the nile valley chapter 2:id the new kingdom 1800-1000 b.c. “the land of the pharaohs.”

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The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

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Page 1: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id

The New Kingdom1800-1000 B.C.

“The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Page 2: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

New Kingdom

Page 3: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

It was actually during the 18th dynasty of the New Kingdom that the rulers of Egypt first began using

the title pharaoh.*

*pharaoh (pe-ro) means “great house”[Image source:

http://www.narmer.pl/gen/ima/g17-18en.gif]

Page 4: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Cartouches of great pharaohs:

Page 5: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Hatshepsut

• ruled with her husband

• regent for stepson Thutmose III

• finally made herself pharaoh

Page 6: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Queen Hatshepsut assumed all of the trappings of royal power, including the false beard

traditionally worn by Egyptian kings.

[Image source: http://www.duke.edu/~drb3/hatshepsut/HATSHEPSUT.HTML]

Page 7: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Hatshepsut carried out an extensive building program .

Page 8: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Thutmose III ruled after

Hatshepsut’s death and marched a

large Egyptian army northeast

to conquer Syria.

Page 9: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Thutmose III captured the

important town of

Megiddo which

controlled the trade routes.

[Image source: http://www.eyelid.co.uk/k-q3.htm]

Page 10: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Thutmose III soon conquered an empire

that brought great wealth to Egypt.

[Image source: http://www.terraflex.co.il/ad/egypt/history18-20.htm#Thutmoseiii]

Page 11: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Egyptians benefited from

cultural diffusion when their

empire brought them into contact

with other cultures.

Page 12: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Amenhotep IV broke with

tradition and promoted

monotheism when he

encouraged Egyptians to

worship of one god - Aton.

[Image source: http://www.library.nwu.edu/class/history/B94/akhencol.gif]

Page 13: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Akhenaton moved the capital of

Egypt from Thebes to Amarna.

[Image source: http://www.unites.uqam.ca/dhist/pagesp/pagemg3.htm]

Page 14: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

[Image source: http://www.unites.uqam.ca/dhist/pagesp/pagemg3.htm]

Page 15: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Amenhotep IV changed his name to Akhenaton to honour

the sun-disk god Aton.

[Image source: http://www.pharaonicarts.com/AkhenatonSun.htm]

Page 16: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

We know about this brief

period in history due to a cache of letters unearthed by

archaeologists and known as the Amarna

Letters. Source: Biblical Archaeology Review, May/June 1998, p. 39.

Page 17: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

After Akhenaton’s

death, the priests

restored the old religion

and put Tutankhamen on the throne.

[Image source: http://www.terraflex.co.il/ad/egypt/history18-20.htm#Tutankhamen]

Page 18: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

The priests made Pharaoh Tutankhamen

to move the capital back to Thebes.

[Image source: http://www.unites.uqam.ca/dhist/pagesp/pagemg3.htm]

Page 19: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Tutankhamen’s tomb in the Valley of the Kings

[Image source: http://www.geocities.com/TheTropics/Shores/9624/egypt.html]

Page 20: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

General Ramses, commander of the

Egyptian army, overthrew the

18th dynasty and established a new

dynasty.[Image source: http://www.egybazar.com/ramsess18.html]

Page 21: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

[Image source: http://www.natashascafe.com/cgi-bin/dbase.cgi?ramses]

Pharaoh Ramses II worked to

restore Egypt’s prestige

during the 1200s B.C.

Page 22: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

He was known as “Ramses the Great” because of his military prowess.

[Image source: http://www.natashascafe.com/cgi-bin/dbase.cgi?ramseschariot]

Page 23: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

The Egyptians fought the Hittites of southwest Asia for control of Syria.

Page 24: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Ramses II ruled for 67 years anddied at theage of 90.

[Image source: http://www.ccer.ggl.ruu.nl/abu_simbel/ramses.html]

Page 25: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

Egypt was weakened by attacks from

the Sea Peoples and

entered a period of decline.

Page 26: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”
Page 27: The Nile Valley Chapter 2:id The New Kingdom 1800-1000 B.C. “The Land of the Pharaohs.”

By 945 B.C., Egypt came

under foreign rule - among

them the Libyans from the west and the Kushites

from the south.