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Peeps at Many Lands: Ancient Egypt
by James Baikie
- Language
- EN
- Format
- EPUB
- Size
- 991 KB
Description
This work is a non-fiction historical account structured as a descriptive narrative about ancient Egypt. It offers an overview of Egypt's geography, highlighting the importance of the Nile River, and discusses significant cultural and architectural achievements, including notable monuments and societal developments. The author integrates references to biblical figures and events, linking biblical history with Egypt's ancient past. The book aims to present a comprehensive picture of Egypt’s civilization, emphasizing its role as a centre of early human advancement and its paradoxical combination of natural beauty and complex history.
Published in the early 20th century, the text reflects contemporary perspectives on Egypt's history and its place within the broader context of ancient civilization. It is part of the "Peeps at Many Lands" series, designed to provide accessible introductions to different regions and their histories. The work balances factual description with interpretive insights, serving as both an educational resource and a concise guide to Egypt's historical significance.
Published in the early 20th century, the text reflects contemporary perspectives on Egypt's history and its place within the broader context of ancient civilization. It is part of the "Peeps at Many Lands" series, designed to provide accessible introductions to different regions and their histories. The work balances factual description with interpretive insights, serving as both an educational resource and a concise guide to Egypt's historical significance.
From the opening pages
* These eight illustrations are in colour; the others are in black and white. SKETCH-MAP OF ANCIENT EGYPT. "A LAND OF OLD RENOWN" If we were asked to name the most interesting country in the world, I suppose that most people would say Palestine—not because there is anything so very wonderful in the land itself, but because of all the great things that have happened there, and above all because of its having been the home of our Lord. But after Palestine, I think that Egypt would come next. For one thing, it is linked very closely to Palestine by all those beautiful stories of the Old Testament, which tell us of Joseph, the slave-boy who became Viceroy of Egypt; of Moses, the Hebrew child who became a Prince of Pharaoh's household; and of the wonderful exodus of the Children of Israel. But besides that, it is a land which has a most strange and wonderful story of its own. No other country has so long a history of great Kings, and wise men, and brave soldiers; and in no other country can you see anything to compare with the great buildings, some of them most beautiful, all of them most wonderful, of which Egypt has so many. We have some old and interesting buildings in this country, and people go far to see cathedrals and castles that are perhaps five or six hundred years old, or even more; but in Egypt, buildings of that age are looked upon as almost new, and nobody pays very much attention to them. For the great temples and tombs of Egypt were, many of them, hundreds of years old before the story of our Bible, properly speaking, begins. The Pyramids, for instance, those huge piles that are still the wonder of the world, were far older than any building now standing in Europe, before Joseph was sold to be a slave in Potiphar's house. Hundreds upon hundreds of years before anyone had ever heard of the Greeks and the Romans, there were great Kings reigning in Egypt, sending out their armies to conquer Syria and the Soudan, and their ships to explore the unknown southern seas, and wise men were writing books which we can still read. When Britain was a wild, unknown island, inhabited only by savages as fierce and untaught as the South Sea Islanders, Egypt was a great and highly…
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