Jenna socials
Transcript of Jenna socials
ANCIENT EGYPT By: Jenna Mellor
MAP OF ANCIENT EGYPT
During this time frame, ancient Egypt was divided into Upper and Lower Egypt. Lower Egypt was farther north and Upper Egypt was farther south. However, Upper and Lower Egypt split between 1000 and 1100 B.C. This civilization lasted from 3100 B.C. to 30 B.C. This is equivalent to the first Dynasty to the Ptolemaic Dynasty.
BACKGROUND
The civilization of ancient Egypt that I chose lasted from 3100
B.C. to 30 B.C. (the first Dynasty to the Ptolemaic Dynasty). 3100
B.C. is when the Hieroglyphic script was invented and Upper and
Lower Egypt were unified. In 30 B.C., Cleopatra VII died. In
between this long period of time, many important events
happened such as the pyramids of Giza were built, various kings
ruled Egypt, the temple of Karnak was built, and Upper and
Lower Egypt split. There have been many events that have
occurred in Ancient Egypt that have made history.
Pyramids
of Giza
Hieroglyphic script
Temple of
Karnak Cleopatra VII
SOCIAL STRUCTURE
The Social Pyramid is a metaphorical way of showing which
individual is in a higher class than another. In this case, the
Pharaoh is the most important. Then come the viziers, who are
the Pharaoh's most trusted advisors. The high
priests and nobles are next, the officials and
scribes were the only people who knew how
to read and write, the skilled craftsmen were
below the high priests and nobles, and at the
bottom of the Social Pyramid are the slaves,
labourers, and the peasants. The position of
each of these individuals was dependent on
their class, gender, race, and occupation.
HOUSING
In ancient Egypt, the houses were mainly
made out of mud bricks. Brick makers would
let the mud bake in the sun after placing them
in wooden moulds. The mud bricks would be
stacked to make houses as soon as they
hardened. After the annual flood, there was a
lot of mud in ancient Egypt, especially around
the Nile River. For the wealthier people, the
houses were made out of double thick walls
and the poor people lived in houses made out
of walls that were only one brick thick.
The floor in a poor person‟s home was dug
beneath the ground. The floor of a wealthy
person‟s home was tiled. The roof of a house
was made out of timber and was covered with
thatch and matting. Reeds and straw bound
together is thatch and it was layered with mud
plaster. Because the inside of a house was
dimly lit, people often used the roof as living
space.
The average house in ancient Egypt had four
rooms; small rooms joined to a central room.
The central room was often higher than the
others and used for sleeping. The other three
rooms were usually a kitchen, a storage
room or extra bedroom, and an entry room
that led to the central room. However, the
wealthy people usually had ten rooms and
the poor people only had one.
Every rich person‟s home had a
garden with a swimming pool.
Except for the poor, most people
had furniture in their home. The
richer the person, the more furniture
they had. The wealthiest homes
even had painted walls; usually blue
or yellow with coloured ceilings.
Mud bricks
Ancient
Egyptian
house
Tiles in a
rich
person‟s
house
FOOD
Most Egyptian food came from the Nile River. Because of the Nile River,
Egypt had extremely fertile soil around the area which was great for growing
crops. The river produced enough fish to supply the people with their daily
recommended amount of fish and meat, seeing as how it is difficult for
ancient Egypt to raise livestock. Since there is very fertile soil around the Nile
River, people would grow wheat to make many food recipes or be fermented
and ground into different things, vegetables including peas, beans, onions,
garlic, leeks, lettuce, cabbages, and turnips, and fruits including figs, dates,
and grapes which could be used to make wine for those who could afford it.
The wealthy people could afford to eat coconuts, olives, and meat on
occasion. The poor people could only afford to eat wheat and whatever fruits
and vegetables they could grow in a garden.
Wheat
Salmon
Lettuce
Turnips
Figs
Grapes
FAMILY LIFE
In the poor ancient Egyptian families, the mother raised the children. In the richer
families, hired servants and slaves would help take care of the children and provide
them with their basic needs. Whether rich or poor, ancient Egyptians thought of
children as a blessing and a treasure. Surprisingly, men and women were treated
equally and had the same rights for the most part; however, the women were still taught
and expected to obey their fathers and husbands. In fact, the wives and mothers of the
pharaohs were known to have the „real‟ ruling power. In the absence of their husbands
or sons, women could run farms and businesses. People hired women in courts and
temples to work as acrobats, singers, dancers and musicians. Women worked as
maids and nannies for the rich families and also could become priests if they were
noblewomen. Also, women sometimes worked as perfume makers and professional
mourners. Trading and crafting was the job of a young boy; they learned these skills
from their fathers or an artisan. Young girls learned their training from their mothers at
home. If a family was wealthy enough, they would send their son to school to study
religion, reading, arithmetic, and writing at about seven years old. Too bad that it was
against the law for girls to go to school. All children were intended to look after their
parents if they were elderly. If the parents died, the son would take over the land and
the girl would inherit all of the household goods. Although if there were no sons, the
land would become the daughter‟s.
Egyptian Family
Egyptian Trading
Egyptian
Acrobat
MARRIAGE
Ancient Egyptian
marriage
Egyptian
Jewellery
CHILDBIRTH PRACTICES (EXTRA)
Birth Stool
Egyptian
woman with
baby
CHILDHOOD
Most ancient Egyptian children had brothers and sisters. It
was very rare for parents to let their children die if they were
too poor to look after them because whether rich or poor,
children were highly valued and loved. It made it easier for
poor families because most children didn‟t need clothes until
they left babyhood. Before the children were old enough to
play outside, their mother looked after them. Wealthy
parents owned servants to look after the babies, whereas
working mothers took their babies wherever they had to go.
If a child‟s mother was a slave, there is a chance that the
child may become a slave as well. As a slave, people get
beaten or sold, although if you did your job well, your owner
may reward you with freedom. A lot of foreigners were quite
surprised with the fact that children were loved very much
for the most part because in other countries, people would
take their children for granted.
EDUCATION
When the boys were four years old, their father would start to teach them
everything they needed to know. The son would usually follow in his
fathers footsteps, so if a father traded goods, he would teach his son the
rules of trading so he could become a trader one day. Some children
attended a school in a village, whereas other children went to school that
was meant for a particular career such as a scribe or priest. The schools
mainly taught reading, writing, math, sports, morals, and manners. The
higher branch of education called “Instruction of Wisdom” taught
morality, ethics, and knowledge needed to become a doctor or scribe.
When a boy was fourteen, he would join his father in his career. Although
schools were not open for girls, they could train to be dancers, bakers,
entertainers, and weavers. Girls were usually trained by their mothers on
motherhood and learning how to be a good wife. Only the wealthiest
families could afford their daughters getting education in reading and
writing.
Reading and writing;
Hieroglyphics
Egyptian
school
RELIGION The ancient Egyptians had around 2000 gods and goddesses; some of them were
worshiped by everybody, and others worshiped by certain citizens and ethnic groups.
Quite a few gods and goddesses were shown and represented as part animal and part
human. It was believed that a person had the ba or soul of a bird with a human head and
every ancient Egyptian had a twin called a ka. The ka would make trips to the world
where gods and goddesses of the dead lived and the ba kept in touch with family and
friends from the dead. The ka and ba always lived in the body of its person forever, even
in his or her tombstone. If the ka and ba couldn‟t find its person, the Egyptian would not
live forever and it was mummified so the ba and ka could locate it. For a person to live
forever, he or she had to be honest. Egyptian god Anubis would weigh a person‟s heart
with the feather of truth to decipher whether or not that person was honest. If the heart
weighed more than the feather of truth, the person wasn‟t honest and his or her heart
would be eaten by an animal that was part alligator, part cheetah, and part lion called the
devourer, and if the feather weighed more than the heart, the person was honest and
would live forever. There were many different theories on how the world started including
the ocean started in darkness. After, dry land rose up and the sun god appeared and he
created light and all things. There were many temples in ancient Egypt, as they were the
dwelling places for the gods. When a pharaoh died, he became a god. All in all, religion
was a big part in Egyptian lives.
Ba (left) and ka
(right)
Weighing the
heart with the
feather of truth Devourer
CLEOPATRA VII
(EXTRA)
Cleopatra VII was a part of the
Ptolemaic Dynasty. She was
born in late 69 B.C. and died in
30 B.C. She ruled Egypt after
Alexander the Great. She
refused to speak Egyptian and
therefore spoke Greek.
She was the Queen of
Egypt from 51 B.C. until
she died in 30 B.C. The
people of Egypt idolized
her for her original
statements with her style
and ways to govern the
country.
CLOTHING
Clothing has hardly changed over the course of a hundred years. Almost
always, the ancient Egyptian clothes were made out of linen, which they
wove from fibres of the flax plant. The workers wore loincloths or tunic
dresses; although when they were on the job, they would often work
naked and the servant girls just wore a belt. Wealthy people wore
transparent white cloth that was pleated, draped, then tied to fit them. On
their heads they wore black wool wigs and makeup on their eyes and lips.
Before being clothed, each person had to be washed. This means that
water is poured over you and the rich people had tiled washing areas to
be washed on. After an Egyptian was washed, he or she would put
scented oil all over his or her body. Each women would wear rings,
necklaces, and earrings out of gold or beads, whether rich or poor.
Ancient Egyptians wore sandals out of plaited papyrus, leather, and palm
fibre, although they were only worn when they were necessary and
carried around otherwise. Loincloths and tunic dresses were made using
a spindle and a stripper and wigs were made out of human hair.
Loincloth
Tunic
Sandals
Egyptian
wigs
Jewellery
ART AND MUSIC
Ancient Egyptian art consisted of painting,
sculpting, architecture, papyrus, pottery,
hieroglyphs, and literature. Animals were
very symbolic in Egyptian art and the
colours used were very expressive. When
painting humans, it was typical to have the
head facing the side, showing the person‟s
portrait, the torso facing front, and the legs
and feet facing the side. Sculptures mainly
represented Egyptian gods and
goddesses. Architects used sun dried and
kiln baked brick to build. The buildings
were then decorated from top to bottom.
Papyrus means paper. Crafting papyrus
had to be done with precision. Pottery was
steatite or soapstone carved into vases,
deities, or animals. Hieroglyphs are an
Egyptian form of writing. Literature was
almost always written on papyrus and
included elements of Egyptian art.
In ancient Egypt, music was
significant in every day life. Music
occurred in festivals, entertainment,
dancing, temples, workshops,
palaces, farms, battlefields, and
tombs. Egyptian god Osiris brought
music into everyday life. Throughout
the Predynastic period, Old Kingdom,
and Middle Kingdom, harps, flutes,
double clarinets, percussion
instruments, lyres, lutes, and cymbals
were brought into civilization. In
ancient Egypt, there was folk music,
coptic music, and saidi music. All in
all, music was a large part of
civilization in ancient Egypt.
Art
Music
Painting (left)
and sculpture
(right)
Flute (left)
and cymbals
(left)
FESTIVALS (EXTRA)
There were often festivals of the gods. They
were holidays that would sometimes even last
for several days. Throughout festivals, there is
singing, dancing, lots of noise in the streets,
eating, and drinking. The Beautiful Festival of
the Valley was celebrated in the Middle
Kingdom period and later. This was in the 12th
Dynasty. This festival was celebrated every
year for the second month of Shomu
(beginning of summer; harvest season). This
festival represented the land of the dead and
the Thebes that dated in the Middle Kingdom.
CONCLUSION
Egyptian children
playing (left) and
religion- ka (left)
Elders were
respected
INFORMATION BIBLIOGRAPHY
Websites:
Ancient Egypt http://www.woodlandsjunior.kent.sch.uk/homework/egypt/Hierarchy.html
Ancient Egyptian Food http://www.ancient-egypt-online.com/ancient-egyptian-food.htm
Ancient Egyptian Religion http://www2.sptimes.com/Egypt/EgyptCredit.4.3.html
Art of Ancient Egypt http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_of_ancient_Egypt
A Timeline of Ancient Egyptian History http://www.ancientegypt.co.uk/time/explore/main.html
Cleopatra VII http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleopatra_VII
Education in Ancient Egypt http://historylink101.net/egypt_1/a-education.htm
Egypt: Daily Life http://www2.sptimes.com/Egypt/EgyptCredit.4.2.html
Houses of Ancient Egypt http://www.dragonstrike.com/egypt/house.htm
Housing in Ancient Egypt http://historylink101.net/egypt_1/a-housing.htm
Music in Ancient Egypt
http://www.umich.edu/~kelseydb/Exhibits/MIRE/Introduction/AncientEgypt/AncientEgypt.html
Religion http://www.site-ology.com/egypt/RELIG.HTM
Social Structures of Ancient Egypt http://www.all-about-egypt.com/social-structures-of-
ancient-egypt.html
The Middle Eastern Dowry http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/gift_giving_customs/77199
INFORMATION BIBLIOGRAPHY #2
Books:
Clare, John D. Pyramids of Ancient Pyramids. San Diego:
Harcourt, 1992.
Morley, Jaqueline. How Would You Survive as an Ancient Egyptian? Belgium: Franklin Watts, 1995.
PICTURE BIBLIOGRAPHY http://schools.tdsb.on.ca/silverthornjps/egypt/index.htm Pyramids. Slide 1.
http://www.bible-history.com/geography/maps/map_pharaonic_egypt.html Map of ancient Egypt. Slide 1.
http://www.ancientegypt.co.uk/time/explore/tihie.html Hieroglyphic Script. Slide 3.
http://tigerx.com/history/people/cleopatra.htm Cleopatra VII. Slide 3.
http://www.places-to-visit.us/category/Egypt.html Pyramids of Giza. Slide 3.
http://www.wayfaring.info/2006/10/30/the-astonishing-temple-of-karnak-in-luxor-spiritual-center-of-the-ancient-egyptians/ Temple of Karnak. Slide 3.
http://www.woodlands-junior.kent.sch.uk/homework/egypt/Hierarchy.html Social structure of ancient Egypt. Slide 4.
http://historylink101.net/egypt_1/a-housing.htm Ancient Egyptian House. Slide 5.
http://www.dragonstrike.com/egypt/house.htm Mud bricks and tile floor. Slide 5.
http://www.khalilpakistan.com/trading.html Wheat. Slide 6.
http://www.victorialodging.com/recreation/fishing Salmon. Slide 6.
http://www.foodpoisonjournal.com/foodborne-illness-outbreaks/the-uglier-side-of-lettuce/ Lettuce. Slide 6.
http://www.sheknows.com/food-and-recipes/articles/805855/turnips-and-red-kidney-beans Turnips. Slide 6.
http://www.justfruitsandexotics.com/Figs.htm Figs. Slide 6.
http://www.free-extras.com/images/grapes-5432.htm Grapes. Slide 6.
http://www.fathom.com/course/21701778/session2.html Egyptian family. Slide 7.
http://www.mediastorehouse.com/trade_ancient_egypt/print/585699.html Egyptian trading. Slide 7.
http://www.thekeep.org/~kunoichi/kunoichi/themestream/egypt_soul.html Egyptian Acrobat. Slide 7.
http://www.adornmentsatthefactory.net/tag/gemology/ Ancient Egyptian marriage. Slide 8.
http://fashionweekblog.blog.com/ Ancient Egyptian Jewellery. Slide 8.
http://www.fourmums.com/just-us-two/06-02-2011/one-yanked-out-every-minute-under-bright-hallogen-lights/ Birth Stool. Slide 9.
http://www.ancient-egypt-history.com/2011/02/ancient-egyptian-womens-health-and.html Egyptian woman with baby. Slide 9.
PICTURE BIBLIOGRAPHY #2 http://pc.ign.com/dor/objects/669069/immortal-cities-children-of-the-nile/images/immortal-cities-
children-of-the-nile-20040623042954236.html Children playing. Slide 10 & 17.
http://oldegypt.wikispaces.com/Hieroglyphics+Symbols Hieroglyphics. Slide 11.
http://ancientegyptmoberly.pbworks.com/w/page/12830337/Ancient-Egypt-Education Ancient
Egyptian school. Slide 11.
http://www.andrewgough.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=3360 Bird with human head. Slide 12.
http://www.touregypt.net/featurestories/ka.htm Egyptian ka. Slide 12 & 17.
http://www.stencilkingdom.com/catalogue/catalogue.php?page=egypt/catalogue_body_egypt_egypt
44.php Heart and feather of truth. Slide 12.
http://www.egyptiandreams.co.uk/ammit.php The devourer. Slide 12.
http://sastha-knowyourledge.blogspot.com/2011/02/all-of-historys-most-scandalous-woman.html
Cleopatra VII. Slide 13.
http://www.modthesims.info/download.php?t=163398 Loincloth. Slide 14.
http://www.costumecraze.com/Couples-Costumes-p7.html Tunic. Slide 14.
http://christianimageresource.org/catalog2.html Sandals. Slide 14.
http://theafrostory.blogspot.com/2009/11/do-i-perpetuate-self-hatred-because-i.html Wigs. Slide 14.
http://ancientegyptmoberly.pbworks.com/w/page/12830342/Ancient-Egyptian-Fashion-Legacy
Egyptian jewellery. Slide 14.
http://www.oldandsold.com/articles20/painting-methods-1.shtml Egyptian painting. Slide 15.
http://www.pleasantmorningbuzz.com/arts/ Egyptian sculpture. Slide 15.
http://www.ancient-egypt-online.com/egyptian-music.html Flute. Slide 15.
http://christianimageresource.org/catalog5.html Cymbals. Slide 15.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beautiful_Festival_of_the_Valley Festival of the Valley. Slide 16.
http://www.tau.ac.il/humanities/archaeology/projects/proj_past_elder.html Egyptian elders. Slide 17.