Marc Van De Mieroop

A History of Ancient Egypt


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statements of kingship and the king’s legitimacy. This new approach makes it impossible to date the unification of Egypt or attribute it to a specific individual on the basis of these representations. But the art of the period shows that the Egyptians linked unification with conflict. The king or king‐like figure is always prominent in these depictions and he can engage in acts of great cruelty, such as decapitation and hanging.

      Many of the objects containing these scenes were excavated as a group at Hierakonpolis. Among them several inscribed with the name of Narmer stand out because of the detail of their scenes. We can read Narmer’s palette, a 25‐inch‐ (64‐centimeter‐) high thin flat slab, as one of the first royal inscriptions from Egypt (Figure 2.3). One side shows a king wearing the high white crown of Upper Egypt beating another man with a mace. Near the second man are two hieroglyphs that seem to denote the name of a region in the north or the victim’s name. Above them is a falcon perched on a papyrus plant holding a rope around a man’s neck, which we can read as the god Horus, represented as a falcon, handing over the conquered Delta to the king. On the other side, the same king wearing the square red crown of Lower Egypt reviews standard‐bearing troops. To their right are two rows of decapitated bodies with the heads between their legs – on top of each head, except for one, lays a cut off penis. Two hieroglyphs in the top registers of both sides identify the king as Narmer. The exact meaning of the scenes remains opaque, but overall the monument seems to declare that King Narmer of Upper Egypt defeated the Delta, and thus became king of Lower Egypt as well. Scholars question the literal reading of Narmer’s palette as an account of the first conquest of the Delta, but regard the representation as one of several statements that the Egyptian king was obliged to keep the country united, through military means if needed.

      Source: Erich Lessing / Art Resource

      Other men, perhaps earlier than Narmer, appear in similar settings of violence. The Hierakonpolis deposit contains a 10‐inch‐ (25‐centimeter‐) high limestone mace representing a king with the crown of Upper Egypt, possibly engaged in work on canals lined with papyrus plants, a symbol of the Delta. The top register shows lapwing birds hanging from a noose on standards that probably signify various districts of Egypt. In later periods these birds symbolize the general population, and we read the mace head as celebrating the subjugation of people from the Delta by the king (see Figure 1.8). Two signs in front of his mouth seem to render his name: a rosette and a scorpion. As we cannot read these phonetically, scholars refer to the man either as King Scorpion or as King Rosette‐Scorpion.

       The unification of Egypt

      Most likely, the area that incorporated Abydos, Naqada, and Hierakonpolis first grew into a territorial unit and then rapidly expanded into other areas to its north and south. The close connection between these three previously independent centers is clear from the fact that the names of early rulers often appear in more than one site. For example, Narmer was buried in Abydos, but his most significant monuments were in Hierakonpolis, while his wife’s tomb may have been at Naqada. The annexation of Delta regions was the final act in this expansion.

      The visual commemorations of the unification of the Egyptian state focus on the person of the king, represented as much larger than others and the only one who takes action. The emphasis on the royal person pervades all aspects of early Egyptian society, and is one of the ideological pillars of Egyptian culture that endured throughout the country’s ancient history. At the creation of the state, the Egyptians formulated a vision of the world and its organization that was fundamental for all that followed in later millennia. They codified ideologies and established procedures and tools as the basis of official life, which would change and evolve in later history, but remained foundational.

       Kings

       Cemeteries

      The striped part of the serekh depicts the façade of the royal palace or palace enclosure, a mud‐brick