Historical Periods of Ancient Egypt

The historical periods of ancient Egypt spans the period from the early predynastic settlements of the north Nile Valley to the Roman conquest in 30 BC. The Pharaonic Period is dated from some 3150 BC, when Lower and Upper Egypt became a unified state, until the country drop under Greek govern in 332 BC. Egypt's history is split into several different periods according to the dynasty of the governing of each pharaoh. The dating of events is still a field of research. The conservative dates are not put up by any reliable good date for a couple of about three millennia. The following is the list according to conventional Egyptian chronology.


Late Period

Just fter 671 BC on, Memphis and the Delta area got the target of many attacks from the Assyrians, who expelled the Nubians and handed over power to node kings of the Dynasty 26. Psamtik I was the first to be established as the king of the full of Egypt, and he brought increased stability to the country during a 54-year reign from the new capital of Sais. Four successive Saite kings continued taking Egypt successfully and peacefully from 610-526 BC, holding the Babylonians away with the help of Greek mercenaries. By the end of this period a new power was growing in the Near East: Persia. The pharaoh Psamtik III had to present the might of Persia at Pelusium; he was defeated and briefly escaped to Memphis, but ultimately was captured and then executed.

Persian domination:

Achaemenid Egypt can be broken into 3 eras: the first period of Persian military control when Egypt became a satrapy, followed by an separation of independency, and the second and last period of occupation. The Persian king Cambyses assumed the formal title of Pharaoh, called himself Mesuti-Re ("Re has given birth"), and sacrificed to the Egyptian gods. He established the dynasty 27. Egypt was then joined with Cyprus and Phoenicia in the sixth satrapy of the Achaemenid Empire. Cambyses' heirs Darius I the Great and Xerxes followed a similar policy, visited the country, and warded off an Athenian approach. It is likely that Artaxerxes I and Darius II visited the country as well, although it is not attested in our sources, and did not prevent the Egyptians from feeling unhappy. During the war of sequence after the reign of Darius II, which broke out in 404, they revolted under Amyrtaeus and found their independence. This unique ruler of the dynasty 28 died in 399, and power went to the Twenty-ninth dynasty. The Thirtieth Dynasty was showed in 380 BC and lasted until 343 BC. Nectanebo II was the last native king to rule Egypt. Artaxerxes III (358–338 BC) reconquered the Nile valley for a short period (343–332 BC). In 332 BC Mazaces passed over the country to Alexander the Great without a fight. The Achaemenid Empire had ended, and for a while Egypt was a satrapy in Alexander's empire. Later the Ptolemies and then the Romans successively ruled the Nile valley.

Ptolemaic dynasty:

About 332 BC Alexander III of Macedon captured Egypt with little underground from the Persians. He was received by the Egyptians as a savior. He visited Memphis, and got on a pilgrimage to the oracle of Amun at the Oasis of Siwa. The oracle held him to be the son of Amun. He conciliated the Egyptians by the value which he showed for their faith, but he named Greeks to virtually all the senior puts up in the country, and founded a new Greek city, Alexandria, to be the new capital. The wealthiness of Egypt could now be harnessed for Alexander's conquest of the stay of the Persian Empire. Early in 331 BC he was ready to depart, and led his forces out to Phoenicia. He left Cleomenes as the ruling nomarch to control Egypt in his absence. Alexander never returned to Egypt. Following Alexander's dying in Babylon in 323 BC, a sequence crisis erupted among his generals. Initially, Perdiccas governed the empire as strong for Alexander's half brother Arrhidaeus, who became Philip III of Macedon, and then as strong for both Philip III and Alexander's baby son Alexander IV of Macedon, who had not been born at the time of his father's death. Perdiccas appointed Ptolemy, one of Alexander's best companions, to be satrap of Egypt. Ptolemy governed Egypt from 323 BC, nominally in the name of the corporate kings Philip III and Alexander IV. However, as Alexander the Great's empire disintegrated, Ptolemy soon established himself as ruler in his own right. Ptolemy successfully held Egypt against an intrusion by Perdiccas in 321 BC, and consolidated his position in Egypt and the surrounding areas during the Wars of the Diadochi (322 BC-301 BC). In 305 BC, Ptolemy took the title of King. As Ptolemy I Soter (Saviour), he established the Ptolemaic dynasty that was to rule Egypt for about 300 years.

The later Ptolemies assumed Egyptian customs by marrying their siblings, had themselves portrayed on public memorials in Egyptian style and dress, and participated in Egyptian spiritual life. Hellenistic culture expanded in Egypt well after the Muslim conquest. The Ptolemies had to fight native rebellions and were taken in foreign and civil warfares that led to the disdain of the kingdom and its appropriation by Rome.

Third Intermediate Period

Afterward the death of Ramses XI, his heir Smendes governed from the city of Tanis in the north, while the High Priests of Amun at Thebes had good rule of the southern of the country, whilst set nominally recognizing Smendes as king. In fact, this division was less important than it seems, since both priests and pharaohs came from the same family. Piankh, assumed hold of Upper Egypt, ruling from Thebes, with the north set of his control close at Al-Hibah. (The High Priest Herihor had passed before Ramses XI, but also was an all-but-independent swayer in the latter days of the king's rule.) The country was once once again split into 2 parts with the priests in Thebes and the Pharaohs at Tanis. Their rule seems to be without any other distinction, and they were replaced without any looking struggle by the Libyan kings of the Twenty-Second Dynasty. Egypt has long had bonds with Libya, and the first king of the new dynasty, Shoshenq I, was a Meshwesh Libyan, who attended as the commanding officer of the armies below the last ruler of the Twenty-First Dynasty, Psusennes II. He unified the country, putting hold of the Amun clergy under his own son as the High Priest of Amun, a post that was antecedently a hereditary appointment. The scant and irregular nature of the written shows from this period indicate that it was mobile. There appear to have been many subversive groups, which finally led to the creation of the Twenty-Third Dynasty, which ran contemporary with the latter part of the Twenty-Second Dynasty. After the detachment of Egypt from Nubia at the end of the New Kingdom, a native dynasty took control of Nubia. Below king Piye, the Nubian founder of Twenty-Fifth Dynasty, the Nubians forced north in an effort to crush his Libyan opponents ruling in the Delta. He managed to attain power as far as Memphis. His opposite Tefnakhte finally submitted to him, but he was provided to remain in power in Lower Egypt and founded the passing Twenty-Fourth Dynasty at Sais.

Egypt was reunified by the Twenty-Second Dynasty founded by Shoshenq I around 945 BC, who derived from Meshwesh immigrants, primitively from Ancient Libya. This brought constancy to the country for well over a century. After the rule of Osorkon II the country had again splintered into two lands with Shoshenq III of the Twenty-Second Dynasty controlling Lower Egypt by 818 BC while Takelot II and his son (the future Osorkon III) ruled Middle and Upper Egypt. The Nubian kingdom to the south took full reward of this division and political imbalance. Piye engaged a campaign from Nubia and defeated the combined might of different native-Egyptian swayer such as Peftjaubast, Osorkon IV of Tanis, and Tefnakht of Sais. Piye established the Nubian Twenty-Fifth Dynasty and appointed the defeated swayer to be his provincial governors. He was followed first by his brother, Shabaka, and then by his 2 sons Shebitku and Taharqa.

The international prestige of Egypt rejected well by this time. The country's international allies had fallen under the sphere of shape of Assyria and from about 700 BC the question became when, not if, there would be war between the 2 states. Taharqa's reign and that of his successor, Tanutamun, were filled with constant conflict with the Assyrians against whom there were numerous victories, but finally Thebes was occupied and Memphis sacked.

New Kingdom

Possibly as a result of the foreign govern of the Hyksos during the Second Intermediate Period, the New Kingdom saw Egypt attempt to create a cushion between the Levant and Egypt, and gain its greatest territorial extent. It expanded far south into Nubia and made wide districts in the Near East. Egyptian armies pushed Hittite armies for control of modern-day Syria.

Eighteenth Dynasty:


This was a time of great wealthiness and power for Egypt. Some of the most important and best-known Pharaohs ruled at this time. Hatshepsut was a pharaoh at this time. Hatshepsut is different as she was a female pharaoh, a rare occurrence in Egyptian history. She was an hard and competent leader, extending Egyptian trade south into present-day Somalia and northern into the Mediterranean. She ruled for twenty years through a combination of gross propaganda and deft political skill. Her co-regent and heir Thutmose III ("the Napoleon of Egypt") extended Egypt's army and managed it with great winner. Late in his reign he ordered her figure hacked out from her memorials. He fought against Asiatic souls and was the most made of Egyptian pharaohs. Amenhotep III built extensively at the temple of Karnak accepting the Luxor temple which lay of two pylons, a colonnade behind the new temple entrance, and a different temple to the goddess Ma'at.

Nineteenth Dynasty:

Ramses I reigned for two years and was succeeded by his son Seti I. Seti I carried on the work of Horemheb in reconstructing power, control, and honor to Egypt. He likewise was sure for making the temple complex at Abydos. Arguably Ancient Egypt's power as a nation-state upset during the reign of Ramses II (the Great) of the 19th Dynasty. He ruled for 67 years from the years of 18 and carried on his immediate predecessor's work and created many more splendid temples, such as that of Abu Simbel on the Nubian border. He sought to recover territories in the Levant that had been made by 18th Dynasty Egypt. His efforts of reconquest culminated in the Battle of Kadesh in 1274 BC, where he led Egyptian armies against those of the Hittite king Muwatalli II and was caught in history's first recorded military ambush. Ramses II was famed for the huge number of children he sired by his various wives and concubines; the tomb he built for his sons (many of whom he outlived) in the Valley of the pharaohs has tried to be the largest funerary complex in Egypt. His immediate heirs continued the campaigns, though an progressively careful court complicated matters. Ramses II was succeeded by his son Merneptah and then by Merenptah's son Seti II. Seti II's throne seems to have been disputed by his half-brother Amenmesse, who may have temporarily governed from Thebes. Upon his dying, Seti II son Siptah, who may have been afflicted with poliomyelitis during his life, was appointed to the throne by Chancellor Bay, an Asiatic commoner who served as vizier behind the scenes. At Siptah's early death, the throne was assumed by Twosret, the dowager queen of Seti II (and possibly Amenmesses's sister). A period of anarchy at the close of Twosret's short reign saw a native reaction to foreign control leading to the performance of the chancellor, and placing Setnakhte on the throne, establishing the Dynasty 20.

Twentieth Dynasty:


The last "great" king from the New Kingdom is widely regarded to be Ramses III, the son of Setnakhte who reigned three decenniums after the time of Ramses II. In Year 8 of his rule, the Sea People, invaded Egypt by land and sea. Ramses III sunk them in two great land and sea battles. He claimed that he incorporated them as open people and established them in Southern Canaan, although there is prove that they forced their way into Canaan. Their front in Canaan may have contributed to the formation of new states in this area such as Philistia afterwards the break of the Egyptian Empire. He was also compelled to fight offensive Libyan tribesmen in two leading campaigns in Egypt's Western Delta in his Year 6 and Year 11 respectively. The heavy cost of these battles slowly exhausted Egypt's treasury and put up to the gradual decline of the Egyptian Empire in Asia. The severity of these difficultness is stressed by the fact that the first known labour strike in recorded history occurred during Year 29 of Ramses III's reign, when the food rations out for the Egypt's favored and elite royal tomb-builders and craftsmen in the village of Deir el Medina could not be purveyed. Something in the air kept much sunlight from reaching the ground and also got global tree development for almost two full decenniums until 1140 BC. One advised cause is the Hekla 3 blast of the Hekla volcano in Iceland, but the dating of that event remains in dispute.

Next Ramses III's last there was endless fuss between his heirs. 3 of his boys would go on to assume power as Ramses IV, Ramses VI and Ramses VIII respectively. However, at this time Egypt was likewise increasingly beset by a series of drouths, below-normal flooding levels of the Nile, famine, civil agitation and official subversion. The power of the last king, Ramses XI, grew so weak that in the south the High Priests of Amun at Thebes got the effective defacto rulers of Upper Egypt, while Smendes controlled Lower Egypt even before the death of Ramses XI. Smendes would finally found the dynasty 21 at Tanis.

Second Intermediate Period and the Hyksos

Second Intermediate Period marks a period when Ancient Egypt erstwhile again fell into disorder between the end of the Middle Kingdom, and the begin of the New Kingdom. This period is greatest known as the time the Hyksos (an Asiatic people) made their appearing in Egypt, the reigns of its kings comprising the Fifteenth and Dynasties 16. The Dynasty 13 proved unable to hold onto the risky land of Egypt, and a rustic governing family located in the marshlands of the west Delta at Xois broke away from the central authority to form the Fourteenth Dynasty. The splintering of the land accelerated after the rule of the Thirteenth Dynasty pharaoh Neferhotep I.

Hyksos first seem during the rule of the Dynasty 13 pharaoh Sobekhotep IV, and by 1720 BC took hold of the town of Avaris. The schemes of the established account of the "invasion" of the land by the Hyksos is kept in the Aegyptiaca of Manetho, who records that during this time the Hyksos overran Egypt, led by Salitis, the founder of the Dynasty 15. In the last decades, however, the thought of a simple migration, with little or no force involved, has got some support. Under this theory, the Egyptian swayer of Dynasty 13 were unable to stop these new migrants from travelling to Egypt from Asia because they were standard kings who were struggling to cope with various domestic troubles including possibly famine. The Hyksos princes and chieftains ruled in the east Delta with their local Egyptian vassals. The Hyksos Fifteenth Dynasty rulers showed their capital and seat of government at Memphis and their summertime residence at Avaris. The Hyksos kingdom was cantered in the eastern Nile Delta and Middle Egypt and was limited in size, never passing south into Upper Egypt, which was under hold by Theban-based swayer. Hyksos telling with the south seem to have been primarily of a commercial nature, although Theban princes appear to have knew the Hyksos rulers and may perhaps have provided them with protection for a period.

About the time Memphis fell to the Hyksos, the native Egyptian ruling house in Thebes held its independence from the vassal dynasty in Itj-tawy and set itself up as the Dynasty 17. This dynasty was to prove the salvation of Egypt and would eventually lead the war of liberation that drove the Hyksos back into Asia. The two close kings of this dynasty were Tao II the Brave and Kamose. Ahmose I completed the conquering and expulsion of the Hyksos from the delta region, restored Theban rule over the whole of Egypt and successfully confirmed Egyptian power in its once subject districts of Nubia and Canaan. His reign marks this beginning of the Eighteenth Dynasty and the New Kingdom.

Middle Kingdom

Middle Kingdom is the period in the ancient Egypt chronology stretching from the establishment of the Dynasty 11 to the end of the Dynasty 14, roughly between 2030 BC and 1640 BC nearly.

The period being two phases, the 11th Dynasty, which governed from Thebes and the 12th Dynasty onwards which was cantered around el-Lisht. These 2 dynasties were primitively considered to be the full extent of this unified kingdom, but historians now consider the 13th Dynasty to leastways partly belong the Middle Kingdom. The latest pharaohs of the Middle Kingdom observed their line to a nomarch of Thebes, (Intef the Great, son of Iku), who is referred in a figure of contemporary letterings. However, his immediate successor Mentuhotep II is advised the first pharaoh of this dynasty. An inscription carved during the reign of Wahankh Intef II pictures that he was the first of this dynasty to claim to govern over the whole of Egypt, a take which brought the Thebeans into fight with the swayer of Herakleopolis Magna, the Dynasty 10. Intef undertook several campaigns north, and caught the important nome of Abydos.

Warfare continued intermittently between the Thebean and Heracleapolitan dynasts to the 14th regnal year of pharaoh Nebhetepra Mentuhotep II, when the Herakleopolitans were sunk, and the Theban dynasty started to consolidate their rule. Mentuhotep II is knew to have commanded campaigns south into Nubia, which had gained its independency on the First Intermediate Period. There is as well evidence for military actions against Palestine. The king reorganized the country and located a vizier at the head of civil governing for the country. Mentuhotep IV was the final pharaoh of this dynasty, and despite being free from various numbers of pharaohs, his reign is attested from a few inscriptions in Wadi Hammamat that record excursions to the Red Sea coast and to quarry stone for the royal repositories. The leader of this outing was his vizier Amenemhat, who is wide assumed to be the future pharaoh Amenemhet I, the first pharaoh of the 12th Dynasty. Amenemhet is wide assumed by some Egyptologists to have either seized the throne or taken power after Mentuhotep IV died unsuccessful.

Amenemhat I built a new capital for Egypt, knew as Itjtawy, thought to be located near the present-day el-Lisht, although the chronicler Manetho takes the capital continued at Thebes. Amenemhat forcibly pacified home unrest, curtailed the rights of the nomarchs, and is known to have at founded at least one effort into Nubia. His son Senusret I continued the policy of his father to retake Nubia and other territories lost during the First Intermediate Period. The Libyans were close under his forty-five year rule and Egypt's successfulness and security were assured. Senusret III (1878 BC – 1839 BC) was a warrior-king, leading his troops deep into Nubia, and built a series of massive forts throughout the country to establish Egypt's formal boundaries with the victorious areas of its territory. Amenemhat III (1860 BC – 1815 BC) is considered the last great pharaoh of the Middle Kingdom. Egypt's population started to exceed food production levels during the rule of Amenemhat III, who then ordered the exploitation of the Faiyum and increased mining operations in the Sinaï forsake. He also invited Asiatic settlers to Egypt to labour on Egypt's monuments. Last in his reign the annual floods along the Nile began to fail, further straining the resources of the government. The Thirteenth Dynasty and Fourteenth Dynasty witnessed the slow decline of Egypt into the Second Intermediate Period in which about of the Asiatic settlers of Amenemhat III would savvy power over Egypt as the Hyksos.

First Intermediate Period

After the fall of the Old Kingdom came a roughly 200-year stretch of time knew as the First Intermediate Period, which is loosely thought to take a relatively obscure set of pharaohs running from the end of the Sixth to the Tenth, and about of the Eleventh Dynasty. Most of these were future local monarchs who did not take such power out of their own limited domain, and none held power over the totally of Egypt. Though their governing was in form of Theocracy, they reliably respect other governments,. While there are next to no official records covering this period, there are a number of fictional texts known as Lamentations from the early period of the subsequent Middle Kingdom that may drop some light on what happened during this period. Some of these texts shine on the breakdown of rule, others allude to intrusion by "Asiatic bowmen". In frequent the stories focus on a society where the natural put of things in both company and nature was overthrown.

It is also highly probably that it was during this period that totally of the pyramid and grave complexes were hooked. Further lamentation texts allude to this fact, and by the beginning of the Middle Kingdom mummies are found dressed with magical pieces that were once individual to the pyramid of the kings of the sixth dynasty.

By 2160 BC a new line of pharaohs (the 9th and 10th Dynasties) consolidated Lower Egypt from their special in Herakleopolis Magna. A rival line (the Eleventh Dynasty) based at Thebes reunified Upper Egypt and a brush between the two rival dynasties was inevitable. Around 2055 BC the Theban forces defeated the Heracleopolitan Pharaohs, reunified the 2 Lands. The reign of its first pharaoh, Mentuhotep II marks the beginning of the Middle Kingdom.

Old Kingdom

Old Kingdom is most commonly regarded as spanning the period of time when Egypt was ruled by the 3rd Dynasty complete to the Sixth Dynasty (2686 BC – 2134 BC). The royal capital of Egypt in the Old Kingdom was placed at Memphis, where Djoser established his court. The Old Kingdom is perhaps best knew, however, for the large number of pyramids, which were built at this time as pharaonic burial places. For this reason, the Old Kingdom is oftentimes referred to as (the Age of the Pyramids Builders). The first known pharaoh of the Old Kingdom was Djoser (2630–2611 BC) of the Third Dynasty, who placed the construction of a pyramid (the Step Pyramid) in Memphis' necropolis, Sakkara. It was in this era that formerly independent ancient Egyptian states got known as nomes, ruled alone by the pharaoh. Later the former swayer were forced to accept the role of regulators or different work in tax collecting. Egyptians in this era worshiped their pharaoh as a god, believing that he ensured the annual flooding of the Nile that was essential for their crops.

Old Kingdom and its royal power made their zenith below the Fourth Dynasty. Sneferu, the dynasty's yield, is believed to have approved at least 3 pyramids; piece his son and successor Khufu erected the Great Pyramid of Giza, Sneferu had more stone and brick went than any other pharaoh. King Khufu (Greek Cheops), his son Khafra (Greek Chephren), and his grandson Menkaura (Greek Mycerinus), all reached long fame in the building of their pyramids. To direct and feed the manpower needed to create these pyramids required a concentrated government with big powers, and Egyptologists believe the Old Kingdom at this time established this level of sophistication. Recent digs near the pyramids led by Mark Lehner have exposed a large city which appears to have put up, fed and provided the pyramid workers. Although it was once believed that slaves constructed these monuments, a theory based on the biblical Exodus account, study of the tombs of the workmen, who oversaw structure on the pyramids, has showed they were built by a corvée of peasants got from across Egypt. They apparently worked while the yearly Nile flood reported their fields, also as a very big crowd of specialists, including stone cutters, painters, mathematicians and priests. The Fifth Dynasty started with Userkhaf (2465–2458 BC), who initiated reforms that vulnerable the central governing. After his rule civil wars arose as the powerful nomarchs (regional governors) no more belonged to the royal family. The worsening civil conflict sabotaged unity and physical government and also caused famines. The final blow came when a severe drought in the region that resulted in a drastic drop in hurry between 2200 and 2150 BC, which in turn prevented the rule flooding of the Nile. The result was the give of the Old Kingdom observed by decades of famine and strife.

Early Dynastic Period

The historical shows of ancient Egypt begin with Egypt as a unified state, which occurred sometime about 3150 BC. According to Egyptian tradition Menes, thought to have merged Upper and Lower Egypt, was the first pharaoh. This Egyptian culture, traditions, art construction, architecture, and social structure was closely tied to religion, remarkably stable, and changed little over a period of nearly 3000 years. Egyptian chronology, which involves regnal years, started around this time. The conventional Egyptian chronology is the chronology accepted during the twentieth century, but it does not include any of the leading revision proposals that also have been made in that time. Even within a single work, archaeologists often will offer several possible dates or even different whole chronologies as possibilities. Consequently, there may be discrepancies between dates showed here and in articles on particular swayer or topics related to ancient Egypt. There likewise are several manageable spellings of the names. Typically, Egyptologists separate the history of pharaonic civilization using a schedule laid out first by Manetho's Aegyptiaca [History of Egypt] that was written during the Ptolemaic era, during the 3rd century BC.

Prior to the union of Egypt, the land was settled with individual villages. With the early dynasties, and for some of Egypt's history thereafter, the country came to be known as the Two Lands. The rulers made a national governing and appointed royal governors.

Matching to Manetho, the 1st pharaoh was Menes, but archaeological findings support the view that the first pharaoh to claim to have united the two lands was Narmer (the last pharaoh of the Protodynastic Period). His name is known mainly from the famous Narmer Palette, whose pictures have been read as the act of uniting Upper and Lower Egypt. Funeral applies for the elite resulted in the construction of mastaba tombs, which later got models for accompanying Old Kingdom buildings such as the Step pyramid.

Predynastic Period

This period predates the unification of the north and south parts of Egypt. Settlements were established beside the Nile River. By 3500 BC, Hierakonpolis in Upper Egypt was the biggest Egyptian settlement with the busy town spread out on the Nile for over three km. Hieroglyphs made their first appearing toward the end of this period, about 3250 BC by the latest ideas.

Toward the end of this time, around 3250 to 3100 BC, a period sometimes denoted to by Egyptologists as Dynasty 0, there were pharaohs in Upper (Southern) Egypt with Narmer being of unique prominence. The unification of Upper and Lower Egypt is often attributed to a king called Menes or Narmer, who may be the same person.

The Narmer Palette points Narmer in battle and wear the crown of Upper Egypt on one side and the crown of Lower Egypt on the opposite side.

Tarkhan

Pottery jar from Tarkhan
Tarkhan was a site in the Faiyum part of the Nile, located on the western bank in an area named the lower valley.  The  necropolis  there  dates  to  the  Old  Kingdom Period  (2575–2134  B.C.E.).  Predynastic  tombs  were  also constructed in Tarkhan, where mortuary regalia and the names of various rulers, accepting Narmer, were unearthed.

Seila

Pyramid of Seila
Seila was a site surrounding the Faiyum territory of Egypt,  south  of  El-Lisht. A  pyramid was  erected  on  a abandon spur at Seila. This pyramid, credibly built by Huni (r.  2599–2575  B.C.E.),  was  made  out  of  limestone blocks.  The  pyramid  was  fashioned  with  4  steps  and was 99 square ft at the base.

Sidment el-Gebel

Sidment el-Gebel, that is a direct for a series of necropolises south of the Fayum a few km west of the town of Ihnasya/Herakleopolis.

Near the Necropolis of Sedmet el-Gebel, houses dating to the Roman Egypt (30 BC–390 AD) period were discovered, which in and of itself means a continued occupation of the domain.

Meidum

Meidum Pyramid
Meidum, a  site  close  the  Faiyum served  as  a royal  necropolis  for  the  3rd  and  Fourth  Dynasties.  A step Pyramid at Meidum was probably began by Huni (2599–2575  B.C.E.)  and  completed  by  Snefru (2575–2551  B.C.E.).  This  pyramid  was  put up  on  an earthen  platform  and  was  composed  originally  of  eight layers. The construction gave some time afterwards, possibly as late as  the  New  Kingdom  (1550–1070  B.C.E.).  The outer casing, yet, was damaged and broke during  construction.  The  mummies  of  several  individuals were discovered in the leading debris. Inside transitions and  chambers  led  to  a  vertical  shaft  and  a  burial  room, which  was  lined  with  limestone.  The  remains  of  a wooden coffin were exposed in this corbeled chamber, and a mortuary temple was also found on the east side of the pyramid, holding two oval stelae. A causeway as well taken to a valley temple.

A  series  of  Dynasty 4  (2575–2465  B.C.E.) mastaba tombs  surround  the  pyramid,  some  holding amazing reliefs and statuary. The known Meidum geese paintings  were  part  of  the  reliefs  in  the  tomb  of  Neferma'at and  his  wife  Atet.  Nearby,  the  mastaba  of  Prince Rahotep and his married woman Nofret contained a different portrait style statue aggroup. The paintings and statues are in the  Egyptian  Museum  in  Cairo.  A  Dynasty 5 (2465–2323 B.C.E.) mummy was likewise found in Meidum.

Herakleopolis Magna

Heracleopolis Magna

Herakleopolis Magna, a site south of Meidum at the entrance to the Faiyum, now Ihnasiyah el-Medineh, originally called Nen-nesut, Nenen-nesut, or Ninsu by the Egyptians, Herakleopolis was the capital of the twentieth nome of Upper Egypt and the cult center for Harsaphes (Her-shef). 

Herakleopolis dominion has been named that figure in telling to the Greek idol hero "Herakles" who Greeks paired with the main region idol "Hershef" or "Hersphes" which represents the head of a drive. Most of the region is located on the island between the Nile and Bahr Youssef, and bounded on the north by  Arsinoite dominion, and Oxyrhynchites from the south and  it  match  Herakleopolis  region  with  current  Beni  Suef province, and even beyond. This region has a great grandness since  prehistoric  times;  through  private  historic  ages  when  it became  the  capital  Herakleopolis  Magna  "Ehnasya"  is  the political capital of the country in the "Ehnasya age" during the epoch of the two families ninth and tenth, and continued until the Graeco-Romans time.

Ruined columns at
Herakleopolis Magna
The  place  was  occupied  as  early  as  the  1st Dynasty (2920–2770 B.C.E.) but rose to prominence in the First  Intermediate  Period  (2134–2040  B.C.E.).  The  name Herakleopolis Magna was added upon the site by the swayer of the Ptolemaic Period (304–30 B.C.E.). In the First Intermediate  Period,  Herakleopolis  was  the  home  of  the Khety (Aktoy)  clan.  During  the  Khety  period  of  rule (2134–2040  B.C.E.),  a  canal  linked  Herakleopolis  Magna to  Memphis.  Montuhotep  II  rounded  the  site  in  2040 B.C.E. when he started his campaign to reunify Egypt.

Harsaphes's temple,  a  ram-headed  deity,  was restored  at  Herakleopolis  Magna  by  Ramses II (1290–1224 B.C.E.). A granite triad of Ramses II, Ptah, and Harsaphes was also erected in Herakleopolis Magna. An  Old  Kingdom  (2575–2134  B.C.E.)  enshrine  and  a necropolis, Gebel El-Sidmant, are on the site.

Hawara

Pyramid of Amenemhat III at Hawara
Hawara  was  a  royal  necropolis  in  the  south area  of  the  Faiyum used  by  the Dynasty 12.  The pyramidal  complex  of  Amenemhet III (1844–1797 B.C.E.), a monument named the Labyrinth that served as the mortuary temple of the pyramid, was raised on the site.  The  temple  reportedly  contained  3000  chambers related by ranging passages, shafts, and corridors on subterranean  levels.  The  burial  chamber  was  designed out of a single part of quartzite, estimated by Herodotus in Egypt c. 450 B.C.E., as weighing different tons.

The  Labyrinth  had  twelve  covered  courts,  facing  south and north. Herodotus toured the upper and lower levels and named the complex. All of the walls were decorated with reliefs, and white marble columns were used throughout. No causeway or valley temple was erected. Sobekneferu (1787–1783  B.C.E.),  a  manageable  daughter  of Amenemhet  III,  completed  the  pyramid  for  her  father. Little rests of the structure. A nearby necropolis contained wax portraits and tombs dating to the later Greco-Roman Periods.

Hawara is the place of the massive pyramid of Amenemhat III, a twelve Dynasty (Middle Kingdom, 1204–1604 B.C.E.) pharaoh. The complex  was  knew in ancient times for its great labyrinth, a temple complex peripheral the pyramid, described by ancient travelers as a vast, obscure maze of streets and buildings.  According to legend, it inspired Dedalus  to create the labyrinth of Crete.  Among other things, the Hawara labyrinth was the location of a temple to Sobek, the feared  local crocodile deity.  

Hawara was also a necropolis – nowadays famous for its strikingly realistic funerary portraits.  Funerals were apparently a major business in Hawara, and most of the people involved in the takes in this case were connected to this industry.  Calling themselves “god’s sealants and embalmers,” they owned parts in the necropolis  of Hawara and nearby burial grounds, these parts were, in fact, transferable, just like real property.

El-Lahun (Kahun)

cartouche of Senusret II,
beside the pyramid of
Senusret II
A community structure at El-Lahun, started by Senwosret II (1897–1878  B.C.E.)  of  the Dynasty 12 (1991–1783 B.C.E.), Kahun was the abode of the workers  and  artisans  involved  in  royal  mortuary  monuments.  The  site  was  involved  by  a  gated  mud-brick wall and widespread into three residential areas. A temple of Anubis was also found on the site, and a cache of varied papyri was  discovered  in  the  temple. Named  Hotep-Senwosret, “Senwosret Is Satisfied,” and placed at the opening of the Faiyum, the site is known for a cache of jewelry discovered  in  the  tombs  of  Princess  (or  perhaps  queen) Sithathor Yunet and  other  family  members  sunk  in  the complex.

The place was divided into 3 sections, including a necropolis area for nobles and officials and a residential area on the eastern and on the west. Vast garners served the entire region. The treasury of papyri at Kahun disciplined hundreds of texts concerning legal matters, literature,  mathematics,  medicine,  temple  affairs,  and  vet  information.  The  site  was  abandoned  abruptly in a afterwards historical period, perhaps as a result of an quake or some other natural disaster.

El-Lisht

Pyramid of Amenemhet I at El-Lisht
Lisht or El-Lisht is an Egyptian village placed south of Cairo. It is the site of Middle Kingdom royal and elite burials, including two pyramids built by Amenemhat I and Senusret I. The two main pyramids were surrounded by smaller pyramids of extremities of the royal family, and many mastaba graves of high officials and their family members. They were constructed throughout the Twelfth and Thirteenth Dynasties. The site is likewise known for the tomb of Senebtisi, found carefree and from which a set of jewelry has been recovered. The pyramid complex of Senusret I is the best preserved from this period. The coffins in the grave of Sesenebnef present the earliest versions of the Book of the Dead.

The ancient Egyptian site of el-Lisht can be base on the west bank of the Nile River, around 65 km south of the city of Cairo. It is a Twelfth Dynasty necropolis, close to the metropolis of Itj-Tawy.

The Eleventh Dynasty’s capital was located at the city of Thebes. The first king of the Twelfth Dynasty, Amenemhet I, went the capital from Thebes to a city close el-Lisht called Itj-tawy, because it was close to the mouth of the Fayyum, and well placed to control the 'Two Lands' of Upper and Lower Egypt.Another motive advised is land renewal and desire to increase the agricultural output for the area. The ruins of Itj-Tawy have never been conclusively placed, and the only locational prove discovered consists of pieces of clayware in the area it is thought to be in. However, Twelfth Dynasty rulers established pyramids at el-Lisht which are knew to researchers.

El-Lisht is the necropolis of the first two rulers of Dynasty Twelve, Amenemhet I and his son and successor Senusret I. These pyramids would have been open to those traveling to Itj-Tawy from the south. The more known of the two monumental complexes, that of Amenemhat I, featured an offer hall with a granite altar, carved with pictures of examples of the nomes (provinces) bringing offers to the pharaoh. However, the pyramid itself is in a sunk state, rising approximately 20 meter above ground level.

Tombs of El-Lisht:

Pyramid of Senusret I
Tomb of Senewosret-Ankh
Tomb of a certain Senusret, shaft of Hapy, found untouched
Tomb of Intef (?)
French tomb
Tomb of Imhotep
Tomb of Mentuhotep
Tomb, South-Khor A
Tomb, South-Khor B
Tomb A in South area
Tomb of Djehuty
Tomb of Ipi
Tomb D in South area
Tomb E in South area
Tomb of Sehetepibreankh
Pyramid of Amenemhat I
Tomb 384 of Rehuerdjersen
Tomb 400 of Intefiqer
Tomb 470 of Senimeru
Tomb 493 of Nakht
Tomb 758 of Senusret, shaft with undisturbed tomb of Senebtisi
Tomb 954
Tomb 956

Crocodilopolis

Crocodilopolis is an ancient  Egyptian  site,  originally named Shedet, then Arsinoe, and now Medinet el-Faiyum. A custom states that AHA (King Menes; 2920 B.C.E.) established Crocodilopolis.  The  city  attended  as  the  capital  of  the Faiyum and was the cultic center for the crocodile deity Sobek. An agricultural central watered by the Bahr Yusef (the  Joseph  River,  rewarding  a  local  hero  of  Islam),  the city also had a shrine honoring the goddess Renenet. A temple discovered on this site sees to the reign of Amenemhet III (1844–1797  B.C.E.),  but  it  was  probably  complete  by  him,  having  been  started  by  King Senwosret I (1971–1926 B.C.E.). There is some speculation that the red granite  Obelisk at  Abgig was  once  part  of  this  temple. Ramses II (1290–1224 B.C.E.) restored the temple of Sobek. During the Ptolemaic Period (304–30 B.C.E.), the city  was  named  for  Queen  Arsinoe and  served  as  an important cultic center for Sobek. Visitors to the city fed crocodiles  raised  there.  There  were  several  mines  in the field of Crocodilopolis, exploited throughout Egypt’s history. The site also had a sacred lake and baths.

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