Friday, December 10, 2010

The Egypt Story ............Egyptian Women who rocked the World








Most people misjudge Egypt and the other countries in the East, especially in the Middle East,
Whether it comes to ancient Egypt or even modern Egypt. Regarding ancient Egypt, people only think of the pharaohs and gods, without giving any attention to either women, or the locals in general. And when it comes to modern Egypt, they always mention Islam as the main oppression of women, which is totally wrong.

Let's talk about some examples of women throughout the history of Egypt. Around 4500 years ago, at the time when the king of Egypt was considered the god king and the main link to the gods, women, especially the members of the royal families, had a great position. By the end of the third dynasty, Egypt was ruled by a pharaoh called Huni, who was building his pyramid in Meidum to the south of Giza near Cairo. Prince Snefru was married to his daughter, the mother of the famous pharaoh Cheops, Queen Hetepheres. She was buried not far from the pyramid of her son at the Giza plateau. Her tomb and the treasures discovered there reflect the power and the wealth of that queen around 2600 B.C.

After the fall of the middle kingdom, Egypt became very weak, and the north of the country was invaded by the Hyksos around 1750 B.C. The Hyksos ruled Lower Egypt for more than two centuries, during which Upper Egypt was almost independent, and was ruled by a series of real true
Egyptian princes. These princes claimed to be the kings of Upper and Lower Egypt. During that time of instability in Egypt, there lived a woman who happened to be the wife of the prince and later pharaoh Sekenenre. She was Queen Titisherry, a wonderful woman, a great queen and a loving wife. She stood by her husband in his struggle against the foreign people who occupied the northern part of his kingdom. Queen Titisherry conceived two sons who ruled one after the other. Kamose, who died during the struggle, and Ahmose, who managed to sweep the invaders away and to unite the country? Pharaoh Ahmose was the founder of the eighteenth dynasty and the new kingdom, as well as the Egyptian empire.
Around 1400 B.C., nearly 3400 years ago, when the rest of the human race was still living in caves acting like monkeys, Egypt was ruled by a very strong, powerful woman, whose name will remain forever Queen Hatshepsut. She ruled for around 22 years in the middle of the time when men ruled the whole earth, and she managed to gain the respect of her enemies before her friends the queen maintained very strong relations with the other neighbors, especially in Africa, and she built a number of magnificent monuments. The best of all was her mortuary temple of el Dir el Bahari on the west bank of Luxor. She erected two massive obelisks at Karnak Temple, and added two of the main pylons there.

Not a long time after lived an amazing woman, queen Ti, who was married to the very famous pharaoh Amenhotep III. Although Queen Ti did not have royal blood, it seems she was the actual ruler next to her husband. The queen was a great support to her son Akhenaten later on, with his great wife Nefertiti. Perhaps the best example, someone like Ramses the Great would not be that great without his royal wife, and his great love, Queen Nefertari.

In different parts of Egypt, we discovered remains of the villages of the builders and workers, such as in Giza and in Luxor, and the documents from those villages tell us a lot about the situation of women thousands of years ago. At the time when women in Europe were hardly 
Living, the women, wives and mothers, daughters and sisters of the artisans were enjoying full rights of inheritance and free will.

Even at the time of the Greeks, who learned a lot from the Egyptians, women had rights.
Queen Cleopatra, though she had Greek origins, was an Egyptian queen. She was born in the tenth generation of the Greeks in Egypt, was brought up and educated in Egypt, spoke Egyptian and worshipped Egyptian gods. She lived, died and was buried in Egypt more than 2000 years ago.

When the Arabs arrived in Egypt during the first half of the 7th century AD, the leader of the Arabs (Amro Ibn El Aas) wrote to the Khalifa Omar to tell him that it was quite noticeable that women in Egypt at that time were enjoying full rights. Islam was teaching the Egyptians how to behave and respect women, which prepared them to accept a woman later on as a ruler, Queen Shagar Ell Dor around the 12th century AD.
In modern times, Egypt has many examples of women who played a great role. Mrs. Hoda Shaarawy, during the first half of the 20th century, led a great movement for women’s liberation and the right for education. Mrs. Safia Zaghlol was the wife of the great Egyptian leader who fought against the British occupation. Mrs. Gihan Al Sadat set an early new law for women’s justice during the 1970’s. Professor Samira Mousa worked in the Egyptian nuclear project in the 
1960’s, and later worked in Iraq until she was assassinated by the Mosad (the Israeli intelligence). Today you will find women in Egypt who are great doctors, engineers, teachers, bankers, etc. They play a magnificent role in the life of Egypt.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Akhenaten.... The heretic king or the genius king?








All throughout the Egyptian history, the ancient Egyptians had many gods, but they believed in one main god, who was the sun god. He was worshipped under many names, the most well-known being Ra. This was until 1400 B.C., when Egypt was ruled by a very powerful wealthy king named Amenhotep III, who was married to a beautiful woman; queen Ti, who was not a member of the royal family; although she is believed to be a daughter of some of the nobles (Yuia & Tuia), who are buried in the valley of the kings. Amenhotep III, who is considered the second greatest builder of ancient Egypt after Ramses II, ruled from Luxor, when it was one of the largest cosmopolitan cities of the ancient world, if not the largest. Luxor was known as the city of one hundred gates, which indicated the size of the city.... The capital of a vast empire stretching from Iraq in the north to the land of Nubia in the south. This city was one of the early tourist attractions around 3500 years ago. 



In that very open, mixed environment, the son of the king was born and was given a name: Amenhotep IV. To prepare him to succeed his father, he was sent to the city of Oon (present-day Heliopolis, which is now part of greater Cairo). Oon was the center of the cult of the sun god Ra, who was known during the Old and the Middle Kingdoms as the main god of Egypt. Later the capital was moved to Luxor, and the god Amen, the local god of Luxor, was united with Ra and became Amen Ra, the most famous and powerful god until the end of the ancient civilization of Egypt.

The son Amenhotep IV was a kind of different person, not like the sons of the other kings, the descendants of the priests or even the locals. He was smart, sensitive, full of himself, and on top of it all, a dreamer. Amenhotep IV was strongly influenced by the priests of Oon (Heliopolis), and when he looked around him, he realized how powerful the priests were, especially those of Amen Ra in Luxor. He felt that his father, the king, was getting very weak and nearly losing control from those who were in charge of the kingdom, the priests. He also noticed that the locals had no chance of contacting the gods, and they were kept away from the temples, which was a very strong reason for losing faith. Amenhotep IV decided to change everything, and as he was very smart man, ambitious, and like his father, married to a very beautiful woman, Nefertiti (similar to and as powerful as his mother). He knew it would be very difficult, and it probably would not make it to the end, if not becoming his own end.

For one reason or another, and unlike the pharaohs, Amenhotep III decided to elevate his son to the throne next to him and gave him the royal titles. We can understand now that Amenhotep IV the son was the one in charge; he decided to start the revolution by changing his name to be Akhenaten (the messenger of Aten, the believer of Aten), and he diverted his faith to the god Aten, who was an old form of the sun god and not very famous. The god Aten was unlike the other gods of Egypt; very simple yet very complicated. He was not depicted in an animal form or even human form; he was simply the god Aten. He was everything and everywhere and the idea of the manifestation of god would not work for him. He was the hidden power behind the sun disk; he was the power in the sky, earth, mountains, stars, animals, humans.... Everything. It was a challenge to look at god, simply because you couldn't comprehend the power of god.... yet if you wanted to, look through the sun disk then you could see him!!! Nobody could, of course. Unlike the other religions, the faith of Aten did not stop the locals behind the outer walls of the temples. It invited and welcomed them to share and participate and act in the newly built temples. The temples were not roofed like the other temples, but widely opened to welcome the sun rays which were representing the power of the eternal universal god Aten. Akhenaten ruled from Luxor for about six years. This was considered a very difficult part of his rule, when he had a direct confrontation with the strong priests of Amen Ra. That was the time when he was building a new city, half way between Luxor and Cairo, to become his new capital, claiming that it should be built in a pure area where no other god has been worshipped before. During those six years, there was a lot of struggle in Thebes. The king ordered his subjects to destroy the images of the other gods, and to convert their temples to be temples of his new old god Aten. The royal family and the followers of the new religion, supported by the generals leading the Egyptian army, all moved to the new beautiful city of love, called Amarna. The city, which we can understand from the very little we found, and the descriptions about it, was a wonderful city. When Akhenaten reached his new capital, he promised his god Aten never to leave his city to the end of his life.

Art has been always the best way to express human ideas and thought; it is like a history book, reflecting social, religious and political life. As it was huge change of religion, a big move into a new capital, and a dramatic change in the political life, we expect art to follow and for it be different, to match all those big changes. Akhenaten, unlike people before or after him, believed that god didn't need to look at you to bring you back to the afterlife, or that you must be in good form to have a perfect shape in the afterlife. He believed god knows you very well and he looks straight into your heart. When we look at the statues of the king, he looks very different from the other kings before his time and after him as well. He never had the masculine body and the handsome face; on the contrary, his body looked more feminine and his long face, with thick lips, made him look more ugly than handsome. But if we look at other humans living at the same time, including the royal family, they all looked similar to him, which might reflect a fashion of art to match the changes happening in Egypt at that time. Not only art changed; Akhenaten noticed that the language (hieroglyphics) was very different from the actual spoken language used by the locals, and as he wanted to get the people involved, he started changing the language as well. This gave the locals the ability to better understand the religion and the history.



 Although Akhenaten and his royal family were supported by the army, it was not enough. The priests of Amen Ra, who had their own troops, were very strong, and gradually many members of the Egyptian army joined them. This was the beginning of the end, and the fall of that wonderful star, which shined in the sky of Egypt for a very short period of time, like a shooting star. Akhenaten was not just a king, a messenger of god; he was also a poet who left us many hymns, similar to and as beautiful as those of King David of the Israelites. The fact that the king and his beautiful queen Nefertiti were depicted with their children is very unusual in Egyptian history. Akhenaten was a leader of the ancient Egyptian renaissance.

Now! Was he a heretic king or a star in the sky of civilization?



Written by 


Hisham El Meniawy
Guest lecturer & Egyptologist
www.hegyptology.com


Sunday, October 10, 2010

The Egypt story......love in Ancient Egypt





Most people don't understand the ancient Egyptians because they look at them from the perspective of how humans live today, and they assume they were very much different from us. This is wrong simply because those ancient Egyptians were humans very much like me and you. They had their moments of happiness as well as sadness, had fun listening to music, dancing, traveling, hunting, camping, fishing and playing sports... and of course they had their love stories and made love. 

One of the most beautiful and true love stories comes to us from the time of the most famous pharaoh ever ruled, Ramses the Great, and his beloved queen Nefertari. Ramses the Great, like most of the pharaohs and the kings of the ancient civilization, had many wives. His main concern was to conceive as many children as he could, so one of them will succeed him upon the throne. The story between Ramses and Nefertari started while he was the crown prince, and even before becoming the king. Most likely she was a daughter of one of the nobles, and we are quite sure that between them was a great love story almost 3300 years old.

Nefertari was the most beloved woman by the king until she died after almost more than 25 years of marriage. He dedicated lots of work to her. Most of his statues have small statues of her attached to him, and although her size is much smaller than him, the difference in the size was not because she was a woman and he was a man. It was because he was a god and she was a queen (human). The way she was standing behind his left leg, touching it gently says a lot: "I am supporting my king, my beloved husband, I and push him to do all his best." His answer back is "My beloved, I believe that behind every successful man is a great woman like you, Nefertari." At the site of Abu Simbel, he built and dedicated a temple to her as a goddess, and next to his statues were statues of her, the same size as the king.

Nefertari held many titles, including, "bnrt-mrwt" (sweet of love), "nbt-im3t" (lady of grace), "wrt-hzwt" (great of praises), "hmt-niswt-wrtmeryt-f" (great king's wife, his beloved), "hmt-ntr" (god's wife), "hmnt-shm'w-mhw" (mistress of upper and lower Egypt), "nbt-t3wy" (lady of the two lands), "hmwt-t3w-nbw" (lady of all lands), and "hmt-k3-nxt" (wife of the strong bull). But the most beautiful title was given to her by the king himself: "The one for whom the sun shines." When he lost her after almost 25 years and was showing his weakness, he said: "My love is unique - no one can rival her, for she is the most beautiful woman alive. Just by passing, she has stolen away my heart."



Written by:
Hisham El Meniawy
Guest lecturer & Egyptologist
www.hegyptology.com

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

The Egypt Story ......... People's management !





The quest for the past is discovering how the people in ancient Egypt lived thousands of years ago. While people in the rest of the world were still living in caves and chasing animals, how did the Egyptians manage to build the civilization which is still fascinating us until this day? Most people now focus on the great stone work, especially when it comes to the building of the pyramids. How did they cut the stone? How did they move them? How did they put them all together in that perfect way, in a very advanced and complicated form? All very valid questions. 

Yet the most important question of all is, how did they manage the 100,000 builders and stone masons who were gathered there? As Herodotus mentioned (even if it was not 100% correct),people management was the secret of success in ancient Egypt! Over thousands of years, how did they manage to move, train, educate and control those thousands of people? Every one of them knew exactly what he was supposed to do, which might be different from what he did yesterday, or what he might do tomorrow. How can we imagine feeding that number of people? What sort of catering was used that long time ago? What was the health condition? The medical care? The death and accident rate? How did they manage all of that? 

A popular theory is that the ancient Egyptians used slaves to build those pyramids. This theory is so wrong if we just think of all the logistical issues. How can you control thousands of slaves in the open desert without the fear of every one of them rising up to fight for his freedom? The pyramids, as well as the rest of the Egyptian civilization, were built with love, not fear; with happiness, not slavery. It was an immensely great honor to be among the team selected to build the house of eternity for the god king. If we keeping trying to understand the ancient Egyptian civilization through our backgrounds of today, we are making a big mistake; we have to see life through their eyes.



Written by :
Hisham El Meniawy
Guest lecturer & Egyptologist
www.hegyptology.com

Sunday, September 26, 2010

The Egypt Story....... (Life & Death )

The ancient Egyptians had a great respect for life and all different creatures. For hours and hours, day after day, they watched what happened around them in the natural world. They had everything; water, food, fertile land, animals, birds, the sun and lovely weather. They then faced the inevitable fact of this life, which is death; sooner or later they would die and their life would come to an end. They started to wonder what would happen to them after death!

From there they started to believe in a second life; life after death in the hereafter, which would be an eternal life and would last forever. They loved life and wanted to be immortal, so they kept their eyes on the second life even more than the first. In believing in life after death, they assumed they would take a journey from the first life to the second one in the underworld. That journey would be very dangerous and full of enemies and bad spirits, so they needed guidance and guardians, and their gods would fill that role. They also needed guide books to direct them and usher them into the underworld, so books like the Book of the Dead, the pyramid texts and coffin texts were there to help them and show them the way.

To come back in the afterlife, they needed their bodies well preserved, so they practiced mummification to keep the body in good form. They built the tombs, which were known as the houses of eternity, where they would live until they were called by the gods on the judgment day. On that day they would be judged by the god Osiris, and their heart would be weighed against the feather of justice. If the heart is heavy it means that person was evil and will be sent to hell, while if his heart is lighter than the feather, it means he was good and will go to heaven. Heaven or hell would be eternal, so we can understand how important the second life was. That is why when they built tombs or temples, they used stone, while building their houses and even their palaces, and they used mud brick and wood. In most of the cases, these houses couldn't survive to today.

We can never say that the ancient Egyptian art was boring or dull, because they always mention death and the afterlife. One could say it was very practical to dream of the eternal life in heaven, which was their main motive to build that great civilization.


written by :
Hisham El Meniawy
Guest lecturer & Egyptologist
www.hegyptology.com

Friday, September 24, 2010

The Egypt story....... (The quest)

The ancient Egyptian civilization has been always fascinating, and since the time of the early Greek travelers to Egypt, people have been wondering about the secret of the mystical civilization. People always wonder why and how the ancient Egyptians managed to build all those massive buildings, and why what is left is only what was built for the afterlife. It's very important to understand what the ancient Egyptians thought about life and death in order to be able to answer all the questions.

Egypt, which is located in the very northeast part of Africa, is considered part of the Sahara desert, and the Nile has been always the main source of water. It taught them how to form villages and towns, and how to learn to live together. The Nile was the first lesson of stability, teaching them agriculture; they needed to live by the river and use its water and silt to farm their land. It becomes very fertile because every year during the summer, the Nile rushes in a great inundation, covering the banks with lots of water for irrigation and it gives life to the soil and the people.

The symbol of life in ancient Egypt was the form of a key, called the "ankh", which is known as the key of life or the key of the Nile. We notice two things here; first that the river Nile and life have the same meanings, and second, it has the form of a key. The ancient Egyptians believed that the Nile god Hapi used that key to open the gates of the Nile in central Africa to let the Nile flood, creating life in its path.



By :
Hisham El Meniawy
Guest lecturer & Egyptologist
www.hegyptology.com