Topic 2 - Egypt

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<p>Amon-Ra</p>

Amon-Ra

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Mrs Ahrens World History I

104 Terms

1
<p>Amon-Ra</p>

Amon-Ra

sun god of Upper + Lower Egypt

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<p>Bastet</p>

Bastet

Goddess who protects Amon-Ra from Apophis (or Chaos)

part cat, part lioness

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<p>Ma&apos;at</p>

Ma'at

The Feather of Truth

goddess protects justice

keeps things in balance

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<p>Aten</p>

Aten

Not sun, but sun's disk

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<p>Thoth</p>

Thoth

god of learning and thought

patron of scribes

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<p>Tawaret</p>

Tawaret

(The Great One)

Takes care of pregnant women

protected Horus when he was a baby while Isis went to find Osiris

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<p>Anubis</p>

Anubis

Dad: Osiris

Mom: Nepthys

Jackal headed god in charge of mummifying the dead properly

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<p>Horus</p>

Horus

Hawk-eyed avenger married to a cow

Son of Osiris and Isis

Fought uncle Set

He's got his EYE on you!

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<p>Geb</p>

Geb

God of Earth

husband of Nut

one of the first Beings of Creation

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<p>Nut</p>

Nut

Goddess of the sky and heavens

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<p>Shu</p>

Shu

God of atmosphere and dry winds

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<p>Tefnut</p>

Tefnut

Goddess of Rain (created by Atum's clearing his throat)

Lioness's Head

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13
<p>Isis</p>

Isis

Egyptian goddess of fertility

Beloved wife of Osiris

Searched high and low for his body, TWICE

Mummified his body parts

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<p>Osiris</p>

Osiris

Egyptian god of the underworld

judge of the dead

Beloved husband of Isis

First to be mummified

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15
<p>Seth</p>

Seth

Jealous brother of Osiris and Isis

Murdered Osiris. TWICE.

Fought Horus for control of Egypt

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<p>Nephthys</p>

Nephthys

Termed the "lady of the castle," for her role as guardian of the tomb

Isis' sister

also said to be Osiris' mistress + mother of Anubis

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<p>Narmer-Menes</p>

Narmer-Menes

1st pharaoh of Egypt

unites upper and lower Egypt with crown

Palette shows unification by having both crowns

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<p>Pharaoh Djoser</p>

Pharaoh Djoser

Ordered his vizier Imhotep to buid the stepped pyramid from stacked mastabas

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<p>Vizier Imhotep</p>

Vizier Imhotep

Genius who designed the first pyramid in the world, the Stepped Pyramid of Saqqara, for Pharaoh Djoser.

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<p>Stepped Pyramid of Saqqara</p>

Stepped Pyramid of Saqqara

First pyramid in the world

built by Imhotep for Djoser

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21
<p>Khufu</p>

Khufu

Pharaoh who had built the Great Pyramid of Giza, the largest Pyramid in the world

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Pyramid building

Twenty year project

very expensive and very complex

Paid for with onerous taxes on product and labor

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<p>1st intermediate period</p>

1st intermediate period

2300CE, people of Egypt rebelled because pyramid building demanded too much- money, natural resources, people's time

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<p>Middle Kingdom of Egypt</p>

Middle Kingdom of Egypt

Pharoahs stopped building pyramids

instead built drained

irrigated the Delta

built canals between Nile and Red Sea

focus on public works/infrastructure enriched Egypt and her people.

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<p>2nd intermediate period</p>

2nd intermediate period

HYKSOS INVADE and rule for 150 years

nothing changed because they like the Egypt lifestyle

They had better weapons

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New Kingdom

Incredibly powerful pharoahs who ousted the Hyksos and built obelisks, school, temples, tombs

Included Ahmose, Hatshepsut, Akhenaten, Tutankhamun, and Ramses the Great

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<p>Ahmose</p>

Ahmose

Upper Egypt pharoah who threw out the Hyksos and reunited Upper and Lower Egypt for the first time in 150 years.

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Thutmose I

Non-royal pharaoh and father of Thutmose II & Hatshepsut by different wives.

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Thutmose II

Non-royal pharaoh and husband/half brother of Hatshepsut.

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Hatshepsut

Only female pharaoh, took power in place of her nephew/step-son when her brother/husband Thutmose II dies.

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Thutmose III

Nephew/step-son of Pharaoh Hatshepsut who tried to tried to rid every memory of her rule after she died

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<p>Nefer</p>

Nefer

Part of an Egyptian name, it means "beauty" Ka-nefer-nefer Nefertiti Nefertari Maathorneferure

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Akhenaten

Tries to limit worship in all of Egypt to just the sun's disk god, Aten, (monotheism)

gives a lot of power to Nefertiti

Father to Tut and Anaksenamun

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Tutankamen

Pharoah whose tomb in the Valley of the Kings is one of the only tombs found intact (not robbed)

husband to Anaksenamun

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<p>Anaksenamun</p>

Anaksenamun

Daughter of Nefertiti and Akhenaten

Married to her father Akhenaten, then her brother Tut and finally her grandfather Ay.

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<p>Why monotheism by Akhenaten?</p>

Why monotheism by Akhenaten?

The priests of Amun-Ra were even more powerful than the pharaohs so removing Amun-Ra removed the priests rendering them powerless.

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Ramses II

Pharoah who ruled for 70 years in the 1200s

Emphasis on military power

famous treaty with Hittites

mortuary temples

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<p>Abu Simbel</p>

Abu Simbel

Worship temple for Ramses placed specifically so that twice a year Ramses and three god faces sitting inside the temple would get lit up (except god of the underworld)

Had to be moved onto higher ground and have a mountain built around it bc it was in flood plain

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Ramesseum

Ramses' mortuary temple complete with a scribe school because it assured that he would always be worshipped

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<p>Nefertari</p>

Nefertari

Ramses favorite wife, had a matching (smaller) mortuary temple.

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<p>Why are Egypt and Nubia considered frenemies?</p>

Why are Egypt and Nubia considered frenemies?

Nubia needed crops and wheat from Egypt and Egypt needed gold from Nubia

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Opposite geography of Nubia and Egypt

Nubia was very rocky and had gold in the hills, Egypt was very fertile thanks to the Nile floods and produced wheat and lots of other food.

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<p>Medjai (medjay)</p>

Medjai (medjay)

Nubians who guarded the tombs of the Pharaohs in the VOK

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meriotic

Nubia's written language, still undeciphered

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<p>Why Nubia had 3 capitals over time.</p>

Why Nubia had 3 capitals over time.

Kerma, Napata, Meroë- kept moving farther up the Nile away from Egypt because each capital was too close to the enemy as Egypt expanded

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Cultural Diffusion

Nubia copied Egypt -their kings dressed as pharaohs and built tiny pyramids

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<p>Egyptian writing system</p>

Egyptian writing system

Hieroglyphics

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48

Isis, Osiris and Horus myth

Seth kills Osiris b/c of jealousy

puts him in a box which lands in a tree and grows into it

Tree gets moved to Tyre (Phoencia)

Isis get it back

Seth kills Osiris again and spreads body parts

Isis finds the body parts and puts them together in the world's 1st mummy

Horus avenges Osiris by fighting his uncle Seth for control of Egypt

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feather of truth test

They would weigh their hearts compared to a feather

If they were lighter they would be saved

if it was heavier, they would go to the underworld

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mummification

canopic jars held your guts, spread with salt and then herbs and oils, wrapped in linen

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tomb decorations

They were filled with a lot of gold and jewelry- everything the person would need for the afterlife

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<p>Egyptian soul</p>

Egyptian soul

Ba: the bird - part that can travel between life and death

others

Khet (physical body)

Sah (spiritual body)

Ib (heart)

Ka (vital essence)

Shut (shadow)

Sekhem (form)

Ren (name)

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<p>negative confession</p>

negative confession

"I have NOT..."

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<p>Nubian pharaohs</p>

Nubian pharaohs

Copies Egypt with same fake beard, jewelry, crown, eye makeup, but not same skin color

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<p>Upper Egypt capital</p>

Upper Egypt capital

Thebes

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<p>Lower Egypt capital</p>

Lower Egypt capital

Memphis

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<p>Valley of Salt</p>

Valley of Salt

Wadi Natron

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Natural Borders of Egypt

Cataract, Mediterranean, Eastern and Western deserts

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<p>City of Aten</p>

City of Aten

Akhetaten (Amarna)

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Canopic Jars (sons of Horus)

Containers in which the ancient Egyptians preserved the internal organs of a deceased person usually for burial with the mummy

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<p>sarcophagus</p>

sarcophagus

coffin in Egypt

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<p>Nile Delta</p>

Nile Delta

The most fertile area of land in Egypt located end of the Nile River where it empties into the Mediterranean Sea

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Valley of the Kings

An area were many tombs where built after the great pyramids because it allowed for easier guarding and less grave robbery.

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<p>Book of the Dead</p>

Book of the Dead

Collection of religious spells which were thought to be helpful to the deceased in the afterlife.

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<p>Herodotus</p>

Herodotus

Greek Historian

considered the father of History

came from a Greek community in Anatolia and traveled extensively, collecting information in western Asia and the Mediterranean lands

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<p>Dua-Khety</p>

Dua-Khety

Wrote Satire of the Trades -a letter to his son Pepy encouraging him to stay in school -become a scribe and thus avoid entering the trades (HARD work)

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<p>scribe</p>

scribe

A professional writer who works for those with money, power and position.

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royal blood

Believed to be elite, containing special properties that commoners' blood did not have, thus enabling royal descendants to control aspects of nature that common people could not.

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Ta-Seti

Name of Nubia that means Land of the Bow (Archers)

refers to the excellence of the Archers of Nubia

their ability to win wars by shooting at their enemies with bow and arrow

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<p>Augustus Caesar (Octavian)</p>

Augustus Caesar (Octavian)

Enemy of the Nubia Kandake, Amirenas.

founder of the Roman Empire and its FIRST Roman Emperor

Part of a statue of him was the footrest of Amirenas' throne

Also enemy of Cleopatra

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<p>Palermo Stone</p>

Palermo Stone

A fragment of the Royal Annals of the Old Kingdom, ca. 2300 BCE, a record of military campaigns by Egypt against Nubia. Egyptian artifact held hostage in Palermo, Italy.

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<p>Kerma, 2400BCE</p>

Kerma, 2400BCE

1st Kingdom of Kush capital, created when the more powerful Nubian villages gradually took over the weaker ones

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Hyksos alliance with Nubia, 1700BCE

Agreement between them to attack Upper Egypt and defeat the forces of Kamose (last Pharaoh of 17th Dynasty)

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Nubian alliance with Phoenicia and Judah, 700s BCE

Agreement between them to defend against expanding Assyrians (Sennacherib, Esarhaddon and finally Ashurbanipal). Led by Taharqa of Kush

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<p>Jebel Barkal</p>

Jebel Barkal

A city built to worship Amun

site of Nubian pillars that have the history of the Napatan period of Nubian/Kush history inscribed on them in hieroglyphics.

Beautiful temple built during the age of the Black (Nubian/Kush) Pharaohs,

modeled after the temples at Abu Simbel, and is the burial site of Piye and Shabaka. 700s BCE

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<p>Taharqa</p>

Taharqa

A Kushite king he was one of the most powerful leaders in history.

His Kushite kingdom grew to include Egypt and prospered under his reign.

He built many large temples in and around Egypt and Kush. Driven out of Egypt by the conquering Assyrians under King Esarhaddon,

returned to reclaim Egypt until he was later defeated by the next Assyrian king, Assurbanipal. 600s BCE

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Alara, King of Kush

Very first King of Kush (Nubia)

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Kashta

Kushite king who attacked Egypt.

Made the Kushite Kingdom into an Empire by conquering Upper Egypt and capturing Thebes.

Father of High Priestess Amenirdis I.

Founder of 25th Dynasty of Egypt.

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<p>Amenirdis I</p>

Amenirdis I

Nubian princess, daughter of King Kashta, she became High Priestess in newly conquered Thebes.

She was called "God's Wife of Amun".

Super powerful

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Piye

King of Kush around 750 B.C., who gained control of all of Egypt, becoming pharaoh and uniting Egypt with Kush. Got the Delta princes of Egypt to promise allegiance with Kush.

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<p>Shabaka</p>

Shabaka

Piye and Amenirdis' brother.

Pharaoh over Kush and Egypt. Avenged his brother Piye, by punishing the rebel Egyptian princes from the Delta region.

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<p>Meroe</p>

Meroe

Capital of a flourishing kingdom in southern Nubia from the 4th century B.C.E. to the 4th century C.E.. In this period Nubian culture shows more independence from Egypt and the influence of Sub-Saharan Africa. Known for its manufacture of iron weapons and tools.

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<p>kandake</p>

kandake

Sister of the current king ("Qore" in Kush), she would be the mother of the next king/Qore.

This is matrilineal succession. Often a very powerful female leader who ruled alongside her husband and/or her son.

We use the name Candace for our daughters because it means QUEEN.

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Powerful Nubian Kandakes:

Shanakdakhete, 177-155BC;

Amanirenas, 40-10BC;

Amanishakheto, 10BC-1AD;

Amanitore, 1-20AD;

Amantitere, 22-41AD [*might be the Kandake of reference in the book of Acts];

Amanikhatashan, 62-85AD;

Maleqorobar, 266-283AD;

Lahideamani 306-314AD.

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<p>Amanirenas, 40-10BCE</p>

Amanirenas, 40-10BCE

Most famous kandake of Kush because of her role leading Kushite armies against the Romans in a war that lasted five years, from 27 BC to 22 BC.

After an initial victory when the Kushites attacked Roman Egypt and sacked Thebes, the Kushites were driven out of Egypt by the Romans and forced Amanirenas to make a treaty restoring the prior status quo.

She was described as a tremendous warrior and leader, very brave, and blind in one eye!

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<p>Aksum (Axum)</p>

Aksum (Axum)

Early African civilization located southeast of Nubia (in Ethiopia, Eritrea, Sudan);

oldest Christian empire in the world;

traded goods such as ivory, emeralds, tortoise shells, silk, and spices with India, China, Rome, and Byzantium.

Remained Christian even during Muslim expansion.

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Lalibela, Ethiopia

Major Christian center of early Ethiopia.

Key church in this city is made of one single rock.

11 rock-hewn churches connected by rock tunnels, near the Great Rift Valley still exist today.

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Queen of Sheba

The queen of a wealthy country (Aksum/Ethiopia) who came to test Solomon's wisdom.

Their son, Menelik, returned to Sheba (Aksum/Ethiopia) with the Ark of the Covenant.

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Kebra Nagast

Work of sacred literature written in the Ge'ez language in the 1300s AD that documents Menelik and his successors in the Solomonic Ethiopian ruling dynasty.

Considered historically reliable.

Followed by Ethiopian Christians and Jamaican Rastafarians.

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King Ezana of Axum

He brought Christianity to Africa and made it the official religion of Axum. 300s AD

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Trade with Axum

Arabia, Sub-Saharan Africa, Red Sea, Arabian Sea, China, India, Persia, Egypt and Nubia

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Frumentius

This man and his brother were captives in Aksum and became the tutors of King Ezana, eventually converting Ezana and all of Aksum to Christianity in 333AD (32 years after Armenia, 47 years before Rome)

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Athanasius of Alexandria

(d. AD 373) Bishop/Patriarch of the Church in Alexandria, Egypt. Responsible for the Christian community in North Africa. #2 Patriarch after Patriarch in Rome (Pope)

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Ezana Stele

Standing stele (hawulti/obelisk) from Axum carved from a block of granite, marks the tomb of King Ezana, the 1st Christian leader of Aksum.

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Ezana Stone

The Ezana Stone documents the conversion of King Ezana to Christianity and his conquest of various neighboring areas, including Meroë, commemorating his victories in praise of God.

Written in various ancient languages, including the Ethiopian Semitic Ge'ez, the South Arabian Sabaean, and Greek, the king's engravings in stone provided a trilingual monument in different languages, similar to the Rosetta Stone.

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Deir al Bahri, Egypt

Queen Hatshepsut's mortuary temple in the Valley of the Kings

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Aswan, Egypt

Trade city in Upper Egypt at the 1st Cataract. The name means TRADE.

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Narmer

Egyptian King who is believed to have brought 2 Egyptian Kingdoms together.

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Double Crown of Egypt

the crown of unification that combined the white Ibis crown of Upper Egypt with the red Asp crown of Lower Egypt.

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Nefertiti

queen of Egypt and wife of Akhenaten (14th century BC)

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