Egyptian Art and Architecture - USA History.
Publié le 02/05/2013
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The kings of the 1st Dynasty (2920 BC-2770 BC) were buried in the cemetery of their ancestors at Abydos in southern Egypt.
Their burial sites were built of mud brick (bricks baked in the sun) and consisted of two parts: a tomb in the desert where the king was buried, and a rectangular funerary enclosure at the desert's edge, whererituals were performed.
A pair of stone slabs called stelae marked the tombs and bore the name of the royal occupant.
In the 2nd Dynasty (2770 BC-2649 BC), most royal burials were moved north to the cemetery of Şaqq ārah, which served the capital city of Memphis, but the last two kings were buried at Abydos.
Within the tomb enclosure of the last king of the 2nd Dynasty, Khasekhemwy, archaeologists have excavated a square brick mound.
This mound was probably theforerunner of the first pyramid, which is known as the Step Pyramid at Şaqq ārah.
The Step Pyramid was built by King Djoser, who ruled from 2630 BC to 2611 BC, during the 3rd Dynasty (2649 BC-2575 BC).
In its final form it consisted of six huge, square tiers of decreasing size, placed one on top of the other to a height of nearly 60 m (200 ft).
Its diminishing tiers resemble steps.
The Step Pyramid stood in themiddle of a rectangular enclosure.
Also within the enclosure were various other buildings, some of which could be entered, while others had no doors.
These buildingsfunctioned only for the spirit forms of the dead king and the gods, who were believed to be able to pass through the thick rock walls.
Unlike the earlier mud-brick tombs, the entire complex at Şaqq ārah was built of stone; however, similarities show that the complex evolved from the earlier tombs andfunerary enclosures at Abydos.
The Şaqq ārah design combined the tomb and funerary enclosure so that the burial, placed under the pyramid, lay within the funeraryenclosure.
King Sneferu built the first true pyramid with smooth sides at the beginning of the 4th Dynasty (2575 BC–2467 BC), and Egyptian kings continued to use pyramids for burial through the 12th Dynasty.
The best-known pyramids were built on the Giza plateau for three 4th Dynasty kings: Khufu, Khafre, and Menkaure.
Each pyramid isjust one element in a line of structures that form a burial complex.
The complex begins at the east, with a temple on a harbor at the edge of the cultivated land in theNile Valley.
From this valley temple, where the king’s body was first brought by boat, a long, covered causeway runs west into the desert to a pyramid temple.
To thewest of the temple is the pyramid itself, inside of which the king’s body was placed.
Inside the temple, rituals performed for the king included the offering of food anddrink to nourish his ka-spirit (life force).
The Egyptian pyramids served as more than a place to put the king’s dead body.
They were places of transformation that enabled the king to pass into a new stage oflife.
The east-west orientation of each pyramid complex paralleled the daytime course of the sun as it rises and sets.
The burial chamber represented the duat throughwhich the sun traveled from west to east at night before rising in the eastern sky at dawn.
While the king's body lay in its coffin, his ka-spirit was nourished by ritualsthat priests performed in the pyramid temple, and his ba-spirit (personality, or individual identity) joined the sun, triumphantly leaving the duat at sunrise to travel across the sky.
At night it sank with the sun back into the duat to rejoin the king's body and ka-spirit, and here it was renewed before leaving the tomb again in themorning.
In this way the dead king achieved eternal existence.
After the Middle Kingdom ended in 1640 BC, the Egyptians stopped building royal pyramids, and in the New Kingdom (1550 BC–1070 BC), kings were buried in tombs at Thebes in the Valley of the Kings, where the burial site of King Tutankhamun was found in 1922.
The Valley of the Kings is a rocky desert area with high cliffs.
TheEgyptians cut the tombs into the cliffs.
The tombs typically consisted of a series of corridors, steps, and rooms that ended in a burial chamber.
The door to the tombformed a point of transition from the world of the living to the world of the dead, so that the tomb represented the duat .
In the New Kingdom’s 18th Dynasty, tombs were mostly undecorated, except for the burial chamber.
In the 19th Dynasty (1307 BC–1196 BC) and 20th Dynasty (1196 BC–1070 BC), decoration extended to the tomb entrance, where the sun’s passage was depicted through the duat at night until its rise, regenerated, in the morning.
The dead king, who was identified with the sun god, achieved new life by taking part in the eternal cycle of the sun.
Because the narrow Valley of the Kings lacked space fortemples in which to honor the king, these were separated from the tomb and built where the desert's edge met the cultivated regions.
By the end of the New Kingdom, the Egyptians no longer built royal tombs in the desert, perhaps because of the difficulty of protecting these isolated spots from tombrobbers.
Instead, tombs began to be built inside the most important temple complex in the king's capital or native city.
Most New Kingdom royal tombs were smallerthan those of earlier dynasties, and few of their associated buildings have survived.
The Ptolemaic kings of the era following the Late Period, which ended in 332 BC, were buried in Alexandria, which was their capital city.
A2 Tombs of the Elite
The tombs for the elite members of Egyptian society were less elaborate than royal tombs, but they were nevertheless impressive.
The preferred location for elite tombswas the west bank of the Nile, but many were built on the east bank as well.
In the 1st and 2nd dynasties the tombs of the elite at Şaqq ārah consisted of an underground structure that contained the burial site and a flat, rectangular mud-brickstructure built over it.
Today these structures are called mastabas, from the Arabic word for 'bench.' The long sides of the mastabas had a north-south orientation.
In the 2nd Dynasty, tomb builders started creating a niche on the eastern side of the tomb.
In it was placed a stone slab carved with an image of the deceased tombowner seated before a variety of offerings.
The slab marked the place for making offerings.
During the next two dynasties, the niche was gradually cut deeper into thesolid mastaba, so that the offering place lay within it.
Decorated limestone slabs lined the walls of the niche.
In the 4th Dynasty, stone mastabas began to replace those of mud brick.
In the 5th Dynasty (2465 BC–2323 BC) and 6th Dynasty (2323 BC–2152 BC), the large mastabas of the highest officials had a series of decorated rooms for the performance of funerary rituals.
These rituals focused on a false door on the west wall of theoffering chamber—a door that was intended to connect the worlds of the dead and the living.
Although solid and impassable to the living, the door permitted the deadto pass through and receive offerings.
This tomb chapel remained open to priests and family members after the tomb’s owner was buried, but the actual body wasplaced in a burial chamber at the bottom of a shaft cut deep into the ground below the chapel.
After the burial, the shaft was filled in and made inaccessible.
Although freestanding tomb chapels were common in the Old Kingdom, some chapels were cut out of rock cliffs.
During much of the Old Kingdom, most elite tombswere built near the capital city of Memphis, but by the 6th Dynasty, officials concerned with provincial administration were building their tombs in the provinces theygoverned.
This tradition continued into the Middle Kingdom until the 12th Dynasty (1991 BC–1783 BC).
The large decorated tomb chapels of the Middle Kingdom were cut into the cliffs that run along the edge of the Nile Valley.
The best-known elite cemetery of the New Kingdom lies on the west bank of the Nile at Thebes.
The rock-cut tomb chapels there take the shape of a T.
They areentered from an open court through a door that leads into the crossbar of the T, with the shaft of the T straight ahead.
Like earlier tomb chapels, these provided aspace for offerings by the living to the dead, but instead of a false door, the focal point was a statue of the deceased placed in a niche on the back wall of the chapel.
Elite burials of the New Kingdom also took place at Şaqq ārah, some in rock-cut tombs, but most in freestanding tomb chapels.
In the Late and Ptolemaic periods, eliteburial sites had a variety of forms.
A3 Temples.
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