British archaeologists have pinpointed when the original ‘pharaohs’ ruled Ancient Egypt for the first time.
Using mathematical models, radiocarbon dating and archaeological evidence, researchers found the first ruler, King Aha acceded to the throne between 3111 BC and 3045 BC - up to five hundred years later than some previous estimates.
A new timeline shows the original territorial state developed from primitive beginnings in as little as six hundred years.
Archaeologist Dr Michael Dee, of the University
of Oxford, said: 'There are no records before the third dynasty, so we
have had to guess exactly when the vital First Dynasty, which led to the
development of writing and agriculture, happened.' Samples were taken
from the royal cemetery, Abydos (pictured)
But it will be another thousand years before we are as far removed from her as she was from her earliest predecessors who remain shrouded in legends and conjecture, known only from a handful of frustratingly incomplete sources.
Archaeologist Dr Michael Dee, of the University of Oxford, said: 'There are no records before the third dynasty, so we have had to guess exactly when the vital First Dynasty, which led to the development of writing and agriculture, happened.'
The study, published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society A, also found the Predynastic period when inhabitants along the River Nile started to form permanent settlements was probably closer to 3700 BC than 4000 BC, with the stone age Neolithic era preceding it lasting longer and finishing later.
Dr Dee said: 'The origins of Egypt began a millennium before the pyramids were built, which is why our understanding of how and why this powerful state developed is based solely on archaeological evidence.
WHO WAS KING AHA?
Hor-Aha was the first king of the first dynasty
His name means 'fighting hawk'
He is thought to be the founder of the capital city at Memphis
His tomb at Abydos is the largest in the north-western section of the cemetary
Legend has it he was killed by a hippo
Another says he was attacked by wild dogs and saved by a crocodile in the Faiyum and as a result, the city of Crocodilopolis was founded
His name means 'fighting hawk'
He is thought to be the founder of the capital city at Memphis
His tomb at Abydos is the largest in the north-western section of the cemetary
Legend has it he was killed by a hippo
Another says he was attacked by wild dogs and saved by a crocodile in the Faiyum and as a result, the city of Crocodilopolis was founded
Aha is believed to have become pharaoh at the age of 30 and ruled until he was about 62. Legend has it that he was killed by a hippopotamus while hunting.
His ‘chief wife’ was Benerib, whose name was written on his tomb at Abydos, but he also had another wife, Khenthap, with whom he became father of Djer, Egypt’s second king.
Then came King Djet, Queen Merneith, King Den, King Anedjib, King Semerkhet and King Qa’a whose reign began between 2906 BC and 2886 BC.
Dr Dee said they would have ruled over a territory spanning a similar area to Egypt today with formal borders at Aswan in the south, the Mediterranean Sea in the north and across to the modern day Gaza Strip in the east.
Until now scholars had relied on archaeological
evidence alone, using the evolving styles of ceramics (pictured)
excavated at human burial sites to try to piece together the timings of
key chronological events in the Predynastic period and the First Dynasty
Scientists have pinpointed when the original
'pharaohs' ruled Ancient Egypt for the first time. Older 'Petrie
Sequences Dating Strips' are pictured
The chronology of early Egypt between 4500 and 2800 BC has been reset thanks to more than 100 fresh radiocarbon dates obtained from hair, bone and plant samples excavated at several key sites including the tombs of the kings and surrounding burials.
Egypt was the first territorial state to be brought under one political ruler and the new dating evidence suggests this period of unification happened much faster than previously known.
Until now scholars had relied on archaeological evidence alone, using the evolving styles of ceramics excavated at human burial sites to try to piece together the timings of key chronological events in the Predynastic period and the First Dynasty.
For example, among the most significant pieces of evidence surviving today are two mud seals excavated at the royal tombs at Abydos, containing lists in successive order of the First Dynasty kings.
Using the fresh radiocarbon dates combined with existing archaeological evidence, the researchers’ mathematical model pinpointed the likeliest date for each king’s accession. The date for each king is thought to be accurate to within 32 years.
The data supports a shortening of the Egyptian Predynastic; the period over which state formation occurred, to between 600 and 700 years.
'This finding accentuates a contrast with neighbouring southwest Asia, where the transition from cereal production to state formation took somewhere between four to five millennia,' the researchers said.
'It reinforces the suggestion that, despite their geographical proximity, prehistoric societies in Africa and Asia followed very different trajectories to political centralisation,' they added.
Dr Linus Girdland Flink, co-author and postdoctoral research assistant at the Natural History Museum, London said the museum houses human remains from the First Dynasty royal tombs of Abydos, Egypt, many of which were excavated in the late 19th and 20th centuries.
'We were surprised to see how well preserved
the specimens are. Preservation of organic materials from hot desert climates
is usually poor but we were able carryout radiocarbon dating using organic residue
from most of the specimens.'
He said Abydos is a
key archaeological site for understanding the prehistory of Egypt as
most of the early rulers are buried there.
'The remains housed at the Museum come from the burials of
courtiers who were likely sacrificed to accompany their king into the
afterlife. Importantly, this practice was unique to the First Dynasty and these
remains provide a unique opportunity to gain broad understanding of life during
that time.’
KING AHA AND THE EARLY DYNASTIC PERIOD OF EGYPT
The
Early Dynastic Period of Egypt immediately follows the unification of
Lower and Upper Egypt and is generally taken to include the First and
Second Dynasties, lasting from the Protodynastic Period of Egypt until
about 2686 BC.
The capital moved from Abydos to Memphis in the First Dynasty with a unified Egypt ruled by an Egyptian god-king, but Abydos remained the major holy land in the south.
The hallmarks of ancient Egyptian civilization, such as art, architecture and many aspects of religion, took shape during the Early Dynastic period.
Before the unification of Egypt, the land was settled with autonomous villages but after the first ruler came to power the country came to be known as the Two Lands, where rulers established a national administration and appointed royal governors.
The earliest hieroglyphs appear just before this period, though little is known of the spoken language they represent.
The capital moved from Abydos to Memphis in the First Dynasty with a unified Egypt ruled by an Egyptian god-king, but Abydos remained the major holy land in the south.
The hallmarks of ancient Egyptian civilization, such as art, architecture and many aspects of religion, took shape during the Early Dynastic period.
Before the unification of Egypt, the land was settled with autonomous villages but after the first ruler came to power the country came to be known as the Two Lands, where rulers established a national administration and appointed royal governors.
The earliest hieroglyphs appear just before this period, though little is known of the spoken language they represent.
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