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Mummies and Pyramids The best way the ancient Egyptians knew to preserve a body was to mummify it. The poor placed the bodies of their dead relatives out in the sun, in the desert sand. The bodies mummified naturally by drying out. Then, they rubbed the body with oil and spices and wrapped it in cloth before burying it. This kept the body “fresh.” Egyptians did this because they thought they would need to be able to walk around in the afterlife. Anyone who could afford it went to a professional mummy maker. People wanted to look their best in their afterlife. Many people were made into mummies, but only the Kings built pyramids to hold their mummies. Pyramids were huge structures. They had storage rooms, courtyards, secret passageways, and all kinds of fancy traps designed to catch robbers who tried to break into the pyramid to rob it. Pyramids were full of treasures. The average person created grave goods to take with them to their afterlife. These “grave goods” were things that they created ONLY to use in their grave. Imagine the treasures a pharaoh might feel were necessary to bring along! Most of the time, Kings would want to bring lots of treasure and gold, as well as clothes, entertainment, and even food! The first pyramid, the Step Pyramid, was built around 2700 BCE, nearly 5000 years ago! Pyramid construction was abandoned after the time of the Old Kingdom. It was simply too easy to find a pyramid. Grave robbers knew exactly where the pharaohs were buried, and thus knew exactly where to find riches and wealth. If you were caught, the penalty for grave robbing was death. The ancient Egyptians did not simply build a pyramid, bury a pharaoh, and walk away. A whole city grew up around a pyramid during its construction. These cities were called pyramid cities. The pharaoh provided homes for everyone who worked on the pyramid construction. People were paid for their work in goods and food and homes. After a pyramid was finished, the pyramid city continued to exist. Some of the people who stayed had jobs maintaining and guarding the pyramid. Others, like bakers and basket weavers, were merchants who created needed goods.

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Page 1: Pyr - campbell.k12.ky.us

MummiesandPyramids

The best way the ancient Egyptians knew to preserve a body was to mummify it. The poor

placed the bodies of their dead relatives out in the sun, in the desert sand. The bodies

mummified naturally by drying out. Then, they rubbed the body with oil and spices and

wrapped it in cloth before burying it. This kept the body “fresh.” Egyptians did this because

they thought they would need to be able to walk around in the afterlife.

Anyone who could afford it went to a professional mummy maker. People wanted to look their

best in their afterlife.

Many people were made into mummies, but only the

Kings built pyramids to hold their mummies.

Pyramids were huge structures. They had storage

rooms, courtyards, secret passageways, and all kinds

of fancy traps designed to catch robbers who tried to

break into the pyramid to rob it.

Pyramids were full of treasures. The average person

created grave goods to take with them to their

afterlife. These “grave goods” were things that they created ONLY to use in their grave.

Imagine the treasures a pharaoh might feel were necessary to bring along! Most of the time,

Kings would want to bring lots of treasure and gold, as well as clothes, entertainment, and even

food!

The first pyramid, the Step Pyramid, was built around 2700 BCE, nearly 5000 years ago!

Pyramid construction was abandoned after the time of the Old Kingdom. It was simply too easy

to find a pyramid. Grave robbers knew exactly where the

pharaohs were buried, and thus knew exactly where to

find riches and wealth. If you were caught, the penalty

for grave robbing was death.

The ancient Egyptians did not simply build a pyramid,

bury a pharaoh, and walk away. A whole city grew up

around a pyramid during its construction. These cities

were called pyramid cities.

The pharaoh provided homes for everyone who worked on the pyramid construction. People

were paid for their work in goods and food and homes.

After a pyramid was finished, the pyramid city continued to exist. Some of the people who

stayed had jobs maintaining and guarding the pyramid. Others, like bakers and basket weavers,

were merchants who created needed goods.

Page 2: Pyr - campbell.k12.ky.us

Hieroglyphics

Before the ABCs were developed, people used to write using pictographs. Pictographs are

symbols or pictures that represent a word. (Pictograph? Picture? See the connection?!)

The Egyptians used a type of pictographs called hieroglyphics. They used them to write on

temples, tomb walls, and papyrus scrolls. Few people in Egypt knew all of the symbols, so

people specialized in writing. These writing specialists were called “scribes”.

Why Write? Writing began in Egypt to keep records of business transactions and to label

products. Writing helped people record their own history, literature, trade records, and

even everyday activities. Some of the earliest books

were written using pictographs like hieroglyphics!

Page 3: Pyr - campbell.k12.ky.us

Egypt and Kush Egypt’s Southern Neighbor:

Kush

• Nubia is located on the

Nile River, South of

Egypt

• The land was rugged

and not suited for

farming

• It had lots of minerals

such as gold and iron

Egypt and Kush traded

many goods and ideas

because each had things the

other won’t have.

• Nubia was rich in goods that were scarce in Egypt (ivory, animal skins,

timber)

• Egypt had better farming and could trade crops like grain

• In 1525 BC Egypt conquers Kush. Many things in Kush changed. Kush had

to obey the Pharaoh (King) and had to use Egyptian Kush hieroglyphics to

write. The Pharaohs also ordered the Kush to build temples to worship

Egyptian Gods. Finally, some people were taken as slaves.

Page 4: Pyr - campbell.k12.ky.us

SocialStructure

The pharaoh was the king of Egypt. He had all the power and owned all the land. He had many

government officials and priests who did the work of running the country

for him. (Pharaohs were usually men, but a few were women!) Generally

the pharaoh’s son became king after the pharaoh died. The royal family

lived in great luxury, with jewelry and clothes made of the finest linen.

Priests and priestesses held places of great honor in Egyptian society.

They served as religious advisors to the pharaoh and performed

ceremonies at temples, festivals, and funerals. They worked in temples

taking care of the statues that honored each god or goddess. They also

oversaw the whole process of making mummies, to ensure that each

person’s soul made it to the afterlife. Both men and women were priests.

The scribes were in a slightly lower class than the priests and government officials. They worked for

the government as the official writers and record keepers. They told the pharaoh about what was

happening in his country. They kept records of the grain supply, taxes, and court cases. Scribes spent 12

years learning more than 700 symbols in the Egyptian writing

system, hieroglyphics. Schools for scribes were very strict, and

beatings for laziness or not paying attention were common.

However, once done with school scribes were respected and fairly

well paid.

The artisans were skilled workers like carpenters, jewelers,

metalworkers, painters, potters, basket-makers, and stone carvers.

They usually worked under the eye of a boss in workshops, making

tools, furniture, linen cloth, jewelry, and stone statues. Pharaohs asked hundreds of artisans at a time to

work on the statues and paintings for tombs, temples, pyramids, and monuments they were building.

The artisans rarely got the respect they deserved – even the most talented were not allowed to sign their

work, because people in the upper classes viewed them as common workers. They usually worked for 9

days in a row before getting a day off. They lived in small, three-room houses and sometimes went

without food when it was hard to find work.

The peasants were at the bottom of the social pyramid, even though everyone depended on them.

They grew the crops that supplied everyone with food. Some peasants were actually slaves captured from

other countries and put to work on the pharaoh’s pyramid building projects. The peasants lived in simple

brick homes with little furniture. They often worked for 9 days straight and rested on the 10th

day. They

had to pay their taxes in crops (not money), and were beaten by government officials if they were not

able to pay.

Farmers and SlavesFarmers and SlavesFarmers and SlavesFarmers and Slaves

ArtisansArtisansArtisansArtisans

ScribesScribesScribesScribes

PriestsPriestsPriestsPriests

PharaoPharaoPharaoPharaohshshshs

Page 5: Pyr - campbell.k12.ky.us

RamsesII

Ramses II, “Ramses the Great,” was the pharaoh of Egypt for 67 years. During that time, he took

over many other areas and expanded Egypt into a major empire. He even took over part of Mesopotamia!

Hattusili, king of Hatti, was also expanding his empire. When the two empires wanted the same land, they

went to war with each other. In 1280 BCE, Ramses II signed a peace treaty with Hattusili. It was translated

and written in both empires’ writing systems so both leaders had a copy.

0

Parts of the Actual Treaty

(1) "Ramses, the great king, the king of the country of Egypt, shall never attack the country of Hatti to

take possession of a part (of this country). And Hattusili, the great king, the king of the country of Hatti,

shall never attack the country of Egypt to take possession of a part (of that country)."

(2) "They who observe the words that are in the silver tablet the great gods of the country of Egypt and

the great gods of the country of Hatti shall allow them to live and prosper in their houses, their country and

with their servants.”

(3) “They who do not observe the words that are in this silver tablet, the great gods of the country of

Egypt as well as the great gods of the country of Hatti will exterminate their houses, their country and their

servants."

(4) When another king came to Ramses II and asked him to be his ally against the Hittite empire, he

said, "Today there is fraternity between the Great King of Egypt and the king of Hatti.”

This is the Egyptian copy,

written in hieroglyphics.

This is the Hittite copy, written

in Akkadian.

Page 6: Pyr - campbell.k12.ky.us

NaturalResourcesandGeography

The ancient Egyptians enjoyed many natural barriers. A natural barrier is something made

in nature, like a river, that blocks other people from coming in. . There were deserts to the

east and west of the Nile River, and mountains to the south. This isolated the ancient

Egyptians and allowed them to develop a truly unique culture.

The Nile is the world's longest river. It is over 4000 miles long! It is shaped like the lotus

flower so often seen in ancient Egyptian art. Each spring, water would run off the

mountains and the Nile would flood. As the flood waters receded, black rich fertile soil was

left behind. The ancient Egyptian called this rich soil The

Gift of the Nile.

Fertile soil for crops was not the Nile's only gift. The Nile

gave the ancient Egyptians many gifts. Thanks to the Nile,

these ancient people had fresh water for drinking and

bathing. The Nile supported transportation and trade. It

provided materials for building, for making cloth for

clothes, and even for making paper - made from the wild

papyrus weed, that grew along the shores of the Nile.

Because of the annual flooding of the Nile, the ancient

Egyptians enjoyed a high standard of living compared to

other ancient civilizations. Without the Nile, Egypt would

be a desert.

The majority of the people in Egypt live in the fertile areas around the Nile River. This

narrow band of farmland is usually less than 24 miles wide! The areas away from the river

are desert lands where few humans live. These deserts (deshrets) kept Egypt isolated

allowing the civilization to flourish for more than 3,000 years.