Thursday, September 5, 2013

Egypt's Greatest Accomplishment

I believe that Ancient Egypt's is their whole method of building pyramids. When you really think about it it is amazing that 3,000 years ago they were able to stack 1,000s of blocks that individually weighed 2 tons each.It amazes me that they were able to make a block that weighed that much. Even their tools were an amazing accomplishment.  I think that what astounds me the most is that the pyramids were actually tombs.

They were underground which is amazing because they had to dig the underground part out by hand. Also, in to tomb part of it they buried their dead with things for the 'after life.' They put inside everything that would be needed. They put food and water. They put chamber pots. They put clothes, makeup, jewelery, and amulets. They put anything that the person could ever possibly need or want.

The Egyptians had many amazing inventions and accomplishments, but I personally believe that the pyramids were the greatest and best of them all.

Impact of Geography

We established our land along the banks of the Great Nile River because of the water, and because of how fertile the soil was. The region did many things for us. By yearly, predictable flooding we were able to create an irrigation system. We used the system to get drinking water and to water our crops. If we didn't have the Great River then we wouldn't have been able to grow our crops or have water to drink. Without the Nile our civilization would never have been able to flourish.

Egypt Latitude and Longitude

26.0000° N, 30.0000° E
 

Egypt on Political Map

Map made in Paint. Blank map coppied off of internet.

Egypt on Physical Map

Map made in paint. Blank map coppied off of internet.





Feature 5: Advanced Technology

We Ancient Egyptians were very advanced as far as technology went. We invented many things that your people still use today such as clocks, calendars, paper, and pens.

We used two kinds of clocks - the sundial and the water clock. The sundial was much like the analog clocks that some of your people use. It was a circle that had a single hand in the middle. Rather than having the hand move around the clock the sun cast shadows on the dial. Wherever the shadow lander was what time it was.

However, the water clock is unlike anything that your people use today. It was basically two buckets and a stand. One of the buckets sat on top of the stand with a hole poked in the side. Underneath of the top bucket there was the second bucket. Then the top bucket was filled with water and trickled into the bottom bucket. Different levels of water in the bottom bucket equaled a certain time.

Water Clock
 
Not only did we invent the clocks, but we also invented the calendar. It started when we noticed a pattern in the time that the Great Nile would flood. After we noticed that it was almost the same time between every flood we decided to make a calendar to help us predict when the next flood would come.
 
Our calendars are almost exactly the same as your people's today. It  consisted of 365 days, had a 10 day week, a 3 week month, 4 months a season, and 3 seasons a year. (Number info at http://library.thinkquest.org/J002046F/technology.htm)
 


Egyptian Calendar
 
One of our greatest inventions was paper. Without it, not nearly as much history would have been recorded, and because we are human we learn from our mistakes. Without history, those mistakes would never have been recorded - and neither would have great ideas.
 
In order to make paper (which we didn't make from trees - we made papyrus paper) we had to collect the Cyperus Papyrus plant. Then we had to peel the outside of the plant off much like one would shuck corn. Then we had to cut the peeled outside layers into strips. These strips had to soak for a few days so that they became more paper-like. Then the strips are laid out to dry and then cut into the shape of the paper. Then we would pound the papyrus paper individually with a rock to get all of the water that was still soaked in the strips out. Then we laid the strips right next to each other a beat them one more time so that it would seal. After the strips were completely dry we would polish them with a piece of ivory. Then the paper was ready to use.
 
Of course in order to use paper you also had to have a pen. We made our pens out of reed. They are called reed pens. Basically what we did was take a single piece of the reed plant and cut and shape it. Then we made the ink by mixing soot, gelatin, and bees wax. The reed pen would then be dipped into the ink and used to write on papyrus paper.
 
 
We Egyptians created many of the things that your people use every day. Without our intelligence your everyday life might not be the same.
 
-Anonymous Ancient Egyptian Inventor

 

 


 



Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Feature 4: Record Keeping


In our time only a few people were allowed to learn to read and right - not everyone. However the scribes were important to have. They did all of the record keeping. Obviously because nobody else knew how to write.

To become a scribe you had to go through 4-5 years of scribe school. There you would learn to read and write hieroglyphics. Hieroglyphics were pictures used in our time rather than the alphabet that your people use.


Hieroglyphics
 
The children in scribe school practiced writing very often. In the end all of the practice was worth it. Not everybody was qualified for scribe school. It was most often the children of scribes with the occasional craftsman's child who got to go.
 
 
Our hieroglyphics were very complex. In 196 BC by a group of priests who wanted to honor the current pharaoh. During that time there were two methods of writing in Egypt - Hieroglyphics and demotic. At the time the rulers spoke Greek, so when the pharaoh had a decree written on a stone (Rosetta Stone) it included all three languages
 
Rosetta Stone
 
 
The stone was found in the town of Rosetta in 1799 by Pierre-François Bouchard (a french soldier from Napolian Bonappart's army) during the French Expedition to Egypt. The British ended up beating the French in Egypt and then the stone was in their possession.
 
Once the stone was in England, Jean-François Champollion of Paris started working on translating it in 1803. It took over twenty years to fully translate the stone. Once translated it took even longer before scholars could read all of our writing.
 
Since we came up the Rosetta Stone all of your people were able to learn much about our country and our ways. Without scribes like myself the world today would not know nearly as much as it does about Egyptian history.
 
 
Hesy-Ra
Scribe of Pharaoh Djoser