The Nile |
The Nile also served as a source of food for the people of ancient Egypt. The river streamed with different types of fish, for example, catfish, mullet, bolti, and rods. Although certain species of fish were prohibited from consumption in areas of Egypt because of local superstitions, fishing was experienced as both an industry and a sport. A wide change of wild birds, admitting fourteen coinages of wild ducks and geese as well as herons, pelicans, and cranes, were hunted in the marshes along the Nile. Organized hunting down expeditions used cats to flush the birds from the marshes and then lassos, weighted ropes, bows and arrows, and throw sticks to bring them down. There were also crocodiles and hippopotamuses in the Nile, but the Egyptians hunted them only for sport. The Nile served other designs as well. It was the major source of water for bathing and drinking. Water was taken straight from the Nile or from one of the canals the Egyptians built to connect with it, although some wells did exist in towns not relocated directly on the river. Mud deposited by the Nile was used to make bricks for reconstructing houses, granaries, and enclosing walls around buildings.
The Nile was also great for farming because it left a stratum of nutrient-bearing silt when the waters of the annual inundation receded, and it also provided water for irrigation. Those gardens based around villages and country houses of the wealthy had to be watered regularly because of their position above the range of the Nile's flood waters and because of the typecasts of crops grown there (including lettuce, onion plants, figs, peas, vetch, beans, and grapes). After the New Kingdom, the ancient Egyptians used shadufs to bring up water from the canals to the gardens. Because the shaduf had to be worked by hand, this method acting of irrigation was very labor strong.
Without the River Nile, agriculture and, thus, life in ancient Egypt would have been unthinkable. The river was a regular and inevitable source of water. Because the flood was an event that annually revitalized the floodplain with water and new soil, it symbolized rebirth for the ancient Egyptians. The flood created a need for resurveying property lines and for dredging the canals. Because working in the domains was not possible during the months of the flood, many farmers helped to manufacture temples, royal tombs, and palaces during those times. For their functions, they were paid in food and other material commodities. The second geographic hold of Egypt was the flood plain. This was the low strip of fertile land based on either side of the Nile River that flooded during the annual deluge. Most ancient villages were based on the highest ground of this zone. In addition, most of the farming came here. The agricultural year began in September or October, when the flood subsided leaving the earth soaked and overlain with a fresh layer of black silt. The outstanding crops of ancient Egypt were emmer (a type of wheat), barley, and flax. Cattle and poultry were multiplied, not only for food but also for religious rituals.
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