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Egyptian empire about 1450 b.C.
Geography of the Ancient Nile Valley
“Egypt is wholly the gift of the Nile.” – Herodotus

People settled and established farming villages along the Nile.

Egyptians depended on annual floods to soak the land and deposit
a layer of silt, or rich soil.

Egyptians had to cooperate to control the Nile, building dikes,
reservoirs, and irrigation ditches.

Rulers used the Nile to link and unite Upper and Lower Egypt.

The Nile served as a trade route connecting Egypt to Africa, the
Middle East, and the Mediterranean world.
Three Kingdoms of Ancient Egypt



            OLD                   MIDDLE                     NEW
         KINGDOM                                           KINGDOM
                                   KINGDOM
       Pharaohs organized a     Large drainage project   Powerful pharaohs
       strong central state,    created arable farmland. created a large empire
       were absolute rulers,                             that reached the
       and were considered      Traders had contacts     Euphrates River.
       gods.                    with Middle East and
                                Crete.                   Hatshepsut
       Egyptians built                                   encouraged trade.
       pyramids at Giza.        Corruption and
                                rebellions were          Ramses II expanded
       Power struggles, crop    common.                  Egyptian rule to Syria.
       failures, and cost of
       pyramids contributed     Hyksos invaded and       Egyptian power
       to the collapse of the   occupied the delta       declined.
       Old Kingdom.             region.
Egyptian Religious Beliefs

 •Belief that many gods and goddesses ruled the world and
 the afterlife.
          Amon-Re was the sun god.
                 Osiris was the god of the underworld and of
 the             Nile.
          The pharaoh was believed to be a god as well as
          a monarch.

 •Belief in eternal life after death.
                   Relied on the Book of the Dead to help them
                   through the afterworld.
                                      Practiced mummification, the
 preservation of the         body for use in the next life.
Ancient Egypt: A Center of Learning & Culture



       Advances in Learning                  Advances in the Arts
      Developed a form of picture writing   Statues, paintings, and writings tell
      called hieroglyphics.                 us about ancient Egyptian values
                                            and attitudes.
      Doctors diagnosed and cured
      illnesses, performed surgery, and     Developed painting style that
      developed medicines still used        remained unchanged for thousands
      today.                                of years.

      Developed 12-month calendar on        Wrote hymns and prayers to the
      which modern calendar is based.       gods, proverbs, love poems, stories
      Astronomers mapped constellations     of victory in battle, and folk tales.
      and charted movement of the
      planets.                              Built pyramids and other great
                                            buildings, such as temple of
      Developed practical geometry.         Ramses II.
      Skilled in design and engineering.
Class System in Ancient Egypt


                               PHARAOH
                   Earthly leader; considered a god


                   HIGH PRIESTS AND PRIESTESSES
                      Served gods and goddesses


                              NOBLES
                        Fought pharaoh’s wars

                MERCHANTS, SCRIBES, AND ARTISANS
                 Made furniture, jewelry, and fabrics for
           pharaohs and nobles, and provided for other needs

                 PEASANT FARMERS AND SLAVES
              Worked in the fields and served the pharaoh
Characteristics of Egyptian Architecture

 •Due to the scarcity of lumber, the two predominant building
 materials used in ancient Egypt were sun-baked mud brick
 and stone, mainly limestone, but also sandstone and granite
 in considerable quantities.

 •From the Old Kingdom onward, stone was generally
 reserved for tombs and temples,

 •while bricks were used even for royal palaces, fortresses, the
 walls of temple precincts and towns, and for subsidiary
 buildings in temple complexes.

 • Egypt houses were made out of mud collected from the Nile
 river. It was placed in molds and left to dry in the hot sun to
 harden for use in construction.
Characteristics of Egyptian Architecture
 •Many Egyptian towns have disappeared because they were situated
 near the cultivated area of the Nile Valley and were flooded as the
 river bed slowly rose during the millennia, or the mud bricks of which
 they were built were used by peasants as fertilizer.

 •Others are inaccessible, new buildings having been erected on
 ancient ones. Fortunately, the dry, hot climate of Egypt preserved
 some mud brick structures.

 •Examples include the village
        Deir al - Madinah,
        the Middle Kingdom town at Kahun,
        and the fortresses at Buhen and Mirgissa.

 Also, many temples and tombs have survived because they were
 built on high ground unaffected by the Nile flood and were
 constructed of stone.
Deir al - Madinah




                                   Kahun

fortresses at Buhen and Mirgissa
Religious buildings/monuments
•massive structures characterized by thick, sloping walls with
few openings.

• possibly a method of construction used to obtain stability in
mud walls.

•the incised and flatly modeled surface adornment of the stone
buildings has derived from mud wall ornamentation.

•the use of the arch was developed during the fourth dynasty,
all monumental buildings are post and lintel constructions,

•flat roofs are constructed of huge stone blocks supported by
the external walls and the closely spaced columns.
Religious buildings/monuments
•Exterior and interior walls, as well as the columns and piers,
were covered with hieroglyphic and pictorial frescoes and
carvings painted in brilliant colors.

•Many motifs of Egyptian ornamentation are symbolic, such as
       the scarab, or sacred beetle
       the solar disk
       the vulture
       palm leaves,
       the papyrus plant
       buds and flowers of the lotus

Hieroglyphs were inscribed for decorative purposes as well as
to record historic events or spells.
the scarab, or sacred beetle




                           the solar disk
the vulture
Palm leaves
Papyrus Capital
Buds and flower of Lotus
Religious buildings/monuments
•Ancient Egyptian temples were aligned with astronomically
significant events, such as solstices and equinoxes,

•required precise measurements at the moment of the
particular event.

•Measurements at the most significant temples may have been
ceremonially undertaken by the Pharaoh himself.
column
Examples
 TOMB ARCHITECTURE
      MASTABAS
      ROYAL PYRAMIDS
      ROCK – HEWN TOMBS

 TEMPLES

 OBELISKS

 DWELLINGS

 FORTRESSES
MASTABAS
Historical Background

 This type of structure was an elaboration of the Pre – Dynastic Period
 burial-pit and mound form. Mastabas were favored as funerary
 monument from the Early Dynastic Period on

 As the Egyptian craftsmanship increased in the Early Dynastic Period,
 mastaba such as those of the first dynasty at Saqqara, were elaborate,
 having many storage or offering compartments, housing funerary
 chapels, shrines, offering tables and were quite evidently close copies
 of contemporary houses.

 In the Old Kingdom, even after the Pharaohs began to be buried in
 pyramids, other royal officials were still interred in Mastabas, usually
 around the site of the pyramid.
MASTABAS
Usage and Shape
  A sepulchral structure built aboveground.

  Mastabas were built above a shaft at the
 bottom of which was situated a tomb

 The structure above the ground were
 relatively low

 Rectangular in plan with inward-sloping
 walls

 Flat roof.

 Built of brick and faced with limestone slabs.
 sides sloping at an angle of about 75 degrees
MASTABAS
Usage and Shape
        they were derived from the rude heaps of stones piled over
         earlier mummy holes.

        They consisted of three parts :
 (i)     The outer chamber, in which were placed the offerings to the
         Ka or " double," decorated with festal and other scenes which
         are valuable from an historical standpoint.

 (ii)    The inner secret chamber, known as the " serdab," which
         contained statues of the deceased members of the family.

 (iii)   The chamber containing the sarcophagus, reached by an
         underground shaft.
MASTABAS
Decorations and Examples




  Plain undecorated exterior

  The interior of mastaba walls were decorated with texts and images,
 illustrating scenes from the daily life of the deceased, offering scenes
 and ritual hunt scenes.
MASTABAS
The Mastaba of Thi, Sakkara




 well preserved and restored, dates from the Fifth Dynasty, and was
 erected to Thi, who held the position of royal architect and superintendent
 of pyramids.

 It consists of a small vestibule, beyond which is a large court, where
 offerings to the deceased were made, and from which a mummy shaft led
 to the tomb chamber.

 The masonry is accurately jointed, and the bas-reliefs are some of the
 finest and most interesting in Egypt.
MASTABAS
The Mastaba of Thi, Sakkara




 A second tomb chamber, 22 ft. 9 ins. by 23 ft. 9 ins. and 12 ft. 6 ins.
 high, has mural reliefs which represent harvesting, ship-building,
 slaughtering of sacrificial animals, as well as arts and crafts of Old
 Egypt

 while Thi himself is pictured in a papyrus thicket, sailing through the
 marshes.
ROYAL PYRAMIDS
In its most common form, a pyramid is a massive stone or brick
structure with a square base and four sloping triangular sides that meet
in a point at the top.

Pyramids have been built by different peoples at various times in
history. Probably the best-known pyramids are those of ancient Egypt,
which were built to protect the tombs of rulers or other important
persons.
ROYAL PYRAMIDS
 Early royal pyramids were of mastaba type, from which the true
pyramid evolved.

 Pyramids did not stand in isolation.

 they were surrounded by a walled enclosure and had an offering
chapel, with a stele, a mortuary temple for the worship of the dead and
deified Pharaoh

 pyramids were built during the lifetime of the Pharaohs, because of
their belief in immortality.
ROYAL PYRAMIDS
Pyramids were founded on living rock, were of limestone quarried in
their locality, faced with the finer limestone.

 Granite, in limited use, such as linings of the chambers and passages.

 Tomb Chambers and their approaches were either cut in the rock
below the monument or were in its constructed core.

 Entrances were from the north side, the sides were scrupulously
oriented with the cardinal points.
ROCK – HEWN TOMBS
 Served for the nobility rather than royalty

 Pyramids, of indifferent construction, remained the principal form of
royal tomb.

 TOMBS, BENI HASAN
• Belonged to a provincial great family.

• totally rock –hewn, each consists of a chamber behind a porticoed
façade

• slightly fluted and tapered columns
TEMPLES
 Two main classes –
        mortuary temples, for ministrations to deified Pharaohs
        Cult temples, for the popular worship of ancient and mysterious
        gods

 Royal burials more important than mortuary temples

 Their special character merged into that of the cult temples, lost the
distinction between the two types.

 Cult temples essentials were
        rectangular palisaded court
        entered from a narrow end flanked by pennon – poles
        centrally within them an emblem of deity
        pavilion comprising vestibule and sanctuary
TEMPLES
 Mortuary and cult temples had most features in common.

 Along main axis, not specifically oriented, there was walled open
court, with colonnades around leading to covered structure.

 Transverse axis in covered structure had columned vestibule and
sanctuary.

 Impressive axial gateway to the court.
TEMPLE OF KHONS , KARNAK
 A Cult temple

 it had entrance pylons,
        court hypostyle hall,
        sanctuary,
        and various chapels
        all enclosed by high girdle wall

 The entrance pylons, fronted by obelisks,
                                              Corridor of Sphinxes
were approached through an imposing
avenue of sphinxes.

 The Portal gave on to the open court,
surrounded on three sides by a double
colonnade and leading to the hypostyle hall
TEMPLE OF KHONS , KARNAK
TEMPLE OF KHONS , KARNAK
 The light in the Hypostyle was admitted through clearstory

 Beyond was the sanctuary , with openings front and back and a
circulating passage around

 Beyond this was again a four- columned hall.

 There were small rooms flanking the sanctuary

 on its rear were mainly chapels, for purpose of rituals

 The temple was protected by a great wall of the same height as the
halls

 The wall decreased in height towards the sanctuary end.
TEMPLE OF KHONS , KARNAK




                         Exterior Wall




                    Internal Colonnade
TEMPLE OF KHONS , KARNAK

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Egyptian architecture 1

  • 2. Geography of the Ancient Nile Valley “Egypt is wholly the gift of the Nile.” – Herodotus People settled and established farming villages along the Nile. Egyptians depended on annual floods to soak the land and deposit a layer of silt, or rich soil. Egyptians had to cooperate to control the Nile, building dikes, reservoirs, and irrigation ditches. Rulers used the Nile to link and unite Upper and Lower Egypt. The Nile served as a trade route connecting Egypt to Africa, the Middle East, and the Mediterranean world.
  • 3. Three Kingdoms of Ancient Egypt OLD MIDDLE NEW KINGDOM KINGDOM KINGDOM Pharaohs organized a Large drainage project Powerful pharaohs strong central state, created arable farmland. created a large empire were absolute rulers, that reached the and were considered Traders had contacts Euphrates River. gods. with Middle East and Crete. Hatshepsut Egyptians built encouraged trade. pyramids at Giza. Corruption and rebellions were Ramses II expanded Power struggles, crop common. Egyptian rule to Syria. failures, and cost of pyramids contributed Hyksos invaded and Egyptian power to the collapse of the occupied the delta declined. Old Kingdom. region.
  • 4. Egyptian Religious Beliefs •Belief that many gods and goddesses ruled the world and the afterlife. Amon-Re was the sun god. Osiris was the god of the underworld and of the Nile. The pharaoh was believed to be a god as well as a monarch. •Belief in eternal life after death. Relied on the Book of the Dead to help them through the afterworld. Practiced mummification, the preservation of the body for use in the next life.
  • 5. Ancient Egypt: A Center of Learning & Culture Advances in Learning Advances in the Arts Developed a form of picture writing Statues, paintings, and writings tell called hieroglyphics. us about ancient Egyptian values and attitudes. Doctors diagnosed and cured illnesses, performed surgery, and Developed painting style that developed medicines still used remained unchanged for thousands today. of years. Developed 12-month calendar on Wrote hymns and prayers to the which modern calendar is based. gods, proverbs, love poems, stories Astronomers mapped constellations of victory in battle, and folk tales. and charted movement of the planets. Built pyramids and other great buildings, such as temple of Developed practical geometry. Ramses II. Skilled in design and engineering.
  • 6. Class System in Ancient Egypt PHARAOH Earthly leader; considered a god HIGH PRIESTS AND PRIESTESSES Served gods and goddesses NOBLES Fought pharaoh’s wars MERCHANTS, SCRIBES, AND ARTISANS Made furniture, jewelry, and fabrics for pharaohs and nobles, and provided for other needs PEASANT FARMERS AND SLAVES Worked in the fields and served the pharaoh
  • 7. Characteristics of Egyptian Architecture •Due to the scarcity of lumber, the two predominant building materials used in ancient Egypt were sun-baked mud brick and stone, mainly limestone, but also sandstone and granite in considerable quantities. •From the Old Kingdom onward, stone was generally reserved for tombs and temples, •while bricks were used even for royal palaces, fortresses, the walls of temple precincts and towns, and for subsidiary buildings in temple complexes. • Egypt houses were made out of mud collected from the Nile river. It was placed in molds and left to dry in the hot sun to harden for use in construction.
  • 8. Characteristics of Egyptian Architecture •Many Egyptian towns have disappeared because they were situated near the cultivated area of the Nile Valley and were flooded as the river bed slowly rose during the millennia, or the mud bricks of which they were built were used by peasants as fertilizer. •Others are inaccessible, new buildings having been erected on ancient ones. Fortunately, the dry, hot climate of Egypt preserved some mud brick structures. •Examples include the village Deir al - Madinah, the Middle Kingdom town at Kahun, and the fortresses at Buhen and Mirgissa. Also, many temples and tombs have survived because they were built on high ground unaffected by the Nile flood and were constructed of stone.
  • 9. Deir al - Madinah Kahun fortresses at Buhen and Mirgissa
  • 10. Religious buildings/monuments •massive structures characterized by thick, sloping walls with few openings. • possibly a method of construction used to obtain stability in mud walls. •the incised and flatly modeled surface adornment of the stone buildings has derived from mud wall ornamentation. •the use of the arch was developed during the fourth dynasty, all monumental buildings are post and lintel constructions, •flat roofs are constructed of huge stone blocks supported by the external walls and the closely spaced columns.
  • 11. Religious buildings/monuments •Exterior and interior walls, as well as the columns and piers, were covered with hieroglyphic and pictorial frescoes and carvings painted in brilliant colors. •Many motifs of Egyptian ornamentation are symbolic, such as the scarab, or sacred beetle the solar disk the vulture palm leaves, the papyrus plant buds and flowers of the lotus Hieroglyphs were inscribed for decorative purposes as well as to record historic events or spells.
  • 12. the scarab, or sacred beetle the solar disk
  • 16. Buds and flower of Lotus
  • 17. Religious buildings/monuments •Ancient Egyptian temples were aligned with astronomically significant events, such as solstices and equinoxes, •required precise measurements at the moment of the particular event. •Measurements at the most significant temples may have been ceremonially undertaken by the Pharaoh himself.
  • 19. Examples  TOMB ARCHITECTURE MASTABAS ROYAL PYRAMIDS ROCK – HEWN TOMBS  TEMPLES  OBELISKS  DWELLINGS  FORTRESSES
  • 20. MASTABAS Historical Background This type of structure was an elaboration of the Pre – Dynastic Period burial-pit and mound form. Mastabas were favored as funerary monument from the Early Dynastic Period on As the Egyptian craftsmanship increased in the Early Dynastic Period, mastaba such as those of the first dynasty at Saqqara, were elaborate, having many storage or offering compartments, housing funerary chapels, shrines, offering tables and were quite evidently close copies of contemporary houses. In the Old Kingdom, even after the Pharaohs began to be buried in pyramids, other royal officials were still interred in Mastabas, usually around the site of the pyramid.
  • 21. MASTABAS Usage and Shape  A sepulchral structure built aboveground.  Mastabas were built above a shaft at the bottom of which was situated a tomb The structure above the ground were relatively low Rectangular in plan with inward-sloping walls Flat roof. Built of brick and faced with limestone slabs. sides sloping at an angle of about 75 degrees
  • 22. MASTABAS Usage and Shape  they were derived from the rude heaps of stones piled over earlier mummy holes.  They consisted of three parts : (i) The outer chamber, in which were placed the offerings to the Ka or " double," decorated with festal and other scenes which are valuable from an historical standpoint. (ii) The inner secret chamber, known as the " serdab," which contained statues of the deceased members of the family. (iii) The chamber containing the sarcophagus, reached by an underground shaft.
  • 23. MASTABAS Decorations and Examples  Plain undecorated exterior  The interior of mastaba walls were decorated with texts and images, illustrating scenes from the daily life of the deceased, offering scenes and ritual hunt scenes.
  • 24. MASTABAS The Mastaba of Thi, Sakkara well preserved and restored, dates from the Fifth Dynasty, and was erected to Thi, who held the position of royal architect and superintendent of pyramids. It consists of a small vestibule, beyond which is a large court, where offerings to the deceased were made, and from which a mummy shaft led to the tomb chamber. The masonry is accurately jointed, and the bas-reliefs are some of the finest and most interesting in Egypt.
  • 25. MASTABAS The Mastaba of Thi, Sakkara A second tomb chamber, 22 ft. 9 ins. by 23 ft. 9 ins. and 12 ft. 6 ins. high, has mural reliefs which represent harvesting, ship-building, slaughtering of sacrificial animals, as well as arts and crafts of Old Egypt while Thi himself is pictured in a papyrus thicket, sailing through the marshes.
  • 26. ROYAL PYRAMIDS In its most common form, a pyramid is a massive stone or brick structure with a square base and four sloping triangular sides that meet in a point at the top. Pyramids have been built by different peoples at various times in history. Probably the best-known pyramids are those of ancient Egypt, which were built to protect the tombs of rulers or other important persons.
  • 27. ROYAL PYRAMIDS  Early royal pyramids were of mastaba type, from which the true pyramid evolved.  Pyramids did not stand in isolation.  they were surrounded by a walled enclosure and had an offering chapel, with a stele, a mortuary temple for the worship of the dead and deified Pharaoh  pyramids were built during the lifetime of the Pharaohs, because of their belief in immortality.
  • 28. ROYAL PYRAMIDS Pyramids were founded on living rock, were of limestone quarried in their locality, faced with the finer limestone.  Granite, in limited use, such as linings of the chambers and passages.  Tomb Chambers and their approaches were either cut in the rock below the monument or were in its constructed core.  Entrances were from the north side, the sides were scrupulously oriented with the cardinal points.
  • 29. ROCK – HEWN TOMBS  Served for the nobility rather than royalty  Pyramids, of indifferent construction, remained the principal form of royal tomb.  TOMBS, BENI HASAN • Belonged to a provincial great family. • totally rock –hewn, each consists of a chamber behind a porticoed façade • slightly fluted and tapered columns
  • 30. TEMPLES  Two main classes – mortuary temples, for ministrations to deified Pharaohs Cult temples, for the popular worship of ancient and mysterious gods  Royal burials more important than mortuary temples  Their special character merged into that of the cult temples, lost the distinction between the two types.  Cult temples essentials were rectangular palisaded court entered from a narrow end flanked by pennon – poles centrally within them an emblem of deity pavilion comprising vestibule and sanctuary
  • 31. TEMPLES  Mortuary and cult temples had most features in common.  Along main axis, not specifically oriented, there was walled open court, with colonnades around leading to covered structure.  Transverse axis in covered structure had columned vestibule and sanctuary.  Impressive axial gateway to the court.
  • 32. TEMPLE OF KHONS , KARNAK  A Cult temple  it had entrance pylons, court hypostyle hall, sanctuary, and various chapels all enclosed by high girdle wall  The entrance pylons, fronted by obelisks, Corridor of Sphinxes were approached through an imposing avenue of sphinxes.  The Portal gave on to the open court, surrounded on three sides by a double colonnade and leading to the hypostyle hall
  • 33. TEMPLE OF KHONS , KARNAK
  • 34. TEMPLE OF KHONS , KARNAK  The light in the Hypostyle was admitted through clearstory  Beyond was the sanctuary , with openings front and back and a circulating passage around  Beyond this was again a four- columned hall.  There were small rooms flanking the sanctuary  on its rear were mainly chapels, for purpose of rituals  The temple was protected by a great wall of the same height as the halls  The wall decreased in height towards the sanctuary end.
  • 35. TEMPLE OF KHONS , KARNAK Exterior Wall Internal Colonnade
  • 36. TEMPLE OF KHONS , KARNAK