From ancient times, the rise and fall of the River Nile portended
periods of famine or good fortune for the peoples of Egypt. Other
than wells, the River Nile is the only source of water in the country.
During an idyllic year, the flooding of the Nile would begin in
July, and by September its receding waters would deposit a rich,
black silt in its wake for farming. Before taming the river, however,
the ancient Egyptians had to overcome the river's peculiar problem.
The Niles runs along an alluvial plain, the ebb and tide of the
Nile corresponding to an annual movement of the ground. When the
Nile is the lowest, the ground completely dries up. When it floods,
the water seeps into the dry soil and causes the ground to rise
as much as a foot or two like some bloated sponge. As the inundation
subsides the ground settles again to its original dry level, but
never settles evenly.
The name Egypt means "Two Lands," reflecting the two separate
kingdoms of Upper and Lower prehistoric Egypt - Delta region in
the north and a long length of sandstone and limestone in the south.
In 3000 B.C., a single ruler, Menes, unified the entire land and
set the stage for an impressive civilization that lasted 3,000
years. He began with the construction of basins to contain the
flood water, digging canals and irrigation ditches to reclaim the
marshy land.
From these earliest of times, so important was the cutting of
a dam that the event was heralded by a royal ceremony. King Menes
is credited with diverting the course of the Nile to build the
city of Memphis on the site where the great river had run. By 2500
B. C., an extensive system of dikes, canals and sluices had developed.
It remained in use until the Roman occupation, circa 30 B.C. -
641 A.D.
For pure water, the Egyptians depended upon wells. Their prowess
in divining hidden sources is shown in the "Well of Joseph," constructed
about 3000 B.C. near the Pyramids of Gizeh. Workers had to dig
through 300 feet of solid rock to tap into the water.
Plumbing For the Dead: Egypt's pyramid-temples
which have withstood thousands of years of time also attest to
the skill of the ancient construction workers. The earliest pyramids
were built from 2660-2500 B.C., a period running parallel with
the Sumer-Mesopotamians when they achieved their greatest advances
in civilization. Yet any cultural ties that Egypt had with Mesopotamia
had vanished by this period.
A stone bath with plastered sides and drain. Just below
the outlet of the bath, water drained into a vase perforated at
the bottom and cemented into the earth.
By 2500 B.C. the Egyptians were pretty adept with drainage construction,
accentuated by the significance that water played in their priestly
rituals of purification and those affecting the burial of the kings.
According to their religion, to die was simply to pass from one
state of life to another. If the living required food, clothing
and other accoutrements of daily life, so did the dead. Thus, it's
not surprising that archaeologists have discovered bathrooms in
some tombs.
Excavators of the mortuary temple of King Suhura at Abusir discovered
niches in the walls and remnants of stone basins. These were furnished
with metal fittings for use as lavatories. The outlet of the basin
closed with a lead stopper attached to a chain and a bronze ring.
The basin emptied through a copper pipe to a trough below. The
pipe was made of 1/16" beaten copper to a diameter of a little
under 2". A lap joint seam hammered it tight.
Also found within a pyramid temple built by King Tutankhamen's
father-in-law at Abusir, was a brass drain pipe running from the
upper temple along the connecting masonry causeway to the outer
temple on the river.
Excavators have discovered a tomb which supposedly contains the
body of Osiris before he became a god. It contains the dividing
line between Life and Death, i.e., a deep moat containing water
that surrounds all sides of the figure of the god on his throne.
After 5,000 years, water still fills the canal through underground
pipes from the River Nile.
Coppersmiths: The ancient Egyptians were early
developers of pipe and the techniques of making copper alloys.
In the begimling, of course, their pipe and fittings were very
crude. Like the Mesopotamians, they used clay pipe made from a
combination of straw and clay. First it was dried in the sun, and
then baked in ovens. As they improved upon their clay sewer pipe,
the Egyptians were able to drain the low-lying portions of the
Nile Valley, and gradually the entire region evolved into a fertile
garden.
It is here in Egypt that the noria or Egyptian wheel
became a common use. As in Mesopotamia, it consisted of a chain
pump comprising a number of earthen pots carried round and round
by a wheel.
The Egyptians were quite skilled in working metals. They melted
metal in a crucible over a super-hot fire, the intense heat provided
by men fanning the fire with blowpipes made of reeds tipped with
clay. The molten metal was poured out and allowed to cool, then
beaten out with smooth stones into sheets of the required thickness.
It was then cut to shape. One explanatory picture in a tomb chapel
describes the process as "causing metal to swim."
Other examples of their craftsmanship are found in bowls of beaten
copper on which they casted double spouts. Originally copper basins
were used only by the pharoahs.
The homes of the wealthy were airy and roomy, literally. There
were bedrooms, servants' quarters, halls, dining rooms - and bathrooms.
Actually, a "bathroom" was usually a small recessed room with
a square slab of limestone in the corner. There the master of the
house stood while his slaves liberally doused him with water. The
waste water ran into a large bowl in the floor below or through
an earthenware channel in the wall where it emptied into still
another bowl outside. Then that bowl was baled out by hand.
Remains of early earth closets with limestone seats also have
been discovered, the disposal evidently in the sandy soil.
Many other details of Egypt's past are lost in obscurity. But
of their engineering skill there is no doubt. Knowing only the
lever, roller, inclined plane and possibly a long copper saw, they
erected immense monuments in the desert sands and along great cliffs.
When anyone reflects on ancient Egypt today, the Great Pyramid
of Cheops and its staggering dimensions invariably are brought
to mind: It stands 481 ft. high and contains 2 million blocks of
yellowish limestone. Each block weights 2.5 tons, was quarried
miles away, floated on barges, and dragged from the shores of the
Nile to its present site.
The other monument of renown is the Sphinx, guardian of the pyramids,
which the ancients carved out of bedrock. It is shaped like a crouching
lion with a human head. Unfortunately it was built before the services
of a good Roman plumber were available. Located outside present
day Cairo, it has lost limestone blocks to the marauding influence
of undeground water pollution - caused mainly by nearby villagers
throwing household and human waste out in the street.