+ All Categories
Home > Education > Week 4 September 20

Week 4 September 20

Date post: 18-May-2015
Category:
Upload: holly-stevens
View: 236 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Wathena Temple 1303.003 Holly Stevens TAMUC
Popular Tags:
79
Quiz on Wednesday covering today’s lecture, last Wednesday’s lecture, Chapter 3 New Kingdom, Chapter 4 Minoans Chapter 4 – what was unique about the Minoans, their art, where were they located, rough period in time, fresco
Transcript
Page 1: Week 4 September 20

Quiz on Wednesday covering today’s lecture, last

Wednesday’s lecture, Chapter 3 New Kingdom, Chapter 4

MinoansChapter 4 – what was unique about the Minoans, their art,

where were they located, rough period in time, fresco

Page 2: Week 4 September 20

No one got all 10 questions plus the extra credit on the

first quiz, but there were several scores of 10 points (9

right plus the extra credit). Congrats to: Will, Jacob,

Justin, Harshmeet, Shaina, Jeanie, Megan!

Page 3: Week 4 September 20

The time period that includes Hatshepsut and Akhenaten and Tutankhamun is known as:

The New Kingdom

1600 – 1000 bce

Page 4: Week 4 September 20

Hatshepsut, Senmut

Page 5: Week 4 September 20
Page 6: Week 4 September 20

November 17, 1997: Al-Gama'at al-Islamiyya (IG) gunmen shot and killed 58 tourists and four Egyptians and wounded 26 others at the Hatshepsut Temple in the Valley of the Kings near Luxor. Thirty-four Swiss, eight Japanese, five Germans, four Britons, one French, one Colombian, a dual Bulgarian/British citizen, and four unidentified persons were among the dead. Twelve Swiss, two Japanese, two Germans, one French, and nine Egyptians were among the wounded.

Page 7: Week 4 September 20
Page 8: Week 4 September 20

Construction: Book

Page 9: Week 4 September 20
Page 10: Week 4 September 20
Page 11: Week 4 September 20
Page 12: Week 4 September 20
Page 13: Week 4 September 20
Page 14: Week 4 September 20
Page 15: Week 4 September 20

On a stela from Sinai, the figure of Hatshepsut is shown with her coronation name, Maatkara, and the title "King of Upper and Lower Egypt."

Page 16: Week 4 September 20
Page 17: Week 4 September 20
Page 18: Week 4 September 20
Page 19: Week 4 September 20
Page 20: Week 4 September 20
Page 21: Week 4 September 20

Obelisk at Karnak

No one knows why it was walled off rather than destroyed

Page 22: Week 4 September 20
Page 23: Week 4 September 20
Page 24: Week 4 September 20
Page 25: Week 4 September 20
Page 26: Week 4 September 20
Page 27: Week 4 September 20
Page 28: Week 4 September 20
Page 29: Week 4 September 20

Nefertiti and Akhenaten (Amenhotep)

Page 30: Week 4 September 20

Tiye and Akhenaten

Page 31: Week 4 September 20
Page 32: Week 4 September 20

Tiye’s mother, Yuya

Page 33: Week 4 September 20
Page 34: Week 4 September 20
Page 35: Week 4 September 20
Page 36: Week 4 September 20
Page 37: Week 4 September 20
Page 38: Week 4 September 20
Page 39: Week 4 September 20

Meritaten (1349 BC)

Meketaten + Ankhenspaaten (1346 BC)

Neferneferuaten (1339 BC)

Neferneferure and Setepenre (1338).

Try these tongue twisters – Akhenaten’s and Nefertiti’s six daughter’s names:

Page 40: Week 4 September 20
Page 41: Week 4 September 20
Page 42: Week 4 September 20
Page 43: Week 4 September 20
Page 44: Week 4 September 20
Page 45: Week 4 September 20
Page 46: Week 4 September 20
Page 47: Week 4 September 20
Page 48: Week 4 September 20
Page 49: Week 4 September 20

Tutankhamun aka

King Tut

Page 50: Week 4 September 20
Page 51: Week 4 September 20
Page 52: Week 4 September 20
Page 53: Week 4 September 20
Page 54: Week 4 September 20
Page 55: Week 4 September 20
Page 56: Week 4 September 20
Page 57: Week 4 September 20
Page 58: Week 4 September 20
Page 59: Week 4 September 20
Page 60: Week 4 September 20
Page 61: Week 4 September 20
Page 62: Week 4 September 20

Ka Statue

Not Tutankhamun’s

Page 63: Week 4 September 20
Page 64: Week 4 September 20
Page 65: Week 4 September 20
Page 66: Week 4 September 20
Page 67: Week 4 September 20
Page 68: Week 4 September 20

Egyptian art

Page 69: Week 4 September 20
Page 70: Week 4 September 20
Page 71: Week 4 September 20
Page 73: Week 4 September 20
Page 74: Week 4 September 20

Temples of Rameses: Book

Page 75: Week 4 September 20
Page 76: Week 4 September 20
Page 77: Week 4 September 20

Built by Ramses II to inform those entering Egypt from the south of the might and power of Pharaoh, this monument once stood next to the flowing Nile. But the Nile shifted, Egypt shrank and desert sands flowed in. Over millennia this temple was lost to human knowledge. Rediscovered in 1813, only the leftmost head and the tip of a crown were visible. British archaeologists excavated at the dawn of the twentieth century and revealed an archeological treasure. With the coming of the High Dam at Aswan, this entire monument was cut into blocks and moved away from Lake Nasser's rising waters.

Page 78: Week 4 September 20

Ramses temple is aligned so that on the 22nd of February and 22nd of October (Ramses coronation and birth days) the sun's rays shine down the Hypostyle Hall and illuminate these seated gods.Ra is rightmost, followed by Ramses II as a god, then Amun. The leftmost god is Ptah, God of Darkness. 

Page 79: Week 4 September 20

Recommended