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Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Ancient Egyptian Culture :: Egypt Ancient World Culture

Somewhere around 1375 years before the birth of Christ, an Egyptian pharaoh publicly changed his name. That change signalled a return to long-standing tradition, a hallmark of Egyptian stopping point that flourished for more than three thousand years peacefully in the rich Nile River valley. The king had been called Tutankhaton. The last portion of his name, aton, was the name for the sun-god, which, in the years before the kings reign, had achieved short letter among the competing deities in Egyptian religious tradition. The king changed his name to the one by which he is known today -- TUTANKHAMEN or, more popularly, King Tut -- and ended the brief sample in monotheism in favor of the older religion with its promise of an afterlife.And what an afterlife the pharaoh would have Embalmed in order to endure the elements of disintegration, richly attired to attest to his mythical earthly wealth, magnificently housed to remind all on-lookers of the towering greatness of the entombed human -- the pharaoh lived on in perpetual association with the stone structures that rose portentously come to the fore of the hot, barren sands of the desert so close to the life-giving, greening Nile. And the solemn bearing of these great structures reminds people today of the human hope for immortality and the way an ideal culture fashioned a collective immortality in astonishing stone. Here was a culture that would persist, just as its pharaohs would live on in their tacit palaces.More interesting, perhaps, is the collective underwriting of the PYRAMIDS. No fewer than 70,000 workers would have been needed to lug limestone blocks from desert miles away to the building sites. Yet there is little evidence that the pharaohs had to blackjack their subjects to leave their fields and families in order to build a monument whose completion any single worker would certainly never see.

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