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Excavation tells monumental story of Egypt’s urban development

By William Harms
w-harms@uchicago.edu
News Office

The excavation area at Tell Edfu in southern Egypt shows superimposed settlement layers dating to various phases. Some of the silos of the 17th Dynasty (ca. 1630-1520 B.C.) are covered by a thick ash layer, into which several storage compartments were later built.

An Oriental Institute expedition at Tell Edfu in southern Egypt has unearthed a large administration building and silos that provide fresh clues about the emergence of urban life.

The discovery provides new information about a little understood aspect of ancient Egypt—the development of cities in a culture that is largely famous for its monumental architecture.

The archaeological work at Tell Edfu was initiated with the permission of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, headed by Zahi Hawass, under the direction of Nadine Moeller, Assistant Professor in the Oriental Institute. Work late last year revealed details of seven silos, the largest grain bins found from ancient Egypt, as well as an older, columned hall that was an administration center.

Long fascinated with temples and monuments such as pyramids, scholars have traditionally spent little time exploring ancient Egyptian residential communities. Due to intense farming and heavy settlement over the years, much of the record of urban civilization had been lost. So little archaeological evidence remains that some scholars believe Egypt did not have a highly developed urban culture; rather, Mesopotamia gained the distinction of teaching people to live in cities.

“The traditional view of ancient Egypt has been biased by the fact that most excavation work so far has focused on temples and tombs. The mounds that comprise the remains of Egyptian cities were either ignored, buried under modern towns, or else destroyed by modern agricultural activities. Edfu is one of the very few remaining city mounds that are accessible for scientific study,” said Gil Stein, Director of the Oriental Institute.

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Photo by G. Marouard

A view toward the east shows Tell Edfu in the foreground



“The work at Edfu is important and innovative, in that it finally allows us to examine ancient Egypt as an urban society, whose cities and towns housed bureaucrats, craft specialists, priests and farmers. Nadine Moeller’s discovery of silos and local administrative buildings shows us how these cities actually functioned as places where the agricultural wealth of the Nile valley was mobilized for the state. Grain as currency provided the sinews of power for the pharaohs,” he added.


“Ancient Egyptian administration is mainly known from texts, but the full understanding of the institutions involved and their role within towns and cities has been so far difficult to grasp because of the lack of archaeological evidence with which textual data needs to be combined,” Moeller said.

At Tell Edfu, archaeologists have uncovered what amounts to a downtown area. The community, halfway between the modern cities of Aswan and Luxor, was a provincial capital and important regional center. Tell Edfu is also rare, in that almost 3,000 years of Egyptian history are preserved in the stratigraphy of a single mound.

The administrative building and silos were at the heart of the ancient community. Because grain was a form of currency, the silos functioned as a bank and a food source. The silos’ size indicates the community was apparently a prosperous urban center.

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Photo by G. Marouard

Parts of the administrative building of the late Middle Kingdom (ca. 1773-1650 B.C.) show some of the sandstone column bases still in situ.


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Posts: 5555 | From: Tha 5th Dimension. | Registered: Apr 2006  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
-Just Call Me Jari-
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Who Writes these articles..?

Are they suffering from a classic case of Mental Retardation or are they really as stupid to NOT KNOW about the city of Km.t known as Akenadon..(Tel El Armana)...which is the FIRST PLANNED city on Earth by the way....predating anything Mesopotamian. Why don't they just ake a trip to Tel El Armana and see for themselves...its clearly planned to center Akenaton and his palaces in the Center with the Residential quaters springing out like rays of the sun...His Palaces were planned with order not found until Greece YEARS later...

Clearly these peoaple have no idea about the matrial they talk about....TUT...its really a shame...

People are CLEARLY stupid.

Posts: 8806 | From: The fear of his majesty had entered their hearts, they were powerless | Registered: Nov 2007  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

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