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Historians have given the name Kingdom to those periods in ancient Egyptian history when: The central government was strong. The country was unified. And there was an orderly succession of pharaohs. Intermediate Periods are the times when: Central authority broke down. Competing centres of power emerged. The country was plunged into civil war or was occupied by foreigners.
After five centuries and following the end of the Sixth Dynasty (ca. 2181 B.C.), the system faltered, and a century-and-a-half of civil war, the First Intermediate Period, ensued. The reestablishment of a powerful central government during the Twelfth Dynasty, however, re-instituted the patterns of the Old Kingdom. Thus, the Old Kingdom and the Middle Kingdom may be considered together. Divine kingship was the most striking feature of Egypt in these periods. The political and economic system of the ancient Egypt Old Kingdom developed around the concept of a god incarnate who was believed through his magical powers to control the Nile flood for the benefit of the nation. In the form of great religious complexes centered on the pyramid tombs, the cult of the pharaoh, the godking, was given monumental expression of a grandeur unsurpassed in the ancient Near East. ![]() built during the Ancient Egypt Old Kingdom Central to the ancient Egypt Old Kingdom view of kingship was the concept of maat, loosely translated as justice and truth but meaning more than legal fairness and factual accuracy. It referred to the ideal state of the universe and was personified as the goddess Maat. The king was responsible for its appearance, an obligation that acted as a constraint on the arbitrary exercise of power. The pharaoh ruled by divine decree. In the early years, his sons and other close relatives acted as his principal advisers and aides. By the Fourth Dynasty, there was a grand vizier or chief minister, who was at first a prince of royal blood andheaded every government department. The country was divided into nomes or districts administered by nomarchs orgovernors. At first, the nomarchs were royal officials who moved from post to post and had no pretense to independence orlocal ties. The post of nomarch eventually became hereditary, however, and nomarchs passed their offices totheir sons. Hereditary offices and the possession of property turned these officials into a landed gentry. Concurrently, kings began rewarding their courtiers with gifts of tax-exempt land.From the middle of the Fifth Dynasty can be traced the beginnings of a feudal state with an increase in the power of theseprovincial lords, particularly in Upper Egypt. ![]() The ancient Nile Old Kingdom ended when the central administration collapsed in the late Sixth Dynasty. This collapse seems to have resulted at least in part from climatic conditions that caused a period of low Nile waters and great famine. The kings would have been discredited by the famine, because pharaonic power rested in part on the belief that the king controlled the Nile flood. In the absence of central authority, the hereditary landowners took control and assumed responsibility for maintaining order in their own areas. The manors of their estates turned into miniature courts, and Egypt splintered into a number of feudal states. This period of decentralized rule and confusion lasted from the Seventh through the 11th dynasties. In the period known as the Middle Kingdom the kings of the 12th Dynasty restored central government control and a single strong kingship. The Middle Kingdom ended with the conquest of Egypt by the Hyksos, the so-called Shepherd Kings. The Hyksos were Semitic nomads who broke into the Delta from the northeast and ruled Egypt from Avaris in the eastern Delta.
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