Friday 26 October 2012

the footslave


I received a story written by a man I met in SL. He wrote it in English, and i published all without correction.





i, slave Baruti, foot slave

For 5 years, i am slave of the Goddess, and consequently one of the slaves with the longest state of service. Actually, I was one of her teachers, and when the Divine one decided, a few years ago, that She needed more slaves to serve her, i begged Her to enjoy this exceptional privilege. I was Her first foot slave. Here is a report of a ceremony that I was experiencing in my new role.

From Her fourteenth , the young Goddess stayed to Her own 'Golden Palace'. The first slaves were newly trained and served as carriers of the litter and as fan slaves. They were all young men, and I was almost 50, an old greybeard . At that time, the slaves were still modestly dressed, and they had a spacious and comfortable stay in the Palace. One evening, during a lesson Poetry, i lowered on my stomach, and worshiped at the Feet of the Goddess, begging Her for a favour. Actually this was forbidden, but the Divine one replied that She would listen. Hesitantly, I spoke: "Divine Majesty, there are now a dozen slaves in Your service. I see that they are all young and beautiful, but I beg you, Holy Goddess, is there no place for me in this herd of slaves? "

I expected a bunch of lashes and derisive laughter . Instead, I heard the sweet voice of the Goddess, "and how would an old man be of service to Me?" "Holy Goddess" I replied "I beg You, let me be Your footrest. The highest honour for a humble serf, is to lie under Your Divine Feet, O Holy Goddess "I didn’t dare to look up and lay  trembling before Her on the floor.

After a long silence She said, "on your knees and look at Me!" I got up slowly and looked at Her in awe and devotion. Although She was a child, I felt so insignificant and weak in Her presence. Haughty She played with the leather straps of Her whip and She tested me in a sublime way . "You know that each slave is  My property?" She said. I bowed deeply before Her, and said that i wanted nothing more than to be Her humble servant.

Then I had to teach her again, as if this conversation took never place.

The next morning, i rushed to the gatehouse, where a priestess  prepared a hot bath. This was normal, because everyone must undergo a ritual purification to be admitted in the Goddess presence. All my hair, even my public hair, were removed, and then i realized that i was a slave. I was painted up like a courtier and i got a gold loincloth and a leather collar with  a leash. The priestess guided me in the direction of the sanctuary, and the private quarters of Goddess Yanara.

For the first stage i had to kneel, and creeping on my stomach i had to follow her upstairs, kissing all the steps. Instead of feeling humiliated  i was proud . Before the priestess led me inside the Sanctuary, she ordered. "Slave,"  This word sent a shiver through my whole body, "When we come into the Holy Shrine, you have to kiss the floor constantly . Remember that the Goddess is worshiped here every day, and that this room is one of the Holiest places in the world. "Very slowly she went on, and i writhed like a snake behind her, while i touched the floor with my lips. It was a sensual experience, which i deeply enjoyed.

In front of the monumental golden throne the priestess commanded that i had to kneel. I straightened my back and for the first time in my life I saw the huge throne rising  high above me . "There's your place, slave!" And the priestess pointed to the bottom of the throne, where until today had been a costly footrest. "I release you now, and then you crawl into your place under the throne. You stretch out yourself cross to the throne, so the Goddess is able to put Her Divine Feet on your back. You press your face against the floor, and you keep your arms at your sides. Remain motionless. When the Goddess puts Her Feet on your back , you worship her aloud as follows: "Holy Goddess, exalted Daughter of Isis, this humble slave worships You." Then she did me repeat this phrase several times, and removed the leash. Kissing the floor i crawled to my place ...
As soon as I lay in the prescribed posture, people entered the Sanctuary. A few priestesses and priests knelt down on soft cushions. I also heard that the musicians behind the throne tuned their instruments. My back was covered with a silk cloth. I was a lowly slave, and it was unthinkable to be in direct contact with the Goddess. Moments later a hymn resounded throughout  the cool room, while the Goddess was carried in on a litter, by 12 slaves crawling on hands and knees, very slowly, making their way to the throne. The Goddess got out and climbed the few steps to Her seat. She lay down in the purple cushions. When i felt her sandals on my back, i stammered  the mantra that i had learned. I shivered in silent adoration and kept my eyes closed. I hardly dared breathe, and remained as motionless as possible. In my mind I repeated the mantra hundreds of times.

24 new priests were trained, appearing for the first time before their Goddess. They crawled on their knees to the throne in two rows to kiss Goddess’sacred  Feet. After this ceremony, as everyone was gone, came my priestess  and hooked me at her leash, and she brought me back to my stay.

I'm still a foot slave, and because of my age i have no hope of another function at the Court. But the idea that the Goddess  is happy of my puny person , and the fact i may serve and worship her in this way, gives me the greatest satisfaction, and makes me happy.


Friday 12 October 2012

Prayers to Yanara



It is incumbent on priestesses and priests to worship Goddess Yanara 4 times a day. It usually happens in the throne room, but also in the bedroom or anywhere the Goddess wishes.



(If interested in ancient Egyptian language, you may ask for the texts in ancient Egyptian )


Morning Rite-Prayer of Awakening 
Awake, awake, awake, 
Awake in peace, 
Lady of peace, 
Rise thou in peace, 
Rise thou in beauty, 
Goddess of Life 
Beautiful in heaven. 
Heaven is in peace 
Earth is in peace 
O Goddess! 
Daughter of Isis
Daughter of Osiris
Queen of Egypt 
Goddess rich in names! 
All praise to You 
All praise to You 
I adore You 
I adore You 
Goddess Yanara!



Noontime Rite 
From the land of morning I hail you Yanara
I thank You for Your guidance 
Through the hours between night and noon 
Welcome to the softer sky of afternoon 
Look ahead to the respite of dusk and evening

An Evening Orison of Yanara– The Evening Rite 
Hail Yanara, glorious Goddess, 
Day is done and the night is come, 
The sun is set and the stars emerge 
This is the Evening Rite, 
The rite to end the day of light. 
Let your instrument sound Your name, 
Hailing You with all homage, 
Yanara glorious Goddess. 
To the candle which the match I rise 
On the altar set to You, Yanara, glorious Goddess, 
And the nighttime incense rises, sweetly mixed, 
To put me in the mind of perceiving You 
Yanara, glorious Goddess 
Who rises behind me like a flame of gold 
And brushes my back with deft wings. 
I make open the nape of my neck to You. 
Let your portal welcome You, O Yanara, 
Great and glorious Goddess. 
Up my hands rise and hold 
The curved bow of exaltation, 
And rise once more 
To the sharp angle of invocation. 
Come, oh great and glorious Goddess, 
Come into the fullness of force and love, 
Let your garment for a moment clothe You, 
O Yanara, Goddess great and glorious.

Rite of Night – A Nighttime Prayer 
I hail You and praise You, 
Glorious Goddess, 
At the end of this day which You granted me. 
May my actions within its hours be 
judged to be justified, 
And my words within its hours found to be true. 
Drain from me all ill intent and action; 
I offer to You all energy I have locked 
In unworthy action or reaction 
May tomorrow by Your grace find me 
Wiser and my joy in the Universe still greater. 
I ask Your welcome now in the Temple; 
Accept me this night for rest, for study, and for worship; 
Grant me dreams of meaning and the memory to recall them. 
Hail to You, Goddess of the Starry pathways, 
Hail to You, Goddess of the Deep Black, 
Hail to You, Goddess of the Shining Sun at Midnight, 
May I partake of Your glory forever.

Monday 8 October 2012

Priests and Priestesses




Those who spoke to the Gods and Goddesses were the Priests and Priestesses. They were the souls who carried the sacred knowledge about creation and the nature of our reality. There were initiates who studied the knowledge of both the sacred mystery teachings and the religious philosophies of the times. This sacred knowledge would be passed down in many forms including the genetics of certain souls. That information would one day be brought out into the open in its truest form.

Because the Pharaoh could not perform ceremonies at all the temples throughout Egypt, he appointed high priests to carry out the sacred rituals at each temple. Priests often passed down their positions from father to son. They enjoyed great power and wealth in Egyptian society. The priests' duties were to care for the gods and attend to their needs. They also performed funeral rites, teaching school, supervising the artists and works, and advising people on problems.

The priesthood of ancient Egypt has a far reaching and deep history, rooted within the traditions of Ancient Egypt. Unlike the orthodox priesthoods usually found within Western society, the role of the Egyptian priest or priestess was vastly different within the society as a whole. Rather than seek the divine and develop a rapport with the gods, the role of the priest was akin to an everyday job.

For, as the pharaoh was seen as a god himself, the priests and priestesses were seen as stand-in's for the pharaoh; as it was the greater job of the priests and priestesses to keep Egyptian society in good order, as is the case with most theoretically based societies. The mystical attributes of the priests and priestesses take on a secondary role, when one considers the heightened role religion played within Egyptian society. Not only was religion a way to attain the ethereal and basic needs of the Egyptians, but it also served as a mechanism to order society, to create a hierarchy, and to preserve the culture for future generations. As such, the role of the priests and priestesses was both functional and mystical on both levels.

A priest or priestess in ancient Egypt was generally chosen by either the king, or attained their post by hereditary means. In either case, the priests who received their positions hereditarily and through the king were not set apart from mundane life. In fact, such priests were made to embrace the mundane life to keep Egyptian society functioning properly (and as stated above it was a job of fairly high status). Though the priesthood had started out simply, with relatively few temples, in the later dynasties the temples expanded into the hundreds. With such growth, a large bureaucracy was needed to keep the temples in good standing; and thenceforth, the small priesthood's of the Egyptians grew from an estimated hundred priests into the thousands, and with it came a priestly hierarchy.

The daily life of a priest or priestess depended on their sex and also their hierarchical standing within the priesthood. Priests were often rotated from position to position within the priestly hierarchy and were integrated in and out of mundane society. This rotation system generally went, that a priest would enter into temple life one month, at three times a year. This rotation system had a direct connection to the often stringent purity rites of the priests.

Regardless of what status the priest was, there were numerous taboos and tradition's a priest had to or could not partake of. Of these taboos and traditions, a priest or priestess could not eat fish (a food thought to be ascribed to peasant life), could not wear wool (as nearly all animal products were unclean), were generally circumcised (only common among the male priests), and it was not uncommon for priests to bathe three or four times a day in "sacred" purificatory pools. It was also not uncommon for the "oracle" tending priests (one of the most sacred positions), to shave off all of their body hair, partially to get rid of lice, but partially for purificatory functions.

These "oracle" priests symbolically gave food to the statues of the gods, clothed the statues of the gods, sealed the temple chamber in the evening, and were known as stolists. As can be seen from the example of the stolists, the need for purity extended not only upon the mundane level, but also held true within the afterlife as well. Further, from such purificatory rites the priests were often times known as the "pure ones" regardless of status within the temples.

The priesthood was a civil function in ancient Egypt. Recruited from the local population, the priests served three months at a time then returned to their daily lives. A small core of superior priests, or adepts, served the temple full time. During the New Kingdom, every temple, no matter how small, had at least one resident priest. The function of a priest was to maintain the universal order as dictated by the Gods in the Zep Tepi, or the First Time, the original Golden Age of the High God. To this end, their primary function was to perform the rituals of the Divine Drama, the Great Myth, at the appropriate time and in the correct way. By involving a large portion of the local population in its services, the temple became the center of local culture.

The initiation, or installation, of a priest was essentially the same in all temples. A baptism in a sacred pool, symbolic of the waters of Nu, the Cosmic Ocean, washed away all evil. Then the candidate was sprinkled with oil and water as purification, led to the statue of the Goddess and instructed in the secret ways of touching and working with the statue. The candidate then undertakes a ten day fast, at the end of which the mysteries are revealed by some sort of psychic/shamanic experience.

Within the temple structure, there were classes of priests. The administrative officials in the large temples, such as Karnak, functioned as a separate group, one not too concerned with religious perspectives. They took care of the business end of the temple and its property. The religious establishment also had its classes. The temple of Amun had five different priestly sections, each with its own sub-divisions. The High Priest of Ptah at Memphis was called "the great chief of all artisans," as all crafts were under the protection of Ptah. These first and second "prophets," mis-translated by the Greeks from the Egyptian "servants of the God," were mostly royal appointments and could be chosen from any level of society. They led the higher ranks of the priesthood in the ritual functions of the temple.

In addition to the political administration, the priests and priestesses took on both magical and economic functions, however set apart from the hierarchy of priests are the lay magicians who supplied a commoners understanding of Egyptian religion. Through the use of magic and their connection to the gods, lay magicians provided a service to their community, usually consisting of counseling, magical arts, healing, and ceremony.

Lay magicians who served within this last and final caste of the Egyptian priesthood belonged to a large temple known simply as "The House of Life". Laymen would come to "The House of Life" to meet with a magician, priest or priestess to have their dreams interpreted, to supply magical spells and charms, to be healed and to counteract malevolent magic, and to supply incantations of various types. Though the House of Life provided it's Laymen with many prescriptive cures for common ills, it was largely shrouded in mystery in ancient times. In fact, the library of The House of Life was shrouded in great secrecy, as it contained many sacred rites, books, and secrets of the temple itself which were thought could harm the pharaoh, the priests, and all of Egypt itself.

Though the magicians of The House of Life, were seen as another step from the ceremonial duties of the priests, they were by no means less important, and as is evidenced by the presence of many magical wands, papyri text, and other archeological evidence, The House of Life took on a role direly important to the way of life of Ancient Egyptians.

One final position within the priesthood highly worthy of mention is that of the Scribes. The scribes were highly prized by both the pharaoh and the priesthood, so much so that in some of the pharaoh's tombs, the pharaoh himself is depicted as a scribe in pictographs. The scribes were in charge of writing magical texts, issuing royal decrees, keeping and recording the funerary rites (specifically within The Book of The Dead) and keeping records vital to the bureaucracy of Ancient Egypt. The scribes often spent years working on the craft of making hieroglyphics, and deserve mentioning within the priestly caste as it was considered the highest of honors to be a scribe in any Egyptian court or temple.

Finally, worthy of mention, though there is considerable historical evidence telling of the role of priests within the priestly hierarchy, the status of the priestesses was at times equal if not minor to that of the male priesthood. The female priestesses held the main function within the temple's of music and dancing. At Thebes, however, the chief-priestess of Amun bore the title of 'God's wife'. She was the leader of the female music-makers who were regarded as the god's harem and were identified with the goddess Hathor, who was associated with love and music. In the Twenty-third Dynasty and afterwards such priestesses were practically rulers of the theocracy, their duties centering around the reverence of Isis, and many other female and male goddesses and gods.

The hierarchy of priests consisted of a milieu of offices and duties. At the top of the hierarchy of priests was the high-priest, also known as the sem-priest, and as "the First Prophet of the God". The high-priest was often very wise in years, and old. Not only did he serve as political advisor to the pharaoh, but he was also a political leader for the temples he belonged to as well. The high-priest was in charge of over-seeing magical rites and ceremonies as well as advising the pharaoh. Maintaining a fairly ceremonial position, the high-priest was often times chosen by the pharaoh as an advisor, however, it was not uncommon for a high-priest to have climbed through the ranks to his official status.

Below the high-priest were a number of priests with many specialized duties. The specialization of these second tier priests ran from "horology" (keeping an accurate count of the hours through the days, extremely important during the time of the sunboat worshippers, but also for agricultural reasons as well), "astrology" (extremely important as well to the mythology of Egypt as well as to the architectural and calendrical systems of Egypt), to healing. As is obvious by the specialization of the priests, the cycles of the cosmos were extremely important, as they decided when crops would be planted, when the Nile would wax or wane, and further when the temple rites were to begin in the morning. The result of these Egyptian priests studies can be seen in both the mythological studies of Egypt, as well as within the agricultural practices, which rival even the modern Caesarian Calendar still used within the western world today.


The Kher Heb or the Lector Priest

Sacred scrolls are read out loud by the Kher Heb, the Lector Priest, who is obliged to read them directly from the papyrus book held open in his hands. He has to recite them exactly as they are written, even if he has read them many, many times before, for making a mistake can offend the god. This was done at the official ceremonies and at the head of the processions, when the god was carried out before the people.


The Hem Netjer or the High Priest

It was not regarded as important to spread teachings about the god's superiority, nor was it the Hem Netjer's task to see to the people's spiritual or moral welfare. His job was to take care of the god and the god's needs, to act as a servant of the god. By treating the god as an important citizen of Egypt, it was ensured that the god would live on and care for the people of Egypt. And the highest priest was Pharao, who acted as a servant to all the different gods, in all the different religious centre throughout the land. He appointed High Priests to act for him at the different temples, their number depending on the size of the temple and the cult's popularity. This appointment to High Priest was both a religious and a political one and sometimes it was held within a powerful family for several generations.



Female Servants of God

Women from noble families were accepted as Hem Netjer already in the Old Kingdom. Usually they were attached to the goddesses. It's uncertain what work they really performed, more than being singers, dancers and musicians. At one occasion in the Third Intermediate Period there was a royal lady titled God's Wife of Amen. She was served by female acolytes, lived in celibacy and adopted another royal lady to secure the successorship.



God's Father

The High Priest is also called the First Prophet and could in his turn delegate Second, Third and Fourth Prophets as deputies. The brother-in-law to Amenhotep III, Aanen, was for a long time Second Prophet of Amen at Karnak and High Priest of Re-Atum. Aanen's father Yuya was High Priest of Min at Akhim and also held the title of God's Father, which is believed to mean Father-in-law of the King. But "father of the god" was also used as titles for the priesthood directly below the First Prophet and these persons often held other important duties outside the temples. Yuya was therefore Master of the King's Horses and Overseer of the Cattle of the temple of Min, besides being the High Priest of Min.



Temple Work and Purity
The priesthood was divided into four phyles, i.e. groups, and each phyle worked one month out of three. The servants of the god kept up their normal profession, whatever it was, for eight months of the year, and the remaining months were served at the temple.
When in the temple, ritual purity was of utmost importance. Each temple had its own lake where the priests purified themselves and the ritual vessels that were used in ceremonies, and from where water was taken for the libation offerings. Priests could only wear white linen and sandals made from papyrus, all animal products were considered unclean. The priest who held the leading role in a procession or other ceremony, used the cheetah- or leopard skin robe draped across his back. But that one might also have been an imitation.
During temple duty, a priest had to shave off all his bodily hair, even the eye brows and was expected to abstain from sexual activity. Outside of temple duty, they could marry, raise families and live normal lives.


Services and Rituals
The god, in the form of a statue, was seated in a shrine, or naos, which was built of stone or wood and kept in the innermost chamber of the temple. The statue could be made of stone, gold or gilded wood, inlaid with semi-precious stones and it was not always life sized. It was not regarded as an idol, but as the receptacle of the deity's ka. Three times a day, if not more, rituals were performed at the shrine. At dawn the temple singers awoke the god by singing the Morning Hymn. And after having purified himself, the priest conducting the Morning Service, broke the seal and drew back the bolts that had been tied last night, and the doors to the god was opened. Now the god received the same purification process as the priests already had undergone. Incense was burned and the god was dressed, perfumed and had cosmetics put on, in the same way as the King would have been prepared for the day.


The Offerings
Then food and drink was put before the god. This was a display of the best that could be found; joints of meat, roasted fowl, bread, fruits, vegetables, beer, wine, and everything in large quantities, out of the temple´s own kitchens, gardens and farms, and of superior quality. The meat came from animals that had been slaughtered out of the sight of the god, and overseen by a priest who had ensured it was fit to put before the god.No blood or unsightly scenes were allowed before the god.< The offerings always included flowers, bound in garlands and in large temples there were gardens with gardeners and florists to ensure the supply and prepare the offerings.

Over these offerings the priest poured libations of water, and in a spoon-like saucer, shaped like a forearm with an open palm holding a small pot, incense was burned. Incense was considered the "Perfume of the gods" and as the intention was to stimulate all the senses of the gods, it played an important part in the rituals. Food and drink meant taste, music and singing meant sound, and flowers were added to make the offering beautiful and presentable. So while the god's ka was believed to be absorbing these offerings, musicians, singers and dancers enteratined him. The text of the hymns was simple, with many repetitions of the god´s attributes and names, and the music could be rattling of the sistrum or menat, percussion, and for special occasions, harp, flute, drums and cymbals.


Temple Organization
The larger temple centres were like veritable cities and employed all kinds of workers. There were temple bakeries and breweries, and some temples had a fleet of boats and fishermen, hunters and stables with donkeys, there were farms or tenants of land. The produce arrived daily to fill the god´s storehouses and everything was recorded and kept in books by the temple scribes. On top of that the temple employed craftsmen like stonemasons, painters, carpenters, weavers, scribes and administrators, not to mention the priests. It was a huge organization and as an example there is Karnak, with a list of more than 81.000 employees!


Wages
During the time of service in the temple, any employee enjoyed a higher standard than normally. The god's wealth was for all to share, depending of status and type of work. So large, well functioning centres usually held large properties of land, the workers, stone masons, farmers etc. kept their families there too, which enlarged the population, and ensured there were all these extra kinds of needs and doings to keep women and children fed and clothed. A large religious temple complex was bested in riches only by the Royal House.


Festivals and Processions
The temples celebrated regular festive days, the First of the Month and the New Moon. The god's statue was then paraded around the temple grounds, and at certain places the procession stopped for offerings. These "resting places" of the god usually had something in common with the particular festival.

Then there were the larger religious festivals where the god was carried outside the temple precinct in front of the people. As they were not allowed inside the temple, this was a popular occasion, the god carried on his bark, although veiled from the direct look of the commoner, and the sacred books carried on the shoulders of a priest walking in front of the procession.

Priests fanned and sheltered the god from the sun with ostrich plumes or fans made from palm fibre. Incense was burned and offerings were made at the resting places along the route. Some of these were permanent little temples, others were erected just for the event. Here, the bark was set down on an "altar" while the rituals were performed. At some occasions the bark was put on the god's own barque from the temple quai and was towed further along the Nile, escorted by a flotilla of boats, sometimes even the royal family was present to watch. These were great occasions, in which everybody took part and they usually lasted for several days, when eating and drinking was abundant.

Festivals could also be shared between two temples, like the commemoration of the Sacred marriage of Hathor and Horus at Dendera. All these celebrations had to be held at the right time and day and it was the task of the temple star watcher to keep track of the religious calendars.









Thursday 4 October 2012

The Military of Ancient Egypt





The ancient Egyptian military, like all armies, was a product of the society that created it. Although it was not militarily innovative itself, Egyptian society could be very conservative; and the Egyptian military readily adapted enemy weapons and technologies becoming a powerhouse of the ancient world and one of the great military forces of history.

The ancient Egyptians were a blessed kingdom. Few nations have had their ideal position; they were defended naturally from attack by geography and united as a people. The deserts protected the flanks of Egypt while their Northern border was protected by the Mediterranean Sea. The Nile River flowed from South to North, and five cataracts protected the Southern border. Additionally, the Egyptians had the advantage of being ethnically and culturally unified. An advantage when it comes to governing, most nations have the additional problem of disparate groups constantly attempting to break away and revolting. Egypt however was united under their Pharaoh, a king who was considered to be a god on earth. For hundreds of years the Egyptians prospered, their cities not even requiring defensive walls and their people secure.

Egypts defensive advantages were not enough to stop the conquering Hyskos who invaded at the end of the Middle Kingdom. The Egyptians learned from their defeat and reinvented their army, ushering in a new age of military glory. The Egyptian lands of the Archaic Period, old kingdom and middle kingdom, were not devoid of armies or enemies however. Nomads raided from the desert, Libyans attacked the Nile delta and the Nubians threatened the Southern boarder. The Pharaohs responded with force. Fortresses and outposts were built and garrisoned to protect the Nile delta, Eastern desert and the southern border. If the threat was more substantial then a raid and the small garrisons couldn’t handle it the Pharaoh would respond with an army.

The first possible prehistoric battle in the archaeological record is on the Nile near the border of Egypt and Sudan. The site known as Cemetery 117 has been determined to be between approximately 13,140 to 14,340 years old. It contains 59 skeletons along with many partial skeletons, many with arrowheads or spear points embedded in them, indicating that they may have been the battle casualties. The wounds show no signs of associated with healing. Some speculate that an increasingly arid climate may have caused greater competition and there seems to be a quick decline in populations at the end of the Paleolithic. Others have questioned this conclusion, arguing that the bodies could have accumulated over decades or even centuries. Perhaps the site is evidence of the murder of trespassers rather than an actual battle. They also point out that nearly half of the bodies are female and thirteen are children.

Archeologists have identified a string of Nile cultures spanning from the 14th millennium BC to the Dynastic period. These cultures developed from hunter-gathers and wild grain gathers to settled agricultural villages and eventually the mini states that were forged into Ancient Egypt. These societies are credited with many firsts for mankind and developed into one of our earliest urban populations. However the productive, but limited areas available for farming caused conflict first among bands of human struggling to make their first attempts at food production then later between villages. Groups of desert nomads would have been attracted to the comparative paradise the Nile valley offered with its vast flocks of birds, wild grains and animal life and needed to be repulsed. These conflicts would have been carried out using primitive weapons, clubs, stone maces, slings, throwing sticks, stone tipped spears and stone tipped arrows. Early bows were constructed using two antelope horns fixed to a handle. By 5500 BC tribes had adapted to the annual flooding of the Nile for agriculture and mastered animal husbandry, creating food surpluses and villages. As their societies became more advanced so did the complexity of warfare, small raiding tactics evolved into armies and they began to make shields of animal hide stretched over wood frames.

Egyptian society had an early jump on the world stage, developing medicine, astronomy, mathematics, cosmetics, and domesticating animals to name a few. They also broadened their world, making contact with Palestine and the Byblos coast.

By 4000 BC they began to import obsidian from Ethiopia to make razor sharp blades. Over the next thousand years they developed from scattered villages and hamlets to powerful civilizations with kings in complete control of the people and resources of the Nile valley. The wooden simple bow (or self bow) had been developed by this time and replaced the older horn bows. They expanded their trade routes, developed writing and increased their territory along the Nile until three cities dominated the valley and vied for complete control. The world’s first depictions of siege warfare can be found in reliefs depicting sieges and wheeled siege ladders. By 3150 BC the king of Upper Egypt had had defeated the other to kings and taken control over all of Egypt. This may have been accomplished by a Pharaoh named Narmar, the so called scorpion king, who is the first known to be depicted with the symbols of a united upper and Lower Egypt.

Warfare in Egypt’s Archaic Period
During the archaic period (3100 BC – 2686 BC) soldiers were equipped with stone maces, copper tipped spears and bows with flint or obsidian arrows. Soldiers were protected by large wooden shields and didn’t wear armor due to the desert heat. Forces were raised by conscription when needed to fend off small scale raids form groups like the Libyans. In battle signature tactic of Egyptian warfare was used; enemy forces were attacked by the Egyptians perpetual main weapon of choice, the bow and arrow. The old horn bows and simple long bows were replaced by a more compact and simpler to pullback recurve bow. Once an enemy was weekend and in disarray from the volleys of arrows the Egyptian infantry assaulted with their main melee weapons, the stone mace and spears. Infantry soldiers also carried throwing sticks as secondary weapons, a largely ineffective but extremely inexpensive short ranged missile weapon.

Old Kingdom Military & Warfare
The Old Kingdom (2686 BC – 2134 BC) was a prosperous time for the Egyptians. It was a golden age when great periods were constructed and Egypt grew rich and influential. This government to become stable and in turn they reorganized the military. The Pharaoh’s began a military construction program placing forts to protect Egypt from incursions from the Libyans to the West and the Sinai and Canaanite tribes to the Northeast. Their greatest conflict during this time was with the Nubians to the South. A string of Forts were constructed within territories taken from them to ensure the safety of Egypt.

During the Old Kingdom, Egypt didn’t have a standing army. Instead governors of administrative divisions called Nomes were required to raise armies. When a force was needed all of the armies of the Nomes would be come together and be commanded by the Pharaoh. However, this created another problem for Pharaoh’s, occasionally Nomes created rival factions and vied for the monarchy in which case they needed to be forcibly suppressed through military action by the Pharaoh.

Egyptian armies of the period consisted of archers and infantry men . Most infantry would be equipped spears, brandishing copper spearheads and a large shield. (Also, see Egyptian weapons.) These shields were the kind that used hides stretched over wooden frames. The design has been tested and it was surprisingly resilient. They are lighter then a pure wooden shield allowing for a larger size and their ability to flex allowed them to absorb blows that shattered wooden shields. Elite troops and leaders would have been armed with copper maces, ideal for bashing lightly armored foes but expensive. The infantry was backed up by archers carrying a simple curved bow and arrows with arrowheads made of flint or copper. The reason the Egyptians returned to the simple curved bow from the recurved bow is unclear, perhaps they preferred its lower maintenance. Nubian mercenaries were said to have been their best archers.

As the pharoah’s of the old kingdom concentrated on constructing their pyramids they slowly allowed more power to fall into the hands of the Governors of the nomes. Upon the death of the 94 year old pharaoh Pepy II Egypt fell into civil war. Without a clear heir the regional powers began to contend with each other for supremacy. Egyptian power waned in the following period, called The First Intermediate Period. Militarily Egypt would never be as secure again as it was in the Old Kingdom, now forced to contend with other rising powers in the near East.

Middle Kingdom Military & Warfare
During the Middle Kingdom, between 2030 BC – 1640 BC, the Pharaoh’s struggled to hold on to Egyptian power. They needed to protect their trade routes and resources now more than ever. The era of their complete military dominance was now in the past. The borders were pushed out to their greatest extent yet and the Pharaoh’s were now content with keeping a power balance with the other near eastern empires. Senusret III, Pharaoh from 1878 BC to 1839 BC, and was one of the most powerful kings of this period. He cleared a navigable canal through the first cataract and relentlessly pushed Egypt’s southern border to the second cataract deep into Nubia. He then erected massive river forts including Buhen, Semna and Toshka to protect the new border. He also erected great steles (that’s the plural of stela, large stone tablets) to commemorate his victories and to extol his successors to maintain the new border.

Tactically and organizationally the Egyptian army remained similar to that of the Old Kingdom. Conscripted peasants and tradesmen continued to form the army, although the establishment of garrisons may have added to their professionalism. Tactically they continued to be heavily dependent on their archers. Around 2000 BC the first metal arrowheads made an appearance in their military made from hammer hardened copper. Bronze bladed axes began to appear in the infantry at this time. They were constructed with blade affixed into grooves on long handles. This was a weaker connection then the axes made by their contemporaries that feathered a hole through the axe head that the handle fit through, but it served their purpose of slashing unarmored troops and hacking through hide covered, wood framed shields. New infantry mercenary troops, called Maryannu, were hired from the Levant during the end of the Middle Kingdom. Unfortunately for the Egyptians there had been major advances weapons and tactics had been both developed and found their way into the Near East. The stagnant Egyptian military was on the brink of disastrous defeat.

What may have started as peaceful migrations of Asiatic workers needed for building projects in the Nile delta ended with the militarily powerful Hyskos dominating the Nile Delta and ushering in the Second Intermediate Period. The Hyskos, meaning “Shepard Kings”, had Canaanite names and were of Semitic origins. They took over the Egyptian capitol Memphis and ruled from Avaris in the lower delta. New military equipment insured their ascendancy and domination of the locals. Archery advances such as the composite bow, an improved recurve bow and improved arrowheads were brought by the Hyskos. Infantry advances included various kinds of swords and daggers, a metal bound wooden shields, mailed shirts, and the metal helmet. However, it is their use of the horse drawn chariot that is most commonly cited as their greatest military advancement over the Egyptians. This may be an oversimplification though, there is evidence that both the horse and Chariot were known of by the Middle Kingdom Egyptians, apparently they just hadn’t incorporated them into their military forces at the time.

The Egyptians that chafed under foreign rule flocked to Thebes in Upper Egypt. Here, on the upper Nile domestic Egyptian pharaoh’s still ruled. The Hyskos kings in Lower Egypt had styled themselves as Pharaohs and added the middle Egypt to their domain. The Nubians, or Kush, took the opportunity to assert their independence, trapping the Egyptians in an enemy sandwich. The Pharaohs in Thebes may first have been content to mine gold and make money off the Red Sea trade to care about their overrun countrymen down river. However, demands of tribute and taxes for access to the Lower Nile made a new generation of Pharaoh’s consider the foreign domination to be blight on their holy land. They retrained their army, adopted the deadly composite bow and built light, fast war chariots to their own specifications.

Seqenenre Tao II, called “The Brave”, the Theban Pharaoh from c.1560 BC - 1558 BC, launched the first assaults against the Hyksos and their Pharaoh Apepi (also called Apophis). His mummies head features multiple, vicious axe wounds; he fell in battle against the Hyksos only two years into his reign. However, his sons would take up the banner of their fallen father.

Kamose, called “The Strong”, the son of Seqenenre, inherited the throne from his now mummified father. Apepi, who had usurped the Hyksos thrown of Lower and Middle Egypt preferred to change the names on old monuments instead of having his own built. You have to admire the old ruler’s consistency. Apepi traded peacefully with the native Egyptians to the South, but like his Father, Kamose despised the Theban Pharaohs subordinate position. In the third year of his reign he launched his attack on the Hyskos, surprising and overrunning their southern garrisons. He then headed straight for their capitol and battled the Hyksos outside of Avaris itself. The city itself was not taken, but the Thebans devastated their fields. Kamose intercepted a letter requesting aid from the King of Kush, wounded from the battle he then sailed back up the Nile and dispatched forces to intercept any aid from Kush. In Thebes he celebrated his victory then died, most likely from his wounds. The Hyksos had been caught off guard, but weren’t much worse off.

Kamose’s brother Ahmose then became the Pharaoh. He was more causious then his father and brother and waited before resuming the war. Hyksos king Apepi died, he had been a contemporary of Seqenenre Tao II and ruled both Middle and Lower Egypt but at the time of his death the Hyksos had lost Middle Egypt. Kamose’s continuous campaigns and chariot based army wore down the Hyskos. The Egyptians employed their own weapons and tactics against them, and after several campaigns against it the stronghold of Avaris was conquered. Egypt was once again under the domain of one Egyptian Pharaoh.

The Thebans started to rebel against the Hyksos when Pharaoh Sekenre (or Senakhtenre) Taa became Pharaoh. Sekenre called the Thebans to a battle against the Hyksos, a battle that claimed his own life. Sekenre was succeeded by Kamose, who also attempted to battle the Hyksos, but spent only three years on the throne, before probably being killed in battle. Kamose’s brother Ahmose was far more successful than his predecessors. He battled the Hyksos, and drove them from Egypt. This marked the beginning of the New Kingdom.


New Kingdom Military & Warfare
The New Kingdom (1570 BC – 1070 BC) was a time of great change and renewed strength for the military forces of Egypt. The Egyptians had learned much from the Hyskos and they reformed their military into that of a first rate power. During the New Kingdom the Egyptian Empire reached its greatest extent.

A rich, noble warrior class joined the army as Charioteers, shooting powerful composite bows from their mobile platforms. The Egyptians made lighter, more agile chariots then their contemporaries. Two horses would pull the chariot and its two man team, one warrior handling the chariot while the other peppered the enemy with arrows. Spears would be employed for close combat and the warrior usually had some protection. Occasionally scale armor or a shield, but more typically thick leather straps across the chest. It was unnecessary to protect the lower body, as the chariot shielded it. The chariots were the masters of the battlefield during their day, providing both speed and long ranged attacks. The Egyptians preferred to use their chariots to stay out of range of their opponents, while devastating them with arrows. Other Near Eastern empires would send their chariots crashing into enemy formations, creating carnage with blades placed on their wheels (scythed chariots). Uniquely among the powers of the time, the Chariots of Egypt were state owned, instead of by individual warriors.

Advances were also made in the Egyptian infantry. A sword called the khopesh came in to use. This iconic weapon was balanced both for slashing and stabbing and it featured a hook on one site of the blade. The hook could be used to pull an enemies shield down before the Khopesh was lunged forward, stabbing the face, neck or chest. Infantry also began wearing armor, scale armor or leather tunics with metal scales sewn on them. Advances in armor lead to advances in axes; the old Egyptian slashing battle axe was replaced by a new piercing one. However, the Egyptians neglected to use the eyehole design of the Hysko’s Axe heads and never achieved their stability. Axes fell out of favor, probably due to a lack of need for armor penetrating weapons in their hot climate, the Egyptians preferred swords.

While the superior composite bow, made of layers of bone and wood, was used by the Egyptians of this period, their very high cost and difficult maintenance would have made them less common. Composite bows offered greater range and the ability to penetrate scale armor. However, composite bows required them to be unstrung between uses and stringing them was not a simple task. It took two people and a lot of strength. They were also difficult to maintain, they had to be covered and protected from humidity. Composite bows were also difficult to construct, Egypt imported most of theirs from Egypt. For these reasons most of the bows used by the Egyptian military continued to be simple bows and recurve bows, composite bows were only given out to the elite troops and this usually meant the chariot warriors.

During the New Kingdom, the Egyptian military changed from levy troops into a firm organization of professional soldiers. Conquests of foreign territories, like Nubia, required a permanent force to be garrisoned abroad. The encounter with other powerful Near Eastern kingdoms like Mitanni, Hittites, and later the Assyrians and Babylonians, made it necessary for the Egyptians to conduct campaigns far from home. Infantry troops were organized into large square formations by weapon type, Archers, swordsmen or spearmen.

The New Kingdom also employed mercenaries to fill its ranks Sherden (one of the Sea Peoples), Libyans and Maryannu charioteers where all employed. A group called the Na’arn mercenaries were hired by Ramessess II, an ethicity from Anatolia. Hebrews tribal infantry may also have served as mercenaries under Ramessess II.

New Kingdom Egypt reached the zenith of its power under the Pharoahs Seti I and Ramesses II (Ramesses the Great), increasing Egyptian territory all the way to Syria in the Levant. Ramesses II campaigned vigorously against both the Libyans and the Hittites, fought in. During the battle of Kadesh Ramessess II fought the Hittites to a stalemate in what was probably the largest chariot battle ever fought, involving around 5,000 – 6,000 chariots. The stalemate resulted in the earliest known and physically surviving international peace treaty. An enlarged replica of the Kadesh agreement hangs on a wall at the United Nations headquarters.

The reorganization and reequipping of the Egyptian military during the New Kingdom allowed them to engage the powerful Near Eastern kingdoms like Mitanni, the Hittites, and later the Assyrians and Babylonians. Egypt’s old enemies, the Libyans and Numidians also required military attention. Without the knowledge gained from the Hyksos the Egyptians never would have survived, especially from the onslaught of The Sea Peoples in the 12th century BC.

The mysterious Sea Peoples, a confederacy of seafaring raiders and conquerors, smashed into the civalizations of the Near East. The ends of several civilizations around 1175 BC have lead to a theory that the Sea Peoples caused the collapse of the Hittite, Mycenaean and Mitanni kingdoms. They definitely destroyed some kingdoms of the Levant and may have been the catalyst for the Bronze Age Collapse (1206 - 1150 BCE). Characterized by the interuption of trade routes and extinguished literacy. In the first phase of this period, almost every city between Troy and Gaza on the Eastern Mediterranean was violently destroyed. An inscription in Egpypt reads, “No land could stand before their arms, from Hatti, Kode, Carchemish, Arzawa, Alashiya on being cut down.” Carchemish in fact survived the Sea People's attacks, despite the Egyptian report. However, the ferocity of their invasions is not in doubt.

Egypt proper was next on their hit list, and they needed a miracle, the Sea Peoples had already overrun all of their newly acquired territories in Asia. The army of Ramesses III met the Sea Peoples on Egypts Eastern frontier and defeated them in the Battle of Djahy (c. 1178 BC). Ramessess III largely credited his chariots for the victory in inscriptions. This was followed by an attack by the Sea Peoples naval fleet. At the following Battle of the Delta a great sea battle was fought between Egypt and the invaders. Ramesses III hid his navy in one of the many branches of Nile mouth and posted coastal watchmen. The enemy fleet was ambushed, then after a great ship to ship battle the invasion was repulsed. Survivors found in the waters of the Nile were dragged up on shore and executed ad hoc. However, this wasn’t the end, the raids continued for years.

Ramesses III certainly scored a great and decisive victory against the invaders. However, after his death the Sea Peoples settled in Canaan and Palestine. One of these groups may have been the biblically mentioned Philistines, including their champion Goliath. The Egyptians were able to repulse the attack of the Sea Peoples on their homeland, but at a heavy cost. The conflict exhausted the Egyptian military and emptied the treasury to such an extent that Egypt would never again recover to be a powerful empire.

The entire eastern world faced an onslaught from new invaders known as The Sea Peoples and slipped into a dark age. After these brutal conquers were repelled by Ramesses III their old enemies like the Libyans and Nubians rose up and then and invaded. Internal conflict was another cause of the fall of Egyptian power as a sect of priests contended with the Princes for Pharaoh the New Kingdom slipped into the “Third Intermediate Period” and Late period. It is often regarded as the last gasp of a once great culture, where the power of Egypt had greatly diminished. The Sheridans (a Sea Peaples) and Libyans took control of the Western portions of the Nile Delt while the Nubians took control of upper Egypt. The weekend and divided Egyptains were then unable to counter an Assyrian invasion and the lands of the Nile became part of the Assyrian Empire. Egypt was then ruled by foreign powers, the Assyrians, Persians and finally the Romans all were able to conquer and rule the once mighty empire. The Egyptain military would never again be a great force in the ancient world.

Weapons











Wednesday 3 October 2012

Cats





Cats and Egyptians

The cat in ancient Egypt was a sacred and respected animal. It was in Egypt that cats were first domesticated more than 4000 years ago, and around 2000 BCE that the fully domesticated cat was brought into the houses of Egyptians.
The ancient Egyptians took their cats on hunting trips instead of dogs, and statues of cats were placed outside the house to protect the inhabitants and to ward off evil spirits. This showed that the cat had become an integral part of ancient Egyptian family life.
Cats were not only protected by almost every occupant of Egypt, but also by the law. So extreme in fact was the devoutness of the Egyptian culture to the cat, that if a human killed a feline, either intentionally or unintentionally, that human was sentenced to death.
Laws were set that also forbade the exportation of cats, though more often than not, many were smuggled to the neighboring Mediterranean countries.
The cat held a powerful spot in the history of Egypt. While she protected the land and its people, she also protected the mystique that was and is the cat in ancient Egypt.


Bastet the Goddess



She is the Sacred Cat and her name means devouring lady. She is depicted as having the body of a woman and the head of a domestic cat. Baset (Bastet) is the daughter of the sun god Ra, wife of Ptah, and mother of Mihos.
Her worship began around the year 3200 BCE. The Egyptians celebrated Baset's feast day with great joy and enthusiasm, honoring the goddess and protectress. She symbolized the moon in its function of making a woman fertile. She was also the Egyptian Goddess of pleasure, music, dancing and joy. The people of ancient Egypt turned to Baset for protection and for blessing. She was the protectress of women, children and domestic cats.
"Beloved Bast, mistress of happiness and bounty, twin of the Sun God, slay the evil that afflicts our minds as you slew the serpent Apep. With your graceful stealth anticipate the moves of all who perpetrate cruelties and stay their hands against the children of light. Grant us the joy of song and dance, and ever watch over us in the lonely places in which we must walk". Ancient Egyptian prayer



Tuesday 2 October 2012

Egyptian Hairstyles




Egyptian Hairstyles
The clothing worn by the Ancient Egyptians was simple consisting of white shifts for the women and kilts for the men. The clothing was adorned by fabulous jewelry, sashes and aprons and by the addition of decorative and highly fashionable wigs. Ancient Egyptian men generally kept the hair short or shaved it off, wealthy Egyptian men then wore wigs. The women of Ancient Egypt kept their own hair long which they plaited and curled. The wealthy women also wore elaborate wigs.
The hairstyles of the Ancient Egyptians were subject to some variation depending on their status in society. These variations were subject to the following:

Status - the higher the status the more elaborate the hairstyle, wigs and adornments

Role in Society - Egyptian priests shaved their hair completely and did not wear wigs

Gender - the men and women adopted different hairstyles

Age - Children of both sexes wore the 'Lock of Youth'. Older men and women dyed their hair with henna

Fashion - Hairstyles and fashions changed during the different periods of Ancient Egyptian history

Egyptian Hairstyles of Women
The women of early Ancient Egypt of the Middle Kingdom kept their hair short whereas the women of the later New Kingdom kept their hair long, which they plaited and curled. The wealthy women also wore elaborate wigs. Long hair was dressed as plaits or braided pony tails, and occasionally a fringe was cut. The hair of wealthy was elaborately curled and occasionally adorned with jewelry, gold strands, flowers, beads, ribbons and hair bands. The women had a preference for unique hairstyle which were kept in placed with clasps and hairpins.


Egyptian Hairstyles of Men
The hairstyles of the men in Ancient Egypt changed little during the whole of the period which lasted over three thousand years. Ancient Egyptian men generally kept the hair short or shaved it off. The wealthy Egyptian men then wore highly elaborate wigs or hair extensions.


The Egyptian Hairstyles of Children
The Egyptian hairstyles of children consisted of a shaved head except for one, long plaited lock which hung at the side. This lock of hair was referred to as the 'Lock of Youth'. This hairstyle was the traditional style worn by both boys and girls until the age of puberty. At the age of puberty the 'Lock of Youth' was cut off and the young men then adopted the same hairstyle as the men - short or shaved. The young girls then kept their hair long, which they dressed as plaits or braided pony tails, and occasionally a fringe was cut. Their hair was elaborately curled and occasionally adorned with jewelry, beads and hair bands.


Facial and Body Hair
The fashions and traditions relating to  facial and body hair changed during the different periods. Men of the earliest periods, up to the Old and early Middle Kingdom were known to wear full beards and moustaches. This fashion changed during the Later Periods of Egyptian history and men of all roles and status adopted the clean shaven style.

The Beard of the Pharaohs
Despite the change of style and the new low esteem afforded to facial hair the beard was still considered to be sacred to the gods and therefore the Pharaohs. The beard was considered to be a divine symbol of the gods. Depictions of Pharaohs, both the Kings and some Queens, are seen wearing false plaited beards. These false beards were religious symbols of the Pharaohs emphasizing their status as a living god. The bizarre false beards were tightly knotted and plaited and hooked behind the ears. The styles and shapes of the beards varied from the long rectangular shape which was cut level at the bottom to a long, narrow beard plaited like a pigtail with the end jutting forward, such as the beard from the chin on the mask of King Tut, Tutankhamen.   They were worn on important religious and other ceremonial occasions.



Writing



The ancient Egyptians believed that it was important to record and communicate information about religion and government. Thus, they invented written scripts that could be used to record this information.

The most famous of all ancient Egyptian scripts is hieroglyphic. However, throughout three thousand years of ancient Egyptian civilisation, at least three other scripts were used for different purposes. Using these scripts, scribes were able to preserve the beliefs, history and ideas of ancient Egypt in temple and tomb walls and on papyrus scrolls.

One of the keys to unlocking the secrets of ancient Egyptian writing was the 'Rosetta Stone'.

The Rosetta Stone is a stone with writing on it in two languages (Egyptian and Greek), using three scripts (hieroglyphic, demotic and Greek).
The Rosetta Stone is written in three scripts because when it was written, there were three scripts being used in Egypt.
The first was hieroglyphic which was the script used for important or religious documents.
The second was demotic which was the common script of Egypt.
The third was Greek which was the language of the rulers of Egypt at that time.
The Rosetta Stone was written in all three scripts so that the priests, government officials and rulers of Egypt could read what it said.
The Rosetta Stone was carved in 196 B.C..
The Rosetta Stone was found in 1799 by French soldiers who were rebuilding a fort in Egypt..
It is called the Rosetta Stone because it was discovered in a town called Rosetta (Rashid).
The Rosetta Stone is a text written by a group of priests in Egypt to honour the Egyptian pharaoh. It lists all of the things that the pharaoh has done that are good for the priests and the people of Egypt.
 Many people worked on deciphering hieroglyphs over several hundred years. However, the structure of the script was very difficult to work out.
After many years of studying the Rosetta Stone and other examples of ancient Egyptian writing, Jean-François Champollion deciphered hieroglyphs in 1822.
Champollion could read both Greek and coptic.
He was able to figure out what the seven demotic signs in coptic were. By looking at how these signs were used in coptic he was able to work out what they stood for. Then he began tracing these demotic signs back to hieroglyphic signs.
By working out what some hieroglyphs stood for, he could make educated guesses about what the other hieroglyphs stood for.

Scribe