Title: History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 2 (of 12)
Author: G. Maspero
Editor: A. H. Sayce
Translator: M. L. McClure
Release date: December 16, 2005 [eBook #17322]
Most recently updated: March 2, 2021
Language: English
Credits: Produced by David Widger
THE KING, QUEEN, AND ROYAL PRINCES—PHARAONIC ADMINISTRATION
FEUDALISM AND THE EGYPTIAN PRIESTHOOD, THE MILITARY—THE CITIZENS AND THE COUNTRY-PEOPLE.
The cemeteries of Gizeh and Saqqâra: the Great Sphinx; the mastabas, their chapel and its decoration, the statues of the double, the sepulchral vault—Importance of the wall-paintings and texts of the mastabas in determining the history of the Memphite dynasties.
The king and the royal family—Double nature and titles of the sovereign: his Horus-names, and the progressive formation of the Pharaonic Protocol—Royal etiquette an actual divine worship; the insignia and prophetic statues of Pharaoh, Pharaoh the mediator between the gods and his subjects—Pharaoh in family life; his amusements, his occupations, his cares—His harem: the women, the queen, her origin, her duties to the king—His children: their position in the State; rivalry among them during the old age and at the death of their father; succession to the throne, consequent revolutions.
The royal city: the palace and its occupants—The royal household and its officers: Pharaoh’s jesters, dwarfs, and magicians—The royal domain and the slaves, the treasury and the establishments which provided for its service: the buildings and places for the receipt of taxes—The scribe, his education, his chances of promotion: the career of Amten, his successive offices, the value of his personal property at his death.
Egyptian feudalism: the status of the lords, their rights, their amusements, their obligations to the sovereign—The influence of the gods: gifts to the temples, and possessions in mortmain; the priesthood, its hierarchy, and the method of recruiting its ranks—The military: foreign mercenaries; native militia, their privileges, their training.
The people of the towns—The slaves, men without a master—Workmen and artisans; corporations: misery of handicraftsmen—Aspect of the towns: houses, furniture, women in family life—Festivals; periodic markets, bazaars: commerce by barter, the weighing of precious metals.
The country people—The villages; serfs, free peasantry—Rural domains; the survey, taxes; the bastinado, the corvée—Administration of justice, the relations between peasants and their lords; misery of the peasantry; their resignation and natural cheerfulness; their improvidence; their indifference to political revolutions.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I—THE POLITICAL CONSTITUTION OF EGYPT
CHAPTER II—THE MEMPHITE EMPIRE
CHAPTER III—THE FIRST THEBAN EMPIRE
List of Illustrations
004.jpg the Mastaba of Khomtini in The Necropolis Of GÎzeh
006.jpg the Great Sphinx of GÎzeh Partially Uncovered, And the Pyramid of Khephren
008.jpg TetiniÔnkhÛ, Sitting Before the Funeral Repast
009.jpg the Façade and The Stele of The Tomb Of Phtahshopsisu at Saqqara
010.jpg Stele in the Form of a Door
014.jpg a Representation of the Domains Of The Lord Ti, Bringing to Him Offerings in Procession
021.jpg the Birth of a King and his Double
024.jpg the Adult King Advancing, Followed by his Double
028.jpg the Goddess Adopts The King by Suckling Him
029.jpg the Cucupha-headed Sceptre.
030.jpg Different Postures for Approaching the King
039.jpg Pharaoh Gives Solemn Audience to One of His Ministers
042.jpg The Queen Shakes the Sistrum While The King Offers The Sacrifice
042b.jpg the Island and Temple of Phil.
051.jpg Men and Women Singers, Flute-players, Harpists, And Dancers, from the Tomb of Ti
052.jpg the Dwarf Khnumhotpu, Superintendent of The Royal Linen
059.jpg the Packing of The Linen and Its Removal to The White Storehouse.
061.jpg Measuring the Wheat and Depositing It in The Granaries
063.jpg Plan of a Princely Storehouse for Provisions
065.jpg the Staff of a Government Officer in The Time Of The Memphite Dynasties
068.jpg the Funeral Stele of The Tomb Of Amten, The “grand Huntsman.”
072.jpg Statue of Amten, Found in his Tomb
075.jpg Plan of the Villa Of a Great Egyptian Noble
077.jpg Hunting With the Boomerang and Fishing With The Double Harpoon in a Marsh Or Pool
078.jpg Prince Api, Borne in a Palanquin, Inspects His Funerary Domain
079.jpg a Dwarf Playing With Cynocephali and A Tame Ibis
092.jpg Some of the Military Athletic Exercises
095.jpg War-dance Performed by Egyptian Soldiers Before A Battle
098.jpg Two Blacksmiths Working the Bellows
099.jpg Stone-cutters Finishing the Dressing of Limestone Blocks
101.jpg a Workshop of Shoemakers Manufacturing Sandals
101.jpg the Baker Making his Bread and Placing It in The Oven
103.jpg the House of a Great Egyptian Lord
104.jpg Plan of a Part Of the Ancient Town Of Kahun
105.jpg Stele of SÎtÛ, Representing the Front Of a House
106.jpg a Street in the Higher Quarter of Modern SiÛt
107.jpg a Hall With Columns in One of the Xiith Dynasty Houses at Gurob
109.jpg Apparatus for Striking a Light
110.jpg Mitral Paintings in the Ruins of an Ancient House At Kahun
114.jpg Two Women Weaving Linen at a Horizantal Loom
118.jpg One of the Forms Of Egyptian Scales
123.jpg Part of the Modern Village Of Karnak, to The West Of the Temple of ApÎt
128.jpg the Levying of The Tax: The Taxpayer in The Scribe’s Office
130.jpg Levying the Tax: The Taxpayer in The Hands of The Exactors
131.jpg Levying the Tax: The Bastinado
132.jpg Collosal Statue of a King
136.jpg Colored Sculptures in the Palace
142a.jpg Two FellahÎn Work the Shadouf in a Garden
142b.jpg Cutting and Carrying the Harvest
147.jpg a Flock of Goats and the Song Of A Goatherd
154.jpg Map Sinaitic Peninsular, Time of Memphite Empire
156.jpg A Barbarian MonÎti from Sinai
157.jpg Two Refuge Towers of the HirÛ-shÂÎtÛ, in The Wady BÎar
159.jpg View of the Oasis Of Wady FeÎkÂn in The Peninsula Of Sinai
163.jpg the Mining Works of Wady Maghara
164.jpg the High Castle of The Miners—haÎt-qaÎt—at The Confluence of Wady Genneh and Wady Maghara
171.jpg the Court and The Two StelÆ of The Chapel Adjoining the Pyramid of MêdÛm
176.jpg the Triumphal Bas-reliefs of Kheops on The Rocks Of Wady Maghara
176b.jpg Profile of Head Of a Mummy, (a Man) Thebes
179.jpg KhÛÎt, the Great Pyramid of GÎzeh, The Sphinx, And the Temple of The Sphinx
181a.jpg the Movable Flagstone at The Entrance to The Great Pyramid
181b.jpg the Interior of The Great Pyramid
183.jpg the Ascending Passage of The Great Pyramid
187.jpg the Name of Kheops Drawn in Red on Several Blocks Of the Great Pyramid
188.jpg Alabaster Statue of Khephren
188b.jpg the Pyramid of Khephren
192.jpg Diorite Statue of MenraÛrÏ
194.jpg the Coffin of Mykerinos
196.jpg the Granite Sarcophagus of Mykerinos
198.jpg Diorite Statue of Khephren, GÎzeu Museum
211.jpg Table of the IVth Dynasty
215.jpg Table of Pharaohs Of the Vth Dynasty
210.jpg Statue in Rose-coloured Granite of the Pharaoh AnÛ, in the GÎzeh Museum
217.jpg Triumphal Bas-relief of Pharaoh SahÛrÛ, on The Rocks of Wady Magharah.
219.jpg Passenger Vessel Under Sail
223.jpg Map of Nubia in the Time Of The Memphite Empire
225.jpg Head of an Inhabitant Of PÛanÎt
234a.jpg Avenue of Sphinxes—karnak
236.jpg One of the Wooden Panels Of Hosi, in The GÎzeh Museum
237.jpg a Sculptor’s Studio, and Egyptian Painters At Work
238.jpg Cellarer Coating a Jar With Pitch
239.jpg Baker Kneading his Dough
241.jpg the Sheikh-el Beled in The Gizeh Museum
242.jpg the Kneeling Scribe in The Gizeh Museum
246.jpg Peasant Going to Market
247.jpg Kofir, the Director of Granaries
252.jpg Stele of the Daughter Of Kheops
253.jpg the Pharaoh MenkauhorÛ
255.jpg the Mastabat-el-faraun, Looking Towards The West Façade
265.jpg the Island of Elephantine
266.jpg the Island of Elephantine Seen from The Ruins Of Syenne
269.jpg Small Wady, Five Hours Beyond Ed-doueÎg, on The Road to the Red Sea
270.jpg the Rocks of The Island Of Sehêl, With Some Of The Votive Inscriptions
275.jpg the Mountain of Aswan and The Tombs Of The Princes of Elephantine
278.jpg HirkhÛf Receiving Posthumous Homage at the Door Of his Tomb from His Son
282.jpg Head of the Mummy Of Metesouphis I
283.jpg Plan of the Pyramid Of Unas
284.jpg the Sepulchral Chamber in The Pyramid of Unas, And his Sarcophaous
286.jpg the Entrance to The Pyramid of Unas at SaqqÀra
289.jpg Table of the Dates Of The Kings Vith Dynasty
298.jpg Flat-bottomed Vessel of Bronze Open-work Bearing The Cartouches of Pharaoh KhÎti I
300.jpg Part of the Walls Of El-kab on The Northern Side
302.jpg the Second Fortress of Abydos—the ShÛnet-ez-zebÎb—as Seen from the East
304.jpg Attack Upon an Egyptian Fortress by Troops Of Various Arms
306.jpg Denderah—temple of Tentyra
306-text.jpg—temple of Tentyra
310.jpg Map, the Principality of SiÛt
311.jpg the Heavy Infantry of The Princes Of SiÛt, Armed With Lance and Buckler
313.jpg Palette Inscribed With the Name of MirikarÎ
314.jpg the Brick Pyramid of AntÛfÂa, at Thebes
318.jpg the Pharaoh Monthotpu Receiving The Homage of His Successor—antue—in the Shat Er-rigeleh.
326.jpg Some of the Band Of Asiatics, With Their Beasts, Brought from KhnÛmhotpÛ
334.jpg Plan of the Temple Of Sarbut El Khadim
335.jpg the Ruins of The Temple Of Hathor
344.jpg One of The Façades Of the Fortress Of Kubban
345.jpg the Second Cataract Between Hamkeh and Wady Halfa
346.jpg the Second Cataract at Low Nile
349.jpg the Triumphal Stele of Usirtasen I.
351.jpg the Rapids of The Nile at Semneh, and The Two Fortresses Built by Usirtasen Iii
353.jpg the Channel of The Nile Between The Two Fortresses of Semneh and Kummeh
355.jpg KÛshite Prisoners Brought to Egypt
362.jpg the Routes Leading from The Nile to The Red Sea, Between Koptos and Kosseir.
376.jpg One of the Tanis Sphinxes in The GÎzeh Museum
381.jpg the Obelisk of Ûsirtasen I., Still Standing In The Plain of Heliopolis
384.jpg Usirtasen I. Of Abydos
385.jpg a Part of the Ancient Sacred Lake Of Osiris Near The Temple of Abydos
386.jpg the Site of The Ancient Heracleopolis
387.jpg SobkÛ, the God of The FayÛm, Under The Form Of A Sacred Crocodile
388.jpg the Remains of The Obelisk Of Begig
389.jpg the Ruined Pedestal of One Of The Colossi Of BiahmÛ
390.jpg a View in the FayÛm In The Neighbourhood of The Village of FidemÎn
391.jpg the Court of The Small Temple
392.jpg the Shores of The Birket-kerun Near The Embouchure of the Wady Nazleh
393.jpg the Two Pyramids of The Xiith Dynasty at Lisht
394.jpg Painting at the Entrance of The Fifth Tomb
395.jpg Pectoral Ornament of Usirtasen Iii
396.jpg the Pyramid of Illahun, at The Entrance Of The Fa.Ûm
399.jpg the Mountain of Silt With The Tombs Of The Princes
401.jpg Map of Principality Of the Gazelle
405.jpg the Modern Cemetery of Zawyet El-meiyetÎn
408.jpg the Tombs of Princes Of The Gazelle-nome At Beni-hasan
410.jpg the Colossal Statue of King Sovkhotpu in The Louvre
414.jpg Statue of HarsÛf in the Vienna Museum
415.jpg Statue of SovkhotpÛ Iii.
417.jpg One of the Overturned and Broken Statues Of MirmasiiaÛ at Tanis
The king, the queen, and the royal princes—Administration under the Pharaohs—Feudalism and the Egyptian priesthood, the military—The citizens and country people.
Between the Fayûm and the apex of the Delta, the Lybian range expands and forms a vast and slightly undulating table-land, which runs parallel to the Nile for nearly thirty leagues. The Great Sphinx Harmakhis has mounted guard over its northern extremity ever since the time of the Followers of Horus.
Hewn out of the solid rock at the extreme margin of the mountain-plateau, he seems to raise his head in order that he may be the first to behold across the valley the rising of his father the Sun. Only the general outline of the lion can now be traced in his weather-worn body. The lower portion of the head-dress has fallen, so that the neck appears too slender to support the weight of the head. The cannon-shot of the fanatical Mamelukes has injured both the nose and beard, and the red colouring which gave animation to his features has now almost entirely disappeared. But in spite of this, even in its decay, it still bears a commanding expression of strength and dignity. The eyes look into the far-off distance with an intensity of deep thought, the lips still smile, the whole face is pervaded with calmness and power. The art that could conceive and hew this gigantic statue out of the mountain-side, was an art in its maturity, master of itself and sure of its effects. How many centuries were needed to bring it to this degree of development and perfection!
In later times, a chapel of alabaster and rose granite was erected alongside the god; temples were built here and there in the more accessible places, and round these were grouped the tombs of the whole country. The bodies of the common people, usually naked and uncoffined, were thrust under the sand, at a depth of barely three feet from the surface. Those of a better class rested in mean rectangular chambers, hastily built of yellow bricks, and roofed with pointed vaulting. No ornaments or treasures gladdened the deceased in his miserable resting-place; a few vessels, however, of coarse pottery contained the provisions left to nourish him during the period of his second existence.
Some of the wealthy class had their tombs cut out of the mountain-side; but the majority preferred an isolated tomb, a “mastaba,” * comprising a chapel above ground, a shaft, and some subterranean vaults.
From a distance these chapels have the appearance of truncated pyramids, varying in size according to the fortune or taste of the owner; there are some which measure 30 to 40 ft. in height, with a façade 160 ft. long, and a depth from back to front of some 80 ft., while others attain only a height of some 10 ft. upon a base of 16 ft. square.*
The walls slope uniformly towards one another, and usually have a smooth surface; sometimes, however, their courses are set back one above the other almost like steps.