Mendes

The hieroglyphic
name of Mendes
Mendes was the Greek address of the Ancient Egyptian city of Djedet, likewise noted in Ancient Egypt as Per-Banebdjedet ("The Domain of the Ram Lord of Djedet") and Anpet, is known today as Tell El-Ruba.

The city is located in the eastern Nile delta, and was the capital of the 16th Lower Egyptian nome of Kha, until it was replaced by Thmuis in Greco-Roman Egypt. The two cities are only different hundred meters apart. During the 29th dynasty, Mendes was as well the capital of Ancient Egypt, lying on the Mendesian branch of the Nile (now silted), about 35 km east of al-Mansurah.

The location of Mendes
In ancient times, Mendes was a famous city that attracted the notice of nearly ancient geographers and historians, taking Herodotus (ii. 42, 46. 166), Diodorus (i. 84), Strabo (xvii. p. 802), Mela (i. 9  9), Pliny the Elder (v. 10. s. 12), Ptolemy (iv. 5.  51), and Stephanus of Byzantium (s. v.). The city was the capital of the Mendesian nome, placed at the point where the Mendesian arm of the Nile falls into the lake of Tanis. Archaeological evidence manifests to the existence of the town at least as far back as the Naqada II period (4th millennium BCE). Secondary the first Pharaohs, Mendes quick became a strong seat of provincial government and rested so throughout the Ancient Egyptian period. In Classical times, the nome it governed was one of the nomes allotted to that section of the native army which was addressed the Calasires, and the city was celebrated for the manufacture of a perfume showed as the Mendesium unguentum. (Plin. xiii. 1. s. 2.) Mendes, however, rejected early, and disappears in the first century AD; since both Ptolemy (l. c.) and P. Aelius Aristides (iii. p. 160) mention Thmuis as the unique town of note in the Mendesian nome. From its position at the juncture of the river and the lake, it was credibly impinged upon by their waters, after the canals fell into neglect under the Macedonian kings, and when they were restored by Augustus (Sueton. Aug. 18, 63) Thmuis had pulled its trade and population.

The great deities of Mendes were the ram god Banebdjedet (lit. Ba of the Lord of Djedet), who was the Ba of Osiris, and his wife, the fish goddess Hatmehit. With their child Har-pa-khered ("Horus the Child"), they formed the three of Mendes.

The ram deity of Mendes was drawn by Herodotus in his History as being represented with the head and wool of a goat: ...whereas anyone with a bema of Mendes or who comes from the state of Mendes, will have nothing to do with (sacrificing) goats, but uses sheep as his sacrificial creatures... They say that Heracles sovereign desire was to see Zeus, but Zeus was resisting to let him do so. Eventually, as a result of Heracles pleading, Zeus came up with a plan. He skinned a ram and cut off his head, then he held the head in front of himself, wore the hook, and showed himself to Heracles similar that. That is why the Egyptian statues of Zeus have a rams head, is why rams are sacred to the Thebans, and they do not exercise them as sacrificial animals. However there is just one day of the yearthe day of the fete of Zeus--when they chop up a several ram, skin it, dress the statue of Zeus in the way observed, and then bring the statue of Heracles up hot to the statue of Zeus. Then everyone round the sanctuary mourns the dying of the ram and finally they bury it in a spiritual tomb.

Demonologists in last modern times often imagined Satan as manifesting himself as a goat or lech, because goats had a report for lustful behavior and were practiced in the iconography of pre-Christian gods like Pan and the goat of Mendes. The occultist Eliphas Levi in his Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie (1855) drew an image of the pretend medieval idol Baphomet that conflated it with the goat of Mendes and the imagery of the Satanic satyr. The picture of the satyr-like Baphomet and its suspicious connection with Mendes has since been repetitive by various occultists, conspiracy theorists, and neopagans.

The site is today the greatest going tell in the Nile delta, and dwells of both Tell El-Ruba (the place of the main temple enclosure) and Tell El-Timai (the resolution site of Thmuis to the south). Overall, Mendes is about 3 km long from north to south and norms about 900m east-to-west. An Old Kingdom necropolis is estimated to contain over 9,000 inhumations. Several drives of 20th-century excavations have been led by North American institutions, taking on New York University and the University of Toronto, as well as a Pennsylvania State University team led by Donald Redford. Under the focus of Prof. Redford, the current excavations are reducing on a number of countries in and about the main temple. Work on the New Kingdom processional-style temple has recently exposed foundation deposits of Merenptah under the second pylon. It is thought that four obscure pylons or gates gone for each of the Avatars of the essential deity worshiped here. Evidence has suggested that their expression dates from at least the Middle Kingdom, as base deposits were exposed. The original constructions were buried, added to, or incorporated into later ones up time by later rulers. Billy Morin, latterly at University of Cambridge in England and now at Leiden University in the Netherlands led a team that investigated these further and exposed several mud-brick walls passing as pylons and their creations . Over thirty of the bricks were stamped with the cartouche of Menkheperre, the pre-nomen of Thutmose III. A cemetery of worthy rams was discovered in the northwest corner of Tell El-Ruba. Monuments taking the names of Ramesses II, Merneptah. and Ramesses III were also saw. A temple attested by its base deposits was made by Amasis II. The tomb of Nepherites I, which Donald Reford over was destroyed by the Persians, was discovered by a joint team from the University of Washington and the University of Toronto in 1992-1993. On the edge of the temple pitcher, a sondage supervised by Matthew J. Adams has revealed uninterrupted social stratification from the Middle Kingdom down to the First Dynasty. Coring results suggest that future diggings in that sondage should expect to take the stratification down into the Buto-Maadi Period. The material excavated so far is already the longest uninterrupted social stratification for whole of the Nile Delta, and possibly for full of Egypt.

Recent Posts:



·        Kohl
·        Amenemhat (Nobleman)
·        Cosmetics in Ancient Egypt
·        Memphis
·        Kom Aushim
·        Amenemhet (Official)
·        Menat
·        Terenuthis
·        Amenemhet (Temple official)
·        Kom Dara

Kom Dara

In this status, an essential, though rather obscure repository may be significant. In the cemetery of Dara, some 27 km. downriver from Assiut in Middle Egypt, a truly gigantic mud-brick mastaba-tomb, noted as Kom Dara, occupies a commanding position. This construction has not yet been properly inquired. In its present discipline, an field of 138 X 144 m. (that is, 19,872 sq. m.) is limited by massive outer walls that earlier rose to a height of about 20 m. The rests of the mortuary chapel that must sure once have processed part of the complex have not yet been saw. The interior, however, was reached by a inclined corridor entering the establishing in the middle of its north side, and leading down to a single belowground burial chamber reconstructed from great limestone slabs.

The extended size of this tomb, on with its square layout and the position of its burial chamber, are immediately reminiscent of a pyramid. Closer analysis of its expression, however, exposes beyond any doubt that the constructing was never designed as a pyramid. In fact, approach to the burial chamber from the north is a fairly standard feature in individual tomb architecture of the gone Old Kingdom, while the square layout of the superstructure is twinned by lesser tombs in Dara graveyard itself Kom Dara, thus, may be understood as a monumental tomb that came from a local paradigm, very untold in the way that the royal saff-tomhs at Thebes developed from the simpler types of saff-tomhs made for the funerary cults of the ordinary people.

On the basis of pottery, Kom Dara can be dated to the earlier half of the First Intermediate Period. Its owner rests unknown to us, and there is not yet any certain evidence to support the often repeated identification with an otherwise unattested King Khuy, whose name appears on a relief fragment found reused in another construction at the site. The tomb itself however, attests unequivocally to its owners dreams to a political role that far surpassed that of a mere nomarch, regardless of whether he actually dared to take the titles of royalty.

There are no historical records that can tell us what was really happening at this site, but the whole setting makes it plain that the owner of the Kom Dara tomb did not in fact succeed in establishing an clear centre of power, as the Thebans did at a slightly later date. It is tempting, however, to reflect a little further. In the wide, fertile plains of Middle Egypt, every hard local dynasty was dressed to find himself immediately surrounded by a account of powerful competitions. The geographical situation itself, therefore, may have helped to brace the balance of power between a number of Middle Egyptian local rulers, which, in turn, could have been material in maintaining royal over-lordship. In addition, it does not seem too far-fetched to accept that here, in one of the agriculturally most winning areas of the country, the Crown saw important interests at stake and, accordingly, felt rather less inclined to tolerate the political adventures of provincial rules than in the remote stretches of the head of the southern (that is, the Theban region).

Recent Posts:



·        Kohl
·        Amenemhat (Nobleman)
·        Cosmetics in Ancient Egypt
·        Memphis
·        Kom Aushim
·        Amenemhet (Official)
·        Menat
·        Terenuthis
·        Amenemhet (Temple official)

Amenemhet (Temple official)

Amenemhet was a temple official of the Eighteenth Dynasty. He served Queen Hatshepsut (1473-1458 B.C.E.).  Amenemhet was also a priest of the temple of Amun. Once trusted to have been the brother of Senenmut, a idolized of Hatshepsut, Amenemhet processed as a executive program of the bark of the God Amun and a leader in the festivals on which Amun was  paraded through the streets or extended to the western shore of Thebes. He was buried in Thebes.

Recent Posts:



·        Knots
·        Memnomium
·        Neferkhewet
·        Kohl
·        Amenemhat (Nobleman)
·        Cosmetics in Ancient Egypt
·        Memphis
·        Kom Aushim
·        Amenemhet (Official)
·        Menat
·        Terenuthis

Terenuthis

Terenuthis or Kom Abu Billou
Terenuthis, or Kom Abu Billo, was a town in Ancient Egypt. Placed roughly on the spot of the modern town of Tarrana, approximately 70 km north of Cairo in the western delta, it was described after the ancient Egyptian goddess Renenutet. Renenutet is one of the near ancient gods in the Egyptian pantheon, and in later worship was unified with other Egyptian gods alike Wadjet. Renenutet was perchance a local protecting deity in predynastic times, as Terenuthis is the oldest noted center of her cult.

Tarrana in the Province of Beherah replaces Terenuthis, now noted as Kom Abu Billo, the ruins of which lie about a mile and a quarter to the west. About nine miles outside are Lake Nitria and Lake Scetis, good which were the lavras of these names, Nitria and Scetis.
A tomb from Terenuthis

After Egypt became a Roman willpower, Terenuthis was unified into the Roman province of Aegyptus Prima. There are archaeological rests dating leastwise from the Middle Kingdom, as well as a necropolis. From the Ptolemaic period dates a (now generally destroyed) temple sacred to Hathor-Thermutis, which was earlier established by Ptolemy I and Ptolemy II.

Terenuthis got a bishopric that, being in the state of Aegyptus Prima was a suffragan of Alexandria and is taken in the Catholic Church's list of conventional sees. Le Quien notes two of its bishops: Arsinthius in 404; Eulogius at the First Council of Ephesus in 431. The monks sometimes sought refuge in Terenuthis in penetrations of the Maziks. John Moschus went there at the beginning of the 7th century. There is popular mention of Terenuthis in Christian Coptic literature.

Recent Posts:



·        Memnomium
·        Neferkhewet
·        Kohl
·        Amenemhat (Nobleman)
·        Cosmetics in Ancient Egypt
·        Memphis
·        Kom Aushim
·        Amenemhet (Official)
·        Menat

Menat

A Menat from the
late 18th Dynasty
Menat was a fetish of manliness, depicted on reliefs and statues of the god Khons and worn  by Egyptians to foster fertility and health in women  and virility in men. In this form the menat was fashioned out of glaze ware. The amulet was as well based in the mummy swathes of the gone in mortuary rites.

Recent Posts:



·        Knots
·        Memnomium
·        Neferkhewet
·        Kohl
·        Amenemhat (Nobleman)
·        Cosmetics in Ancient Egypt
·        Memphis
·        Kom Aushim
·        Amenemhet (Official)

Amenemhet (Official)

Amenemhet was an Official of the Twelfth Dynasty. Amenemhet processed Amenemhet III (1844-1797 B.C.E.) as superintendent of repairs transmitted at Wadi Hammamat, an serious trade road  from Koptos to the Red Sea. Amenemhet led a important military effect to Wadi Hammamat  to escort workers assigned to quarry blocks of basaltic stone in the field. Numbering 2,000, Amenemhet's drive not only quarried the stones but likewise freshened up the site and added new appliances that pressed resolutions.

Recent Posts:



·        Knots
·        Memnomium
·        Neferkhewet
·        Kohl
·        Amenemhat (Nobleman)
·        Cosmetics in Ancient Egypt
·        Memphis
·        Kom Aushim

Kom Aushim

Kom Aushim (Karanis)
Kom Aushim, or Karanis is a place in the Faiyum country of the Nile, dating to the Middle Kingdom. The kings of the Twelfth Dynasty (1991-1783  B.C.E.) applied the field for royal retreats. However, no memorials from that dynasty are recognizable now. Kom Aushim was likely Letopolis, a cult center of Horus, named Hem by the Egyptians.

Recent Posts:




·        Kleomenes
·        Neferkahor
·        Amenemhab
·        Knots
·        Memnomium
·        Neferkhewet
·        Kohl
·        Amenemhat (Nobleman)
·        Cosmetics in Ancient Egypt
·        Memphis

Memphis

The hieroglyphic
namr of Memphis
Memphis described Ankh-tawy (That Which Joins the Two Lands) or Men-nefer (after the name of a near pyramid) in ancient times, Memphis was the capital of Egypt and therefore the residency of kings in the Predynastic Period and Old Kingdom. Its placement was just south of the set where the Nile opens to form the Delta, about fifteen miles south of what is now Cairo. Its break, either King Narmer or King Aha, chose this situation for its positioning between Upper and Lower Egypt. Reported to legend, the king showed the city by establishing a dam to reroute a arm of the Nile and form a flat plain where he could form, and this dam was reinforced by incidental kings. So, scientists from  the  Egypt  Exploration  Society, a British administration that supports scientific explore in Egypt, recently addressed that the course of the Nile River near Memphis is importantly east of its original location, and from geological prove they suspect that this redirection was artificial rather than natural.
The location of Memphis
To the west of Memphis lies a necropolis with a important number of tombs and pyramids. Today this graveyard country is related to in terms of its several areas, each one addressed  for a nearby village: Dashur, Saqqara, Abusir, Zawiyet el-Aryan, Giza, and Abu Roash. complete of these are great archaeological  websites  that  stay to be pictures of ongoing research.
Ruins of the temple of Hathor
Ruins of the temple of Ptah
Even after Twelfth Dynasty  king Amenemhet I went Egypts capital to close Itj-tawy (plausibly in the field of el-Lisht, though it has never been learned), Memphis stayed a leading administrative and religious center. In fact, passim its history Memphis was a cult heart for the god Ptah, and so has a Temple of Ptah. The city likewise has a palace, the Palace of White Walls, established by either Narmer  or Aha.

Recent Posts:



·        Kleomenes
·        Neferkahor
·        Amenemhab
·        Knots
·        Memnomium
·        Neferkhewet
·        Kohl
·        Amenemhat (Nobleman)
·        Cosmetics in Ancient Egypt

Cosmetics in Ancient Egypt

Cosmetics appear in
Ancient Egyptian painting
Egypt, one of the earliest civilizations on the earth, was not only remembered today as a cradle of the western cultivated world and direct from witch which many sciences and arts extended across the Europe, but likewise as a home of one of the most commonly used beauty items that are practiced today cosmetics. It was there that cosmetics were addressed by almost everyone, enabling them not only to keep better body appearing and fashion, but also giving very great medical profits to the civilization that gone in very harsh desert terms. Over 3 thousand years of get and practice with creating several cosmetic intersections have enabled Egyptian royalty, aristocracy, and middle separate to fully address cosmetics and make it to be important part of their lives. Greek traders who visited Egypt around 1000 BC referred that they were astonished with fashion showed in public places - almost everyone wore cosmetic productions of some kind, and not in small measures! But that was not the close, because even their statues of gods and public buildings with human motif ribbons wore aesthetic paints. There cosmetics were not only famous as a fashion products, but as points that were gifted to them by the gods. Religious priests who defended the secret recipes for many conventional oils fought always against enabling Egyptian traders to share their goods with the immediate civilizations.

The first archeological findings of Egyptian cosmetics is dated to 3100BC (ceremonial pallette that was used for grinding and mixing of cosmetic factors), but more regular artefacts could be saw after 1500 BC. One of such great findings was located in the tomb of the King Thutmosis III (c1450 BC) which gross not only buried consorts of the ruler, but besides their fashion items. Few of those surviving aesthetic jars even overseen to preserve cleansing oils that was used to remove close mascaras, lipsticks and eyeshades. The most important tool in Egyptian fashion was brush. With it they given nearly every cosmetic substance they had. The most common brush was made from the salvadorapersica tree, which in summation to giving facial paints was as well used as a toothbrush by many. Most commonly, Egyptians practiced black kohl as an eyeliner and green malachite as an eye shadow. Mascara was too popular. These productions were made not only to make wearer more pretty, but they likewise held their skin and eyes from diseases that could be made by the harsh African desert wind (grind of tiny particles and attempts by wind-blown organisms). Oils, pastes and hair's-breadth colors likewise contained heavy metals, such copper and lead, which successfully fought bacterias and transmissions. Finally, full body paints that were based on Chalk and white lead paint were used by nobles who worshipped to showcase their pale skin as a sign of aristocracy and situation.

Recent Posts:



·        Lucius Memmius
·        Kleomenes
·        Neferkahor
·        Amenemhab
·        Knots
·        Memnomium
·        Neferkhewet
·        Kohl
·        Amenemhat (Nobleman)

Amenemhat (Nobleman)

The hieroglyphic
name of Amenemhat
Amenemhat was Nobleman of Beni Hasan. He attended his nome Beni Hasan and the state in the reign of Senwosret I (1971-1926 B.C.E.). This  noble  typifies the nomarchs, or provincial aristocrats of Egypt, individuals who transmitted titles of prince or count in each break nome of the land. Section of Amenemhats inherited responsibility was named  Menet-khufu, idolized as the provenance of Khufu (Cheops, r. 2551-2528 B.C.E.), the constructor of the Great Pyramid at Giza. Amenemhat was the son of Khnumhotep I, inheriting  the Oryx Nome, a country always known as establishing strong support for the compelling pharaohs of Egypt.
The funerary temple of
Amenemhet in Beni Hassan
Drawing from tomb BH2
A military commander, belike leading army establishing blocks from his own territory, Amenemhat answered Senwosret I in Nubian causes, the region below Aswan (now modern Sudan).  He  led  junkets  for  trade and  handled processes in the royal targets and mines. For his services he found golden collars (symbols of honor) and 3,000  head of cattle. Amenemhat served  the  throne  of Egypt for more than than a quarter of a century.

Recent Posts:



·        Kleomenes
·        Neferkahor
·        Amenemhab
·        Knots
·        Memnomium
·        Neferkhewet
·        Kohl

Kohl

Nefertiti Statue
showing the eye liner
Kohl is the Arabic word for the ancient Egyptian cosmetic practiced to adorn eyes. Dried continues of the kohl complex have been  described in tombs, attended  by palettes, tubs, and applicators. Kohl was a frequent cosmetic for full forms.

Recent Posts:



·        Lucius Memmius
·        Kleomenes
·        Neferkahor
·        Amenemhab
·        Knots
·        Memnomium
·        Neferkhewet

Neferkhewet

Highly skilled artistic official of the Eighteenth Dynasty. He  served Hatshepsut (1473-1458 B.C.E.)  as royal architect. Her prevail sponsored tremendous construction sees in both the north and the southern, and many talented individuals worked to provide splendid monuments throughout the Nile Valley. Neferkhewets tomb on the western shore of Thebes allows certification of his acquisitions and his honors as a retainer of the court. as well observed are his wife, Ren-nefer, and his boy, Amenenhet.

Recent Posts:


·        Neferkau
·        Amemait
·        Lucius Memmius
·        Kleomenes
·        Neferkahor
·        Amenemhab
·        Knots
·        Memnomium

Labels