Ancient Egypt
Ancient Egypt, civilization in
northeastern Africa dating from the 3rd millennium bc. Its many
achievements, preserved in its art and monuments, hold a
fascination that continues to grow as archaeological finds
expose its secrets. This article focuses on Egypt from its
prehistory up to the Islamic conquest in the 7th century ad. For
subsequent history through the contemporary period, see Egypt.
Introduction to ancient Egyptian civilization
Life in ancient Egypt Ancient Egypt can be thought of as an oasis
in the desert of northeastern Africa, dependent on the annual
inundation of the Nile River to support its agricultural
population. The country’s chief wealth came from the fertile
floodplain of the Nile valley, where the river flows between
bands of limestone hills, and the Nile delta, in which it fans
into several branches north of present-day Cairo. Between the
floodplain and the hills is a variable band of low desert that
supported a certain amount of game. The Nile was Egypt’s sole
transportation artery.
The First Cataract at Aswān,
where the riverbed is turned into rapids by a belt of granite,
was the country’s only well-defined boundary within a populated
area. To the south lay the far less hospitable area of Nubia, in
which the river flowed through low sandstone hills that in most
regions left only a very narrow strip of cultivable land. Nubia
was significant for Egypt’s periodic southward expansion and for
access to products from farther south. West of the Nile was the
arid Sahara, broken by a chain of oases some 125 to 185 miles
(200 to 300 km) from the river and lacking in all other
resources except for a few minerals. The eastern desert, between
the Nile and the Red Sea, was more important, for it supported a
small nomadic population and desert game, contained numerous
mineral deposits, including gold, and was the route to the Red
Sea.
To the northeast was the
Isthmus of Suez. It offered the principal route for contact with
Sinai, from which came turquoise and possibly copper, and with
southwestern Asia, Egypt’s most important area of cultural
interaction, from which were received stimuli for technical
development and cultivars for crops. Immigrants and ultimately
invaders crossed the isthmus into Egypt, attracted by the
country’s stability and prosperity. From the late 2nd millennium
bc onward, numerous attacks were made by land and sea along the
eastern Mediterranean coast.
At first, relatively little
cultural contact came by way of the Mediterranean Sea, but from
an early date Egypt maintained trading relations with the
Lebanese port of Byblos (present-day Jbail). Egypt needed few
imports to maintain basic standards of living, but good timber
was essential and not available within the country, so it
usually was obtained from Lebanon. Minerals such as obsidian and
lapis lazuli were imported from as far afield as Anatolia and
Afghanistan.
Agriculture centred on the
cultivation of cereal crops, chiefly emmer wheat (Triticum
dicoccum) and barley (Hordeum vulgare). The fertility of the
land and general predictability of the inundation ensured very
high productivity from a single annual crop. This productivity
made it possible to store large surpluses against crop failures
and also formed the chief basis of Egyptian wealth, which was,
until the creation of the large empires of the 1st millennium bc,
the greatest of any state in the ancient Middle East.
Basin irrigation was achieved
by simple means, and multiple cropping was not feasible until
much later times, except perhaps in the lakeside area of Al-Fayyūm.
As the river deposited alluvial silt, raising the level of the
floodplain, and land was reclaimed from marsh, the area
available for cultivation in the Nile valley and delta
increased, while pastoralism declined slowly. In addition to
grain crops, fruit and vegetables were important, the latter
being irrigated year-round in small plots; fish was also vital
to the diet. Papyrus, which grew abundantly in marshes, was
gathered wild and in later times was cultivated. It may have
been used as a food crop, and it certainly was used to make
rope, matting, and sandals. Above all, it provided the
characteristic Egyptian writing material, which, with cereals,
was the country’s chief export in Late period Egyptian and then
Greco-Roman times.
Cattle may have been
domesticated in northeastern Africa. The Egyptians kept many as
draft animals and for their various products, showing some of
the interest in breeds and individuals that is found to this day
in the Sudan and eastern Africa. The donkey, which was the
principal transport animal (the camel did not become common
until Roman times), was probably domesticated in the region. The
native Egyptian breed of sheep became extinct in the 2nd
millennium bc and was replaced by an Asiatic breed. Sheep were
primarily a source of meat; their wool was rarely used. Goats
were more numerous than sheep. Pigs were also raised and eaten.
Ducks and geese were kept for food, and many of the vast numbers
of wild and migratory birds found in Egypt were hunted and
trapped. Desert game, principally various species of antelope
and ibex, were hunted by the elite; it was a royal privilege to
hunt lions and wild cattle. Pets included dogs, which were also
used for hunting, cats (domesticated in Egypt), and monkeys. In
addition, the Egyptians had a great interest in, and knowledge
of, most species of mammals, birds, reptiles, and fish in their
environment.
Most Egyptians were probably
descended from settlers who moved to the Nile valley in
prehistoric times, with population increase coming through
natural fertility. In various periods there were immigrants from
Nubia, Libya, and especially the Middle East. They were
historically significant and also may have contributed to
population growth, but their numbers are unknown. Most people
lived in villages and towns in the Nile valley and delta.
Dwellings were normally built of mud brick and have long since
disappeared beneath the rising water table or beneath modern
town sites, thereby obliterating evidence for settlement
patterns. In antiquity, as now, the most favoured location of
settlements was on slightly raised ground near the riverbank,
where transport and water were easily available and flooding was
unlikely. Until the 1st millennium bc, Egypt was not urbanized
to the same extent as Mesopotamia. Instead, a few centres,
notably Memphis and Thebes, attracted population and
particularly the elite, while the rest of the people were
relatively evenly spread over the land. The size of the
population has been estimated as having risen from 1 to 1.5
million in the 3rd millennium bc to perhaps twice that number in
the late 2nd millennium and 1st millennium bc. (Much higher
levels of population were reached in Greco-Roman times.)
Nearly all of the people were
engaged in agriculture and were probably tied to the land. In
theory all the land belonged to the king, although in practice
those living on it could not easily be removed and some
categories of land could be bought and sold. Land was assigned
to high officials to provide them with an income, and most
tracts required payment of substantial dues to the state, which
had a strong interest in keeping the land in agricultural use.
Abandoned land was taken back into state ownership and
reassigned for cultivation. The people who lived on and worked
the land were not free to leave and were obliged to work it, but
they were not slaves; most paid a proportion of their produce to
major officials. Free citizens who worked the land on their own
behalf did emerge; terms applied to them tended originally to
refer to poor people, but these agriculturalists were probably
not poor. Slavery was never common, being restricted to captives
and foreigners or to people who were forced by poverty or debt
to sell themselves into service. Slaves sometimes even married
members of their owners’ families, so that in the long term
those belonging to households tended to be assimilated into free
society. In the New Kingdom (from about 1539 to 1075 bc), large
numbers of captive slaves were acquired by major state
institutions or incorporated into the army. Punitive treatment
of foreign slaves or of native fugitives from their obligations
included forced labour, exile (in, for example, the oases of the
western desert), or compulsory enlistment in dangerous mining
expeditions. Even nonpunitive employment such as quarrying in
the desert was hazardous. The official record of one expedition
shows a mortality rate of more than 10 percent.
Just as the Egyptians optimized
agricultural production with simple means, their crafts and
techniques, many of which originally came from Asia, were raised
to extraordinary levels of perfection. The Egyptians’ most
striking technical achievement, massive stone building, also
exploited the potential of a centralized state to mobilize a
huge labour force, which was made available by efficient
agricultural practices. Some of the technical and organizational
skills involved were remarkable. The construction of the great
pyramids of the 4th dynasty (c. 2575–c. 2465 bc) has yet to be
fully explained and would be a major challenge to this day. This
expenditure of skill contrasts with sparse evidence of an
essentially neolithic way of living for the rural population of
the time, while the use of flint tools persisted even in urban
environments at least until the late 2nd millennium bc. Metal
was correspondingly scarce, much of it being used for prestige
rather than everyday purposes.
In urban and elite contexts,
the Egyptian ideal was the nuclear family, but, on the land and
even within the central ruling group, there is evidence for
extended families. Egyptians were monogamous, and the choice of
partners in marriage, for which no formal ceremony or legal
sanction is known, did not follow a set pattern. Consanguineous
marriage was not practiced during the Dynastic period, except
for the occasional marriage of a brother and sister within the
royal family, and that practice may have been open only to kings
or heirs to the throne. Divorce was in theory easy, but it was
costly. Women had a legal status only marginally inferior to
that of men. They could own and dispose of property in their own
right, and they could initiate divorce and other legal
proceedings. They hardly ever held administrative office but
increasingly were involved in religious cults as priestesses or
“chantresses.” Married women held the title “mistress of the
house,” the precise significance of which is unknown. Lower down
the social scale, they probably worked on the land as well as in
the house.
The uneven distribution of
wealth, labour, and technology was related to the only partly
urban character of society, especially in the 3rd millennium bc.
The country’s resources were not fed into numerous provincial
towns but instead were concentrated to great effect around the
capital—itself a dispersed string of settlements rather than a
city—and focused on the central figure in society, the king. In
the 3rd and early 2nd millennia, the elite ideal, expressed in
the decoration of private tombs, was manorial and rural. Not
until much later did Egyptians develop a more pronouncedly urban
character.
The king and ideology:
administration, art, and writing
In cosmogonical terms, Egyptian
society consisted of a descending hierarchy of the gods, the
king, the blessed dead, and humanity (by which was understood
chiefly the Egyptians). Of these groups, only the king was
single, and hence he was individually more prominent than any of
the others. A text that summarizes the king’s role states that
he “is on earth for ever and ever, judging mankind and
propitiating the gods, and setting order [maʿat, a central
concept] in place of disorder. He gives offerings to the gods
and mortuary offerings to the spirits [the blessed dead].” The
king was imbued with divine essence, but not in any simple or
unqualified sense. His divinity accrued to him from his office
and was reaffirmed through rituals, but it was vastly inferior
to that of major gods; he was god rather than man by virtue of
his potential, which was immeasurably greater than that of any
human being. To humanity, he manifested the gods on earth, a
conception that was elaborated in a complex web of metaphor and
doctrine; less directly, he represented humanity to the gods.
The text quoted above also gives great prominence to the dead,
who were the object of a cult for the living and who could
intervene in human affairs; in many periods the chief visible
expenditure and focus of display of nonroyal individuals, as of
the king, was on provision for the tomb and the next world.
Egyptian kings are commonly called pharaohs, following the usage
of the Old Testament. The term pharaoh, however, is derived from
the Egyptian per ʿaa (“great estate”) and dates to the
designation of the royal palace as an institution. This term for
palace was used increasingly from about 1400 bc as a way of
referring to the living king; in earlier times it was rare.
Rules of succession to the
kingship are poorly understood. The common conception that the
heir to the throne had to marry his predecessor’s oldest
daughter has been disproved; kingship did not pass through the
female line. The choice of queen seems to have been free; often
the queen was a close relative of the king, but she also might
be unrelated to him. In the New Kingdom, for which evidence is
abundant, each king had a queen with distinctive titles, as well
as a number of minor wives.
Sons of the chief queen seem to
have been the preferred successors to the throne, but other sons
could also become king. In many cases the successor was the
eldest (surviving) son, and such a pattern of inheritance agrees
with more general Egyptian values, but often he was some other
relative or was completely unrelated. New Kingdom texts
describe, after the event, how kings were appointed heirs either
by their predecessors or by divine oracles, and such may have
been the pattern when there was no clear successor. Dissent and
conflict are suppressed from public sources. From the Late
period (664–332 bc), when sources are more diverse and patterns
less rigid, numerous usurpations and interruptions to the
succession are known; they probably had many forerunners.
The king’s position changed
gradually from that of an absolute monarch at the centre of a
small ruling group made up mostly of his kin to that of the head
of a bureaucratic state—in which his rule was still
absolute—based on officeholding and, in theory, on free
competition and merit. By the 5th dynasty, fixed institutions
had been added to the force of tradition and the regulation of
personal contact as brakes on autocracy, but the charismatic and
superhuman power of the king remained vital.
The elite of administrative
officeholders received their positions and commissions from the
king, whose general role as judge over humanity they put into
effect. They commemorated their own justice and concern for
others, especially their inferiors, and recorded their own
exploits and ideal conduct of life in inscriptions for others to
see. Thus, the position of the elite was affirmed by reference
to the king, to their prestige among their peers, and to their
conduct toward their subordinates, justifying to some extent the
fact that they—and still more the king—appropriated much of the
country’s production.
These attitudes and their
potential dissemination through society counterbalanced
inequality, but how far they were accepted cannot be known. The
core group of wealthy officeholders numbered at most a few
hundred, and the administrative class of minor officials and
scribes, most of whom could not afford to leave memorials or
inscriptions, perhaps 5,000. With their dependents, these two
groups formed perhaps 5 percent of the early population.
Monuments and inscriptions commemorated no more than one in a
thousand people.
According to royal ideology,
the king appointed the elite on the basis of merit, and in
ancient conditions of high mortality the elite had to be open to
recruits from outside. There was, however, also an ideal that a
son should succeed his father. In periods of weak central
control this principle predominated, and in the Late period the
whole society became more rigid and stratified.
Writing was a major instrument
in the centralization of the Egyptian state and its
self-presentation. The two basic types of writing—hieroglyphs,
which were used for monuments and display, and the cursive form
known as hieratic—were invented at much the same time in late
predynastic Egypt (c. 3000 bc). Writing was chiefly used for
administration, and until about 2650 bc no continuous texts are
preserved; the only extant literary texts written before the
early Middle Kingdom (c. 1950 bc) seem to have been lists of
important traditional information and possibly medical
treatises. The use and potential of writing were restricted both
by the rate of literacy, which was probably well below 1
percent, and by expectations of what writing might do.
Hieroglyphic writing was publicly identified with Egypt. Perhaps
because of this association with a single powerful state, its
language, and its culture, Egyptian writing was seldom adapted
to write other languages; in this it contrasts with the
cuneiform script of the relatively uncentralized, multilingual
Mesopotamia. Nonetheless, Egyptian hieroglyphs probably served
in the middle of the 2nd millennium bc as the model from which
the alphabet, ultimately the most widespread of all writing
systems, evolved.
The dominant visible legacy of
ancient Egypt is in works of architecture and representational
art. Until the Middle Kingdom, most of these were mortuary:
royal tomb complexes, including pyramids and mortuary temples,
and private tombs. There were also temples dedicated to the cult
of the gods throughout the country, but most of these were
modest structures. From the beginning of the New Kingdom,
temples of the gods became the principal monuments; royal
palaces and private houses, which are very little known, were
less important. Temples and tombs were ideally executed in stone
with relief decoration on their walls and were filled with stone
and wooden statuary, inscribed and decorated stelae
(freestanding small stone monuments), and, in their inner areas,
composite works of art in precious materials. The design of the
monuments and their decoration dates in essence to the beginning
of the historical period and presents an ideal, sanctified
cosmos. Little in it is related to the everyday world, and,
except in palaces, works of art may have been rare outside
temples and tombs. Decoration may record real historical events,
rituals, or the official titles and careers of individuals, but
its prime significance is the more general assertion of values,
and the information presented must be evaluated for its
plausibility and compared with other evidence. Some of the
events depicted in relief on royal monuments were certainly
iconic rather than historically factual.
The highly distinctive Egyptian
method of rendering nature and artistic style was also a
creation of early times and can be seen in most works of
Egyptian art. In content, these are hierarchically ordered so
that the most important figures, the gods and the king, are
shown together, while before the New Kingdom gods seldom occur
in the same context as humanity. The decoration of a nonroyal
tomb characteristically shows the tomb’s owner with his
subordinates, who administer his land and present him with its
produce. The tomb owner is also typically depicted hunting in
the marshes, a favourite pastime of the elite that may
additionally symbolize passage into the next world. The king and
the gods are absent in nonroyal tombs, and, until the New
Kingdom, overtly religious matter is restricted to rare scenes
of mortuary rituals and journeys and to textual formulas. Temple
reliefs, in which king and gods occur freely, show the king
defeating his enemies, hunting, and especially offering to the
gods, who in turn confer benefits upon him. Human beings are
present at most as minor figures supporting the king. On both
royal and nonroyal monuments, an ideal world is represented in
which all are beautiful and everything goes well; only minor
figures may have physical imperfections.
This artistic presentation of
values originated at the same time as writing but before the
latter could record continuous texts or complex statements. Some
of the earliest continuous texts of the 4th and 5th dynasties
show an awareness of an ideal past that the present could only
aspire to emulate. A few “biographies” of officials allude to
strife, but more-nuanced discussion occurs first in literary
texts of the Middle Kingdom. The texts consist of stories,
dialogues, lamentations, and especially instructions on how to
live a good life, and they supply a rich commentary on the more
one-dimensional rhetoric of public inscriptions. Literary works
were written in all the main later phases of the Egyptian
language—Middle Egyptian; the “classical” form of the Middle and
New kingdoms, continuing in copies and inscriptions into Roman
times; Late Egyptian, from the 19th dynasty to about 700 bc; and
the demotic script from the 4th century bc to the 3rd century
ad—but many of the finest and most complex are among the
earliest.
Literary works also included
treatises on mathematics, astronomy, medicine, and magic, as
well as various religious texts and canonical lists that
classified the categories of creation (probably the earliest
genre, dating back to the beginning of the Old Kingdom, c. 2575
bc, or even a little earlier). Among these texts, little is
truly systematic, a notable exception being a medical treatise
on wounds. The absence of systematic inquiry contrasts with
Egyptian practical expertise in such fields as surveying, which
was used both for orienting and planning buildings to remarkably
fine tolerances and for the regular division of fields after the
annual inundation of the Nile; the Egyptians also had surveyed
and established the dimensions of their entire country by the
beginning of the Middle Kingdom. These precise tasks required
both knowledge of astronomy and highly ingenious techniques, but
they apparently were achieved with little theoretical analysis.
Whereas in the earliest periods
Egypt seems to have been administered almost as the personal
estate of the king, by the central Old Kingdom it had been
divided into about 35 nomes, or provinces, each with its own
officials. Administration was concentrated at the capital, where
most of the central elite lived and died. In the nonmonetary
Egyptian economy, its essential functions were the collection,
storage, and redistribution of produce; the drafting and
organization of manpower for specialized labour, probably
including irrigation and flood protection works, and major state
projects; and the supervision of legal matters. Administration
and law were not fully distinct, and both depended ultimately on
the king. The settlement of disputes was in part an
administrative task, for which the chief guiding criterion was
precedent, while contractual relations were regulated by the use
of standard formulas. State and temple both partook in
redistribution and held massive reserves of grain; temples were
economic as well as religious institutions. In periods of
decentralization similar functions were exercised by local
grandees. Markets had only a minor role, and craftsmen were
employees who normally traded only what they produced in their
free time. The wealthiest officials escaped this pattern to some
extent by receiving their income in the form of land and
maintaining large establishments that included their own
specialized workers.
The essential medium of
administration was writing, reinforced by personal authority
over the nonliterate 99 percent of the population; texts
exhorting the young to be scribes emphasize that the scribe
commanded while the rest did the work. Most officials (almost
all of whom were men) held several offices and accumulated more
as they progressed up a complex ranked hierarchy, at the top of
which was the vizier, the chief administrator and judge. The
vizier reported to the king, who in theory retained certain
powers, such as authority to invoke the death penalty,
absolutely.
Before the Middle Kingdom, the
civil and the military were not sharply distinguished. Military
forces consisted of local militias under their own officials and
included foreigners, and nonmilitary expeditions to extract
minerals from the desert or to transport heavy loads through the
country were organized in similar fashion. Until the New Kingdom
there was no separate priesthood. Holders of civil office also
had priestly titles, and priests had civil titles. Often
priesthoods were sinecures: their chief significance was the
income they brought. The same was true of the minor civil titles
accumulated by high officials. At a lower level, minor
priesthoods were held on a rotating basis by “laymen” who served
every fourth month in temples. State and temple were so closely
interconnected that there was no real tension between them
before the late New Kingdom.
Sources, calendars, and
chronology
For all but the last century of Egyptian prehistory,
whose neolithic and later phases are normally termed
“predynastic,” evidence is exclusively archaeological; later
native sources have only mythical allusions to such remote
times. The Dynastic period of native Egyptian rulers is
generally divided into 30 dynasties, following the Aegyptiaca of
the Greco-Egyptian writer Manetho of Sebennytos (early 3rd
century bc), excerpts of which are preserved in the works of
later writers. Manetho apparently organized his dynasties by the
capital cities from which they ruled, but several of his
divisions also reflect political or dynastic changes—that is,
changes of the party holding power. He gave the lengths of reign
of kings or of entire dynasties and grouped the dynasties into
several periods, but, because of textual corruption and a
tendency toward inflation, Manetho’s figures cannot be used to
reconstruct chronology without supporting evidence and analysis.
Manetho’s prime sources were
earlier Egyptian king lists, the organization of which he
imitated. The most significant preserved example of a king list
is the Turin Papyrus (Turin Canon), a fragmentary document in
the Egyptian Museum in Turin, Italy, which originally listed all
kings of the 1st through the 17th dynasty, preceded by a
mythical dynasty of gods and one of the “spirits, followers of
Horus.” Like Manetho’s later work, the Turin document gave reign
lengths for individual kings, as well as totals for some
dynasties and longer multidynastic periods.
In early periods the kings’
years of reign were not consecutively numbered but were named
for salient events, and lists were made of the names.
More-extensive details were added to the lists for the 4th and
5th dynasties, when dates were assigned according to biennial
cattle censuses numbered through each king’s reign. Fragments of
such lists are preserved on the Palermo Stone, an inscribed
piece of basalt (at the Regional Museum of Archaeology in
Palermo, Italy), and related pieces in the Cairo Museum and
University College London; these are probably all parts of a
single copy of an original document of the 5th dynasty.
The Egyptians did not date by
eras longer than the reign of a single king, so a historical
framework must be created from totals of reign lengths, which
are then related to astronomical data that may allow whole
periods to be fixed precisely. This is done through references
to astronomical events and correlations with the three calendars
in use in Egyptian antiquity. All dating was by a civil
calendar, derived from the lunar calendar, which was introduced
in the first half of the 3rd millennium bc. The civil year had
365 days and started in principle when Sirius, or the Dog
Star—also known in Greek as Sothis (Ancient Egyptian:
Sopdet)—became visible above the horizon after a period of
absence, which at that time occurred some weeks before the Nile
began to rise for the inundation. Every 4 years the civil year
advanced one day in relation to the solar year (with 3651/4
days), and after a cycle of about 1,460 years it would again
agree with the solar calendar. Religious ceremonies were
organized according to two lunar calendars that had months of 29
or 30 days, with extra, intercalary months every three years or
so.
Five mentions of the rising of
Sirius (generally known as Sothic dates) are preserved in texts
from the 3rd to the 1st millennium, but by themselves these
references cannot yield an absolute chronology. Such a
chronology can be computed from larger numbers of lunar dates
and cross-checked from solutions for the observations of Sirius.
Various chronologies are in use, however, differing by up to 40
years for the 2nd millennium bc and by more than a century for
the beginning of the 1st dynasty. The chronologies offered in
most publications up to 1985 have been thrown into some doubt
for the Middle and New kingdoms by a restudy of the evidence for
the Sothic and especially the lunar dates. For the 1st
millennium, dates in the Third Intermediate period are
approximate; a supposed fixed year of 945 bc, based on links
with the Old Testament, turns out to be variable by a number of
years. Late period dates (664–332 bc) are almost completely
fixed. Before the 12th dynasty, plausible dates for the 11th can
be computed backward, but for earlier times dates are
approximate. A total of 955 years for the 1st through the 8th
dynasty in the Turin Canon has been used to assign a date of
about 3100 bc for the beginning of the 1st dynasty, but this
requires excessive average reign lengths, and an estimate of
2925 bc is preferable. Radiocarbon and other scientific dating
of samples from Egyptian sites have not improved on, or
convincingly contested, computed dates. More-recent work on
radiocarbon dates from Egypt does, however, yield results
encouragingly close to dates computed in the manner described
above.
King lists and astronomy give
only a chronological framework. A vast range of archaeological
and inscriptional sources for Egyptian history survive, but none
of them were produced with the interpretation of history in
mind. No consistent political history of ancient Egypt can be
written. The evidence is very unevenly distributed; there are
gaps of many decades; and in the 3rd millennium bc no continuous
royal text recording historical events was inscribed. Private
biographical inscriptions of all periods from the 5th dynasty
(c. 2465–c. 2325 bc) to the Roman conquest (30 bc) record
individual involvement in events but are seldom concerned with
their general significance. Royal inscriptions from the 12th
dynasty (1938–1756 bc) to Ptolemaic times aim to present a
king’s actions according to an overall conception of “history,”
in which he is the re-creator of the order of the world and the
guarantor of its continued stability or its expansion. The goal
of his action is to serve not humanity but the gods, while
nonroyal individuals may relate their own successes to the king
in the first instance and sometimes to the gods. Only in the
decentralized intermediate periods did the nonroyal recount
internal strife. Kings did not mention dissent in their texts
unless it came at the beginning of a reign or a phase of action
and was quickly and triumphantly overcome in a reaffirmation of
order. Such a schema often dominates the factual content of
texts, and it creates a strong bias toward recording foreign
affairs, because in official ideology there is no internal
dissent after the initial turmoil is over. “History” is as much
a ritual as a process of events; as a ritual, its protagonists
are royal and divine. Only in the Late period did these
conventions weaken significantly. Even then, they were retained
in full for temple reliefs, where they kept their vitality into
Roman times.
Despite this idealization, the
Egyptians were well aware of history, as is clear from their
king lists. They divided the past into periods comparable to
those used by Egyptologists and evaluated the rulers not only as
the founders of epochs but also in terms of their salient
exploits or, especially in folklore, their bad qualities. The
Demotic Chronicle, a text of the Ptolemaic period, purports to
foretell the bad end that would befall numerous Late period
kings as divine retribution for their wicked actions.
The recovery and study of
ancient Egypt
European interest in ancient Egypt was strong in
Roman times and revived in the Renaissance, when the wealth of
Egyptian remains in the city of Rome was supplemented by
information provided by visitors to Egypt itself. Views of Egypt
were dominated by the classical tradition that it was the land
of ancient wisdom; this wisdom was thought to inhere in the
hieroglyphic script, which was believed to impart profound
symbolic ideas, not—as it in fact does—the sounds and words of
texts. Between the 15th and 18th centuries, Egypt had a minor
but significant position in general views of antiquity, and its
monuments gradually became better known through the work of
scholars in Europe and travelers in the country itself; the
finest publications of the latter were by Richard Pococke,
Frederik Ludwig Norden, and Carsten Niebuhr, all of whose works
in the 18th century helped to stimulate an Egyptian revival in
European art and architecture. Coptic, the Christian successor
of the ancient Egyptian language, was studied from the 17th
century, notably by Athanasius Kircher, for its potential to
provide the key to Egyptian.
Napoleon I’s expedition to and
short-lived conquest of Egypt in 1798 was the culmination of
18th-century interest in the East. The expedition was
accompanied by a team of scholars who recorded the ancient and
contemporary country, issuing in 1809–28 the Description de
l’Égypte, the most comprehensive study to be made before the
decipherment of the hieroglyphic script. The renowned Rosetta
Stone, which bears a decree of Ptolemy V Epiphanes in
hieroglyphs, demotic script, and Greek alphabetic characters,
was discovered during the expedition; it was ceded to the
British after the French capitulation in Egypt and became the
property of the British Museum in London. This document greatly
assisted the decipherment, accomplished by Jean-François
Champollion in 1822.
The Egyptian language revealed
by the decipherment and decades of subsequent study is a member
of the Afro-Asiatic (formerly Hamito-Semitic) language family.
Egyptian is closest to the family’s Semitic branch but is
distinctive in many respects. During several millennia it
changed greatly. The script does not write vowels, and because
Greek forms for royal names were known from Manetho long before
the Egyptian forms became available, those used to this day are
a mixture of Greek and Egyptian.
In the first half of the 19th
century, vast numbers of antiquities were exported from Egypt,
forming the nucleus of collections in many major museums. These
were removed rather than excavated, inflicting, together with
the economic development of the country, colossal damage on
ancient sites. At the same time, many travelers and scholars
visited the country and recorded the monuments. The most
important, and remarkably accurate, record was produced by the
Prussian expedition led by Karl Richard Lepsius, in 1842–45,
which explored sites as far south as the central Sudan.
In the mid-19th century,
Egyptology developed as a subject in France and in Prussia. The
Antiquities Service and a museum of Egyptian antiquities were
established in Egypt by the French Egyptologist Auguste
Mariette, a great excavator who attempted to preserve sites from
destruction, and the Prussian Heinrich Brugsch, who made great
progress in the interpretation of texts of many periods and
published the first major Egyptian dictionary. In 1880 Flinders
(later Sir Flinders) Petrie began more than 40 years of
methodical excavation, which created an archaeological framework
for all the chief periods of Egyptian culture except for remote
prehistory. Petrie was the initiator of much in archaeological
method, but he was later surpassed by George Andrew Reisner, who
excavated for American institutions from 1899 to 1937. The
greatest late 19th-century Egyptologist was Adolf Erman of
Berlin, who put the understanding of the Egyptian language on a
sound basis and wrote general works that for the first time
organized what was known about the earlier periods.
Complete facsimile copies of
Egyptian monuments have been published since the 1890s,
providing a separate record that becomes more vital as the
originals decay. The pioneer of this scientific epigraphy was
James Henry Breasted of the Oriental Institute of the University
of Chicago, who began his work in 1905 and shortly thereafter
was joined by others. Many scholars are now engaged in
epigraphy.
In the first half of the 20th
century, some outstanding archaeological discoveries were made:
Howard Carter uncovered the tomb of Tutankhamen in 1922; Pierre
Montet found the tombs of 21st–22nd-dynasty kings at Tanis in
1939–44; and W.B. Emery and L.P. Kirwan found tombs of the
Ballānah culture (the 4th through the 6th century ad) in Nubia
in 1931–34. The last of these was part of the second survey of
Lower Nubia in 1929–34, which preceded the second raising of the
Aswān Dam. This was followed in the late 1950s and ’60s by an
international campaign to excavate and record sites in Egyptian
and Sudanese Nubia before the completion of the Aswān High Dam
in 1970. Lower Nubia is now one of the most thoroughly explored
archaeological regions of the world. Most of its many temples
have been moved, either to higher ground nearby, as happened to
Abu Simbel and Philae, or to quite different places, including
various foreign museums. The campaign also had the welcome
consequence of introducing a wide range of archaeological
expertise to Egypt, so that standards of excavation and
recording in the country have risen greatly.
Excavation and survey of great
importance have continued in many places. For example, at
Ṣaqqārah, part of the necropolis of the ancient city of Memphis,
new areas of the Sarapeum have been uncovered with rich finds,
and a major New Kingdom necropolis is being thoroughly explored.
The site of ancient Memphis itself has been systematically
surveyed; its position in relation to the ancient course of the
Nile has been established; and urban occupation areas have been
studied in detail for the first time.
Egyptology is, however, a
primarily interpretive subject. There have been outstanding
contributions—for example in art, for which Heinrich Schäfer
established the principles of the rendering of nature, and in
language. New light has been cast on texts, the majority of
which are written in a simple metre that can serve as the basis
of sophisticated literary works. The physical environment,
social structure, kingship, and religion are other fields in
which great advances have been made, while the reconstruction of
the outline of history is constantly being improved in detail.
The Predynastic and Early Dynastic periods
Predynastic Egypt
The peoples of predynastic Egypt were the
successors of the Paleolithic inhabitants of northeastern
Africa, who had spread over much of its area; during wet phases
they had left remains in regions as inhospitable as the Great
Sand Sea. The final desiccation of the Sahara was not complete
until the end of the 3rd millennium bc; over thousands of years
people must have migrated from there to the Nile valley, the
environment of which improved as the region dried out. In this
process the decisive change from the nomadic hunter-gatherer way
of life of Paleolithic times to settled agriculture has not so
far been identified. Some time after 5000 bc the raising of
crops was introduced, probably on a horticultural scale, in
small local cultures that seem to have penetrated southward
through Egypt into the oases and the Sudan. Several of the basic
food plants that were grown are native to the Middle East, so
the new techniques probably spread from there. No large-scale
migration need have been involved, and the cultures were at
first largely self-contained. The preserved evidence for them is
unrepresentative because it comes from the low desert, where
relatively few people lived; as was the case later, most people
probably settled in the valley and delta.
The earliest known Neolithic
cultures in Egypt have been found at Marimda Banī Salāma, on the
southwestern edge of the delta, and farther to the southwest, in
Al-Fayyūm. The site at Marimda Banī Salāma, which dates to the
6th–5th millennium bc, gives evidence of settlement and shows
that cereals were grown. In Al-Fayyūm, where evidence dates to
the 5th millennium bc, the settlements were near the shore of
Lake Qārūn, and the settlers engaged in fishing. Marimda is a
very large site that was occupied for many centuries. The
inhabitants lived in lightly built huts; they may have buried
their dead within their houses, but areas where burials have
been found may not have been occupied by dwellings at the same
time. Pottery was used in both cultures. In addition to these
Egyptian Neolithic cultures, others have been identified in the
Western Desert, in the Second Cataract area, and north of
Khartoum. Some of these are as early as the Egyptian ones, while
others overlapped with the succeeding Egyptian predynastic
cultures.
In Upper Egypt, between Asyūṭ
and Luxor (Al-Uqṣur), have been found the Tasian culture (named
for Dayr Tāsā) and the Badarian culture (named for Al-Badārī);
these date from the late 5th millennium bc. Most of the evidence
for them comes from cemeteries, where the burials included fine
black-topped red pottery, ornaments, some copper objects, and
glazed steatite beads. The most characteristic predynastic
luxury objects, slate palettes for grinding cosmetics, occur for
the first time in this period. The burials show little
differentiation of wealth and status and seem to belong to a
peasant culture without central political organization.
Probably contemporary with both
predynastic and dynastic times are thousands of rock drawings of
a wide range of motifs, including boats, found throughout the
Eastern Desert, in Lower Nubia, and as far west as Mount
ʾUwaynāt, which stands near modern Egypt’s borders with Libya
and The Sudan in the southwest. The drawings show that nomads
were common throughout the desert, probably to the late 3rd
millennium bc, but they cannot be dated precisely; they may all
have been produced by nomads, or inhabitants of the Nile valley
may often have penetrated the desert and made drawings.
Naqādah I, named for the major
site of Naqādah but also called Amratian for Al-ʿĀmirah, is a
distinct phase that succeeded the Badarian. It has been found as
far south as Al-Kawm al-Aḥmar (Hierakonpolis; ancient Egyptian
Nekhen), near the sandstone barrier of Mount Silsilah, which was
the cultural boundary of Egypt in predynastic times. Naqādah I
differs from its Badarian predecessor in its density of
settlement and the typology of its material culture but hardly
at all in the social organization implied by the archaeological
finds. Burials were in shallow pits in which the bodies were
placed facing to the west, like those of later Egyptians.
Notable types of material found in graves are fine pottery
decorated with representational designs in white on red,
figurines of men and women, and hard stone mace-heads that are
the precursors of important late predynastic objects.
Naqādah II, also known as
Gerzean for Girza (Jirza), is the most important predynastic
culture. The heartland of its development was the same as that
of Naqādah I, but it spread gradually throughout the country.
South of Mount Silsilah, sites of the culturally similar Nubian
A Group are found as far as the Second Cataract of the Nile and
beyond; these have a long span, continuing as late as the
Egyptian Early Dynastic period. During Naqādah II, large sites
developed at Al-Kawm al-Aḥmar, Naqādah, and Abydos (Abīdūs),
showing by their size the concentration of settlement, as well
as exhibiting increasing differentiation in wealth and status.
Few sites have been identified between Asyūṭ and Al-Fayyūm, and
this region may have been sparsely settled, perhaps supporting a
pastoral rather than agricultural population. Near present-day
Cairo—at Al-ʿUmāri, Al-Maʿādi, and Wādī Dijlah and stretching as
far south as the latitude of Al-Fayyūm—are sites of a separate,
contemporary culture. Al-Maʿādi was an extensive settlement that
traded with the Middle East and probably acted as an
intermediary for transmitting goods to the south. In this
period, imports of lapis lazuli provide evidence that trade
networks extended as far afield as Afghanistan.
The material culture of Naqādah
II included increasing numbers of prestige objects. The
characteristic mortuary pottery is made of buff desert clay,
principally from around Qinā, and is decorated in red with
pictures of uncertain meaning showing boats, animals, and scenes
with human figures. Stone vases, many made of hard stones that
come from remote areas of the Eastern Desert, are common and of
remarkable quality, and cosmetic palettes display elaborate
designs, with outlines in the form of animals, birds, or fish.
Flint was worked with extraordinary skill to produce large
ceremonial knives of a type that continued in use during
dynastic times.
Sites of late Naqādah II
(sometimes termed Naqādah III) are found throughout Egypt,
including the Memphite area and the delta region, and appear to
have replaced the local Lower Egyptian cultures. Links with the
Middle East intensified, and some distinctively Mesopotamian
motifs and objects were briefly in fashion in Egypt. The
cultural unification of the country probably accompanied a
political unification, but this must have proceeded in stages
and cannot be reconstructed in detail. In an intermediate stage,
local states may have formed at Al-Kawm al-Aḥmar, Naqādah, and
Abydos and in the delta at such sites as Buto (modern Kawm
al-Farāʿīn) and Sais (Ṣā al-Ḥajar). Ultimately, Abydos became
preeminent; its late predynastic cemetery of Umm al-Qaʿāb was
extended to form the burial place of the kings of the 1st
dynasty. In the latest predynastic period, objects bearing
written symbols of royalty were deposited throughout the
country, and primitive writing also appeared in marks on
pottery. Because the basic symbol for the king, a falcon on a
decorated palace facade, hardly varies, these objects are
thought to have belonged to a single line of kings or a single
state, not to a set of small states. This symbol became the
royal Horus name, the first element in a king’s titulary, which
presented the reigning king as the manifestation of an aspect of
the god Horus, the leading god of the country. Over the next few
centuries several further definitions of the king’s presence
were added to this one.
Thus, at this time Egypt seems
to have been a state unified under kings who introduced writing
and the first bureaucratic administration. These kings, who
could have ruled for more than a century, may correspond with a
set of names preserved on the Palermo Stone, but no direct
identification can be made between them. The latest was probably
Narmer, whose name has been found near Memphis, at Abydos, on a
ceremonial palette and mace-head from Al-Kawm al-Aḥmar, and at
the Palestinian sites of Tall Gat and ʿArad. The relief scenes
on the palette show him wearing the two chief crowns of Egypt
and defeating northern enemies, but these probably are
stereotyped symbols of the king’s power and role and not records
of specific events of his reign. They demonstrate that the
position of the king in society and its presentation in mixed
pictorial and written form had been elaborated by the early 3rd
millennium bc.
During this time Egyptian
artistic style and conventions were formulated, together with
writing. The process led to a complete and remarkably rapid
transformation of material culture, so that many dynastic
Egyptian prestige objects hardly resembled their forerunners.
The Early Dynastic period (c.
2925–c. 2575 bc)
The 1st dynasty (c. 2925–c. 2775 bc)
The beginning of the historical period is characterized by the
introduction of written records in the form of regnal year
names—the records that later were collected in documents such as
the Palermo Stone. The first king of Egyptian history, Menes, is
therefore a creation of the later record, not the actual unifier
of the country; he is known from Egyptian king lists and from
classical sources and is credited with irrigation works and with
founding the capital, Memphis. On small objects from this time,
one of them dated to the important king Narmer but certainly
mentioning a different person, there are two possible mentions
of a “Men” who may be the king Menes. If these do name Menes, he
was probably the same person as Aha, Narmer’s probable
successor, who was then the founder of the 1st dynasty. Changes
in the naming patterns of kings reinforce the assumption that a
new dynasty began with his reign. Aha’s tomb at Abydos is
altogether more grandiose than previously built tombs, while the
first of a series of massive tombs at Ṣaqqārah, next to Memphis,
supports the tradition that the city was founded then as a new
capital. This shift from Abydos is the culmination of
intensified settlement in the crucial area between the Nile
River valley and the delta, but Memphis did not yet overcome the
traditional pull of its predecessor: the large tombs at Ṣaqqārah
appear to belong to high officials, while the kings were buried
at Abydos in tombs whose walled complexes have long since
disappeared. Their mortuary cults may have been conducted in
designated areas nearer the cultivation.
In the late Predynastic period
and the first half of the 1st dynasty, Egypt extended its
influence into southern Palestine and probably Sinai and
conducted a campaign as far as the Second Cataract. The First
Cataract area, with its centre on Elephantine, an island in the
Nile opposite the present-day town of Aswān, was permanently
incorporated into Egypt, but Lower Nubia was not.
Between late predynastic times
and the 4th dynasty—and probably early in the period—the Nubian
A Group came to an end. There is some evidence that political
centralization was in progress around Qustul, but this did not
lead to any further development and may indeed have prompted a
preemptive strike by Egypt. For Nubia, the malign proximity of
the largest state of the time stifled advancement. During the
1st dynasty, writing spread gradually, but because it was used
chiefly for administration, the records, which were kept within
the floodplain, have not survived. The artificial writing medium
of papyrus was invented by the middle of the 1st dynasty. There
was a surge in prosperity, and thousands of tombs of all levels
of wealth have been found throughout the country. The richest
contained magnificent goods in metal, ivory, and other
materials, the most widespread luxury products being
extraordinarily fine stone vases. The high point of 1st-dynasty
development was the long reign of Den (flourished c. 2850 bc).
During the 1st dynasty three
titles were added to the royal Horus name: “Two Ladies,” an
epithet presenting the king as making manifest an aspect of the
protective goddesses of the south (Upper Egypt) and the north
(Lower Egypt); “Golden Horus,” the precise meaning of which is
unknown; and “Dual King,” a ranked pairing of the two basic
words for king, later associated with Upper and Lower Egypt.
These titles were followed by the king’s own birth name, which
in later centuries was written in a cartouche.
The 2nd dynasty (c. 2775–c. 2650 bc)
From the end of the 1st dynasty, there is evidence of rival
claimants to the throne. One line may have become the 2nd
dynasty, whose first king’s Horus name, Hetepsekhemwy, means
“peaceful in respect of the two powers” and may allude to the
conclusion of strife between two factions or parts of the
country, to the antagonistic gods Horus and Seth, or to both.
Hetepsekhemwy and his successor, Reneb, moved their burial
places to Ṣaqqārah; the tomb of the third king, Nynetjer, has
not been found. The second half of the dynasty was a time of
conflict and rival lines of kings, some of whose names are
preserved on stone vases from the 3rd-dynasty Step Pyramid at
Ṣaqqārah or in king lists. Among these contenders, Peribsen took
the title of Seth instead of Horus and was probably opposed by
Horus Khasekhem, whose name is known only from Kawm al-Aḥmar and
who used the programmatic epithet “effective sandal against
evil.” The last ruler of the dynasty combined the Horus and Seth
titles to form the Horus-and-Seth Khasekhemwy, “arising in
respect of the two powers,” to which was added “the two lords
are at peace in him.” Khasekhemwy was probably the same person
as Khasekhem after the successful defeat of his rivals,
principally Peribsen. Both Peribsen and Khasekhemwy had tombs at
Abydos, and the latter also built a monumental brick funerary
enclosure near the cultivation.
The 3rd dynasty (c. 2650–c. 2575 bc)
There were links of kinship between Khasekhemwy and the 3rd
dynasty, but the change between them is marked by a definitive
shift of the royal burial place to Memphis. Its first king,
Sanakhte, is attested in reliefs from Maghāra in Sinai. His
successor, Djoser (Horus name Netjerykhet), was one of the
outstanding kings of Egypt. His Step Pyramid at Ṣaqqārah is both
the culmination of an epoch and—as the first large all-stone
building, many times larger than anything attempted before—the
precursor of later achievements. The pyramid is set in a much
larger enclosure than that of Khasekhemwy at Abydos and contains
reproductions in stone of ritual structures that had previously
been built of perishable materials. Architectural details of
columns, cornices, and moldings provided many models for later
development. The masonry techniques look to brickwork for models
and show little concern for the structural potential of stone.
The pyramid itself evolved through numerous stages from a flat
mastaba (an oblong tomb with a burial chamber dug beneath it,
common at earlier nonroyal sites) into a six-stepped, almost
square pyramid. There was a second, symbolic tomb with a flat
superstructure on the south side of the enclosure; this probably
substituted for the traditional royal burial place of Abydos.
The king and some of his family were buried deep under the
pyramid, where tens of thousands of stone vases were deposited,
a number bearing inscriptions of the first two dynasties. Thus,
in perpetuating earlier forms in stone and burying this
material, Djoser invoked the past in support of his innovations.
Djoser’s name was famous in
later times, and his monument was studied in the Late period.
Imhotep, whose title as a master sculptor is preserved from the
Step Pyramid complex, may have been its architect; he lived on
into the next reign. His fame also endured, and in the Late
period he was deified and became a god of healing. In Manetho’s
history he is associated with reforms of writing, and this may
reflect a genuine tradition, for hieroglyphs were simplified and
standardized at that time.
Djoser’s successor, Sekhemkhet,
planned a still more grandiose step pyramid complex at Ṣaqqārah,
and a later king, Khaba, began one at Zawyat al-ʿAryan, a few
miles south of Giza. The burial place of the last king of the
dynasty, Huni, is unknown. It has often been suggested that he
built the pyramid of Maydūm, but this probably was the work of
his successor, Snefru. Inscribed material naming 3rd-dynasty
kings is known from Maghāra to Elephantine but not from the
Middle East or Nubia.
The organizational achievements
of the 3rd dynasty are reflected in its principal monument,
whose message of centralization and concentration of power is
reinforced in a negative sense by the archaeological record.
Outside the vicinity of Memphis, the Abydos area continued to be
important, and four enormous tombs, probably of high officials,
were built at the nearby site of Bayt Khallaf; there were small,
nonmortuary step pyramids throughout the country, some of which
may date to the 4th dynasty. Otherwise, little evidence comes
from the provinces, from which wealth must have flowed to the
centre, leaving no rich local elite. By the 3rd dynasty the
rigid structure of the later nomes, or provinces, which formed
the basis of Old Kingdom administration, had been created, and
the imposition of its uniform pattern may have impoverished
local centres. Tombs of the elite at Ṣaqqārah, notably those of
Hezyre and Khabausokar, contained artistic masterpieces that
look forward to the Old Kingdom.
The Old Kingdom (c. 2575–c. 2130 bc) and the First Intermediate
period (c. 2130–1938 bc)
The 4th dynasty (c. 2575–c. 2465 bc)
The first king of the 4th dynasty, Snefru, probably built the
step pyramid of Maydūm and then modified it to form the first
true pyramid. Due west of Maydūm was the small step pyramid of
Saylah, in Al-Fayyūm, at which Snefru also worked. He built two
pyramids at Dahshūr; the southern of the two is known as the
Blunted Pyramid because its upper part has a shallower angle of
inclination than its lower part. This difference may be due to
structural problems or may have been planned from the start, in
which case the resulting profile may reproduce a solar symbol of
creation. The northern Dahshūr pyramid, the later of the two,
has the same angle of inclination as the upper part of the
Blunted Pyramid and a base area exceeded only by that of the
Great Pyramid at Giza. All three of Snefru’s pyramids had
mortuary complexes attached to them. Snefru’s building
achievements were thus at least as great as those of any later
king and introduced a century of unparalleled construction.
In a long perspective, the 4th
dynasty was an isolated phenomenon, a period when the potential
of centralization was realized to its utmost and a
disproportionate amount of the state’s resources was used on the
kings’ mortuary provisions, almost certainly at the expense of
general living standards. No significant 4th-dynasty sites have
been found away from the Memphite area. Tomb inscriptions show
that high officials were granted estates scattered over many
nomes, especially in the delta. This pattern of landholding may
have avoided the formation of local centres of influence while
encouraging intensive exploitation of the land. People who
worked on these estates were not free to move, and they paid a
high proportion of their earnings in dues and taxes. The
building enterprises must have relied on drafting vast numbers
of men, probably after the harvest had been gathered in the
early summer and during part of the inundation.
Snefru’s was the first king’s
name that was regularly written inside the cartouche, an
elongated oval that is one of the most characteristic Egyptian
symbols. The cartouche itself is older and was shown as a gift
bestowed by gods on the king, signifying long duration on the
throne. It soon acquired associations with the sun, so that its
first use by the builder of the first true pyramid, which is
probably also a solar symbol, is not coincidental.
Snefru’s successor, Khufu
(Cheops), built the Great Pyramid at Giza (Al-Jīzah), to which
were added the slightly smaller second pyramid of one of Khufu’s
sons, Khafre (more correctly Rekhaef, the Chephren of Greek
sources), and that of Menkaure (Mycerinus). Khufu’s successor,
his son Redjedef, began a pyramid at Abū Ruwaysh, and a king of
uncertain name began one at Zawyat al-ʿAryan. The last known
king of the dynasty (there was probably one more), Shepseskaf,
built a monumental mastaba at south Ṣaqqārah and was the only
Old Kingdom ruler not to begin a pyramid. These works,
especially the Great Pyramid, show a great mastery of monumental
stoneworking: individual blocks were large or colossal and were
extremely accurately fitted to one another. Surveying and
planning also were carried out with remarkable precision.
Apart from the colossal
conception of the pyramids themselves, the temple complexes
attached to them show great mastery of architectural forms.
Khufu’s temple or approach causeway was decorated with
impressive reliefs, fragments of which were incorporated in the
12th-dynasty pyramid of Amenemhet I at Al-Lisht. The best known
of all Egyptian sculpture, Khafre’s Great Sphinx at Giza and his
extraordinary seated statue of Nubian gneiss, date from the
middle 4th dynasty.
The Giza pyramids form a group
of more or less completed monuments surrounded by many tombs of
the royal family and the elite, hierarchically organized and
laid out in neat patterns. This arrangement contrasts with that
of the reign of Snefru, when important tombs were built at
Maydūm and Ṣaqqārah, while the King was probably buried at
Dahshūr. Of the Giza tombs, only those of the highest-ranking
officials were decorated; except among the immediate entourage
of the kings, the freedom of expression of officials was greatly
restricted. Most of the highest officials were members of the
large royal family, so that power was concentrated by kinship as
well as by other means. This did not prevent factional strife:
the complex of Redjedef was deliberately and thoroughly
destroyed, probably at the instigation of his successor, Khafre.
The Palermo Stone records a
campaign to Lower Nubia in the reign of Snefru that may be
associated with graffiti in the area itself. The Egyptians
founded a settlement at Buhen, at the north end of the Second
Cataract, which endured for 200 years; others may have been
founded between there and Elephantine. The purposes of this
penetration were probably to establish trade farther south and
to create a buffer zone. No archaeological traces of a settled
population in Lower Nubia have been found for the Old Kingdom
period; the oppressive presence of Egypt seems to have robbed
the inhabitants of their resources, as the provinces were
exploited in favour of the king and the elite.
Snefru and the builders of the
Giza pyramids represented a classic age to later times. Snefru
was the prototype of a good king, whereas Khufu and Khafre had
tyrannical reputations, perhaps only because of the size of
their monuments. Little direct evidence for political or other
attitudes survives from the dynasty, in part because writing was
only just beginning to be used for recording continuous texts.
Many great works of art were, however, produced for kings and
members of the elite, and these set a pattern for later work.
Kings of the 4th dynasty identified themselves, at least from
the time of Redjedef, as Son of Re (the sun god); worship of the
sun god reached a peak in the 5th dynasty.
The 5th dynasty (c. 2465–c. 2325 bc)
The first two kings of the 5th dynasty, Userkaf and Sahure, were
sons of Khentkaues, who was a member of the 4th-dynasty royal
family. The third king, Neferirkare, may also have been her son.
A story from the Middle Kingdom that makes them all sons of a
priest of Re may derive from a tradition that they were true
worshipers of the sun god and implies, probably falsely, that
the 4th-dynasty kings were not. Six kings of the 5th dynasty
displayed their devotion to the sun god by building personal
temples to his cult. These temples, of which the two so far
identified are sited similarly to pyramids, probably had a
mortuary significance for the king as well as honouring the god.
The kings’ pyramids should therefore be seen in conjunction with
the sun temples, some of which received lavish endowments and
were served by many high-ranking officials.
Pyramids have been identified
for seven of the nine kings of the dynasty, at Ṣaqqārah (Userkaf
and Unas, the last king), Abū Ṣīr (Sahure, Neferirkare,
Reneferef, and Neuserre), and south Ṣaqqārah (Djedkare Izezi,
the eighth king). The pyramids are smaller and less solidly
constructed than those of the 4th dynasty, but the reliefs from
their mortuary temples are better preserved and of very fine
quality; that of Sahure gives a fair impression of their
decorative program. The interiors contained religious scenes
relating to provision for Sahure in the next life, while the
exteriors presented his “historical” role and relations with the
gods. Sea expeditions to Lebanon to acquire timber are depicted,
as are aggression against and capture of Libyans. Despite the
apparent precision with which captives are named and total
figures given, these scenes may not refer to specific events,
for the same motifs with the same details were frequently shown
over the next 250 years; Sahure’s use of them might not have
been the earliest.
Foreign connections were
far-flung. Goldwork of the period has been found in Anatolia,
while stone vases named for Khafre and Pepi I (6th dynasty) have
been found at Tall Mardīkh in Syria (Ebla), which was destroyed
around 2250 bc. The absence of 5th-dynasty evidence from the
site is probably a matter of chance. Expeditions to the
turquoise mines of Sinai continued as before. In Nubia, graffiti
and inscribed seals from Buhen document Egyptian presence until
late in the dynasty, when control was probably abandoned in the
face of immigration from the south and the deserts; later
generations of the immigrants are known as the Nubian C Group.
From the reign of Sahure on, there are records of trade with
Punt, a partly legendary land probably in the region of
present-day Eritrea, from which the Egyptians obtained incense
and myrrh, as well as exotic African products that had been
traded from still farther afield. Thus, the reduced level of
royal display in Egypt does not imply a less prominent general
role for the country.
High officials of the 5th
dynasty were no longer members of the royal family, although a
few married princesses. Their offices still depended on the
king, and in their biographical inscriptions they presented
their exploits as relating to him, but they justified other
aspects of their social role in terms of a more general
morality. They progressed through their careers by acquiring
titles in complex ranked sequences that were manipulated by
kings throughout the 5th and 6th dynasties. This
institutionalization of officialdom has an archaeological
parallel in the distribution of elite tombs, which no longer
clustered so closely around pyramids. Many are at Giza, but the
largest and finest are at Ṣaqqārah and Abū Ṣīr. The repertory of
decorated scenes in them continually expanded, but there was no
fundamental change in their subject matter. Toward the end of
the 5th dynasty, some officials with strong local ties began to
build their tombs in the Nile valley and the delta, in a
development that symbolized the elite’s slowly growing
independence from royal control.
Something of the working of the
central administration is visible in papyri from the mortuary
temples of Neferirkare and Reneferef at Abū Ṣīr. These show
well-developed methods of accounting and meticulous
recordkeeping and document the complicated redistribution of
goods and materials between the royal residence, the temples,
and officials who held priesthoods. Despite this evidence for
detailed organization, the consumption of papyrus was modest and
cannot be compared, for example, with that of Greco-Roman times.
The last three kings of the
dynasty, Menkauhor, Djedkare Izezi, and Unas, did not have
personal names compounded with “-Re,” the name of the sun god
(Djedkare is a name assumed on accession); and Izezi and Unas
did not build solar temples. Thus, there was a slight shift away
from the solar cult. The shift could be linked with the rise of
Osiris, the god of the dead, who is first attested from the
reign of Neuserre. His origin was, however, probably some
centuries earlier. The pyramid of Unas, whose approach causeway
was richly decorated with historical and religious scenes, is
inscribed inside with spells intended to aid the deceased in the
hereafter; varying selections of the spells occur in all later
Old Kingdom pyramids. (As a collection, they are known as the
Pyramid Texts.) Many of the spells were old when they were
inscribed; their presence documents the increasing use of
writing rather than a change in beliefs. The Pyramid Texts show
the importance of Osiris, at least for the king’s passage into
the next world: it was an undertaking that aroused anxiety and
had to be assisted by elaborate rituals and spells.
The 6th dynasty (c. 2325–c. 2150 bc)
No marked change can be discerned between the reigns of Unas and
Teti, the first king of the 6th dynasty. Around Teti’s pyramid
in the northern portion of Ṣaqqārah was built a cemetery of
large tombs, including those of several viziers. Together with
tombs near the pyramid of Unas, this is the latest group of
private monuments of the Old Kingdom in the Memphite area.
Information on 6th-dynasty
political and external affairs is more abundant because
inscriptions of high officials were longer. Whether the
circumstances they describe were also typical of less loquacious
ages is unknown, but the very existence of such inscriptions is
evidence of a tendency to greater independence among officials.
One, Weni, who lived from the reign of Teti through those of
Pepi I and Merenre, was a special judge in the trial of a
conspiracy in the royal household, mounted several campaigns
against a region east of Egypt or in southern Palestine, and
organized two quarrying expeditions. In the absence of a
standing army, the Egyptian force was levied from the provinces
by officials from local administrative centres and other
settlements; there were also contingents from several southern
countries and a tribe of the Eastern Desert.
Three biographies of officials
from Elephantine record trading expeditions to the south in the
reigns of Pepi I and Pepi II. The location of the regions named
in them is debated and may have been as far afield as the
Butāna, south of the Fifth Cataract. Some of the trade routes
ran through the Western Desert, where the Egyptians established
an administrative post at Balāṭ in Al-Dākhilah Oasis, some
distance west of Al-Khārijah Oasis. Egypt no longer controlled
Lower Nubia, which was settled by the C Group and formed into
political units of gradually increasing size, possibly as far as
Karmah (Kerma), south of the Third Cataract. Karmah was the
southern cultural successor of the Nubian A Group and became an
urban centre in the late 3rd millennium bc, remaining Egypt’s
chief southern neighbour for seven centuries. To the north the
Karmah state stretched as far as the Second Cataract and at
times farther still. Its southern extent has not been
determined, but sites of similar material culture are scattered
over vast areas of the central Sudan.
The provincializing tendencies
of the late 5th dynasty continued in the 6th, especially during
the extremely long reign (up to 94 years) of Pepi II. Increasing
numbers of officials resided in the provinces, amassed local
offices, and emphasized local concerns, including religious
leadership, in their inscriptions. At the capital the size and
splendour of the cemeteries decreased, and some tombs of the end
of the dynasty were decorated only in their subterranean parts,
as if security could not be guaranteed aboveground. The pyramid
complex of Pepi II at southern Ṣaqqārah, which was probably
completed in the first 30 years of his reign, stands out against
this background as the last major monument of the Old Kingdom,
comparable to its predecessors in artistic achievement. Three of
his queens were buried in small pyramids around his own; these
are the only known queens’ monuments inscribed with Pyramid
Texts.
The 7th and 8th dynasties (c. 2150–c. 2130 bc)
Pepi II was followed by several ephemeral rulers, who were in
turn succeeded by the short-lived 7th dynasty of Manetho’s
history (from which no king’s name is known) and the 8th, one of
whose kings, Ibi, built a small pyramid at southern Ṣaqqārah.
Several 8th-dynasty kings are known from inscriptions found in
the temple of Min at Qifṭ (Coptos) in the south; this suggests
that their rule was recognized throughout the country. The
instability of the throne is, however, a sign of political
decay, and the fiction of centralized rule may have been
accepted only because there was no alternative style of
government to kingship.
With the end of the 8th
dynasty, the Old Kingdom system of control collapsed. About that
time there were incidents of famine and local violence. The
country emerged impoverished and decentralized from this
episode, the prime cause of which may have been political
failure, environmental disaster, or, more probably, a
combination of the two. In that period the desiccation of
northeastern Africa reached a peak, producing conditions similar
to those of contemporary times, and a related succession of low
inundations may have coincided with the decay of central
political authority. These environmental changes are, however,
only approximately dated, and their relationship with the
collapse cannot be proved.
The First Intermediate
period
The 9th dynasty (c. 2130–2080 bc)
After the end of the 8th dynasty, the throne passed to kings
from Heracleopolis, who made their native city the capital,
although Memphis continued to be important. They were
acknowledged throughout the country, but inscriptions of
nomarchs (chief officials of nomes) in the south show that the
kings’ rule was nominal. At Dara, north of Asyūṭ, for example, a
local ruler called Khety styled himself in a regal manner and
built a pyramid with a surrounding “courtly” cemetery. At
Al-Miʿalla, south of Luxor, Ankhtify, the nomarch of the
al-Jabalayn region, recorded his annexation of the Idfū nome and
extensive raiding in the Theban area. Ankhtify acknowledged an
unidentifiable king Neferkare but campaigned with his own
troops. Major themes of inscriptions of the period are the
nomarch’s provision of food supplies for his people in times of
famine and his success in promoting irrigation works. Artificial
irrigation had probably long been practiced, but exceptional
poverty and crop failure made concern with it worth recording.
Inscriptions of Nubian mercenaries employed by local rulers in
the south indicate how entrenched military action was.
The 10th (c. 2080–c. 1970 bc) and 11th (2081–1938 bc) dynasties
A period of generalized conflict focused on rival dynasties at
Thebes and Heracleopolis. The latter, the 10th, probably
continued the line of the 9th. The founder of the 9th or 10th
dynasty was named Khety, and the dynasty as a whole was termed
the House of Khety. Several Heracleopolitan kings were named
Khety; another important name is Merikare. There was
intermittent conflict, and the boundary between the two realms
shifted around the region of Abydos. As yet, the course of
events in this period cannot be reconstructed.
Several major literary texts
purport to describe the upheavals of the First Intermediate
period—the Instruction for Merikare, for example, being ascribed
to one of the kings of Heracleopolis. These texts led earlier
Egyptologists to posit a Heracleopolitan literary flowering, but
there is now a tendency to date them to the Middle Kingdom, so
that they would have been written with enough hindsight to allow
a more effective critique of the sacred order.
Until the 11th dynasty made
Thebes its capital, Armant (Greek, Hermonthis), on the west bank
of the Nile, was the centre of the Theban nome. The dynasty
honoured as its ancestor the God’s Father Mentuhotep, probably
the father of its first king, Inyotef I (2081–65 bc), whose
successors were Inyotef II and Inyotef III (2065–16 and 2016–08
bc, respectively). The fourth king, Mentuhotep II (2008–1957 bc,
whose throne name was Nebhepetre), gradually reunited Egypt and
ousted the Heracleopolitans, changing his titulary in stages to
record his conquests. Around his 20th regnal year he assumed the
Horus name Divine of the White Crown, implicitly claiming all of
Upper Egypt. By his regnal year 42 this had been changed to
Uniter of the Two Lands, a traditional royal epithet that he
revived with a literal meaning. In later times Mentuhotep was
celebrated as the founder of the epoch now known as the Middle
Kingdom. His remarkable mortuary complex at Dayr al-Baḥrī, which
seems to have had no pyramid, was the architectural inspiration
for Hatshepsut’s later structure built alongside.
In the First Intermediate
period, monuments were set up by a slightly larger section of
the population, and, in the absence of central control, internal
dissent and conflicts of authority became visible in public
records. Nonroyal individuals took over some of the privileges
of royalty, notably identification with Osiris in the hereafter
and the use of the Pyramid Texts; these were incorporated into a
more extensive corpus inscribed on coffins (and hence termed the
Coffin Texts) and continued to be inscribed during the Middle
Kingdom. The unified state of the Middle Kingdom did not reject
these acquisitions and so had a broader cultural basis than the
Old Kingdom.
The Middle Kingdom (1938–c. 1630 bc) and the Second Intermediate
period (c. 1630–1540 bc)
The Middle Kingdom Mentuhotep II campaigned in Lower Nubia,
where he may have been preceded by the Inyotefs. His mortuary
complex in Thebes contained some of the earliest known
depictions of Amon-Re, the dynastic god of the Middle Kingdom
and the New Kingdom. Mentuhotep II was himself posthumously
deified and worshiped, notably in the Aswān area. In
administration, he attempted to break the power of the nomarchs,
but his policy was unsuccessful in the longer term.
Mentuhotep II’s successors,
Mentuhotep III (1957–45 bc) and Mentuhotep IV (1945–38 bc), also
ruled from Thebes. The reign of Mentuhotep IV corresponds to
seven years marked “missing” in the Turin Canon, and he may
later have been deemed illegitimate. Records of a quarrying
expedition to the Wadi Ḥammāmāt from his second regnal year were
inscribed on the order of his vizier Amenemhet, who almost
certainly succeeded to the throne and founded the 12th dynasty.
Not all the country welcomed the 11th dynasty, the monuments and
self-presentation of which remained local and Theban.
The 12th dynasty (1938–c. 1756 bc)
In a text probably circulated as propaganda during the reign of
Amenemhet I (1938–08 bc), the time preceding his reign is
depicted as a period of chaos and despair, from which a saviour
called Ameny from the extreme south was to emerge. This
presentation may well be stereotyped, but there could have been
armed struggle before he seized the throne. Nonetheless, his
mortuary complex at Al-Lisht contained monuments on which his
name was associated with that of his predecessor. In style, his
pyramid and mortuary temple looked back to Pepi II of the end of
the Old Kingdom, but the pyramid was built of mud brick with a
stone casing; consequently, it is now badly ruined.
Amenemhet I moved the capital
back to the Memphite area, founding a residence named
Itjet-towy, “she who takes possession of the Two Lands,” which
was for later times the archetypal royal residence. Itjet-towy
was probably situated between Memphis and the pyramids of
Amenemhet I and Sesostris I (at modern Al-Lisht), while Memphis
remained the centre of population. From later in the dynasty
there is the earliest evidence for a royal palace (not a
capital) in the eastern delta. The return to the Memphite area
was accompanied by a revival of Old Kingdom artistic styles, in
a resumption of central traditions that contrasted with the
local ones of the 11th dynasty. From the reign of Amenemhet
major tombs of the first half of the dynasty, which display
considerable local independence, are preserved at several sites,
notably Beni Hasan, Meir, and Qau. After the second reign of the
dynasty, no more important private tombs were constructed at
Thebes, but several kings made benefactions to Theban temples.
In his 20th regnal year,
Amenemhet I took his son Sesostris I (or Senwosret, reigned
1908–1875 bc) as his coregent, presumably in order to ensure a
smooth transition to the next reign. This practice was followed
in the next two reigns and recurred sporadically in later times.
During the following 10 years of joint rule, Sesostris undertook
campaigns in Lower Nubia that led to its conquest as far as the
central area of the Second Cataract. A series of fortresses were
begun in the region, and there was a full occupation, but the
local C Group population was not integrated culturally with the
conquerors.
Amenemhet I apparently was
murdered during Sesostris’s absence on a campaign to Libya, but
Sesostris was able to maintain his hold on the throne without
major disorder. He consolidated his father’s achievements, but,
in one of the earliest preserved inscriptions recounting royal
exploits, he spoke of internal unrest. An inscription of the
next reign alludes to campaigns to Syria-Palestine in the time
of Sesostris; whether these were raiding expeditions and parades
of strength, in what was then a seminomadic region, or whether a
conquest was intended or achieved is not known. It is clear,
however, that the traditional view that the Middle Kingdom
hardly intervened in the Middle East is incorrect.
In the early 12th dynasty the
written language was regularized in its classical form of Middle
Egyptian, a rather artificial idiom that was probably always
somewhat removed from the vernacular. The first datable corpus
of literary texts was composed in Middle Egyptian. Two of these
relate directly to political affairs and offer fictional
justifications for the rule of Amenemhet I and Sesostris I,
respectively. Several that are ascribed to Old Kingdom authors
or that describe events of the First Intermediate period but are
composed in Middle Egyptian probably also date from around this
time. The most significant of these is the Instruction for
Merikare, a discourse on kingship and moral responsibility. It
is often used as a source for the history of the First
Intermediate period but may preserve no more than a memory of
its events. Most of these texts continued to be copied in the
New Kingdom.
Little is known of the reigns
of Amenemhet II (1876–42 bc) and Sesostris II (1844–37 bc).
These kings built their pyramids in the entrance to Al-Fayyūm
while also beginning an intensive exploitation of its
agricultural potential that reached a peak in the reign of
Amenemhet III (1818–1770 bc). The king of the 12th dynasty with
the most enduring reputation was Sesostris III (1836–18 bc), who
extended Egyptian conquests to Semna, at the south end of the
Second Cataract, while also mounting at least one campaign to
Palestine. Sesostris III completed an extensive chain of
fortresses in the Second Cataract; at Semna he was worshiped as
a god in the New Kingdom.
Frequent campaigns and military
occupation, which lasted another 150 years, required a standing
army. A force of this type may have been created early in the
12th dynasty but becomes better attested near the end. It was
based on “soldiers”—whose title means literally
“citizens”—levied by district and officers of several grades and
types. It was separate from New Kingdom military organization
and seems not to have enjoyed very high status.
The purpose of the occupation
of Lower Nubia is disputed, because the size of the fortresses
and the level of manpower needed to occupy them might seem
disproportionate to local threats. An inscription of Sesostris
III set up in the fortresses emphasizes the weakness of the
Nubian enemy, while a boundary marker and fragmentary papyri
show that the system channeled trade with the south through the
central fortress of Mirgissa. The greatest period of the Karmah
state to the south was still to come, but for centuries it had
probably controlled a vast stretch of territory. The best
explanation of the Egyptian presence is that Lower Nubia was
annexed by Egypt for purposes of securing the southern trade
route, while Karmah was a rival worth respecting and preempting;
in addition, the physical scale of the fortresses may have
become something of an end in itself. It is not known whether
Egypt wished similarly to annex Palestine, but numerous
administrative seals of the period have been found there.
Sesostris III reorganized Egypt
into four regions corresponding to the northern and southern
halves of the Nile valley and the eastern and western delta.
Rich evidence for middle-ranking officials from the religious
centre of Abydos and for administrative practice in documents
from Al-Lāhūn conveys an impression of a pervasive, centralized
bureaucracy, which later came to run the country under its own
momentum. The prosperity created by peace, conquests, and
agricultural development is visible in royal monuments and
monuments belonging to the minor elite, but there was no small,
powerful, and wealthy group of the sort seen in the Old and New
Kingdoms. Sesostris III and his successor, Amenemhet III
(1818–c. 1770 bc), left a striking artistic legacy in the form
of statuary depicting them as aging, careworn rulers, probably
alluding to a conception of the suffering king known from
literature of the dynasty. This departure from the bland ideal,
which may have sought to bridge the gap between king and
subjects in the aftermath of the attack on elite power, was not
taken up in later times.
The reigns of Amenemhet III and
Amenemhet IV (c. 1770–60 bc) and of Sebeknefru (c. 1760–56 bc),
the first certainly attested female monarch, were apparently
peaceful, but the accession of a woman marked the end of the
dynastic line.
The 13th dynasty (c. 1756–c. 1630 bc)
Despite a continuity of outward forms and of the rhetoric of
inscriptions between the 12th and 13th dynasties, there was a
complete change in kingship. In little more than a century about
70 kings occupied the throne. Many can have reigned only for
months, and there were probably rival claimants to the throne,
but in principle the royal residence remained at Itjet-towy and
the kings ruled the whole country. Egypt’s hold on Lower Nubia
was maintained, as was its position as the leading state in the
Middle East. Large numbers of private monuments document the
prosperity of the official classes, and a proliferation of
titles is evidence of their continued expansion. In government
the vizier assumed prime importance, and a single family held
the office for much of a century.
Immigration from Asia is known
in the late 12th dynasty and became more widespread in the 13th.
From the late 18th century bc the northeastern Nile River delta
was settled by successive waves of peoples from Palestine, who
retained their own material culture. Starting with the
Instruction for Merikare, Egyptian texts warn against the
dangers of infiltration of this sort, and its occurrence shows a
weakening of government. There may also have been a rival
dynasty, called the 14th, at Xois in the north-central delta,
but this is known only from Manetho’s history and could have had
no more than local significance. Toward the end of this period,
Egypt lost control of Lower Nubia, where the garrisons—which had
been regularly replaced with fresh troops—settled and were
partly assimilated. The Karmah state overran and incorporated
the region. Some Egyptian officials resident in the Second
Cataract area served the new rulers. The site of Karmah has
yielded many Egyptian artifacts, including old pieces pillaged
from their original contexts. Most were items of trade between
the two countries, some probably destined for exchange against
goods imported from sub-Saharan Africa. Around the end of the
Middle Kingdom and during the Second Intermediate period, Medjay
tribesmen from the Eastern Desert settled in the Nile valley
from around Memphis to the Third Cataract. Their presence is
marked by distinctive shallow graves with black-topped pottery,
and they have traditionally been termed the “Pan-grave” culture
by archaeologists. They were assimilated culturally in the New
Kingdom, but the word Medjay came to mean police or militia;
they probably came as mercenaries.
The Second Intermediate
period
The increasing competition for power in Egypt and Nubia
crystallized in the formation of two new dynasties: the 15th,
called the Hyksos (c. 1630–c. 1523 bc), with its capital at
Avaris (Tell el-Dabʿa) in the delta, and the 17th (c. 1630–1540
bc), ruling from Thebes. The word Hyksos dates to an Egyptian
phrase meaning “ruler of foreign lands” and occurs in Manetho’s
narrative cited in the works of the Jewish historian Flavius
Josephus (1st century ad), which depicts the new rulers as
sacrilegious invaders who despoiled the land. They presented
themselves—with the exception of the title Hyksos—as Egyptian
kings and appear to have been accepted as such. The main line of
Hyksos was acknowledged throughout Egypt and may have been
recognized as overlords in Palestine, but they tolerated other
lines of kings, both those of the 17th dynasty and the various
minor Hyksos who are termed the 16th dynasty. The 15th dynasty
consisted of six kings, the best known being the fifth, Apopis,
who reigned for up to 40 years. There were many 17th-dynasty
kings, probably belonging to several different families. The
northern frontier of the Theban domain was at Al-Qūṣiyyah, but
there was trade across the border.
Asiatic rule brought many
technical innovations to Egypt, as well as cultural innovations
such as new musical instruments and foreign loan words. The
changes affected techniques from bronze working and pottery to
weaving, and new breeds of animals and new crops were
introduced. In warfare, composite bows, new types of daggers and
scimitars, and above all the horse and chariot transformed
previous practice, although the chariot may ultimately have been
as important as a prestige vehicle as for tactical military
advantages it conferred. The effect of these changes was to
bring Egypt, which had been technologically backward, onto the
level of southwestern Asia. Because of these advances and the
perspectives it opened up, Hyksos rule was decisive for Egypt’s
later empire in the Middle East.
Whereas the 13th dynasty was
fairly prosperous, the Second Intermediate period may have been
impoverished. The regional centre of the cult of Osiris at
Abydos, which has produced the largest quantity of Middle
Kingdom monuments, lost importance, but sites such as Thebes,
Idfū, and Al-Kawm al-Aḥmar have yielded significant, if
sometimes crudely worked, remains. Aside from Avaris itself,
virtually no information has come from the north, where the
Hyksos ruled, and it is impossible to assess their impact on the
economy or on high culture. The Second Intermediate period was
the consequence of political fragmentation and immigration and
was not associated with economic collapse, as in the early First
Intermediate period.
Toward the end of the 17th
dynasty (c. 1545 bc), the Theban king Seqenenre challenged
Apopis, probably dying in battle against him. Seqenenre’s
successor, Kamose, renewed the challenge, stating in an
inscription that it was intolerable to share his land with an
Asiatic and a Nubian (the Karmah ruler). By the end of his third
regnal year, he had made raids as far south as the Second
Cataract (and possibly much farther) and in the north to the
neighbourhood of Avaris, also intercepting in the Western Desert
a letter sent from Apopis to a new Karmah ruler on his
accession. By campaigning to the north and to the south, Kamose
acted out his implicit claim to the territory ruled by Egypt in
the Middle Kingdom. His exploits formed a vital stage in the
long struggle to expel the Hyksos.
John R. Baines
Peter F. Dorman
Encyclopædia Britannica