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Pyramids on the Pyramids on the Nile Nile Chapter 2 section 2 Chapter 2 section 2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yVrNV_5LhNE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yVrNV_5LhNE

Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

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Page 1: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Pyramids on the NilePyramids on the Nile

Chapter 2 section 2Chapter 2 section 2

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yVrNV_5LhNEhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yVrNV_5LhNE

Page 2: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

First…a reviewFirst…a review

• What are the two rivers of Mesopotamia?

Tigris and Euphrates

• Was flooding of the Tigris and Euphrates good or bad?

Good

• Who was the leader of cities during peaceful times

priest

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More reviewMore review

• Who was at the top of the Sumerian social pyramid?

Priests and kings

• Who was at the bottom?

slaves

• What was Hammurabi’s legacy?

code of laws

Page 4: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Geography of Egypt Geography of Egypt

• West of the Fertile Crescent in Africa, another river makes its way to sea- the Nile in Egypt

• Nile flows northward for over 4,100 miles-longest in the world

• That’s the same distance from Chicago Illinois to Paris France!

Page 5: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

NileNile

• River brings its water to Egypt from distant mountains and plateaus

• Settlements sprung up on narrow strip of land made fertile by the river

• Change from fertile soil to desert was so abrupt that a person could stand with one foot on each

Page 6: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Nile RiverNile River

• Every July, rains and melting snow from the mountains cause the Nile to rise and spill over its banks

• Left behind is a rich deposit of fertile black mud

• Before it could dry, peasants would prepare fields for planting

• Cycle repeated itself every year: flood, plant, harvest; flood, plant, harvest

Page 7: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Nile RiverNile River

• Abundance brought by the Nile was so great, Egyptians worshiped it as a god

• Greek historian remarked Egypt was “the gift of the Nile”

Page 8: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Upper Egypt and Lower EgyptUpper Egypt and Lower Egypt

• Ancient Egyptians knew only the lower part of the Nile- the last 750 miles before it empties north into Mediterranean Sea

• Didn’t pass point called cataract- boulders turning river to rapids

• Between the First Cataract and Mediterranean lay 2 different regions: Upper and Lower Egypt

Page 9: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

HUH??? HUH???

• Terms Upper and Lower Egypt can seem confusing because of the location of these regions

• Upper and lower refer to land elevation

• Region of Upper Egypt was at a high elevation

• Lower Egypt was at a low elevation closer to Mediterranean Sea

Page 10: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2
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Nile RiverNile River

• River provided transportation between Upper and Lower Egypt

• Helped unify Egypt's villages an promote trade• Nile was as regular as clockwork• If floodwaters were few feet lower than usual,

amount of silt, crops, and food was reduced• If waters were higher, water could spread

beyond fields to the mud-brick villages nearby and destroy homes

Page 12: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

• Deserts on both sides of the Nile acted as natural barriers between Egypt and other lands

• By 3200 B.C. Egyptians coming into contact and trading with people of Mesopotamia

• Searched for gold, ivory, cattle and granite for massive temples and tombs

Page 13: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Moving goods and ideas Moving goods and ideas

• Egyptians moved freely from region to region searching for better land for farming

• Egypt blended cultures of Nile Valley people’s and became a land of cultural, ethnic, and racial diversity throughout its 3,000 year history

Page 14: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Egypt unites into a KingdomEgypt unites into a Kingdom• By 3200 B.C. Upper and

Lower Egypt ruled by 2 different rulers

• King of Lower Egypt wore a red crown and king of Upper Egypt, a white crown

• 3100 B.C. Menes, King of upper Egypt united all of Egypt, and created a double crown

Page 15: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

MenesMenes

• Established capital, Memphis, place where Upper and Lower Egypt meet

• Establish 1st Egyptian dynasty

Page 16: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

PharaohsPharaohs

• To Egyptians, Kings were gods and became known as pharaohs

• Pharaoh stood at center of religion, government, and army

• Theocracy- ruler is a divine figure

• Believed pharaoh responsible for kingdom’s well being, sun rising, the Nile to flood and crops to grow

Page 17: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2
Page 18: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

PyramidsPyramids

• Egyptians believed King ruled after his death and tombs were bigger than palaces

• For Kings of the Old Kingdom, rested in a structure called a pyramid

Page 19: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

The PyramidsThe Pyramids

• Used large supply of granite and limestone

• For the Pyramid of Giza, each block weighed at least 2 ½ tons, some weighed 15

• Stacked more than 2 million blocks with precision 481 ft

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Do you know how heavy that is?Do you know how heavy that is?

A car- 1 ton

whaleshark-15 tons

Page 21: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

• Peasants forced to build pyramids when the Nile was in flood and couldn’t farm

• Government provided food and housing

Page 22: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Egyptian CultureEgyptian Culture

• Egyptians were polytheistic

• Most important gods, Ra, the sun god and Horus, the god of light

• Important goddess, Isis represented ideal mother and wife

Page 23: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

• Egyptians believed in afterlife• Preserved a dead body by mummification-

embalming and drying the corpse to prevent from decaying

• Placed the mummy in a tomb filled with items the dead may need in after life

• Book, Book of the Dead provided guidance for the afterlife

• http://www.ancientegypt.co.uk/mummies/story/page2.html

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Page 26: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

• http://www.youtube.com/user/historyteachers#p/u/22/Jz3d5x-MUT4

Page 27: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Egyptian Society PyramidEgyptian Society Pyramid

King, queen, royal family•

Upper class

(wealthy landowners, priests, gov’t officials)

Middle class (merchants, artisans)

Lower class (large population, peasants, workers)

Page 28: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Women in EgyptWomen in Egypt

• Had many rights of man

• Could propose marriage or seek divorce

• Wore make-up (so did men)

• Kohl- powdered minerals mixed with water applied to eyes

Page 29: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

HieroglyphicsHieroglyphics

• Flexible writing system• Earliest form of

hieroglyphics picture stood for an idea

• Changed system to also stand for sounds

• Could be used like letters of the alphabet

• Wrote on papyrus reeds that grew

Page 30: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Science and technologyScience and technology

• Developed written numbers for counting, adding, subtracting

• Developed a calendar to keep track of floods based on a star appearing each year before the floods

• Calendar was based on 365 days, broke it into 12 months of 30 days

• So accurate, short of the solar year by 6 hours

Page 31: Pyramids on the Nile Chapter 2 section 2

Chariot Riders Invade EgyptChariot Riders Invade Egypt

• Power of pharaohs decline 2180 B.C.

• 1640 B.C. Asian nomads swept into Egypt in horse-drawn chariots by people called Hyksos “rulers of the uplands”

• Egypt will rise again, and will be known as the New Kingdom

•http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=walk+like+an+egyptian