Ancient Egypt Simple Outline
Simple Egypt Outline File
- See Ancient Egypt entry for fuller detailed outline, resources, & lesson planning ideas
Simple Outline files are designed for Quick Reference and Overview of a subject. More detailed outlines will be in the main file.
Geography[edit | edit source]
Ancient Egypt Overview | |
---|---|
Event | Date |
Neolithic period along Nile | 9,000 - 5,500 BC |
Upper and Lower Egypt kingdoms | 3300 BC |
unification of Egypt under
Menes or "Narmer" |
3100 BC |
Old Kingdom | 2686 - 2150 BC (or 2134 BC) |
Middle Kingdom | 2055 - 1773 BC |
Hyksos invasion & rule of Lower Egypt
migration & gradual conquest |
1720-1570 BC |
New Kingdom | 1549 - 1069 BC |
Nile River[edit | edit source]
- Herodotus: "Egypt is the gift of the Nile"
- slow, predicable, massive flooding that leaves silt for soil renewal
- easy movement North South along Nile
- Upper Egypt = narrow Nile Valley from cataracts to Nile Delta
- Lower Egypt = Nile Delta where river spreads out at river mouth
Climate[edit | edit source]
- River Valley civilization = large river, silt
- hot climate: Egypt a desert without the Nile; very little rain ("No Nile, no Egypt")
- long growing season (Egyptians had three seasons: flooding, growing, and harvesting)
- Egyptian history impacted by climate change (see main file Egypt
Isolation, Movement[edit | edit source]
- Egypt = 800 miles of the Nile Valley
- from waterfalls to the South to the Nile Delta that flows into Mediterranean Sea at the North (flows North)
- isolated by desert and mountains to either side of the Nile
- isolation = unique culture
- not entirely isolated: has exchange with surrounding regions
- Egypt isolation broken by Hyksos invasion and Egyptian New Kingdom empire
- Egypt then absorbed into other empires after fall of New Kingdom
History Overview[edit | edit source]
Prehistory[edit | edit source]
- Ice Age nomadic hunter-gatherers commenced semi-permanent settlement along Nile River
- Neolithic agriculture commenced along Nile Valley of Egypt approx. 9,000 BC
- Civilization arises approx. 4,000-3,000 BC as settlements grow, mix, and combine into larger political units
- political unites called "nomes" (42 along Nile)
===Pre-Dynastic Period & Unification
- Upper and Lower Egypt = principal political divisions before and after unity under pharoahs
- Menes and/or Narmer = 1st to unite Upper and Lower Egypt through conquest, approx. 3100 BC
Old Kingdom[edit | edit source]
- rise:
- starts with "dynastic" rule by ruling families
- strong pharoahs (word means "Great House")
- pyramid building
- centralization and bureaucracy
- collapse:
- pyramid & other massive building weakens state (over-taxation, wealth burial, etc.)
- weakened pharoahs: local rulers gain power
- climate change: Nile floods reduced = famine, disorder, and collapse
Middle Kingdom[edit | edit source]
- rise:
- reorganization of irrigation = normalcy, trade, surplus
- strong ruler reunites Egypt by conquest
- turbulent period: instability, climate impact, and chaos
- collapse:
- Hyksos invasion (likely motivated by climate change)
- = migrants and invaders who take over and rule Lower Egypt (Nile Delta region)
- Hyksos bring Middle East war technologies (advanced bows, armor, and horses & chariots)
- Egyptian isolation ended
- Hyksos absorbed into Egyptian culture, but now there is a cultural connection to Mideast
- Egyptians adopt Hyksos technologies
New Kingdom[edit | edit source]
- rise:
- Upper Kingdom ruler conquers & expels Hyksos and reunites Egypt
- period of great trade, wealth, and monument building
- pharoahs invade Nubia to South and Middle East to Northeast
- conquer Syria: up to Euphrates River
- war with Hittites (from Asia Minor) ends in stalemate, but Egypt weakens
- reliance on foreigners weakens army & central control
- collapse:
- over-expansion and constant warfare weakens Egyptian empire
- climate change impacts larger region and heralds social collapse across Middle East and Mediterranean
Foreign Rule[edit | edit source]
- from Africa:
- Nubian invasion and rule
- Ethiopian invasion and rule
- from Middle East:
- Assyrian invasion and rule
- Babylonian rule
- Persian rule
- Alexander the Great conquest & Greek cultural takeover of Egypt
Egyptian Culture[edit | edit source]
Arts & Architecture[edit | edit source]
- pyramids: greatest buildings in world until 20th century
- temples, monumnets, obelisks, etc.
- public works = assive
Religion[edit | edit source]
- pharoahs = descended from gods; living gods or connection to them
- focus on after-life
- pyramids and tombs
- power of priests: keeping flooding normal, temples, different gods
- gods and myths
- Ra or Aman-Ra = sun god
- story of Osiris, Isis and Set = founding myth
Cultural Achievements[edit | edit source]
- greater gender equality than most other ancient worlds
- medicine (mummification)
- math (farming, irrigation and architecture)
- literature: great poems and inscriptions on tombs and memorials
- agricultural production was the key to Egyptian wealth, and for its "bread basket" Egypt remained a crucial holding for subesquent empires, especially Rome.
Other[edit | edit source]
- for lesson plans, resources, and links, see Egypt category or Ancient Egypt main file