The Complete Story Of The Ancient Egyptians In 4 Hours | Immortal Egypt

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Odyssey - Ancient History Documentaries
Egypt is home to one of the world's earliest civilizations, with its earliest settlements in norther...
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if you love ancient history then this is the channel for you history hit TV it's like Netflix but dedicated just to add free history documentaries including a huge library of ancient history content from the ninth Legion to buddika to the first Britain simply check out the details in the description below and make sure you use code Odyssey on sign up [Music] C get [Laughter] up this is brilliant this is obviously an iconic image taking a camel ride by the pyramids surely it encapsulates the spirit of Egypt but such an image is completely misleading because there
weren't any camels here when the pyramids were built 4 and a half thousand years ago and that's the thing ancient Egypt is instantly recognizable but all too often completely misunderstood so I'm going to try and change that good luck the Great Pyramid of Giza final resting place of King kufu over 140 M from bottom to top no wonder it still pulls in the crowds and the occasional egyptologist well here it's hard to really get it into words but we are now entering into the depths of this iconic Monument of ancient Egypt it's a very busy
iconic Monument though so here and as we set foot on this journey upwards it's a brilliant metaphor for the way that the ancient Egyptian civilization literally rose up from the Earth to a real Zenith so come with me and I'll show you something really brilliant because the pyramids are really only the tip of the [Music] iceberg oh oh flipping out so all this was a a big city capital overwhelming size that is absolutely superb in this series I'm going to explore the story of what I consider to be the world's greatest civilization more than 4,000
years of history that has shaped our world and left unmistakable marks that can still be read today I'll be looking into every nook and cranny from little known tombs it's staggering I've never ever been into a tomb quite like this before to the hidden corners of vast monuments it's like being on top of the world isn't it now we are in the top of [Music] K so it's really no surprise that weird and wonderful theories about ancient Egypt crop up all the time but what I find so amazing is that this most intrigu leing civilization
was actually created by people not so very different from you and me and that's the story I want to tell a story full of secret treasures dark deeds and sometimes controversial theories this mask was originally made for someone else and for the first time I'll be piecing it all together from the earliest Egyptians to the last of the Pharaohs wow look at that look at that oh that is oh that is so beautiful welcome to my story of ancient Egypt [Music] the big question is how did ancient Egypt begin where did the first Egyptians and
their extraordinary culture come [Music] from this Immortal civilization was thousands of years in the making so to pull it all together is a daunting task but bear with me as it's utterly fascinating but we won't begin with massive monuments but with some enigmatic Clues you could easily [Music] miss this is certa around 100 km south of Lua unless you're an archaeologist you almost certainly won't have heard of it because there are aren't any great temples or Royal tombs to admire but high in the cliffs you can see real signs of ancient life here thousands of
years before the pyramids and this is where our Story begins welcome to ca Joan thank you so much for letting me come here it's incredibly exciting it's the first time you're here I suppose nothing escapes the sharp eye of Dr Dirk Hyer and he's got something very special to show me not many people have been here before you because it's it's a quite recent discovery these carvings in the Rock reveal an amazing story about the beginnings of Egyptian life it's a 19,000 year old picture gallery [Music] complete with its own hippo back line very short
tail IND legs belly line front legs and uh the mouth is sh hippo is smiling but then again an hippo is always smiling but another type of animal is by far the most common here that's that's cattle ah it's not not just cattle is the Mighty orox the wild Buffett wild cattle and extremely powerful images that seem to be in movement they are the charging down to wers aren't they these wild orox were ancestors of the domestic cow and nearly 20,000 years ago beef was the main thing on the menu about maybe 50% of their
diet was composed of orox so they were experts and Masters in representing this [Music] animal it's always high on the cliff very prominent positions that give an excellent Panorama over what must have been in the paleolitic de hunting grounds of the people it's easy to picture these early hunters here as they track their prey [Music] but the landscape would have looked very different from today because back then this was Savannah grassland a green and fertile [Music] region do we have any idea why these creatures were engraved on these rocks here we can guess Joan but
we don't know maybe they wanted to influence the hunting maybe this is some sort of hunting [Music] magic it really is magical to sit here and imagine Egypt's earliest nomadic people passing right through this spot and portraying on these very rocks the animals that they saw all around them human figures and boats join the animals as the carv ings became stranger and stranger but these carvings are also the earliest glimpse of the amazing things to come these are the first signs of what makes ancient Egypt well ancient Egypt as for its ancient landscape this evolved
under dramatic circumstances 10,000 years ago gravity tilted the entire Earth of its axis by about half a degree and this had a profound effect on climate and as the world began to change Egypt would never be the same again now these early people were Nomads seasonally mobile pastoralists who moved around following the summer rains and these rains really were the vital life-bringing force which created The Greenery on which wild animals depended but of course with climate change these rains began to dry up okay you can cut the rain the diminishing rainfall forced both animals and
people towards large lakes which formed during the rainy season one such area is nabta pla 100 km Southwest of a swam and here these nomadic Hunters began to settle into communities but still reliant on the annual summer rains they needed to predict exactly when these would return and so they turned to the night sky welcome to the beginning of time quite literally because this is Egypt's oldest calendar at around 7,000 years old this Stone Circle from NAB tolia is the earliest evidence of how Egyptian weather forecasters became astronomers they aligned its Central stones to the
circumpolar Stars visible in the night sky all year round when the sun appeared directly overhead the stones cast no Shadow the midsummer r were approaching this meant that the animals would drink the plants would grow and the world would survive for another year so in many ways this circle represents the solution to the very real problem of survival but the Egyptians would take this a step further I think the really great thing about these mini Monumental markers is that this is the earliest example we we have of the way in which the Egyptians are aligning
their monuments to various things to the sky to the cardinal points and from now on every tomb every Temple every monument will be aligned to the Heavens to the very Gods [Music] themselves if the stars and the rain were this closely linked then this world and the next must be one and the same [Music] now this has been described as Egypt's earliest sculptured stone monument and dates from around 5,000 BC this chunk of sandstone was quarried over a mile away from where it was eventually discovered this certainly suggests a kind of sense of community where
people were already working together to achieve a desired aim in this case the stone was hauled into place and then there are clear signs that it's been sculpted into a specific shape now you might have to go with me on this but some believe that this is in fact a cow with its large hindquarters and this sculptured head now the cow was a vital part of everyday life for these people it was a source of meat of milk and of blood key sources of protein they needed to keep them healthy and yet so important was
the cow they chose to take it through into the Afterlife with them to sustain them on a spiritual level and this is the very beginnings of the great cow goddess [Music] hathor hathor may have started off as a source of milk and meat but eventually she would Bel loved and idolized by millions of Egyptians since she represented love joy Beauty and motherhood and although Her Image develops from a lifelike animal to a female face with cow's ears this may be hathor's very earliest [Music] Incarnation yet hathor is only one of a multitude of gods and
goddesses the Egyptians just couldn't get enough of them over the centuries emerged hundreds if not thousands of deities each with a specific purpose and appearance some came in human form some had animal heads they could be male female even androgynous it seems that there were few aspects of life that didn't have their own Gods we know that in the very earliest times their gods resembled familiar things the world around them elements of nature and certainly animals and over time the animals their forms their shapes their characteristics were distilled down into this sort of divine figure
each one worshiped for a different quality in the case of the ram they were worshiped for their procreative powers in The Case of the Cal they nurturing motherly instincts then of course you ' got rather different creatures the dangerous creatures the ones that lived on the edges of the Egyptian world the Lions the crocodiles the [Music] jackles but it wasn't just about finding the appropriate Divinity it was about gaining power over them the goddess seet was a ferocious lioness and the bringer of death to humans so the Egyptians transformed her into a day as a
way of controlling her destructive Powers by worshiping segment it was believed that she could be plated and transformed into a more benign deity on so many levels the Egyptians were trying to tap into nature to affect the way that nature then in turn affected [Music] them in many ways Egypt's unique religion was the glue that hell Society together uniting the population and underpinning almost every aspect of life it's everywhere in tombs in temples in everyday life and yet there is another even more fundamental element without which ancient Egypt would never have existed at all [Music]
later Greek historians famously observed that Egypt was the gift of the Nile and how right they were because as the climate continued to change the desert Lakes eventually dried up leaving the Egyptians with just one source of water this is an incredibly special place located in modern Sudan it nonetheless forms the very source of Egypt for it's the place where two great rivers meet the White Nile and the Blue Nile which combine here to form the world's longest river flowing from the heart of Africa and out into the Mediterranean Sea for much of the year
the wide lazy White Nile is the main source of water until annual rainfall in the Ethiopian Highlands swells the faster flowing Blue Nile today the modern Aswan dams hold back these flood waters but until the 20th century huge volumes of water and fertile silt surged down river to flood the entire Nile Valley bringing life life and fertility to the desert that is [Music] Egypt this annual Nile flood was the single most important event in the lives of every ancient Egyptian for its life-giving Waters brought the nutrients and minerals which enrich the soil all along its
banks and this allowed agriculture to flourish Egypt is blessed with some of the most fertile land in the world where farmers can grow everything from sweet corn and garlic to bananas sugar cane and cotton bada it's quite intensive farming isn't it the land gives the people a lot doesn't it yes but we need to give the land also rest we grow one time and we leave it for 1 month then after we use the land again to grow again that's amazing that it only needs one month rest time and then it can be planted again
yeah sometime 15 days sometime one month but it really does emphasize that this land of Egypt has always been so rich and so giving to the people it's always given the people everything they need and it's the Nile that turned this desert land into a [Music] paradise and 7,000 years ago the people who could no longer survive in an increasingly desert landscape were forced to migrate towards it as their only source of water so ancient Egypt took shape as these people came together along the banks of the Nile in the north settlements clustered around the
Delta and the fom and in the South around the Kenna Bend this was the beginning of Egypt's so-called two lands Upper and Lower Egypt which developed into two distinct [Music] cultures but what they both had in common common was the astonishing fertility replenished every year by the miracle of the [Music] Nile elcab located to the south of the kend is one of upper Egypt's earliest settlements and while it may lack the wow factor of the pyramids it's actually far more revealing to see traces of this amazing Evolution because he here we can see how a
nomadic lifestyle was soon replaced by settled social structure and although it was a slow and gradual process archaeologist Elizabeth Hart can identify each stage of this transformation sending L into small pits wow you do work in an endclass space but it's much cooler down here it's lovely actually so down at at this level we have sterile soil where nobody lived and then starting around 4200 BC are layers of silt from the N flood followed by wind accumulated sand and then another layer of silt and then more sand and here you can see it really well
a thin silt layer from the Nile coming up and flooding and then the sand and over here we have a hear feature so this tells us that humans were actually living on these and coming into the Nile Valley and then moving back out and we also found lots of pot shirts and stone tools in these layers you know it might be a small space but you've got people's real lives unfolding within it aren't you and we have thousands of years of it here when we started people were just moving into the Nile Valley they were
just starting to farm and by the end here we have pharaohs and a whole United Egypt it's really impressive when you think about all the change that happened over this chunk of sand although we are still centuries away from the grand fonic monuments you can still find traces of the lives these ancient people lived if you look hard enough for very little has survived except for tons of pottery yeah this one is uh yeah so it's 5,000 years old so it's 5,000 years old they're also tactile these things aren they these pots help us to
identify when this early Society began to produce a food Sur Surplus a pivotal transition which required robust Pottery for the storage of large scale food and drink production these bread molds from slightly later are one of the most common finds so you heat the mold then the do gets into into it and by the heat of the mold the this the bake the bread will be will be baked but this comes in massive amounts these are the beer jars ah bre beer Egyptian Staples oh nice scer beard jar this is the nuts and bolts of
how Egyptian chronology all came together in the early days isn't it yes the potery is especially fundamental to understand how people were [Music] living yet in Egypt living was only half the story because what really sets the ancient Egyptians of part is their view of death to them death wasn't the end of life but a new beginning a transformation from the world of the living into an everlasting afterlife and such a belief would shape Egypt's most mysterious practice and my favorite subject mumification although the origins of this enigmatic tradition are only now becoming clearer the
burial of their dead had a strong significance from the very earliest times this is a typical burial from around 3,400 BC the body is curled into the fetal position and here placed within a reconstru constructed pit grave surrounded by the belongings he might have had in his Earthly life like Pottery jewelry and a pallette for preparing Cosmetics everything that was important to him in life accompanied him into death and I think that's quite significant because it shows that already 5 and a half thousand years ago the Egyptians wanted to take it all with them they
clearly believed that something happened Beyond Death death was simply a transition into another state of existence when you continued to live and it was assumed you would need everything you'd needed in your life on Earth his body was naturally mummified in the hot desert sand but its placement here may not have been accidental because even when dead the body had to be preserved in order to house the soul for eternity a skeleton simply wasn't good enough skeletons bones they are very very Anonymous And yet when the soft tissue the skin the hair is all present
we are ourselves and that's exactly what this individual represents being face to face with one of the very earliest Egyptians gives us insight into the development of their ideas about the afterlife it started off as a practical thing burying the dead in a relatively small space bundled up and then it developed these layers of kind of like the symbolism the Fatal position this idea in rebirth into the next world it's almost like the seed from which the Egyptian ferary belief system evolved this is the very beginning of a process which would be repeated a millionfold
throughout Egyptian history it's this combination of the esoteric on underpinned by the Practical which really does sum up the Egyptians in a nutshell from the very beginning the Egyptians were masters of making sense of their world no matter how complex and mystifying it might seem to [Applause] us and this same ability to bring order is also found in the way they structured their early Society adopting levels of bureaucracy that border on the obsessive in the ancient city of abidos the site of Egypt's first Royal burial ground archaeologists found the origins of a system that we
still have to put up with [Music] today it's most fitting that this city of death was the fine spot of the earliest means of calculating that other great certainty taxes the evidence comes from small bone and ivory labels like these which have been dated to around 3250 BC the originals are probably the size of of a postage stamp and you can see that each one is engraved with images of animals of birds of plants and so forth and each one is pierced for suspension to a chest or Pottery vessel which would have contained oil linen
grain and it's thought that these symbols represent the regions that produce these Commodities which were then brought here to abide us thought to have been sent as tax payments these tiny labels show how these early people were already capable of collecting duties from a vast geographical area some experts even believe these symbols can be vocalized by turning the simple drawings into sounds makes this the world's earliest known writing Now isn't it interesting that the world's earliest writing wasn't developed to express some great outpouring of emotion or Express Grand Passion it was simply a means of
calculating taxes these symbols soon became a sophisticated writing system of elegant signs we call hieroglyphs which which means sacred carvings and these signs represented every aspect of the Egyptian World which were only translated in 1822 with the discovery of the Rosetta [Music] Stone and a common language was needed as goods were transported between the two lands of Upper and Lower Egypt the people of Lower Egypt had also developed trade links with the rest of the anci ient world but as more warlike regions began to emerge in Upper Egypt it soon became clear that the Nile
had spawned two very different and distinctive cultures and in many ways the only thing they really had in common was this Great [Music] River the inevitable clash between these cultures is recorded on what many consider to be ancient Egypt's founding document taking the form of a giant ceremonial cosmetic palet this is an exact copy of the original n pallet and however idealized and embellished it depicts the pivotal moment when the southern King Nama defeated his Northern enemy a split second after this mace comes down onto this Northern enemy's head and he's executed he's killed he
is no more Nama himself Remains the first king of a United Egypt and what this means is that the whole of the country is now United under one man's rule he is setting himself up quite literally as the god king as the one central figure at the very Pinnacle of the pyramid that forms Egyptian society and from him everything else flow Egypt is now the world's first nation [Music] state what made ancient Egypt ancient Egypt is all here the art forms the forms of religion and even the world's first writing hieroglyphic script this is the
name of Nama the catfish n and the Chisel M N M striking catfish as the first king of Egypt Nama is protected by the cow goddess hathor stands beside Horus the fulcon god of kingship and is dressed in all the same paraphernalia as every King who succeeds him he has the tyion false beard to emphasize his virility and his strength and this is matched of course by the tyion Bull's taale It's a Wonderful feature this idea you could just tie a little tail onto the back of the belt and then take into yourself the power
of a bull this pallet is Egypt's earliest historical document it's the blueprint of how every future Pharaoh will be portrayed in the company of the Gods yet Perhaps most significant is nus smiting pose this powerful image with the mace held high will be endlessly repeated throughout Egypt's long history this is a horrible way to die to have your brains bludgeoned out and yet even this the Egyptian artist can show in an almost ballet like pose it's been sanitized it's been elevated to a piece of art and yet the message still gets through for the next
3,000 years every one of Egypt subsequent rulers would try and Link themselves to Egypt's first pharaoh to rule legitimately and successfully they had to be absorbed into the complexities of the Egyptian hierarchy both in this world and the next so their names were recorded on a series of King lists a kind of royal family tree and the best preserved of these is here in the temple of seti the first at abidos it lists himself in 75 of his Royal predecessors going right back to the very dawn of Egyptian history with the very first king up
there King Nama and the other important detail about this is that it's essentially emphasizing that Royal continuity because seti has his own young son Ramsey the Crown Prince actually reading out these names on a p piece of Papyrus paper so it's as if seti is saying to the gods look I'm now pharaoh and this is my son who succeed me to become yet another name on this remarkable list in all Egypt had over 300 pharaohs organized into 30 dynasties but in the case of Egypt's earliest Kings being merely mortal was not enough they needed to
prove their it by exercising absolute control over their subjects and the evidence for this was found in the desolate desert surrounding the ancient city of [Music] abidos this was Egypt's first first Royal burial ground the original version of the Valley of the Kings now being here you get a real sense of the importance of this place for the ancient Egyptians for as the wind funnels down this Valley and swirls around the sand if you listen very carefully you can hear a whispering sound a whispering once thought to be the voices the very dead themselves and
here Egypt's earliest Kings were laid to rest within huge Subterranean burial Chambers like this the location of the final resting place of Egypt's thirdd pharaoh King jur one of the largest and most complex tombs of the first dynasty and although it's been recovered in sand it clearly demonstrates the power that jur still wielded even in death jur himself was buried here in the central chamber but all around the 318 subsidiary Graves of his courtiers not only that a little Way Beyond many other others were also buried in total 587 individuals accompanied this man into the
next World which is incredible enough but there is evidence of a more Sinister twist the fact that this tomb was all sealed over at the same time suggests these people may have been victims of ritual sacrifice perhaps even ritual stabbing as portrayed in art of the time and certainly that power over life and death would give any King a Godlike status now later Kings seem to have realized that killing all their cers in one go was not the best use of people who were a precious State resource after all who'll be around to make the
next king his cup of tea although the cruel and shortsighted practice of ritual killing soon died out it had nonetheless demonstrated that Egypt's rulers had complete control over their subjects an essential step along the Route towards building the pyramids and indeed Egypt itself welcome welcome yet the Egyptian people were not Slaves by this time Egypt was a Land of Plenty where all could enjoy its Bounty both in life and in death this is the later tomb of an official called uar and here he is greeting as he's coming to the door of his own tomb
emerging from the walls captured in all his Splendor with his finery on his Jewel belt and his white linen Kilt even details down to his little sort of mustache looks a little bit like clar Gable to be honest the scenes in his colorful tomb depict a refined life that's a world away from Egypt's earliest Farmers we have ukat seated in front of a table of food offerings as's fruit vegetables wine and so forth the bearers are coming forward with offerings to sustain his soul ukat was the royal butcher an important member of court and with
royal courtiers no longer sacrificed for burial with their King they could now make their own elaborate preparations for the afterlife there are a couple of scenes up here of the household servants making the beds of ukata and his family they're stretching out the linen sheets they're bringing even a little fly my whisk and the ancient Egyptian pillow the headrest there so even in the afterlife ukat will be comfortable iar's tomb is in Sakara a sprawling City of the Dead for Egypt's First Capital Memphis yet Sakara wasn't just the burial sight of courtiers but of Kings
and the sight of a revolution in Royal tomb [Music] building and whereas previously the dead had tended to be buried away in the desert hidden away almost here at Sakara high on the desert escarment the dead were literally placed on display up to this point the Egyptians attended to build their tombs and temples like their houses from organic materials from the mud brick wood and reads which rarely survive but in the third Dynasty the great innovator King joser built his legacy in something far more permanent for he built in stone which could potentially last forever
joser built this huge stone wall to surround his tomb complex although his Architects and workmen still Drew their inspiration from the natural world you can see that the Masons are just trying to get their head around how to actually work with this stuff what forms to put it in so we have Egypt's first hyper style Hall of columns sure but it's taking the form of reads bound together to make the kind of columns that would have been in Joseph's Palace down by the Nile but this of course is a house for death this is a
palace of Eternity and must be built in something a so stone at the rear of his complex is an Intriguing Stone Shrine where I can come face to face with King joser himself the shrine looks like it's suffering a severe case of subsidence and yet the Egyptians purposefully built it on this very definite t built it has these two holes here where Modern tourists can see Jos but josa can see them he can actually see beyond them because this face is True North it faces the northern Stars which the Egyptians call the imperishable ones and
so at death josea Soul could rise up and merge with these Stars so he too would be imperishable and he too would never die in order to ensure that his soul could live on Jose's body needed somewhere safe to rest within a tomb truly Fit For A King most burials were topped by a simple single story building called a maaba meaning bench but josa did something radical Jos really wanted to impress with his funerary Monument so another step was built on top I think josph must have quite liked the effect that this gave and so
built a third step a fourth step a fifth step sixth step when they stood back and looked they realized they'd built Egypt's first pyramid pretty impressive the step pyramid stands over 60 M tall and still dominates the Sakara landscape at the time it was the largest building on earth reinforcing Joseph's status as a living God in the grandest of ways it certainly secured his place in Egyptian history with ancient visitors flocking here to Marvel at his achievements now jza had cre created a true Landmark but it also created Egypt's first tourist attraction if you come
with me I'll show you the evidence because in here we have what many tourists still leave today appreciative graffiti and this is the original handwriting of a couple of ancient visitors from around 1300 BC who were so impressed by what they saw they described Jose's pyramid as If Heaven were in it and they C joser we've been the inventor of stone but why did josa build this was it just an ego trip or an exercise in personal vanity or was it designed to show the world just how far Egypt had come because in only a
few centuries these desperate people had come together to create the world's first nation [Music] state Egypt was now an Unstoppable Powerhouse a nation unified both politically and culturally under a single ruler whose authority was Limitless yet it wasn't just the king who could achieve immortality for the man who designed and built Joseph pyramid was destined to become even more famous than the Pharaoh he had [Music] served this statue base once held a full-sized figure of King joser but carved into its base is also the name of his architect and here we can see it with
this re The Owl and then the little mat with a little bread loaf on which reads IM hotep and here he is the man himself although most likely a commoner by birth imotep Rose through the ranks to become one of Egypt's most powerful officials he was made the Royal Chancellor the Prime Minister he was even made high priest of the Sun God he was the ultimate local Boy made good because he then gained a reputation as an academic as a great healer and he was famous the length and breadth of Egypt he was ultimately woried
as a god IM hotep represents the ultimate in Social Mobility a kind which was certainly possible within Egypt's unique [Music] Society this was a society in which ideas were often taken to extremes with 1 and a half million people United by an absolute belief in the power of their King and in the certainty of the afterlife Egypt enters its most ambitious era so far the pyramid age over 130 pyramids would be built across Egypt and they represent the Zenith in Royal tomb building huge state sponsored engineering projects that used vast resources of materials Manpower and
[Music] time the largest of all the Great Pyramid of King kufu which took over 20 years to build and in order to build something so ambitious and entire city was created specifically to house the construction workers just beyond this Monumental wall it's known as the wall of The Crow and it separated the silent Sacred Space of the Dead from the busy bustling city of the pyramid builders [Music] this 5 hectare site once housed workshops bakeries a tool making facility and a fish processing area for this was an integrated self-sufficient community of over 8,000 people who
even had their own Medical [Music] Care anthropological archaeologist Dr Richard reading has been Excavating the site since 1991 where we are now this is kind of a big Workshop big industrial park where there's lots of activity going on out here they're probably producing Granite statue maybe Granite columns we find tools out here for polishing the uh Granite we find tools out here for uh chipping at the granite it's very well planned we have three streets we have North Street Main Street we're on and we have South Street down there so we're walking down Main Street
we're walking down Main stre Street the pyramid workers live cheap by Jou in twostory Barracks you would have walked in you would have been in a very quiet dark long narrow room um this is where they would have slept um there would have been a uh a higher bed for the overseer at each end and then everybody would have laid down probably with their head in this direction or the other direction exactly like this he would be lying here like this and and this would be your your nighttime position very comfortable can I can I
try out the overseer bed sure you want to try out the overseer's bed there delusions of grander is it this one or that one yeah it's that's the that's the wall the right where you are is oh so this is all right so if I if I sat down here yeah the overseers bed is actually buried under a few centimeters of sand and the floor here was probably under about a half meter of sand so oh this is nice yeah I keep my eye on you now that's right you could see me if I got
up in the night and I tried to sneak out to go someplace you would see me everything the workers needed was here on site the team have recovered data that shows that workers consumed 74 cattle and 257 sheep and goats each week this Corral area could hold a week's supply of cattle before more was shipped in from Egypt's grasslands you could have almost just in time delivery coming down another small herd coming down from KL hen or the Delta coming down and in it's a really well old machine you can see now how efficient the
Egyptians were obtaining their food bringing it to the right place at the right time for the right people it's brilliant it's absolutely brilliant it wasn't just simply the food it was everything there was the copper to make tools there was the stone being brought in here from Aswan and other areas so a lot of things were coming into here these were government workers they got everything from the government in many ways this settlement is Egypt in microcosm a highly order social structure with job specialization and mass cooperation it's hard to believe that in a relatively
short period of time Egypt had been transformed from simple subsistence into a United State which could provide for everyone who worked on its behalf what we're seeing here is the final building block in Egyptian culture but not just for the pyramid age for once this infrastructure was in place it would never change so whether they're building a pyramid or setting up a colossal statue the level of organization and cooperation would remain the same but this was the foundation stone of [Music] Egypt the pyramids are Eternal Testament to just how powerful Egypt had now now become
and in many ways they are Egypt at this time dominating everything around them on a gigantic scale and towering above the Giza landscape is the Great [Music] Pyramid it took around 20,000 people to set in place the 2 .3 million blocks of limestone it remained the tallest structure anywhere in the world for 3,800 years until the building of Lincoln Cathedral Spire in 1300 ad it's a phenomenal achievement for any civilization at any time but for me its exterior can't compare to the sense of wonder once you venture inside the roof of the grand Gallery passageway
is built of multiple layers of enormous Limestone slabs rising over 8 m High massive massive blocks of masonry built on a Godlike scale that's surely what kufu wanted I sincerely hope kuf Fu's Eternal resting place was rather less congested than it is today but it still gives a real atmosphere of the business that must have been here on a daily basis these guys were hully massive massive blocks hundreds of feet up literally into the air these guys were magicians just look how brilliantly these courses have been laid these are perfect and if I any modern
architect to be able to replicate this using the tools that the Ancients had at their disposal [Music] wow here we are at the Zenith we're at the heart of the pyramid now King kuo's burial chamber and we've hit it exactly the right moment because the pyramid is closed for lunch so we've got the whole place to ourselves and you really get a sense of the sanctity of this divine mosum the walls and roof of the burial chamber are lined entirely in Granite and it was within here that the body of the great king kufu was
sealed ready for his final journey into the Afterlife at the heart of the pyramid in terms of its architecture but we're literally in the heart of ancient Egypt I feel like I should be speaking in a whisper because the Acoustics are so extraordinary it's a a sterile plain Stark room it's pretty much like a bank vault and when you think about it that's exactly what it is because it once contained Egypt's greatest treasure the mummified body of the god king which contained the soul not only of kufu but of all the gener gener ations of
pharaohs stretching way back to King Nama forget the jewels forget the gold Egypt's real treasure was in here and it's the first time I've ever been in here without crowds and crowds of other people and speaking now the sound of the voice reverberating around immediately takes you back 4 and a half thousand years to the day of the funeral to the sacred words the priest would have chanted to revive the soul of the god king it's miraculous It's a Wonderful spectacular place that affects every sense visually audibly in every sense it's it's beyond words really
I think I probably better stop talking now so now all the elements that made of ancient Egypt were in place a wellfed highly organized population that unswervingly followed their god king and all of whom shared this fervent belief in an afterlife life in Egypt was good with its Mighty pharaohs multiple gods and magnificent art it's easy to think that ancient Egypt was always powerful and successful but there were also darker times conflict Civil War famine and an overall feeling of catastrophe and the only way it could survive was through its own resilience and the strongest
of leadership now this is costus III who ruled Egypt almost 4,000 years ago he's strong and he's muscular everything a pharaoh should be and yet look at his face his scowling features have been interpreted to suggest his harsh Rule and his large ears his ability to hear any plots against him costerus embodies the way Egypt's monarchs ruled during its turbulent times this King controlled his enemies through a series of military fortresses and through magical curses but this is a new era in Egypt's history not only ruled by military power but by fear and suspicion and
Egypt's darkest times threatened to destroy its entire civilization I've already explored how Egypt's ancient culture began thousands of years earlier blessed by the River Nile and a rich natural environment and a society United by a complex [Music] ideology but in this episode we'll see how the massive self-confidence of the pyramid age was not to last as a Dark Age brought this civilization to the brink of annihilation make no mistake this is the home of the dead and we're in amongst them these were times of famine Civil War and Anarchy Kings have been reduced to something
on a minuscule level but this collapse triggered one of the greatest revivals of ancient times with Egypt reemerging more powerful and Wealthy than ever before welcome to my story of ancient Egypt Sakara where Egypt's Great Pyramid age began but among its glories there's also evidence of a far less well-known side to Egypt's story its descent into a Dark Age the Zenith of Egypt's Old Kingdom was the great pyramid at Giza and only 200 years later King unas Causeway was created it might not look much today but it's the highlight of unas pyramid complex a 750
m Long Causeway which symbolically connected life and [Music] death it goes right from the Nile Valley all the way up onto the high desert Plateau right to the foot of the Pyramid of unas so it would have been used for his funeral procession but it would also have drawn up that lifegiving force from the valley below up to the city of the dead here at zakara a narrow slit in the roof once allowed enough lighting but the extraordinary thing is that this Causeway was designed for a sole purpose the King's funeral procession carved upon its
walls are scenes revealing both sides of Life the forces of order and of chaos it first portrays an idealized version of Egypt a time of Plenty here we can see typical scenes within an Egyptian temple or ferary context scenes of the rich Bounty of Egypt all the fruit the vegetables the crops the meat the fish all the wealth of the natural environment of Egypt which was all obviously brought to the land through the good offices of the king the bringer of all Bounty the intermediary with the gods but also this Causeway contained something rather more
disturbing evidence that dark Forces were at work further on down the causeway emerged a counterpart image the flip side of bounty an image so unusual it's now displayed in sakara's museum and it really is one of ancient Egypt's most haunting and revealing works of art here we see these dark Forces at work what we have are two rows of emaciated victims of famine these poor people that weat with hunger they're falling down they're suffering and this is basically ancient Egypt coming face to face with reality because these are believed to be the bedwin who inhabited
the desert fringes of Egypt so it's as if this kind of idea of suffering the forces of chaos are on the periphery of Egypt but they're getting ever closer to the Nile Valley Egypt is starting to waking up to the fact that chaos isn't all that far away this is ancient Egypt beginning to suffer such gritty realism had rarely been portrayed before chaos depicted as the suffering of real people this isn't happening in some esoteric Realm of the Gods where chaos is sort of portrayed as some sort of desperate Magical Force very detached from reality
this is reality through such realistic Imes the Egyptians were expressing their fears to the gods appealing to them to keep these forces of chaos at Bay but instead the starving famine victims would turn out to be a chilling omen up until now Egypt's Prosperity had flowed from its one source of water the River Nile whose annual floods enriched the soil allowing life and agriculture to flourish this Natural Abundance was the very Bedrock on which Egypt and its Perpetual world order was able to thrive but this lifeblood was about to run dry evidence shows that at
the end of the third millennium BC the Nile flood levels fell dramatically as the very thing that brought them life began to diminish the Egyptians believed that their gods had begun to abandon them and for the next Century the ancient texts talk of suffering starvation and even cannibalism traditionally Egyptian Society had been built on the belief in the divine power of its Kings without this belief the pyramid age would never have been possible but now in its time of need Egypt's King seemed increasingly powerless in the face of such natural disaster and this would come
to a head with a ruler who was well past his prime claimed to have lived for a 100 years he was Egypt's longest lived monarch king Pepe II and this space was once a ceremonial running track the type of place where Pepe would have to display his physical prowess to prove himself to his people now when any Pharaoh had celebrated 30 years Reign they had to perform the jubile ceremonies and this involved running the ceremonial Jubilee race four times around this circuit as King of the North four times around the circuit as King of the
South it was the ultimate public display of their Fitness to rule and their strength it really showed who was in charge of Egypt but that's where Pepe's advancing age would eventually let him down of course when Pharaoh was relatively young and fit this would have been a great celebration but in the case of poor Pepe then in his 90s it became all too clear that Pharaoh was no living God and this really undermined the whole concept of what it was to be a pharaoh clearly as mortal as his subjects any natural disaster must have seemed
the fault of this less than superhuman King and this combination of a weakening pharaoh and failing harvests led to rapid decline ancient Egypt now faced its first major political crisis for the power and apparent Divinity of the Pharaoh that had been so very important in the pyramid age had now vanished everything that bound Egyptian Society together had begun to fall away and Egypt was plunged into a Dark Age in this time of growing uncertainty when the Egyptians had lost faith in both the monarchy and statun religion they increasingly turned to the power of magic this
is a rather unsettling thing it's an ancient Egyptian mask it's almost 4,000 years old and it's made of linen covered in a thin layer of plaster and then painted predominantly black with colors picked out on various features of course the Egyptians are well known for making elaborate arrangements for their afterlife the death mask placed over the mummified body recreated the features of the Dead to make them recognizable to the gods but this mask is different it was made to be worn by the living and we know this because of the very distinctive eye holes which
you can see there and this would allow the wearer to see around them you can imagine when this was applied to the face fastened on tied on behind the head it would transform that individual into a completely different entity traces of paint on the linen reveal how it might have helped the wearer embody some form of magical being whoever wore this was going to some effort to transform their appearance to try and tap into the hidden forces of the Gods and to control the world in which they lived it's as if the Egyptian individual that
wore this was trying to take charge of their own destiny but the mask isn't the only evidence of magic for in their Dark Ages the Egyptians increasingly began to write out curses and spells on pots and figurines scrolled across one was the curse die heno son of inth a form of magic sufficiently small scale to be performed within their own homes and one of the most graphic ways they did this was to take a piece of clay or a simple pot like this one and write upon it the thing or the person that they wanted
to control they often used red ochre because red was associated with the powers of Destruction so if I was doing this I'd put on it the thing I'd want to stop which your early morning calls and alarm clocks so you've got to imagine Egyptians from all walks of life doing this the priest wanting to protect the Pharaoh the soldier in battle against an enemy or simply a hated love rival so all sorts of Egyptians could be on the receiving end of something like this and then to activate the curse they smashed the [Music] pot it
was a symbolic act to annihilate the name of the enemy and therefore to control that enemy oh that does feel better not unlike Voodoo such practices are found in many ancient cultures and Egypt was no exception but it's far from the way we imagine the formal time honored rituals of the temple led by the king at the head of the religious hierarchy this is an Egypt that's becoming more suspicious more fearful and more aware of the threats to their their world natural disasters political breakdown and foreign powers and this little wax figurine is a means
to control anyone that threatens the balanced order of Egyptian life Welcome to the age of [Music] fear the time when every element of Egypt's world view was in doubt their faith in their King in their land and even in their gods had all faltered this is one of the lowest points in Egypt's long story and its effect reverberated throughout the Nile Valley the king traditionally based in the north was no longer the source of wealth so Royal officials abandoned court and relocated back to their hometowns throughout the country disunited Egypt reverted back to how it
had been a thousand years earlier breaking up into a series of local regions called gnomes and now a new kind of leader emerges to dominate the Dark Ages no longer a single King but multiple [Music] Warlords and we know much about one of them because he left his detailed autobiography in his rockcut tomb at moala well away from the usual tourist [Music] sites his name was ank Tiffy now an tii is a smalltime official who's worked his way up through the ranks to become the regional Governor or noark as it's known and in the declining
central government the power vacuum that opens up is now filled by the antifas of this world Ani's tomb is quite modest by ancient Egyptian standards but its interior walls tell of his rise to power and egyptologist Gary Shaw is going to help me unravel an TI's story you can see the man himself ah the great man the great man carved standing there he got a great hairstyle he does that is lovely I'm liking him already yeah man Sophie has a great Tor as well the hieroglyphs and images that fill the walls reveal how antii exploited
the power vacuum at the end of the pyramid age reducing the king to nothing more than a footnote the only time you see the name of a king in the entire tomb is right here this tiny little cou it couldn't be any small look at the size of that it says neare and that's it is that it in the old tomb the old tomb the one mention of a king and just I think that really emphasizes just how important he thought he was alone he didn't need to mention the Pharaoh he didn't need to say
uh that the king told me to do this so I did this because of the king's favors he just did it himself that is extraordinary I think that cou alone of everything in the Tomb encapsulates this whole period Kings have been reduced to something on a minuscule level and the local rulers are shown on a huge scale and it's all about them isn't it an tii had enhanced his own political career and wanted to ensure the gods were in no doubt as to his importance so the elaborate language once exclusive to the King was now
part of an tiy's own boastful propaganda this warlord was an ego Maniac he also says that he's a a hero without equal without peer and you get that here I'm a hero without peer and pretty much almost every uh inscription in this tomb ends or includes this statement at some point inside and what did he do to kind of justify these claims he emphasizes all the good things he did for the people uh This was meant to be a time of of drought and famine so were told in the texts and he tried to guide
them through this he was managing it by feeding everybody and doing all sorts of good things giving bread to the hungry Ry ointment to those without ointment and sandals for those who were B fooot and wives for those without wives so it's it's basically telling us about a time of turmoil yeah but he's probably just over exaggerating because the more he exaggerates just how awful it is the more great he looks when he says well these are the nice things I did for everybody and you get this here he talks about the entire South uh
dying from Hunger oh look at that that that's a really graphic hieroglyph I love that the guy over de body he's definitely dead and but then it gets even worse though it says that every single man is eating his children he didn't allow this to happen in his gnome of course where he lived everything was fine and at the same time he's also a fantastic Warrior we're told over here inevitably how did I know that was coming yeah absolutely yeah the these texts on this particular column talk about his abilities as a warrior in his
biggest boast of all ank Tiffy The Local Hero almost claims the status of a God I am the beginning and the end of mankind since nobody like myself existed before nor will he exist in Egypt's Dark Age Warlords like antii had replaced the real kings of Egypt and an tiy's delusions of grander so vividly expressed inside his tomb are even more emphasized on the outside because he chose burial in inside a rock shaped like a natural pyramid he wanted to be the local pharaoh and in a way he was because whoever fed and protected the
people also led the people but as the power of Warlords like an tii grew so did the conflicts between them and over time as they either defeated their neighbors or formed Alliance with them two separate dynasties of warlord Kings emerged one in the north at heracleopolis where they wore the Red Crown of Lower Egypt and one in the south at thieves symbolized by the White Crown of Upper Egypt Egypt was a divided Kingdom of two lands and between them lay a war zone [Music] situated at its Center lay Egypt's most sacred site its earliest Royal
burial ground and still today an evocative and Atmospheric place this was the resting place of Egypt's First Kings whose mummified bodies were buried in elaborate burial Chambers beneath the desert floor a safe place for their souls or so they [Music] thought but hostilities between the two Waring factions were about to Plum new depths of horror with an assault so Blasphemous it would change the face of Egypt forever one of the most violent acts was recorded in later texts as the vile deed for the northern warlord Kings fighting their southern opponents here actually desecrated these Royal
tombs for their troops Set Fire to the tombs and destroyed the Royal mummies at a stroke Egypt's physical link to its ancient past was severed such an act of desecration was completely unimaginable and the Egyptian people were rightly appalled although the northern Kings deeply regretted what their troops had done the destruction was irreversible and the origins of Egypt's Royal past lost forever of course the problem with such times of Destruction is that there's very little left of them for us egyptologists to find but Clues do remain if you know what you're looking for today what's
left of the violation of this Royal burial ground is surprising thousands upon thousands of of broken pots although most are not part of the destruction itself they represent centuries of atonement for the loss of Egypt's physical connection with its past now not long after the desecration this became a place of pilgrimage where people came with little pots like this one filled with food drink incense which they offered up to the souls of the Dead Kings once buried here it was believed that at death these Souls of the Kings had joined with the soul of Osiris
god of the dead and as this place became a sight of pilgrimage it's as if the people of Egypt were trying to make amends for the desecration of the past Egypt's spiritual connection to its Royal ancestors was all it had left after the northern Warlords had destroyed their physical remains and the desecration soon provoke violent retaliation directly across the desert from abidos Le thieves the stronghold of the Southern Warlords and they would soon rise up against their Northern Rivals and attempt to resurrect Egypt as a United land [Music] back in 2000 BC thieves was a
one donkey town and yet its Warlords had two distinct advantages over other leaders they lived on a bend in the Nile called the Kenna bend a strategic control point of Rich farmland and their local God was Monto the God of [Music] War the Warlords of Thieves would reunite Egypt and one in particular came to the th his images were carved into the walls of his thean tomb complex and his name tells us much this is the thean warlord Monto hotep and there's a real clue as to what was happening at this part of Egyptian history
because his name Monto hotep means the local war god Monto is content because hotep simply means content and happy so if the war God was happy with Monto hotep this means that he was a very powerful military figure and this is a wonderful scene there are a lot of little Clues here to tell us what's going on and if you look really closely you can see Hands embracing him flanking him at his back at his front around his middle he's been embraced by the gods Chief amongst whom is monter himself and there is he's nose
to noose with the King he's giving him the breath of life and infusing him with his own divine power it was the power of Victory one that finally brought an end to Egypt's first Dark Age monotek really did live up to his name as a true son of the war God because he took his armies North he conquered the North and he reunited Egypt but best of all he's got the Red Crown on and this is the Red Crown of the north because Monto hotep is declaring to the world I might be a southerner I
might be from thieves I should be wearing the White Crown but look at me now I have the Red Crown I am the king of the North and the King of the South and I have reunited Egypt as Egypt's new king he became monah hotep II but his victory came at a high price the Grim details of what his soldiers went through can be found on th's West Bank at dear elbakry it was inside one of the tombs here that the remains of Monto hotep's warriors were uncovered in 1923 their bodies silent witnesses to Egypt's
Civil War of 4,000 years ago which careful analysis revealed in fascinating detail now the archaeologists found around 60 bodies in the Tomb and these are the original excavation photographs all of them had been naturally preserved naturally mummified in the hot dry climate so you've still got the skin and the hair and crucially evidence of how these men had fought and died some of these bodies have been pierced by arrows this one goes right into the left side of the chest others had actually been buried with these leather wrist guards that archers use 10 of the
Warriors had been killed with ebony tipped arrows but in others the wounds are even more brutal you can see here somebody's hit this man on the head with a real whack and you can see this very very graphic area of damage there and after these series of furious blows have been rained down on these poor guys they lay helpless on the field of battle their bodies picked at by vultures you can see here the Dreadful damage it's such a profound image the bodies reveal evidence of the weapons used against them as they fought for control
of [Music] Egypt arrows slingshot and even rocks had been hurled at the Warriors from above eventually their bodies were collected from the battlefield and care carefully wrapped in linen this linen bore the Insignia of the thean Tomb complex belonging to their leader Monto hotep but just as significant as the bodies themselves was where Monto hotep chose to bury his fallen heroes today the Warrior's resting place is a little known sealed tomb but 4,000 years ago monah hotep honored his dead soldiers with a burial amongst the graves of His Highest officials making them part of his
Monument to Victory the new king had created what could well be the world's first known War Cemetery now I'm lucky enough to have been given special permission to see mon hotep's soldiers for the first time these guys are going to be taking down the tomb wall for me allowing me to actually meet the very people who fought in Egypt's Civil War around 2,000 BC so I am very very excited and it was the same curiosity which drove a team of American archaeologists to excavate their original Mass grave in the first place [Music] [Music] now reburied
in a neighboring tomb the bodies of monah hotep soldiers have rarely seen the light of day since their Discovery over 90 years ago shakran M Mia now this is really really super frustrating but in the interest of health and safety I can't go in there immediately much as I really want to because all the stale airs built up as the walls being sealed and we've really got to let this out with all the fungal spores and the bacteria and everything else that's so detrimental to health early egyptologists tended to rush straight in and risk the
so-called Pharaoh's curse so a little waiting is essential I can't believe we're actually going to enter this tomb now it's it's one of those rare moments you get in a egyptological career into a tomb that's hardly ever visited the wall had to come down and who knows what we're going to find inside cuz I certainly have never seen this before so it's a very very special moment this literally wasn't a to I expected nobody knew what to expect it's staggering I've never ever been into a tomb quite like this before the mask is a very
good idea because there's all sorts of things floating around in the atmosphere in here not just the dust of Ages the dust of human beings and as such we have to be very very respectful it's a large Rock Cut tomb and although its walls are unfinished it's typical of those created for courtiers and officials throughout these [Music] Cliffs wow it's a mummified body it's absolutely incredible oh that's that's quite something and if you look along the length of this very long tomb look at the floor this isn't Stone these are human remains of mummy wrappings
and there are chambers and corridors leading off again full of wrappings the linen of Ages some of it is claimed to be the very linen that bound the bodies of monah hotep's Warriors to help preserve them for eternity but at first glance it's hard to get a clear picture for this particular tomb seems to have been reused many times during Egypt's long history part of a shoulder you see the way the Skin's folded and dried out partial human body still with much of its soft tissue intact it hits you immediately in the face and you
confronted with what a tomb is all about out make no mistake this is the home of the dead and we're in amongst them it's a very very emotive and Powerful place to be but what's striking is how little is left of their bodies like many other tombs up and down the Nile they've been subjected to centuries of looting and damage and amongst all these linen wrappings and debris and human remains themselves are the tangible remains of these men who died so bravely in their efforts to reunify Egypt for Monto hotep their leader having just come
out of that tomb a very very mixed emotions I don't really know what I was expecting to see certainly some of monah hotep's soldiers perhaps some of them were it's highly likely essentially what we're looking at are the ancient Egyptians themselves these are the ancient Egyptians temples tombs pyramids this wonderful culture it's all well and good studying these esoteric aspects that are distinct and Marvel and Grand but when it comes down to it the things we should really be interested in are these people mon hotep's reunification of Egypt marked A New Beginning the dawn of
what would become known as the Middle Kingdom and the rise of Thieves [Music] monot made it the new spiritual heart of Egypt and it would stay that way for the next 2,000 years but whereas the war god Monto had dominated the previous Century of Egypt's story The deity that now took Center Stage was hathor the goddess of love joy Beauty and motherhood the goddess whose Origins can be traced right back to the earliest of times and believing that hathor dwelt in the Cliffs of De albakry Monto hotep chose this site not only for his War
Cemetery but for his own tomb complex it was Monto hotep that first built here in this dramatic place where the cliffs meet the desert believed to be the home of the Goddess hathor herself it was a fast track to the afterlife and for Monto hotep and his men who had lived and died by the war god Monto they all now rest in the Eternal Embrace of [Music] hathor the first build at de albakry was monot the founder of a reunified Egypt he was so influential that almost 600 years later female pharaoh hat shepsut built her
own ferary Temple right next door to tap into the religious and political power of her illustrious predecessor [Music] in the Middle Kingdom Life for ordinary people was on the up food was plentiful wealth and trade [Music] flourished and farming was revitalized with new irrigation systems yet the Dark Age had nonetheless left its mark on the Egyptian mindset as revealed in the way they prepared for the afterlife in the Old Kingdom tomb walls were often covered in elaborate scenes and texts replicating an idealized version of the Egyptian world but in the Dark Ages people had seen
their sacred SES ripped apart so instead of such Tom art many in the Middle Kingdom opted for its cheaper equivalent with something much smaller and much more [Music] intimate while these may look like children's toys they were in fact made nearly 4,000 years ago to be placed inside Egyptian burials now these wooden models were designed to provide the deceased with an eternal supply of food and drink in the next World and so we have all the basics here the Egyptian Staples of bread beer and beef so we have the Bakers at this end and they're
grinding the grain to make flour which will then be made into the bread loaves that are cooked in this fire and the the baker is in front there the arms are quite damaged but presumably shielding his face from the heat as We Know from other examples move to the middle and we have the butcher here and he's cutting the throat of this ox and the legs are bound here to keep the animal in situe while the deed is done and then we move on to the end and we have the Brewer this is a fabulous
fabulous example because he's pushing the mash through a Sie and the cves even being drawn on there on the top actually in proportion with the rest of it this individuals ordered rather more beer than either bread or beef um because this section of the model is almost half its length but you can see the Vats of beer carefully laid on their side it's a wonderfully evocative piece these people have been working for 4,000 years they're still at it look at them the key elements of Egyptian culture were back and they look little different from times
of Plenty in the previous millennium look at this busy crew grappling with the sail poles ready to launch the boat off the Nile's Banks and this Granary Silo inside workers hold sacks of barley while a scribe counts the crop and of course there are also female figures in Egypt women enjoyed much the same status as men unlike their sisters in many other parts of the ancient world they're also producing one of the Egyptian Staples but linen the cloth which was used to make pretty much every Egyptian garment when you see this standing woman here she's
spinning the thread with this spindle and the thread that she's busy making she'll then hand on to her two companions here the Weavers and they're using this horizontal Loom that's pegged to the ground to produce the bolts of cloth which will be fashioned into the wraparound dresses the kils the loin cloths as worn by pretty much every ancient Egyptian man woman and child the lives depicted in these busy little scenes are the comfortable and the familiar representing the Egyptian idea of security this isn't toon K's death mask this isn't the finest piece of part you'll
ever see but that isn't the point these are real people doing real jobs this is ancient Egypt up close and personal order had been restored within Egypt but the fears that ons tore Egypt apart hadn't disappeared entirely for now they were projected outwards to the world Beyond its borders so Middle Kingdom mon like Stern old costus III focused on National Security and wealth creation costus is Infamous for his devastating military campaign South into gold Rich Nubia but he also opted for a more permanent kind of control by building castles now this is a map of
Southern Egypt and Nubia which is modern day sedan and where Aswan is that was the border between the two and Egypt maintained its control over Nubia through a series of forts with around eight of these built by costus himself these Middle Kingdom forts were within signaling distance of one another along the southern Nile down into Nubia they were all part of a massive State Building program designed to subjugate the local population and maintain the flow of good ws and people up into Egypt particularly newbi and gold very few of these fors still survive these are
some of the last images ever recorded of the largest at buhan it was filmed in 1962 during its excavation and after the creation of the Aswan Dam these massive mud brick walls disappeared forever beneath the Waters of the new Lake NASA but buhen isn't completely lost to us because the excavation records are kept here at the Egypt exploration society and they reveal an unexpected aspect of Middle Kingdom Egypt as well as photographs they hold architectural plans of the fort drawn up during the excavations giving a real insight into the immense scale of the Egyptian Crackdown
in nuia hi Chris hi Joe how are you I'm well thank you this looks like an amazing photograph what does it actually show well this is an aerial photograph Joe so what we can see here along the bottom this strip is actually the River Nile and then right on the banks of the Nile emerging from the sand here we see this Square outline of the massive uh fortification of the site of buh P but once uh the excavators began to um uncover the full extent of what we could see this is what they came across
that just looks like a medieval castle doesn't it very rarely do you think ancient Egypt oh yeah castles and yet here is the evidence in front of us absolutely designed to keep the enemy out boan Shar features with the castles of Europe but all constructed 3,000 years [Music] earlier most astonishing of all is its sheer size there's a little scale on this map gives you an idea this is roughly 100 m so just the Nile facing wall here is well over 400 m long and if you think about the Great Pyramid of kufu at Giza
that's 200 M along the base so we're talking about the length of two Great Pyramids along here the total circum of this wall is well over a mile um and the walls these outer walls are 11 M High inside which you could fit around 20 football pitches because as well as controlling the Nubian gold Supply Egypt intended to rule by intimidation this is the Middle Kingdom's great Monumental architectural statement pyramids Monumental tombs were not really the kind of buildings they needed what they very much needed were these heavily fortified Fortress towns to guard the frontier
of their territory when this Fortress arrives in the barren empty desert landscape in the Middle Kingdom this would have been a massive statement something very very big powerful strong scary has suddenly arrived in the desert so anybody traveling from new beer North into Egypt has to sail past this and this would have taken quite a while to sail past wouldn't it absolutely yes imagine looking up you're in a little boat on the Nile and you're looking up and up and up and up and you can see all these Arrow slits people training their arrows perhaps
on you just you know you're being watched it's that big brother mentality isn't it [Music] exactly rising up by the Nile buhan was a gleaming Citadel of power but most of all it was an early warning system the eyes and ears of a Nation defined by suspicion and fear but Egypt's Southern border wasn't the only one to be fortified the northeastern border with Palestine was also secured with such defenses to monitor the large number of foreign Traders regularly traveling to sell their goods in super wealthy Egypt and the visit of one such group is portrayed
here on a tomb wall a caravan of wealthy merchants and their families clearly not Egyptian with their distinctive hairstyles and brightly colored clothes known as the armu people they traded in such Goods as the black leor vital for Egypt's production of eye makeup and their distinctive Pottery has been found across the Nile Delta where many of them settled to live and work among the Egyptians but within a century some of these armo had infiltrated high office and eventually took over Egypt itself now these nomadic armor people who came in and out of Egypt on a
regular basis to trade are portrayed here in this wonderful tomb scene and yet the most important part of the entire scenario are three small hieroglyphs right in the middle they reveal one of the other terms the Egyptians used to name the armu it's basically a crook a scepter and that's written with two symbols and that's pronounced heer it means ruler and then the third of the three symbols is kind of undulating Uplands which means desert or Hill Country basically the Egyptians use this symbol to denote a foreign land so you put these signs together ruler
of foreign lands and this really is the clue to what happened next because these armo of Palestinian origin eventually became the hixus the heas are the hixus and they ruled Egypt from the north between 1650 and 1550 BC but as tension between the foreign rulers and their Egyptian subjects gradually escalated Egypt entered a second Dark Age the hixus made an alliance with the Nubians to the South and the Egyptians found themselves trapped between two enemies although we know little of this difficult time some fascinating texts do survive perhaps the most compelling are the words of
a royal letter sent by the hixus King South to thieves its message would prove so explosive that it galvanized the thebans to once more regain control of their land now this letter was either a colossal platic fa or simply downright rudess and it involved the Egyptian goddess tet the pugnacious blade wielding hippo tet may have been a protective deity but she was also a ferocious creature with features borrowed from the hippo and the crocodile animals the Egyptians feared so it seems the hixus king Aus set out deliberately to insult the thie now the letter takes
the form of a complaint in which apus is basically complaining that the bellowing of the Sacred hippos in thieves is keeping him awake at night expel the hippopotami from the lake they do not allow me to sleep day or night because their noise is in my ear now many have taken this to be a rather eccentric comment but I think it actually alludes to the powerful women of Thieves it seems that apus is actually comparing the wife of the thean leader with the Feist to hippo goddess herself and soon it will be the thebans who
would decide that the hixus had had their day they had to go and soon this war of words had escalated into armed conflict between the two powers but the Egyptians of Thieves had also gained the means to launch their attack with something developed by the hixus themselves state-of-the-art Weaponry in particular a new kind of bow known today as the composite bow it would revolutionize Egyptian Warfare wasn't it a lovely shade it's a beautiful thing this may look like a bow made of solid wood similar to those the Egyptians had always used but the secret of
the composite bow is all down to the elements within it's composite because it's made out of different materials all joined together so there's a wooden core form the center of the bow but inside the curve on the belly of the bow is horn glue onto the wood which forms a really powerful spring so the heart the cow will go there yeah that's right on the inside of the curve and then on the outside of the curve an even more unpromising material senu which looks like something the cat would enjoy and that's it's all covered over
with birch bark to protect the U Blue from the elements before the hixus occupation the Egyptians had shot arrows from bows carved from solid wood they were quite large unwieldy and and only effective at fairly close range but in the composite bow animal horn added flexibility and the senine strength it's a clever combination of ingredients isn't it making it the ultimate in ancient archery it just asks you to to do that doesn't it does it's fabulous there's a real sense of power behind this isn't there it's a beautiful thing let me show you so this
is why it's such a Game Changer really because it's a bow that you can use it's quite short you can use it in a chariot and yet wow that was brilliant well done the composite bow was easier to handle and shot faster Arrows with much greater accuracy the Egyptians had little choice but to adapt or remain an occupied Nation so by copying the new military technology they were eventually able to push the hixus out of Egypt all the way back to Palestine securing Egypt's Northern Frontier once [Music] again and when the new bow was used
in conjunction with the other hixus introductions the horse and Chariot the three combined to express the power and supremacy of Egypt new Egyptian rulers this marked the start of the New Kingdom which began when the powerful thean leaders took the throne this dramatic rebirth in royal power was mirrored by the rise of Thieves local God a Moon based at his cult Center the Temple of carac and it would be a moon who now protected Egypt and its [Music] Kings yet thanks to the hixus Legacy these were a new kind of King and it's on this
Temple's walls we can clearly see the effect of the hixus occupation for as Pharaoh smites his enemies this is Egypt reborn a fully armed fully charged superpower whose Kings shown on a Monumental scale are superheroes [Music] over some 800 years since the pyramid age Egypt's story had been one of upheaval collapse finally rebirth the Egyptians had reclaimed their culture and entered a truly golden age [Music] hundreds of tons of stone to portray a mighty Pharaoh colossal Testament to Egypt's golden [Music] age I think it's probably here at the feet of the colos of mnon we
get a real sense of who aminot theii was in my opinion amote theii was ancient Egypt's greatest Pharaoh he presided over the the Zenith of Egyptian culture and civilization he is the Golden Age he is the epitome of everything that made ancient Egypt [Music] brilliant the rise of this great civilization was powered by its extraordinary belief [Music] system where the pursuit of the perfect afterlife was everything capable of withstanding disasters and dark [Music] ages to then reemerge as the most powerful Empire in the ancient world in this episode I'm going to enter what I regard
as Egypt's greatest era the New Kingdom whoa what an amazing chamber a time of luxury Grand designs and unparalleled Splendor isn't this absolutely beautiful but like all good things it couldn't last forever Egypt's powerful religion would prove to be its greatest weakness and now discover how the priests became so Rich their power struggle with the crown destroyed the very Unity of Egypt it was this very conflict that would transform this Golden Age into one of decadence and Corruption and would eventually tear Egypt apart and by looking again at Egypt's greatest superstars I'm going to investigate
what really happened during the glittering New Kingdom welcome to my story of ancient Egypt the New Kingdom nearly 3 and a half thousand years ago and the time of amote III when Egypt's expression of power and belief reached new heights of enormity I've joined an international team of archaeologists who are Excavating just one of the vast monuments amote created his ferary Temple now being here you really get a sense of what it must have been like 3 and a half thousand years ago when this place was a building site much as it is today all
these statues all around aminot thei third's image coming up in their hundreds and yet as the archaeologists today assemble all these pieces this is literally history coming out of the ground Peace by peace in the pyramid age Royal tombs and funerary temples were a single complex but 1300 years later the two were built separately reflecting a new era of opulence epitomizing the greatest dynasty of all the 18th the time of amote the third for centuries pretty much the only visible remains of amots funerary Temple were his two colossal statues now archaeologist Dr hurik seruan and
her team are finally uncovering the full Splendor of this once Mighty Monument you touch and it's it's it's like glass yeah covering over 86 Acres this was not a tomb like the pyramids but a huge complex the largest ferary temple ever created it's a massive unbelievable you have to imagine this is only the major Temple the main Temple you have to imagine other temples processional ways Sphinx Avenues uh magazines workshops Treasures pools Gardens PRI house administrative houses all this was a a big city in the uh in in the cap overwhelming ins s this Grand
Design was built as the place where his soul could be worshiped for eternity while his mummified body was buried in the Valley of the Kings nearby but during his lifetime inside the temple a permanent priesthood was employed all ruled over by the Pharaoh amots massive statues flanked the Temple's main [Music] entrance Beyond them lay a second pair and then a third aminot Tep's image repeated throughout the temple complex I wish one day they they find the time machine I go back one can I come I'll come with you we may not have a time machine
but 15 years of work have begun to reveal some of the Temple's former glories normally these would have been meters up in the air but to actually engage it's so very tactile so very intimate holding hands with the Pharaoh this Colossus from the Temple's second Gateway is flanked by one of the best preserved statues of amote P's principal consort Queen Tai his great Royal wife here standing and by Miracle having been saved by all the catastrophes which struck this Temple so he's protected her for centuries really hasn't he C to be no bigger than amote
P's lower leg Queen Tai's size served to exaggerate the pharaoh's superhuman status these massive statues were more than a memorial each worshiped to guarantee the immortality of the king's soul the Pharaoh as God this is my great surprise to you and hurg has saved the very best till last oh oh flipping out it's aot's head at 3 m tall carved from the finest white Alabaster oh don't know what to say over the years I've seen many of his portraits but rarely one as stunning as this look at it look at his nose this is an
absolutely amazing portrait sculpted face of amot himself never seen anything like it with hundreds of statues like this amote was multi multiplying the image of himself as Egypt's most powerful God bringing light and life to the [Music] world because whoever controlled Egypt's religion controlled Egypt and with it a vast amount of wealth now amote wore gold from top to toe and he handed it out to his courtiers as gifts but he also used it as a diplomatic weapon otep's clever use of Egyptian gold is recorded on Stone scarabs like this one they served as the
pharaoh's news bulletins which he circulated around his Empire with updates inscribed on their base in this case it was a new marriage of the king it effectively records his marriage to a Syrian princess a princess from the land of mitani and it recounts how having uh sent gold to the princess's father he then sent out one of his daughters for the pharaoh to marry so a kind of male order bride if you like it reports that her name was killer heaper and that she arrived from mitani in Syria with no fewer than 317 ladies in
Waiting clearly impressed I'm an notep added the comment it's a [Music] Marvel with this diplomatic marriage only one of many they were an effective way of securing peace and prosperity amote was able to utilize his key resource his goal to kind of get everything he wanted to maintain his status as the Supreme Monarch in the ancient world at that time gold brought Egypt peace with its neighbors with amote II's Empire stretching from what is now Syria as far as modern sedan but within Egypt itself gold had a different use and could even guarantee a f
track to the afterlife emphatically expressed by a great treasure in the museum in Wigan a stunning golden [Music] face originally part of a woman's coffin her lifik features were preserved to allow her soul to recognize her in the afterlife isn't this absolutely beautiful clearly the gold suggests to us that this was someone a very special very high status very wealthy although we can never know her name she had clearly spent a fortune in preparing for her perfect afterlife covered in Gold Leaf she stares out at us with eyes of alabaster and black obsidian we can
really see into the world into the thought patterns of the Egyptians themselves because as stunning as this face is it was simply buried in a tomb literally buried in a hole in the ground not for human eyes but to be seen by the gods and the spirits of the Dead with whom this woman wanted to join and that's why her skin is gold because the gods had golden skin and she wanted to be recognized by them as one of their own taken into their Eternal care for the Egyptians it was a special pact between themselves
and the gods that made their country made their empire so very powerful so very special in the Golden Age this special pact Shone more brightly than ever before with Egypt's wealth poured into their faith in the afterlife and with increasing amounts of gold accompanying the Royal mummies their tombs needed to be kept secure at all costs so a secret burial place was established for Egypt's pharaohs on thieves West [Music] Bank the Valley of the [Music] Kings it was essential that each Royal mummy was buried safely in their tomb in a custom dating back to the
beginning of time because each one became a royal ancestor whose cumulative Souls formed the very essence of [Music] Egypt the Royal tombs had been desecrated once before breaking Egypt's spiritual link to its [Music] ancestors so to prevent this happening again the Pharaohs of the New Kingdom chose burial deep in this remote Valley where they could lie undisturbed in Rock Cut tombs and this became Egypt's most sacred Place such elaborate preparations for the afterlife also fueled a growing economy and just as in the pyramid age the industry of death shaped the lives of many many ordinary
Egyptians for not only were there tombs to cut and temples to build but statues shrines coffins sarcophagy and all the paraphernalia of the afterlife and with this came all the Ingenuity of sourcing everything from Alabaster to Granite to Gold this is a copy of the world's earliest surviving geological map dating from around 1150 BC and the reign of Ramsey IV this map is a guide to the stone quaries and gold mines of a 15 km stretch of Egypt's Eastern desert it's almost as detailed as a modern geological map with different colors for the different rock
types so over here these large areas of black are the sedimentary rocks back here where it turns pink these are the ous Rocks like Granite other little features include areas of gold mining and then throughout you have this very subtle speckling and these are the areas of gravel known to be very accurate the map was made for one specific quarrying Expedition when 8 ,000 men were sent into a Desert Valley 130 km from thieves to mine stone for Royal monuments but what's special about this map is that it leads us to the ordinary people who
were employed by the pharaoh to build the tombs in the Valley of the [Music] Kings it was discovered by archaeologists at the workers's Village of dear El Medina a purpose-built settlement to house the tomb Builders Architects artists and scribes together with their families this would have been a bustling place it streets full of children playing deliveries being made and all the colors sounds and smells of everyday life it's one of the workers who lived here who made the map now we even know the identity of the map maker The Scribe and KN his distinctive handwriting
is well known from a range of other literary works from poems to prayers maps to tomb plants and it's thanks to one particular little inscription with his name on that we even know where he lived I'm an act lived here this is the Scrib's house am and KN was one of the many skilled workers that Rose through the ranks of society in the generations following the reign of amote III he became the head scribe of this entire Village so a very very important man and yet it's a very sad tale as well because as he
gets older we know that his eyesight started to fail because a prayer of his has survived in which he makes this very personal address to the local goddess meret Sega who lived at the top of the mountain up there and he's imploring the goddess he's saying my eyesight is failing I see darkness by day and for a scribe for a consumate draftsman like Amon KN how sad that would have been here I'm enact praise to Merit Sega both of them symbolically portrayed without their eyes it's hard not to resist this image that as he got
older and more infirm he would have gone up the steps to the flat roof with failing eyesight try to focus on the job in hand trying to mix his paints apply the the lines and the words and so forth and needing the full sun on a day like this just to get through the working day but just like his predecessors who built the pyramids am Anda would have felt a sense of Greater purpose we can imagine him and his neighbors in dear El Medina working towards a single aim creating the Royal tomb the New Kingdom
pharaohs had created a new image for themselves elaborate building schemes requiring New Towns full of workers a strong economy supporting an Ever grander Vision both for this world and the next [Music] but the spiritual convictions that had brought Egypt to its zith had also created a serious threat in the New Kingdom much of the Egyptian State centered on thieves while its West Bank was mainly dedicated to its City of the Dead the East Bank was where most people lived and the site of Egypt's main State Temple [Music] carac as carak was rapidly becoming the largest
religious complex of the ancient world its influence grew exponentially and likewise the power of its priests to get a real sense of what's going on we need to go behind the scenes I'm being allowed through an ancient passageway once only accessible to CarX clergy from the top more more more wonderful [Music] sign it leads to the top of the Temple's main gateway and gives a view of carak not many get to see just look at that you could fit nraam and St Paul's cathedrals in here and still have acres to spare it is [Music] immense
within carac a series of chapels shrines and sacred precincts covered a total area of more than 250 [Music] Acres this was Egypt's religious heart for almost 2,000 years the reason why carak is so vast is that every Pharaoh PS so much of their wealth in into this Temple their gold and their Spoils of War all filled the Temple's coffers and each Pharaoh also wanted to build their own Halls shrines and obelisks in an attempt to outdo their predecessors and yet all to the greater glory of kak's Chief God Amon over the course of centuries a
moon had risen from a local thean God to Egypt's State deity and his worship was the engine that fueled the nation so every Pharaoh had to keep a moon content offering him their wealth and tending to his every need and this privilege fell to carnac's high priest and was performed in the Temple's inner sanctum secret ceremonies at which the only others permitted were the Royals here we are in the very heart of carak Temple this is where the god lived the God himself lived inside his sacred statue the original wouldn't have been much bigger than
this would have been solid gold it would have lived inside a little golden Shrine sealed by a pair of small [Music] doors each morning the high priest would come in he would awaken the God's spirit he would greet him he would wash him anoint him with perfume apply his eye makeup and then dress him in various linen outfits apply the small pieces of jewelry to the God's statue and then the God would proceed to enjoy his day a moon received daily meals of the finest Foods roast Meats bread fruit and vegetables accompanied by wine and
beer clouds of incense would drive away evil forces and musicians and dancers entertained him and by keeping their most important deity content it was believed that a moon would in turn make the Nile flood each year make the sunrise each morning and maintain Egypt's Supreme status [Music] the high priest's direct access to a moon made them the greatest beneficiaries of kak's growing Prosperity this tranquil lake is where the male and female clergy bathe twice each day and night to maintain their ritual Purity before the gods known as the pure ones they set themselves apart from
the rest of society with their distinctive appearance achieved through their own set of daily rituals part of this process of ritual Purity involved using an array of implements on a daily basis to transform their appearance and one of the most important things they did they had to remove all body hair male and female clergy using razor like this so every day having to shave their heads and their entire bodies keep them free from lice and all these kind of things which would have inhibited their sense of cleanliness it was essential that they also had a
very clean mouth because they'd be speaking the words before the God and so they use something which is quite a a modern thing basically Natron salt are kind of bicarbonate rather like a modern bicarbonate toothpaste which would get their teeth nice and clean scrupulous not only with dental hygiene they wore readed woven sandals and Robes of pure white [Music] linen and having transform themselves in this wonderful way they also had access to these polished metal mirrors they could then admire their transformed appearance because it was important to distance themselves from the great unwashed for the
ancient priest cleanliness really was Next to Godliness and they were the God's chosen [Music] people as the wealth and power of carnac's priests grew their authority over Egypt began to rival that of the king kak's priests had far-reaching influence active not only by day but also by [Music] night one of these priests was called Knack he was a priest of the hours of a moon which basically means he was an astronomer and he would sit by night on the flat Temple roof which was effectively an ancient Observatory and he'd be able to chart the progress
of the stars and planets in the sky watch the moov mement of the heavens and by doing so the priests of Egypt were able to work out when to celebrate specific events but of course what this meant is that kak never closed it was a 24-hour a day concern it meant the priests were always there it meant the priests were always watching fully aware of the potential threat posed by the carak clergy Aman Otep III employed his own relatives in the temple to guarantee their loyalty but such subtle means of control were about to evaporate
enter a new Pharaoh aanan sun and air of [Music] amote but unlike his father aanan was no diplomat his zealous Ambitions would soon plunge Egypt into an age of political and religious [Music] extremism early in his Reign aanan found a swift way to stamp his authority on the priests by building a controversial new Temple complex at [Music] carac now what we're looking at here is something very very unusual ual it's part of a wall from carak Temple but not the traditional part of carak Temple it's a section that was built a little Way Beyond and
it was a new revolutionary building it wasn't built like the old style carak in huge big monolithic blocks of stone but these small easier to handle blocks which meant of course it could almost spring up overnight but most shocking of all were the images that this new Temple portrayed a Nan had begun to dismantle Egypt's traditional religion and replace its many deities with a single God if you look very carefully the images are very different to what went before a moon is nowhere present the god of caruk himself isn't represented in his own Temple because
the god shown here is a form of the sun god called the arton and you can see the multiple Rays coming down ending in human hands giving their blessings to the main figure here and it isn't the high priest of a moon faron's priests were no longer in control at carac and the moon himself was now replaced by the Aran Sun God in fact life in Egypt was turned on its head and whereas previous viously courtiers would bow very low before their Monarch now times had changed these people have their faces in the dirt before
Pharaoh they're lying prostrate before him this marked the beginning of a new [Music] age it was an age when the only way to reach God was through his intermediaries twin mons ainan and his wife and co-ruler nefatiti [Music] and when the priests subjected the royal couple closed carac sacked its priests and seized its treasury they then moved their whole Court 400 km Down River from thieves and in less than 10 years built a brand new [Music] city known today as a Mana its Palace es temples and tombs were filled with images of the arton the
suis God gone with a multiplicity of gods to worship now it was the Sun that was celebrated each day with hymns prayers and offerings presented on a truly lavish scale [Music] but the couple's vision of Utopia came at a price and when Aken Aran died after a 17-year Reign Egypt was bankrupt his son became king of Egypt and although he reigned for less than 10 years he still became the most famous Pharaoh from the whole of Egyptian history totan Carman his treasure discovered by Howard Carter in 1922 was the most famous archaeological find of all
time toon carman's mask is the epitome of ancient Egypt so very familiar yet like so many of his treasures holding a longstanding secret I've come to Oxford University's Griffith Institute to examine the most detailed records of his burial so in this first stack these are all Carter's notes Diaries journals and then right at the bottom down here we've got all Harry Burton's original glass negatives captured on delicate glass slides these are the original negativ taken by Howard Carter's photographer at every stage of the 10year excavation so this shows very first view they had of the
Mummy they reveal Toton carman's burial in a way not usually seen for this is the linen shroud over his third innermost coffin this is as if the ERS have just finished the family have laid there re and floral tributes before the ly finally went on what a privilege to actually see this in Black right wow that's pretty profound for all his fabled wealth Toton Carman was in life a fairly insignificant Pho but his premature death after only a decade as king offered carak priests the perfect opportunity to obliterate all trace of akan Aran nefatiti and
the Amman period and these wonderful photos of his burial treasure reveal how they did it on his famous Golden Throne Tuton Carman and his wife on cenam moon are depicted together but all is not what it seems as Recent research has discovered we look at the back of the Queen's head where her wig originally was it's being slightly cut down there the same with to carman's Crown a new Crown has been added here so it's little things like this because headgear regalia was crucial in identifying these Royal individuals by altering the images the Throne had
been customized for T and Carmen but the biggest giveaway as to whom this once belonged is in the deity that looms large above the king and queen so although a moon is also named on this Throne it's the art and sundisk that does take center stage and really does cement this piece as a royal Throne from the Amman age so it seems that the two figures once believed to be to and Carmen and his wife wife were originally ainan and nefatiti another clue comes from the most famous artifact from ancient history the golden mask of
Tuton Carmen or is it Recent research has zoned in on One Long overlooked feature and that is the decidedly pierced ears because it's been suggested that this MK was originally made for someone else the research suggests that toot and Carman wouldn't have worn earrings Beyond childhood so by the age of 20 when he died he would not have been portrayed with pierced ears this mask was not made for an adult male Pharaoh indeed when the gold has been compared the face is made of completely different gold to the rest evidence of soldering is clearly visible
on on the mask it now seems as if toon carman's own face was effectively grafted on to the mask of a previous ruler a previous ruler who had pierced ears for earrings a previous ruler who may well have been a woman who may well have been [Music] Neti in fact it's estimated that around 80% of the objects found in toon carman's tomb originally belonged to either akan Aran or nefatiti and with all of it dumped together like this it was a kind of spiritual decluttering as far as the priests were concerned all this was tainted
gold and so the burial of toot and Carmen was the perfect opportunity to bury The Unwanted past forever while the city of Mana had been abandoned then demolished the memory of everything it represented was likewise being erased Egypt's State religion was restored kak's priests were back in business and thieves was once again the seat of sacred [Music] power and now now the next dynasty of the New Kingdom was in control having died without an air Tuton Carman was succeeded by a line of militaristic rulers the 19th Dynasty with no direct Royal ancestry the new Dynasty
needed to reconnect with Egypt's illustrious past so it reinstated traditional beliefs in a Renaissance led by one of its most influential rulers seti the first his tomb in the Valley of the Kings is the largest Pharaoh's tomb ever created here currently close to the public I've been given special permission to explore this labyrinthine treasure the tomb's inviting us down further down into the underworld and it's just going us into the darkness it's a really really deep tomb this it's 174 MERS of corridors and Chambers all chiseled out by hand and covered from floor to ceiling
in some truly spectacular scenes wa what an amazing chamber absolutely filled with little golden twinkly stars but the the walls of seti's Tomb carry a clear message demonstrating the return of Egypt's traditional deities in full [Music] force here we see him set with the [Music] [Applause] gods this is a brilliant chamber it's repeated images of the Pharaoh seti with the gods the gods are back and he's Keen to show that and so we see him here with Anubis the elegant black Jackal God of eming and the dead here seti is making offerings to hathor the
maternal goddess of love who takes all dead Souls into her care and Horus the god of kingship wearing the joint crowns of Upper and Lower Egypt then seti makes the strongest connection with Egypt's past in the portrayal of the ultimate deity in the Tomb airis god of the underworld he represents every single Pharaoh that's gone before seti he represents the accumulated powers of the royal ancestors and seti is Keen to show himself in the company of Osiris he's tapping in to that greatness that made Egypt such a strong [Music] Nation every image every hieroglyph in
set his tomb harks back to the Golden Age of amote III and continuing with this golden Legacy set his Reign was a true Renaissance of art and culture with the ultimate Jewel in his tomb his burial chamber that is absolutely superb this is really incredible it's taking that nighttime sky Motif and really really running with it this is the night sky has seen Through The Eyes of the astronomer priests and this is where the Royal mummy would have laying in its Alabaster sarcophagus allowing set his mummy set his soul to look up at this spectacular
ceiling Egypt's traditional belief system is here RIT large covering every [Music] surface Egypt was back seti had brought back the days of Glory it's as if the ammana period had never been and for the average man and woman in the street that was a wonderful thing because order had been restored chaos had been brushed away and everything was all right with their world the Golden Age had been restored but not just for the largest life pharaohs with their glorious tombs and vast monuments but for the majority of Egypt's population too this included the inhabitants of
dear El Medina the tomb Builder's Village near the Valley of the Kings at the edge of the village was a great pit the community dump inside which were discovered tens of thousands of pieces of pottery and stone covered in pictures and words written in hieratic script a kind of hieroglyphic shorthand these are the ancient Egyptian equivalent of Post-it notes shopping lists and text messages this is uh the kind of stuff that speaks to Everyday Life what's going on underneath the surface with the help of hieratic expert Dr Glenn godho we can catch a glimpse of
this intimate World far away away from Kings and gods which is your favorite amongst these ones I always go to this one this is really nice because this one's a basically a list of stuff you take to a party what you've got is tabulated information so you've got vertical and horizontal lines and in each of those spaces you've got a name and the stuff they brought to that particular event I mean this person here the name's missing from this but this person brought the most stuff about 11 items we've got bread for example being brought
along uh next down we've got uh some beers so one jug of beer as well as beer and bread it lists a veritable Feast fruit 20 pieces beans One Jar full fish meat and even a cake the thing I like about this is the idea of a community coming together it really does make the ancient Egyptians that more real because we can then we all like a good party but of course life isn't always a party and people fall on hard times this fragment begins with a story of a breakup hesu nebf divorced the lady
hell and then it goes on to record a heartwarming story of support from its Anonymous author he seems to have wanted to look after this lady hell and so the text goes on and it says that the the author of this spent uh three years giving one measure of Emma wheat to hell every month but it doesn't end there so she gives to the author here um a sash so a piece of clothing and she says in this line here uh to offer it at the riverbank um the river bank is where the market was
right and she says that um she'd like one measure of um of Emma weat for it but no one wanted it oh so yeah yeah the text goes on to say uh that um the author tried to offer it down at the riverbank but uh he gives a customer a view it's right here one word Bean which means bad a yeah yeah so so it wasn't even worth one measure of Emma so that is sad but the author's such a good egg that that um he says that he buys it off of her for well
over the market value of this thing that wasn't even worth one measure in the first place anyway nice guy P we don't know his name yeah it's a real shame it's a real shame but at least we have his words one of the many voices from dear El Medina which still speak to us across 3,000 years of History telling us of the highs and lows of lives familiar to us even today for most people the New Kingdom had been an age of Plenty but it wasn't to last the Golden Era of wealthy pharaohs was becoming
ever more [Music] superficial setti's son Ramsey II was Egypt's most prolific Builder over spending on ever more ostentatious monuments the best known of which was his Temple at Abu symbol but such over the top building projects emptied the royal coffers as did a series of costly Foreign Wars so by the time of ramse III the cracks had certainly begun to appear as inflation increased supplies in the state granaries ran low so the grain which formed the monthly wage rations of state employees like tomb Builders and Artisans was no longer paid when due and it sparked
the first recorded labor strike in history it happened in 1155 BC when the tomb Builders began to complain that Their Food Supplies hadn't been delivered and when it happened again the following month they simply down tools marched to the nearest Temple and shouted we are hungry to make sure their grievances were heard they staged a sit in at the temple but the state's response only added insult to [Music] injury local officials could only hand round a delivery of pastries not much use to anyone the indifference of the authorities provoked many more weeks of protest their
grievances only increased and soon the Striking workers had taken to shouting out at passing authority figures including the mayor the workers were finally fobbed off with enough supplies to shut them up in time for the pharaoh's Jubilee celebration to pass by unhindered by trouble but the Striking workers had highlighted the waning power of the monarchy with the Pharaoh now served by an increasingly inefficient and corrupt bureaucracy the Glorious bubble of Royal extravagance finally burst [Music] and the pharaoh's Rivals were waiting in the wings the priests of carak having grown powerful through the revenues given to
the gods they served the writing for the Royals was quite literally on the wall and you can see what I mean in this little known part of carak Temple where the high priest is making a very bold statement but only if you know how to read the footnotes now this is a fascinating scene we have the Pharaoh ramse the nth and he's facing his high priest shown here but there's something extraordinary about this scene because For the First Time The Pharaoh and the priest are shown on exactly the same scale they are the same height
that's why the priest is looking so pleased he has his arms raised as if in Triumph because these guys are so clever they've actually got the Pharaoh standing on a box so he's a fraction higher and yet in reality they're the same height this really shows that the priests are in power they're basically saying to the king we are the same size as you therefore we are as important as you [Music] are priests have become full-time politicians vying with the throne for power they destabilized the balance between church and state the relationship on which Egypt's
entire culture depended so great were their Ambitions that by the end of the New Kingdom the priests took control of the entire South and with the Pharaoh ruling only the north the country was split into its two ancient halves but even worse was to come it's at medet Habu Ramsey III's ferary Temple that we can find out just how little interest these politician priests now had in the Royal afterlife they were only concerned with their own status and their own wealth now this next disturbing part of Egypt's story not only spelled disaster for its core
belief in the Royal afterlife it left a tortuous puzzle for egyptologists which we are still trying to piece together it's an extraordinary story that begins not in the temple but in a small house built later within the grounds because the priest's corrupt Ambitions will be put into practice by the man who lived here his name was buha Arman and as necropolis scribe he worked in the nearby Valley of the Kings this is the man himself butter Arman with his shaven head his starch Kilt his arms raised in prayer he's praying to the great God of
Thieves amoon himself although BH arman's story doesn't quite live up to this image of piety because it was here that he received a letter of instruction from his boss the high priest of carac this is a copy of that letter and its contents are mindblowing because the high priest is telling bu Arman go and perform for me a task on which you've never before embarked uncover a tomb among the ancient tombs and preserve its sealed door until I return and although this language is quite euphemistic and cryptic both the sender and recipient knew exactly what
it meant and it would have a profound impact on Egypt bhha Arman had been promoted his new title was opener of the gates of the necropolis so he and his men set out for the Valley of the Kings taking with them tools and bundles of of linen their mission nothing less than the systematic dismantling of the royal Cemetery in search of gold it was an order to accumulate [Music] wealth tomb robbing itself was nothing new in ancient Egypt but what's different about this looting is that it's an order from the ruler of op Egypt the
high priest himself this is looting sanctioned by the [Applause] [Music] state knowing the secret location of the royal tombs bhha Arman began what was euphemistically referred to as restoration work the final taboo was about to be broken so bu Arman and his men set to work they break open the seal of every Royal tomb they move the lid of the sarcophagus take out the Royal mummy in its nest of gold coffins and proceed to unwrap each one next they strip them of anything of value gold masks jewelry and amulets all taken for the temple [Music]
treasury as for the mummies they're rewrapped in Fresh Linen and all buried together for the cash strapped priests these Royal tombs were no longer inviable but little more than a series of dead bodies resting amidst the gold they needed to achieve their political aims so for 20 years this very tomb became one of buha armen's repping workshops where archa ologists found fragments of the gold prized from Royal coffins traces of the Lost Treasures of numerous pharaohs and BHA arman's handwriting was discovered on the rewrapped mummy of Ramsey [Music] III with no guard for the sacred
even the great Pharaoh amote III ended up repackaged in the coffin of Ramsey's II covered with the ill-fitting lid of seti [Music] II only one tomb hidden by Rubble escaped the wholesale plunder yet the ultimate violation of ancient Egypt's Soul was now complete clearly the priest Kings of carak had got what they'd always wanted absolute power no longer interested in the Royal ancestors who were simply a source of Revenue to be robbed and discarded The Devout have become cynical and the Royal afterlife nothing more than an ill iion this is about as far north in
Egypt as it's possible to get because out there is the Mediterranean to my West is Libya to my East Palestine and Arabia while Egypt itself lies down there to the South a thousand kilometers of desert cut right through the center by the mighty River Nile and at its top lies this the great port city of Alexandria it was ancient Egypt's last and most influential Capital it was a city of great power wealth and luxury the greatest in the world Alexandria was also home of one of Egypt's most famous pharaohs Cleopatra the final ruler of a
Greek Dynasty and the last in a long line of foreign Invaders who' each claimed Egypt for themselves seduced by its legendary splendors by now the pyramids were already thousands of years old they were the beginning of a seemingly indestructible core belief that had survived chaos famine and War it's as if they've been picked clean a belief that would shine even more brightly in its fabled golden age whose temples tombs and glittering Treasures had made Egypt an irresistible [Music] temptation as jealous foreign r rulers I a weakened Egypt how could it survive successive waves of foreign
attack but Egypt had a secret weapon a culture so strong and deep rooted that it seduced and then absorbed all who would claim it as their own welcome to my story of ancient Egypt throughout the first millennium BC Egypt faced wave after a wave of foreign [Music] Invaders but in the face of such a strong and longlived culture all who would try to take over Egypt would themselves be taken over [Music] almost a thousand years before Cleopatra Egypt had entered its third intermediate period a time of political Decline and [Applause] [Music] vulnerability for it's the
beginning of the 22nd Dynasty around 945 BC the priests are in charge of the South but in the north the vulture have started to Circle waiting for their chance to swoop as a group of Libyan generals seize power to Ruess pharaohs of a divided land in many ways Egypt's waning power had been triggered by a loss of faith when the authority of the New Kingdom pharaohs had begun to crumble Egypt's once Pious priests had helped loot the Royal tombs in the Valley of the Kings systematically dismantling Egypt's previously unshakable belief in the afterlife with the
decline in power of the New Kingdom pharaohs the libyans who' fought for the Egyptians as mercenary generals gradually infiltrated Egypt's power structure and eventually took power as the 22nd Dynasty [Music] the first king of the 22nd Dynasty sheshank had a number of sons who helped him keep control of Egypt one of whom was called nylot and these are the bracelets of Prince nylot Egypt's Libyan rulers understood that looking and acting Egyptian would help to keep the country under their control the these beautiful bracelets are just a tiny fraction of the golden Treasures created for Egypt's
Libyan Royals who on the surface at least upheld many of Egypt's most sacred Traditions they are portraying the very small figure of the god Horus who symbolized Egyptian kingship shown as a young child emerging from a Lotus Blossom and on either side he's protected by the rearing cobras the Royal Urus symbol yet in some ways these images are simply window dressing lip service to ancient Egyptian traditions in order to claim a greater prize for the libyans had organized nothing less than the state sponsored plundering of Egypt's Royal tombs they were so transfixed by the wealth
by the gold by The Bling of ancient Egypt they wanted it for themselves and know over their several centuries rule while they appeared to look like pharaohs and to rule as pharaohs Egypt never feels to have been a cohesive United Kingdom they weren't Egyptians at heart and that's really what mattered in many ways Libyan rule was destined to fail because even if they were militarily Superior their adoption of Egyptian culture was at best superficial was insufficient to unite the country in the north the squabbling Libyan Elite fought amongst themselves while in the South the Egyptian
priesthood including yet more Libyan princes still clung to power a fragmented Egypt was easy pickings for any would be Invader Egypt needed a regime that could reconnect with its most powerful asset its history and by 747 BC that's what happened when the kushite rulers of Nubia made a direct spiritual connection with Egypt's glorious past now the kushites were Egypt's Southern Neighbors in Nubia and from time immemorial they and the Egyptians had kind of battled around the sort of Southern border of Egypt by the 8th Century BC however the kushites had the upper hand they were
fervent Believers in Egypt's traditional gods in some ways making them more Egyptian than the Egyptians the kingdom of kush in Nubia was at the very edge of the Egyptian world having been repeatedly conquered by Egypt the kushites have been hugely influenced by Egyptian beliefs beliefs that centered on this great Sandstone Mountain Jebel barkle for centuries it had been regarded as the mythical mound of [Music] creation the mound from which Egypt's great Creator God a moon was born [Music] here is the Holy Mountain this is where the god lived in his primeval form Dr Tim Kendall
has spent almost 30 years working at the site being at the southern limit of the Empire it was where where the Nile began where fertility began and so it had to be the place where creation began so this was the they imagined this is the birthplace of the god Amon and so this this was the Primeval carac when the New Kingdom pharaohs had arrived here in 1500 BC they built this Temple and dedicated it to amoon and his wife the goddess Moot and when the Egyptians withdrew from Nubia some 400 years later the native kushites
continued to honor the sacred mountain and Egypt's spiritual Traditions as the kushite Kings gained increasing military power they also claimed Egypt for themselves so when King P led a kushite invasion of Egypt in 747 BC he didn't plunder or destroy but restored and rebuilt and founded Egypt's 25th Dynasty the irony is that he's conquering Egypt to put everything right I suppose so it's all such a cycle of of rebirth regrowth Redevelopment and the kushite kings are really kind of tapping into that ancient power source yeah and just sort of giving it back to the Egyptians
starting time all over again and doing it right so they had that same sense of history and continuity as the Egyptians they are the natural successors of the 18th Dynasty Kings fueled by a genuine desire to make their own Mark in Egypt's long story The kushites began to rebuild Egypt here in their new Heartland King P expanded the existing Temple of am moon at Jebel barkle to balance the original Great temple of carak in Egyptian thieves but while the kushites had absorbed the culture of Egypt they still had their Roots here in Africa this cultural
Fusion is quite clearly expressed in this extraordinary representation of the Egyptian goddess moot the face of the Goddess moot has tribal scars and look we'll see if it shows with this light do you see the three lines of her face so this is an Egyptian goddess with a nuban makeover yeah she was a goddess of Nubia and it was appropriate for Nubians to have Tribal scars so this is a very very graphic version of the way in which local Nubians were making the traditional deities of Egypt their own physically marking them it's as if she's
being stamped as a Nubian yep how incredible this is such a land of surprises that is [Music] beautiful yeah this land of surprises has something else in store too gale force winds whip up the worst Sandstorm in years it's a powerful reminder that the Ancients would also have had to deal with such dramatic natural phenomena you certainly taste the great in your te the Ancients would have tackled this using spells rituals they would also have made extra offerings to specific deities most notably Osiris's brother God Seth the god of turbulence the god of storms the
god of redheaded individuals who were seen is somewhat turbulent too can't imagine why I'm seeking shelter in this Shrine cut into the mountain by P sun to Harker which is currently undergoing major restoration by an Italian Mission it apparently reveals graphic evidence of Egypt's continuing powerful influence never been here before I have no idea what's going on in here so this will be as new to me as it is to you oh flipping egg it's a real privilege to see the th blackened walls finally giving up their secrets wow look at that look at that
oh that is oh that is so beautiful they're bringing out not just the golds but the blues these two colors the bright blue of the sky and the Nile and the gold this s really powerful color of the sun god this is tahaka the kushite most powerful and important Pharaoh in classic Egyptian style he's shown offering to the God amoon and his wife the goddess moot it's raised relief this is old school this is old school technique this is skill and they're all overlaid in this yellow gold and you can even see the little scales
on this corselet that a moon wearing every details here it's fabulous it's like Christmas morning this this is just extraordinary just look for yourselves just look look at their faces look at their eyes this world truly exemplifies Egypt's ancient magic as those who try to conquer it end up being seduced by it and then become a part of it it's a sincere attempt by tahaka to connect his kingship to the achievements of the Pharaohs of Egypt's past in particular to the rulers of the New [Music] Kingdom so although history records that tahaka conquered Egypt this
scene reveals it's actually Egypt that conquered tahaka it's as if the Egyptian identity will always win out no matter what so much so that tahaka is even shown with the Ram's horns of a moon identifying him as the son of Egypt's God of gods these were worn by amot III in luar Temple in the 18th Dynasty they were later warn by the great Alexander to show he too was the son of a moon and here we have tahaka in all his finery in all his splendor [Applause] [Music] who knew that they were here hidden away
in this special special rock we've come to the heart of Jebel barle now we've come to the heart of Egyptian religion because this is the very birthplace of a moon himself and here he is just for us right now emerging from the walls very few people have ever seen [Music] this here inside the temple where only the most Pious were allowed to Harker is shown in deference to Egypt's most powerful [Music] God and outside on the mountain he exhibits his devotion on a truly Monumental scale by embellishing the very top of its Pinnacle 180 M
tall and 11 M from The Cliff face it seems completely inaccessible but to have Parker pulled off an incredible technical achievement he built a crane arm and elaborate Scaffolding in order to make his own permanent mark on the mountain what he did was he made a an inscription for himself commemorating his victories east and west then underneath his men set a small statue of the king and they covered the inscription with gold today you can hardly see it but in those days it would have been the most conspicuous feature of the mountain I mean that's
meant to be seen by the god seen by the gods of course no mortal eye could read this from the ground but that wasn't the point this was a message to the gods carved on a Monument built to impress completely covered in Gold it reflected the sun's rays and it acted like a giant billboard as it telegraphed to Harker's message for miles around and this again harked back to Egypt's past when previous pharaohs had placed gilded capstones on their pyramids and obelisks to harness the potent powers of the sun just to the east of Jebel
barkle lies the necropolis of Nuri where the kushite king's transformation into Egyptian pharaohs was finally completed for the dynasty who had invaded Egypt were now copying Egypt's ultimate symbol and for the first time in over a thousand years the Kings who ruled Egypt were buried in pyramids when the Kings made their Capital at Memphis they were living right across the river from the Great Pyramids Taro spent most of his life there and was familiar with the Great Pyramids and so when he died he needed a pyramid of commensurate scale and uh and this he sort
of established this new type and it was followed by all of his successors the kushites eventually built more pyramids here in their Nubian Homeland than the Egyptians had built in Egypt and just as at Giza tahaka Pyramid is precisely aligned to its environment for on the exact day when the Nile flood begins to recede the sun sets just like this directly behind the Jebel barkle Pinnacle yet only on this specific day and only when viewed from the top of taha's pyramid that is totally impressive not just a skill a feet of engineering but but such
Devotion to the gods Gods obser observing nature I mean it would take huge amount of observation to get the position just right to get the day just right surrounded by these pyramids the images of amoon and Moot and their Monumental temples it's easy to forget that the kushites were actually a foreign power who' taken Egypt by Force yet it's almost as if Egypt was taunting its Invaders while you may try and dominate our land our culture will ultimately dominate you and as such the kushites left a legacy of renewal and Resurrection but like all Egypt's
conquerors the kushite moment in the sun was fleeting for their 25th Dynasty lasted but a century as a far more ruthless and ambitious power now [Music] invaded in 674 BC the Fearsome Assyrian army marched into Egypt as ruthless expansionists they had little interest in Egyptian culture they graphically demonstrated their contempt by sacking the Sacred City of Thieves [Music] the Assyrians unlike the Egyptians are interested in expanding their empire and really taking over other parts of the world and they do that by violence this very unyp bronze helmet was discovered in thieves it is one of
the very few objects that reveal the Assyrian takeover of Egypt despite possessing equally powerful iconography of their own the Assyrians had little time to leave their Mark they Simply Stamped their Authority upon Egypt by trying to rip out its religious [Applause] heart this holy complex this really huge Sacred Space had never been attacked in Egyptian history and so for a mob to damage the temple to damage statues perhaps to damage precious things would really have been absolute anatha to the Egyptians what's really striking is it's obviously not an Egyptian item but the Egyptians didn't even
wear helmets did they they relied on their thick hair didn't they so for me it really evokes a completely Alien image I mean the Assyrians I mean war was their business wasn't [Music] it with their sophisticated at weapons and armor the Assyrians were a war machine whose Unstoppable progress seemed to spell disaster for Egypt yet after little more than 20 years the Assyrians returned East to tackle problems at home leaving vassals in charge of Egypt based at the Delta city of sa these were the seite Kings shrewd Egyptian politicians who first appeared to serve their
Assyrian Masters but soon became strong enough to declare their independence Egypt was now back in Egyptian hands the seites instigated a spectacular Renaissance in Native culture at the heart of which lay Egypt's most powerful symbol of national identity mumification but no longer limited to humans there was an explosion of animal mumification everything from dogs cats crocodiles Ibis and even tiny shrews the ancient Egyptians had always mummified their dead both human and animal and with the seites we can almost see it as a way of the seite Kings trying to declare we are Egypt we are
important this is what makes us special no one else in the ancient world could mummify like the Egyptians and so they rolled it out a millionfold with animals specifically bred for mumification and then sold as offerings at temples the seites had reinvigorated Egypt's oldest industry death was once again big business [Music] now this might look pretty silly but around 2,000 years ago here at Sakara this would have been a very common [Music] site this place would have been packed with pilgrims with priest making animal mummies and they be trundling the mummies across the landscape in
carts like this one so we must get out of our minds this idea of Egyptian priests as these Pious quiet figures wafting through the landscape and by this time it was all carried out in great numbers and it was Egypt's endless ability to reinterpret its core beliefs that was the key to its longevity for Millennia the Egyptians had believed that the Pharaoh was a living God who embodied the soul of Egypt when the king died their soul lived on in their mummified body which must be kept safe to guarantee the Contin ity of Egypt so
they'd always buried their rulers in the safety of pyramids or elaborate Rock Cut tombs but in times of increasing unrest and foreign rule the Egyptians could no longer rely on even having a pharaoh to bury and so they turned to another centuries old practice the serapium at Sakara is a huge subterranean tomb complex in which the concepts of kingship and animal mumification were fused together for each of these giant Granite sarcophagy once contained an animal believed to embody all the qualities of kingship this is the burial site of the Sacred apis bull these were the
bodies of mummified Bulls of of such importance to the Egyptian mindset they extend Ed all this effort and cost to create a suitably impressive burial site and they've done this in Spades as one bll dies and is mummified and buried the other one is then worshipped in life and at death mummified and buried again and so there's a real progression The Cult of the apis bull dates right back to the beginning of Egyptian history and it's closely linked to the Pharaoh it was believed that when the sacred bull died it became one with Osiris the
god of the afterlife and so became an Osiris apis or CPUs for short and these sacred Bulls became hugely important under the seites during times of foreign occupation when Egypt was increasingly being ruled by Pharaoh's In Absentia be it in Persia or wherever else for the Egyptians they needed a physical presence and the apist both provided this presence because they could see it with their own own eyes they could celebrate rituals in its company and at death it would be mummified and then buried in the manner of Pharaoh's going back for Millennia so it was
crucial to have this creature here each one successively buried in a sarcophagus just like this one we're looking at some serious Devotion to this sacred creature and everything it represented for Egypt in many ways the herum is Egypt RIT large in which its core beliefs are taken to extremes being down here really makes you feel minuscule you realize you're now walking amongst the gods words fail me frankly because of the enormity of it all but that was the thing that was the skill of the Egyptians they batter you over the head with his idea of
the Colossal the Monumental the spectacular yet the Egyptians Devotion to the apis bull had left them vulnerable by embodying the power of Egypt within a single living animal they had created an easy target given the apis Bull's Divine status harming it would have been completely Unthinkable but when the Persian king cises invaded Egypt he had other plans [Music] the Persian Empire swept West taking all before it and then into Egypt itself the Persian king cises entered Egypt in 525 BC and destroyed the seite dynasty much like the Assyrians the Persians were ruthless expansionists chiefly interested
in enlarging their empire and combies seem to have trampled all all over Egypt's ancient Traditions having taken Egypt by force cises burnt the mummy of the previous seite pharaoh before stabbing the apis bull which slowly bled to death and by doing this cises was sending a very clear message to the Egyptians I am now in charge [Music] for the next 200 years the Egyptians were little more than the heavily taxed Servants of the Persian Empire and with all attempts at Rebellion met with extreme retaliation Egypt needed a savior an outsider who could be transformed by
Egypt's powerful ideology and in return could transform Egypt enter the Macedonian Superman enter Alexander the [Music] Great Alexander was one of the world's greatest military leaders and during his short life amassed an Empire that stretched across three continents founding over 70 cities that bore his name after his initial defeat of the Persian king Alexander marched unopposed into Egypt in 332 BC the world's most successful Empire Builder had arrived not only transforming Egypt's future but preserving its ancient past it really is no exaggeration to say that Alexander the Great is one of the most remarkable people
who ever lived he really was the superhero of the ancient world so you'd think that Egypt would be filled with his images after all he had saved them from the hated Persians and yet other than the great city of Alexandria that bears his name he is remarkably hard to find within Egypt's traditional temples except here in this modest little shrine at the heart of luar Temple Alexander was not only a brilliant sold soier but a master politician marching into Egypt's ancient Capital Memphis amid rumors he was the son of Egypt's last native Pharaoh this instantly
plugged him into Egypt's long native history and he was crowned as a traditional Pharaoh here he is the great man repeatedly across the walls of this Limestone Shrine and yet you'd never know it was Alexander simply by looking cuz he looks like every other Egyptian pharaoh but he knew their secret that to rule Egypt you had to appear to be an Egyptian and he did this brilliantly to the extent that he had his name his Greek name alexandros written in the Egyptian tradition even in a Royal cartouch and it's the only giveaway that this is
Alexander the Great because there is his name alexandros written in typical Egyptian style and there he's even wearing the red and the white Jewel Crown of a United land and so he's encapsulating everything that it was to be an Egyptian pharaoh just like the kushite king tahaka at Jebel barle Alexander is shown offering incense to the king of the Gods amoon but simply connecting with the gods wasn't enough Alexander understood that real power came from becoming a God and so he undertook a perilous journey across the Libyan Desert to the remote Oasis Shrine of seawa
where he could commune with the Oracle of a moon himself and it said in this legendary story that the god actually said to him you are my son and from then on something clicked in Alexander's mind and he went off to conquer the rest of the ancient world truly believing he was divine and he had the full blessing and support of Ammon himself the king of the Gods of Egypt Alexander would only stay in Egypt for six short months but during his time here he founded a city that would be his lasting Legacy the great
city of Alexandria built on the Mediterranean Coast to create trading links with the rest of the ancient world the later historian Arian recorded that Alexander had laid out the city's General plan himself but lacking chalk or other means he resorted to marking it out with grain when a flock of birds began eating the grain Alexander regarded this as a bad Omen yet his religious advisor quickly spun bad news into good and interpreted this as a sign that the new city would soon prosper and would one day feed the whole world a remarkably accurate prophecy for
within a very few years Alexandria would not only be Egypt's New Capital but the greatest city on earth although Alexander himself would never see it yet despite his Pious nature Alexander was essentially a soldier and his quest to conquer the Persian Empire he left Egypt in 331 BC never to return alive moving as far east as India he conquered an Empire of 2 million square miles before dying in Babylon aged only 32 but still undefeated and still the pharaoh of Egypt at death Alexander was mummified and his body became the focus of a power struggle
some of his officers wanted him bued in his Greek Homeland but for others he had to return to Egypt and be buried as a pharaoh thereby preserving Egypt's long Traditions but it obviously meant that anyone who possessed his mummified body could also claim the Throne of Egypt and clues to this drama can be found here in the Windswept desert of Sakara 10 years after he left Egypt alive Alexander returned here for his body had been mummified Egyptian style and it became a hugely powerful Talisman for whoever held the body of Alexander the Great held Egypt
while on route to Greece his cor was diverted and his mummified body brought here to Egypt's ancient necropolis of Sakara exactly where his tomb itself was remains a mystery although situated just meters from the serapium is this collection of very un Egyptian looking stat statues and it's these somewhat sandblasted statues that give us a real clue that Alexander May initially have been buried somewhere close by because these are the sculptured images of some of the greatest Scholars and artists of ancient Greece although exactly who is who has kept academics scratching their heads for years their
likely identities reveal a direct link to the world in which Alexander grew up and was educated [Laughter] take Homer for example his great warrior hero Achilles was Alexander's lifelong role model Plato who had tuted Aristotle who in turn had tuted Alexander and Pinda whose poetry had praised Alexander's Macedonian ancestors as for who placed these statues here the most likely candidate is Alexander's General and probable half brother Tommy for by burying Alexander here close to Egypt's ancient Capital Memphis toy could legitimize his own takeover of Egypt and by laying claim to Alexander's body and to Egypt
he founded the dynasty named after himself the fabulous and outrageous Tois ruling Egypt for the last three centuries BC the toic dynasty would be Egypt's final flowering 15 male Kings all named Tommy with their female co-ruler half of whom were called Cleopatra Macedonian Greek by descent their Dynasty would bring Greek style culture knowledge and fabulous wealth into Egypt while at the same time immersing themselves in Egypt's irresistible religion and Customs they were very very sensitive to the cultural practices and the religious sensibilities of the Egyptians they knew that to control this ancient land of Egypt
had to tap into what made Egypt powerful what made Egypt special they wore the right clothes the right crowns they built the right temples they worship the right gods and the tmis relocated Egypt's capital from Memphis to their new super city Alexandria [Music] built to Alexander's original plan it was one of the most lavish construction projects on Earth the historian sto would like to comment that the city had magnificent public precincts and Royal palaces that covered a fourth or even a third of the entire area the colon marble streets were over 10 m wide there
were public baths a huge gymnasium and of the greatest wonders of the ancient world the 135 M tall fos Lighthouse that guided ships safely into port and at the center of the city Alexander himself whose mummified body had been exhumed from Sakara and brought [Music] here the tmis had built a capital unlike anything Egypt had ever seen before for in Alexandria A New Egypt was being born the creation of Alexandria and the great influx uh of immigrants gave it a freshness of vivacity and really kind of transformed the ancient culture whereas previously Egyptian civilization had
developed along the Nyland in many ways was quite inward looking quite insular I think the fact that Alexandria was open to so many diverse influences religiously culturally and this gave it a real air of Tolerance I think i' have felt very at home here there's a real sense of culture and learning and appreciation of Life Today Alexandria is the largest city on the Mediterranean stretching for over 20 M along the coast as Egypt's largest sea port it caters for over 80% of the country's imports and exports a legacy that reaches directly back to the tmis
having improved Egyptian agriculture by reclaiming new Farmland through increased irrigation they supplemented the Egyptian Staples with new crops such as cotton and better grapes for wine production and today the markets of Al Andria still Buzz with some of the early cities Lively Cosmopolitan style I'm going to try and find the nearest equivalents to ancient Egyptian Delicacies and these are dates and the ancient Egyptians used to make pastries and bread from them because they had a very sweet tooth I think I might have to taste one just for quality control you understand see how authentic they
are they are very nice this is incense in its raw State and of course this was burnt in temples and in funerary rights the port city of Alexandria became a huge Hub of international trade establishing roots with Greece the Middle East India and even Britain and as native Egyptian Goods like Papyrus and perfume flowed out of the country new exotic luxuries like spices silks and wines poured in the Greeks loved olives and so these were imported and the Egyptians started to grow them I'll definitely have some of these delicious black pepper we've got to get
some black pepper this is one of the really really popular things certainly in toake times because markets had opened up and certainly as as far east as India and the Greeks went crazy for this stuff [Music] it's certainly Lively shopping in Egypt never a dull moment with Alexandria now at the heart of the ancient world the rest of Egypt benefited too for determined to honor their adopted country's long history the tmis undertook a massive Temple rebuilding and restoration program indeed modern visitors can often fail to realize that many of the places they visit were either
built or restored by the Tois Esna edu dender comomo all of these are toate buildings that tourists and Scholars admire so much and yet they really don't give sufficient credit to the people whose Vision created them the most impressive of all such temples lies the farthest from Alexandria deep into Upper Egypt close to Aswan is the stunning Temple of feli which in Egyptian meant the end since it was located at the very Southern edge of Egypt much of the temple was built by Tommy II and his co-ruler and sister are sin there was a a
law passed by her husband toy to say a statue of our sin had to be Ed in every single temple in Egypt she had to become its resident goddess aroi was a powerful female pharaoh associated with the Goddess Isis a role the famous Cleopatra would adopt two centuries later and under the Tois feli became a major center of the Isis cult and here in the heart the feli temple aro's golden statue would have stood side by side with that of Isis so the walls are full of full of images of Isis and her fellow Gods
according to myth Isis was responsible for the vital Nile flood swelling the river as she wept tears of Sorrow for her murdered husband airis who she then resurrected and with its spectacular location feli still retains its hugely spiritual atmosphere think it's that sense of continuity you really feel when you're up here feel like you're at the center of the world supposed for the ancient Egyptians you were the center of their religious world and at this point which was the heart of ancient Egyptian religion way into the Christian era way into the 6th Century ad kind
of messes with your head it's a very very holy place this but while feli was becoming an increasingly important center of Egyptian religion its new capital Alexandria had become the leading Center of knowledge for the Tois created some of the first scholarships attracting academics from across the world to study a wide range of subjects biology theology astronomy geometry Anatomy philosophy and of course my own personal favorite history and at the center of this intellectual hot housee was the famous Royal Library up to half a million Works were once housed within to compete with the famous
schools of Plato and arist stle in Athens and today that Legacy lives on with Alexandria striking new library toies really did appreciate that knowledge was power and they wanted that power so they brought together in this one single place some of the greatest works in human history the plays of Escala Sophocles and Ides The Works of Aristotle the philosopher the Old Testament scriptures and all the accumulated know from the temples of ancient Egypt all brought into this one single building The Great Library also contained The Works of Herodotus a Greek historian who traveled the length
of Egypt over a century before the tmis had come to power his accounts sum up the Greek fascination with Egyptian Society not only is the climate different from that of the rest of the world and the river unlike any other River but the people also in most of their manners and Customs exactly reverse the common practice of mankind for the women attend the markets and trade while the men sit at home and do the weaving indeed the level of equality of Egypt's women shocked Herodotus something he vividly records when he witnessed a group of men
and women traveling together by boat to the Delta city of bubastis some of the women make a noise with clappers others play the OBO while the rest of the women and men sing and clap their [Music] hands some of the women shout mockery to the women of that town they are passing whilst others dance and others stand up and expose their private parts [Music] in temples the length of Egypt the tmis ensured they were portrayed as Egyptian pharaohs making them almost indistinguishable from their native Egyptian predecessors yet in Alexandria the blend of Greek and Egyptian
could sometimes create a hybrid of rather strange results hi n Hi how are you namin Sami is a local historian who spent years studying this remark a tomb complex built just after the toic period and here we come to the unique perial me peral chamber that's mad that is fabulous guarded by Greek Doric colums the entrance is covered in images of Egyptian gods who would ensure safe passage into the Afterlife it's it's like a a tomb but it's also like a temple a temple a facad of a temple but a typical Egyptian star yeah yeah
protecting the entrance yeah yeah you know why C choosen to be presented in the tombs because the cpra has no eyelashes it keep keeps her eyes open 24 hours which means it's awake to protect the tomb for 24 hours a day and night I love these snakes that's a a very great looking snake but it's wearing a very little ancient Egyptian CR that's crazy exactly they literally are throwing everything they've got at this to I mean Medusa Horus sundisk to guarantee safety this is the best Garden doorway I've seen in Egypt it's got everything here
and the statues they represent the inhabitants of the Tomb a single wealthy family these two exhibit an odd mix of the Greek and Egyptian I think the bodies are ancient Egyptian The Stance is ancient Egyptian the man's kilt is Egyptian from the neck down they Egyptian but from the neck up they're European it's clear the tomb owners had done everything they could to ensure safe passage into the Egyptian afterlife oh look it's the epis even if they didn't quite understand how it all worked all the features are there you've got th with you know presenting
the oils and a new doing the same mummifying the dead you've even got Jes under canic jaws and feather of Might the goddess of Justice without her approval you will never crosses the other side he didn't forget to add a Greek touch in a lower part to depictions of dianosis dianis was the Greek god of wine and fertility clearly the tomb occupants intended to continue the lives they lived in Alexandria into the Beyond I want all what I enjoy in life to be with me of course in other side especially the wine what a great
place to spend eternity despite its rather cartoon-like quality the apparent opulence of this tomb demonstrates the desire of the alexandrian elite to integrate into Egyptian culture yet in many ways it was little more than a veneer hiding the real force that would ultimately destroy Egypt for where the external Invaders had largely tried and failed Egypt's real Nemesis would be the tm's famous love of luxury and excess much of this luxury was just a facade for the Royals of Alexandria notorious for their love of display were like actors on a stage as one ancient commentator observed
everything in Egypt is simply play acting and painted scenery a comment which cuts to the heart of this melodramatic monarchy for whom image was everything because while the ruling elite were living it up in Alexandria other parts of Egypt were far from content by the end of the 3r century BC Egypt was once more Riven with Civil War Upper Egypt began to rebel and it fell to toy the f to try and fight the fires of Anarchy so not only did he portray himself as an Egyptian he went even further in his support for Egypt's
ancient beliefs in doing so he left the world one of its most famous ancient artifacts the Rosetta Stone it's best known as the means by which the French scholar cholon was first able to decipher Egyptian hieroglyphs in 1822 and we can tell that the inscription on the stone was of huge importance because it was written out in three types of script Greek demotic and hieroglyphic in a way you could almost describe it as a kind of News Bulletin it's the priest of Memphis issuing this decree to let as many people know exactly what the religious
and the political policy was of crown and clergy and it particular particularly focuses on toomy V's generous patronage the priests are praising him because he's the one that gives wealth to the temple and gives due honor and respect to the sacred animals which were such an integral part of Egyptian religion the priests really are grateful to their toake pharaoh who they see as wanting to sort of tap in to the ancient Egyptian culture an ancient Egyptian religion much like Alexander had much like the seites had and the kushites had they knew that to attain true
power true control in Egypt you had to do things the Egyptian way yet toy the Fifth's philanthropy came at a price keeping the peace in Egypt proved cripplingly expensive so the second half of the toake dynasty was Riven by debt corruption and vicious Civil War soon the expanding Roman Empire bard down on a divided Egypt only the famous Cleopatra stood in their way in the mold of great uncle Alexander she believed herself Divine and managed to hold the Romans at Bay for over 20 years but not even the great Cleopatra could prevent the inevitable and
so it was that in August 30 BC see Cleopatra's famous suicide brought an end to ancient Egypt As We Know It This epic culture which had lasted for 3,000 years came to an end in a matter of days when on the 31st of August Egypt was formerly annexed by Rome this was Egypt's point of no return a slow painful decline of Egyptian beliefs and culture until the arrival of Christianity with its numerous temples abandoned built over or simply destroyed Egypt's glories began to fade from memory but Egypt's great story can now be Trace back 20,000
years to the very origins of its magical culture which had evolved from its unique environment creating a series of sophisticated beliefs able to unite a country to build great monuments it had survived chaos and famine only to rise again in a glorious senith of rebirth and Resurrection even waves of foreign invasions were ultimately assimilated by Egypt's powerful traditions and despite being eventually absorbed into the Roman Empire the ancient culture had continued until the arrival of Christianity it as the Egyptians had always believed there would be a life after [Music] death Cleopatra's Needle on London's embankment
had Lan forgotten in Egypt until the 19th century but as pioneering egyptologists began a 200-year process of rediscovery ancient Egypt was reborn and this time it went [Music] Global and what a privilege it is for us today to be able to see such wonderful things and capture just a glimpse of this fascinating ancient culture the culture of a people at one with their environment and who captured through their Timeless monuments their own unique view of the world in fact the story of Egypt is far from over for its rediscovery means that it is only just
beginning and it's the things that made the Egyptians so very special have ensured that they're now known right across the world and they've a achieve their ultimate goal to live forever
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