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Excerpted and Updated
from "The Firsts of the First Hundred years" Nekhen News 10, 1998.
Over one hundred years of scientific investigation at Hierakonpolis,
the site of Egypt's first capital, has produced a large number
of first, i.e., the first occurrence of objects, practices and
styles that were destined typify Egyptian civilization, such as
the first temple and first mummies. It has also produced a similar
number of "onlys", that is, the only preserved examples, although
other occurrences have been documented, but are no long preserved.
There are also a few seconds and thirds just to round out the
picture.
A comprehensive list is rather formidable, so here is just some
of the fascinating firsts which have led (and are currently leading)
to a new and fuller understanding of ancient Egypt at its beginnings.
The first group of firsts derives from the excavations of over
100 years ago (1897-9) when the British Egyptologists John Quibell
and Frederick Green came to salvage the site after the depredations
of looters.
r The palette of Narmer. c. 3100 BC After the golden mask of King
Tutankhamen, it is probably the most reproduced image from Ancient
Egypt. Once called the oldest political document in history, this
is no longer true, but its importance has not diminished.
r The oldest life-sized human statue: a courtier or priest from
the temple of Horus.c.3000 BC
r The earliest painted tomb. The only tomb of the Predynastic
period with painted decoration along its plastered walls. It depicts
a floating funerary cortege and scenes of power and dominion,
among them one of the earliest scenes of smiting, later to be
a canonical pose of kings for the next 3000 years.
r The largest flint knives ever produced in Egypt, c. 3100 BC.
Several of the votive offerings at the temple of Horus are gigantic
versions of fine objects, like decorated votive maceheads and
hard stone bowls, up to 10 times larger than normal and only found
at Hierakonpolis.
r The only large-scale metal statuary to come down to us from
remote antiquity in Egypt--the over life size copper statue of
King Pepy of Dynasty 6 (c. 2200 BC) and the smaller statue of
his son? Both have recently been conserved by the Egyptian Museum,
Cairo, revealing both the exquisite workmanship and the remnants
of gilding.
r The golden hawk head of the cult image of Horus. c. 2300 BC
Unique for its beauty, it is also the oldest (known) cult image
in existence.
r The oldest stone
statue of a known and named personage; the two statues of King
Khasekhemwy of Dynasty 2 (c. 2700 BC)
r The oldest free-standing structure in the world. c. 2700 BC,
still preserved in places to its original 9m height. It is the
ceremonial enclosure of King Khasekhemwy, the father of the first
pyramid builder, Djoser, and a great builder in his own right,
who embellished his massive structure with the first known granite
architectural elements carved in the formal and characteristic
Egyptian style.
Since 1969, the present Hierakonpolis Expedition has continued
to investigate the site and each year has uncovered new firsts,
by which the full significance and importance of the site can
be understood. Here is a checklist to help you keep track.
p The earliest preserved house in Egypt. c 3600 BC. The house
of a potter, it is preserved because the potter worked too close
to where he lived and accidentally burnt it down while firing
a load of pots.
p Egypt's earliest temple. c. 3400 BC. A large structure, originally
fronted by huge (cedar?) timbers, it was to become the prototype
for temple architecture for millennia to come.
p Egypt's first industrial breweries. c. 3600 BC. It is estimated
that this brewery could produce about 300 gallons of beer a day.
At the rate, it could supply a daily ration for over 200 people,
and so far only a small fraction of this quarter has been investigated.
The secret to Hierakonpolis greatness may have been the early
development of the redistributive economy that later kept Egypt
alive.
p The first Mummies. c. 3600 BC. Predynastic burials in which
the hands and head area have been padded with linen bundles and
then wrapped in bandages predating other examples by at least
400 years.
p Vanity at its origins? The first evidence for hair extensions/hair
weaving to create an elaborate hair style and the oldest documented
use of henna to cover grey hair, c. 3500 BC. This new discovery
predates other evidence by 500 years
p The oldest preserved beard c. 3500 BC: A full male beard, well
shaped and trimmed.
p The first and only known elephant burial. c. 3600 BC. perhaps
in association with a hunting ritual for the next life. This burial
occurs in a cemetery which contains many early animal burials,
some for the first time: graves of baboons, dogs, sea shells,
cattle including a triple interment of a bull, cow and calf, anticipating
the family triads worshipped in most Egyptian temples. The burial
of these animals gives us reason to suspect that at Hierakonpolis,
the elite didn't just take their wealth with them, they took their
entire world!
p Egypt's earliest masks. Made of pottery, they fit perfectly
over a human face, but were they worn by the living or the dead?
p The first stone-cut tomb, c. 3100 BC, a huge, deep cutting into
the underlying bedrock, with a side chamber sealed with a portcullis
stone as would later be the case in the pyramids.
p The earliest preserved royal palace. c. 2900 BC. While the funerary
enclosure was a palace for eternity, this building, ornamented
with the same niched brick pattern, is the only known example
of an early palace of the living.
p First evidence of popular religious practice in the form of
a ritual deposit of ostrich feathers (c. 1500 BC), buried at a
remote hillock covered in petroglyphs (rock carvings). The deposit
helps to explain some of the obscure carved symbols as well as
ambiguous statements in religious texts of millennia later.
p One of the only known rock-paintings in Egypt, north of the
first cataract.
The list gets longer every year. Help us continue to find new
insights into Egyptian civilization at its origins by becoming
a Friend of Nekhen. As a Friend, you will receive the Nekhen News,
a lavishly illustrated newsletter, which will keep you up to date
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