A History of Ancient Egypt. Marc Van De Mieroop. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Marc Van De Mieroop
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
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Жанр произведения: История
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781119620891
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of life (ankh) before Psammuthis’s Horus name and a cartouche with his nomen, followed by the standard phrase “given all life, all joy, forever.” Metropolitan Museum of Art 27.2.1. Source: Rogers Fund 1927

      Figure 13.1 Alexandria in the Ptolemaic and Roman periods was a Greek city in its layout. Some earlier Egyptian planned cities used the gridiron street pattern, but Alexandria had unique Greek features, such as a central main street, a roofed colonnade (stoa), an open square (agora), and a hippodrome. Also, its buildings were Greek rather than traditional Egyptian. Source: Kenzie, Judith (2007) The Architecture of Alexandria and Egypt, c. 300 B.C. to A.D. 700, New Haven: Yale University Press, p. 38 fig. 38. © 2007 Yale University

      Figure 13.2 The continuation of Egyptian customs while Greeks and Romans ruled the country is clear in funerary practices – mummification remained the norm. The fresco shown here from the interior of the Alexandria Catacombs (1st–2nd century AD) depicts the goddess Isis in an embalming ritual. While the contents of the scene are fully Egyptian, the style is Graeco‐Roman. © DeA Picture Library / Art Resource

      Figure 13.3 In the Ptolemaic and Roman eras royal depictions on temples maintained the traditional Egyptian imagery of rulers. Shown here is the 2nd pylon of the Isis temple at Philae with King Ptolemy XII Neos Dionysos offering to the gods Isis and Horus. Were it not for his name in the inscriptions, one would not know that the king was not an Egyptian. Photo: Marc Van De Mieroop

      Figure 13.4 The Ptolemaic kings expressed their rights to rule Egypt by representing themselves in the manner of earlier pharaohs, and the artists employed the age‐old traditions of sculpture to do so. This 93‐cm‐high torso of a black basalt statue commissioned by one of the later Ptolemies shows him with the royal skirt, the shortened staff in his left hand, the left foot forward, and with his name written in a cartouche on his belt. Metropolitan Museum of Art 1981.224.1. Source: Purchase, Lila Acheson Wallace Gift and Rogers Fund, 1981

      Figure 13.5 The mixture of Greek and Egyptian practices is shown on this 52.4‐cm‐high limestone stele, which probably stood in a temple in the Fayyum. On the top is a traditional Egyptian depiction of Queen Cleopatra VII making an offering to Isis, who is breastfeeding her son. She is represented as a man, with the double crown of Egypt and the royal skirt. On the bottom the inscription in Greek states that Onnophris, the Greek “president of the association of Isis Snonais” set the stele up on July 2, 51 BC. His name is a Greek rendering of the Egyptian Wen‐nefer. Louvre Museum, Paris E27113. © RMN‐Grand Palais / Art Resource

      Figure 13.6 The Nubian kingdom continued certain ancient Egyptian practices after they had been discontinued in Egypt. This included burial in pyramids, some 50 of which for kings, queens, and their children are known from Meroe after that city became the center of the kingdom. These were constructed between 300 BC and AD 350. Source: Werner Forman / Art Resource

      Figure 13.8 In the early decades of the common era Amanitore was queen of Meroe. She is depicted here on the pylon of the Lion Temple at Naqa in the traditional pose of an Egyptian ruler defeating enemies. The representation of her body and the fact that she is shown as a warrior are non‐Egyptian elements, however. Source: Werner Forman / Art Resource

      Maps

      Map 1 Egypt and Nubia from prehistory to the Middle Kingdom

      Map 2 Pyramid locations

      Map 3 Egypt and surrounding territories in the New Kingdom

      Map 4 Western Thebes

      Map 5 Egypt’s Syrian dependencies in the Amarna age

      Map 6 Late Period Egypt

      Map 7 The eastern Mediterranean in the first millennium

      When this book appeared in its first edition in the fall of 2011, Egypt was constantly in the news, not for its ancient past but because of the popular uprising against the regime headed by Hosni Mubarak, a president who was regularly called “Egypt’s last pharaoh.” The following years were often very difficult for the country’s inhabitants, with much political conflict, insecurity, and a collapse of the tourism industry, which had been one of the major sources of income. Modern events in a region do impact what students of its history can do, and indeed many archaeological projects were suspended. Yet research on Egypt’s ancient civilization did not slow down. Scholars around the world continued to write on all aspects of history, pursuing established approaches, but also introducing new concerns and sometimes new methodologies. For example, DNA analyses of mummies are more widespread today than they were 10 years ago, while climate change has become more popular as a historical explanation. Also, new archaeological discoveries, often the work of Egyptian researchers, continued to be announced. At the same time, I was encouraged to rethink how to teach the history of ancient Egypt to a succession of undergraduate students at Columbia University, with their varied backgrounds and interests, so when I was given the opportunity to revise this textbook, more than a decade after the first edition was written, I was happy to do so.