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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,200 --> 00:00:04,800 Camel, get up. 2 00:00:04,800 --> 00:00:06,120 Woo! 3 00:00:06,120 --> 00:00:09,000 SHE LAUGHS 4 00:00:09,000 --> 00:00:11,480 This is brilliant. 5 00:00:11,480 --> 00:00:13,680 This is obviously an iconic image - 6 00:00:13,680 --> 00:00:16,560 taking a camel ride by the pyramids. 7 00:00:16,560 --> 00:00:19,320 Surely, it encapsulates the spirit of Egypt. 8 00:00:20,520 --> 00:00:24,280 But such an image is completely misleading, 9 00:00:24,280 --> 00:00:26,640 because there weren't any camels here 10 00:00:26,640 --> 00:00:29,440 when the pyramids were built 4,500 years ago. 11 00:00:31,000 --> 00:00:32,800 And that's the thing. 12 00:00:32,800 --> 00:00:36,320 Ancient Egypt is instantly recognisable 13 00:00:36,320 --> 00:00:39,360 but all too often completely misunderstood. 14 00:00:41,080 --> 00:00:44,720 So, I'm going to try and change that. 15 00:00:44,720 --> 00:00:46,400 - Good luck! - Shukran jazeelan. 16 00:00:50,000 --> 00:00:52,120 The Great Pyramid of Giza, 17 00:00:52,120 --> 00:00:54,960 the final resting place of King Khufu, 18 00:00:54,960 --> 00:00:58,680 over 140 metres from bottom to top. 19 00:01:00,640 --> 00:01:03,120 No wonder it still pulls in the crowds... 20 00:01:03,120 --> 00:01:05,520 and the occasional Egyptologist. 21 00:01:13,200 --> 00:01:15,480 - Sabah al-khair. MEN: - Sabah al-khair. 22 00:01:17,080 --> 00:01:20,840 It's hard to really get it into words, but we are now entering 23 00:01:20,840 --> 00:01:25,280 into the depths of this iconic monument of ancient Egypt. 24 00:01:25,280 --> 00:01:27,200 Sabah al-khair. 25 00:01:27,200 --> 00:01:29,400 It's a very busy iconic monument, though. 26 00:01:31,440 --> 00:01:33,720 - Sabah al-khair. - Sabah al-khair. 27 00:01:33,720 --> 00:01:38,000 And as we set foot on this journey upwards, it's a brilliant metaphor 28 00:01:38,000 --> 00:01:42,320 for the way that the ancient Egyptian civilisation literally rose up 29 00:01:42,320 --> 00:01:45,240 from the Earth to a real zenith. 30 00:01:45,240 --> 00:01:48,800 So, come with me and I'll show you something really brilliant. 31 00:01:48,800 --> 00:01:53,360 Because the pyramids are really only the tip of the iceberg. 32 00:01:57,000 --> 00:01:58,320 Oh! 33 00:01:58,320 --> 00:01:59,920 Oh, flipping heck. 34 00:02:03,040 --> 00:02:05,960 So all this was a big city. 35 00:02:05,960 --> 00:02:07,640 - Overwhelming in size. - Yeah, it is. 36 00:02:08,720 --> 00:02:11,600 That is absolutely superb. 37 00:02:11,600 --> 00:02:15,000 In this series, I am going to explore the story 38 00:02:15,000 --> 00:02:19,040 of what I consider to be the world's greatest civilisation - 39 00:02:19,040 --> 00:02:23,240 more than 4,000 years of history that has shaped our world 40 00:02:23,240 --> 00:02:27,040 and left unmistakable marks that can still be read today. 41 00:02:29,280 --> 00:02:32,240 I'll be looking into every nook and cranny, 42 00:02:32,240 --> 00:02:35,520 from little-known tombs... 43 00:02:35,520 --> 00:02:36,560 It's staggering. 44 00:02:36,560 --> 00:02:39,880 I've never ever been into a tomb quite like this before. 45 00:02:39,880 --> 00:02:42,040 ..to the hidden corners of vast monuments... 46 00:02:42,040 --> 00:02:44,160 It's like being on top of the world, isn't it? 47 00:02:44,160 --> 00:02:46,560 Yeah, we are on the top of Karnak. 48 00:02:49,840 --> 00:02:53,880 So it's really no surprise that weird and wonderful theories 49 00:02:53,880 --> 00:02:56,640 about ancient Egypt crop up all the time. 50 00:02:58,760 --> 00:03:03,600 But what I find so amazing is that this most intriguing civilisation 51 00:03:03,600 --> 00:03:08,280 was actually created by people not so very different from you and me. 52 00:03:08,280 --> 00:03:10,800 And that's the story I want to tell. 53 00:03:13,000 --> 00:03:17,520 The story full of secret treasures, dark deeds... 54 00:03:19,000 --> 00:03:22,280 ..and sometimes controversial theories. 55 00:03:22,280 --> 00:03:25,720 This mask was originally made for someone else. 56 00:03:27,360 --> 00:03:30,640 And for the first time, I'll be piecing it all together... 57 00:03:31,960 --> 00:03:36,360 ..from the earliest Egyptians to the last of the pharaohs. 58 00:03:36,360 --> 00:03:38,680 Wow! Look at that, look at that! 59 00:03:38,680 --> 00:03:41,520 Oh, that is... Oh, that is so beautiful. 60 00:03:43,520 --> 00:03:46,840 Welcome to my story of ancient Egypt. 61 00:04:03,600 --> 00:04:07,040 The big question is, how did ancient Egypt begin? 62 00:04:09,560 --> 00:04:11,040 Where did the first Egyptians 63 00:04:11,040 --> 00:04:13,600 and their extraordinary culture come from? 64 00:04:17,160 --> 00:04:21,800 This immortal civilisation was thousands of years in the making, 65 00:04:21,800 --> 00:04:24,880 so to pull it all together is a daunting task. 66 00:04:26,000 --> 00:04:29,320 But bear with me, as it's utterly fascinating. 67 00:04:36,000 --> 00:04:38,760 But we won't begin with massive monuments 68 00:04:38,760 --> 00:04:41,880 but with some enigmatic clues you could easily miss. 69 00:04:49,200 --> 00:04:53,800 This is Qurta, around 100 kilometres south of Luxor. 70 00:04:55,760 --> 00:04:57,600 Unless you're an archaeologist, 71 00:04:57,600 --> 00:05:00,960 you almost certainly won't have heard of it, 72 00:05:00,960 --> 00:05:05,000 because there aren't any great temples or royal tombs to admire. 73 00:05:06,760 --> 00:05:08,200 But high in the cliffs, 74 00:05:08,200 --> 00:05:11,400 you can see real signs of ancient life here. 75 00:05:15,400 --> 00:05:18,840 Thousands of years before the pyramids, 76 00:05:18,840 --> 00:05:22,000 and this is where our story begins. 77 00:05:22,000 --> 00:05:23,440 Welcome to Qurta, Joann. 78 00:05:23,440 --> 00:05:24,680 Thank you so much 79 00:05:24,680 --> 00:05:26,600 for letting me come here. 80 00:05:26,600 --> 00:05:29,040 It's incredibly exciting. 81 00:05:29,040 --> 00:05:31,440 - It's the first time you're here, I suppose? - Yes. 82 00:05:31,440 --> 00:05:34,720 Nothing escapes the sharp eye of Dr Dirk Huyge, 83 00:05:34,720 --> 00:05:37,640 and he's got something very special to show me. 84 00:05:37,640 --> 00:05:39,600 Not many people have been here before you 85 00:05:39,600 --> 00:05:41,800 because it's a quite recent discovery. 86 00:05:46,360 --> 00:05:50,000 These carvings in the rock reveal an amazing story 87 00:05:50,000 --> 00:05:52,280 about the beginnings of Egyptian life. 88 00:05:54,880 --> 00:05:58,520 It's a 19,000-year-old picture gallery. 89 00:06:01,920 --> 00:06:03,560 Complete with its own hippo. 90 00:06:07,600 --> 00:06:11,040 Back line, very short tail, hind legs, 91 00:06:11,040 --> 00:06:14,040 belly line, front legs. 92 00:06:14,040 --> 00:06:15,720 And the mouth is shown. 93 00:06:15,720 --> 00:06:18,720 The hippo was smiling. But then again, a hippo is always smiling. 94 00:06:20,680 --> 00:06:24,480 But another type of animal is by far the most common here. 95 00:06:25,520 --> 00:06:27,040 That's...that's cattle. 96 00:06:27,040 --> 00:06:29,080 Ah! It's not just cattle, 97 00:06:29,080 --> 00:06:32,120 this is the mighty aurochs - the wild bovid, wild cattle. 98 00:06:34,760 --> 00:06:38,320 And extremely powerful images that seem to be in movement. 99 00:06:38,320 --> 00:06:40,960 They are, they're charging down towards us, aren't they? 100 00:06:43,960 --> 00:06:47,120 These wild aurochs were ancestors of the domestic cow. 101 00:06:48,760 --> 00:06:53,000 And nearly 20,000 years ago, beef was the main thing on the menu. 102 00:06:55,240 --> 00:06:59,840 About maybe 50% of their diet was composed of aurochs. 103 00:07:02,480 --> 00:07:06,560 So they were experts and masters in representing this animal. 104 00:07:11,320 --> 00:07:15,040 It's always high on the cliff - very prominent positions that give 105 00:07:15,040 --> 00:07:18,880 an excellent panorama over what must have been in the Palaeolithic, 106 00:07:18,880 --> 00:07:20,880 the hunting grounds of the people. 107 00:07:26,080 --> 00:07:28,600 It's easy to picture these early hunters here 108 00:07:28,600 --> 00:07:30,200 as they tracked their prey. 109 00:07:33,440 --> 00:07:37,160 But the landscape would've looked very different from today. 110 00:07:37,160 --> 00:07:40,640 Because back then, this was savannah grassland - 111 00:07:40,640 --> 00:07:42,640 a green and fertile region. 112 00:07:47,040 --> 00:07:51,280 Do we have any idea why these creatures 113 00:07:51,280 --> 00:07:53,080 were engraved on these rocks here? 114 00:07:54,160 --> 00:07:56,560 We can guess, Joann, but we don't know. 115 00:07:56,560 --> 00:07:59,640 Maybe they wanted to 116 00:07:59,640 --> 00:08:01,080 influence the hunting, 117 00:08:01,080 --> 00:08:03,600 maybe this is some sort of hunting magic. 118 00:08:12,240 --> 00:08:16,880 It really is magical to sit here and imagine Egypt's earliest 119 00:08:16,880 --> 00:08:20,480 nomadic people passing right through this spot and portraying 120 00:08:20,480 --> 00:08:23,400 on these very rocks the animals that they saw all around them. 121 00:08:27,720 --> 00:08:31,880 Human figures and boats joined the animals as the carvings 122 00:08:31,880 --> 00:08:34,040 became stranger and stranger. 123 00:08:35,200 --> 00:08:36,760 But these carvings are also 124 00:08:36,760 --> 00:08:39,960 the earliest glimpse of the amazing things to come. 125 00:08:47,080 --> 00:08:50,440 These are the first signs of what makes ancient Egypt, 126 00:08:50,440 --> 00:08:52,000 well, ancient Egypt. 127 00:08:59,040 --> 00:09:01,840 As for its ancient landscape, 128 00:09:01,840 --> 00:09:05,440 this evolved under dramatic circumstances. 129 00:09:05,440 --> 00:09:10,760 10,000 years ago, gravity tilted the entire earth off its axis 130 00:09:10,760 --> 00:09:12,680 by about half a degree, 131 00:09:12,680 --> 00:09:16,080 and this had a profound effect on climate. 132 00:09:16,080 --> 00:09:18,000 And as the world began to change, 133 00:09:18,000 --> 00:09:20,080 Egypt would never be the same again. 134 00:09:21,840 --> 00:09:26,760 Now, these early people were nomads, seasonally mobile pastoralists 135 00:09:26,760 --> 00:09:29,400 who moved around, following the summer rains. 136 00:09:29,400 --> 00:09:32,440 THUNDER 137 00:09:35,040 --> 00:09:38,680 And these rains really were the vital, life-bringing force 138 00:09:38,680 --> 00:09:42,320 which created the greenery on which wild animals depended. 139 00:09:42,320 --> 00:09:44,600 But of course, with climate change, 140 00:09:44,600 --> 00:09:47,200 these rains began to dry up. 141 00:09:47,200 --> 00:09:49,080 OK, you can cut the rain. 142 00:09:55,800 --> 00:10:00,240 The diminishing rainfall forced both animals and people towards 143 00:10:00,240 --> 00:10:03,440 large lakes, which formed during the rainy season. 144 00:10:05,440 --> 00:10:07,760 One such area is Nabta Playa, 145 00:10:07,760 --> 00:10:10,960 100 kilometres southwest of Aswan. 146 00:10:10,960 --> 00:10:15,000 And here, these nomadic hunters began to settle into communities. 147 00:10:15,000 --> 00:10:18,000 But still reliant on the annual summer rains, 148 00:10:18,000 --> 00:10:21,240 they needed to predict exactly when these would return. 149 00:10:21,240 --> 00:10:24,920 And so they turned to the night sky. 150 00:10:24,920 --> 00:10:27,120 Welcome to the beginning of time. 151 00:10:28,480 --> 00:10:29,560 Quite literally, 152 00:10:29,560 --> 00:10:32,360 because this is Egypt's oldest calendar. 153 00:10:33,720 --> 00:10:36,240 It's around 7,000 years old. 154 00:10:36,240 --> 00:10:38,440 This stone circle from Nabta Playa 155 00:10:38,440 --> 00:10:40,040 is the earliest evidence 156 00:10:40,040 --> 00:10:42,400 of how Egyptian weather forecasters 157 00:10:42,400 --> 00:10:43,800 became astronomers. 158 00:10:46,120 --> 00:10:50,160 They aligned its central stones to the circumpolar stars, 159 00:10:50,160 --> 00:10:52,960 visible in the night sky all year round. 160 00:10:55,040 --> 00:10:57,800 When the sun appeared directly overhead, 161 00:10:57,800 --> 00:11:00,640 the stones cast no shadow. 162 00:11:00,640 --> 00:11:03,520 The mid-summer rains were approaching. 163 00:11:03,520 --> 00:11:06,640 THUNDER 164 00:11:06,640 --> 00:11:08,760 This meant that the animals would drink, 165 00:11:08,760 --> 00:11:13,360 the plants would grow and the world would survive for another year. 166 00:11:13,360 --> 00:11:14,960 So in many ways, 167 00:11:14,960 --> 00:11:21,120 this circle represents the solution to the very real problem of survival. 168 00:11:21,120 --> 00:11:24,800 But the Egyptians would take this a step further. 169 00:11:24,800 --> 00:11:28,720 I think the really great thing about these mini monumental markers 170 00:11:28,720 --> 00:11:31,240 is that this is the earliest example 171 00:11:31,240 --> 00:11:34,280 we have of the way in which the Egyptians are aligning 172 00:11:34,280 --> 00:11:39,120 their monuments to various things, to the sky, to the cardinal points. 173 00:11:39,120 --> 00:11:43,320 And from now on, every tomb, every temple, every monument 174 00:11:43,320 --> 00:11:47,160 will be aligned to the heavens, to the very gods themselves. 175 00:11:52,160 --> 00:11:55,280 If the stars and the rain were this closely linked... 176 00:11:56,480 --> 00:11:59,720 ..then this world and the next must be one and the same. 177 00:12:02,880 --> 00:12:05,880 Now, this has been described as Egypt's earliest 178 00:12:05,880 --> 00:12:10,120 sculpted stone monument and dates from around 5000 BC. 179 00:12:12,280 --> 00:12:16,280 This chunk of sandstone was quarried over a mile away from where 180 00:12:16,280 --> 00:12:18,640 it was eventually discovered. 181 00:12:18,640 --> 00:12:22,680 This certainly suggests a kind of sense of community where 182 00:12:22,680 --> 00:12:27,280 people were already working together to achieve a desired aim. 183 00:12:27,280 --> 00:12:30,640 In this case, the stone was hauled into place, 184 00:12:30,640 --> 00:12:32,720 and then there are clear signs 185 00:12:32,720 --> 00:12:36,080 that it has been sculpted into a specific shape. 186 00:12:37,160 --> 00:12:39,480 Now, you might have to go with me on this, 187 00:12:39,480 --> 00:12:42,720 but some believe that this is in fact a cow... 188 00:12:44,840 --> 00:12:46,720 ..with its large hind quarters... 189 00:12:47,760 --> 00:12:49,400 ..and this sculpted head. 190 00:12:51,880 --> 00:12:55,360 Now, the cow was a vital part of everyday life for these people - 191 00:12:55,360 --> 00:12:58,560 it was a source of meat, of milk and of blood - 192 00:12:58,560 --> 00:13:01,560 key sources of protein they needed to keep them healthy. 193 00:13:01,560 --> 00:13:03,920 And yet so important was the cow, 194 00:13:03,920 --> 00:13:07,600 they chose to take it through into the afterlife with them, 195 00:13:07,600 --> 00:13:10,360 to sustain them on a spiritual level. 196 00:13:10,360 --> 00:13:15,120 And this is the very beginnings of the great cow goddess, Hathor. 197 00:13:19,520 --> 00:13:23,600 Hathor may have started off as a source of milk and meat, 198 00:13:23,600 --> 00:13:25,840 but eventually she would be loved 199 00:13:25,840 --> 00:13:28,520 and idolised by millions of Egyptians, 200 00:13:28,520 --> 00:13:34,400 since she represented love, joy, beauty and motherhood. 201 00:13:36,680 --> 00:13:40,200 And although her image develops from a lifelike animal 202 00:13:40,200 --> 00:13:43,280 to a female face with cow's ears, 203 00:13:43,280 --> 00:13:47,200 this may be Hathor's very earliest incarnation. 204 00:13:51,080 --> 00:13:55,880 Yet Hathor is only one of a multitude of gods and goddesses. 205 00:13:55,880 --> 00:13:58,560 The Egyptians just couldn't get enough of them! 206 00:13:58,560 --> 00:14:01,400 Over the centuries, emerged hundreds - 207 00:14:01,400 --> 00:14:03,600 if not thousands - of deities, 208 00:14:03,600 --> 00:14:07,880 each with a specific purpose and appearance. 209 00:14:07,880 --> 00:14:10,200 Some came in human form. 210 00:14:11,240 --> 00:14:12,920 Some had animal heads. 211 00:14:14,360 --> 00:14:18,600 They could be male, female, even androgynous. 212 00:14:20,760 --> 00:14:23,200 It seems that there were few aspects of life 213 00:14:23,200 --> 00:14:25,080 that didn't have their own gods. 214 00:14:28,400 --> 00:14:30,440 We know that in the very earliest times, 215 00:14:30,440 --> 00:14:33,320 their gods resembled familiar things, 216 00:14:33,320 --> 00:14:35,720 the world around them - elements of nature 217 00:14:35,720 --> 00:14:37,680 and certainly animals. 218 00:14:37,680 --> 00:14:41,320 And over time, the animals, their forms, their shapes, 219 00:14:41,320 --> 00:14:43,560 their characteristics 220 00:14:43,560 --> 00:14:46,880 were distilled down into this sort of divine figure, 221 00:14:46,880 --> 00:14:49,600 each one worshipped for a different quality. 222 00:14:49,600 --> 00:14:51,000 In the case of the ram, 223 00:14:51,000 --> 00:14:54,440 they were worshipped for their procreative powers. 224 00:14:54,440 --> 00:14:56,080 In the case of the cow, 225 00:14:56,080 --> 00:14:59,320 for their nurturing, motherly instincts. 226 00:15:00,560 --> 00:15:02,920 And of course, you've got rather different creatures - 227 00:15:02,920 --> 00:15:06,240 the dangerous creatures, the ones that lived on the edges 228 00:15:06,240 --> 00:15:07,560 of the Egyptian world - 229 00:15:07,560 --> 00:15:10,720 the lions, the crocodiles, the jackals. 230 00:15:14,000 --> 00:15:17,320 But it wasn't just about finding the appropriate divinity, 231 00:15:17,320 --> 00:15:19,720 it was about gaining power over them. 232 00:15:20,760 --> 00:15:24,440 The goddess Sekhmet was a ferocious lioness 233 00:15:24,440 --> 00:15:27,320 and the bringer of death to humans. 234 00:15:28,360 --> 00:15:31,640 So the Egyptians transformed her into a deity 235 00:15:31,640 --> 00:15:35,080 as a way of controlling her destructive powers. 236 00:15:35,080 --> 00:15:38,560 By worshipping Sekhmet, it was believed that she could be 237 00:15:38,560 --> 00:15:42,640 placated and transformed into a more benign deity. 238 00:15:44,800 --> 00:15:48,480 On so many levels, the Egyptians were trying to tap into nature 239 00:15:48,480 --> 00:15:53,360 to affect the way that nature then in turn affected them. 240 00:15:53,360 --> 00:15:57,080 LION GROWLING 241 00:15:57,080 --> 00:15:58,520 In many ways, 242 00:15:58,520 --> 00:16:03,240 Egypt's unique religion was the glue that held society together, 243 00:16:03,240 --> 00:16:05,040 uniting the population 244 00:16:05,040 --> 00:16:08,760 and underpinning almost every aspect of life. 245 00:16:08,760 --> 00:16:11,600 It's everywhere, in tombs and temples, 246 00:16:11,600 --> 00:16:13,760 in everyday life. 247 00:16:13,760 --> 00:16:19,000 And yet, there is another, even more fundamental element 248 00:16:19,000 --> 00:16:23,840 without which ancient Egypt never would have existed at all. 249 00:16:34,160 --> 00:16:37,520 Later, Greek historians famously observed that Egypt was 250 00:16:37,520 --> 00:16:40,440 the gift of the Nile. 251 00:16:40,440 --> 00:16:42,040 And how right they were. 252 00:16:42,040 --> 00:16:44,760 Because as the climate continued to change, 253 00:16:44,760 --> 00:16:47,720 the desert lakes eventually dried up, 254 00:16:47,720 --> 00:16:51,320 leaving the Egyptians with just one source of water. 255 00:17:05,760 --> 00:17:10,520 This is an incredibly special place. Located in modern Sudan, 256 00:17:10,520 --> 00:17:14,400 it nonetheless forms the very source of Egypt, 257 00:17:14,400 --> 00:17:19,040 for it's the place where two great rivers meet - the White Nile 258 00:17:19,040 --> 00:17:21,560 and the Blue Nile - which combine here 259 00:17:21,560 --> 00:17:23,720 to form the world's longest river, 260 00:17:23,720 --> 00:17:27,680 flowing from the heart of Africa and out into the Mediterranean Sea. 261 00:17:32,480 --> 00:17:33,920 For much of the year, 262 00:17:33,920 --> 00:17:37,680 the wide, lazy White Nile is the main source of water, 263 00:17:37,680 --> 00:17:41,720 until annual rainfall in the Ethiopian highlands swells 264 00:17:41,720 --> 00:17:44,400 the faster-flowing Blue Nile. 265 00:17:44,400 --> 00:17:49,040 Today, the modern Aswan dams hold back these floodwaters. 266 00:17:49,040 --> 00:17:54,400 But until the 20th century, huge volumes of water and fertile silt 267 00:17:54,400 --> 00:17:58,360 surged downriver to flood the entire Nile valley... 268 00:18:00,520 --> 00:18:04,120 ..bringing life and fertility to the desert that is Egypt. 269 00:18:13,560 --> 00:18:17,320 This annual Nile flood was the single most important event 270 00:18:17,320 --> 00:18:20,320 in the lives of every ancient Egyptian, 271 00:18:20,320 --> 00:18:24,480 for its life-giving waters brought the nutrients and minerals 272 00:18:24,480 --> 00:18:27,200 which enriched the soil all along its banks, 273 00:18:27,200 --> 00:18:30,960 and this allowed agriculture to flourish. 274 00:18:33,240 --> 00:18:36,960 Egypt is blessed with some of the most fertile land in the world... 275 00:18:38,120 --> 00:18:42,080 ..where farmers can grow everything from sweet corn and garlic 276 00:18:42,080 --> 00:18:44,600 to bananas, sugar cane and cotton. 277 00:18:51,560 --> 00:18:54,680 Badaway, it's quite intensive farming, isn't it? 278 00:18:54,680 --> 00:18:58,200 The land gives the people a lot, doesn't it? 279 00:18:58,200 --> 00:19:01,280 Yes, but we need to give the land also a rest. 280 00:19:01,280 --> 00:19:05,760 We grow one time and we leave it for one month. 281 00:19:05,760 --> 00:19:09,120 Then after, we use the land again to grow again. 282 00:19:09,120 --> 00:19:12,600 That's amazing that it only needs one month rest time 283 00:19:12,600 --> 00:19:14,480 and then it can be planted again. 284 00:19:14,480 --> 00:19:17,640 - Yes, sometimes 15 days, sometimes one month. - Wow! 285 00:19:17,640 --> 00:19:20,680 But it really does emphasise that this land of Egypt 286 00:19:20,680 --> 00:19:24,120 has always been so rich and so giving to the people - 287 00:19:24,120 --> 00:19:27,080 it's always given the people everything they need. 288 00:19:33,200 --> 00:19:38,000 And it's the Nile that turned this desert land into a paradise. 289 00:19:45,480 --> 00:19:48,800 And 7,000 years ago, the people who could no longer 290 00:19:48,800 --> 00:19:51,560 survive in an increasingly desert landscape 291 00:19:51,560 --> 00:19:53,960 were forced to migrate towards it 292 00:19:53,960 --> 00:19:56,680 as their only source of water. 293 00:19:56,680 --> 00:20:01,960 So ancient Egypt took shape as these people came together along the banks 294 00:20:01,960 --> 00:20:03,160 of the Nile. 295 00:20:04,520 --> 00:20:08,640 In the north, settlements clustered around the delta and the Faiyum. 296 00:20:10,360 --> 00:20:13,040 And in the south, around the Qena Bend. 297 00:20:15,040 --> 00:20:18,600 This was the beginning of Egypt's so-called two lands - 298 00:20:18,600 --> 00:20:20,520 Upper and Lower Egypt, 299 00:20:20,520 --> 00:20:23,560 which developed into two distinct cultures. 300 00:20:29,320 --> 00:20:33,600 But what they both had in common was the astonishing fertility, 301 00:20:33,600 --> 00:20:37,080 replenished every year by the miracle of the Nile. 302 00:20:41,480 --> 00:20:44,560 El Kab, located to the south of the Qena Bend, 303 00:20:44,560 --> 00:20:47,920 is one of Upper Egypt's earliest settlements. 304 00:20:50,240 --> 00:20:53,160 And while it may lack the wow factor of the pyramids, 305 00:20:53,160 --> 00:20:58,720 it's actually far more revealing to see traces of this amazing evolution. 306 00:21:00,240 --> 00:21:03,840 Because here, we can see how a nomadic lifestyle 307 00:21:03,840 --> 00:21:06,960 was soon replaced by a settled, social structure. 308 00:21:09,880 --> 00:21:12,560 And although it was a slow and gradual process, 309 00:21:12,560 --> 00:21:14,920 archaeologist Elizabeth Hart 310 00:21:14,920 --> 00:21:18,520 can identify each stage of this transformation. 311 00:21:19,960 --> 00:21:22,040 Descending into small pits... 312 00:21:22,040 --> 00:21:25,120 - Yes. - Wow, you do work in an enclosed space. 313 00:21:25,120 --> 00:21:28,120 - But it's much cooler down here. - It's lovely, actually. 314 00:21:30,240 --> 00:21:32,920 So down at this level, we have sterile soil 315 00:21:32,920 --> 00:21:34,560 where nobody lived. 316 00:21:34,560 --> 00:21:36,840 And then starting around 4200 BC, 317 00:21:36,840 --> 00:21:39,600 are layers of silt from the Nile flood, 318 00:21:39,600 --> 00:21:44,000 followed by wind-accumulated sand, and then another layer of silt and 319 00:21:44,000 --> 00:21:46,600 then more sand. And here you can see it really well - 320 00:21:46,600 --> 00:21:48,400 a thin silt layer from the Nile 321 00:21:48,400 --> 00:21:50,560 coming up and flooding, and then the sand. 322 00:21:50,560 --> 00:21:52,440 And over here, 323 00:21:52,440 --> 00:21:54,240 we have a hearth feature. 324 00:21:54,240 --> 00:21:58,160 So this tells us that humans were actually living on these 325 00:21:58,160 --> 00:22:01,120 and coming into the Nile valley and then moving back out. 326 00:22:01,120 --> 00:22:05,480 And we also found lots of pot shards and stone tools in these layers. 327 00:22:05,480 --> 00:22:07,000 You know, it might be a small space, 328 00:22:07,000 --> 00:22:10,000 but you've got people's real lives unfolding within it, haven't you? 329 00:22:10,000 --> 00:22:12,280 And we have thousands of years of it here. 330 00:22:12,280 --> 00:22:15,280 When we started, people were just moving into the Nile valley, 331 00:22:15,280 --> 00:22:17,040 they were just starting to farm. 332 00:22:17,040 --> 00:22:21,440 And by the end here, we have pharaohs and a whole united Egypt. 333 00:22:21,440 --> 00:22:24,880 It's really impressive when you think about all the change that 334 00:22:24,880 --> 00:22:26,720 happened over this chunk of sand. 335 00:22:30,160 --> 00:22:34,320 Although we are still centuries away from the grand pharaonic monuments, 336 00:22:34,320 --> 00:22:38,160 you can still find traces of the lives these ancient people lived, 337 00:22:38,160 --> 00:22:40,600 if you look hard enough, 338 00:22:40,600 --> 00:22:42,920 for very little has survived, 339 00:22:42,920 --> 00:22:45,320 except for tonnes of pottery. 340 00:22:47,040 --> 00:22:48,480 Yeah, this one is... Yeah. 341 00:22:48,480 --> 00:22:49,880 So it's 5,000 years old? 342 00:22:49,880 --> 00:22:53,120 - So it's 5,000 years old. - Still so tactile, these things, aren't they? 343 00:22:55,240 --> 00:22:59,560 These pots help us to identify when this early society began 344 00:22:59,560 --> 00:23:01,800 to produce a food surplus, 345 00:23:01,800 --> 00:23:06,640 a pivotal transition which required robust pottery for the storage 346 00:23:06,640 --> 00:23:09,560 of large-scale food and drink production. 347 00:23:11,840 --> 00:23:14,320 These bread moulds, from slightly later, 348 00:23:14,320 --> 00:23:16,680 are one of the most common finds. 349 00:23:16,680 --> 00:23:18,280 So, you heat the mould, 350 00:23:18,280 --> 00:23:20,280 then the dough gets into it. 351 00:23:20,280 --> 00:23:21,960 And by the heat of the mould, 352 00:23:21,960 --> 00:23:25,200 - the bake...the bread will be baked. - Brilliant! 353 00:23:25,200 --> 00:23:28,520 But this comes in massive amounts 354 00:23:28,520 --> 00:23:29,800 These are the beer jars. 355 00:23:29,800 --> 00:23:33,480 - Ah! Bread and beer. - Bread and beer. - The Egyptian staples. 356 00:23:33,480 --> 00:23:35,400 Oh, nice for a beer jar. 357 00:23:35,400 --> 00:23:39,120 This is the nuts and bolts of how Egyptian chronology all came 358 00:23:39,120 --> 00:23:41,200 - together in the early days, isn't it? - Yes, yes. 359 00:23:41,200 --> 00:23:44,040 The pottery is especially fundamental to understand 360 00:23:44,040 --> 00:23:45,320 how people were living. 361 00:23:53,280 --> 00:23:56,760 Yet in Egypt, living was only half the story. 362 00:23:58,000 --> 00:24:01,720 Because what really sets the ancient Egyptians apart 363 00:24:01,720 --> 00:24:03,320 is their view of death. 364 00:24:09,280 --> 00:24:13,040 To them, death wasn't the end of life but a new beginning. 365 00:24:14,640 --> 00:24:17,720 A transformation from the world of the living 366 00:24:17,720 --> 00:24:19,920 into an everlasting afterlife. 367 00:24:21,520 --> 00:24:25,920 And such a belief would shape Egypt's most mysterious practice - 368 00:24:25,920 --> 00:24:28,120 and my favourite subject. 369 00:24:30,760 --> 00:24:32,080 Mummification! 370 00:24:35,960 --> 00:24:39,280 Although the origins of this enigmatic tradition are only 371 00:24:39,280 --> 00:24:41,160 now becoming clearer, 372 00:24:41,160 --> 00:24:44,800 the burial of their dead had a strong significance 373 00:24:44,800 --> 00:24:47,000 from the very earliest times. 374 00:24:50,320 --> 00:24:54,600 This is a typical burial from around 3400 BC. 375 00:24:56,000 --> 00:24:58,800 The body is curled into the foetal position 376 00:24:58,800 --> 00:25:02,000 and here placed within a reconstructed pit grave, 377 00:25:02,000 --> 00:25:06,320 surrounded by the belongings he might have had in his earthly life - 378 00:25:06,320 --> 00:25:11,280 like pottery, jewellery and a palette for preparing cosmetics. 379 00:25:12,840 --> 00:25:18,200 Everything that was important to him in life accompanied him into death. 380 00:25:18,200 --> 00:25:22,080 And I think that's quite significant because it shows that already, 381 00:25:22,080 --> 00:25:26,920 5,500 years ago, the Egyptians wanted to take it all with them. 382 00:25:26,920 --> 00:25:30,600 They clearly believed that something happened beyond death. 383 00:25:30,600 --> 00:25:34,960 Death was simply a transition into another state of existence, 384 00:25:34,960 --> 00:25:39,040 when you continued to live and it was assumed you would need everything 385 00:25:39,040 --> 00:25:41,280 you'd needed in your life on Earth. 386 00:25:42,920 --> 00:25:46,680 His body was naturally mummified in the hot desert sand, 387 00:25:46,680 --> 00:25:50,520 but its placement here may not have been accidental. 388 00:25:52,000 --> 00:25:53,960 Because even when dead, 389 00:25:53,960 --> 00:25:56,120 the body had to be preserved 390 00:25:56,120 --> 00:25:59,360 in order to house the soul for eternity. 391 00:26:01,480 --> 00:26:03,960 A skeleton simply wasn't good enough. 392 00:26:03,960 --> 00:26:07,360 Skeletons, bones, they are very, very anonymous. 393 00:26:07,360 --> 00:26:11,680 And yet, when the soft tissue, the skin, the hair is all present, 394 00:26:11,680 --> 00:26:13,360 we are ourselves. 395 00:26:13,360 --> 00:26:16,720 And that's exactly what this individual represents. 396 00:26:18,040 --> 00:26:21,680 Being face to face with one of the very earliest Egyptians 397 00:26:21,680 --> 00:26:24,880 gives us insight into the development of their ideas 398 00:26:24,880 --> 00:26:26,240 about the afterlife. 399 00:26:27,320 --> 00:26:29,720 It started off as a practical thing - 400 00:26:29,720 --> 00:26:34,000 burying the dead in a relatively small space, bundled up - 401 00:26:34,000 --> 00:26:38,400 and then it developed these layers of kind of like the symbolism. 402 00:26:38,400 --> 00:26:42,880 The foetal position - this idea in rebirth into the next world. 403 00:26:42,880 --> 00:26:45,520 It's almost like the seed 404 00:26:45,520 --> 00:26:49,360 from which the Egyptian funerary belief system evolved. 405 00:26:49,360 --> 00:26:52,920 This is the very beginning of a process which would be repeated 406 00:26:52,920 --> 00:26:56,320 a million fold, throughout Egyptian history. 407 00:26:56,320 --> 00:27:00,320 It's this combination of the esoteric 408 00:27:00,320 --> 00:27:02,200 underpinned by the practical 409 00:27:02,200 --> 00:27:05,320 which really does sum up the Egyptians in a nutshell. 410 00:27:09,280 --> 00:27:12,360 From the very beginning, the Egyptians were masters 411 00:27:12,360 --> 00:27:14,480 of making sense of their world, 412 00:27:14,480 --> 00:27:17,800 no matter how complex and mystifying it might seem to us. 413 00:27:22,560 --> 00:27:26,680 And this same ability to bring order is also found in the way 414 00:27:26,680 --> 00:27:28,600 they structured their early society, 415 00:27:28,600 --> 00:27:33,080 adopting levels of bureaucracy that border on the obsessive. 416 00:27:34,440 --> 00:27:36,560 In the ancient city of Abydos, 417 00:27:36,560 --> 00:27:40,000 the site of Egypt's first royal burial ground, 418 00:27:40,000 --> 00:27:43,160 archaeologists found the origins of a system 419 00:27:43,160 --> 00:27:45,480 that we still have to put up with today. 420 00:27:47,520 --> 00:27:52,120 It's most fitting that this city of death was the find spot 421 00:27:52,120 --> 00:27:57,480 of the earliest means of calculating that other great certainty - taxes! 422 00:28:02,240 --> 00:28:06,320 The evidence comes from small bone and ivory labels like these, 423 00:28:06,320 --> 00:28:09,880 which have been dated to around 3250 BC. 424 00:28:12,040 --> 00:28:16,040 The originals are probably the size of a postage stamp, 425 00:28:16,040 --> 00:28:20,360 and you can see that each one is engraved with images of animals, 426 00:28:20,360 --> 00:28:22,840 of birds, of plants, and so forth. 427 00:28:22,840 --> 00:28:26,440 And each one is pierced for suspension to a chest 428 00:28:26,440 --> 00:28:27,760 or pottery vessel, 429 00:28:27,760 --> 00:28:30,480 which would have contained oil, linen, grain. 430 00:28:30,480 --> 00:28:34,000 And it's thought that these symbols represent the regions that produced 431 00:28:34,000 --> 00:28:35,600 these commodities, which were then 432 00:28:35,600 --> 00:28:37,200 brought here to Abydos. 433 00:28:38,400 --> 00:28:40,800 Thought to have been sent as tax payments, 434 00:28:40,800 --> 00:28:42,280 these tiny labels 435 00:28:42,280 --> 00:28:45,880 show how these early people were already capable of collecting 436 00:28:45,880 --> 00:28:49,640 duties from a vast geographical area. 437 00:28:49,640 --> 00:28:53,880 Some experts even believe these symbols can be vocalised. 438 00:28:53,880 --> 00:28:56,680 By turning the simple drawings into sounds 439 00:28:56,680 --> 00:28:59,800 makes this the world's earliest known writing. 440 00:29:07,120 --> 00:29:10,960 Now, isn't it interesting that the world's earliest writing 441 00:29:10,960 --> 00:29:14,920 wasn't developed to express some great outpouring of emotion 442 00:29:14,920 --> 00:29:16,880 or express grand passion? 443 00:29:16,880 --> 00:29:20,480 It was simply a means of calculating taxes. 444 00:29:23,200 --> 00:29:27,200 These symbols soon became a sophisticated writing system of 445 00:29:27,200 --> 00:29:32,680 elegant signs we call hieroglyphs, which means sacred carvings. 446 00:29:34,280 --> 00:29:38,800 And these signs represented every aspect of the Egyptian world, 447 00:29:38,800 --> 00:29:41,560 which were only translated in 1822 448 00:29:41,560 --> 00:29:44,160 with the discovery of the Rosetta Stone. 449 00:29:49,440 --> 00:29:52,880 And a common language was needed, as goods were transported 450 00:29:52,880 --> 00:29:56,360 between the two lands of Upper and Lower Egypt. 451 00:29:56,360 --> 00:29:59,240 The people of Lower Egypt had also developed trade links 452 00:29:59,240 --> 00:30:01,440 with the rest of the ancient world. 453 00:30:01,440 --> 00:30:05,320 But as more war-like regions began to emerge in Upper Egypt, 454 00:30:05,320 --> 00:30:09,320 it soon became clear that the Nile had spawned two very different 455 00:30:09,320 --> 00:30:10,920 and distinctive cultures. 456 00:30:14,880 --> 00:30:18,000 And in many ways, the only thing they really had in common 457 00:30:18,000 --> 00:30:19,800 was this great river. 458 00:30:27,280 --> 00:30:30,440 The inevitable clash between these cultures is recorded 459 00:30:30,440 --> 00:30:34,920 on what many consider to be ancient Egypt's founding document. 460 00:30:38,920 --> 00:30:42,640 Taking the form of a giant ceremonial cosmetic palette, 461 00:30:42,640 --> 00:30:44,000 this is an exact copy 462 00:30:44,000 --> 00:30:47,120 of the original Narmer Palette. 463 00:30:47,120 --> 00:30:49,520 And however idealised and embellished, 464 00:30:49,520 --> 00:30:53,360 it depicts the pivotal moment when the southern king Narmer 465 00:30:53,360 --> 00:30:55,600 defeated his northern enemy. 466 00:30:55,600 --> 00:30:58,000 A split second after this mace comes down 467 00:30:58,000 --> 00:31:00,240 onto this northern enemy's head, 468 00:31:00,240 --> 00:31:03,200 and he's executed, he's killed, he's no more, 469 00:31:03,200 --> 00:31:05,240 Narmer himself remains, 470 00:31:05,240 --> 00:31:08,480 the first king of a united Egypt. 471 00:31:08,480 --> 00:31:10,520 And what this means is 472 00:31:10,520 --> 00:31:12,560 that the whole of the country 473 00:31:12,560 --> 00:31:15,760 is now united under one man's rule. 474 00:31:16,960 --> 00:31:20,560 He is setting himself up quite literally as the god-king, 475 00:31:20,560 --> 00:31:24,440 as the one central figure at the very pinnacle 476 00:31:24,440 --> 00:31:27,720 of the pyramid that forms Egyptian society. 477 00:31:27,720 --> 00:31:31,560 And from him, everything else flows. 478 00:31:31,560 --> 00:31:35,120 Egypt is now the world's first nation-state. 479 00:31:43,760 --> 00:31:47,040 What made ancient Egypt ancient Egypt is all here. 480 00:31:48,240 --> 00:31:51,520 The art forms, their forms of religion 481 00:31:51,520 --> 00:31:56,040 and even the world's first writing - hieroglyphic script. 482 00:31:56,040 --> 00:31:58,920 And this is the name of Narmer. 483 00:31:58,920 --> 00:32:01,600 The catfish - Nar. 484 00:32:01,600 --> 00:32:03,320 And the chisel - Mer. 485 00:32:03,320 --> 00:32:05,400 Narmer - the striking catfish. 486 00:32:06,440 --> 00:32:11,480 As the first king of Egypt, Narmer is protected by the cow goddess, Hathor, 487 00:32:11,480 --> 00:32:15,160 stands beside Horus, the falcon god of kingship, 488 00:32:15,160 --> 00:32:17,760 and is dressed in all the same paraphernalia 489 00:32:17,760 --> 00:32:20,280 as every king who succeeds him. 490 00:32:20,280 --> 00:32:22,800 He has the tie-on false beard 491 00:32:22,800 --> 00:32:25,960 to emphasise his virility and his strength. 492 00:32:25,960 --> 00:32:28,960 And this is matched, of course, by the tie-on bull's tail. 493 00:32:28,960 --> 00:32:32,040 It's a wonderful feature - this idea you could just tie 494 00:32:32,040 --> 00:32:34,560 a little tail onto the back of the belt, 495 00:32:34,560 --> 00:32:37,880 and then take into yourself the power of a bull. 496 00:32:38,920 --> 00:32:43,080 This palette is Egypt's earliest historical document. 497 00:32:44,840 --> 00:32:48,200 It's the blueprint of how every future pharaoh 498 00:32:48,200 --> 00:32:51,880 will be portrayed, in the company of the gods. 499 00:32:53,800 --> 00:32:58,080 Yet perhaps most significant is Narmer's smiting pose. 500 00:32:58,080 --> 00:33:02,960 This powerful image with the mace held high will be endlessly repeated 501 00:33:02,960 --> 00:33:05,400 throughout Egypt's long history. 502 00:33:07,880 --> 00:33:12,040 This is a horrible way to die - to have your brains bludgeoned out. 503 00:33:12,040 --> 00:33:14,760 And yet, even this the Egyptian artists can show 504 00:33:14,760 --> 00:33:18,280 in an almost ballet-like pose. 505 00:33:18,280 --> 00:33:19,720 It's been sanitised, 506 00:33:19,720 --> 00:33:23,120 it's been elevated to a piece of art, 507 00:33:23,120 --> 00:33:25,080 and yet the message still gets through. 508 00:33:34,600 --> 00:33:36,720 For the next 3,000 years, 509 00:33:36,720 --> 00:33:39,400 every one of Egypt's subsequent rulers 510 00:33:39,400 --> 00:33:42,760 would try and link themselves to Egypt's first pharaoh. 511 00:33:42,760 --> 00:33:46,080 To rule legitimately and successfully, 512 00:33:46,080 --> 00:33:48,800 they had to be absorbed into the complexities 513 00:33:48,800 --> 00:33:50,800 of the Egyptian hierarchy, 514 00:33:50,800 --> 00:33:53,520 both in this world and the next. 515 00:33:53,520 --> 00:33:57,120 So their names were recorded on a series of king lists, 516 00:33:57,120 --> 00:33:59,040 a kind of royal family tree. 517 00:33:59,040 --> 00:34:02,320 And the best preserved of these is here, 518 00:34:02,320 --> 00:34:05,200 in the temple of Seti I at Abydos. 519 00:34:05,200 --> 00:34:09,640 It lists himself and 75 of his royal predecessors, 520 00:34:09,640 --> 00:34:12,840 going right back to the very dawn of Egyptian history, 521 00:34:12,840 --> 00:34:15,480 with the very first king up there, King Narmer. 522 00:34:15,480 --> 00:34:19,440 And the other important detail about this is that it's essentially 523 00:34:19,440 --> 00:34:25,040 emphasising that royal continuity because Seti has his own young son, 524 00:34:25,040 --> 00:34:27,000 Ramses, the crowned prince, 525 00:34:27,000 --> 00:34:31,880 actually reading out these names on a piece of papyrus paper. 526 00:34:31,880 --> 00:34:33,880 So it's as if Seti is saying to the gods, 527 00:34:33,880 --> 00:34:36,040 "Look, I'm now pharaoh, 528 00:34:36,040 --> 00:34:39,000 "and this is my son who'll succeed me 529 00:34:39,000 --> 00:34:43,000 "to become yet another name on this remarkable list." 530 00:34:44,320 --> 00:34:47,760 In all, Egypt had over 300 pharaohs, 531 00:34:47,760 --> 00:34:50,560 organised into 30 dynasties. 532 00:34:53,040 --> 00:34:55,880 But in the case of Egypt's earliest kings, 533 00:34:55,880 --> 00:34:58,320 being merely mortal was not enough. 534 00:34:58,320 --> 00:35:00,520 They needed to prove their divinity 535 00:35:00,520 --> 00:35:04,640 by exercising absolute control over their subjects. 536 00:35:15,000 --> 00:35:16,960 And the evidence for this was found 537 00:35:16,960 --> 00:35:20,600 in the desolate desert surrounding the ancient city of Abydos. 538 00:35:28,360 --> 00:35:31,680 This was Egypt's first royal burial ground, 539 00:35:31,680 --> 00:35:34,720 the original version of the Valley of the Kings. 540 00:35:43,160 --> 00:35:45,560 Now, being here, you get a real sense 541 00:35:45,560 --> 00:35:48,880 of the importance of this place for the ancient Egyptians, 542 00:35:48,880 --> 00:35:53,240 for as the wind funnels down this valley and swirls around the sand, 543 00:35:53,240 --> 00:35:56,720 if you listen very carefully, you can hear a whispering sound. 544 00:36:04,920 --> 00:36:08,960 A whispering once thought to be the voices of the very dead themselves. 545 00:36:16,880 --> 00:36:20,520 And here, Egypt's earliest kings were laid to rest 546 00:36:20,520 --> 00:36:23,600 within huge subterranean burial chambers. 547 00:36:23,600 --> 00:36:27,520 Like this, the location of the final resting place 548 00:36:27,520 --> 00:36:31,040 of Egypt's third pharaoh, King Djer, 549 00:36:31,040 --> 00:36:35,840 one of the largest and most complex tombs of the first dynasty. 550 00:36:35,840 --> 00:36:38,280 And although it's been recovered in sand, 551 00:36:38,280 --> 00:36:44,120 it clearly demonstrates the power that Djer still wielded... 552 00:36:44,120 --> 00:36:45,760 even in death. 553 00:36:47,480 --> 00:36:51,320 Djer himself was buried here, in the central chamber. 554 00:36:51,320 --> 00:36:56,000 But all around, are 318 subsidiary graves of his courtiers. 555 00:36:56,000 --> 00:36:57,920 Not only that, 556 00:36:57,920 --> 00:37:01,640 a little way beyond, many others were also buried. 557 00:37:01,640 --> 00:37:08,800 In total, 587 individuals accompanied this man into the next world. 558 00:37:08,800 --> 00:37:11,600 Which is incredible enough, but there is evidence 559 00:37:11,600 --> 00:37:13,880 of a more sinister twist. 560 00:37:13,880 --> 00:37:17,960 The fact that this tomb was all sealed over at the same time 561 00:37:17,960 --> 00:37:22,200 suggests these people may have been victims of ritual sacrifice, 562 00:37:22,200 --> 00:37:26,120 perhaps even ritual stabbing, as portrayed in art of the time. 563 00:37:26,120 --> 00:37:30,120 And certainly, that power over life and death would give any king 564 00:37:30,120 --> 00:37:31,760 a god-like status. 565 00:37:44,760 --> 00:37:47,160 Now, later kings seemed to have realised that killing 566 00:37:47,160 --> 00:37:50,920 all their courtiers in one go was not the best use of people, 567 00:37:50,920 --> 00:37:53,320 who were a precious state resource. 568 00:37:53,320 --> 00:37:56,800 After all, who'd be around to make the next king his cup of tea? 569 00:37:59,320 --> 00:38:02,720 Although this cruel and short-sighted practice of ritual killing 570 00:38:02,720 --> 00:38:05,280 soon died out, it had, nonetheless, 571 00:38:05,280 --> 00:38:10,560 demonstrated that Egypt's rulers had complete control over their subjects, 572 00:38:10,560 --> 00:38:14,320 an essential step along the route towards building the pyramids 573 00:38:14,320 --> 00:38:16,520 and indeed Egypt itself. 574 00:38:16,520 --> 00:38:19,040 HORN BEEPS 575 00:38:19,040 --> 00:38:21,440 - Hello! - Welcome, welcome! 576 00:38:23,440 --> 00:38:26,240 Yet the Egyptian people were not slaves. 577 00:38:26,240 --> 00:38:30,240 By this time, Egypt was a land of plenty, 578 00:38:30,240 --> 00:38:35,280 where all could enjoy its bounty, both in life and in death. 579 00:38:41,440 --> 00:38:45,360 This is the later tomb of an official called Irukaptah. 580 00:38:45,360 --> 00:38:49,240 And here he is, greeting as he's coming to the door of his own tomb, 581 00:38:49,240 --> 00:38:50,920 emerging from the walls, 582 00:38:50,920 --> 00:38:54,040 captured in all his splendour with his finery on, 583 00:38:54,040 --> 00:38:57,040 his jewelled belt and his white linen kilt. 584 00:38:57,040 --> 00:39:00,040 Even details down to his little sort of pencil moustache. 585 00:39:00,040 --> 00:39:02,680 Looks a little bit like Clark Gable, to be honest. 586 00:39:05,720 --> 00:39:10,040 The scenes in his colourful tomb depict a refined life 587 00:39:10,040 --> 00:39:13,080 that's a world away from Egypt's earliest farmers. 588 00:39:17,440 --> 00:39:22,360 We have Irukaptah seated in front of a table of food offerings - 589 00:39:22,360 --> 00:39:25,920 there is fruit, vegetables, wine and so forth. 590 00:39:25,920 --> 00:39:30,000 The bearers are coming forward with offerings to sustain his soul. 591 00:39:34,960 --> 00:39:39,520 Irukaptah was the royal butcher, an important member of court. 592 00:39:39,520 --> 00:39:40,920 And with royal courtiers 593 00:39:40,920 --> 00:39:43,640 no longer sacrificed for burial with their king, 594 00:39:43,640 --> 00:39:46,600 they could now make their own elaborate preparations 595 00:39:46,600 --> 00:39:48,200 for the afterlife. 596 00:39:48,200 --> 00:39:52,160 There are a couple of scenes up here of the household servants 597 00:39:52,160 --> 00:39:54,600 making the beds of Irukaptah 598 00:39:54,600 --> 00:39:58,000 and his family there - stretching out the linen sheets. 599 00:39:58,000 --> 00:40:00,280 They're bringing even a little fly whisk 600 00:40:00,280 --> 00:40:03,280 and the ancient Egyptian pillow, the headrest there. 601 00:40:03,280 --> 00:40:08,520 So even in the afterlife, Irukaptah will be comfortable. 602 00:40:11,800 --> 00:40:14,800 Irukaptah's tomb is in Saqqara, 603 00:40:14,800 --> 00:40:19,720 a sprawling city of the dead for Egypt's first capital, Memphis. 604 00:40:23,160 --> 00:40:26,280 Yet Saqqara wasn't just the burial site of courtiers... 605 00:40:26,280 --> 00:40:31,200 but of kings. And the site of a revolution in royal tomb-building. 606 00:40:35,520 --> 00:40:39,280 And whereas previously the dead had tended to be buried away 607 00:40:39,280 --> 00:40:41,480 in the desert, hidden away almost, 608 00:40:41,480 --> 00:40:44,600 here at Saqqara, high on the desert escarpment, 609 00:40:44,600 --> 00:40:47,280 the dead were literally placed on display. 610 00:40:50,960 --> 00:40:54,080 Up to this point, the Egyptians had tended to build their tombs 611 00:40:54,080 --> 00:40:56,360 and temples - like their houses - 612 00:40:56,360 --> 00:40:58,680 from organic materials - 613 00:40:58,680 --> 00:41:02,720 from the mud-brick, wood and reeds which rarely survive. 614 00:41:04,440 --> 00:41:06,200 But in the third dynasty, 615 00:41:06,200 --> 00:41:08,520 the great innovator King Djoser 616 00:41:08,520 --> 00:41:10,240 built his legacy 617 00:41:10,240 --> 00:41:12,640 in something far more permanent. 618 00:41:14,760 --> 00:41:16,960 For he built in stone, 619 00:41:16,960 --> 00:41:19,200 which could potentially last forever. 620 00:41:20,480 --> 00:41:25,400 Djoser built this huge stone wall to surround his tomb complex, 621 00:41:25,400 --> 00:41:27,360 although his architects and workmen 622 00:41:27,360 --> 00:41:30,600 still drew their inspiration from the natural world. 623 00:41:31,800 --> 00:41:34,760 You can see that the masons are just trying to get their head around 624 00:41:34,760 --> 00:41:36,480 how to actually work with this stuff, 625 00:41:36,480 --> 00:41:38,040 what forms to put it in. 626 00:41:38,040 --> 00:41:41,560 So we have Egypt's first hypostyle hall of columns, sure. 627 00:41:41,560 --> 00:41:46,000 But it's taking the form of reeds bound together to make the kind 628 00:41:46,000 --> 00:41:50,560 of columns that would have been in Djoser's palace down by the Nile. 629 00:41:53,560 --> 00:41:55,600 But this, of course, is a house for death. 630 00:41:55,600 --> 00:41:57,360 This is a palace of eternity 631 00:41:57,360 --> 00:42:00,400 and must be built in something as solid as stone. 632 00:42:09,920 --> 00:42:14,320 At the rear of his complex is an intriguing stone shrine, 633 00:42:14,320 --> 00:42:18,280 where I can come face to face with King Djoser himself. 634 00:42:21,120 --> 00:42:24,880 The shrine looks like it's suffering a severe case of subsidence. 635 00:42:24,880 --> 00:42:29,960 And yet, the Egyptians purposefully built it on this very definite tilt. 636 00:42:34,320 --> 00:42:39,120 And it has these two holes here where modern tourists can see Djoser. 637 00:42:41,200 --> 00:42:42,640 But Djoser can see them. 638 00:42:42,640 --> 00:42:44,800 He can actually see beyond them, 639 00:42:44,800 --> 00:42:46,760 cos this faces true north. 640 00:42:46,760 --> 00:42:48,640 It faces the northern stars, 641 00:42:48,640 --> 00:42:51,760 which the Egyptians called the Imperishable Ones. 642 00:42:51,760 --> 00:42:53,120 And so at death, 643 00:42:53,120 --> 00:42:57,040 Djoser's soul could rise up and merge with these stars, 644 00:42:57,040 --> 00:43:00,920 so he too would be imperishable and he too would never die. 645 00:43:06,080 --> 00:43:10,080 In order to ensure that his soul could live on, Djoser's body 646 00:43:10,080 --> 00:43:16,080 needed somewhere safe to rest - within a tomb truly fit for a king. 647 00:43:16,080 --> 00:43:19,960 Most burials were topped by a simple, single-storey building 648 00:43:19,960 --> 00:43:22,600 called a mastaba, meaning bench. 649 00:43:22,600 --> 00:43:25,960 But Djoser did something radical. 650 00:43:27,160 --> 00:43:30,960 Djoser really wanted to impress with his funerary monument, 651 00:43:30,960 --> 00:43:34,040 so another step was built on top. 652 00:43:35,480 --> 00:43:38,400 And I think Djoser must have quite liked the effect that this gave 653 00:43:38,400 --> 00:43:42,240 and so built a third step, 654 00:43:42,240 --> 00:43:44,720 a fourth step, 655 00:43:44,720 --> 00:43:46,600 a fifth step, 656 00:43:46,600 --> 00:43:48,920 a sixth step... 657 00:43:48,920 --> 00:43:50,920 And when they stood back and looked, 658 00:43:50,920 --> 00:43:54,440 they realised - they'd built Egypt's first pyramid. 659 00:43:54,440 --> 00:43:55,960 Pretty impressive. 660 00:43:59,840 --> 00:44:03,480 The step pyramid stands over 60 metres tall 661 00:44:03,480 --> 00:44:06,160 and still dominates the Saqqara landscape. 662 00:44:06,160 --> 00:44:09,960 At the time, it was the largest building on Earth, 663 00:44:09,960 --> 00:44:15,320 reinforcing Djoser's status as a living god in the grandest of ways. 664 00:44:19,720 --> 00:44:22,840 It certainly secured his place in Egyptian history, 665 00:44:22,840 --> 00:44:26,920 with ancient visitors flocking here to marvel at his achievements. 666 00:44:28,360 --> 00:44:31,040 Now, Djoser had created a true landmark, 667 00:44:31,040 --> 00:44:34,320 but he'd also created Egypt's first tourist attraction. 668 00:44:34,320 --> 00:44:37,200 And if you come with me, I'll show you the evidence. 669 00:44:39,520 --> 00:44:43,400 Because in here, we have what many tourists still leave today - 670 00:44:43,400 --> 00:44:45,400 appreciative graffiti. 671 00:44:45,400 --> 00:44:48,280 And this is the original handwriting 672 00:44:48,280 --> 00:44:51,960 of a couple of ancient visitors from around 1300 BC 673 00:44:51,960 --> 00:44:56,680 who were so impressed by what they saw, they described Djoser's pyramid 674 00:44:56,680 --> 00:44:58,600 as if heaven were in it. 675 00:44:58,600 --> 00:45:02,680 And they credit Djoser with being the inventor of stone. 676 00:45:17,360 --> 00:45:20,120 But why did Djoser build this? 677 00:45:20,120 --> 00:45:23,960 Was it just an ego trip or an exercise in personal vanity? 678 00:45:23,960 --> 00:45:28,320 Or was it designed to show the world just how far Egypt had come? 679 00:45:28,320 --> 00:45:30,160 Because in only a few centuries, 680 00:45:30,160 --> 00:45:32,560 these disparate people had come together 681 00:45:32,560 --> 00:45:35,320 to create the world's first nation-state. 682 00:45:41,560 --> 00:45:45,400 Egypt was now an unstoppable powerhouse, 683 00:45:45,400 --> 00:45:49,560 a nation unified both politically and culturally 684 00:45:49,560 --> 00:45:53,000 under a single ruler, whose authority was limitless. 685 00:45:54,080 --> 00:45:57,440 Yet it wasn't just the king who could achieve immortality, 686 00:45:57,440 --> 00:46:00,440 for the man who designed and built Djoser's pyramid 687 00:46:00,440 --> 00:46:03,240 was destined to become even more famous 688 00:46:03,240 --> 00:46:05,040 than the pharaoh he had served. 689 00:46:11,400 --> 00:46:16,080 This statue base once held a full-sized figure of King Djoser. 690 00:46:16,080 --> 00:46:20,760 But carved into the base is also the name of his architect. 691 00:46:20,760 --> 00:46:23,640 And here we can see it, with this reed, 692 00:46:23,640 --> 00:46:28,360 the owl and then the little mat with a little bread loaf on, 693 00:46:28,360 --> 00:46:31,040 which reads Imhotep. 694 00:46:32,640 --> 00:46:34,720 And here is the man himself. 695 00:46:37,400 --> 00:46:39,960 Although most likely a commoner by birth, 696 00:46:39,960 --> 00:46:41,920 Imhotep rose through the ranks 697 00:46:41,920 --> 00:46:45,760 to become one of Egypt's most powerful officials. 698 00:46:45,760 --> 00:46:49,080 He was made the royal chancellor, the prime minister, 699 00:46:49,080 --> 00:46:52,280 he was even made high priest of the sun god. 700 00:46:52,280 --> 00:46:54,800 He was the ultimate local boy made good 701 00:46:54,800 --> 00:46:56,880 because he then gained a reputation 702 00:46:56,880 --> 00:46:59,720 as an academic, as a great healer 703 00:46:59,720 --> 00:47:02,680 and he was famous the length and breadth of Egypt. 704 00:47:02,680 --> 00:47:05,480 He was ultimately worshipped as a god. 705 00:47:06,840 --> 00:47:10,640 Imhotep represents the ultimate in social mobility, 706 00:47:10,640 --> 00:47:14,840 a kind which was certainly possible within Egypt's unique society. 707 00:47:21,640 --> 00:47:26,440 This was a society in which ideas were often taken to extremes. 708 00:47:26,440 --> 00:47:30,520 With 1.5 million people united by an absolute belief 709 00:47:30,520 --> 00:47:32,120 in the power of their king 710 00:47:32,120 --> 00:47:34,720 and in the certainty of the afterlife, 711 00:47:34,720 --> 00:47:38,800 Egypt enters its most ambitious era so far. 712 00:47:42,120 --> 00:47:43,480 The pyramid age. 713 00:47:48,640 --> 00:47:52,840 Over 130 pyramids would be built across Egypt, 714 00:47:52,840 --> 00:47:57,200 and they represent the zenith in royal tomb-building - 715 00:47:57,200 --> 00:48:00,560 huge state-sponsored civil engineering projects 716 00:48:00,560 --> 00:48:05,920 that used vast resources of materials, man-power and time. 717 00:48:12,880 --> 00:48:16,520 The largest of all, the Great Pyramid of King Khufu, 718 00:48:16,520 --> 00:48:19,120 which took over 20 years to build. 719 00:48:25,880 --> 00:48:28,760 And in order to build something so ambitious, 720 00:48:28,760 --> 00:48:31,240 an entire city was created 721 00:48:31,240 --> 00:48:34,240 specifically to house the construction workers, 722 00:48:34,240 --> 00:48:37,080 just beyond this monumental wall. 723 00:48:37,080 --> 00:48:39,280 It's known as the Wall of the Crow 724 00:48:39,280 --> 00:48:43,160 and it separated the silent, sacred space of the dead 725 00:48:43,160 --> 00:48:46,520 from the busy, bustling city of the pyramid builders. 726 00:49:00,000 --> 00:49:04,320 This five-hectare site once housed workshops, bakeries, 727 00:49:04,320 --> 00:49:08,360 a tool-making facility and a fish-processing area, 728 00:49:08,360 --> 00:49:11,880 for this was an integrated, self-sufficient community 729 00:49:11,880 --> 00:49:14,040 of over 8,000 people, 730 00:49:14,040 --> 00:49:16,120 who even had their own medical care. 731 00:49:25,480 --> 00:49:29,000 Anthropological archaeologist Dr Richard Redding 732 00:49:29,000 --> 00:49:32,520 has been excavating the site since 1991. 733 00:49:32,520 --> 00:49:34,880 Where we are now, this is kind of a big workshop 734 00:49:34,880 --> 00:49:38,480 a big industrial park where there's lots of activity going on. 735 00:49:38,480 --> 00:49:41,640 Out here, they were probably producing granite statues, 736 00:49:41,640 --> 00:49:43,160 maybe granite columns. 737 00:49:43,160 --> 00:49:44,600 We find tools out here 738 00:49:44,600 --> 00:49:47,120 for polishing the granite. 739 00:49:47,120 --> 00:49:50,560 We find tools out here for chipping at the granite. 740 00:49:50,560 --> 00:49:52,720 It's very well planned. We have three streets - 741 00:49:52,720 --> 00:49:55,000 we have north street, main street we're on 742 00:49:55,000 --> 00:49:56,640 and we have south street down there. 743 00:49:56,640 --> 00:49:59,600 - So we are walking down main street? - You're walking down main street. 744 00:50:01,160 --> 00:50:05,200 The pyramid workers lived cheek by jowl in two-storey barracks. 745 00:50:07,440 --> 00:50:08,680 You would've walked in 746 00:50:08,680 --> 00:50:10,960 and you would've been in a very quiet, dark, 747 00:50:10,960 --> 00:50:13,120 long, narrow room. 748 00:50:13,120 --> 00:50:15,320 This is where they would have slept. 749 00:50:15,320 --> 00:50:18,120 There would've been a higher bed 750 00:50:18,120 --> 00:50:19,880 for the overseer at each end. 751 00:50:19,880 --> 00:50:22,520 And then everybody would have laid down, 752 00:50:22,520 --> 00:50:24,800 probably with their head 753 00:50:24,800 --> 00:50:26,680 in this direction or the other direction, 754 00:50:26,680 --> 00:50:29,800 exactly like this. You'd be lying here like this, and this would be 755 00:50:29,800 --> 00:50:31,080 your night-time position. 756 00:50:31,080 --> 00:50:33,400 Very comfortable(!) Can I try out the overseer's bed? 757 00:50:33,400 --> 00:50:36,000 - Sure. - Is that OK? - You want to try out the overseer's bed there? 758 00:50:36,000 --> 00:50:37,280 Delusions of grandeur. 759 00:50:37,280 --> 00:50:38,400 Is it this one or that one? 760 00:50:38,400 --> 00:50:41,200 Yeah, it's... That's the wall, so right where you are. 761 00:50:41,200 --> 00:50:43,600 Oh, so this is all right. So if I sat down here... 762 00:50:43,600 --> 00:50:45,640 Yeah, the overseer's bed is actually buried 763 00:50:45,640 --> 00:50:47,120 under a few centimetres of sand, 764 00:50:47,120 --> 00:50:50,440 and the floor here is probably under about a half metre of sand. 765 00:50:50,440 --> 00:50:51,880 - No, this is nice. - Yeah. 766 00:50:51,880 --> 00:50:53,240 I can keep my eye on you now. 767 00:50:53,240 --> 00:50:56,200 That's right, you can see me. If I got up in the night and I tried 768 00:50:56,200 --> 00:50:58,760 to sneak out to go someplace, you would see me. 769 00:50:58,760 --> 00:51:02,480 Everything the workers needed was here, on site. 770 00:51:02,480 --> 00:51:05,600 The team have recovered data that shows that workers consumed 771 00:51:05,600 --> 00:51:11,200 74 cattle and 257 sheep and goats each week. 772 00:51:11,200 --> 00:51:14,320 This corral area could hold a week's supply of cattle, 773 00:51:14,320 --> 00:51:17,200 before more were shipped in from Egypt's grasslands. 774 00:51:17,200 --> 00:51:19,720 You could have almost just-in-time delivery, 775 00:51:19,720 --> 00:51:23,280 another small heard coming down from Kom el-Hisn, 776 00:51:23,280 --> 00:51:25,400 or the delta, coming down and in. 777 00:51:25,400 --> 00:51:27,840 Well, it's a really well-oiled machine. You can see now 778 00:51:27,840 --> 00:51:31,440 how efficient the Egyptians were at obtaining their food, 779 00:51:31,440 --> 00:51:33,920 bringing it to the right place at the right time 780 00:51:33,920 --> 00:51:36,000 for the right people - it's brilliant. 781 00:51:36,000 --> 00:51:38,560 It wasn't just simply the food, it was everything. 782 00:51:38,560 --> 00:51:41,320 There was the copper to make tools, 783 00:51:41,320 --> 00:51:45,120 there was the stone being brought in here from Aswan and other areas. 784 00:51:45,120 --> 00:51:47,120 So a lot of things were coming into here. 785 00:51:47,120 --> 00:51:48,680 These were government workers - 786 00:51:48,680 --> 00:51:50,760 they got everything from the government. 787 00:51:53,640 --> 00:51:57,960 In many ways, this settlement is Egypt in microcosm - 788 00:51:57,960 --> 00:52:02,400 a highly ordered social structure with job specialisation 789 00:52:02,400 --> 00:52:04,680 and mass cooperation. 790 00:52:04,680 --> 00:52:08,960 It's hard to believe that in a relatively short period of time 791 00:52:08,960 --> 00:52:12,160 Egypt had been transformed 792 00:52:12,160 --> 00:52:16,640 from simple subsistence into a united state 793 00:52:16,640 --> 00:52:20,000 which could provide for everyone who worked on its behalf. 794 00:52:24,280 --> 00:52:25,800 What we are seeing here 795 00:52:25,800 --> 00:52:29,240 is the final building block in Egyptian culture 796 00:52:29,240 --> 00:52:31,400 but not just for the pyramid age. 797 00:52:31,400 --> 00:52:34,200 For once this infrastructure was in place, 798 00:52:34,200 --> 00:52:35,920 it would never change. 799 00:52:35,920 --> 00:52:37,880 So whether they are building a pyramid 800 00:52:37,880 --> 00:52:40,040 or setting up a colossal statue, 801 00:52:40,040 --> 00:52:44,560 the level of organisation and cooperation would remain the same, 802 00:52:44,560 --> 00:52:48,240 for this was the foundation stone of Egypt. 803 00:52:54,000 --> 00:52:58,000 The pyramids are eternal testament to just how powerful 804 00:52:58,000 --> 00:52:59,880 Egypt had now become. 805 00:52:59,880 --> 00:53:03,000 And in many ways, they are Egypt at this time - 806 00:53:03,000 --> 00:53:06,920 dominating everything around them on a gigantic scale. 807 00:53:12,280 --> 00:53:16,720 And towering above the Giza landscape is the Great Pyramid. 808 00:53:24,880 --> 00:53:29,520 It took around 20,000 people to set in place the 2.3 million 809 00:53:29,520 --> 00:53:31,200 blocks of limestone. 810 00:53:31,200 --> 00:53:34,200 It remained the tallest structure anywhere in the world 811 00:53:34,200 --> 00:53:36,000 for 3,800 years, 812 00:53:36,000 --> 00:53:40,120 until the building of Lincoln Cathedral spire in 1300 AD. 813 00:53:40,120 --> 00:53:44,320 It's a phenomenal achievement for any civilisation at any time. 814 00:53:45,840 --> 00:53:50,880 But for me, its exterior can't compare to the sense of wonder 815 00:53:50,880 --> 00:53:52,960 once you venture inside. 816 00:53:55,680 --> 00:53:59,000 The roof of the Grand Gallery passageway is built 817 00:53:59,000 --> 00:54:02,240 of multiple layers of enormous limestone slabs 818 00:54:02,240 --> 00:54:05,160 rising over eight metres high. 819 00:54:05,160 --> 00:54:08,000 Massive, massive blocks of masonry 820 00:54:08,000 --> 00:54:12,360 built on a god-like scale, that is surely what Khufu wanted. 821 00:54:15,760 --> 00:54:20,440 I sincerely hope Khufu's eternal resting place was rather less 822 00:54:20,440 --> 00:54:22,120 congested than it is today. 823 00:54:22,120 --> 00:54:25,440 But it still gives a real atmosphere of the busyness that must have been 824 00:54:25,440 --> 00:54:27,720 here on a daily basis. 825 00:54:31,960 --> 00:54:36,480 These guys were hauling massive blocks hundreds of feet up, 826 00:54:36,480 --> 00:54:37,640 literally, into the air. 827 00:54:37,640 --> 00:54:39,400 These guys were magicians! 828 00:54:43,800 --> 00:54:47,880 Just look how brilliantly these courses have been laid. 829 00:54:47,880 --> 00:54:49,800 These are perfect. 830 00:54:49,800 --> 00:54:52,760 I defy any modern architect to be able to replicate this 831 00:54:52,760 --> 00:54:56,200 using the tools that the ancients had at their disposal. 832 00:55:07,320 --> 00:55:08,720 Wow. 833 00:55:08,720 --> 00:55:12,200 Here we are at the zenith. We are at the heart of the pyramid now - 834 00:55:12,200 --> 00:55:14,240 King Khufu's burial chamber. 835 00:55:14,240 --> 00:55:16,720 And we've hit it at exactly the right moment... 836 00:55:16,720 --> 00:55:19,400 because the pyramid is closed for lunch! 837 00:55:19,400 --> 00:55:21,960 So we've got the whole place to ourselves. 838 00:55:21,960 --> 00:55:26,840 And you really get a sense of the sanctity of this divine mausoleum. 839 00:55:33,120 --> 00:55:36,920 The walls and roof of the burial chamber are lined entirely 840 00:55:36,920 --> 00:55:38,320 in granite. 841 00:55:38,320 --> 00:55:42,800 And it was within here that the body of the great King Khufu was sealed, 842 00:55:42,800 --> 00:55:46,120 ready for his final journey into the afterlife. 843 00:55:49,960 --> 00:55:53,880 We are at the heart of the pyramid in terms of its architecture, 844 00:55:53,880 --> 00:55:57,720 but we are literally in the heart of ancient Egypt. 845 00:55:59,600 --> 00:56:02,400 I feel like I should be speaking in a whisper 846 00:56:02,400 --> 00:56:04,720 cos the acoustics are so extraordinary. 847 00:56:06,040 --> 00:56:09,080 It's a sterile, 848 00:56:09,080 --> 00:56:11,880 plain, stark room. 849 00:56:11,880 --> 00:56:14,240 It's pretty much like a bank vault. 850 00:56:14,240 --> 00:56:16,920 And when you think about it, that's exactly what it is 851 00:56:16,920 --> 00:56:20,880 because it once contained Egypt's greatest treasure - 852 00:56:20,880 --> 00:56:23,560 the mummified body of the god-king - 853 00:56:23,560 --> 00:56:27,520 which contained the soul not only of Khufu 854 00:56:27,520 --> 00:56:30,080 but of all the generations of pharaohs, 855 00:56:30,080 --> 00:56:32,960 stretching way back to King Narmer. 856 00:56:37,200 --> 00:56:39,720 Forget the jewels, forget the gold, 857 00:56:39,720 --> 00:56:43,320 Egypt's real treasure was in here. 858 00:56:43,320 --> 00:56:45,920 And it's the first time I've ever been in here 859 00:56:45,920 --> 00:56:49,440 without crowds and crowds of other people. 860 00:56:49,440 --> 00:56:54,400 And speaking now, the sound of the voice reverberating around, 861 00:56:54,400 --> 00:56:58,760 immediately takes you back 4,500 years to the day of the funeral, 862 00:56:58,760 --> 00:57:02,560 to the sacred words the priest would've chanted 863 00:57:02,560 --> 00:57:06,880 to revive the soul of the god-king. 864 00:57:06,880 --> 00:57:09,040 It's miraculous. It's a wonderful, 865 00:57:09,040 --> 00:57:12,000 spectacular place that affects every sense - 866 00:57:12,000 --> 00:57:16,120 visually, audibly... 867 00:57:16,120 --> 00:57:20,840 In every sense, it's...it's beyond words, really. 868 00:57:20,840 --> 00:57:23,440 I think I'd probably better stop talking now. 869 00:57:32,080 --> 00:57:36,520 So now all the elements that made up ancient Egypt were in place - 870 00:57:36,520 --> 00:57:39,320 a well-fed, highly organised population 871 00:57:39,320 --> 00:57:42,560 that unswervingly followed their god-king, 872 00:57:42,560 --> 00:57:45,760 and all of whom shared this fervent belief 873 00:57:45,760 --> 00:57:48,040 in an afterlife. 874 00:57:48,040 --> 00:57:50,360 Life in Egypt was good. 875 00:57:58,200 --> 00:58:00,880 Now, of course, none of this could last. 876 00:58:00,880 --> 00:58:06,240 Economic disaster and famine plunged Egypt into chaos. 877 00:58:06,240 --> 00:58:09,480 This is ancient Egypt beginning to suffer. 878 00:58:09,480 --> 00:58:12,120 With the pharaoh's power melting away, 879 00:58:12,120 --> 00:58:16,360 local warlords ransacked its most sacred sites. 880 00:58:19,560 --> 00:58:22,480 Egypt's dark age was coming. 881 00:58:22,480 --> 00:58:25,840 Make no mistake, this is the home of the dead. 73892

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