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Egypt's Ancient History
- Malachy.
When we arrived in Cairo, we were anxious to visit the
Egyptian Museum, home to 120,000 objects
from the prehistoric to Greco-Roman era. The Egyptian
government established the ‘Service des
Antiques de l’Egypte’ in 1835, mainly to halt the
plundering of archeological sites and to arrange
the exhibition of the collected artifacts owned by the
government. The present museum was built in
1900, in the neo-classical style. After a number of
days in Cairo, we were reintroduced to large
groups of Western tourists who are bussed to the
museum and the pyramids from their comfortable
hotels, by and large, missing the rest of Cairo.
The most famous attraction at the museum is the
headpiece and funerary artifacts of King
Tutankhamun. 1700 artifacts from the tomb of
Tutankhamun are on dispay in the museum. Although the
tomb of King Tut was one of the smallest and least
flamboyant, it is extremely important because,
unlike the larger and more lavish tombs, his was found
intact, in 1922 by Englishman, Howard
Carter. The find was a huge bonus to Egyptology and
our guide at the museum spoke of Carter with
great respect. Many other similar tombs have been
pilfered by local and foreign thieves and
archaeologists.
The 5000 year long history of Ancient Egypt has been
divided into 8 or 9 periods. There were three
recognised periods of prosperity and unity, the Old,
Middle and New kingdoms, flanked and seperated
by intermediate periods when Egypt was ruled by
provincial, divided rulers.
Tutankhamun, the boy-king, ascended the throne against
a background of political and religious
unrest, around 1,300BC. With his accession, the Amarna
interlude was brought to an end, and the
country gradually regained its traditional beliefs.
The young king was to rule Egypt for nine
years, although the real power was in the firm hands
of others. Due to his sudden premature death,
his tomb was prepared hastily.
The Egyptian Museum has many displays of interest to
ogling visitors, including the royal Mummy
Room where a dozen famous pharaohs lie in state. We
came face-to-face with the exposed mummified
head of Rameses II, the greatest pharaoh of all time.
Towards the end of the New Kingdom, Ramesis
II left many extravagent monuments to his 67 year
rule, including the Sun temple of Ramesis himself
and the Hathor temple of his favourite wife,
Nefertari, at Abu Simbel in Southern Egypt.
Like every other visitor to Cairo, we did not want to
miss out on a trip to the Pyramids. We took a
metro towards the Giza Plateau, on the West Bank of
the Nile, and then a taxi to the entrance of
the fenced area of desert, touts, tourists, tourist
police, one sphinx and nine pyramids. It's
bizarre to drive through busy Cairo and spot a pale
yellow pyramid, surviving since Egypt's Old
Kingdom, peeping through a gap in the buildings and
billboards.
Once we'd finished haggling with the taxi driver, we
walked straight up to the Sphinx, with its
monumental proportions, feline body, and human facial
features. It stretches 73meters in length and
reaches 20 meters in height. The Sphinx was carved out
of a single outcropping of rock around the
time of the construction of the Pyramid of Khafre,
around 2500 BC, and the features are thought to
be those of King Khafre wearing the royal nemes
headdress.
The Pyramid of Khufu is the largest of the three
principal pyramids on the Giza Plateau, the
oldest, yet the only surviving of the Seven Ancient
Wonders of the World. I wish I could say I was
speechless, but having heard about the pyramids since
childhood, I thought they could have been a
little taller, the blocks a little larger and the
Sphinx a little bit mightier. Still, it was
pretty impressive to stand in the shadow of these
monuments to a highly advanced ancient
civilisation.
We both made the crouched climb down and up into the
centre of the Pyramid of Khafre to stand below
136 meters of rock. The uppermost part of this pyramid
still has it's original polished limestone
veneer, which must have looked quite stunning when
complete. The Pyramid is flanked on either side
the pyramids of Khufu and Menkaure. Although there is
much speculation regarding the basis for
these extravagant, geometrically significant
structures, one thing is certain; like other tombs of
Pharoes along the Nile, they were tombs where royalty
such as Khufu, Khefre, and Menkaure could
start their mystic journey to the afterlife.
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