Ancient Egypt Essay

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Before our modern day obsession with posting to internet walls and worshiping our pets, an ancient civilization nestled on the banks of the Nile River was doing the exact same thing. Except that civilization was over 6,000 years ago. That civilization was Egypt.
Ancient Egypt covers a vast sweep of history, and certain events or epochs were crucial to the development of its society and culture. One of these was the unification of Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt sometime during the third millennium B.C. The ancient Egyptians regarded this event as the most important in their history, comparable to the "First Time," or the creation of the universe. With the unification of the "Two Lands" by the legendary, if not mythical, King Menes, the glorious Pharaonic Age began. Power was centralized in the hands of a god-king, and, thus, Egypt became the first organized society.
The ancient Egyptians were people of many firsts. They were the first people of ancient times to believe in life after death. They were the first to build in stone and to fashion the arch in stone and brick. Even before the unification of the Two Lands, the Egyptians had developed a plow and a system of writing. They were accomplished sailors and shipbuilders. They learned to chart the cosmos in order to predict the Nile flood. Their physicians prescribed healing remedies and performed surgical operations. They sculpted in stone and decorated the walls of their tombs with naturalistic murals in vibrant colors. The legacy of ancient Egypt is written in stone across the face of the country from the pyramids of Upper Egypt to the rock tombs in the Valley of the Kings to the Old Kingdom temples of Luxor and Karnak to the Ptolemaic temples of Edfu and Dendera and to the Roma...

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...e. They believed the physical body had to be preserved to allow a place for their spirit to dwell in the afterlife. Because of this, mummification was performed to preserve the body.
Conclusion
Without their religion and as well as advancements in all areas of life the Egyptian society may not have existed. Egyptian culture revolved around its ardent beliefs. This celebration of life and death was revealed through their art, architecture, politics, social life, and religion. Perhaps it was the mix of politics, religion and the belief that the pharaoh was infallible and a deity that allowed Egypt to remain the powerful country that it was for such a long time. Nonetheless, the Ancient Egyptians have left us with a vast knowledge of advancements that we have been appreciating for thousands of years and should expect to continue doing so for the foreseeable future.

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