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Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Historical scope



As you except from this blog to share about ancient greek and it’s relation to Egypt specifically the most known Mediterranean city in Egypt, Alexandria  









Now we will ride my time machine I’ve invented specially for you and travel to the past to see if the ancient Egyptians and ancient greek met




"You Greeks are youngsters." That is the very thing an Egyptian priest should have told a meeting Greek in the sixth century BC. What's more, as it were he was correct. We consider Antiquated Greece, indeed, "old", and it is presently known to return to Mycenaean culture of the final part of the second thousand years BC. However, Egyptian civilization is significantly sooner than that: during the second thousand years BC it was at its level (the "New Realm"), yet its beginnings go solidly into the third thousand years BC or considerably prior.


Egyptians and Greeks are known to have been in contact currently in the second thousand years BC, however we have barely any insight into it. The image becomes more clear from around 600BC, when the nautical Greeks were continuous guests to Egypt. Some of it was for exchange (there was a Greek exchanging base at Naucratis Egypt from about this time), some of it was about military administrations, and some of it was likely touring. By the fifth fourth hundreds of years BC Greek erudite people had a very smart thought of Egyptian culture. They realized it was antiquated (truth be told they incredibly misjudged how old it was), and they considered it to be a wellspring of information and exclusive insight. Some of them accepted that Egypt had impacted Greece in the far off past; for the student of history Herodotus, Greek religion was for the most part an Egyptian import.


Streak forward to the Greek time frame (late fourth first hundreds of years BC), while, following Alexander the great the Incomparable, Egypt was taken over by a Greco-Macedonian tradition situated in the new city of Alexandria. These Greek pharaohs imparted in Greek and the actual country turned out to be progressively bilingual and bicultural, a cycle that went on into the Roman time frame. The most distinctive image of the new Greco-Egyptian culture that created is the ubiquity of Egyptian religion, especially the goddess Isis, who had admirers all around the Mediterranean by the first century BC.


Something major Egypt and Greece shared practically speaking was their obsession for literature . Greek literature was similarly youthful, verified from around 700BC (Homer, Hesiod), albeit the Greeks likely had oral writing significantly sooner than that. Egypt has one of the earliest authenticated artistic customs on the planet, going right back to the third thousand years BC.


Demotic content on the Rosetta Stone, English Historical center. Photograph by Einsamer Schütze, CC BY-SA 3.0 through Wikimedia Hall.

English Gallery Egypt by Einsamer Schütze. CC-BY-SA 3.0 through Wikimedia Hall.

Whenever Greeks were gotten comfortable Egypt, they probably experienced Egyptian writing. No lack of Egyptian writing was being composed and acted in this period, the majority of it in the later type of the Egyptian language called "Demotic" (which has a truly troublesome content). We wouldn't have a ton of familiarity with this today, yet fortunately a portion of the papyrus-original copies have made due, or if nothing else bits of them have. Gigantic advances have been made in distinguishing and unraveling these over the most recent couple of many years, and interestingly we can start to see what Egyptian writing resembled in the Greek and Roman periods.


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