:: The pyramids reflect the rich civilization and high degree of architectural skill of the ancient Egyptians. Their structures and shapes are marvelous. They are the important, mysterious, and the most unusual structures in the world. They hide many mysteries inside them. People around the world have much to know about these pyramids. They offer considerable knowledge about the human history, ancient civilization, religious theology and much more. They also symbolize the old mythology and the beliefs of the people of that time. In short, they are matchless and beyond comparison. Through all these factors, they capture the attention of the tourists around the world. For the last 3000 years, these pyramids are the main destination for the world tourists as well as they provide a source for imaginative thoughts. Tourists come in great number every year, around the world to see these incredible creations of human brain and strength. Many of them come to remove the mystery that how ancient Egyptians were able to build such huge and peculiar structures with their ancient tools
Many questions about these pyramids are yet to be answered and many mysterious facts are yet to be brought in light." They are strange and mysterious and they will remain strange and mysterious. So they will never leave the tourists to divert their attention to the other sides. In other words, the pyramids are the continuous source for the Egyptian tourism to be developed more and more. Tourism is the main industry of Egypt and pyramids are the most captivating figures for the tourists in Egypt"
No one can deny the key role of pyramids through which Egypt has been known all around for centuries. Egyptian pyramids were built 3000 years ago. Since then, they have been the center of the focus of the people around the world
. They capture the attention of tourists, students and different professionals. Every year, million of tourists around the world, come to visit them. They tell the stories of these mysterious pyramids to others and incline them to come to see these queer structures. Thus, the pyramids play the key role in developing the tourism industry in Egypt. All these tourists travel to Egypt, stay in hotels, do shopping and spend money. As a result, Egypt has been earning a big amount of foreign exchange. The tourism is one of the main sources of income for Egypt through which not only the national economy is strengthened but it also helps the common people to get prosperous. Local people get jobs and do business through tourism and get more opportunities to strengthen their own financial condition. No one denies the role of pyramids they have been playing for the development of Egyptian economy for the last 3000 years. Pyramids are, and will remain the main destination for world tourists in Egypt so they are a permanent source for Egyptian economy to grow more and more.
For centuries, Pyramids and Nile River are the main two sources in Egyptian Economy .Nile River is backbone of Egyptian Agriculture and the main source of electric power So far. Either The pyramids feed Egyptian economy through the continuously tourist visitors, which they come from the whole world for take a time near these pyramids. The modern Egypt inherited a grand heritage from the ancient Egypt civilization .This helped to avoid poverty, which swept most of the African States.
بنات اختصروها قدر الامكان عشان تكون خاتمه لبحثي
الله يوفقكم

تالاااا @talaaaa
عضوة جديدة
يلزم عليك تسجيل الدخول أولًا لكتابة تعليق.

تالاااا
•
الله يوفقك دلوعه زوجها
انا احتا على الاقل برقراف150كلمه تقريبا
يضم السياحه والاقتصاد ولفته حلوه مثل اللي حطيتي
الله يفتح باب الخير لك
انا احتا على الاقل برقراف150كلمه تقريبا
يضم السياحه والاقتصاد ولفته حلوه مثل اللي حطيتي
الله يفتح باب الخير لك

حياتي شكلك بتكلمين عن مصر مو الاهرامات لووووووول و لا يضيق صدرك
شوفي البرقراف و خوذي اللي تبينه
When most people mention Ancient Egypt the first thing that comes to mind is the Pyramids. To construct such monuments required a mastery of art, architecture and social organization that few cultures would ever rival. The pyramids are said to have built Egypt by being the force that knit together the kingdom's economy. Their creations were so substantial, that the sight of these vast pyramids would take your breath away. Today, the valley of the Nile has an open air museum so people can witness these grand monuments.
For most Westerners, Egypt evokes mummies and pyramids. Westerners have been touring Egypt since the ancient Greeks, following a well-traveled tourist route up the Nile River. The Nile has been the central axis of civilization in Egypt, from ancient to modern times, and, except for the development of beach resorts in the Sinai and on the Red Sea and Mediterranean coasts, the Nile cruise remains the basic tourist route even today.
So entwined is the West's image of Egypt with its ancient monuments that it seems self-evident to Europeans and Americans that the pyramids are Egypt's number one tourist attraction. But the pyramids are low on the list of destinations for Gulf Arabs visiting Egypt. Arabs engage with a more contemporary imagining of Egyptian culture, one that is grounded in the regional circulation of singers, dancers, and movie stars. Tourists from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates are famous for spending their time not at the pyramids but rather in the nightclubs of Pyramids Road. The difference between Arab and Western tourism is literally night and day: the pyramid tours start early in the morning to beat the midday heat, while nightclub evenings don't come to an end until the early-morning light.
Arabs and Westerners don't see the same Egypt. What they see is influenced by their own culture, language, religion, history, and politics. These different imaginations of Egypt have in turn shaped Egypt's own view of itself, creating overlapping layers of identity: Egypt as the land of the pharaohs, pyramids, and mummies, but also Egypt as the center of Arab cinema, Arab music, and belly dancing. Centuries of transnational exchanges have produced layers of imaginations of Egypt.
Ultimately these different views of Egypt reveal as much about Westerners and Gulf Arabs as they reveal about Egypt. The Western fascination with pharaonic Egypt cannot be understood without seeing how Egyptology was intertwined with the history of European imperialism. And the Egyptian stereotype of Gulf Arabs as spending long nights salivating over belly dancers is symptomatic of a Middle Eastern migrant labor economy marked by cultural differences and resentment over the uneven distribution of oil wealth. This book explores parallel Western and Arab experiences with Egypt as a way of reflecting back their differences and similarities.
There are many aspects to the Ancient Egyptian economy. The Egyptians traded, educated, and farmed. The Egyptian society has had many great achievements. But the question is, “What was the Ancient Egyptian economy like?” Let’s dig a little deeper and find out!
Trade started to happen in the fourth century B.C. The Egyptians traded with countries around the Mediterranean Sea, Aegean Sea, and the Red Sea. Items brought from other countries were goods like silver, iron, cedar logs, horses, ivory, copper, cattle, leopard skins, and spices. The main products brought from Egypt were gold and other minerals, wheat, barley, and papyrus sheets. One of the more famous trade expeditions in Ancient Egypt was when Queen Hatshepsut sent an expedition down the Red Sea where they got frankincense, trees, elephants’ tusks, ebony, gold, spices, and foreign animals like panthers. Sailors on the trading ships were paid in grain. When their ships stopped to unload, they were able to visit dockside shops to exchange their grain for clothes, fresh fruit, and vegetables.
Egyptians did not have coin money like we do today. When shopping in Ancient Egypt you would have to bargain on a price. Although there were no fixed prices, Egyptians were good at figuring out how much an item would cost. Cost was measured in a deben (a copper weight of .5 ounces). For goods like razors or shoes the cost would be one or two deben, but for four pigs it would cost more like twenty deben which they would trade for something that was worth the same amount.
Jobs in Ancient Egypt included government officials, soldiers, scribes, doctors, merchants, dancers, fishermen, hunters, bakers, carpenters, coffin-makers, spinners, weavers, jewelers, pyramid builders, Egyptian artists, and farmers. Most Egyptians were farmers. The main crops grown in Egypt were wheat, barley, lettuce, beans, onions, figs, dates, grapes, melons, and cucumbers. The pharaoh was the controller of the jobs .
Between the ages of four and fourteen children attended school. Little boys started learning their father’s job when they were four. When they were older they were expected to do the same occupation as their father. Girls and boys both attended school together. They studied reading, writing, and math. Children who were going to be lawyers, scribes, or doctors went to a special school were they studied hieroglyphics. When girls grew up they took to tending the home.
There were castes of people by wealth. The social pyramid went like this, at the very top of the pyramid was the pharaoh who ruled all. The upper class was filled with the pharaoh’s royal family, scribes, government officials, priests, and soldiers. The middle class was the crafters, artists, and other skilled workers like painters, carpenters, jewelers, and brick makers. Farmers were also in the middle class. The lower class consisted of slaves and servants. There was slavery in Ancient Egypt. Sometimes people would be given to the pharaoh as a gift but most were slaves because they could not pay the money they owed or to escape being poor. Many rich Egyptian families hired servants to work for them.
Over all, the Ancient Egyptian civilization had a pretty advanced economy. With trade, the many different jobs, and the weight of the deben, the Egyptians had many great accomplishments
شوفي البرقراف و خوذي اللي تبينه
When most people mention Ancient Egypt the first thing that comes to mind is the Pyramids. To construct such monuments required a mastery of art, architecture and social organization that few cultures would ever rival. The pyramids are said to have built Egypt by being the force that knit together the kingdom's economy. Their creations were so substantial, that the sight of these vast pyramids would take your breath away. Today, the valley of the Nile has an open air museum so people can witness these grand monuments.
For most Westerners, Egypt evokes mummies and pyramids. Westerners have been touring Egypt since the ancient Greeks, following a well-traveled tourist route up the Nile River. The Nile has been the central axis of civilization in Egypt, from ancient to modern times, and, except for the development of beach resorts in the Sinai and on the Red Sea and Mediterranean coasts, the Nile cruise remains the basic tourist route even today.
So entwined is the West's image of Egypt with its ancient monuments that it seems self-evident to Europeans and Americans that the pyramids are Egypt's number one tourist attraction. But the pyramids are low on the list of destinations for Gulf Arabs visiting Egypt. Arabs engage with a more contemporary imagining of Egyptian culture, one that is grounded in the regional circulation of singers, dancers, and movie stars. Tourists from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates are famous for spending their time not at the pyramids but rather in the nightclubs of Pyramids Road. The difference between Arab and Western tourism is literally night and day: the pyramid tours start early in the morning to beat the midday heat, while nightclub evenings don't come to an end until the early-morning light.
Arabs and Westerners don't see the same Egypt. What they see is influenced by their own culture, language, religion, history, and politics. These different imaginations of Egypt have in turn shaped Egypt's own view of itself, creating overlapping layers of identity: Egypt as the land of the pharaohs, pyramids, and mummies, but also Egypt as the center of Arab cinema, Arab music, and belly dancing. Centuries of transnational exchanges have produced layers of imaginations of Egypt.
Ultimately these different views of Egypt reveal as much about Westerners and Gulf Arabs as they reveal about Egypt. The Western fascination with pharaonic Egypt cannot be understood without seeing how Egyptology was intertwined with the history of European imperialism. And the Egyptian stereotype of Gulf Arabs as spending long nights salivating over belly dancers is symptomatic of a Middle Eastern migrant labor economy marked by cultural differences and resentment over the uneven distribution of oil wealth. This book explores parallel Western and Arab experiences with Egypt as a way of reflecting back their differences and similarities.
There are many aspects to the Ancient Egyptian economy. The Egyptians traded, educated, and farmed. The Egyptian society has had many great achievements. But the question is, “What was the Ancient Egyptian economy like?” Let’s dig a little deeper and find out!
Trade started to happen in the fourth century B.C. The Egyptians traded with countries around the Mediterranean Sea, Aegean Sea, and the Red Sea. Items brought from other countries were goods like silver, iron, cedar logs, horses, ivory, copper, cattle, leopard skins, and spices. The main products brought from Egypt were gold and other minerals, wheat, barley, and papyrus sheets. One of the more famous trade expeditions in Ancient Egypt was when Queen Hatshepsut sent an expedition down the Red Sea where they got frankincense, trees, elephants’ tusks, ebony, gold, spices, and foreign animals like panthers. Sailors on the trading ships were paid in grain. When their ships stopped to unload, they were able to visit dockside shops to exchange their grain for clothes, fresh fruit, and vegetables.
Egyptians did not have coin money like we do today. When shopping in Ancient Egypt you would have to bargain on a price. Although there were no fixed prices, Egyptians were good at figuring out how much an item would cost. Cost was measured in a deben (a copper weight of .5 ounces). For goods like razors or shoes the cost would be one or two deben, but for four pigs it would cost more like twenty deben which they would trade for something that was worth the same amount.
Jobs in Ancient Egypt included government officials, soldiers, scribes, doctors, merchants, dancers, fishermen, hunters, bakers, carpenters, coffin-makers, spinners, weavers, jewelers, pyramid builders, Egyptian artists, and farmers. Most Egyptians were farmers. The main crops grown in Egypt were wheat, barley, lettuce, beans, onions, figs, dates, grapes, melons, and cucumbers. The pharaoh was the controller of the jobs .
Between the ages of four and fourteen children attended school. Little boys started learning their father’s job when they were four. When they were older they were expected to do the same occupation as their father. Girls and boys both attended school together. They studied reading, writing, and math. Children who were going to be lawyers, scribes, or doctors went to a special school were they studied hieroglyphics. When girls grew up they took to tending the home.
There were castes of people by wealth. The social pyramid went like this, at the very top of the pyramid was the pharaoh who ruled all. The upper class was filled with the pharaoh’s royal family, scribes, government officials, priests, and soldiers. The middle class was the crafters, artists, and other skilled workers like painters, carpenters, jewelers, and brick makers. Farmers were also in the middle class. The lower class consisted of slaves and servants. There was slavery in Ancient Egypt. Sometimes people would be given to the pharaoh as a gift but most were slaves because they could not pay the money they owed or to escape being poor. Many rich Egyptian families hired servants to work for them.
Over all, the Ancient Egyptian civilization had a pretty advanced economy. With trade, the many different jobs, and the weight of the deben, the Egyptians had many great accomplishments
الصفحة الأخيرة
It' simply, a masterpiece by the pharao