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BEFORETHEBEFORETHE
PHARAOHSPHARAOHS
PREHISTORIC EGYPTPREHISTORIC EGYPT
M. Fahmy RaiyahM. Fahmy Raiyah
Jacques de Morgan Flinders Petri
PIONEERS OF EGYPTIAN PREHISTORIC
EXCAVATIONS
PALAEOLITHIC
(c.500,000–10,000 BC(
Upper, Middle and Lower Paleolithic industries of Egypt.
Date Period Egyptian variant
5000 BC Neolithic Qarunian
Shamarkian
6500 BC Epi-paleolithic Arkinians
Qadan
Halfan
Kubbaniyan
Idfuan
20,000 BC Upper (late) Paleolithic Khormusan
Aterian
Mousterian
90,000 BC Middle Paleolithic Arkin 8
Umm Shagir
Bir Sahara 14
300,000 BC Lower Paleolithic
Two bipolar Upper Paleolithic blade cores
(up to 13 cm long)
Handaxes from prehistoric Egypt. Lower
Paleolithic or Middle Paleolithic. From the
Metropolitan Museum in New York.
Khormusan
(between 45,000 and 15,000 BC)
Lower Nubia and Upper Egypt
• Tools from stone, animal bones and hematite
• Small arrow heads
Halfan
(between 17,000 and 13,000 BC)
From the second cataract to Kom Ombo
Levallois tools
Microliths
Microlithic tools
Kubbaniyans
(16,070 – 15,640 BC(
used tiny microlithic tools and divided their
time between two distinct but overlapping
habitats.
storing food
Qadan
(13,000-9,000 BC)
Qadan burials: The bodies were buried loosely flexed on their left sides with their heads
to the east and facing south. More than one individual often shared the same grave
CLIMATE CHANGES
• From 120,000 – 90,000 BC: A moister, rainier period
prevailed, enabling Lower Paleolithic people to live and
hunt on ancient savannas.
• About 90,000 years ago: The rains that characterized the
Lower Paleolithic Period were interrupted, and for a
short time the Sahara became a vast desert. Soon, a
more humid climate returned, and scientists call this
the Middle Paleolithic. Springs, lakes and lush grasslands
covered much of the Sahara, surpassing the savanna
conditions that had prevailed in the earlier Lower
Paleolithic Period.
• Around 37,000 BC: the climate began to dry up,
and by 30,000 BC Egypt’s environment was as
arid as it is today. The flora and fauna of the
Western Desert disappeared, and the Middle
Paleolithic peoples living there lost their food
sources.
• moister, more hospitable climate returned to
Egypt from about 17,000 to 13,000 BC.
NEOLITHIC
6000 BC:
Mid-Neolithic period
4000 BC
Late Neolithic/
Early Predynastic
date the cultural background duration
before 8000 BC Palaeolithic
8000-5200 BC
Epipalaeolithic
(Tarifian ; Qarunian - Fayum B -
6000-5000 BC)
3000 years
6000-5000 BC Nabta Playa 1000 years
5200-4000 BC Fayum Neolithic (Fayum A) 1200 years
4800-4200 BC Merimde 600 years
4600-4400 BC El Omari 200 years
4400-4000 BC Badarian 400 years
4000-3300 BC Maadi 700 years
4000-3500 BC Naqada I 500 years
3500-3200 BC Egypt in the Naqada Period Naqada II 300 years
3200-3100 BC Naqada III 100 years
Source: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/museums-static/digitalegypt/chronology/index.html
Predynastic cultures in Lower and Upper Egypt
Date (BC) Upper Egypt Lower Egypt
3150 Protodynastic Protodynastic
3300 Naqada III Naqada III
3400 Naqada IIcd (Late Gerzean) Ma’adian (Late Gerzean)
3650 Naqada IIab (Early Gerzean) Omari B (?)
3750 Naqada I (Amratian) Omari A (?)
4400 Badarian
4800 Merimden
5200 Fayyum A
Source: After Brewer, Douglas J. and Teeter, Emily, Egypt and the Egyptians
(Cambridge University Press, 1999)
NABTA PLAYA
Between 9500 and 5000 radiocarbon years ago the
area of Nabta Playa, in the Western Desert of Egypt
received 100 to 200 mm of rainfall per year, making it
more suitable for human occupation. The rainfall
gathered in a series of lakes; Nabta Playa, one of the
largest in the region. The earliest sites were located
around these large water resources, as were many
Palaeolithic sites in Egypt. The lakes attracted humans
and other animals and supported a subsistence base of
hunting, gathering and in some cases fishing. During
the last part of the Neolithic sequence at Nabta Playa,
beginning around 4500 BC, the climate began shifting
towards the modern hyper-aridity.
Groups here were not sedentary but practiced
seasonal migration to take advantage of different
food resources as they became available. Initially,
cattle, and later sheep and goat, were probably
herded by the migrating people. By planting a few
crops in well-watered areas along the way, they added
an additional food resources. Cultivated plants might
have been abandoned until harvest, or they may have
been tended for part or all of the growing season.
Some groups may have even been semi-permanently
settled, like those in the late Neolithic Fayyum, where
it is thought some members lived at one site year-
round.
Nabta Playa calendar in Aswan Nubia
museum
FAYOUM
c.5100–4500 BC
The earliest fully developed Neolithic sites
in the Egyptian Nile Valley are located in
the north and date between c.5100–4500
BC, with Fayum A and Merimde
Benisalame being the older ones.
Transition from hunting and gathering and fishing to farming and herding.
• New technology/tools for farmers
• Wild to domesticated animals
• Guaranteed food supply at hand
• Permanent Housing
• Pottery (for storage)
• Child-bearing women = sedentary
• Population increases
• More help for farming (intensive)
• Village life initiates urbanization
The Fayum Pre-dynastic period
has been split up into two phases,
• Fayum A: 5200-4000 BC
• Fayum B: 6000-5000 BC
MERMIDA
5000-4400 BC
OMARI
4600-4400 BC
It discovered in 1924 by the Egyptian mineralogist Amim
El-Omari and Paul Bovier-La pierre. Bovier-La pierre
excavated parts of the site during two weeks in 1925. In
1943 Fernand Debono continued the excavations. The
excavations were finally published in 1990.
From the settlement only pits and postholes survived.
The houses might have been built from wattle and daub. All
excavated objects were found in the pits.
The pottery is made with the local clay. The stone tool
repertoire consists of small flakes, axes, sickles and point.
The dead were buried in abandoned storage pits near
houses. The body was placed on the left side with the head
to the south and facing west. Many burials contained a small
pot place in front of the body
MA’ADI/BUTO
Ma’adian pottery vessels
The subterranean style house found at Ma’adi from above (a) and in profile (b).
The closest known counterpart to this structure is found in Southwest Asia.
Badarian culture
4400-4000
• used copper in addition to stone
• planted wheat and barley
• Kept cattle, sheep, and goats.
• Fished from the Nile and hunted gazelle.
Ancient Badarian figurine
of a woman with incised
features (c. 4000 BC),
carved out of
hippopotamus ivory, held
at the British Museum.
This type of figure is
found in burials of both
Badarian men and women
blade of knife
arrowhead
axe
Typical Badarian artefacts
A large sunken ceramic vessel employed
as a Badarian grain silo.
An ostrich eggshell bead in profile and as a strung series for a necklace.
string of beads from a Badarian tomb,
the oldest glazed beads
NAQADA
The Naqada period was first divided by the British
Egyptologist William Flinders Petrie, who explored the
site in 1894, into three sub-periods:
Naqada I: Amratian (after the cemetery near El-Amrah)
Naqada II: Gerzean (after the cemetery near Gerzeh)
Naqada III: Semainean (after the cemetery near Es-Semaina)
NAQADA I
(Amratian)
4000 BC to 3500 BC
An interesting
artefact of the
Naqada I Period
is the animal relief
pot.
Stone vessels
Stone vessels
An abbreviated list of
pot marks recorded
on early Naqada
vessels.
Note how some
marks resemble
early hieroglyphs.
That boats were of great symbolic
importance to the earliest inhabitants of
Upper Egypt is shown by this predynastic
model of a man lying in a foetal position in
a coracle-like vessel, surely one of the
most poignant images from this early
period, conveying a deep sense of
desolation. As was probably the case here,
the boat was frequently used to represent
the transit of the dead to the Afterlife.
Naqada I, probably from Middle Egypt
A clay figurine
A disc-shaped mace head made of dark grey and white porphyry.
Sickle blade with
the characteristic
denticulated
cutting edge.
Scorpion palette
A sherd of Naqada I pottery bearing a representation of the red crown of Lower Egypt
Senet board and pieces.
Circular huts from
Naqada I culture
NAQADA II
Painting in tomb 100 in Hierakonpolis
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
Grey-green ware with the wavy-handle lug
Grey-green ware
decorative wavy design
Naqada II stone vessels which,
unlike earlier periods, are
made from harder stones such
as basalt.
Designs on three Nagada II (Gerzean)
Decorated Ware vessels.
The pear-shapedmace
replaced the
earlier disc mace.
mace head
An amulet shaped
in the form of a
bull’s head.
Two-headed palette
with opposing effigies, a
characteristic design of
Naqada II.
Polished side of a Gerzean flint blade from Abu Zaidan (09.889.120). The
Brooklyn Museum, New York.
Gerzean flint blades
with rounded ends
The British Museum,
London
The Gebel el-Arak knife.
Brooklyn handle: carved
ivory knife handle from Abu
Zeidan, late predynastic
(Nagada IIc/d). Brooklyn
Museum
Rivers handle: carved ivory knife handle,
late predynastic (Nagada IIc/d). Pitt-Rivers
Museum, Farnham, Dorset.
Davis comb: carved ivory comb, late
predynastic (Nagada IIc/d). Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York
Copper tools of the Naqada II Period: an adze (a) and an axe blade (b).
A typical Naqada II pit grave with the
deceased placed in a crouched position,
head to the south and looking to the
west. Characteristic period ceramic
vessels accompany the deceased in her
final resting place.
basket coffin
wood coffin
NAQADA III
The ritual knife, dating to Naqada III period,
now on display at the Brooklyn Museum
The Gebel-Tarif knife of the Naqada III period.
Slate Palette with conquering towns scene
Bone Tags from tomb U-j at Abydos, Early Naqada III
Naqada I (Amratian(
Naqada II (Gerzean(
Naqada III (Semainian / Dyn.“0”(
BURIALS
Appendix
ROCK
DRAWINGS
Rock drawings come from different time
periods, ranging from the Paleolithic, Neolithic
to the pre-dynastic and dynastic times.
In the 1930s, Hans Winkler collected and
classified rock drawings from 40 different sites
in both the Western and Eastern Deserts.
Earliest rock inscriptions are geometric designs and stylized animal footprints.
Detail of late Paleolithic rock art panel showing bovids. Qurta.
Detail of late Palaeolithic rock art panel showing three highly stylized
human figures. Qurta.
Rock drawing, southern Upper Egypt,
probably fifth- fourth millennium B.C.
THE CAVE OF SWIMMERS WADI SURA
GILF KEBIR
Neolithic (?) hand stencils from Wadi el-
Obeiyd Cave. Farafra Oasis.
Predynastic representation of highprowed boat with human figures, ubiquitous in the
Eastern Desert. Wadi Barramiya. Probably Naqada II.
Finely engraved human and animal
figures. Theban Desert. Possibly early
Predynastic
(Tasian or Badarian).
Nag el Hamdulab vandalism to Naqada III
site
MAPS
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Brewer, Douglas J. Ancient Egypt, Foundations of a
Civilization. London: Pearson, 2005.
Davis, Whitney. Masking the Blow: The Scene of
Representation in Late Prehistoric Egyptian Art.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992.
Rice, Michael. Egypt’s Making: The Origins of Ancient
Egypt 5000 – 2000 BC. London: Rutledge, 2003.
Teeters, Emily. Before the Pyramids: The Origins of
Egyptian Civilization. Chicago: The Oriental Institute
of University of Chicago, 2011.
Digital Egypt for Universities, University College
London: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/museums-
static/digitalegypt/neolithic/omari.html

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Prehistoric egypt

  • 2. Jacques de Morgan Flinders Petri PIONEERS OF EGYPTIAN PREHISTORIC EXCAVATIONS
  • 4. Upper, Middle and Lower Paleolithic industries of Egypt. Date Period Egyptian variant 5000 BC Neolithic Qarunian Shamarkian 6500 BC Epi-paleolithic Arkinians Qadan Halfan Kubbaniyan Idfuan 20,000 BC Upper (late) Paleolithic Khormusan Aterian Mousterian 90,000 BC Middle Paleolithic Arkin 8 Umm Shagir Bir Sahara 14 300,000 BC Lower Paleolithic
  • 5. Two bipolar Upper Paleolithic blade cores (up to 13 cm long)
  • 6. Handaxes from prehistoric Egypt. Lower Paleolithic or Middle Paleolithic. From the Metropolitan Museum in New York.
  • 7. Khormusan (between 45,000 and 15,000 BC) Lower Nubia and Upper Egypt • Tools from stone, animal bones and hematite • Small arrow heads
  • 8.
  • 9. Halfan (between 17,000 and 13,000 BC) From the second cataract to Kom Ombo Levallois tools Microliths
  • 11. Kubbaniyans (16,070 – 15,640 BC( used tiny microlithic tools and divided their time between two distinct but overlapping habitats. storing food
  • 12.
  • 13. Qadan (13,000-9,000 BC) Qadan burials: The bodies were buried loosely flexed on their left sides with their heads to the east and facing south. More than one individual often shared the same grave
  • 14. CLIMATE CHANGES • From 120,000 – 90,000 BC: A moister, rainier period prevailed, enabling Lower Paleolithic people to live and hunt on ancient savannas. • About 90,000 years ago: The rains that characterized the Lower Paleolithic Period were interrupted, and for a short time the Sahara became a vast desert. Soon, a more humid climate returned, and scientists call this the Middle Paleolithic. Springs, lakes and lush grasslands covered much of the Sahara, surpassing the savanna conditions that had prevailed in the earlier Lower Paleolithic Period.
  • 15. • Around 37,000 BC: the climate began to dry up, and by 30,000 BC Egypt’s environment was as arid as it is today. The flora and fauna of the Western Desert disappeared, and the Middle Paleolithic peoples living there lost their food sources. • moister, more hospitable climate returned to Egypt from about 17,000 to 13,000 BC.
  • 19. date the cultural background duration before 8000 BC Palaeolithic 8000-5200 BC Epipalaeolithic (Tarifian ; Qarunian - Fayum B - 6000-5000 BC) 3000 years 6000-5000 BC Nabta Playa 1000 years 5200-4000 BC Fayum Neolithic (Fayum A) 1200 years 4800-4200 BC Merimde 600 years 4600-4400 BC El Omari 200 years 4400-4000 BC Badarian 400 years 4000-3300 BC Maadi 700 years 4000-3500 BC Naqada I 500 years 3500-3200 BC Egypt in the Naqada Period Naqada II 300 years 3200-3100 BC Naqada III 100 years Source: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/museums-static/digitalegypt/chronology/index.html
  • 20. Predynastic cultures in Lower and Upper Egypt Date (BC) Upper Egypt Lower Egypt 3150 Protodynastic Protodynastic 3300 Naqada III Naqada III 3400 Naqada IIcd (Late Gerzean) Ma’adian (Late Gerzean) 3650 Naqada IIab (Early Gerzean) Omari B (?) 3750 Naqada I (Amratian) Omari A (?) 4400 Badarian 4800 Merimden 5200 Fayyum A Source: After Brewer, Douglas J. and Teeter, Emily, Egypt and the Egyptians (Cambridge University Press, 1999)
  • 22. Between 9500 and 5000 radiocarbon years ago the area of Nabta Playa, in the Western Desert of Egypt received 100 to 200 mm of rainfall per year, making it more suitable for human occupation. The rainfall gathered in a series of lakes; Nabta Playa, one of the largest in the region. The earliest sites were located around these large water resources, as were many Palaeolithic sites in Egypt. The lakes attracted humans and other animals and supported a subsistence base of hunting, gathering and in some cases fishing. During the last part of the Neolithic sequence at Nabta Playa, beginning around 4500 BC, the climate began shifting towards the modern hyper-aridity.
  • 23. Groups here were not sedentary but practiced seasonal migration to take advantage of different food resources as they became available. Initially, cattle, and later sheep and goat, were probably herded by the migrating people. By planting a few crops in well-watered areas along the way, they added an additional food resources. Cultivated plants might have been abandoned until harvest, or they may have been tended for part or all of the growing season. Some groups may have even been semi-permanently settled, like those in the late Neolithic Fayyum, where it is thought some members lived at one site year- round.
  • 24.
  • 25. Nabta Playa calendar in Aswan Nubia museum
  • 26.
  • 28. The earliest fully developed Neolithic sites in the Egyptian Nile Valley are located in the north and date between c.5100–4500 BC, with Fayum A and Merimde Benisalame being the older ones.
  • 29. Transition from hunting and gathering and fishing to farming and herding. • New technology/tools for farmers • Wild to domesticated animals • Guaranteed food supply at hand • Permanent Housing • Pottery (for storage) • Child-bearing women = sedentary • Population increases • More help for farming (intensive) • Village life initiates urbanization
  • 30. The Fayum Pre-dynastic period has been split up into two phases, • Fayum A: 5200-4000 BC • Fayum B: 6000-5000 BC
  • 31.
  • 32.
  • 33.
  • 35.
  • 36.
  • 37.
  • 39. It discovered in 1924 by the Egyptian mineralogist Amim El-Omari and Paul Bovier-La pierre. Bovier-La pierre excavated parts of the site during two weeks in 1925. In 1943 Fernand Debono continued the excavations. The excavations were finally published in 1990. From the settlement only pits and postholes survived. The houses might have been built from wattle and daub. All excavated objects were found in the pits. The pottery is made with the local clay. The stone tool repertoire consists of small flakes, axes, sickles and point. The dead were buried in abandoned storage pits near houses. The body was placed on the left side with the head to the south and facing west. Many burials contained a small pot place in front of the body
  • 42.
  • 43. The subterranean style house found at Ma’adi from above (a) and in profile (b). The closest known counterpart to this structure is found in Southwest Asia.
  • 44.
  • 46.
  • 47.
  • 48. • used copper in addition to stone • planted wheat and barley • Kept cattle, sheep, and goats. • Fished from the Nile and hunted gazelle.
  • 49. Ancient Badarian figurine of a woman with incised features (c. 4000 BC), carved out of hippopotamus ivory, held at the British Museum. This type of figure is found in burials of both Badarian men and women
  • 50.
  • 51.
  • 52.
  • 53.
  • 56. axe
  • 58.
  • 59. A large sunken ceramic vessel employed as a Badarian grain silo.
  • 60. An ostrich eggshell bead in profile and as a strung series for a necklace.
  • 61. string of beads from a Badarian tomb, the oldest glazed beads
  • 63. The Naqada period was first divided by the British Egyptologist William Flinders Petrie, who explored the site in 1894, into three sub-periods: Naqada I: Amratian (after the cemetery near El-Amrah) Naqada II: Gerzean (after the cemetery near Gerzeh) Naqada III: Semainean (after the cemetery near Es-Semaina)
  • 65.
  • 66.
  • 67.
  • 68.
  • 69.
  • 70.
  • 71. An interesting artefact of the Naqada I Period is the animal relief pot.
  • 72.
  • 74.
  • 76.
  • 77.
  • 78. An abbreviated list of pot marks recorded on early Naqada vessels. Note how some marks resemble early hieroglyphs.
  • 79. That boats were of great symbolic importance to the earliest inhabitants of Upper Egypt is shown by this predynastic model of a man lying in a foetal position in a coracle-like vessel, surely one of the most poignant images from this early period, conveying a deep sense of desolation. As was probably the case here, the boat was frequently used to represent the transit of the dead to the Afterlife. Naqada I, probably from Middle Egypt
  • 81.
  • 82.
  • 83.
  • 84.
  • 85.
  • 86. A disc-shaped mace head made of dark grey and white porphyry.
  • 87. Sickle blade with the characteristic denticulated cutting edge.
  • 89. A sherd of Naqada I pottery bearing a representation of the red crown of Lower Egypt
  • 90. Senet board and pieces.
  • 93. Painting in tomb 100 in Hierakonpolis
  • 94.
  • 95.
  • 96.
  • 97.
  • 98.
  • 99.
  • 100. Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
  • 101.
  • 102. Grey-green ware with the wavy-handle lug
  • 104.
  • 105.
  • 106.
  • 107. Naqada II stone vessels which, unlike earlier periods, are made from harder stones such as basalt.
  • 108. Designs on three Nagada II (Gerzean) Decorated Ware vessels.
  • 111. An amulet shaped in the form of a bull’s head.
  • 112.
  • 113. Two-headed palette with opposing effigies, a characteristic design of Naqada II.
  • 114. Polished side of a Gerzean flint blade from Abu Zaidan (09.889.120). The Brooklyn Museum, New York.
  • 115. Gerzean flint blades with rounded ends The British Museum, London
  • 116. The Gebel el-Arak knife.
  • 117.
  • 118.
  • 119. Brooklyn handle: carved ivory knife handle from Abu Zeidan, late predynastic (Nagada IIc/d). Brooklyn Museum
  • 120. Rivers handle: carved ivory knife handle, late predynastic (Nagada IIc/d). Pitt-Rivers Museum, Farnham, Dorset.
  • 121. Davis comb: carved ivory comb, late predynastic (Nagada IIc/d). Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
  • 122. Copper tools of the Naqada II Period: an adze (a) and an axe blade (b).
  • 123. A typical Naqada II pit grave with the deceased placed in a crouched position, head to the south and looking to the west. Characteristic period ceramic vessels accompany the deceased in her final resting place.
  • 127. The ritual knife, dating to Naqada III period, now on display at the Brooklyn Museum
  • 128. The Gebel-Tarif knife of the Naqada III period.
  • 129. Slate Palette with conquering towns scene
  • 130.
  • 131. Bone Tags from tomb U-j at Abydos, Early Naqada III
  • 132. Naqada I (Amratian( Naqada II (Gerzean( Naqada III (Semainian / Dyn.“0”( BURIALS
  • 134. Rock drawings come from different time periods, ranging from the Paleolithic, Neolithic to the pre-dynastic and dynastic times. In the 1930s, Hans Winkler collected and classified rock drawings from 40 different sites in both the Western and Eastern Deserts.
  • 135. Earliest rock inscriptions are geometric designs and stylized animal footprints.
  • 136. Detail of late Paleolithic rock art panel showing bovids. Qurta.
  • 137. Detail of late Palaeolithic rock art panel showing three highly stylized human figures. Qurta.
  • 138. Rock drawing, southern Upper Egypt, probably fifth- fourth millennium B.C.
  • 139.
  • 140.
  • 141.
  • 142.
  • 143.
  • 144. THE CAVE OF SWIMMERS WADI SURA GILF KEBIR
  • 145. Neolithic (?) hand stencils from Wadi el- Obeiyd Cave. Farafra Oasis.
  • 146. Predynastic representation of highprowed boat with human figures, ubiquitous in the Eastern Desert. Wadi Barramiya. Probably Naqada II.
  • 147. Finely engraved human and animal figures. Theban Desert. Possibly early Predynastic (Tasian or Badarian).
  • 148. Nag el Hamdulab vandalism to Naqada III site
  • 149. MAPS
  • 150.
  • 151.
  • 152. BIBLIOGRAPHY Brewer, Douglas J. Ancient Egypt, Foundations of a Civilization. London: Pearson, 2005. Davis, Whitney. Masking the Blow: The Scene of Representation in Late Prehistoric Egyptian Art. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992. Rice, Michael. Egypt’s Making: The Origins of Ancient Egypt 5000 – 2000 BC. London: Rutledge, 2003. Teeters, Emily. Before the Pyramids: The Origins of Egyptian Civilization. Chicago: The Oriental Institute of University of Chicago, 2011.
  • 153. Digital Egypt for Universities, University College London: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/museums- static/digitalegypt/neolithic/omari.html