Studyspark Study Document

Contribution Ancient Egyptian Civilization Modern World Essay

Pages:2 (659 words)

Sources:3

Subject:History

Topic:Ancient Egypt

Document Type:Essay

Document:#82741378


ancient Egyptian civilization modern world.

The contribution of ancient Egyptian civilization to the modern world:

Architecture, medicine, and agriculture 'The grandeur that was Greece, the glory that was Rome.' The legacy of Greece and Rome to modern civilization has been well-documented, but the contributions of the ancient Egyptians have often been forgotten. Perhaps it is because their hieroglyphic language is less accessible than that of Greek and Latin or the government and structure of the civilization seems more foreign and autocratic. Regardless, it is important to remember the major influences Egypt had upon Greece, Rome, and other civilizations which shaped the modern world.

Perhaps the most enduring symbol of ancient Egyptian civilization is the pyramids. "The original pyramids serve as a testament to the mathematical skill of the Egyptians, a skill that stimulated Greek mathematicians, including Pythagoras, to perfect their work" (Tyldesley, "Ancient Egypt"). Although Hollywood has often depicted slaves constructing the pyramids, the reality was likely far more prosaic: "a workforce of up to 5,000 permanent employees, supplemented by as many as 20,000 temporary workers" of free laborers helped construct the structures along with some slaves (Tyldesley, "Ancient Egypt"). This was a bureaucratic as well as a mathematical and architectural feat, as these workers had to be fed, quartered, and paid for and "administrators also had to coordinate the supplies of stone, rope, fuel and wood that were needed to support the building work" (Tyldesley, "Ancient Egypt").

The Egyptians were likewise renowned for their medical achievements in the ancient world, and having an Egyptian physician was considered a point of status in Roman society. The medical knowledge of the Egyptians is demonstrated in their elaborate preservation and mummification system, although they were likewise famed as healers of the living. The emphasis on mummification was an instruction in anatomy for many Egyptians and "unlike those of other ancient societies, the Egyptians were experienced in dissecting corpses because, believing that their souls needed an earthly body, they preserved their dead as mummies" Tyldesley, "Ancient Egypt"). An extant papyrus "actually gives names to organs such as the spleen, the heart, the anus, the lungs etc. so they must have known that these exist. One papyrus, the Edwin Smith Papyrus, has a detailed description of the brain in it so this organ was also well researched by the standards of the time" ("Ancient Egyptian medicine," History Learning Site). The attitude towards…


Sample Source(s) Used

Works Cited

"Ancient Egyptian medicine." History Learning Site. 1 Dec 2013.

http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/ancient_egyptian_medicine.htm

Harris, Catherine. "Ancient Egyptian agriculture." Tour Egypt. 1 Dec 2013.

http://www.touregypt.net/egypt-info/magazine-mag07012001-magf5.htm

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

Ancient Civilizations Contributions to Modern

Pages: 6 (2072 words) Sources: 8 Subject: Drama - World Document: #58109690

Another notable development and contribution of ancient from Greek is the Olympics. The event was begun in Greek as an entertainment session but later evolved into an international event. Additional invention of Greek is the architecture. The Greek were immensely talented in art and, therefore, the exemplary architectural inventions and developments in the modern world today. They all can trace the history of the building system in this ancient

Studyspark Study Document

Egyptian Identity the Identity of

Pages: 2 (669 words) Subject: Race Document: #6062032

They are about as related as say the Italians are to the Irish. The modern population of Egypt is largely composed of what anthropologists refer to as people of "Eastern-Hamitic Stock." This means that modern (as well as ancient) Egyptians are more closely related to the North African Berbers, Tuaregs, Fulas, and Tibbus than to Negroes. Egyptian Negroes live in the southern part of the country (which borders on

Studyspark Study Document

Ancient Civilizations Greek Roman Hellenistic

Pages: 8 (2569 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Drama - World Document: #22684849

civilizations we have studied thus far in this course, which do you believe has contributed the most to our present society and why? You must state you case by giving specific examples based on reading and research. Each civilization of the world has grown and evolved on the contributions made by civilization preceding their own. It is beyond contesting that Mesopotamian and Egyptian civilizations (3000-12000 B.C.E.) laid the foundation of

Studyspark Study Document

Ancient, Early Church, Middle Ages, and Renaissance

Pages: 4 (1204 words) Subject: Drama - World Document: #31339101

Ancient, Early Church, Middle Ages, and Renaissance Civilizations to the Contemporary Western Civilization Two primary civilizations had emerged to form the first civilization of mankind -- that of the Mesopotamia, and Egyptian civilizations. Although other important civilizations had been formed during the ancient times such as the Sumerian and Akkadian empires, the important contributions and use of innovations and progress of the three aforementioned civilizations had influenced and developed the

Studyspark Study Document

Ancient Art and Civilization. Specifically

Pages: 3 (1006 words) Sources: 4 Subject: Drama - World Document: #75053705

They also helped create the notion of irrigation and water management, as they built aqueducts and ditches to carry water to farmers far removed from the Nile River. Their technologies helped develop the idea of moving water to where it was needed, something in use today with the massive aqueducts in California that carry water from Northern California and the Colorado River to Southern California's major cities. The Egyptians were

Studyspark Study Document

Civilization We Live in Is

Pages: 8 (3423 words) Sources: 2 Subject: Evolution Document: #38563360

Secondly, the relations that were created at the level of the social groups and of the human establishments gave rise to a surplus of products and inevitably of wealth. This was a natural consequence of the fact that the specialization of labor determined a larger quantity of products being made and of better quality. This is seen as the first revolution, the predecessor of events such as the industrial revolution

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".