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Encyclopedia of society and culture in the ancient world ( PDFDrive ) 767

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Tiêu đề Migration and Population Movements in Ancient Egypt
Trường học Unknown
Chuyên ngành Ancient Egyptian History and Culture
Thể loại essay
Năm xuất bản ca. 1300–1070 b.c.e.
Thành phố Unknown
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Số trang 1
Dung lượng 72,93 KB

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With the exception of a small number of texts, only a few hints help identify Egyptians outside Egypt.. During the Nineteenth and early Twentieth Dynasties 1307–1070 b.c.e., Egyptian and

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Egypt fostered a mind-set of superiority to other cultures and

nations Put simply, Egyptians looked down their noses at

other countries and their people, so few had any real

incen-tive to intermingle with them on their own territory With

the exception of a small number of texts, only a few hints help

identify Egyptians outside Egypt During the Nineteenth and

early Twentieth Dynasties (1307–1070 b.c.e.), Egyptian and

Egyptian-styled pottery is to be found in Canaan (Palestine)

and shows cross-cultural relations between Egypt and its

northwestern neighbors At the same time, fortifi ed towns in

Nubia had a fairly uniform design, for example, Amara West

and Sesebi It can be assumed that Egyptians were living in

such settlements

Ancient Egypt was very much a crossroads Positioned

as it was in the northeast sector of the African continent, it

became a central hub, engaging in trade relations with the

Near East, countries surrounding the Mediterranean Sea,

and nations to the south Egypt became a beehive of activity,

with builders, traders, farmers, diplomats, nomads,

travel-ers, and others passing across its borders and moving about

within the country Archaeological evidence suggests that

late in the Predynastic Period (ca 3000 b.c.e.) many of these

people came from such regions as Mesopotamia, bringing

their science, literature, art, mathematics, and other cultural

attributes with them Many of these people from other lands

became the earliest Egyptians; later arrivals chose to remain

in Egypt, primarily because it was the most advanced

civili-zation of its time, providing opportunities for wealth,

edu-cation, and social relationships In general, Egypt tended to

welcome people from other lands, thinking of them as

Egyp-tian as long as they made a point of acting like EgypEgyp-tians

Th e result was a swirl of population movement within Egypt,

though this population movement was, in general, not

orga-nized, nor did it occur among masses of people

COLONIZATION

At all periods of Egyptian history transplantations of

popula-tion, or inner colonizapopula-tion, apparently occurred Th e central

government divided the Egyptian countryside into organized

agricultural parts centered on larger settlements, the

begin-ning of the organized nomes, or provinces, of later periods

Some of these settlements were in sparsely populated regions

Th e land was cultivated by peasants recruited from more

populous regions During the Fourth Dynasty (ca 2575–2465

b.c.e.) a kind of colony program existed King Snefru, the fi rst

king of the Fourth Dynasty, brought captives from diff erent

campaigns in Nubia and possibly Libya to Egypt and settled

them in newly founded manors in the eastern delta and in

Upper Egypt In this period administration increased, and

the great pyramid-building projects required a large number

of new cultivated agricultural areas as economic support

King Sesostris III (r 1878–1841? b.c.e.), the fi ft h king of

the Twelft hDynasty of the Middle Kingdom, constructed a

full-scale model town called Wah-sut in connection with a

cenotaph and the cult of the death god Osiris near Abydos

in northern Upper Egypt Earlier model towns that suggest internal colonization included the modern Tell el-Dab’a in the eastern part of the Nile delta, known as Auaris at the be-ginning of the Twelft h Dynasty, and Kahun in the vicinity

of modern El-Lahun from the reign of Sesostris II (r 1897–

1878 b.c.e.)

Inner colonization also took the form of resettlement proj-ects during the creation of new capitals like Akhetaten (present-day Tell el-‘Amârna) by Akhenaton (r 1353–1335 b.c.e.) in the Eighteenth Dynasty or Pi-Ramses by Ramses II (r 1290–1224 b.c.e.) during the Nineteenth Dynasty Oft en foreigners were involved in this eff ort A land register from the fourth regnal year of Ramses V (r 1156–1151 b.c.e.) lists Sherden men who were cultivating farmland that they probably obtained under

Granite statue of Sesotris III, from Deir el-Bahri, Th ebes, Egypt (ca 1850 b.c.e.); Sesostris constructed a town in northern Upper Egypt for the purpose of internal colonization (© Th e Trustees of the British Museum)

694 migration and population movements: Egypt

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