the Nile’ wrote the Greek historian Herodotus in c.400 BC. The River Nile was much more than a reliable source of water; the annual inundation resulting from melting snow and the rainfall in the highlands of Ethiopia brought with it the life-giving silt and nutrients that created the fertile strip of land along its banks. The Nile was the magnet that drew disparate tribes from the surrounding areas and, with its abundance of fish and water fowl, was also the reason for the consolidation of fragmented tribes into the nation called Egypt.

From c.4000 BC to the present day, the inhabited regions of Egypt have been restricted to areas of arable land plus some coastal towns and isolated oases in the Sahara Desert. The populated land is divided into two main areas. The first is the triangular delta region to the north where the Nile splits into branches and eventually flows into the Mediterranean Sea. The second area is the region to the south of the delta along the Nile to Egypt’s southern border with Sudan.

The Nile flows from south to north. To journey ‘upstream’ means to travel south, consequently the delta region to the north was called Lower Egypt. The region to the south, along the upper reaches of the Nile, was called Upper Egypt. In our modern convention of drawing maps with north at the top of the page, these names might seem back to front.

Once a society was established along its banks, the Egyptians used the Nile as their main artery for transport. Ships used the river’s strong current to voyage from south to north. On the return voyage, they hoisted a sail to capture the prevailing wind from the north and augmented their progress with oars to propel the vessels upstream to the south.

Egypt was not always as dry as it is now. Archaeological evidence revealed the existence of human habitation in south-west Egypt as early as c.8000 BC. During that period, the Egyptian climate was far wetter than it is today. Dramatic climate change around 8000 BC saw the gradual desertification of the grasslands and the formation of the Sahara Desert.


Ancient Egypt

The climate change that dried out western Egypt resulted in the rain moving eastwards. Tribes from the desiccated grasslands moved to the Nile valley and the delta, to take advantage of the seasonal flood of the Nile. The staple foods were already established as wheat and barley, with flax providing the raw material for fabric and rope production.



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