Egypt in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
e'-jipt:
I. THE COUNTRY
1. The Basis of the Land
2. The Nile Valley
3. Earliest Human Remains
4. Climate
5. Conditions of Life
6. The Nile
7. The Fauna
8. The Flora
9. The Prehistoric Races
II. THE HISTORY
1. 1st and 2nd Ages: Prehistoric
2. 3d Age: Ist and IInd Dynasties
3. 4th Age: IIIrd through VIth Dynasties
4. 5th Age: VIIth through XIVth Dynasties
5. 6th Age: XVth through XXIVth Dynasties
6. 7th Age: XXVth Dynasty to Roman Times
7. 8th Age: Arabic
8. Early Foreign Connections
III. THE OLD TESTAMENT CONNECTIONS
1. Semitic Connections
2. Abramic Times
3. Circumcision
4. Joseph
5. Descent into Egypt
6. The Oppression
7. The Historic Position
8. The Plagues
9. Date of the Exodus
10. Route of the Exodus
11. Numbers of the Exodus
12. Israel in Canaan
13. Hadad
14. Pharaoh's Daughter
15. Shishak
16. Zerakh
17. The Ethiopians
18. Tahpanhes
19. Hophra
20. The Jews of Syene
21. The New Jerusalem of Oniah
22. The Egyptian Jew
23. Cities and Places Alphabetically
IV. THE CIVILIZATION
1. Language
2. Writing
3. Literature
4. Four Views of Future Life
5. Four Groups of Gods
6. Foreign Gods
7. Laws
8. Character
LITERATURE
Egypt (mitsrayim; he Aiguptos): Usually supposed to
represent the dual of Mitsrayim, referring to "the two
lands," as the Egyptians called their country. This dualism,
however, has been denied by some.
I. The Country.
1. The Basis of the Land:
Though Egypt is one of the earliest countries in recorded
history, and as regards its continuous civilization, yet it
is a late country in its geological history and in its
occupation by a settled population. The whole land up to
Silsileh is a thick mass of Eocene limestone, with later
marls over that in the lower districts. It has been elevated
on the East, up to the mountains of igneous rocks many
thousand feet high toward the Red Sea. It has been depressed
on the West, down to the Fayum and the oases below sea-
level. This strain resulted in a deep fault from North to
South for some hundreds of miles up from the Mediterranean.
This fault left its eastern side about 200 ft. above its
western, and into it the drainage of the plateau poured,
widening it out so as to form the Nile valley, as the
permanent drain of Northeast Africa. The access of water to
the rift seems to have caused the basalt outflows, which are
seen as black columnar basalt South of the Fayum, and brown
massive basalt at Khankah, North of Cairo.
2. The Nile Valley:
The gouging out of the Nile valley by rainfall must have
continued when the land was 300 ft. higher than at present,
as is shown by the immense fails of strata into collapsed
caverns which were far below the present Nile level. Then,
after the excavations of the valley, it has been submerged
to 500 ft. lower than at present, as is shown by the rolled
gravel beds and deposits on the tops of the water-worn
cliffs, and the filling up of the tributary valleys--as at
Thebes--by deep deposits, through which the subsequent
stream beds have been scoured out. The land still had the
Nile source 30 ft. higher than it is now within the human
period, as seen by the worked flints in high gravel beds
above the Nile plain. The distribution of land and water was
very different from that at present when the land was only
100 ft. lower than now. Such a change would make the valley
an estuary up to South of the Fayum, would submerge much of
the western desert, and would unite the Gulf of Suez and the
Mediterranean. Such differences would entirely alter the
conditions of animal life by sea and land. And as the human
period began when the water was considerably higher, the
conditions of climate and of life must have greatly changed
in the earlier ages of man's occupation.
3. Earliest Human Remains:
The earliest human remains belonging to the present
condition of the country are large paleolithic flints found
in the side valleys at the present level of the Nile. As
these are perfectly fresh, and not rolled or altered, they
show that paleolithic man lived in Egypt under the present
conditions. The close of this paleolithic age of hunters,
and the beginning of a settled population of cultivators,
cannot have been before the drying up of the climate, which
by depriving the Nile of tributary streams enfeebled it so
that its mud was deposited and formed a basis for
agriculture. From the known rate of deposit, and depth of
mud soil, this change took place about 10,000 years ago. As
the recorded history of the country extends 7,500 years, and
we know of two prehistoric ages before that, it is pretty
well fixed that the disappearance of paleolithic man, and
the beginning of the continuous civilization must have been
about 9,000 to 10,000 years ago. For the continuation of
this subject see the section on "History" below.
4. Climate:
The climate of Egypt is unique in the world. So far as solar
heat determines it, the condition is tropical; for, though
just North of the tropic which lies at the boundary of Egypt
and Nubia, the cloudless condition fully compensates for
higher latitude. So far as temperature of the air is
concerned, the climate is temperate, the mean heat of the
winter months being 52 degree and of the summer...
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