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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,800 --> 00:00:10,160 With its mighty pharaohs, multiple gods and magnificent art, 2 00:00:10,160 --> 00:00:15,400 it's easy to think that Ancient Egypt was always powerful and successful. 3 00:00:17,520 --> 00:00:22,720 But there were also darker times. Conflict, civil war, famine 4 00:00:22,720 --> 00:00:25,440 and an overall feeling of catastrophe. 5 00:00:27,440 --> 00:00:29,480 And the only way it could survive was 6 00:00:29,480 --> 00:00:33,000 through its own resilience and the strongest of leadership. 7 00:00:34,560 --> 00:00:37,000 Now, this is Sesostris III, 8 00:00:37,000 --> 00:00:40,120 who ruled Egypt almost 4,000 years ago. 9 00:00:42,840 --> 00:00:45,040 He's strong and he's muscular, 10 00:00:45,040 --> 00:00:48,800 everything a pharaoh should be, and yet look at his face. 11 00:00:51,040 --> 00:00:56,640 His scowling features have been interpreted to suggest his harsh rule 12 00:00:56,640 --> 00:01:00,840 and his large ears, his ability to hear any plots against him. 13 00:01:03,000 --> 00:01:05,560 Sesostris embodies the way Egypt's monarchs 14 00:01:05,560 --> 00:01:08,440 ruled during its turbulent times. 15 00:01:09,600 --> 00:01:12,480 This king controlled his enemies through 16 00:01:12,480 --> 00:01:16,800 a series of military fortresses and through magical curses. 17 00:01:18,480 --> 00:01:22,400 For this is a new era in Egypt's history, 18 00:01:22,400 --> 00:01:26,960 not only ruled by military power but by fear and suspicion. 19 00:01:28,640 --> 00:01:33,800 And Egypt's darkest times threatened to destroy its entire civilisation. 20 00:01:41,680 --> 00:01:44,480 I've already explored how Egypt's ancient culture 21 00:01:44,480 --> 00:01:46,520 began thousands of years earlier. 22 00:01:48,000 --> 00:01:52,920 Blessed by the river Nile and a rich natural environment 23 00:01:52,920 --> 00:01:56,760 and a society united by a complex ideology. 24 00:02:03,160 --> 00:02:05,960 But in this episode, we'll see how the massive 25 00:02:05,960 --> 00:02:11,880 self-confidence of the pyramid age was not to last, as a dark age 26 00:02:11,880 --> 00:02:15,480 brought this civilisation to the brink of annihilation. 27 00:02:17,120 --> 00:02:21,520 Make no mistake, this is the home of the dead and we're in amongst them. 28 00:02:22,600 --> 00:02:26,520 These were times of famine, civil war and anarchy. 29 00:02:27,920 --> 00:02:31,360 Kings have been reduced to something on a minuscule level. 30 00:02:33,040 --> 00:02:36,080 But this collapse triggered one of the greatest 31 00:02:36,080 --> 00:02:38,040 revivals of ancient times... 32 00:02:40,320 --> 00:02:42,000 ..with Egypt re-emerging 33 00:02:42,000 --> 00:02:44,560 more powerful and wealthy than ever before. 34 00:02:47,360 --> 00:02:50,440 Welcome to my story of Ancient Egypt. 35 00:03:05,080 --> 00:03:08,680 Saqqara - where Egypt's great pyramid age began. 36 00:03:10,960 --> 00:03:14,640 But among its glories there's also evidence of a far less 37 00:03:14,640 --> 00:03:16,720 well-known side to Egypt's story. 38 00:03:24,480 --> 00:03:26,600 Its descent into a dark age. 39 00:03:29,680 --> 00:03:34,080 The zenith of Egypt's Old Kingdom was the Great Pyramid at Giza, 40 00:03:34,080 --> 00:03:38,480 and only 200 years later King Unas' Causeway was created. 41 00:03:42,800 --> 00:03:44,320 It might not look much today 42 00:03:44,320 --> 00:03:47,840 but it's the highlight of Unas' pyramid complex. 43 00:03:47,840 --> 00:03:51,640 A 750m long causeway which symbolically connected 44 00:03:51,640 --> 00:03:53,240 life and death. 45 00:04:00,200 --> 00:04:03,280 It goes right from the Nile Valley all the way up 46 00:04:03,280 --> 00:04:05,200 on to the high desert plateau, 47 00:04:05,200 --> 00:04:07,920 right to the foot of the Pyramid of Unas. 48 00:04:07,920 --> 00:04:09,840 So it would have been used for 49 00:04:09,840 --> 00:04:13,160 his funeral procession, but it would also have drawn up that life-giving 50 00:04:13,160 --> 00:04:17,240 force from the valley below, up to the city of the dead here at Saqqara. 51 00:04:18,800 --> 00:04:22,440 A narrow slit in the roof once allowed enough light in, but 52 00:04:22,440 --> 00:04:25,360 the extraordinary thing is that this causeway was 53 00:04:25,360 --> 00:04:29,560 designed for a sole purpose, the king's funeral procession. 54 00:04:35,920 --> 00:04:40,480 Carved upon its walls are scenes revealing both sides of life, 55 00:04:40,480 --> 00:04:43,000 the forces of order and of chaos. 56 00:04:44,440 --> 00:04:49,440 It first portrays an idealised version of Egypt, a time of plenty. 57 00:04:50,640 --> 00:04:54,040 Here we can see typical scenes within an Egyptian temple 58 00:04:54,040 --> 00:04:56,560 or funerary context. 59 00:04:56,560 --> 00:04:58,920 Scenes of the rich bounty of Egypt. 60 00:04:58,920 --> 00:05:01,520 All the fruit, the vegetables, the crops, the meat, 61 00:05:01,520 --> 00:05:06,320 the fish. All the wealth of the natural environment of Egypt 62 00:05:06,320 --> 00:05:10,640 which was all, obviously, brought to the land through the good offices of 63 00:05:10,640 --> 00:05:15,040 the king, the bringer of all bounty, the intermediary with the gods. 64 00:05:15,040 --> 00:05:19,000 But also this causeway contained something rather more 65 00:05:19,000 --> 00:05:22,800 disturbing, evidence that dark forces were at work. 66 00:05:24,880 --> 00:05:28,440 Further on down the causeway emerged a counterpart image... 67 00:05:28,440 --> 00:05:31,040 VOICES WHISPER 68 00:05:31,040 --> 00:05:33,000 ..the flipside of bounty. 69 00:05:35,560 --> 00:05:40,360 An image so unusual it's now displayed in Saqqara's museum. 70 00:05:40,360 --> 00:05:43,880 And it really is one of ancient Egypt's most haunting 71 00:05:43,880 --> 00:05:45,760 and revealing works of art. 72 00:05:45,760 --> 00:05:47,800 VOICES WHISPER 73 00:05:48,920 --> 00:05:52,560 Here we see these dark forces at work. 74 00:05:52,560 --> 00:05:57,680 What we have are two rows of emaciated victims of famine. 75 00:06:02,160 --> 00:06:05,840 These poor people, they're weak with hunger, they're falling down, 76 00:06:05,840 --> 00:06:10,920 they're suffering and this is basically Ancient Egypt coming 77 00:06:10,920 --> 00:06:14,440 face-to-face with reality because these are believed to be 78 00:06:14,440 --> 00:06:18,600 the Bedouins who inhabited the desert fringes of Egypt, so it's as if 79 00:06:18,600 --> 00:06:23,480 this kind of idea of suffering, the forces of chaos are on the periphery 80 00:06:23,480 --> 00:06:26,840 of Egypt but they're getting ever closer to the Nile Valley. 81 00:06:26,840 --> 00:06:30,520 Egypt is starting to waken up to the fact that chaos isn't 82 00:06:30,520 --> 00:06:35,400 all that far away. This is Ancient Egypt beginning to suffer. 83 00:06:37,720 --> 00:06:41,120 Such gritty realism had rarely been portrayed before. 84 00:06:42,240 --> 00:06:45,560 Chaos depicted as the suffering of real people. 85 00:06:46,720 --> 00:06:50,920 This isn't happening in some esoteric realm of the gods where chaos 86 00:06:50,920 --> 00:06:55,480 is, sort of, portrayed as some sort of disparate magical force, 87 00:06:55,480 --> 00:06:59,840 very detached from reality, this is reality. 88 00:07:02,720 --> 00:07:04,560 Through such realistic images, 89 00:07:04,560 --> 00:07:08,160 the Egyptians were expressing their fears to the gods. 90 00:07:08,160 --> 00:07:11,480 Appealing to them to keep these forces of chaos at bay. 91 00:07:16,600 --> 00:07:20,480 But instead, the starving famine victims would turn out to be 92 00:07:20,480 --> 00:07:21,800 a chilling omen. 93 00:07:34,520 --> 00:07:38,720 Up until now, Egypt's prosperity had flowed from its one 94 00:07:38,720 --> 00:07:44,280 source of water, the river Nile, whose annual floods enriched 95 00:07:44,280 --> 00:07:47,960 the soil, allowing life and agriculture to flourish. 96 00:07:50,280 --> 00:07:54,360 This natural abundance was the very bedrock on which Egypt, 97 00:07:54,360 --> 00:07:57,440 and its perpetual world order, was able to thrive. 98 00:07:59,880 --> 00:08:02,480 But this lifeblood was about to run dry. 99 00:08:05,960 --> 00:08:08,880 Evidence shows that at the end of the third millennium BC, 100 00:08:08,880 --> 00:08:11,920 the Nile flood levels fell dramatically. 101 00:08:13,120 --> 00:08:16,440 As the very thing that brought them life began to diminish, 102 00:08:16,440 --> 00:08:21,520 the Egyptians believed that their gods had begun to abandon them. 103 00:08:21,520 --> 00:08:25,680 And for the next century, the ancient texts talk of suffering, 104 00:08:25,680 --> 00:08:28,400 starvation and even cannibalism. 105 00:08:36,680 --> 00:08:39,680 Traditionally, Egyptian society had been 106 00:08:39,680 --> 00:08:43,160 built on the belief in the divine power of its kings. 107 00:08:43,160 --> 00:08:47,360 Without this belief, the pyramid age would never have been possible. 108 00:08:48,480 --> 00:08:52,560 But now, in its time of need, Egypt's king seemed increasingly 109 00:08:52,560 --> 00:08:55,320 powerless in the face of such natural disaster. 110 00:08:58,320 --> 00:09:02,160 And this would come to a head with a ruler who was well past his prime. 111 00:09:06,600 --> 00:09:09,000 Claimed to have lived for 100 years, 112 00:09:09,000 --> 00:09:13,080 he was Egypt's longest-lived monarch, King Pepi II. 113 00:09:18,680 --> 00:09:22,040 And this space was once a ceremonial running track, 114 00:09:22,040 --> 00:09:25,440 the type of place where Pepi would have to display his physical 115 00:09:25,440 --> 00:09:29,040 prowess to prove himself to his people. 116 00:09:29,040 --> 00:09:32,120 Now, when any pharaoh had celebrated 30 years' reign, 117 00:09:32,120 --> 00:09:36,040 they had to perform the jubilee ceremonies and this involved 118 00:09:36,040 --> 00:09:39,760 running the ceremonial jubilee race, four times round this circuit 119 00:09:39,760 --> 00:09:41,080 as King of the North, 120 00:09:41,080 --> 00:09:44,200 four times round this circuit as King of the South. 121 00:09:44,200 --> 00:09:48,600 It was the ultimate public display of their fitness to rule 122 00:09:48,600 --> 00:09:50,120 and their strength. 123 00:09:50,120 --> 00:09:53,480 It really showed who was in charge of Egypt. 124 00:09:53,480 --> 00:09:58,200 But that's where Pepi's advancing age would eventually let him down. 125 00:09:58,200 --> 00:10:00,880 Of course, when Pharaoh was relatively young and fit, 126 00:10:00,880 --> 00:10:03,040 this would have been a great celebration. 127 00:10:03,040 --> 00:10:07,200 But in the case of poor Pepi, then in his 90s, it became all too 128 00:10:07,200 --> 00:10:11,960 clear that Pharaoh was no living god and this really undermined 129 00:10:11,960 --> 00:10:15,000 the whole concept of what it was to be a pharaoh. 130 00:10:18,480 --> 00:10:22,760 Clearly as mortal as his subjects, any natural disaster must have 131 00:10:22,760 --> 00:10:25,920 seemed the fault of this less than superhuman king. 132 00:10:29,320 --> 00:10:32,000 And this combination of a weakening pharaoh 133 00:10:32,000 --> 00:10:34,920 and failing harvests led to rapid decline. 134 00:10:36,760 --> 00:10:41,640 Ancient Egypt now faced its first major political crisis. 135 00:10:41,640 --> 00:10:45,440 For the power and apparent divinity of the pharaoh that had been 136 00:10:45,440 --> 00:10:50,000 so very important in the pyramid age had now vanished. 137 00:10:54,640 --> 00:10:57,240 Everything that bound Egyptian society together 138 00:10:57,240 --> 00:10:59,120 had begun to fall away... 139 00:11:00,840 --> 00:11:03,560 ..and Egypt was plunged into a dark age. 140 00:11:09,240 --> 00:11:12,000 In this time of growing uncertainty, 141 00:11:12,000 --> 00:11:16,280 when the Egyptians had lost faith in both the monarchy and 142 00:11:16,280 --> 00:11:20,560 state-run religion, they increasingly turned to the power of magic. 143 00:11:33,400 --> 00:11:36,720 This is a rather unsettling thing. 144 00:11:36,720 --> 00:11:39,760 It's an ancient Egyptian mask. 145 00:11:39,760 --> 00:11:44,080 It's almost 4,000 years old and it's made of linen, 146 00:11:44,080 --> 00:11:48,280 covered in a thin layer of plaster then painted predominately 147 00:11:48,280 --> 00:11:51,960 black with colours picked out on various features. 148 00:11:54,160 --> 00:11:57,520 Of course, the Egyptians are well known for making elaborate 149 00:11:57,520 --> 00:12:00,120 arrangements for their afterlife. 150 00:12:00,120 --> 00:12:02,880 The death mask, placed over the mummified body, 151 00:12:02,880 --> 00:12:07,400 recreated the features of the dead to make them recognisable to the gods. 152 00:12:10,080 --> 00:12:13,960 But this mask is different. It was made to be worn by the living. 153 00:12:15,240 --> 00:12:16,440 And we know this 154 00:12:16,440 --> 00:12:20,600 because of the very distinctive eye holes which you can see there 155 00:12:20,600 --> 00:12:24,400 and this would allow the wearer to see around them. 156 00:12:24,400 --> 00:12:25,560 You can imagine 157 00:12:25,560 --> 00:12:28,680 when this was applied to the face, fastened on, tied on behind the head 158 00:12:28,680 --> 00:12:32,920 it would transform that individual into a completely different entity. 159 00:12:34,440 --> 00:12:38,040 Traces of paint on the linen reveal how it might have helped 160 00:12:38,040 --> 00:12:41,240 the wearer embody some form of magical being. 161 00:12:41,240 --> 00:12:42,640 VOICES WHISPER 162 00:12:43,880 --> 00:12:45,360 Whoever wore this 163 00:12:45,360 --> 00:12:50,120 was going to some effort to transform their appearance to 164 00:12:50,120 --> 00:12:52,400 try and tap into the hidden forces of the gods 165 00:12:52,400 --> 00:12:56,160 and to control the world in which they lived. It's as if the Egyptian 166 00:12:56,160 --> 00:13:00,320 individual that wore this was trying to take charge of their own destiny. 167 00:13:05,560 --> 00:13:08,160 But the mask isn't the only evidence of magic. 168 00:13:12,080 --> 00:13:16,320 For in their dark ages the Egyptians increasingly began to write 169 00:13:16,320 --> 00:13:19,920 out curses and spells on pots and figurines. 170 00:13:22,240 --> 00:13:27,880 Scrawled across one was the curse, "Die, Henui, son of Intef!" 171 00:13:27,880 --> 00:13:30,480 A form of magic sufficiently small-scale 172 00:13:30,480 --> 00:13:32,960 to be performed within their own homes. 173 00:13:34,440 --> 00:13:37,360 One of the most graphic ways they did this was to take 174 00:13:37,360 --> 00:13:40,360 a piece of clay or a simple pot like this one 175 00:13:40,360 --> 00:13:44,280 and write upon it the thing or the person that they wanted to control. 176 00:13:45,520 --> 00:13:47,160 They often used red ochre, 177 00:13:47,160 --> 00:13:51,800 because red was associated with the powers of destruction. 178 00:13:51,800 --> 00:13:54,400 So if I was doing this, I would put on the thing 179 00:13:54,400 --> 00:13:58,240 I would want to stop, which are early morning calls and alarm clocks. 180 00:14:00,760 --> 00:14:04,200 So you've got to imagine Egyptians from all walks of life doing 181 00:14:04,200 --> 00:14:08,760 this, the priest wanting to protect the pharaoh, the soldier 182 00:14:08,760 --> 00:14:13,840 in battle against an enemy, or simply a hated love rival. So all 183 00:14:13,840 --> 00:14:18,360 sorts of Egyptians could be on the receiving end of something like this. 184 00:14:20,440 --> 00:14:23,760 And then to activate the curse, they smashed the pot. 185 00:14:29,320 --> 00:14:33,480 It was a symbolic act to annihilate the name of the enemy 186 00:14:33,480 --> 00:14:36,480 and therefore to control that enemy. 187 00:14:36,480 --> 00:14:38,080 Ooh, that does feel better! 188 00:14:39,280 --> 00:14:43,600 Not unlike voodoo, such practices are found in many ancient cultures 189 00:14:43,600 --> 00:14:45,560 and Egypt was no exception. 190 00:14:48,000 --> 00:14:51,760 But it's far from the way we imagine the formal, time-honoured rituals 191 00:14:51,760 --> 00:14:55,600 of the temple led by the king at the head of the religious hierarchy. 192 00:14:57,240 --> 00:15:01,400 This is an Egypt that's becoming more suspicious, more fearful 193 00:15:01,400 --> 00:15:06,280 and more aware of the threats to their world, natural disasters, 194 00:15:06,280 --> 00:15:08,840 political breakdown and foreign powers. 195 00:15:10,000 --> 00:15:14,400 And this little wax figurine is a means to control anyone that 196 00:15:14,400 --> 00:15:17,200 threatens the balanced order of Egyptian life. 197 00:15:20,320 --> 00:15:22,240 Welcome to the age of fear... 198 00:15:25,680 --> 00:15:29,120 ..a time when every element of Egypt's world view was in doubt. 199 00:15:32,720 --> 00:15:34,680 Their faith in their king, 200 00:15:34,680 --> 00:15:38,640 in their land and even in their gods had all faltered. 201 00:15:40,920 --> 00:15:44,200 This is one of the lowest points in Egypt's long story 202 00:15:44,200 --> 00:15:47,880 and its effect reverberated throughout the Nile Valley. 203 00:15:50,360 --> 00:15:53,440 The king, traditionally based in the north, 204 00:15:53,440 --> 00:15:57,120 was no longer the source of wealth, so royal officials abandoned 205 00:15:57,120 --> 00:16:01,280 court and relocated back to their hometowns throughout the country. 206 00:16:02,520 --> 00:16:07,200 Disunited, Egypt reverted back to how it had been 1,000 years earlier. 207 00:16:08,520 --> 00:16:12,000 Breaking up into series of local regions called nomes. 208 00:16:13,000 --> 00:16:17,200 And now a new kind of leader emerges to dominate the dark ages. 209 00:16:18,800 --> 00:16:22,200 No longer a single king, but multiple warlords. 210 00:16:31,600 --> 00:16:33,560 And we know much about one of them, 211 00:16:33,560 --> 00:16:37,320 because he left his detailed autobiography in his rock-cut tomb 212 00:16:37,320 --> 00:16:40,640 at Mo'alla, well away from the usual tourist sites. 213 00:16:47,280 --> 00:16:49,320 His name was Ankhtifi. 214 00:16:52,400 --> 00:16:55,600 Now, Ankhtifi is a small-time official 215 00:16:55,600 --> 00:16:58,040 who's worked his way up through the ranks 216 00:16:58,040 --> 00:17:02,280 to become the regional governor, or nomarch, as it's known. 217 00:17:02,280 --> 00:17:05,640 And in the declining central government the power vacuum 218 00:17:05,640 --> 00:17:09,560 that opens up is now filled by the Ankhtifis of this world. 219 00:17:12,600 --> 00:17:16,760 Ankhtifi's tomb is quite modest by ancient Egyptian standards, 220 00:17:16,760 --> 00:17:19,720 but its interior walls tell of his rise to power. 221 00:17:22,080 --> 00:17:26,600 And Egyptologist Garry Shaw is going to help me unravel Ankhtifi's story. 222 00:17:27,640 --> 00:17:30,120 - You can see the man himself. - Ah, the great man. 223 00:17:30,120 --> 00:17:34,480 - The great man, carved, standing there. - He's got a great hairstyle. 224 00:17:34,480 --> 00:17:38,280 - He does. - That is lovely. I'm liking him already. 225 00:17:38,280 --> 00:17:40,280 And he has a great tomb, as well. 226 00:17:42,280 --> 00:17:46,000 The hieroglyphs and images that fill the walls reveal how Ankhtifi 227 00:17:46,000 --> 00:17:49,800 exploited the power vacuum at the end of the pyramid age, 228 00:17:49,800 --> 00:17:52,960 reducing the king to nothing more than a footnote. 229 00:17:54,600 --> 00:17:58,600 The only time you see the name of a king in the entire tomb is 230 00:17:58,600 --> 00:18:02,040 right here. This tiny little cartouche. 231 00:18:02,040 --> 00:18:04,720 Oh, it couldn't be any smaller. Look at the size of that. 232 00:18:04,720 --> 00:18:08,480 - It says Neferkare and that's it. - Is that it in the whole tomb? 233 00:18:08,480 --> 00:18:12,040 The whole tomb, one mention of a king, and I think that really 234 00:18:12,040 --> 00:18:15,640 emphasises just how important he thought he was alone. 235 00:18:15,640 --> 00:18:17,280 He didn't need to mention the pharaoh, 236 00:18:17,280 --> 00:18:20,440 he didn't need to say that the king told me to do this, 237 00:18:20,440 --> 00:18:24,000 so I did this because of the king's favours, he just did it himself. 238 00:18:24,000 --> 00:18:25,440 That is extraordinary. 239 00:18:25,440 --> 00:18:28,880 I think that cartouche, alone of everything in the tomb, 240 00:18:28,880 --> 00:18:31,680 encapsulates this whole period. 241 00:18:31,680 --> 00:18:36,160 Kings have been reduced to something on a minuscule level and the local 242 00:18:36,160 --> 00:18:40,880 rulers are shown on a huge scale and it's all about them, isn't it? 243 00:18:40,880 --> 00:18:44,600 Ankhtifi had enhanced his own political career 244 00:18:44,600 --> 00:18:48,960 and wanted to ensure the gods were in no doubt as to his importance. 245 00:18:48,960 --> 00:18:53,320 So the elaborate language, once exclusive to the king, was now part 246 00:18:53,320 --> 00:18:56,520 of Ankhtifi's own boastful propaganda. 247 00:18:56,520 --> 00:18:59,840 This warlord was an egomaniac. 248 00:18:59,840 --> 00:19:03,200 He also says that he's a hero without equal, 249 00:19:03,200 --> 00:19:06,520 without peer and you get that here. 250 00:19:07,760 --> 00:19:12,880 "I am a hero without peer," and pretty much almost every inscription 251 00:19:12,880 --> 00:19:16,520 in this tomb ends or includes this statement at some point inside. 252 00:19:16,520 --> 00:19:18,960 And what did he do to, kind of, justify these claims? 253 00:19:18,960 --> 00:19:21,960 He emphasises all the good things he did for the people. 254 00:19:21,960 --> 00:19:24,120 This was meant to be a time of drought and famine, 255 00:19:24,120 --> 00:19:28,560 so we're told in the texts, and he tried to guide them through this, 256 00:19:28,560 --> 00:19:30,400 he was managing it by feeding everybody 257 00:19:30,400 --> 00:19:32,080 and doing all sorts of good things, 258 00:19:32,080 --> 00:19:37,200 giving bread to the hungry, ointment to those without ointment. 259 00:19:37,200 --> 00:19:41,680 Sandals for those who were barefoot and wives to those without wives. 260 00:19:41,680 --> 00:19:44,720 So it's basically telling us about a time of turmoil. 261 00:19:44,720 --> 00:19:47,320 Yeah, but he was probably just over-exaggerating 262 00:19:47,320 --> 00:19:49,560 because the more he exaggerates just how awful it is, 263 00:19:49,560 --> 00:19:52,280 the more great he looks when he says, "Well, these are the nice 264 00:19:52,280 --> 00:19:55,120 - "things I did for everybody." - Yeah. - And you get this here. 265 00:19:55,120 --> 00:19:59,200 He talks about the entire south dying from hunger. 266 00:19:59,200 --> 00:20:02,840 Oh, look at that, that's a really graphic hieroglyph, I love that. 267 00:20:02,840 --> 00:20:06,000 - The guy fallen over. - Dead body! - He's definitely dead. 268 00:20:07,360 --> 00:20:08,960 But then it gets even worse, 269 00:20:08,960 --> 00:20:12,680 because he says that every single man is eating his children. 270 00:20:12,680 --> 00:20:15,240 He didn't allow this to happen in his nome, of course. 271 00:20:15,240 --> 00:20:17,400 Where he lived, everything was fine. 272 00:20:17,400 --> 00:20:19,880 And at the same time he was also a fantastic warrior, 273 00:20:19,880 --> 00:20:22,680 - we're told over here. - Inevitably! How did I know that was coming? 274 00:20:22,680 --> 00:20:25,480 Yeah, absolutely, yeah. These texts on this particular column 275 00:20:25,480 --> 00:20:28,360 talk about his abilities as a warrior. 276 00:20:28,360 --> 00:20:30,720 In his biggest boast of all, 277 00:20:30,720 --> 00:20:35,280 Ankhtifi, the local hero, almost claims the status of a god. 278 00:20:46,520 --> 00:20:48,600 In Egypt's dark age, 279 00:20:48,600 --> 00:20:52,440 warlords like Ankhtifi had replaced the real kings of Egypt. 280 00:20:53,800 --> 00:20:58,760 And Ankhtifi's delusions of grandeur, so vividly expressed inside his tomb, 281 00:20:58,760 --> 00:21:01,400 are even more emphasised on the outside 282 00:21:01,400 --> 00:21:06,240 because he chose burial inside a rock shaped like a natural pyramid. 283 00:21:06,240 --> 00:21:08,520 He wanted to be the local pharaoh. 284 00:21:11,720 --> 00:21:13,400 And in a way he was, 285 00:21:13,400 --> 00:21:18,040 because whoever fed and protected the people also led the people. 286 00:21:21,280 --> 00:21:24,520 But as the power of warlords like Ankhtifi grew, 287 00:21:24,520 --> 00:21:26,560 so did the conflicts between them. 288 00:21:28,840 --> 00:21:32,760 And over time, as they either defeated their neighbours or formed 289 00:21:32,760 --> 00:21:37,720 alliances with them, two separate dynasties of warlord kings emerged. 290 00:21:39,320 --> 00:21:42,520 One in the north at Herakleopolis where they wore the 291 00:21:42,520 --> 00:21:43,920 red crown of Lower Egypt... 292 00:21:45,560 --> 00:21:47,680 ..and one in the south at Thebes, 293 00:21:47,680 --> 00:21:51,200 symbolised by the white crown of Upper Egypt. 294 00:21:51,200 --> 00:21:55,080 Egypt was a divided kingdom of two lands. 295 00:21:55,080 --> 00:21:57,600 And between them lay a warzone. 296 00:22:05,320 --> 00:22:09,400 Situated at its centre lay Egypt's most sacred site... 297 00:22:10,800 --> 00:22:14,800 ..its earliest royal burial ground. 298 00:22:14,800 --> 00:22:18,600 And still today an evocative and atmospheric place. 299 00:22:20,200 --> 00:22:24,360 This was the resting place of Egypt's first kings, 300 00:22:24,360 --> 00:22:28,360 whose mummified bodies were buried in elaborate burial chambers 301 00:22:28,360 --> 00:22:30,720 beneath the desert floor. 302 00:22:30,720 --> 00:22:34,040 A safe place for their souls, or so they thought. 303 00:22:44,120 --> 00:22:47,000 But hostilities between the two warring factions 304 00:22:47,000 --> 00:22:50,040 were about to plumb new depths of horror, 305 00:22:50,040 --> 00:22:52,560 with an assault so blasphemous, 306 00:22:52,560 --> 00:22:55,640 it would change the face of Egypt for ever. 307 00:22:55,640 --> 00:22:59,280 One of the most violent acts was recorded in later texts 308 00:22:59,280 --> 00:23:03,200 as the Vile Deed, for the northern warlord kings 309 00:23:03,200 --> 00:23:05,560 fighting their southern opponents here 310 00:23:05,560 --> 00:23:08,480 actually desecrated these royal tombs. 311 00:23:10,360 --> 00:23:13,120 For their troops set fire to the tombs 312 00:23:13,120 --> 00:23:15,880 and destroyed the royal mummies. 313 00:23:15,880 --> 00:23:21,360 At a stroke, Egypt's physical link to its ancient past was severed. 314 00:23:21,360 --> 00:23:25,640 Such an act of desecration was completely unimaginable 315 00:23:25,640 --> 00:23:28,680 and the Egyptian people were rightly appalled. 316 00:23:28,680 --> 00:23:32,040 Although the northern kings deeply regretted what their troops 317 00:23:32,040 --> 00:23:36,080 had done, the destruction was irreversible 318 00:23:36,080 --> 00:23:39,440 and the origins of Egypt's royal past lost forever. 319 00:23:41,480 --> 00:23:45,280 Of course, the problem with such times of destruction is that there's 320 00:23:45,280 --> 00:23:48,680 very little left of them for us Egyptologists to find. 321 00:23:50,240 --> 00:23:53,480 But clues do remain if you know what you're looking for. 322 00:23:55,360 --> 00:23:58,080 Today, what's left of the violation of this 323 00:23:58,080 --> 00:24:00,360 royal burial ground is surprising... 324 00:24:01,560 --> 00:24:04,120 ..thousands upon thousands of broken pots. 325 00:24:05,760 --> 00:24:09,120 Although most are not part of the destruction itself, 326 00:24:09,120 --> 00:24:12,720 they represent centuries of atonement for the loss of Egypt's 327 00:24:12,720 --> 00:24:15,200 physical connection with its past. 328 00:24:20,760 --> 00:24:24,920 Now, not long after the desecration, this became a place of pilgrimage, 329 00:24:24,920 --> 00:24:27,720 where people came with little pots like this one, 330 00:24:27,720 --> 00:24:30,600 filled with food, drink, incense, 331 00:24:30,600 --> 00:24:34,920 which they offered up to the souls of the dead kings once buried here. 332 00:24:38,000 --> 00:24:41,760 It was believed that at death, these souls of the kings had joined 333 00:24:41,760 --> 00:24:45,000 with the soul of Osiris, god of the dead, 334 00:24:45,000 --> 00:24:49,000 and as this place became a site of pilgrimage, it's as if the people 335 00:24:49,000 --> 00:24:53,080 of Egypt were trying to make amends for the desecration of the past. 336 00:24:56,520 --> 00:25:00,520 Egypt's spiritual connection to its royal ancestors was all it had 337 00:25:00,520 --> 00:25:04,680 left after the northern warlords had destroyed their physical remains. 338 00:25:06,600 --> 00:25:10,080 And the desecration soon provoked violent retaliation. 339 00:25:12,960 --> 00:25:15,440 Directly across the desert from Abydos... 340 00:25:17,080 --> 00:25:18,360 ..lay Thebes... 341 00:25:20,840 --> 00:25:23,320 ..the stronghold of the southern warlords. 342 00:25:23,320 --> 00:25:25,720 BIRD SQUAWKS 343 00:25:25,720 --> 00:25:28,760 And they would soon rise up against their northern rivals 344 00:25:28,760 --> 00:25:32,040 and attempt to resurrect Egypt as a united land. 345 00:25:37,720 --> 00:25:41,320 Back in 2000 BC, Thebes was a one-donkey town. 346 00:25:41,320 --> 00:25:45,760 And yet its warlords had two distinct advantages over other leaders. 347 00:25:45,760 --> 00:25:49,800 They lived on a bend in the Nile called the Qena Bend, 348 00:25:49,800 --> 00:25:52,360 a strategic control point of rich farmland. 349 00:25:53,680 --> 00:25:57,400 And their local god was Montu, the god of war! 350 00:26:01,440 --> 00:26:04,800 The warlords of Thebes would reunite Egypt. 351 00:26:04,800 --> 00:26:07,400 And one in particular came to the fore. 352 00:26:08,400 --> 00:26:13,000 His images were carved into the walls of his Theban tomb complex. 353 00:26:13,000 --> 00:26:14,760 And his name tells us much. 354 00:26:18,440 --> 00:26:22,160 This is the Theban warlord Montuhotep, 355 00:26:22,160 --> 00:26:24,760 and there's a real clue as to what was happening 356 00:26:24,760 --> 00:26:28,960 at this part of Egyptian history, because his name, Montuhotep, 357 00:26:28,960 --> 00:26:32,800 means "the local war god, Montu, is content", 358 00:26:32,800 --> 00:26:35,920 because "hotep" simply means content and happy. 359 00:26:35,920 --> 00:26:39,360 So if the war god was happy with Montuhotep, 360 00:26:39,360 --> 00:26:42,760 this means that he was a very powerful military figure 361 00:26:42,760 --> 00:26:44,720 and this is a wonderful scene. 362 00:26:44,720 --> 00:26:47,000 There are a lot of little clues here to tell us 363 00:26:47,000 --> 00:26:51,800 what's going on and if you look really closely you can see hands 364 00:26:51,800 --> 00:26:56,920 embracing him, flanking him at his back, at his front, round his middle. 365 00:26:56,920 --> 00:27:01,520 He's been embraced by the gods, chief amongst whom is Montu himself, 366 00:27:01,520 --> 00:27:04,960 and there he is. He's nose to nose with the king, 367 00:27:04,960 --> 00:27:07,200 he's giving him the breath of life 368 00:27:07,200 --> 00:27:10,360 and infusing him with his own divine power. 369 00:27:12,360 --> 00:27:14,640 It was the power of victory. 370 00:27:14,640 --> 00:27:18,720 One that finally brought an end to Egypt's first dark age. 371 00:27:19,760 --> 00:27:22,760 Montuhotep really did live up to his name 372 00:27:22,760 --> 00:27:27,040 as a true son of the war god because he took his armies north, 373 00:27:27,040 --> 00:27:30,920 he conquered the north and he reunited Egypt. 374 00:27:32,080 --> 00:27:34,720 But best of all he's got the red crown on, 375 00:27:34,720 --> 00:27:36,720 and this is the red crown of the north 376 00:27:36,720 --> 00:27:39,440 because Montuhotep is declaring to the world, 377 00:27:39,440 --> 00:27:41,880 "I might be a southerner, I might be from Thebes, 378 00:27:41,880 --> 00:27:43,680 "I should be wearing the white crown, 379 00:27:43,680 --> 00:27:45,920 "but look at me now, I have the red crown. 380 00:27:45,920 --> 00:27:48,800 "I am the king of the north and the king of the south 381 00:27:48,800 --> 00:27:51,200 "and I have reunited Egypt." 382 00:27:53,080 --> 00:27:57,160 As Egypt's new king, he became Montuhotep II. 383 00:27:58,400 --> 00:28:00,480 But his victory came at a high price. 384 00:28:02,160 --> 00:28:04,920 The grim details of what his soldiers went through 385 00:28:04,920 --> 00:28:08,240 can be found on Thebes' West Bank at Deir el-Bahari. 386 00:28:10,880 --> 00:28:13,280 It was inside one of the tombs here that the 387 00:28:13,280 --> 00:28:17,280 remains of Montuhotep's warriors were uncovered in 1923. 388 00:28:21,880 --> 00:28:26,640 Their bodies silent witnesses to Egypt's civil war of 4,000 years ago. 389 00:28:27,960 --> 00:28:31,560 Which careful analysis revealed in fascinating detail. 390 00:28:33,120 --> 00:28:36,360 Now, the archaeologists found around 60 bodies in the tomb 391 00:28:36,360 --> 00:28:39,720 and these are the original excavation photographs. 392 00:28:41,920 --> 00:28:45,360 All of them had been naturally preserved, naturally mummified 393 00:28:45,360 --> 00:28:50,160 in the hot, dry climate, so you've still got the skin and the hair. 394 00:28:50,160 --> 00:28:54,920 And crucially, evidence of how these men had fought and died. 395 00:28:54,920 --> 00:28:57,520 Some of these bodies had been pierced by arrows, 396 00:28:57,520 --> 00:29:01,400 this one goes right into the left side of the chest. 397 00:29:01,400 --> 00:29:04,560 Others had actually been buried with these leather wrist guards 398 00:29:04,560 --> 00:29:05,840 that archers use. 399 00:29:08,120 --> 00:29:11,600 Ten of the warriors had been killed with ebony-tipped arrows. 400 00:29:13,040 --> 00:29:15,800 But in others, the wounds are even more brutal. 401 00:29:17,400 --> 00:29:20,400 You can see here somebody's hit this man on the head with a real 402 00:29:20,400 --> 00:29:24,560 whack and you can see this very, very graphic area of damage there. 403 00:29:26,800 --> 00:29:29,240 And after these series of furious blows had been 404 00:29:29,240 --> 00:29:33,360 rained down on these poor guys, they lay helpless on the field of battle, 405 00:29:33,360 --> 00:29:38,160 their bodies picked at by vultures. You can see here the dreadful damage. 406 00:29:38,160 --> 00:29:40,240 It's such a profound image. 407 00:29:43,880 --> 00:29:47,400 The bodies reveal evidence of the weapons used against them 408 00:29:47,400 --> 00:29:49,480 as they fought for control of Egypt. 409 00:29:52,200 --> 00:29:53,680 Arrows, sling shot 410 00:29:53,680 --> 00:29:56,720 and even rocks had been hurled at the warriors from above. 411 00:29:59,080 --> 00:30:02,360 Eventually their bodies were collected from the battlefield 412 00:30:02,360 --> 00:30:05,000 and carefully wrapped in linen. 413 00:30:05,000 --> 00:30:08,680 This linen bore the insignia of the Theban tomb complex, 414 00:30:08,680 --> 00:30:10,960 belonging to their leader Montuhotep. 415 00:30:12,000 --> 00:30:14,880 But just as significant as the bodies themselves, 416 00:30:14,880 --> 00:30:18,200 was where Montuhotep chose to bury his fallen heroes. 417 00:30:21,440 --> 00:30:25,520 Today, the warriors' resting place is a little-known, sealed tomb. 418 00:30:28,400 --> 00:30:32,760 But 4,000 years ago Montuhotep honoured his dead soldiers 419 00:30:32,760 --> 00:30:36,840 with a burial amongst the graves of his highest officials, 420 00:30:36,840 --> 00:30:39,400 making them part of his monument to victory. 421 00:30:40,560 --> 00:30:42,880 The new king had created what could well be 422 00:30:42,880 --> 00:30:45,120 the world's first known war cemetery. 423 00:30:48,160 --> 00:30:51,880 Now, I'm lucky enough to have been given special permission to see 424 00:30:51,880 --> 00:30:54,480 Montuhotep's soldiers for the first time. 425 00:30:54,480 --> 00:30:57,560 These guys are going to be taking down the tomb wall for me, 426 00:30:57,560 --> 00:31:01,120 allowing me to actually meet the very people who fought in Egypt's 427 00:31:01,120 --> 00:31:05,560 civil war around 2,000 BC so I am very, very excited. 428 00:31:14,920 --> 00:31:18,240 And it was the same curiosity which drove a team of American 429 00:31:18,240 --> 00:31:21,480 archaeologists to excavate their original mass grave 430 00:31:21,480 --> 00:31:22,960 in the first place. 431 00:31:40,200 --> 00:31:42,760 Now reburied in a neighbouring tomb, 432 00:31:42,760 --> 00:31:46,960 the bodies of Montuhotep's soldiers have rarely seen the light of day 433 00:31:46,960 --> 00:31:49,600 since their discovery over 90 years ago. 434 00:31:52,920 --> 00:31:53,960 THEY SPEAK ARABIC 435 00:31:59,920 --> 00:32:03,000 Now this is really, really super frustrating, 436 00:32:03,000 --> 00:32:05,120 but in the interests of health and safety 437 00:32:05,120 --> 00:32:08,160 I can't go in there immediately, much as I really want to, 438 00:32:08,160 --> 00:32:12,080 cos all the stale air has built up as the wall's been sealed 439 00:32:12,080 --> 00:32:16,320 and we've really got to let this out with all the fungal spores 440 00:32:16,320 --> 00:32:19,400 and bacteria and everything else that's so detrimental to health. 441 00:32:21,280 --> 00:32:25,000 Early Egyptologists tended to rush straight in and risked the 442 00:32:25,000 --> 00:32:29,280 so-called pharaoh's curse, so a little waiting is essential. 443 00:32:38,760 --> 00:32:41,960 I can't believe we're going to actually enter this tomb now. 444 00:32:41,960 --> 00:32:47,080 It's one of those rare moments you get in an Egyptological career, 445 00:32:47,080 --> 00:32:49,680 into a tomb that's hardly ever visited. 446 00:32:49,680 --> 00:32:51,760 The wall had to come down and who knows what we're 447 00:32:51,760 --> 00:32:54,600 going to find inside cos I certainly have never seen 448 00:32:54,600 --> 00:32:57,360 this before so it's a very, very special moment. 449 00:33:09,200 --> 00:33:13,480 This literally wasn't at all what I expected, nobody knew what to expect. 450 00:33:13,480 --> 00:33:17,760 It's staggering. I've never ever been into a tomb quite like this before. 451 00:33:22,240 --> 00:33:26,520 The mask is a very good idea because there's all sorts of things 452 00:33:26,520 --> 00:33:29,080 floating around in the atmosphere in here, 453 00:33:29,080 --> 00:33:32,600 not just the dust of ages, but the dust of human beings, 454 00:33:32,600 --> 00:33:35,280 and as such we have to be very, very respectful. 455 00:33:37,200 --> 00:33:39,240 It's a large rock-cut tomb 456 00:33:39,240 --> 00:33:42,200 and although its walls are unfinished, it is typical 457 00:33:42,200 --> 00:33:46,320 of those created for courtiers and officials throughout these cliffs. 458 00:33:47,760 --> 00:33:49,840 Wow, it's a mummified body. 459 00:33:51,680 --> 00:33:55,520 It's absolutely incredible. Oh, that's quite something. 460 00:33:58,760 --> 00:34:04,680 And if you look along the length of this very long tomb, look at the 461 00:34:04,680 --> 00:34:11,160 floor, this isn't stone, these are human remains and mummy wrappings. 462 00:34:12,840 --> 00:34:14,240 And there are chambers 463 00:34:14,240 --> 00:34:19,160 and corridors leading off, again full of wrappings, the linen of ages. 464 00:34:25,680 --> 00:34:28,200 Some of it is claimed to be the very linen that bound 465 00:34:28,200 --> 00:34:32,360 the bodies of Montuhotep's warriors to help preserve them for eternity. 466 00:34:34,400 --> 00:34:39,280 But at first glance it's hard to get a clear picture, for this particular 467 00:34:39,280 --> 00:34:43,600 tomb seems to have been reused many times during Egypt's long history. 468 00:34:45,760 --> 00:34:51,520 Part of a shoulder, you see the way the skin is folded and dried out. 469 00:34:53,040 --> 00:34:57,840 Partial human body, still with much of its soft tissue intact. 470 00:34:57,840 --> 00:34:59,920 It hits you immediately in the face 471 00:34:59,920 --> 00:35:03,040 and you're confronted with what a tomb is all about. 472 00:35:03,040 --> 00:35:07,760 Make no mistake, this is the home of the dead and we're in amongst them. 473 00:35:09,040 --> 00:35:12,160 And it's a very emotive and powerful place to be. 474 00:35:15,440 --> 00:35:20,000 But what's striking is how little is left of their bodies. 475 00:35:20,000 --> 00:35:23,720 Like many other tombs up and down the Nile, they've been subjected to 476 00:35:23,720 --> 00:35:26,160 centuries of looting and damage. 477 00:35:28,160 --> 00:35:32,800 And amongst all these linen wrappings and debris and human remains 478 00:35:32,800 --> 00:35:37,320 themselves are the tangible remains of these men who died so 479 00:35:37,320 --> 00:35:42,320 bravely in their efforts to reunify Egypt for Montuhotep their leader. 480 00:35:58,640 --> 00:36:02,440 Having just come out of that tomb I have very, very mixed emotions. 481 00:36:03,640 --> 00:36:07,560 I don't really know what I was expecting to see, certainly some 482 00:36:07,560 --> 00:36:10,080 of Montuhotep's soldiers. 483 00:36:10,080 --> 00:36:13,040 Perhaps some of them were, it's highly likely. 484 00:36:13,040 --> 00:36:18,080 Essentially, what we're looking at are the ancient Egyptians themselves. 485 00:36:18,080 --> 00:36:20,360 These are the ancient Egyptians. 486 00:36:20,360 --> 00:36:25,480 Temples, tombs, pyramids, this wonderful culture. 487 00:36:25,480 --> 00:36:30,000 It's all well and good studying these esoteric aspects 488 00:36:30,000 --> 00:36:34,800 that are distinct and marvellous and grand but when it comes down 489 00:36:34,800 --> 00:36:39,680 to it, the things we should really be interested in are these people. 490 00:36:49,960 --> 00:36:54,440 Montuhotep's reunification of Egypt marked a new beginning, 491 00:36:54,440 --> 00:36:56,080 the dawn of what would become 492 00:36:56,080 --> 00:36:57,720 known as the Middle Kingdom... 493 00:37:01,000 --> 00:37:02,560 ..and the rise of Thebes. 494 00:37:08,480 --> 00:37:11,880 Montuhotep made it the new spiritual heart of Egypt. 495 00:37:14,560 --> 00:37:17,720 And it would stay that way for the next 2,000 years. 496 00:37:23,040 --> 00:37:26,200 But whereas the war god Montu had dominated the previous 497 00:37:26,200 --> 00:37:28,400 century of Egypt's story, 498 00:37:28,400 --> 00:37:33,560 the deity that now took centre stage was Hathor, the goddess of love, 499 00:37:33,560 --> 00:37:38,800 joy, beauty and motherhood. The goddess whose origins can be 500 00:37:38,800 --> 00:37:41,280 traced right back to the earliest of times. 501 00:37:42,760 --> 00:37:45,280 And believing that Hathor dwelt in the cliffs of 502 00:37:45,280 --> 00:37:50,640 Deir el-Bahari, Montuhotep chose this site not only for his war cemetery, 503 00:37:50,640 --> 00:37:52,600 but for his own tomb complex. 504 00:37:54,560 --> 00:37:58,800 It was Montuhotep that first built here in this dramatic place 505 00:37:58,800 --> 00:38:01,080 where the cliffs meet the desert, 506 00:38:01,080 --> 00:38:04,360 believed to be the home of the goddess Hathor herself. 507 00:38:04,360 --> 00:38:07,720 It was a fast-track to the afterlife and for Montuhotep 508 00:38:07,720 --> 00:38:11,760 and his men, who'd lived and died by the war god Montu, 509 00:38:11,760 --> 00:38:15,200 they all now rest in the eternal embrace of Hathor. 510 00:38:31,080 --> 00:38:34,040 The first to build at Deir el-Bahari was Montuhotep, 511 00:38:34,040 --> 00:38:36,440 the founder of a reunified Egypt. 512 00:38:39,120 --> 00:38:43,720 He was so influential that almost 600 years later, female pharaoh 513 00:38:43,720 --> 00:38:49,080 Hatshepsut built her own funerary temple right next door to 514 00:38:49,080 --> 00:38:54,240 tap into the religious and political power of her illustrious predecessor. 515 00:39:02,640 --> 00:39:06,160 In the Middle Kingdom, life for ordinary people was on the up. 516 00:39:08,600 --> 00:39:09,920 Food was plentiful... 517 00:39:13,360 --> 00:39:15,360 ..wealth and trade flourished... 518 00:39:18,040 --> 00:39:21,640 ..and farming was revitalised with new irrigation systems. 519 00:39:27,280 --> 00:39:32,880 Yet the dark age had nonetheless left its mark on the Egyptian mind-set, 520 00:39:32,880 --> 00:39:36,040 as revealed in the way they prepared for the afterlife. 521 00:39:37,880 --> 00:39:41,960 In the Old Kingdom, tomb walls were often covered in elaborate scenes 522 00:39:41,960 --> 00:39:46,280 and texts replicating an idealised version of the Egyptian world. 523 00:39:48,040 --> 00:39:52,440 But in the dark ages people had seen their sacred sites ripped apart. 524 00:39:53,880 --> 00:39:55,720 So instead of such tomb art, 525 00:39:55,720 --> 00:39:59,200 many in the Middle Kingdom opted for its cheaper equivalent. 526 00:40:02,080 --> 00:40:05,840 With something much smaller and much more intimate. 527 00:40:15,560 --> 00:40:19,320 While these may look like children's toys, they were in fact made 528 00:40:19,320 --> 00:40:23,840 nearly 4,000 years ago to be placed inside Egyptian burials. 529 00:40:26,240 --> 00:40:29,640 Now, these wooden models were designed to provide the deceased with 530 00:40:29,640 --> 00:40:34,800 an eternal supply of food and drink in the next world and so we have 531 00:40:34,800 --> 00:40:40,480 all the basics here, the Egyptian staples of bread, beer and beef. 532 00:40:44,160 --> 00:40:48,440 So we have the bakers at this end and they're grinding the grain to 533 00:40:48,440 --> 00:40:51,480 make flour which will then be made into the bread loaves 534 00:40:51,480 --> 00:40:56,440 that are cooked in this fire and the baker is in front there. 535 00:40:56,440 --> 00:41:00,840 The arms are quite damaged but presumably shielding his face 536 00:41:00,840 --> 00:41:05,520 from the heat as we know from other examples. Move to the middle, we have 537 00:41:05,520 --> 00:41:11,160 the butcher here and he's cutting the throat of this ox. The legs 538 00:41:11,160 --> 00:41:15,600 are bound here to keep the animal in situ while the deed is done. 539 00:41:15,600 --> 00:41:19,360 And we move on to the end and we have the brewer. 540 00:41:19,360 --> 00:41:20,760 This is a fabulous, 541 00:41:20,760 --> 00:41:25,800 fabulous example because he's pushing the mash through a sieve 542 00:41:25,800 --> 00:41:30,120 and the sieve's even been drawn on there on the top. 543 00:41:30,120 --> 00:41:33,120 Actually, in proportion with the rest of it this individual's 544 00:41:33,120 --> 00:41:36,880 ordered rather more beer than either bread or beef 545 00:41:36,880 --> 00:41:41,000 because this section of the model is almost half its length 546 00:41:41,000 --> 00:41:44,920 but you can see the vats of beer carefully laid on their side. 547 00:41:44,920 --> 00:41:47,560 It's a wonderfully evocative piece. 548 00:41:47,560 --> 00:41:49,720 These people have been working for 4,000 years 549 00:41:49,720 --> 00:41:51,840 and they're still at it, look at them. 550 00:41:53,160 --> 00:41:56,320 The key elements of Egyptian culture were back. 551 00:41:56,320 --> 00:41:58,840 And they look little different from times of plenty 552 00:41:58,840 --> 00:42:00,680 in the previous millennium. 553 00:42:03,920 --> 00:42:06,560 Look at this busy crew grappling with the sail, 554 00:42:06,560 --> 00:42:09,680 poles ready to launch the boat off the Nile's banks. 555 00:42:12,440 --> 00:42:17,440 And this granary silo. Inside, workers haul sacks of barley... 556 00:42:19,520 --> 00:42:21,440 ..while a scribe counts the crop. 557 00:42:26,800 --> 00:42:29,560 And, of course, there are also female figures. 558 00:42:30,640 --> 00:42:34,640 In Egypt women enjoyed much the same status as men, 559 00:42:34,640 --> 00:42:38,200 unlike their sisters in many other parts of the ancient world. 560 00:42:39,560 --> 00:42:43,600 They're also producing one of the Egyptian staples, linen, 561 00:42:43,600 --> 00:42:47,960 the cloth which was used to make pretty much every Egyptian garment. 562 00:42:47,960 --> 00:42:52,040 When you see this standing woman here, she's spinning 563 00:42:52,040 --> 00:42:57,160 the thread with this spindle and the thread that she is busy making she'll 564 00:42:57,160 --> 00:43:02,080 then hand on to her two companions, the weavers, and they are using this 565 00:43:02,080 --> 00:43:06,760 horizontal loom that's pegged to the ground to produce the bolts of cloth 566 00:43:06,760 --> 00:43:09,920 which will be fashioned into the wrap-around dresses, 567 00:43:09,920 --> 00:43:12,080 the kilts, the loincloths, as worn by 568 00:43:12,080 --> 00:43:15,840 pretty much every ancient Egyptian man, woman and child. 569 00:43:17,760 --> 00:43:21,880 The lives depicted in these busy little scenes are the comfortable 570 00:43:21,880 --> 00:43:25,880 and the familiar, representing the Egyptian idea of security. 571 00:43:28,520 --> 00:43:31,240 This isn't Tutankhamen's death mask, this isn't the finest 572 00:43:31,240 --> 00:43:35,560 piece of art you'll ever see but that isn't the point. These are real 573 00:43:35,560 --> 00:43:40,400 people doing real jobs. This is Ancient Egypt up close and personal. 574 00:43:43,080 --> 00:43:46,120 Order had been restored within Egypt. 575 00:43:46,120 --> 00:43:50,320 But the fears that once tore Egypt apart hadn't disappeared entirely. 576 00:43:53,480 --> 00:43:57,760 For now they were projected outwards, to the world beyond its borders. 577 00:44:00,520 --> 00:44:05,040 So Middle Kingdom monarchs like stern old Sesostris III 578 00:44:05,040 --> 00:44:08,160 focused on national security and wealth creation. 579 00:44:10,440 --> 00:44:14,240 Sesostris is infamous for his devastating military campaigns 580 00:44:14,240 --> 00:44:16,320 south into gold-rich Nubia. 581 00:44:18,000 --> 00:44:21,640 But he also opted for a more permanent kind of control, 582 00:44:21,640 --> 00:44:22,920 by building castles. 583 00:44:24,600 --> 00:44:29,800 Now, this is a map of southern Egypt and Nubia which is modern day 584 00:44:29,800 --> 00:44:34,040 Sudan, and where Aswan is, that was the border between the two. 585 00:44:34,040 --> 00:44:39,520 And Egypt maintained its control over Nubia through a series of forts. 586 00:44:39,520 --> 00:44:43,160 With around eight of these built by Sesostris himself, 587 00:44:43,160 --> 00:44:45,520 these Middle Kingdom forts were within signalling 588 00:44:45,520 --> 00:44:50,360 distance of one another along the southern Nile down into Nubia. 589 00:44:51,880 --> 00:44:56,480 They were all part of a massive state building programme designed to 590 00:44:56,480 --> 00:45:02,400 subjugate the local population and maintain the flow of goods 591 00:45:02,400 --> 00:45:06,480 and people up into Egypt, particularly Nubian gold. 592 00:45:08,840 --> 00:45:11,160 Very few of these forts still survive. 593 00:45:16,280 --> 00:45:19,800 These are some of the last images ever recorded of the largest, 594 00:45:19,800 --> 00:45:21,000 at Buhen. 595 00:45:24,240 --> 00:45:27,920 It was filmed in 1962 during its excavation. 596 00:45:29,440 --> 00:45:33,160 And after the creation of the Aswan Dam, these massive mud brick 597 00:45:33,160 --> 00:45:37,840 walls disappeared forever beneath the waters of the new Lake Nasser. 598 00:45:44,520 --> 00:45:47,080 But Buhen isn't completely lost to us 599 00:45:47,080 --> 00:45:49,760 because the excavation records are kept here at the 600 00:45:49,760 --> 00:45:51,440 Egypt Exploration Society 601 00:45:51,440 --> 00:45:56,240 and they reveal an unexpected aspect of Middle Kingdom Egypt. 602 00:45:56,240 --> 00:45:58,240 As well as photographs, 603 00:45:58,240 --> 00:46:03,240 they hold architectural plans of the fort drawn up during the excavations. 604 00:46:03,240 --> 00:46:07,200 Giving a real insight into the immense scale of the Egyptian 605 00:46:07,200 --> 00:46:08,960 crackdown in Nubia. 606 00:46:08,960 --> 00:46:11,160 - Hiya, Chris. - Hi, Jo. How are you? 607 00:46:11,160 --> 00:46:14,640 I'm well, thank you. This looks like an amazing photograph. 608 00:46:14,640 --> 00:46:16,200 What does it actually show? 609 00:46:16,200 --> 00:46:18,920 This is an aerial photograph, Jo, so what we can see here 610 00:46:18,920 --> 00:46:22,520 along the bottom this strip is actually the river Nile and then 611 00:46:22,520 --> 00:46:25,520 right on the banks of the Nile emerging from the sand here we see 612 00:46:25,520 --> 00:46:32,160 this square outline of the massive fortification of the site of Buhen. 613 00:46:32,160 --> 00:46:37,080 But once the excavators began to uncover the full extent of what 614 00:46:37,080 --> 00:46:40,760 we can see, this is what they came across. 615 00:46:40,760 --> 00:46:43,680 That just looks like a medieval castle, doesn't it? 616 00:46:43,680 --> 00:46:46,160 Very rarely do you think Ancient Egypt, 617 00:46:46,160 --> 00:46:49,720 "Oh, yeah castles," and yet here's the evidence in front of us. 618 00:46:49,720 --> 00:46:51,320 Absolutely. 619 00:46:53,480 --> 00:46:56,880 Designed to keep the enemy out, Buhen shares features 620 00:46:56,880 --> 00:47:02,080 with the castles of Europe, but all constructed 3,000 years earlier. 621 00:47:06,440 --> 00:47:09,760 Most astonishing of all is its sheer size. 622 00:47:11,440 --> 00:47:13,880 There's a little scale on this map that gives you an idea. 623 00:47:13,880 --> 00:47:18,840 This is roughly 100m, so just the Nile-facing wall here 624 00:47:18,840 --> 00:47:21,920 is well over 400m long. 625 00:47:21,920 --> 00:47:25,200 If you think about the Great Pyramid of Khufu at Giza 626 00:47:25,200 --> 00:47:28,960 that's 200m along the base, so we're talking about the length of two 627 00:47:28,960 --> 00:47:33,000 Great Pyramids along here. The total circumference of this wall is 628 00:47:33,000 --> 00:47:37,600 well over a mile and these outer walls are 11m high. 629 00:47:39,600 --> 00:47:43,480 Inside which you could fit around 20 football pitches. 630 00:47:44,840 --> 00:47:48,200 Because as well as controlling the Nubian gold supply, 631 00:47:48,200 --> 00:47:51,160 Egypt intended to rule by intimidation. 632 00:47:53,240 --> 00:47:55,240 This is the Middle Kingdom's 633 00:47:55,240 --> 00:47:58,480 great monumental, architectural statement. 634 00:47:58,480 --> 00:48:00,080 Pyramids, monumental tombs, 635 00:48:00,080 --> 00:48:02,320 were not really the kinds of buildings they needed. 636 00:48:02,320 --> 00:48:05,000 What they very much needed were these heavily fortified, 637 00:48:05,000 --> 00:48:08,880 fortress towns to guard the frontier of their territory. 638 00:48:10,360 --> 00:48:13,640 When this fortress arrives in the barren, 639 00:48:13,640 --> 00:48:16,560 empty desert landscape in the Middle Kingdom, 640 00:48:16,560 --> 00:48:20,400 this would have been a massive statement. Something very, 641 00:48:20,400 --> 00:48:25,080 very big, powerful, strong, scary has suddenly arrived in the desert. 642 00:48:25,080 --> 00:48:29,120 So anybody travelling from Nubia north into Egypt has to sail past 643 00:48:29,120 --> 00:48:32,120 this and this would have taken quite a while to sail past, wouldn't it? 644 00:48:32,120 --> 00:48:33,240 Absolutely, yeah. 645 00:48:33,240 --> 00:48:36,160 Imagine, you're in a little boat on the Nile and you are looking up 646 00:48:36,160 --> 00:48:39,360 and up and up and you can see all these arrow slits, 647 00:48:39,360 --> 00:48:42,400 people training their arrows perhaps on you. 648 00:48:42,400 --> 00:48:44,040 You know you're being watched. 649 00:48:44,040 --> 00:48:46,760 - It's that big brother mentality, isn't it? - Exactly. 650 00:48:52,400 --> 00:48:56,840 Rising up by the Nile, Buhen was a gleaming citadel of power. 651 00:48:58,240 --> 00:49:02,600 But most of all it was an early warning system, the eyes 652 00:49:02,600 --> 00:49:06,400 and ears of a nation defined by suspicion and fear. 653 00:49:09,400 --> 00:49:13,440 But Egypt's southern border wasn't the only one to be fortified. 654 00:49:13,440 --> 00:49:16,760 The north-eastern border with Palestine was also secured 655 00:49:16,760 --> 00:49:20,200 with such defences to monitor the large number of foreign 656 00:49:20,200 --> 00:49:25,480 traders regularly travelling to sell their goods in super-wealthy Egypt. 657 00:49:25,480 --> 00:49:30,560 And the visit of one such group is portrayed here on a tomb wall, 658 00:49:30,560 --> 00:49:33,760 a caravan of wealthy merchants and their families. 659 00:49:35,280 --> 00:49:38,600 Clearly not Egyptian with their distinctive hairstyles. 660 00:49:38,600 --> 00:49:40,480 and brightly coloured clothes. 661 00:49:42,480 --> 00:49:46,200 Known as the Aamu people, they traded in such goods as the 662 00:49:46,200 --> 00:49:49,280 black lead ore vital for Egypt's production of eye make-up. 663 00:49:52,920 --> 00:49:56,880 And their distinctive pottery has been found across the Nile Delta, 664 00:49:56,880 --> 00:50:01,480 where many of them settled to live and work among the Egyptians. 665 00:50:01,480 --> 00:50:06,560 But within a century, some of these Aamu had infiltrated high office 666 00:50:06,560 --> 00:50:09,800 and eventually took over Egypt itself. 667 00:50:09,800 --> 00:50:12,600 Now, these nomadic Aamu people who came in 668 00:50:12,600 --> 00:50:15,440 and out of Egypt on a regular basis to trade 669 00:50:15,440 --> 00:50:17,960 are portrayed here in this wonderful tomb scene. 670 00:50:17,960 --> 00:50:19,800 And yet the most important 671 00:50:19,800 --> 00:50:23,880 part of the entire scenario are three small hieroglyphs 672 00:50:23,880 --> 00:50:25,040 right in the middle. 673 00:50:26,320 --> 00:50:30,280 They reveal one of the other terms the Egyptians used to name the Aamu. 674 00:50:32,080 --> 00:50:38,000 It's basically a crook, a sceptre and that's written with two symbols 675 00:50:38,000 --> 00:50:42,920 and that's pronounced heka - it means ruler. And then the third of the 676 00:50:42,920 --> 00:50:48,240 three symbols is, kind of, undulating uplands which means desert or hill 677 00:50:48,240 --> 00:50:52,040 country. Basically, the Egyptians use this symbol to denote a foreign land. 678 00:50:52,040 --> 00:50:56,360 So you put these signs together, ruler of foreign lands 679 00:50:56,360 --> 00:51:01,680 and this really is the clue to what happened next, because these 680 00:51:01,680 --> 00:51:05,560 Aamu of Palestinian origin eventually became the Hyksos. 681 00:51:05,560 --> 00:51:07,720 The heka khasut are the Hyksos, 682 00:51:07,720 --> 00:51:13,080 and they ruled Egypt from the north between 1650 BC and 1550 BC. 683 00:51:15,040 --> 00:51:18,200 But as tension between the foreign rulers and their Egyptian 684 00:51:18,200 --> 00:51:23,240 subjects gradually escalated, Egypt entered a second dark age. 685 00:51:24,760 --> 00:51:28,120 The Hyksos made an alliance with the Nubians to the south... 686 00:51:29,960 --> 00:51:33,680 ..and the Egyptians found themselves trapped between two enemies. 687 00:51:36,240 --> 00:51:39,040 Although we know little about this difficult time, 688 00:51:39,040 --> 00:51:42,480 some fascinating texts do survive. 689 00:51:42,480 --> 00:51:46,400 Perhaps the most compelling are the words of a royal letter sent by 690 00:51:46,400 --> 00:51:48,680 the Hyksos king south to Thebes. 691 00:51:49,800 --> 00:51:52,920 Its message would prove so explosive that 692 00:51:52,920 --> 00:51:58,000 it galvanised the Thebans to once more regain control of their land. 693 00:51:58,000 --> 00:52:02,600 Now, this letter was either a colossal diplomatic faux-pas 694 00:52:02,600 --> 00:52:06,920 or simply downright rudeness and it involved the Egyptian goddess 695 00:52:06,920 --> 00:52:10,840 Taweret, the pugnacious blade-wielding hippo. 696 00:52:12,200 --> 00:52:15,160 Taweret may have been a protective deity, 697 00:52:15,160 --> 00:52:17,440 but she was also a ferocious creature... 698 00:52:19,680 --> 00:52:23,040 ..with features borrowed from the hippo and the crocodile, 699 00:52:23,040 --> 00:52:24,960 animals the Egyptians feared. 700 00:52:26,280 --> 00:52:28,640 It seems the Hyksos king, Apophis, 701 00:52:28,640 --> 00:52:31,680 set out deliberately to insult the Thebans. 702 00:52:37,080 --> 00:52:41,160 Now, the letter takes the form of a complaint in which Apophis is 703 00:52:41,160 --> 00:52:44,840 basically complaining that the bellowing of the sacred hippos 704 00:52:44,840 --> 00:52:47,160 in Thebes is keeping him awake at night. 705 00:52:57,960 --> 00:53:01,160 Now, many have taken this to be a rather eccentric comment, 706 00:53:01,160 --> 00:53:05,960 but I think it actually alludes to the powerful women of Thebes. 707 00:53:05,960 --> 00:53:08,920 It seems that Apophis is actually comparing 708 00:53:08,920 --> 00:53:14,000 the wife of the Theban leader with the feisty hippo goddess herself. 709 00:53:14,000 --> 00:53:18,080 And soon it will be the Thebans who would decide that the Hyksos 710 00:53:18,080 --> 00:53:20,960 had had their day. They had to go! 711 00:53:25,080 --> 00:53:28,640 And soon this war of words had escalated into armed conflict 712 00:53:28,640 --> 00:53:30,200 between the two powers. 713 00:53:36,120 --> 00:53:39,720 But the Egyptians of Thebes had also gained the means to 714 00:53:39,720 --> 00:53:44,600 launch their attack with something developed by the Hyksos themselves, 715 00:53:44,600 --> 00:53:46,200 state of the art weaponry. 716 00:53:49,240 --> 00:53:52,120 In particular, a new kind of bow. 717 00:53:52,120 --> 00:53:54,240 Known today as the composite bow. 718 00:53:58,440 --> 00:54:00,920 It would revolutionise Egyptian warfare. 719 00:54:02,000 --> 00:54:03,360 Wasn't it a lovely shape? 720 00:54:03,360 --> 00:54:07,400 - It's a beautiful thing. - This may look like a bow made of solid wood 721 00:54:07,400 --> 00:54:10,280 similar to those the Egyptians had always used. 722 00:54:11,720 --> 00:54:16,400 But the secret of the composite bow is all down to the elements within. 723 00:54:18,120 --> 00:54:21,640 It's composite because it's made out of different materials all 724 00:54:21,640 --> 00:54:26,280 joined together, so there's a wooden core at the centre of the bow 725 00:54:26,280 --> 00:54:30,720 but inside the curve on the belly of the bow is horn, 726 00:54:30,720 --> 00:54:34,880 glued onto the wood which forms a really powerful spring. 727 00:54:34,880 --> 00:54:36,560 So the cow horn would go there? 728 00:54:36,560 --> 00:54:38,800 Yeah, that's right, on the inside of the curve 729 00:54:38,800 --> 00:54:41,640 and then on the outside of the curve an even more unpromising 730 00:54:41,640 --> 00:54:46,440 material, sinew which looks like something the cat would enjoy. 731 00:54:46,440 --> 00:54:49,360 Then it's all covered over with birch bark to protect 732 00:54:49,360 --> 00:54:54,200 - the glue from the elements. - Before the Hyksos occupation, 733 00:54:54,200 --> 00:54:57,840 the Egyptians had shot arrows from bows carved from solid wood. 734 00:54:58,880 --> 00:55:03,360 They were quite large, unwieldy and only effective at fairly close range. 735 00:55:05,480 --> 00:55:09,760 But in the composite bow, animal horn added flexibility, 736 00:55:09,760 --> 00:55:12,000 and the sinew strength... 737 00:55:12,000 --> 00:55:14,640 - It's a clever combination of ingredients. - It's brilliant. 738 00:55:14,640 --> 00:55:17,200 ..making it the ultimate in ancient archery. 739 00:55:19,680 --> 00:55:24,440 It just asks you to do that, doesn't it? It's fabulous. 740 00:55:24,440 --> 00:55:27,360 There's a real sense of power behind this, isn't there? 741 00:55:27,360 --> 00:55:29,080 It's a beautiful thing. 742 00:55:29,080 --> 00:55:31,800 So let me show you why it's such a game changer. 743 00:55:31,800 --> 00:55:34,400 Really, because it's a bow that you can use. 744 00:55:34,400 --> 00:55:37,440 It's quite short, you can use it in a chariot and yet... 745 00:55:39,400 --> 00:55:44,080 Whoa! That was brilliant! Well done! 746 00:55:44,080 --> 00:55:46,240 The composite bow was easier to handle 747 00:55:46,240 --> 00:55:49,360 and shot faster arrows with much greater accuracy. 748 00:55:51,640 --> 00:55:53,640 The Egyptians had little choice 749 00:55:53,640 --> 00:55:56,200 but to adapt or remain an occupied nation. 750 00:55:58,360 --> 00:56:00,920 So by copying the new military technology, 751 00:56:00,920 --> 00:56:05,320 they were eventually able to push the Hyksos out of Egypt 752 00:56:05,320 --> 00:56:08,520 all the way back to Palestine, 753 00:56:08,520 --> 00:56:11,320 securing Egypt's northern frontier once again. 754 00:56:19,200 --> 00:56:22,080 And when the new bow was used in conjunction with the other 755 00:56:22,080 --> 00:56:24,880 Hyksos introductions, the horse and chariot... 756 00:56:26,480 --> 00:56:28,480 ..the three combined to express 757 00:56:28,480 --> 00:56:32,800 the power and supremacy of Egypt's new Egyptian rulers. 758 00:56:40,080 --> 00:56:43,920 This marked the start of the New Kingdom, which began 759 00:56:43,920 --> 00:56:47,720 when the powerful Theban leaders took the throne. 760 00:56:47,720 --> 00:56:51,560 This dramatic rebirth in royal power was mirrored by the rise 761 00:56:51,560 --> 00:56:57,240 of Thebes' local god Amun based at his cult centre, 762 00:56:57,240 --> 00:56:59,080 the Temple of Karnak. 763 00:56:59,080 --> 00:57:02,600 And it would be Amun who now protected Egypt and its kings. 764 00:57:06,040 --> 00:57:10,640 Yet thanks to the Hyksos legacy, these were a new kind of king. 765 00:57:10,640 --> 00:57:13,400 And it's on this temple's walls we can clearly see 766 00:57:13,400 --> 00:57:16,760 the effect of their Hyksos occupation for as the pharaoh 767 00:57:16,760 --> 00:57:21,920 smites his enemies this is Egypt reborn, a fully armed, fully charged 768 00:57:21,920 --> 00:57:28,080 superpower, whose kings, shown on a monumental scale, are superheroes. 769 00:57:38,520 --> 00:57:43,360 Over some 800 years since the pyramid age, Egypt's story had been 770 00:57:43,360 --> 00:57:48,440 one of upheaval, collapse and finally rebirth. 771 00:57:50,000 --> 00:57:52,560 The Egyptians had reclaimed their culture 772 00:57:52,560 --> 00:57:54,960 and entered a truly golden age. 773 00:58:00,400 --> 00:58:04,120 The next part of Ancient Egypt's story is a time 774 00:58:04,120 --> 00:58:05,840 of monumental architecture. 775 00:58:07,840 --> 00:58:10,240 Oh, oh, flippin' heck! 776 00:58:11,880 --> 00:58:13,200 ..and vast wealth... 777 00:58:15,280 --> 00:58:17,000 ..bringing not only glory... 778 00:58:18,760 --> 00:58:20,480 ..but greed and corruption. 779 00:58:21,600 --> 00:58:23,560 The priest-kings of Karnak had got what 780 00:58:23,560 --> 00:58:26,280 they had always wanted, absolute power. 70925

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