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The History of Egypt Podcast

01: The Two Lands (Egypt's Unification)

The History of Egypt Podcast

Dominic Perry

History, Society & Culture

4.8 • 2.1K Ratings

🗓️ 1 January 2013

⏱️ 32 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Out of many... two. Five thousand years ago, a kingdom emerged on the banks of the Nile. The "Two Lands" of Southern and Northern Egypt slowly unified, and rulers like Narmer established their authority. The origins of the kingdom are murky, but archaeology can uncover secrets. In this episode, we meet the first ruler of the land, get a sense of Egypt and its people, and introduce the podcast as a whole. Welcome! Date: circa 3050 – 3000 BCE. Kings: Narmer, Scorpion (epilogue). Episode Music by Keith Zizza www.keithzizza.com. Select Bibliography: Kathryn A. Bard, An Introduction to the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt, 2nd edition, 2015. Eugenia D’Atanasio et al., “The Peopling of the Last Green Sahara Revealed by High-Coverage Resequencing of Trans-Saharan Patrilineages,” Genome Biology 19.20 (2018): 1–15. Gunter Dreyer, “Tomb U-j: A Royal Burial of Dynasty 0 at Abydos,” in Emily Teeter (ed.) Before the Pyramids: The Origins of Egyptian Civilization, 2011: 127-36. A.J. Spencer, Early Egypt: The Rise of Civilization in the Nile Valley, 1993. Barry J. Kemp, Ancient Egypt: Anatomy of a Civilization, 3rd edition, 2018. David O’Connor, Abydos: Egypt’s First Pharaohs and the Cult of Osiris, 2011. John Romer, A History of Ancient Egypt from the First Farmers to the Great Pyramid, 2013. David Wengrow, “Landscapes of Knowledge, Idioms of Power: The African Foundations of Ancient Egyptian Civilization Reconsidered,” in David O’Connor and Andrew Reid (eds) Ancient Egypt in Africa, 2003: 121-36. David Wengrow, The Archaeology of Early Egypt: Social Transformations in North-East Africa, 10,000 to 2650 BC, 2006. Robert J. Wenke, The Ancient Egyptian State: The Origins of Egyptian Culture (c. 8000 – 2000 BC), 2009. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

A hot sun beach down on a green land. This was no desert but a verdant marsh, teeming with life and

0:16.8

sweltering in humidity. Narrow waterways passed by muddy banks, thickets of papyrus and lotus flowers.

0:24.0

Wild animals like the hippopotamus and birds like the ibis made their way across a lush environment.

0:31.0

This swampy expanse called the Nile Delta was a wild land

0:36.2

untamed populated by hunters. It was a land in the midst of conflict.

0:42.3

A tired swive. It was a land in the midst of conflict.

0:44.0

A tired sweating man knelt in the dirt,

0:47.2

his arms ached from battle, his brow was sweaty from the heat.

0:51.2

He rested uncomfortably on the ground while another man watched over him.

0:56.0

Nearby, comrades also knelt in the soil. Their limbs were stained with blood.

1:06.2

The sun shone down on a day of battle. These kneeling men were the losers. The prisoner sweated in his humiliation and fear. The ache of defeat was nothing to the knowledge of what was to come. If he looked around, he would see that future written on the face of his captors.

1:20.0

For those in defeat this was a dark day, but for another group it was a scene of victory.

1:27.0

Around the clearing warriors had gathered to watch over their prisoners.

1:31.0

They clutched their spears excitedly.

1:34.3

These men wore no armour, only white cloth kilts.

1:38.0

Their skin, a mix of red browns and deep blacks, was shiny with sweat. They were warriors of the most ancient sort,

1:45.8

followers of a king and they had come in conquest.

1:48.9

The crowd of victorious warriors parted and a tall muscular man emerged.

1:55.6

He was elegantly dressed in a sort of tunic clasped over the chest.

2:00.5

An ornate belt was cinched at his waist, and from this belt the tail of a lion hung down.

2:06.0

The man wore a short beard from his chin up his jawline.

2:10.0

A top his head he sported a tall white cap, shaped a bit like a bowling pin.

...

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