EARLY DYNASTIC EGYPT
EARLY DYNASTIC EGYPT
Toby A.H.Wilkinson
London and New York
First published 1999 by Routledge
11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE
Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge
29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group
This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005.
© 1999 Toby A.H.Wilkinson
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data
Wilkinson, Toby A.H.
Early Dynastic Egypt/Toby A.H.Wilkinson
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p.378) and index.
1. Egypt—History—To 332 B.C. I. Title DT85.W49 1999
932′.012–dc21 98–35836 CIP
ISBN 0-203-02438-9 Master e-book ISBN
ISBN 0-203-20421-2 (Adobe e-Reader Format) ISBN 0-415-18633-1 (Print Edition)
For Benjamin
CONTENTS
List of plates
ix
List of figures
x
Prologue
xii
Acknowledgements
xvii
PART I INTRODUCTION
PART II
THE ESTABLISHMENT OF AUTHORITY
PART III
THE DIVERSITY OF LOCAL EXPERIENCE
Epilogue
316
Glossary
317
Bibliography
327
Index
356
PLATES
8.1 Markers of the royal cult
240
FIGURES
Map 1 | Map of Egypt and Nubia showing sites mentioned in the text | xviii |
Map 2 | Map of the Near East showing sites mentioned in the text | xx |
Chronological chart of the late Predynastic and Early Dynastic periods | 22 | |
2.1 | Early centres of kingship | 31 |
2.2 | Trade, ownership and power | 35 |
2.3 | Kings before the First Dynasty | 44 |
3.1 | Rulers of the First Dynasty: contemporary lists | 53 |
3.2 | Royal annals | 55 |
3.3 | Year label of Semerkhet | 67 |
3.4 | Ephemeral rulers, 1: Weneg and Nubnefer | 74 |
3.5 | The Third Dynasty: a problem solved | 83 |
3.6 | Ephemeral rulers, 2: Khaba | 85 |
4.1 | Royal domains | 100 |
4.2 | Estates | 102 |
4.3 | The treasury and its functions | 107 |
4.4 | Taxation | 108 |
4.5 | The titles of the vizier | 117 |
4.6 | The structure of Early Dynastic administration | 123 |
5.1 | Campaigns against southern Palestine | 132 |
5.2 | Activity in Egypt’s desert margins | 142 |
5.3 | Campaigns against Nubia | 151 |
6.1 | The staff of office | 159 |
6.2 | The red crown | 164 |
6.3 | The white crown | 166 |
6.4 | Standards on early royal monuments | 169 |
6.5 | The Two Ladies | 174 |
6.6 | Hunting the hippopotamus | 185 |
6.7 | Year labels | 188 |
6.8 | Palace-façade architecture, 1 | 194 |
7.1 | The royal cemetery at Abydos | 200 |
7.2 | The royal cemetery at Saqqara | 208 |
9.1 Elkab
287
PROLOGUE
Ancient Egypt holds a unique fascination. No other civilisation of the ancient world has such popular appeal, none is as significant for the history of human society and its organisation. The valley of the River Nile witnessed the world’s first example of that enduring and now omnipresent political structure, the nation state. Today, practically the entire land surface of the earth is divided among nation states, which number nearly two hundred. But the origins of this phenomenon go back five thousand years, to the formation of a unified territory and government in Egypt. Moreover, that government, centred on the royal court and the person of the king, succeeded in creating and promoting an élite culture which expressed itself on a grand scale. Hence, ancient Egyptian civilisation has left an unparalleled series of monuments to allure and intrigue countless generations of visitors.
The pyramids of the Old Kingdom are perhaps the most remarkable, and certainly the most captivating, of Egyptian monuments. Those at Giza were hailed as one of the wonders of the ancient world; to modern eyes they are perhaps the quintessential symbol of the ancient Egyptians’ extraordinary creativity and craftsmanship. Yet the cultural and political developments which led to the construction of the pyramids have been comparatively neglected. Without central control of the economy, the royal court would not have had the resources to engage in monumental building projects. Without the ability to command the necessary manpower, the pyramids could not have been raised. Without the religious and ideological motivation, the construction of huge funerary monuments would, quite literally, never have got off the ground. All these prerequisites for pyramid-building have their roots in the Early Dynastic period. Hence to understand the most potent symbols of ancient Egypt, we must look at what went before. Five hundred years separate the birth of the Egyptian state and the erection of the pyramids. This half-millennium constitutes the formative period of civilisation in the Nile valley, when Egypt’s early kings developed the mechanisms of rule and the élite culture that were to characterise their country for the next three thousand years. This crucially important formative stage is the subject of the current work.
The chapters that follow seek to explain not only the background to the formation of the Egyptian state, but also the means by which its early rulers controlled the people, the land and its resources. Central authority, however, is only one side of the coin. At all periods, Egypt’s governing élite strove to convey the impression that the nation was unified politically and culturally, that all its institutions revolved around the king and took their lead from the royal court. The true picture is rather more complex: in reality, local and regional concerns were important, and often had a direct impact on the pace and direction of change. Egypt was never a monolithic state, despite the wishes and protestations of its rulers. The current work addresses this interesting question, examining the character of Early Dynastic Egypt at the provincial level.