crime & punishment in ancient egypt

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Crime & Punishment in Ancient Egypt By Krishna Horrigan

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Crime & Punishment in Ancient Egypt. By Krishna Horrigan. Introduction. Laws were important to make Egyptian culture run well. None of the laws were written. We have learned about laws from stories and carvings. Pharaoh. The pharaoh was the judge of the high court. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

Crime & Punishment in Ancient Egypt

By Krishna Horrigan

Page 2: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

Introduction•Laws were important to make Egyptian culture run well.

•None of the laws were written.

•We have learned about laws from stories and carvings.

Page 3: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

A Pharaoh presenting the symbol of Justice to the god 

of Dekkah Temple, Ptolemic era

Pharaoh

•The pharaoh was the judge of the high court.

•The people thought of the king as a god, so whatever he said went.

Page 4: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

Ma’atGoddess of truth, justice

and balance

Page 5: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt
Page 6: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

Gold Ma’at pendant from the British Museum

Ma’at

Page 7: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

•In the British Museum in London.

•A story on papyrus paper.

•Helps us understand the Ancient Egyptian’s sense of right and wrong

The Eloquent Peasant

Page 8: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

•The story of a poor farmer going to market with his goods on an donkey.

•Land owner/rich man wanted to trick peasant

•Laid carpet on path/road as a trap

•Peasant tells his story over and over.

•Goes to seven courts to argue his case

•Ends up telling his story to the pharaoh

The Eloquent Peasant

Page 9: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

The Eloquent Peasant

Page 10: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

•King Menes was a very important ruler

•He made the first legal system

King Menes

                               

this is a picture of him punishing a person who has broken the law

Page 11: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

•Found in the tomb of Mehu, a fifth dynasty judge

•Inscriptions describe him as zAb (judge), Priest of Maat, the Goddess of Truth, Eldest One of the Hall and Secretary of the Secret Decisions of the Great Judgment Court.

Ancient Judge

Page 12: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

Included:

• Getting whipped or beat

• Amputation (getting something cut off.)

Punishments

•Hand cut off if you stole.

Page 13: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

•Punishment of a grave robber

•Buried alive

Punishments

Page 14: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

If a kid killed his or her parent(s)

•they would have their skin cut with reeds

•Be put on a bed of thorns

• then burned alive.

But if a parent killed their kid(s)

•they would only have to hold their kid(s) for three days.

Punishments

Page 15: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

Death Sentence If you did a really serious crime, you would be sentenced to death

•left to be eaten by the alligators

•If you had a very high rank, they might let you commit suicide

Page 16: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

•The husband wrote this contract

•He said he would pay the wife some money within 30 days of divorce

Marriage Contract

•They could get married again after divorce

•Eight witnesses signed the back of the contract

Page 17: Crime & Punishment  in Ancient Egypt

•Loans not a modern invention.

•This papyrus is a contract to repay a quantity of grain.

•The loan is for approximately seven months

•Interest is not charged on the basic loan.

•if the loan is not repaid by the set date, the debtor,Amenhotep, agrees to pay an additional fifty percent to Padimin, the owner of the grain, a month later.

•A summary was written at the top of the papyrus

•The papyrus was sealed up.

An ancient loan agreement