Thursday, September 25, 2008

#14 Continuance Of The Pyramid Period

The fashion of burying in pyramids continued to the close of Manetho's sixth dynasty, but no later monarchs rivalled the great works of Khufu and Shafra. The tombs of their successors were monuments of a moderate size, involving no oppression of the people, but perhaps rather improving their condition by causing a rise in the rate of wages. Certainly, the native remains of the period give a cheerful representation of the condition of all classes. The nation for the most part enjoys peace, and applies itself to production. The wealth of the nobles increases, and the position of their dependents is improved. Slaves were few, and there was ample employment for the labouring classes. We do not see the stick at work upon the backs of the labourers in the sculptures of the time; they seem to accomplish their various tasks with alacrity and gaiety of heart. They plough, and hoe, and reap; drive cattle or asses; winnow and store corn; gather grapes and tread them, singing in chorus as they tread; cluster round the winepress or the threshingfloor, on which the animals tramp out the grain; gather lotuses; save cattle from the inundation; engage in fowling or fishing; and do all with an apparent readiness and cheerfulness which seems indicative of real content. There may have been a darker side to the picture, and undoubtedly was while Khufu and Shafra held the throne; but kings of a morose and cruel temper seem to have been the exception, rather than the rule, in Egypt; and the moral code, which required kindness to be shown to dependents, seems, at this period at any rate, to have had a hold upon the consciences, and to have influenced the conduct, of the mass of the people. "Happy the nation that has no history!" Egypt during this golden age was neither assailed by any aggressive power beyond her borders, nor had herself conceived the idea of distant conquest. An occasional raid upon the negroes of the South, or chastisement of the nomades of the East, secured her interests in those quarters, and prevented her warlike virtues from dying out through lack of use. But otherwise tranquillity was undisturbed, and the energies of the nation were directed to increasing its material prosperity, and to progress in the arts.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Salah... like the Chinese Emperior Tombs..if you have heard of XiAn's Granite warriors tomb..they are so well measured and detailed. It must have took years and years to raise such grandure and of course many lives to build them...
The pyramid has always awed me. I wonder how the structures are so well proportion without machines of modern days. The pyramid with the tip and the structure is to maintain life? or preserve body? We tried once putting chicken meat in a small pyramid and for days it did not smell or decay...is this built for the same reason?

salah said...

ancient kings and people believed in a life after death..so pyramids are built to be their home in their new life and they put all their stuff in it...and about decaying....they never decay (mummies), they make a specefic process on the died body ( it's secret didn't revealed till now !!) to prorect him from decaying...

 

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