Introduction to Ancient Egypt
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Ancient Egypt is one of the earliest world civilizations located along the lower Nile or Hapy - like the ancient Egyptians called it, what is today’s modern Egypt. The emergence and rise of the civilization of ancient Egypt is closely tied with insufficient natural rainfall to grow crops which forced the ancient Egyptians to develop artificial irrigation system and to take advantage of the annual floods of the Nile which could be precisely foretold. The flooding started every year in mid June at the time of summer solstice when the brightest star of the Canis Major, Sirius became visible just before sunrise. The Nile flooding reached its peak in September when the ancient Egyptians celebrated the new year. However, besides the water necessary for irrigation the Nile flooding also made the surrounding land very fertile by washing ashore the rich sediments from the Ethiopian Highlands.
Irrigation of the land to produce enough food required cooperation and collaboration of people as well as good organization which eventually led to emergence of a centralized state organization. Ancient Greek historian Herodotus named Egypt the “Nile’s gift” because the Nile was crucial for emergence of civilization of ancient Egypt.
History of ancient Egypt which still astonish us with its achievements starts with the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt by Menes around year 3000 BC. Menes became the first pharaoh and the founder of the First Egyptian Dynasty. Ancient Egypt was ruled by 31 dynasties from the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt until the conquest of Alexander the Great in 332 BC, while the history of Egypt is usually divided on:
- Predynastic Period (3100-2950 BC)
- Early Dynastic Period (2950-2640 BC)
- Old Kingdom (2640-2134 BC)
- First Intermediate Period (2134-2040 BC)
- Middle Kingdom (2040-1650 BC)
- Second Intermediate Kingdom (1650-1552 BC)
- New Kingdom (1552-1070 BC)
- Third Intermediate Period (1070-663 BC)
- Late Period (663-332 BC)
- Ptolemaic Dynasty (332 BC - 30 BC)