Achievements of ancient Egypt. Achievements of ancient Egypt that changed the world Achievements of art of the ancient Egyptians Egyptian pyramids

Municipal educational institution
"Secondary school No. 4"

Scientific school conference 2008

Essay

Topic: “Achievement of the culture of Ancient Egypt”

Korsakova Anna

Kazachenko Anastasia

students of 7th grade

Head Consultant:

Bykova E.M.

MHC teacher

Abstract reviewed:

Sergiev Posad

2008


  1. General characteristics. 3

  2. Achievement of ancient Egyptian culture. 4

  3. Periods of development of Ancient Egypt. 5

  4. Writing of Ancient Egypt. 6

  5. The mystery of Egyptian hieroglyphs. 8

  6. Bibliography. 10

Achievements of the culture of Ancient Egypt

1. General characteristics

Ancient Egypt is the first powerful great power, the first empire that claimed world domination. It was a strong state in which the people were completely subordinate to the ruling class. The basic principles on which the supreme power of Egypt was built were its inviolability and incomprehensibility.

Protest against death is the most important feature of the culture of ancient Egypt. The Egyptians considered it an "abnormality." The passionate desire for immortality determined the entire worldview of the Egyptians, permeated the entire religious thought of Egypt, and shaped ancient Egyptian culture.

The origins of Egyptian civilization lie in ancient times. Almost 5 thousand years ago, when there were still impenetrable forests on the territory of our country, one of the most ancient states arose in the Nile Valley, which existed for 3 thousand years.

The rich culture of Ancient Egypt had a strong influence on European and Arab peoples. It is no coincidence that scientists and philosophers, doctors and astrologers of these peoples would later emphasize that they learned from the Egyptian sages.

^ 2. Achievements of ancient Egyptian culture.

What are the achievements of ancient Egyptian culture?

Papyrus and hieroglyphs were invented in ancient times in Egypt. Religious, medical, scientific and literary texts were kept in scriptoria (“houses of life”) at temples or written on the walls of pyramids and tombs.

Egypt is the birthplace of historical stories, fairy tales, fables, and love lyrics.

The Egyptians determined the area of ​​a circle and the surface of a hemisphere, calculated the volume of a truncated pyramid, compiled a solar calendar, and divided the day into 24 hours.

The Egyptians were the first people in the world to establish the length of the year, dividing it into 12 parts according to the seasons. According to the priests, the Egyptians made this discovery while observing the heavenly bodies...

The Egyptians count 12 months of 30 days each and add 5 more days each year beyond this number, and for them the rotation of the seasons occurs at the same time.”

The Egyptian year began on July 19 with the rising of Sirius, when the Nile flood began, and continued until the next flood. The year is divided into three seasons: flood, sowing, harvest.

^ In the ancient Egyptian year:

10 days – one week

4 months – 1 season (120 days)

3 weeks – one month

3 seasons – 1 year (360+5 holy days)

The birthdays of Osiris, Isis, Set, Nephis, and Horus were considered five sacred days.

These days, like the days of other religious holidays, were days off. Every tenth day that completed the Egyptian week was also considered a day off.

Days were considered favorable and unfavorable. On unfavorable days, the Egyptians were especially careful and wore many magical amulets.

The ancient Egyptians counted time starting from the accession to the throne of the ruling pharaoh. And they determined time using a water clock similar to an hourglass.

The system of measurements in Ancient Egypt was based on the proportions of the human body. The main unit of measurement was the cubit. Seven palms four fingers wide were equal to one elbow. The elbow also had smaller divisions equal to the width of one finger.

^ 3. Periods of development of Ancient Egypt

Systematic study of Egypt began only in the 19th century. If you depict the periodization of Ancient Egypt in the form of a diagram, then according to the picture, the three kingdoms, three rises of culture resemble the symbol of this country - the Great Pyramids of Giza.

Ancient kingdom(2900-2270 BC) - the era of the 1st-6th dynasty. This is the time of the reign of the first sprouts of civilization with its first laws, with its religion, writing and the formation of a literary language. This is the time of the builders of the pyramids at Giza: kings Cheops, Khafre and Mekerin.

Middle Kingdom(2100-1700 BC)_was founded by Theban rulers, who overthrew the Heracleopolitan kings and reunited the country. This period was the reign of the 11th-12th dynasties, the era of the flourishing of culture and creation, the period of the creation of many outstanding works of architecture.

New kingdom(1555-1090 BC) - the time of the greatest strengthening of political power, the era of the pharaohs of the XVIII - XX dynasties. The conquests of Thutmes III lead to the establishment of connections with Western Asia; he imposes tribute on conquered peoples, foreign wealth flows like a river into Egypt. Luxurious buildings are being erected... Amenhotep IV was a great reformer of religion: instead of the previous cult of the god Amun, he introduced the cult of the sun - Aten - and from that time began to call himself Akhenaten. Under Amenhotep IV's son-in-law, Tutankhamun, the royal residence was again moved to Thebes.

^ 4. Writing of Ancient Egypt

How did you manage to create a periodization of Egyptian history?

Scientists were able to do this only after deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphs, which for a long time remained a secret to specialists.

The first examples of writing in Egypt appeared between 3300-3100. BC e. and were called hieroglyphs , which means “sacred writing” in Greek. The Egyptians themselves called the hieroglyphs “divine speech” and attached important religious and magical meaning to the letters, believing that the art of writing was bestowed by Thoth, the god of wisdom.

People specially trained in the art of reading and writing were called scribes. Their profession provided them with a high position in society.

Hieroglyphs could be written from left to right, right to left, or top to bottom. If animals or people are facing left, then the inscription should be read from left to right. It was very difficult to master such an art - after all, you need to remember about 700 characters. Therefore, the Egyptians gradually switched to signs that indicated the sound of words and syllables. The writing process was very slow. Actually, hieroglyphs in their full form were used to record religious texts and government documents. For everyday records, cursive writing eventually appeared - hieratic writing and an even more simplified demotic writing (used in the Late Period).

The ancient Egyptians wrote with a brush and ink on papyrus, which was made from special reeds that grew along the banks of the Nile. They also wrote on pottery shards or limestone slabs, known as ostracons .

^ Learned Scribes

The scribes in the service of the pharaohs knew how to read, write and count: they studied this for many years. Scribes were respected and were exempt from taxes and work during the flood season.

Scribe Kaya.

What were the responsibilities of scribes?

Scribes recorded the decisions made by the pharaoh. They counted the taxes paid by the peasants, the raw materials and materials distributed to the artisans who worked for the pharaoh. On the banks of the Nile, scribes noted the height of the floods and the water level in the reservoirs.

How did they write in Ancient Egypt?

Scribes carried with them a writing instrument consisting of a wooden palette with paints and kalams (reed writing sticks), and a vessel with water for diluting paints. To prepare the paints, ground charcoal and ocher were used; dates and the beginning of a paragraph were written in red. The records were kept on a scroll made of papyrus, a plant that covered the banks of the Nile in abundance.

^ 5. The Mystery of Egyptian Hieroglyphs

Who managed to unravel the mystery of Egyptian hieroglyphs?

Time has preserved many of the inscriptions made by the Egyptians, but has absorbed the mystery of their reading. The last example of a hieroglyphic inscription dates back to 397 BC. e. Therefore, already at the beginning of our era, hieroglyphs were considered incomprehensible drawings that should not be read, but explained.

It was possible to unravel the mystery of the hieroglyphs thanks to a flat stone slab of black basalt the size of a desk surface, found on August 2, 1799. near the city of Rosetta in the Nile Valley. Three inscriptions were carved on this stone: at the top - in hieroglyphs, below it - in demotic writing, and below in Greek! At the end of the Greek inscription it was stated that both upper texts were its exact translation.

Scientists have struggled for a long time over the riddle of hieroglyphs. Finally, a person was found who was able to read the text of the Rosetta stone. It was a French linguist Jean Francois Champollion (1790-1832).

In 1822, he made writing, which had been silent for millennia, “speak.” He was then 32 years old, and for 25 years of them he studied the dead languages ​​of the East and the history of Ancient Egypt.

Champollion suggested that hieroglyphs could mean letters and sounds, not just objects in general. He based his conclusions on the fact that the words inside oval frames called cartouches represented the names of rulers. The name of Ptolemy, which was mentioned several times in the Greek text, was a kind of clue to other hieroglyphs.

6. List of references used


  1. A.M. Vachyants “7 wonders of the Ancient World.” M.: “Iris Press” 2007

  2. Encyclopedia for children "Art I". M.: “Avanta” 2007

  3. Children's encyclopedia. "Civilization of the Ancient World". M.: “Swallowtail” 2007

  4. Encyclopedia “Great Civilizations” M.: “Swallowtail” 2007

Civilizations of Ancient Egypt: development and main achievements

A civilization that existed in the Nile Valley in the 4th thousand. BC. – 4th century BC.

Egypt is located in the northeast of the African continent. In ancient times, Egypt was understood as a valley formed by the lower Nile, sandwiched between the deserts of North and East Africa. The valley was open only in the northeast. This determined the isolation and independence of the ancient Egyptian civilization. The annual floods of the Nile, after the spring retreat, leave a layer of fertile silt on the banks, which creates extremely favorable conditions for agriculture. The Nile is the main transport artery connecting all parts of the valley with each other and with the Mediterranean Sea. In conditions of almost complete absence of rain, it is the only source of moisture.

Effective use of the benefits of the Nile would be impossible without the collective and organized labor of everyone living in its valley. The unevenness of spills necessitated a unified system for regulating and distributing water. The big river, which required the combined efforts of the entire population, turned out to be the main factor in the creation of pan-Egyptian statehood.

Economy Ancient Egypt mainly was based on agriculture. 2-3 harvests were collected per year. The main crops were barley and emmer(a variety of wheat). Still at dawn stories the Egyptians wove from flax; cotton was unknown, and wool clothing was used extremely rarely. The most common fruit trees were date palm, fig and pomegranate. Among the vegetables, garlic, leeks and cucumbers were known. The basis of life was bread, and the favorite drinks were beer and grape wine. The tools of labor in agriculture remained primitive for a long time.

The land belonged to the pharaoh. The lack of arable land has caused limited livestock breeding. Poultry farming, especially the breeding of ducks and geese, was of great importance. Domestic animals were bred both for food and for leather. Bees were bred to produce honey, and this activity was a royal monopoly.

There were almost no trees suitable for use as building material in the Nile Valley. Already in the era of the first dynasties, the pharaohs sent sea expeditions to Lebanon for coniferous wood.

The good fertile soils of Egypt and the skill of farmers made it possible not only to provide the rural population with food, but also to create excess product. Early isolation from agriculture crafts became the basis for exchange between rural and urban populations. Internal trade arose. At the same time in the country there were not enough metals. Their had to buy abroad or replenish resources at the expense of conquered countries. Even during the period of the Old Kingdom, trade routes developed from Egypt to Nubia, Sinai, Palestine and Syria. During the New Kingdom In Egypt, the monetary unit of weight, the deben, was already widely used. Large trade transactions were documented in a special public place, with witnesses whose names recorded in documents.

It was first developed in Egypt technology for making writing material - papyrus.

During slave system, all residents Ancient Egypt was divided into 3 main classes: slave owners, slaves and peasants. The main workforce is slaves. The first slaves were prisoners of war. In the northern territories, slavery was unprofitable. In ancient Egypt, the harvest and maintenance of the irrigation system led to the emergence of slavery. Characteristic self-selling of free people, debt slavery. Slave labor was used on large estates by mid-level owners - officials, military colonists, etc. Large landowners were churches, which received significant income from the exploitation of slave labor. Preserved, special decrees Ptolemies on the registration of slaves, the prohibition of their export from Egypt, on the search for fugitive slaves, the punishment of slaves, etc. In wills and marriage contracts, slaves are mentioned as a type of property. The slave trade figured prominently in commercial transactions.

Policy . The state arises to maintain the irrigation system. Eastern despotism. Under an absolute monarchy, people are divided into different classes, and under an eastern despotism, everyone is equal for the ruler. Everything must be subordinated to the irrigation system, so there is no point in another form of government , otherwise it is impossible to maintain the system.

The main function of the state was to mobilization of the forces of society for execution important economic, political or religious objectives(maintenance irrigation system, organization of military campaigns, construction of religious structures), which led to the emergence of a system of careful accounting and distribution of all labor and material resources. In charge of a large and ramified state apparatus, which carried out its activities at three levels - central, new and local.

Pharaoh cult acquires an exceptional character; Enormous labor and material resources are mobilized for the construction of giant pyramids.

Spiritual world.

Science achievements : water pumps, ceramics, glass, weaving machines and textile technologies, copper, bronze, gold, medicine, mathematics. For the first time, cities appear with a clear structure, buildings, and a central control system. Invention of the sail, the first merchant fleet. Architecture (pyramids). Hierographic writing, papyrus, calendar. Development of empirical science.

Man is dependent on nature. Cyclicality of consciousness (due to the Nile floods). A person cannot imagine himself outside the state. Admiration for the state and the pharaoh. Estate of consciousness. Disdainful attitude of the upper strata towards the lower ones. Mythological consciousness:

    myth explains events

    myth transmits information between generations

    myth is a ready-made behavior algorithm embedded in people’s minds

The social component is more important than the economic one.

The main achievement in the spiritual sphere is mythological consciousness.

Egypt's main achievement is a unified, clearly structured state and non-economic coercion.

Details Category: Fine arts and architecture of ancient peoples Published 12/21/2015 10:46 Views: 7711

The art of Ancient Egypt is divided into three periods:

Art of the Old Kingdom, art of the Middle Kingdom and art of the New Kingdom. Each of these periods developed its own style, developed its own canons and introduced innovations. Briefly, these periods can be characterized as follows.

General characteristics of the art of Ancient Egypt

Art of the Ancient Kingdom (XXXII century - XXIV century BC)

The main canons of Egyptian art, which were then preserved for centuries, were formed in the first half of the 3rd millennium BC. e. It was a monumental style, due to the fact that the art of Egypt was an integral part of the funeral ritual and was closely connected with a religion that deified the forces of nature and earthly power.
The Great Pyramids and the Great Sphinx date back to this time.

Egyptian pyramids

The Egyptian pyramids are the greatest architectural monuments of Ancient Egypt. These are huge pyramid-shaped stone structures that were used as tombs for the pharaohs of Ancient Egypt. In total, more than 100 pyramids have been discovered in Egypt.

Pyramid of Neferefre in Abusir

Great Sphinx

The Great Sphinx of Giza is the oldest surviving monumental sculpture on Earth. It is carved from a monolithic limestone rock in the shape of a sphinx - a lion lying on the sand, whose face is given a portrait resemblance to Pharaoh Khafre (c. 2575-2465 BC). The length of the statue is 72 m, height 20 m; In ancient times, between the front paws there was a small sanctuary (an altar dedicated to a deity).

Great Sphinx and Pyramid of Cheops
Since ancient times, it was customary in Egypt to depict the pharaoh as a lion destroying his enemies. The circumstances and exact time of construction of the sphinx have not yet been precisely determined. For local residents, the Sphinx was a kind of talisman, the ruler of the Nile. They believed that the level of the great river's flood and the fertility of their fields depended on it.

Great Pyramid of Cheops

Cheops is the second pharaoh of the IV dynasty of the Ancient Kingdom of Egypt (2589-2566 BC or 2551-2528 BC presumably), builder of the Great Pyramid at Giza. Cheops gained a reputation as a classic oriental despot and cruel ruler. He reigned for about 27 years. The pyramid is his greatest achievement, and also the first among the seven wonders of the ancient world. It is the only wonder of the world that has survived to this day. Originally 146.6 m high (today only 137.5 m), it was considered the tallest structure in the world for 3,500 years.

Art of the Middle Kingdom (XXI century-XVIII century BC)

The art of the Middle Kingdom carefully observed the traditions and canons of the Ancient, but also introduced its own characteristics. The beginning of the Middle Kingdom: after a long period of unrest and the disintegration of Egypt into separate nomes, it united under the rule of the Theban rulers. But now centralization was not absolute, as before. Local rulers (nomarchs) became richer and more independent and assumed royal privileges. The tombs of nobles began to be located not at the foot of the royal pyramids, but separately. the pyramids became more modest and smaller in size. During this period, the development of jewelry began.
With the decline in the pathos of monumentality, genre diversity begins to develop. The portrait develops, and its individual features gradually become stronger.

Art of the New Kingdom (XVII century - XI century BC)

In the art of the New Kingdom, the manifestation of human feelings and reflections became noticeable.
The tombs are no longer above ground and are hidden in gorges. The architecture of temples began to dominate. The priests became an independent political force, competing even with the power of the king. Although the pharaohs, their exploits and conquests were glorified in the temples.
Over the course of several centuries, the famous temples of Amun-Ra in Karnak and Luxor, near Thebes, were built and completed.

Main Temple of Amon-Ra at Karnak
The innovative stage is associated with the reign of the reformer pharaoh Akhenaten in the 14th century. BC e. Akhenaten opposed the Theban priesthood, abolished the entire ancient pantheon of gods, and made the priests his irreconcilable enemies.

Akhenaten
The art of Akhenaten's time turned to the simple feelings of people and their mental states. Lyrical scenes of Akhenaten’s family life appear in art: he hugs his wife, caresses his child.
But the reaction to his reforms began already under one of his closest successors - Tutankhamun. Soon all the old cults were restored. But many of Akhenaten’s innovative ideas and techniques were preserved in ancient Egyptian art.

Ramesses II
The last famous conqueror Ramesses II began to cultivate a solemn-monumental style, and after Ramesses there followed a period of long wars, the conquest of Egypt by the Ethiopians and Assyrians. Egypt lost its military and political power, and then its cultural primacy. In the 7th century BC e. The Egyptian state was temporarily reunited around the Sais rulers, and ancient Egyptian art was revived in its traditional forms. But he no longer had the same vitality; he felt tired and his creative energy was drying up. The world-historical role of Egypt was exhausted.

Architecture of Ancient Egypt

Early Kingdom Architecture

The monuments of monumental architecture of this period have practically not survived, because The main building material was easily destroyed raw brick. Clay, reed and wood were also used. Stone was used only as a finishing material. The type of palace facades dates back to this era. Religious and memorial buildings are better preserved: sanctuaries, chapels and mastabas. During this period, some design techniques developed: concave cornices, ornamental friezes (picturesque or sculptural), and designing a doorway with a deep ledge.

Architecture of the Old Kingdom - “the time of the pyramids”

During this period, a powerful centralized state was created under the rule of the pharaoh, who is considered the son of the god Ra, this also dictated the main type of architectural structure - the tomb. The largest royal tombs-pyramids are being created, the structures of which were worked on for decades not only by slaves, but also by peasants. The pyramids indicate that in Ancient Egypt at that time exact sciences and crafts were well developed.

Step pyramid of Djoser at Saqqara
Other pharaohs of the Third Dynasty also built step pyramids. Towards the end of the Old Kingdom period, a new type of building appeared - the solar temple, which was usually built on a hill and surrounded by a wall.

Mortuary Temple of Seti I at Abydos

Architecture of the Middle Kingdom

After Mentuhotep I in 2050 BC. BC reunited Egypt and restored the unified power of the pharaohs under the auspices of Thebes, the psychology of individualism began to dominate: everyone began to care about their own immortality. Now not only the pharaoh, but also ordinary mortals began to claim privileges in the other world. The idea of ​​equality after death arose; this was immediately reflected in the technical side of the cult of the dead. Mastaba-type tombs became an unnecessary luxury. To ensure eternal life, one stele was enough - a stone slab on which magical texts were written.
But the pharaohs continued to build tombs in the form of pyramids, although their sizes decreased, the material for construction was not two-ton blocks, but raw brick, and the method of masonry changed. The basis is 8 main stone walls. Eight other walls extended from these walls at an angle of 45º, and the gaps between them were filled with fragments of stone, sand, and brick. The top of the pyramid was lined with limestone slabs. Adjacent to the eastern side of the pyramid was the upper mortuary temple, from which there was a covered passage to the temple in the valley. Currently, these pyramids are piles of ruins.

Mortuary temple of Pharaoh Mentuhotep II
A new type of burial structure also appeared: tombs. The main part of the tomb was the funeral temple, decorated with a portico; in the center, a ramp led to the second terrace, where the second portico was surrounded on three sides by a columned hall, in the center of which rose a pyramid made of stone blocks. Its foundation was a natural rock. On the western side there was an open courtyard. The tomb of the pharaoh was located under the columned hall.

Architecture of the New Kingdom

Thebes began to play a major role in the architecture and art of the New Kingdom. They build magnificent palaces and houses, magnificent temples. The glory of the city remained for many centuries.
The construction of temples was carried out in three main directions: ground, rock and semi-rock temple complexes.

Facade of the rock temple of Ramses II

Late Kingdom architecture

From the era of the XXVI dynasty, Thebes lost its political and artistic significance, and the city of Sais became the new capital of Egypt. Architectural monuments of the Sais period have hardly survived. The few surviving ones contain ground and rock structures, some elements of temple architecture: hypostyles, pylons, chains of halls.
Hypostyle is a large hall of a temple or palace supported by columns with numerous, regularly placed columns.

Great Hypostyle Hall at Karnak (Egypt)
In the architecture of the era of Persian rule, there is a gradual abandonment of the type of monumental ensembles; temples are becoming much smaller in size. The type of classical colonnade from the time of the New Kingdom is preserved, but the pomp and detail of the decor increases noticeably.
After the conquest of Egypt by the Greeks, a synthesis of local artistic culture with the traditions of antiquity took place.

The temple at Philae is evidence of the evolution of the traditions of ancient Egyptian art during the Hellenistic period

Ancient Egypt sculpture

The sculpture of Ancient Egypt is original and strictly canonically regulated. It was created and developed to represent the ancient Egyptian gods, pharaohs, kings and queens in physical form. Statues of gods and pharaohs were placed on public display, usually in open spaces and outside temples. The most sacred image of God was in the temple. Many carved figurines have survived. Such figurines were made of wood, alabaster, and more expensive materials. Wooden images of slaves, animals and property were placed in tombs to accompany the dead in the afterlife.

Statues of Hatshepsut and Thutmose III (Karnak)
There were also many images of Ka in the graves of ordinary Egyptians, mostly made of wood, some of which have survived. Ka is the human spirit, a being of a higher order, divine life force. After the death of a person, Ka continued to exist inside the tomb and accepted offerings.
Ka was depicted as a man with raised arms bent at the elbows on his head.
Inanimate objects also had ka. The gods had several Ka.
The canon of creating ancient Egyptian sculpture: the color of a man’s body should have been darker than the color of a woman’s body, the hands of a seated person should have been exclusively on his knees. Rules for depicting Egyptian gods: the god Horus should be depicted with the head of a falcon, the god of the dead Anubis with the head of a jackal, etc. The sculptural canon of Ancient Egypt existed for 3 thousand years.
The flourishing of sculpture of small forms began in the art of the Middle Kingdom. Although it was still associated with the funeral cult, the figurines were already covered with primer and painted, and entire multi-figure compositions were created in round sculpture.
In the New Kingdom, monumental sculpture began to actively develop, the purpose of which began to go beyond the funerary cult. Personality traits appear in Theban sculpture of the New Kingdom. For example, portrait images of Hatshepsut. Hatshepsut is a female pharaoh of the New Kingdom of Ancient Egypt from the 18th dynasty. Hatshepsut completed the restoration of Egypt after the Hyksos invasion and erected many monuments throughout Egypt. She, along with Thutmose III, Akhenaten, Tutankhamun, Ramses II and Cleopatra VII, is one of the most famous Egyptian rulers.

Hatshepsut
Sculptural group portraits also appear in the art of the New Kingdom, especially images of a married couple.
An innovation was the depiction of figures entirely in profile, which was previously not allowed by the Egyptian canon. What was also new was the fact that ethnic features were preserved in the portrait. The lyrical principle is manifested in the Amarna reliefs, full of natural plasticity and not containing canonical frontal images.
The works of the sculptors of Thutmes’ workshop are rightly considered the culmination of the development of fine art. Among them is the famous head of Queen Nefertiti in a blue tiara.

Bust of Nefertiti. New Museum (Berlin)
Nefertiti is the “main wife” of the ancient Egyptian pharaoh of the 18th dynasty Akhenaten (c. 1351-1334 BC). It is believed that Egypt has never given birth to such a beauty before. She was called "Perfect"; her face adorned temples throughout the country.
In the sculpture of the Late Kingdom, the skills of the ancient high craftsmanship of sculpture partly fade away. Staticity, conventional outlines of faces, canonical poses and even the semblance of an “archaic smile”, characteristic of the art of the Early and Ancient Kingdoms, are becoming relevant again. The sculptures of the Ptolemaic period are also mainly made in the traditions of the Egyptian canon. But Hellenistic culture influenced the nature of the interpretation of the face; greater plasticity, softness and lyricism appear.

Statue of Osiris. Louvre (Paris)

Painting of Ancient Egypt

All sculptures in Ancient Egypt were brightly colored. Paint composition: egg tempera, viscous substances and resins. No real fresco was used, only “fresco a secco” (wall painting done on hard, dried plaster, re-moistened. Paints used are ground in vegetable glue, egg or mixed with lime). The top of the painting was covered with a layer of varnish or resin to preserve the image for a long time. Most often, small statues, especially wooden ones, were painted this way.
Many Egyptian paintings were preserved due to the dry climate of Ancient Egypt. The paintings were created to improve the life of the deceased in the afterlife. Scenes of a journey to the afterlife and a meeting in the afterlife with a deity (the court of Osiris) were depicted.

Part of the Book of the Dead from Akhmim, depicting the court of Osiris (IV-I centuries BC)
The earthly life of the deceased was often depicted to help him do the same in the kingdom of the dead.
In the New Kingdom, the Book of the Dead began to be buried along with the deceased, which was considered important for the afterlife.

Book of the Dead

In the era of the Old Kingdom, there was a custom of reading spells aloud for the deceased king. Later, similar texts began to be written down in the tombs of Egyptian nobles. By the time of the Middle Kingdom, collections of funeral spells were already written on the surface of sarcophagi and became available to anyone who could purchase such a sarcophagus. In the New Kingdom and later they were written down on papyrus scrolls or on leather. These scrolls were called the “Books of the Dead”: a heap of prayers, chants, hymns and spells associated with the funeral cult. Gradually, elements of morality penetrate into the Book of the Dead.

Judgment of Osiris

This is the 125th chapter, which describes the posthumous judgment of Osiris (the king and judge of the underworld) over the deceased. Illustration for the chapter: Osiris with a crown and staff sits on a throne. At the top are 42 gods. In the center of the hall there are scales on which the gods weigh the heart of the deceased (a symbol of the soul among the ancient Egyptians). On one pan of the scales is the heart, that is, the conscience of the deceased, light or burdened with sins, and on the other is Truth in the form of the feather of the goddess Maat or the figurine of Maat. If a person led a righteous life on earth, then his heart and feather weighed the same; if he sinned, then his heart weighed more. The acquitted deceased was sent to the afterlife paradise, the sinner was eaten by the monster Amat (a lion with the head of a crocodile).
At the trial, the deceased turns to Osiris, and then to each of the 42 gods, justifying himself in a mortal sin that one or another god was aware of. This chapter also contains the text of the acquittal speech.

The gods weigh the heart of the deceased (Book of the Dead)
The main colors of painting in Ancient Egypt were red, blue, black, brown, yellow, white and green.

Everyone knows that the ancient Egyptian civilization created many outstanding things. But today we won’t talk about the famous pyramids. The civilization of Ancient Egypt never ceases to amaze with its achievements even after millennia. In addition to the great things that every schoolchild knows about, the ancient Egyptians made many inventions that were more modest at first glance, the strength of which lies in the fact that people still use their fruits to this day. Egyptian ladies wore jewelry and wigs, men played sports, and children played board games and dolls. From fashion to agriculture, it is difficult to find a sphere of human activity that this greatest civilization of antiquity would not have enriched with its achievements. The only thing missing there was mobile communications. She, alas, appeared in a different era. Although much earlier than is commonly believed.

1. Makeup of the eye area

Perhaps, in terms of its significance for humanity, this invention cannot be compared with the wheel and the method of making fire, but in terms of the time during which the technology remains unchanged, this achievement of mankind should perhaps be considered one of the most relevant discoveries of ancient times. Invented approximately 6 thousand years ago, eye makeup has never gone out of style since then.

The most amazing thing is that even today the same makeup application technique that was developed by the ancient Egyptians is used. The Egyptians made black eye kohl using galena (lead glitter). Green eyeshadow was made from malachite with the addition of the same lead glitter, which gave the color richness.

Makeup was intended not only for Egyptian ladies, but also for gentlemen. Status and attractiveness went hand in hand in ancient Egypt, and among the country's upper class there was a belief that the more makeup the better. The use of makeup by the Egyptians was explained not only by the desire to look attractive. It was believed that the applied paint was a cure for various eye diseases. Despite this popular belief in ancient times, today it is known that lead is very harmful to humans.

2. Writing

The reader may get the impression that the ancient Egyptians did nothing but create beauty. But this is not true at all. It was in Ancient Egypt that writing was created. From now on, one could write down one’s thoughts and save them for posterity.

There was nothing new in the use of images to convey information even in those distant times. Drawings of ancient people found in France and Spain were created 30 thousand years before the birth of Christ. But the masterful ability to convey real events in drawings did not yet mean the appearance of writing.

The first graphic systems for languages ​​appeared in Egypt and Mesopotamia. The first Egyptian pictogram system appeared 6 millennia BC. Each of these pictograms corresponded to a specific word. This writing system had many limitations.

Over time, the Egyptians improved their writing, enriching it with alphabetic characters corresponding to certain sounds (something similar to modern letters). In this way they were able to write down names and abstract ideas.

The Egyptians created a system of hieroglyphs, consisting of alphabetic and syllabic symbols, as well as ideograms, signs that reflect a whole word in writing. Writing allowed civilization to leave traces for historians. Sometimes the traces are not entirely clear.

Modern writing, of course, differs from ancient Egyptian. But the idea has remained the same and serves humanity to this day. It is difficult to even imagine our world without writing, which remains the most important component of human culture. Since then, new technologies have emerged that make it possible to record human speech and even videotape. But the role of writing is still enormous.

3. Papyrus sheet

Carving inscriptions on stone is time-consuming and inconvenient. New dynamic writing required new material. Having created writing, the ancient Egyptians found something to write on.

Papyrus was the ancient predecessor of paper, which was invented in China about 140 years before Christ. Papyrus is a plant from the sedge family that grows in marshy areas along the banks of the Nile. The tough, fibrous shell of this plant is ideal for creating a material on which to write.

Ancient Egyptian books were not bound, but rolled into a scroll - one long sheet of papyrus. This wonderful material was used to record religious texts, literature and even musical works.

The technology for producing writing papyrus was kept strictly secret by the ancient Egyptians, which allowed them to export this material to other countries in the region. The most interesting thing is that the process of creating the first written material in history was not recorded anywhere and for this reason was lost. But in 1965, Dr. Hassan Ragab finally managed to please the scientific world with the creation of a sheet of papyrus.

Papyrus was used to make not only the oldest “paper substitute”, but also sails, sandal straps and many other little things of ancient Egyptian life.

4. Calendar

A modern person, without a calendar, may miss an important meeting or come to work on a day off. It's unfortunate, but the ancient Egyptians lived in very harsh conditions. For them, the calendar meant prosperity, and without it, real famine threatened. They could not miss the flood of the Nile (an event that occurred annually). Under these conditions, the entire agricultural system of the country was at great risk. The ancient Egyptians simply had no choice; they could not trust chance. Therefore, several thousand years BC they began to use a calendar.

This calendar was entirely devoted to the needs of agriculture, without which, as we know, there is no food. The year was divided into three main seasons (or seasons): flood, growth and harvest. Each season consisted of four months, each containing 30 days. Isn’t it true that there is a lot of familiarity in this ancient calendar?

But, if you add up all the months of the Egyptian year, you get only 360 days, which is less than the actual cycle of our planet’s revolution around the Sun. To reduce this difference, the Egyptians added five extra days between the harvest and flood seasons. These five days of the off-season were religious holidays in honor of the children of the gods.

It should be noted that both the Julian calendar (old style) and the modern Gregorian calendar are essentially modifications of the ancient Egyptian calendar. Thus, the ancient Egyptians became the creators of the measure with which humanity marks its milestones and creates plans.

5. Plow

A person can do without a newfangled gadget. But not without food. In ancient times, this simple truth was clear to everyone, since almost all people were involved in agriculture. Plowing the land is not an easy task for primitive tools. And humanity created the plow.

There is still ongoing debate among historians about which civilization was the first to create this indispensable agricultural tool. Egyptian or Sumerian? A plow is a very general concept and leaves a huge scope for modification.

Most likely, the first plow was created on the basis of a corresponding hand tool. But its effectiveness was doubtful. Too light, it only scraped the ground and could not plow it deeply. Nowadays this dead-end tool is called a “scraping plow.” Under the scorching rays of the Egyptian sun, working with a hand plow was inconvenient.

But the situation changed dramatically two millennia before the birth of Christ. The Egyptians realized that a plow could pull cattle behind it and do it much more efficiently than a person, who was inferior in strength to an ox. At first the plow was attached to the animal's horns, but this design made it difficult for the animal to breathe. Then a belt system was thought out, making the fastening more effective.

The invention of the plow brought Egyptian agriculture to a level never before seen. Combined with the predictable flood cycle of the Nile, the plow allowed Egypt to simplify cultivation to a degree never before achieved by any civilization in the world.

6. Mouth freshener

Modern man still uses this invention of the ancient Egyptians. Numerous air fresheners, aromatic chewing gum and mints make the breath of the inhabitant of the modern world fresh. The ancient Egyptians also cared not only about the useful, but also about the beautiful.

Having provided yourself with nutrition, it’s time to think about bad breath. This smell was already perceived in those days as evidence of unhealthy teeth. The ancient Egyptians did not drink liters of sweet soda, but the millstones with which they ground grain into flour generously “enriched” their diet with sand, which scratched tooth enamel and made the teeth of representatives of a great civilization vulnerable to infection.

The Egyptians had doctors, but this ancient country did not yet have dentists. Therefore, there was no one to treat teeth and gums. And the Egyptians could only endure the pain and eliminate the unpleasant odor with the help of the first-ever kind of “chewing gum” made from frankincense, myrrh and cinnamon, boiled in honey. This composition was shaped into balls.

7. Bowling

The inhabitants of Ancient Egypt knew how not only to work, decorate themselves and give freshness to their breath. Active recreation was already in fashion back then.

90 kilometers south of Cairo in the second and third centuries AD, during the years of Roman rule over Egypt, the settlement of Narmoutheos was located. It was there that archaeologists found a room in which they found tracks and a set of balls of various sizes.

The length of the path was 3.9 meters, width 20 centimeters, and depth 9.6 centimeters. In the center of each path there was a square depression with a square side of 11.9 centimeters.

If in modern bowling you are supposed to knock down the pins at the end of the lane, then in ancient Egyptian bowling you had to hit the hole located in the middle of the lane. The players stood at different ends of the track and tried not only to drive balls of different sizes into the hole, but also to knock the opponent’s ball off course.

8. Shaving and cutting hair

Although historians are not completely sure of this, it is quite possible that it was the Egyptians who were the first to learn how to do hair. There could be a completely rational reason for this. In the hot Egyptian climate, long hair and beards made people uncomfortable.

Therefore, they cut their hair short and shaved regularly. The priests even shaved the hair on their entire bodies every three days. For most of Egyptian history, being clean-shaven was considered fashionable, and bushy hair was a sign of low social status.

It is possible that it was the Egyptian sharp stones with wooden handles that were the first razors on Earth. Over time, razors began to be made from copper. It was the Egyptians who, for the first time in the history of our world, acquired the profession of hairdresser. Only wealthy ancient Egyptian aristocrats could afford to invite a hairdresser to their home. But simpler people could also use the services of barbers, who set up their first hairdressing salons on Earth under the shady plane trees.

Oddly enough, the Egyptians considered a beard attractive. Provided that it is a false beard, which was made from a bunch of hair. Even more interesting, false beards were worn not only by Egyptian pharaohs, but also by queens.

The shape of a false beard could determine the social status of its owner. Ordinary citizens wore small, approximately 5-centimeter, beards. The pharaohs were characterized by a beard of enormous length, the end of which was given a square shape by barbers. The Egyptians portrayed their gods as having even more luxurious and long beards.

9. Door lock

We should also be grateful to the Egyptian civilization for this invention. The oldest door lock appeared about 6 thousand years ago. With its help, doors were blocked with wooden pins. The oldest castle could be opened and closed using a key. This design has not lost its relevance to this day.

One of the descriptions of Egyptian door locks indicates their dimensions. The largest reached 60 centimeters in length. Egyptian castles provided security to a greater extent than the technology that was later invented by the Romans. Roman castles were of a simpler design. But it was the Romans who were the first to use springs.

10.Toothpaste

Sick teeth caused a lot of trouble for the ancient Egyptians, since the bread contained stone chips from millstones. I had to think about keeping my teeth clean. Archaeologists have discovered toothpicks that were used to remove pieces of food stuck between teeth. The Egyptians, along with the Babylonians, are believed to have enriched human civilization with the toothbrush. The Egyptian toothbrush was a specially frayed tree branch at the end.

But this does not exhaust the innovations that the Egyptians have made in the field of oral hygiene. They created toothpaste. It consisted of a bull's leg ground into powder, ashes, burnt eggshells and pumice.

Recently, archaeologists discovered a recipe for a more hygienic ancient Egyptian toothpaste and a papyrus with instructions for brushing your teeth. But these valuable finds date back to the fourth century AD, that is, the period after Roman rule. The unknown author of this papyrus tells the reader how to mix rock salt, mint, dried iris flowers and pepper in certain proportions, and the result is “a powder that will make the teeth white and excellent.”

Similar on topic

The ancient Egyptians also achieved great success in scientific knowledge. Of course, this was scattered information, loosely connected with each other and not yet separated from the religious-mythological picture of the world. However, many of the results obtained by the ancient Egyptians are striking. The development of computing was facilitated by construction (accuracy of construction measurements and perfect marking with paint of inclination angles, depths and levels of ledges on pyramidal masonry). The need to calculate the periods when the Nile flooded created Egyptian astronomy. In fact, they created one of the first calendars, the basic principles of which remain important to this day.

The year consisted of three times, each time of 4 months, each month of 30 days; In addition to 360 days in a year, there were 5 additional ones; there were no leap years, so the calendar year was ahead of the natural year, consisting of 365 days, by 1 day every 4 years.

The ancient Egyptians did something grandiose in the field of physics - to reduce the friction force, slaves poured oil under the runners of carts (building pyramids).

During the Old Kingdom, the Egyptians made a discovery in the field of chemistry - they invented colored pastes with which they coated large beads or made them from colored smalts. Throughout the history of Ancient Egypt, many different types of jewelry were made from this bead.

The first mathematical and medical texts (some of them are problem books in the modern sense of the word) belong to the Middle Kingdom period.

Mathematics was especially developed in Ancient Egypt - and this despite the cumbersome and inconvenient numerical system. The Egyptians knew complex problems with the formation of fractions, the concept of the unknown, developments in calculating the surface of a hemisphere and the volume of a pyramid, including a truncated one; they already use Pi = 3.16. Together with the trigonometry of volumetric bodies, a system of golden ratio rules is being developed.

Astronomers create fairly accurate pictures of the starry sky (lists of constellations on sarcophagi). There are speculations that the corresponding constellations are in the sky during the day. They are invisible during the day because the Sun is in the sky.

Physics - water clocks were invented (pocket watches, Egyptian neck watches, instructions - “instructions” on using a sundial).

Medicine - medical books describing blood circulation, treatment of wounds, skull fractures and damage to the internal cavities of the nose.

Geography - pieces of detailed drawings of desert mountain maps have reached us.

Perhaps this knowledge will seem too primitive to a modern person, but we should not forget that this is an early stage of human culture. It is no coincidence that the ancient Greeks considered the Egyptians the wisest of people, went to Egypt for wisdom, and learned from the Egyptian priests. The culture of Ancient Egypt in many ways became a model for many other civilizations, a model that was not only imitated, but also built upon and sought to be overcome.



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