Marc Van De Mieroop

A History of Ancient Egypt


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were buried. Many other characteristics of later Egyptian ideology and world views probably also developed in these prehistoric times. In order to understand these ideas better we have to study the more elaborate information of historic times, however.

      NOTES

      1 1. In this book I use the spellings of royal names found in Shaw, ed. 2000: 479–483.

      2 2. Many scholars believe that Manetho only listed 30 dynasties (a round number) and that the 31st dynasty, of the second Persian occupation, was added later by the ancient authors who excerpted his work.

      3 3. Verbrugghe & Wickersham 1996: 201.

      4 4. In this book I follow the dates for reigns provided by Shaw, ed. 2000: 479–483, with some minor changes.

      He will take the White Crown; he will uplift the Red Crown.

      He will unite the Two Powers; he will appease the Two Lords with what they wish.

An illustration of a map depicting Egypt and Nubia from prehistory to the Middle Kingdom.

      Map 1 Egypt and Nubia from prehistory to the Middle Kingdom

Photo depicts one of the most widespread emblems of kingship in ancient Egypt represents the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt, symbolized by two plants, the sedge and the papyrus, tied around the image of a windpipe and lung.

      Photo: Marc Van De Mieroop

      The formation of the Egyptian state happened when Egypt emerged from prehistory – the invention of writing is one of the characteristics of the early state – and the written evidence perforce is very limited. Most of our data are archaeological, and within that record cemeteries dominate by far. Moreover, Upper Egypt is much better known archaeologically than the Delta.

      As is true for all of ancient Egyptian history, we reconstruct dynasties on the basis of later king lists. The names that appear there do not fully correspond to those on Early Dynastic objects, which use different names and include many additional kings. Hence modern scholars developed the concept of a dynasty 0 to fit names attested epigraphically only. The annals on the Palermo Stone (see Chapter 1) cover some kings of this period, and provide a year‐by‐year account of mostly ritual actions. The identification of the kings involved is not always certain, and the information provided is extremely terse.

Summary of dynastic historyLate Predynastic–Early Dynastic Period (ca. 3400–2545)