Sunday, April 7, 2013

Egypt


Egypt
Use your notes and resources to answer the following questions.  Write in complete sentences and support your answers with specific details and examples.  Write neatly on notebook paper and proofread your answers for content and mechanics.  

1.       In the summer of 1888, an Egyptian farmer was working in the desert near the town of Beni Hasan.  One day he dug a hole and accidentally made an incredible discovery.  Just under the surface of the desert lay thousands and thousands of cat mummies.  They had been lying there undisturbed for more than two thousand years.  Why did the Egyptians mummify so many cats?

2.      Why were certain animals chosen to be totems? 

3.      All along the Nile River, people revered cats, ibises, hawks, beetles, crocodiles, asps, jackals, tilapia, ichneumons (the Greek name for the African Mongoose), and falcons.  Select one of these animals and write a short essay explaining why you chose that particular animal as your Egyptian totem.  Consider its physical qualities, traits, habitat, diet,  powers of instinct, communication, protection, and legends involving that animal.  What does that animal symbolize to you?   Use your notebook to write 10 adjectives describing the animal you chose.  Write 5 verbs relating how it moves, eats, hunts, defends, communicates, sleeps, etc. 
Design a 2-D or 3-D work of art to honor your totem in a style similar to traditional Egyptian art. 
4.      Identify each of the following and explain what is important about that person, place, or thing in the context of Egyptology.  Make sure you distinguish between fictional and factual characters, places, and things.
1.     Bubastis  (see also Zagazig)
2.    Bastet
3.    Isis
4.    Ra
5.    Amenemhet I
6.    Herodotus
7.    Nile 
8.    Ra
9.    Sekhmet
10.Ibis
11. Tutankhamen
12.Osiris
13.Herodotus
14.Juvenal
15.Anubus
16.Cyrus
17.Cheops
18.Apep
19.Ptolemy
20.Pharaoh
5.      Select your favorite Egyptian god, goddess, or place.   Read at least three Egyptian myths from various sources which involve your selection in some way, either as a main character or as a setting.  Identify the key characters and summarize the message or theme of each myth.  

Resources: 









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