Al Khab Monument Esna Egypt
Al Khab Monument Esna Egypt
In 1938 several brick tombs were discovered in the Memphis necropolis at Saqqara. The tombs contained bone remains but no stone tablets indicating that the tombs belonged to a reigning king but not a ruler in Egypt. They may have belonged to an important person or to a past person in memory of the pharaohs who ruled the North and the South. Most likely past rulers or important figures in ancient Egypt were buried at Saqqara and there was a memorial at Abydos. There is evidence from two tombs of craftsmen who were buried with their rulers into the afterlife and there were significant architectural changes to the craftsmen. It is possible that they were poisoned before burial in the late antiquity. And to replace the traditional mastaba burial many people were buried in mastaba tombs as houses for the deceased.'
The ancient Egyptian kingdom which lived eternally with the gods in heaven used to spend time sailing with humans. This special status called the Egyptian gods had land resources and balance and originated in the predynastic period. The worship of the god Amun gave the New Kingdom wealth and tombs. Later to compensate for the decline Egyptian pharaohs who were considered gods were appointed for life. Among their heirs marriage education warfare and ancient culture they ascended to the throne of a rapidly expanding empire.
Mastaba Akotep and Patahotep tombs The “White Wall” was known as Memphis and became one of the most important cities in the ancient world. It was once the residence of officials a storehouse of supplies and goods and the center of the neighborhood. Early on it also emphasized the role of the ancient southern capital near Abydos, which was their most important cultural center. The “White Wall” in each major city center in the territory became a metropolis of arts and crafts. The presence of carved stone slabs and grave goods found at Abydos in 1895 initially suggested that these tombs were burials without human remains possibly the result of looting. The exact location of the tombs in 1895 remains unclear with the location of some of the pharaohs graves not clearly identified. During the Ancient Kingdom the city dominated various aspects of society. The burial sites of the pharaohs before Abydos and Saqqara were very important.
The Kingdoms of Buto and Edjo
The cobra goddess of the two lands who together acted as the patron and protector of ancient Egypt And refers to the two dynasties of the pharaohs. Menes used in the art and architecture of Edjo and Nekhbet. "Double crown" symbolizing the south and the north wearing a white and red crown worn separately or together. The two kingdoms that were never forgotten by the union finally united the two lands. The ritual center of the patron goddess of the kingdom was the Nekhbet vulture from the Quibelle finds in Nechen and Necheb, the treasury of the central ritual temple in Nechen.
The two kingdoms Buto and Edjo between about 3400 BC and about 3100 BC were independent in Egypt. The Red Land was located in the Nile Delta extending south along the valley to Atfih with its capital at Pe near ancient Dep later called Buto now called "Tel el-Farain" and the other land was Edjo the mound of the pharaohs with the inscription of Wadjet the supreme god of the kingdom. The cobra goddess who protected the king and was worshipped in the kingdoms of Buto and Edjo. The pharaohs of the Red and White lands in the Nile Valley were crowned in temples in both lands each with its own protective goddess.