Arte - Egypt The Treasure of the Sacred Bulls (2022)


Arte - Egypt The Treasure of the Sacred Bulls (2022)

The Apis bulls were revered as sacred animals in Ancient Egypt and buried at Saqqara, a vast necropolis in the desert close to present-day Cairo. In 1851, the French Egyptologist Auguste Mariette discovered the underground sanctuary and under his direction, dozens of artefacts from the burial chambers were brought to light. Today, the Louvre Museum picks up where Mariette left off! Join a team of archeologists and get exclusive access to rediscover the Serapeum tomb of the Bull Apis, one of the most sacred places in Saqqara, Egypt. This story follows the traces of the strange religious traditions practiced in ancient times under the reign of the pharaohs the incarnation of a preeminent deity of the Egyptian pantheon in a sacred animal; the procession of selecting the young bull; the rites of worship performed in the great temple of Ptah; the procession during the bringing of the mortal remains of the animal to the necropolis; as well as the crowds of pilgrims placing offerings and engraved tablets near the sarcophagus of the animal. Mariette also managed to map out a network of underground tunnels leading to other burial sites he did not have time to uncover. We have exclusive access to follow a team of archeologists, commissioned by the Louvre Museum, to pick up where Mariette left off. Through their field research, the scientists are bringing to life a lost and unknown chapter of ancient Egypt, and writing the next of the greatest adventures in the history of archaeology.

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Snippet from Wikipedia: Ancient Egypt

Ancient Egypt was a cradle of civilization concentrated along the lower reaches of the Nile River in Northeast Africa. It emerged from prehistoric Egypt around 3150 BC (according to conventional Egyptian chronology), when Upper and Lower Egypt were amalgamated by Menes, who is believed by the majority of Egyptologists to have been the same person as Narmer. The history of ancient Egypt unfolded as a series of stable kingdoms interspersed by the "Intermediate Periods" of relative instability. These stable kingdoms existed in one of three periods: the Old Kingdom of the Early Bronze Age; the Middle Kingdom of the Middle Bronze Age; or the New Kingdom of the Late Bronze Age.

The pinnacle of ancient Egyptian power was achieved during the New Kingdom, which extended its rule to much of Nubia and a considerable portion of the Levant. After this period, Egypt entered an era of slow decline. Over the course of its history, it was invaded or conquered by a number of foreign civilizations, including the Hyksos, the Kushites, the Assyrians, the Persians, and, most notably, the Greeks and then the Romans. The end of ancient Egypt is variously defined as occurring with the end of the Late Period during the Wars of Alexander the Great in 332 BC or with the end of the Greek-ruled Ptolemaic Kingdom during the Roman conquest of Egypt in 30 BC. In AD 642, the Arab conquest of Egypt brought an end to the region's millennium-long Greco-Roman period.

The success of ancient Egyptian civilization came partly from its ability to adapt to the Nile's conditions for agriculture. The predictable flooding of the Nile and controlled irrigation of its fertile valley produced surplus crops, which supported a more dense population, and thereby substantial social and cultural development.


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