Articles related to Egypt include:
First Dynasty of Egypt through the Achaemenid Empire (Thirty-first Dynasty of Egypt)
Aaru - Ababda - Abaza Family - Abbas I of Egypt - Abbas II of Egypt - Ahmad ibn Tulun - Abbasid Caliphate - Fifi Abdou - Pope Abraham of Alexandria - Abu Gorab - Abu Hafs al-Masri Brigades - Abu Qir - Abu Qir Bay - Abu Simbel - Abusir - Abydos, Egypt - Abyssinian (cat) - Achaemenid Empire - Adze - Aegyptus - Africa - African Union - Muhammad Ahmad - Ahmes - Queen Ahmose - Ahmose-Nefertari - Ahmose, son of Ebana - Aker (god) - Akhenaten - Akhnaten (opera) - Al-Ahram - Al-Azhar University - Alexander the Great - Alexander Helios - Alexandria - Alexandria Regional Center for Women's Health and Development - Alexandrian text-type - Mohamed Al-Fayed - Al-Gama'a al-Islamiyya - Alhazen - Hassan Allam - Al-Qurn - Amarna - Amarna art - Amarna letters - Amasis II - Ambrose of Alexandria - Amduat - Ammit - Ammon - Amr Diab - Amr Moussa - Amun - Amunet - 'Anat in Egypt - Ancient Egypt - Ancient Egyptian astronomy - Ancient Egyptian funerary texts - Ancient Egyptian royal titulary - Ancient Egyptian medicine - Ancient Egyptian religion - Ancient Near East - Andjety - Ankh -Ankhesenamen - Ankhesenpaaten Tasherit - Ankt - Anti (mythology) - Mark Antony - Antony and Cleopatra - Anubis - Anuket - Apep - Apis (Egyptian mythology) - Apries - ArabDev - Arish - Arsinoe (Gulf of Suez) - Arsinoe I of Egypt - Arsinoe II of Egypt - Arsinoe III of Egypt - Arsinoe IV of Egypt - Arsinoe of Macedonia - Ash (god) - Astrology in Hellenistic Egypt - Aswan - Aswan Dam - Asyut - Aten - Atenism - Athanasius of Alexandria - Atum - Avaris
Babi (mythology) - Badari - Baggush Box - Bahariya Oasis - Bakenranef - Ba-Pef - Sidi Barrani - Bastet (mythology) - Bat (goddess) - Bata (god) - Battle of Actium - Battle of al-Kura - Battle of Alexandria (1801) - Battle of Kadesh - Battle of Megiddo (15th century BC) - Battle of Navarino - Battle of the Nile - Seuserenre Bebiankh - Bedouin - Benben - Beni Hasan - Bennu - Bent Pyramid - Berenice I of Egypt - Berenice II - Berenice III of Egypt - Bes - Bibliotheca Alexandrina - Bintanath - Block statue (Egyptian) - Book of the Dead - Book of Gates - Boundary Stelae of Akhenaten - James Henry Breasted - Brook of Egypt - Bubastis - Buhen - List of burials in the Valley of the Kings - Busiris (Lower Egypt) - Buto
Caesarion - Cairo - Cairo Geniza - Cairo Metro - Cairo Tower - Cambyses II of Persia - Camp David Accords - Canopic jar - Canopus, Egypt - Decree of Canopus - Howard Carter (archaeologist) - Cartouche - Cataracts of the Nile - Youssef Chahine - Jean-François Champollion - Chancellor Bay - Chapelle Rouge - Chariot - Chem - Chensit - Chenti-cheti - Children of Gebelawi - Cinema of Egypt - Cleitarchus - Clement of Alexandria - Cleopatra (1934 film) - Cleopatra (1963 film) - Cleopatra (1999 film) - Cleopatra I of Egypt - Cleopatra II of Egypt - Cleopatra III of Egypt - Cleopatra IV of Egypt - Cleopatra V of Egypt - Cleopatra VI of Egypt - Cleopatra VII - Cleopatra Selene of Syria - Cleopatra Selene II - Cleopatra Thea - Climate of Egypt - Codex Sinaiticus - Coffin Texts - Colossi of Memnon - Communications in Egypt - Constantin-François Chassebœuf - Conventional Egyptian chronology - Coptic alphabet - Coptic architecture - Coptic art - Coptic Cairo - Coptic language - Coptic literature - Coptic monasticism - Coptic Orthodox Church of Alexandria - Coptic placenames - Corniche - Corvée - Crocodilopolis - Culture of Egypt - Cusae - Cyrenaica - Cyril of Alexandria
Dahshur - Dahshur boats - François-Paul Brueys d'Aigalliers - Dakhla Oasis - Dalida - Damnatio memoriae - Danaus chrysippus - Darius I of Persia - Darius II of Persia - Darius the Great's Suez Inscriptions - DB320 - Dedun - Deir el-Bahri - Deir el-Medina - Demographics of Egypt - Demotic (Egyptian) - Den (Pharaoh) - Divine Adoratrice of Amun - Djed - Djedefptah - Djedefre - Djediufankh - Djedkare Isesi - Djedptahiufankh - Djehuti - Djer - Djet - Djoser - Pyramid of Djoser - Bernardino Drovetti - Duat - Dudimose
Earl of Carnarvon - Early Dynastic Period of Egypt - Georg Ebers - Ebers Papyrus - Economy of Egypt - Edfu - Eftekasat - Egypt - Egypt–Ethiopia relations - Egypt (Roman province) - The Egyptian - Egyptian Arabic - Egyptian astrology (disambiguation) - Egyptian astronomy - Egyptian calendar - Egyptian chronology - Egyptian Civil Code - Egyptian cuisine - Egyptian diaspora - Egyptian faience - Egyptian Fourth Dynasty family tree - Egyptian hieroglyphs - Egyptian Islamic Jihad - Egyptian–Israeli Peace Treaty - Egyptian language - Egyptian mathematics - Egyptian Museum - Egyptian numerals - Egyptian pyramids - Egyptian Revival architecture - Egyptian Sand Sea - Egyptian soul - Egyptians - List of Egyptologists - Egyptology - Eighth Dynasty of Egypt - Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt - El Alamein - Mohamed ElBaradei - El Hiba - El Kab - El-Lahun - El-Mahalla El-Kubra - Elephantine - Elephantine papyri - Eleventh Dynasty of Egypt - Embalming - Ennead - Eratosthenes - Esna - Euclid - Exodus - Exodus Decoded - Eye of Horus
Faience - Faiyum - Family tree of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt - Farafra, Egypt - Farouk of Egypt - Fatimid Caliphate - Dodi Fayed - Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt - Fifth Dynasty of Egypt - First Battle of El Alamein - First Dynasty of Egypt - First Intermediate Period of Egypt - Foreign relations of Egypt - Four sons of Horus - Fourteenth Dynasty of Egypt - Fourth Dynasty of Ancient Egypt - Fuad I of Egypt - Fuad II of Egypt - Fustat - Fakhr al-Din al-Qibti
Gabal Edmonstone - Gamal Abdel Nasser - Gates of Cairo - Geb - Geography of Egypt - Geriatric medicine in Egypt - Gerzeh - Gilukhipa - Giza - Giza Necropolis - God's Wife of Amun - Land of Goshen - Governorates of Egypt - Great Hymn to the Aten - Great Pyramid of Giza - Great Sphinx of Giza
Mamdouh Habib - Hapy - Harsiese A - Harsiese B - Hathor - Hatmehit - Hatshepsut - Hawara - Zahi Hawass - Hedetet - Heqet - Heka (god) - Heliopolis (ancient and modern) - Hemen - Hemiunu - Hemsut - Herakleopolis Magna - Herihor - Hermanubis - Hesat - Hetepheres II - Hieratic - History of ancient Egypt - History of Arab Egypt - History of Egypt - History of Egypt under the Muhammad Ali dynasty - History of modern Egypt - History of Ottoman Egypt - History of Persian Egypt - History of the Middle East - Horemheb - Horus - Soad Hosny - Huh (god) - Huni - Hurghada - Hyksos - Hypatia of Alexandria
Salima Ikram - Imhotep - Imiut fetish - Imyremeshaw - Ineni - Intef I - Intef II - Intef III - Intef VI - Intef VII - Ipuwer Papyrus - Iry-Hor - Isetnofret - Ishara - Isis - Islamic Cairo - Itjtawy - ITWorx - Iunit - Iuput I - Iuput II- Izz al-Din al-Kawrani - Ibrahim bin Shaddad
Ka - Karnak - Kashta - Kebechet - Khafre - Pyramid of Khafre - Kharga Oasis - Kemet - Khentkaus II - Khepri - Khnum - Khonsu - Kiya - Kneph - Kohl (cosmetics) - Kom Ombo - Temple of Kom Ombo - Umm Kulthum - Kingdom of Kush - Valley of the Kings - KV1 - KV2 -KV3 - KV4 - KV5 - KV6 - KV7 - KV9 - KV14 - KV17 - KV20 - KV34 - KV35 - KV39 - KV42 - KV43 - KV46 - KV55 - KV60 - KV62
Lake Mariout - Lake Nasser - Miles Lampson, 1st Baron Killearn - Land of Goshen - Land of Punt - Late Egyptian - Late Period of ancient Egypt - S. H. Leeder - Leonardo da Vinci Art Institute - Leontopolis - Karl Richard Lepsius - LGBT rights in Egypt (Gay rights) - Library of Alexandria - Libyan Desert - Lisht - List of ancient Egyptian sites - List of cities in Egypt - List of Coptic Orthodox Popes of Alexandria - List of ancient Egyptian dynasties - List of Egyptians - List of Greek Orthodox Patriarchs of Alexandria - List of pharaohs - List of solar deities - Long Range Desert Group - Luxor - Luxor Museum - Luxor Temple
Maahes - Ma'at - Ma3looma - Maat Kheru - Mafdet - Naguib Mahfouz - Étienne-Louis Malus - Mamluk - Manetho - Auguste Mariette - Mark the Evangelist - Gaston Maspero - Masrena - Mastaba - Pope Matthew I of Alexandria - Medinet Habu (location) - Medinet Habu (temple) - Mediterranean Sea - Meidum - Memphis, Egypt - Mendes - Menes - Menhit - Menkaura - Pyramid of Menkaure - Meret - Meretseger - Meritamen - Meritaten - Merneferre Ay - Merneith - Merneptah - Merneptah Stele - Mersa Matruh - Meshwesh - Meskhenet - Middle East - Middle Kingdom of Egypt - Milan Papyrus - Military history of Egypt during World War II - Military of Egypt - Min (god) - Minya, Egypt - Mizraim - Mnewer - Prince Muhammad Abdel Moneim - Monthu - Mortuary Temple of Amenhotep III - Moses - Mouled Sidi El-Latini - Mount Sinai - Gamal Mubarak - Hosni Mubarak - Mummification Museum - Mummy - Muslim Brotherhood - Mut - Myth of Osiris and Isis
Nabta Playa - Nag Hammadi - Nag Hammadi library - Muhammad Naguib - Mustafa el-Nahhas - Napata - Napoleonic Campaign in Egypt - Naqada - Narmer - Gamal Abdel Nasser - Nebiriau II - Necho I - Necho II - List of necropoleis - Nectanebo I - Nectanebo II - Neferefre - Neferhotep I - Neferhotep III - Neferirkare Kakai - Neferkare, ninth dynasty - Nefertari - Nefertem - Nefertiti - Nehebkau - Neith - Nekhbet - Nekhen - Neper (mythology) - Nephthys - Neter-khertet - New Kingdom - Nile - Nile crocodile - Nile Delta - Nile Level Texts - Nile perch - Nilometer - Nilo-Saharan languages - Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt - Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt family tree - Ninth Dynasty of Egypt - Nitocris - Nomarch - Nome (Egypt) - North Africa - Nu (mythology) -Nubia - Nubian languages - Nut (goddess) - Nymphaea - Nymphaea caerulea - Nymphaea lotus - Nynetjer - Nyuserre Ini
Obelisk - Richard O'Connor - Ogdoad - Old Kingdom - Old Winter Palace Hotel, Luxor - Opening of the mouth ceremony - Operation Compass - Opet Festival - Origen - Osiris - Osiris-Dionysus - Osorkon the Elder - Osorkon I - Osorkon II - Osorkon III - Osorkon IV - Ostracon - Oxyrhynchus - Oxyrhynchus Gospels - Ozymandias
Pachomius - Pakhet - Palestine - Pami - Pantheon (gods) - Papyrus - Papyrus Harris I - Papyrus of Ani - Tewfik Pasha - Passage of the Red Sea - Pedubast I - Pelusium - Pepi I Meryre - Pepi II Neferkare - Petbe - Pope Peter I of Alexandria - Flinders Petrie - Pharaoh - Philae - Philip III of Macedon - Phoenix (mythology) - Piankh - Pi-hahiroth - Pinedjem I - Piye - Politics of Egypt - Polybus (King of Thebes) - Port Safaga - Port Said - Precinct of Amun-Re - Precinct of Mut - Predynastic Egypt - Princess Fawzia Fuad of Egypt - Protodynastic Period of Egypt - Psammuthes - Psamtik I - Psamtik II - Psamtik III - Pschent - Psusennes I - Psusennes II - Psusennes III - Ptah - Ptahhotep - Ptolemaic dynasty - History of Ptolemaic Egypt - Ptolemy - Ptolemy I Soter - Ptolemy II Philadelphus - Ptolemy III Euergetes - Ptolemy IV Philopator - Decree of Memphis (Ptolemy IV) - Ptolemy V Epiphanes - Ptolemy VI Philometor - Ptolemy VII Neos Philopator - Ptolemy VIII Physcon - Ptolemy IX Lathyros - Ptolemy X Alexander I - Ptolemy XI Alexander II - Ptolemy XII Auletes - Ptolemy XIII Theos Philopator - Ptolemy XIV of Egypt - Land of Punt - Pylon (architecture) - Pyramid - Bent Pyramid - Egyptian pyramids - Pyramid of Djoser - Pyramid of Khafre - Pyramid of Menkaure - Red Pyramid - Step pyramid - Pyramid of Unas - Pyramid Texts - Pyramidion - Pyramidology
Qa'a - Qakare Ibi - Qattara Depression - Qetesh - Qubbet el-Hawa - Queen Ahmose - Queen consort - Valley of the Queens - QV44 - QV66
Ra - Rahab - Ramesses II - Ramesses III - Ramesses IV - Ramesses V - Ramesses VI - Ramesses VII - Ramesses VIII - Ramesses IX - Ramesses X - Ramesses XI - Ramesseum - Raneb - Ras Muhammad National Park - Red Pyramid - Red Sea - Reformed Egyptian - Relief - Religion in Egypt - Renenutet - Renpet - Renseneb - Resheph - Rhind Mathematical Papyrus - Rhinocorura - River delta - David Rohl - Erwin Rommel - Rosetta - Rosetta Stone - Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum - Royal Wadi and tombs - Rudamun - Rylands Library Papyrus P52
Mohamed Saad (actor) - Anwar El Sadat - Sahara - Sahure - Saint Catherine's Monastery - Sais, Egypt - Salec - Siraj al-Din Dhabyan - Saad al-Din bin Ghurab - Abd El-Razzak El-Sanhuri - Saqqara - Sarcophagus - Satet - Scarabaeidae - Scaraboid seal - Scribe - Season of the Emergence - Season of the Harvest - Season of the Inundation - Second Battle of El Alamein - Second Dynasty of Egypt - Second Intermediate Period of Egypt - Sed festival - Sehel Island - Seked - Seker - Sekhmet - Senenmut - Senet - Serabit el-Khadim - Serapeum - Serekh - Serket - Set (mythology) - Seventeenth Dynasty of Egypt - Seventh Dynasty of Egypt - Shai - Omar Sharif - Sharm el-Sheikh - Shasu - Shen ring - Pope Shenouda III of Alexandria - Sherden - Shezmu - Shittah-tree - Shoshenq I - Shu (Egyptian deity) - Sia (god) - Sinai Peninsula - Sistrum - Siwa Oasis - Siwi language - Six-Day War - Sixteenth Dynasty of Egypt - Sixth Dynasty of Egypt - Slavery in ancient Egypt - Smenkhkare - Edwin Smith Papyrus - Sneferu - Sobek - Sobekneferu - Solar deity - Sopdet - Sopdu - Southern Tomb 25 - Speos Artemidos - Sphinx - Stargate - Stele - Stella (beer) - Step pyramid - Story of Sinuhe - Story of Wenamun - Strabo - Suez - Suez Canal - Suez Crisis - Syenite - Syriac language
Taba, Egypt - Tadukhipa - Taharqa - Tahpanhes - Takelot I - Takelot II - Takelot III - Talatat - Tamer Hosny - Tanis, Egypt - Tantamani - Senakhtenre Tao I - Seqenenre Tao II - Taweret - Tefnakht - Tefnut - Temple of Kom Ombo - Tenenet - Tenth Dynasty of Egypt - Teti - Mohammed Ali Tewfik - Tewfik Pasha - Tey - The Egyptian - The Ten Commandments (1956 film) - Theban Mapping Project - Theban Necropolis - Thebes, Egypt - Thesh - Third Dynasty of Egypt - Third Intermediate Period of Egypt - Thirteenth Dynasty of Egypt - Thirtieth Dynasty of Egypt - Thoth - Thutmose (prince) - Thutmose (18th-dynasty vizier) - Thutmose (19th-dynasty vizier) - Tuthmose (Viceroy of Kush) - Thutmose (sculptor) - Thutmose I - Thutmose II - Thutmose III - Thutmose IV - Tiye - Tjuyu - Tombs of the Nobles (Amarna) - Tombs of the Nobles (Luxor) - Transliteration of Ancient Egyptian - Transport in Egypt - TT71 - Turin King List - Tutankhamun - Tutankhamun and the Daughter of Ra - Tutkheperre Shoshenq - Twelfth Dynasty of Egypt - Twelfth Dynasty of Egypt family tree - Twentieth Dynasty of Egypt - Twentieth Dynasty of Egypt family tree - Twenty-first Dynasty of Egypt - Twenty-first Dynasty of Egypt family tree - Twenty-second Dynasty of Egypt - Twenty-first Dynasty of Egypt family tree - Twenty-third Dynasty of Egypt - Twenty-fourth Dynasty of Egypt - Twenty-fifth Dynasty of Egypt - Twenty-sixth Dynasty of Egypt - Twenty-eighth Dynasty of Egypt - Twenty-ninth Dynasty of Egypt - Twosret
Umm Kulthum - Umm el-Qa'ab - Unas - Pyramid of Unas - Unfinished obelisk - United Arab Republic - Unut - Upper and Lower Egypt - Uraeus - Userkaf - Userkare - Ushabti
Valley of the Kings - Valley of the Queens - Via della Vittoria - Via Maris - Vizier (Ancient Egypt)
Wadjet - Wagh El-Birket - Wahibre Ibiau - Wahkare Khety I - Wazner - Waste Management in Egypt - Water resources management in modern Egypt - Water supply and sanitation in Egypt - Kent R. Weeks - Wegaf - Story of Wenamun - Weneg (Egyptian deity) - Weneg (pharaoh) - Wepwawet - Werethekau - West Nile virus - Westcar Papyrus - Western Desert Force - Old Winter Palace Hotel, Luxor - Women in Ancient Egypt - Workmen's Village, Amarna - Wosret - WV22 - WV23 - WV25
Yaqub-Har - Yom Kippur War - Thomas Young (scientist) - Yuya
Thebes, known to the ancient Egyptians as Waset, was an ancient Egyptian city located along the Nile about 800 kilometers (500 mi) south of the Mediterranean. Its ruins lie within the modern Egyptian city of Luxor. Thebes was the main city of the fourth Upper Egyptian nome and was the capital of Egypt for long periods during the Middle Kingdom and New Kingdom eras. It was close to Nubia and the Eastern Desert, with its valuable mineral resources and trade routes. It was a religious center and the most venerated city during many periods of ancient Egyptian history. The site of Thebes includes areas on both the eastern bank of the Nile, where the temples of Karnak and Luxor stand and where the city was situated; and the western bank, where a necropolis of large private and royal cemeteries and funerary complexes can be found. In 1979, the ruins of ancient Thebes were classified by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site.
Ahmose I was a pharaoh and founder of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt, classified as the first dynasty of the New Kingdom of Egypt, the era in which ancient Egypt achieved the peak of its power. He was a member of the Theban royal house, the son of pharaoh Seqenenre Tao and brother of the last pharaoh of the Seventeenth Dynasty, Kamose. During the reign of his father or grandfather, Thebes rebelled against the Hyksos, the rulers of Lower Egypt. When he was seven years old, his father was killed, and he was about ten when his brother died of unknown causes after reigning only three years. Ahmose I assumed the throne after the death of his brother, and upon coronation became known as Nebpehtyre, nb-pḥtj-rꜥ "The Lord of Strength is Ra".
Memphis, or Men-nefer, was the ancient capital of Inebu-hedj, the first nome of Lower Egypt that was known as mḥw ("North"). Its ruins are located in the vicinity of the present-day village of Mit Rahina, in markaz (county) Badrashin, Giza, Egypt. This modern name is probably derived from the late Ancient Egyptian name for Memphis mjt-rhnt meaning "Road of the Ram-Headed Sphinxes".
Heliopolis was a major city of ancient Egypt. It was the capital of the 13th or Heliopolite Nome of Lower Egypt and a major religious centre. It is now located in Ayn Shams, a northeastern district of Cairo.
The history of ancient Egypt spans the period from the early prehistoric settlements of the northern Nile valley to the Roman conquest of Egypt in 30 BC. The pharaonic period, the period in which Egypt was ruled by a pharaoh, is dated from the 32nd century BC, when Upper and Lower Egypt were unified, until the country fell under Macedonian rule in 332 BC.
The New Kingdom, also referred to as the Egyptian Empire, was the ancient Egyptian nation between the 16th century BC and the 11th century BC. This period of ancient Egyptian history covers the Eighteenth, Nineteenth, and Twentieth Dynasties. Through radiocarbon dating, the establishment of the New Kingdom has been placed between 1570 BC and 1544 BC. The New Kingdom followed the Second Intermediate Period and was succeeded by the Third Intermediate Period. It was the most prosperous time for the Egyptian people and marked the peak of Egypt's power.
God's Wife of Amun was the highest-ranking priestess of the Amun cult, an important religious institution in ancient Egypt. The cult was centered in Thebes in Upper Egypt during the Twenty-fifth and Twenty-sixth dynasties. The office had political importance as well as religious, since the two were closely related in ancient Egypt.
Qift is a city in the Qena Governorate of Egypt about 43 km (27 mi) north of Luxor, situated a little south of latitude 26° north, on the east bank of the Nile. In ancient times its proximity to the Red Sea made it an important trading emporium between India, Punt, Arabia Felix and the North. It was important for nearby gold and quartzite mines in the Eastern Desert, and as a starting point for expeditions to Punt.
The Precinct of Amun-Re, located near Luxor, Egypt, is one of the four main temple enclosures that make up the immense Karnak Temple Complex. The precinct is by far the largest of these and the only one that is open to the general public. The temple complex is dedicated to the principal god of the Theban Triad, Amun, in the form of Amun-Re.
Armant, also known as Hermonthis, is a town located about 19 km (12 mi) south of Thebes. It was an important Middle Kingdom town, which was enlarged during the Eighteenth Dynasty. It is located today in the Luxor Governorate on the west bank of the Nile.
The Valley of the Kings, also known as the Valley of the Gates of the Kings, is an area in Egypt where, for a period of nearly 500 years from the Eighteenth Dynasty to the Twentieth Dynasty, rock-cut tombs were excavated for pharaohs and powerful nobles under the New Kingdom of ancient Egypt.
Articles related to Modern Egypt include:
The history of the Karnak Temple complex is largely the history of Thebes. The city does not appear to have been of any significance before the Eleventh Dynasty, and any temple building here would have been relatively small and unimportant, with any shrines being dedicated to the early god of Thebes, Montu. The earliest artifact found in the area of the temple is a small, eight-sided column from the Eleventh Dynasty, which mentions Amun-Re. The tomb of Intef II mentions a 'house of Amun', which implies some structure, whether a shrine or a small temple is unknown. The ancient name for Karnak, Ipet-Isut only really refers to the central core structures of the Precinct of Amun-Re, and was in use as early as the 11th Dynasty, again implying the presence of some form of temple before the Middle Kingdom expansion.
The Department of Ancient Egypt is a department forming an historic part of the British Museum, with Its more than 100,000 pieces making it the largest[h] and most comprehensive collection of Egyptian antiquities outside the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.
The following outline is provided as an overview of a topical guide to ancient Egypt:
The High Priest of Ptah was sometimes referred to as "the Greatest of the Directors of Craftsmanship". This title refers to Ptah as the patron god of the craftsmen.
This page list topics related to ancient Egypt.
Women in ancient Egypt had some special rights other women did not have in other comparable societies. They could own property and were, at court, legally equal to men. However, Ancient Egypt was a patriarchal society dominated by men. Only a few women are known to have important positions in administration, though there were female rulers and even female pharaohs. Women at the royal court gained their positions by relationship to male kings.
The Department of Egyptian Antiquities of the Louvre is a department of the Louvre that is responsible for artifacts from the Nile civilizations which date from 4,000 BC to the 4th century. The collection, comprising over 50,000 pieces, is among the world's largest, overviews Egyptian life spanning Ancient Egypt, the Middle Kingdom, the New Kingdom, Coptic art, and the Roman, Ptolemaic, and Byzantine periods.
The Pharaohs' Golden Parade was an event held in Cairo, Egypt on 3 April 2021, during which twenty-two mummies belonging to Kings and Queens of the New Kingdom of Ancient Egypt were moved from the Egyptian Museum in Tahrir Square to the National Museum of Egyptian Civilization in Fustat.