Ancient egypt

  • 1323 BCE

    King Tut

    King Tut was one of the most youngest pharaoh that lived. King Tut was a pharaoh a the age 9. King Tut died at the age 19. Every one respected him a lot.
  • 500 BCE

    Nile River

    The Nile river was used for many reasons. The shdoof was used to get water from the river to their home. The Nile river was 6853 (4258 miles long.)
  • Pyramids

    Built during a time when Egypt was one of the richest and most powerful civilizations in the world, the pyramids especially the Great Pyramids of Giza are some of the most magnificent man-made structures in history.
  • Mummies

    A mummy is the body of a person (or an animal) that has been preserved after death. Who were the mummies? They were any Egyptian who could afford to pay for the expensive process of preserving their bodies for the afterlife.
  • Old kindom

    The Old Kingdom is the name given to the period in the third millennium BC when Egypt attained its first continuous peak of civilization – the first of three so-called "Kingdom" periods (followed by the Middle Kingdom and New Kingdom) which mark the high points of civilization in the lower Nile Valley.
  • Rome v.s Egypt

    The province encompassed most of modern-day Egypt except for the Sinai Peninsula (which would later be conquered by Trajan). Aegyptus was bordered by the provinces of Creta et Cyrenaica to the West and Iudaea (later Arabia Petraea) to the East.
  • Climate

    The most humid area is along the Mediterranean coast, where the average annual rainfall is about 200mm. Precipitation decreases rapidly to the south Cairo receives on average only about 29mm of rain each year, and in many desert locations it may rain only once in several years!