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Markets and City Life

This version was saved 18 years, 3 months ago View current version     Page history
Saved by PBworks
on January 13, 2006 at 12:47:51 pm
 

Transportation

People in Ancient Egypt travelled by feet. They used their two feet to walk around in city life. They walked around and looked at what people were selling. They used boats to transport goods to the Markets in the City. The first boats in Ancient Egypt were rafts. The rafts were made of tightly woven papyrus reeds. Guiders would use poles to guide the rafts through shallow water. Later, the Egyptians attached a mast and square sail to their boats. These ships also had oars for power in calm weather and for maneuvering around docks. Further in time, the Egyptians built larger boats to ply trade routes on the Mediterranean Sea. Some of them were 180 feet long and 60 feet wide. They travelled by boat on the Nile River.

 

Jobs

Ancient Egyptian people could get many jobs such as scribes, "Servants of the Gods", doctors, merchants, and many,many more. A Scribe was a person who were also called "recordkeepers." They recorded just about everything, from breif notes of how many cattle a farmer owned to long reports about the progress of work on a Pharoahs building sites. Scribes also copied out religious, scientific, and historical texts. "Servants of the Gods" are known to us as Preists. Preists had to purify themselves before entering any temple among the Egyptian lands. They chewed natron (a type of mineral collected from the edges of lakes) and breathed sweet-smelling incece fumes. They washed and cut their fingernails and toenails. Male preists had to shave off all of their body hair, including their eyebrows.

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