History - Ancient World 2 - Egyptians Babylonian Cretans Hittites.pdf

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Chapter Two - The Egyptians, The Babylonians, The Cretans, The Hittites
Chapter Two - The Egyptians, The Babylonians, The Cretans, The Hittites
Chapter Two - The Egyptians, The Babylonians, The Cretans, The Hittites
Making Pottery In Ancient Egypt - A wall-painting in a pyramid.
A. The Early Egyptians
We have already dropped a hint that the man who first grew corn regularly, took a great step towards civilisation. Let us discuss this
a little further. When a man found a patch of fertile soil he would want to settle there. Unlike the wandering shepherds or hunters, he
would think it worth his while to build a solid house, and his wife would do her best to make it comfortable. He would plant little
trees round it. He might never see them tall and thick himself, but he liked to think his children would live on at the farm and the
trees would give them shade and shelter. If he had neighbours in his happy valley, he would come to some agreement with them
about boundaries, lost cattle or the water supply, and so there would develop a greater respect and desire for law and order. A little
temple might be built to the Sun-God or the Earth-Goddess, and at certain times of the year they would meet for a festival. Before
long there might be a hundred families in the valley, who felt vaguely that they belonged to a community.
Some of the men would become noted for being very handy with tools, and the other farmers would frequently ask them to put up a
barn or mend a plough. One or two of these men would give up farming altogether and become carpenter, mason, metal-worker or
weaver, their daily practice giving them increasing skill and speed. And so a class of craftsmen would arise who would pass a
lifetime's experience on to their sons or the sons of other farmers who came as apprentices, because there were already enough
brothers on the farm.
The most conveniently situated of such villages would grow into towns where craftsmen settled because there would be more regular
work for them to do in such a central community. Farmers and their wives would come there to exchange their surplus produce for
new tools, clothes or home requirements. In town or country some families, either through unusual prosperity or bold leadership in a
time of danger, would win great respect, and if their descendants could cause that respect to be maintained indefinitely, and were
very proud of their descent, we should have the beginnings of "nobility." As religion grew more complicated, priests would become
an important class. Finally some very clever and daring noble would persuade or force the other nobles to recognise him as their
leader, and he would be hailed as the first king of the land.
From what we said at first, we should expect all these processes to take place first in those parts of the ancient world where there
were great stretches of fertile soil. And this is just what happened. For the first civilisations arose in Egypt in the valley of the Nile,
and in Mesopotamia (or Iraq) along the lower course of the Tigris and Euphrates.
Look at Egypt on the map and see how little of that country matters except the long valley of the Nile. It is only the last stretch of the
Nile that you see on this map, although even this is about seven hundred miles long. For most of this distance (except for the large
delta, once a gulf, that silted up) the river flows along a narrow valley which varies from five to thirty miles across. The valley ends
abruptly in steep cliffs on either side, and from the top of those cliffs stretches the barren, uninhabited desert, one hundred to two
hundred miles of it eastwards to the Red Sea while westwards are the limitless wastes of the Sahara. Egypt, then, is really a long,
narrow, sunken oasis, with the Nile for its well, where, since the dawn of History, corn, beans, date-palms and other fruit trees have
flourished.
So hot is Egypt, and so little rain ever falls (they say London gets in a year as much as Egypt in a century), that the valley too would
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Chapter Two - The Egyptians, The Babylonians, The Cretans, The Hittites
be a desert if the Nile did not overflow its banks every autumn in a mighty flood, and leave behind it, when it flows in its channel
again, a covering of fertile mud which is at once ploughed and sown. When this rich soil dries up again, it is irrigated with water
caught in dykes and pools during the flood, and when these too dry up, the water has to be baled up on a rough-and-ready sort of
crane, from the river itself. The flood is due to the very heavy summer rainfall in the Abyssinian mountains where the Blue Nile and
other eastern tributaries rise.
Date Palm
So the first thing we learn in History is that the Egyptians grew numerous in this fertile valley, and learned to combine together to
control the water. They studied the sun, moon, and stars in order to know more accurately when the river would rise and fall, and
simple geometry would be necessary to survey the fields.
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Chapter Two - The Egyptians, The Babylonians, The Cretans, The Hittites
Irrigation On The Nile
Very early on they learned to write, an art which proves that they were intelligent, and in turn enabled them to be more intelligent
still. As in all the earliest forms of writing, they began with little pictures which told a story. Then they took a big step forward. You
know when you play charades, you take a long word and split it up into short words which have really nothing to do with the long
word, but which are accidentally contained in it. The Egyptians did the same. Supposing they wanted to write "before." They might
draw a little picture of a bee and put next to it the figure four. In time the pictures were greatly simplified, for speed and convenience,
so that for instance these signs,
which could be drawn with quick strokes of the brush.
For most of their writing the Egyptians used paper, which they made by taking the inner rind of a tall, thick reed that was common in
the marshes. They fastened strips of this together, then gummed another layer right across this at right angles. On this they wrote with
a brush that was simply a stick frayed out at the end. They used black ink usually, with red for special headings, as we do.
So Egyptian scribes wrote down particulars of crops and cattle, of cargoes that came up the river, of the building of huge temples and
tombs. Priests wrote prayers and magic spells. And one of the earliest uses to which writing was put was to make careful records of
the kings and queens of Egypt.
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Chapter Two - The Egyptians, The Babylonians, The Cretans, The Hittites
Papyrus Reeds
These rulers are divided into dynasties, a dynasty being a series of rulers descended from the same ancestors, and so having some
family relationship to each other. These records tell us that at first there were two kings of Egypt, one ruling the Delta, the other the
upper valley, but that about 3500 B.C. the king of the upper river conquered the other and the two kingdoms were henceforth united,
the capital being Memphis, about twenty-five miles south of modern Cairo and on the other side of the river. About 3000 B.C. a
powerful line of monarchs began to rule (Fourth and Fifth Dynasties), who built those mighty tombs for themselves which we call the
Pyramids of Gizeh, a few miles south-west of Cairo. You can begin to have some idea of the power that these kings controlled when
you learn that each side of the largest pyramid is two hundred and fifty yards long, that it is a hundred and sixty yards high, and that
it is composed of two million three hundred thousand blocks of granite, each weighing on an average two and a half tons, yet
accurately placed to the fraction of an inch.
The head of the Sphinx is really a statue of one of these monarchs, for the Egyptian kings were fond of erecting colossal images of
themselves.
After about 2500 B.C. the kings were not so mighty, and local nobles and princes ruled their provinces pretty much as they pleased,
so that the next three hundred years are sometimes called the Feudal Age of Egypt. Then about 2200 B.C. came another strong line of
monarchs (Twelfth Dynasty), who brought the nobles to heel again, and whose reigns were long, peaceful and prosperous. They
improved the control of the Nile waters by building great embankments, draining marshes and making careful observations and
surveys of the river.
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Chapter Two - The Egyptians, The Babylonians, The Cretans, The Hittites
Map - Egypt
They encouraged commerce with distant regions. A canal was dug from the most southerly point of the delta to the Red Sea. Gold
came from Nubia, cedar wood from the forests of Lebanon in Syria, strangely decorated pottery and richly dyed stuffs from Crete,
and valuable spices and plants from "the land of Punt" at the southern end of the Red Sea.
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