Ch. 4: Ancient Egypt and Kush Study Guide

The Map: Be able to identify the following on the map: Upper and Lower Egypt, Memphis, Thebes, location of the pyramids and the Valley of the Kings, Nile Delta

Section 1: Geography and Ancient Egypt

Main ideas: Egypt was called “the Gift of the Nile” because the river gave life to the desert.

Civilization developed due to fertile soil, good water and a protected location.

Vocabulary:

cataracts Strong rapids and rushing water in a river

delta A triangle-shaped area of land made of soil deposited by a river

Menes Upper Egyptian leader who united Upper and Lower Egypt @ 3100BC; 1st pharaoh

pharaoh Title used by rulers of Egypt; means “great house

dynasty A series of rulers from the same family; Menes founded the first dynasty.

Facts to know:

Lower Egypt in the north near the Mediterranean Sea

Upper Egypt to the south in the higher land

The cataracts made river travel difficult but protected against invasion.

Best farmland was in the delta region of lower Egypt.

Memphis built by Menes as the capital near the delta.

Double crown worn by Menes to symbolize unification of the two kingdoms.

Nile floods were more predictable than those in Mesopotamia.

Mineral-rich silt brought by the floods; Egypt = black land; desert = red land

Irrigation made farming possible in the dry times

natural barriers the desert, the cataracts, the Mediterranean and the Red Seas.

Wealthy farmers became village leaders, villages banded together to become Upper and Lower

Egypt.

Section 2: The Old Kingdom

Main Ideas: Pharaohs ruled as gods and were at the top of the social structure.

Religion shaped Egyptian life.

Pyramids were built as royal tombs for the pharaohs.

Government and religion were closely connected during the Old Kingdom.

Vocabulary and Facts to know:

Old Kingdom lasted about 500 years (2700BC-2200BC)

The pharaoh represented the gods and was held responsible for good and bad

things that happened

Gov. officials were usually family or nobles hired to help pharaoh govern the kingdom.

Khufu was most famous king of Old Kingdom

Great Pyramid tomb of Pharaoh Khufu who is remembered for his many monuments, temples

Nobles people from rich and powerful families who helped rule

Social Pyramid Order of importance of the people top to bottom: Pharaoh,

Upper class: priests, gov. officials

Middle class soldiers, scribes, merchants, artisans,

Lower class farmers, slaves, servants; (80% of the people)

Trade Not isolated – traded with Sumer, Nubia, Punt

Acquire to get or obtain

Religion Before the first dynasty, each village worshipped its own gods.

Polytheism the worship of many gods, practiced by the Egyptians

Gods Osiris, Isis, Horus, Re, Anubis; many others

Afterlife life after death: more perfect than life

Ka a person’s spirit or life force; remained linked to the body, stayed at burial site

Embalming method of preserving the body after death

Mummy a body embalmed and wrapped in linen cloth

Elite people of wealth and power; only royalty and the elite were mummified

Pyramids built as royal tombs for pharaoh’s and family; engineering feats

Engineering using science and math knowledge to do something practical

Section 3: The Middle and the New Kingdoms

Main ideas The Middle Kingdom was a period of stable government between times of disorder.

The New Kingdom was when Egypt’s trade and military power reached its peak.

Work and daily life were different for each social class.

Facts to Know:

Old Kingdom fall due to lack of farming, huge building projects, nobles challenging the pharaoh

Mentuhoptet II leader who became strong enough to reunite the whole river valley

Middle Kingdom (2050 BC to 1750 BC…@300 years) began when Mentuhoptet II took power

Hyksos used superior weapons to attack the delta and ruled it for 200 years

Ahmose ruler of Thebes who drove out the Hyksos and declared himself ruler of all of

Egypt

New Kingdom period when Egypt reached the height of its power and glory

Empire what Egypt became as it conquered its neighbors to prevent further invasions

Military conquests made Egypt rich.

Trade networks developed between Egypt and the areas it conquered, making Egypt rich

Merchants people who used the trade networks to import and export goods and services

Import to bring products into a country

Export to send out products from an area

Hatshepsut first woman ruler; increased trade and built many beautiful monuments

Ramses the Great

Or Ramses II longest ruling pharaoh; military leader; signed peace treaty with Hittites,

Fought Tehenu

Tutankhamen Boy king whose tomb was discovered in 1922 by Howard Carter in the Valley of

the Kings, still containing all the treasures and his mummy; taught us much

about Egyptian life

Sea people Invaded Egypt after Ramses II died; end of New Kingdom

Women’s rights could own property, enter contracts (binding legal agreements) and divorce

their husbands

Education Most boys and girls received this in ancient Egypt

Slaves Had some legal rights and could sometimes earn their freedom

Section 4: Egyptian Achievements

Main ideas: The Egyptians developed a writing system using hieroglyphics.

The Egyptians created magnificent temples, tombs and works of art

Facts to know:

Papyrus a long-lasting paper-like material made from reeds that grew along the river

Scrolls long, rolled up sheets of papyrus, written on with brushes and ink

Scribes highly honored professional writers and record keepers

Hieroglyphics a formal writing system using more than 600 symbols;

determined which way to read

Cartouche royal names encircled with a line on one end;

Rosetta Stone a stone slab found near the town of Rosetta in the delta; used to crack the code

of how to read hieroglyphics

Pyramids huge stone tombs for the pharaohs

Sphinxes imaginary creatures with the bodies of lions and the heads of people or other

animals often lining the paths to the temples

Obelisk a four-sided pillar with a pointed top (Washington Monument, Andrew Johnson’s

grave)

Great temples Temple of Karnak, Abu Simbel, Luxor….originally brightly painted

Paintings showed historical events, religious celebrations and scenes of daily life;

Distinctive style: upper bodies shown straight on; heads and legs seen from the

Side

Section 5: Ancient Kush

Main Ideas: Geography and location on the Nile helped this civilization develop.

Kush and Egypt traded, but also fought.

Kush conquered Egypt for a while and became powerful for a while.

Facts to know:

Nubia An area south of Egypt which the Egyptians called Kush. Provided gold, slaves,

ivory and stone to Egypt

Kush copied and adopted many Egyptian ways as a result of being conquered by Egypt

Kerma first capital of Kush

Cataracts kept Kush safe from attack by Egypt for a long time

Thutmose I Egyptian pharaoh who conquered Kush

Napata Capital of Kush after it regained its independence from Egypt

Kashta Kushite king who conquered Upper Egypt

Piankhi Kashta’s son; conquered the rest of Egypt after Kashta died

Shabaka Piankhi’s brother who took over after Piankhi; began the 25th dynasty of Egypt

Iron Industry which made Kush rich in trade; Meroë was economic center for this

Shanakhdakheto First woman ruler of Kush

King Ezana King of Axum who took over Kush

Kushite decline Caused partly by overgrazing or animals and destructions of forests for fires