List of Egyptian inventions and discoveries

Egyptian inventions and discoveries are objects, processes or techniques which owe their existence or first known written account either partially or entirely to an Egyptian person.

Ancient Egypt

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Government and Economy

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Tablet of one of the earliest recorded treaties in history, Treaty of Kadesh, at the Istanbul Archaeology Museum
  • Community banking models: Community banking is a non-traditional form of money-lending.[1] Unlike banks or other classic lending institutions, the funds that community banks lend to borrowers are gathered by the local community itself. This tends to mean that the individuals in a neighborhood or group have more control over who is receiving the capital and how that capital is being spent. This practice has existed in some form for centuries; in ancient Egypt, for example, when grain was often used as currency, local granaries would store and distribute the community's food supply.[2] Since that time, a variety of community banking models have evolved.
  • Police: In ancient Egypt evidence of law enforcement exists as far back as the Old Kingdom period. There are records of an office known as "Judge Commandant of the Police" dating to the Fourth Dynasty.[3]
  • Postal system: The first documented use of a postal system, state-sponsored, designated courier service for the dissemination of written documents is in Egypt, where Pharaohs used couriers to send out decrees throughout the territory of the state (2400 BCE).[4]
  • Law: Ancient Egyptian law, dating as far back as 3000 BC, was based on the concept of Ma'at and characterised by tradition, rhetorical speech, social equality, and impartiality.[5][6][7]

Warfare

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Reconstruction of Buhen fortress
  • Catapult: A Catapult dating to the 19th century B.C was found on the walls of the fortress of Buhen.[10]
  • Draw bridge: The fortress of Buhen contains the oldest known drawbridges.[10]
  • Battlements: Another feature of the Buhen fortress the construction of the world's oldest battlements.[10]
  • Arrowslit: Loop holes are found for the first time in some Middle kingdom forts.[11]
  • Battering rams: The earliest depiction of a possible battering ram is from the tomb of the 11th Dynasty noble Khety, where a pair of soldiers advance towards a fortress under the protection of a mobile roofed structure, carrying a long pole that may represent a simple battering ram.[12]
  • Siege towers: Moving siege towers were invented in Egypt during the First Intermediate Period.[13]
  • Naval ram: Naval rams were built on ships since at least the reign of Amenhotep I.[14]
  • Grappling hook: The ancient Egyptians used grappling hooks as early as the Bronze Age collapse and in their war with the Sea people.[15]
  • Dagger: In ancient Egypt, daggers were usually made of copper or bronze, while royalty had gold weapons. At least since pre-dynastic Egypt,[16] (c. 3100 B.C) daggers were adorned as ceremonial objects with golden hilts and later even more ornate and varied construction. One early silver dagger was recovered with midrib design.
  • Police Dogs and War Dogs: were used by the Egyptians as early as 4000 B.C.[17]
  • Encryption: One of the earliest forms of encryption is symbol replacement, which was first found in the tomb of Khnumhotep II, who lived in 1900 B.C. Egypt. Symbol replacement encryption is "non-standard," which means that the symbols require a cipher or key to understand.[18]

Agriculture and Animal Husbandry

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  • Diversion dam: The first Diversion dam is Sadd el-Kafara Dam built in Egypt around 2700 B.C.[19]
  • Noria: Norias appeared in Egypt in the 4th Century B.C.[20]
  • Beekeeping: domesticated Beekeeping was first recorded in ancient Egypt around 2600 B.C.[21][22] as well as the first use of smoke while extracting the honey from bee nests.[23]
  • Horse stable: The world's oldest horse stables were discovered in the ancient city of Pi-Ramesses in Qantir, in Ancient Egypt, and were established by Ramesses II (c. 1304–1213 BC). These stables covered approximately 182,986 square feet, had floors sloped for drainage, and could contain about 480 horses.[24]
  • Zoo: The world's first zoo was discovered at Hierakonpolis dating back to 3,500 B.C.[25]
  • Olive cultivation: Some scholars have argued that olive cultivation originated with the Ancient Egyptians.[26][27]
  • Ox drawn plough: Ox drawn ploughs were used by Ancient Egyptians as early as 2000 B.C.[28]

Transport

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  • Hulls: Hulls were first built in Egypt as early as 3000 B.C[29]
 
Egyptian sailing ship, ca. 1422–1411 BCE
  • Sail: cloth sails are depicted in predynastic Egyptian art (c. 3300 B.C).[30][31]
  • Harbor / Dock: The earliest known Harbors were those discovered in Wadi al-Jarf, an ancient Egyptian harbor, (ca. 2600-2550 BCE, reign of King Khufu), located on the Red Sea coast.[32][33] Archaeologists also discovered anchors and storage jars near the site.[34]
  • Masts and Bipod mast: The bipod mast is a two-legged mast used originally in Egypt during the 3rd millennium BCE. It can be described as two poles secured together at the top, forming a thin isosceles triangle. It did not appear until the Old Kingdom, third dynasty, and disappeared after the sixth dynasty when the pole mast took over during the Middle Kingdom.[35]
  • Stern-mounted steering oar: A predecessor to the Rudder. Rowing oars set aside for steering appeared on large Egyptian vessels long before the time of Menes (3100 BC).[36] In the Old Kingdom (2686 BC-2134 BC) as many as five steering oars are found on each side of passenger boats.[36] The tiller, at first a small pin run through the stock of the steering oar, can be traced to the fifth dynasty (2504–2347 BC).[37] Both the tiller and the introduction of an upright steering post abaft reduced the usual number of necessary steering oars to one each side.[38] Single steering oars put on the stern can be found in a number of tomb models of the time,[39] particularly during the Middle Kingdom when tomb reliefs suggests them commonly employed in Nile navigation.[40] The first literary reference appears in the works of the Greek historian Herodotus (484-424 BC), who had spent several months in Egypt: "They make one rudder, and this is thrust through the keel", probably meaning the crotch at the end of the keel (see right pic "Tomb of Menna").[41][42]
  • Paved road: The world's oldest paved road was discovered near Faiyum dating back to the 26th century BC.[43]
  • Rail: Evidence from The Lake Moeris Quarry Road (26th century BC.) suggests the presence of early wooden rail using wooden logs to.[44][45]

Metals, Elements and Materials

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Medicine

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Discoveries

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  • Meninges:[58]
  • Cerebrospinal fluid:[58]
  • Paralysis:[59]
  • Urinary incontinence: The management of urinary incontinence with pads is mentioned in the earliest medical book known, the Ebers Papyrus (1500 B.C).[60]
  • Anatomy: In 1600 BCE, the Edwin Smith Papyrus, an Ancient Egyptian medical text, described the heart, its vessels, liver, spleen, kidneys, hypothalamus, uterus and bladder, and showed the blood vessels diverging from the heart. The Ebers Papyrus (c. 1550 BCE) features a "treatise on the heart", with vessels carrying all the body's fluids to or from every member of the body.[61]
  • Circulatory system: The earliest known writings on the circulatory system are found in the Ebers Papyrus (16th century BCE), an ancient Egyptian medical papyrus containing over 700 prescriptions and remedies, both physical and spiritual. In the papyrus, it acknowledges the connection of the heart to the arteries. The Egyptians thought air came in through the mouth and into the lungs and heart. From the heart, the air travelled to every member through the arteries. Although this concept of the circulatory system is only partially correct, it represents one of the earliest accounts of scientific thought.[62]
  • Cataract surgery: The earliest known depiction of cataract surgery is on a statue from the Fifth Dynasty (2467–2457 BCE).[63]
  • Cancer: The earliest written record regarding cancer is from circa 1600 B.C in the Egyptian Edwin Smith Papyrus and describes breast cancer.[64]
  • Diabetes: Diabetes was one of the first diseases described,[65] with an Egyptian manuscript from c. 1500 BCE mentioning "too great emptying of the urine." The Ebers papyrus includes a recommendation for a drink to take in such cases.[66] The first described cases are believed to have been type 1 diabetes.[67]
  • Dracunculiasis or Guinea-worm disease and its treatment: The Ebers Papyrus says that the cure to the Guinea-Worm disease is to wrap the emerging end of the worm around a stick and slowly pull it out. 3,500 years later, this remains the standard treatment.[68]
  • Crutch: Crutches were used in ancient Egypt.[69][70]
  • Hysteria: The oldest record of hysteria dates back to 1900 B.C. when Egyptians recorded behavioral abnormalities in adult women on medical papyrus.[71] The Egyptians attributed the behavioral disturbances to a wandering uterus—thus later dubbing the condition hysteria.[71] To treat hysteria Egyptian doctors prescribed various medications.[71] For example, doctors put strong smelling substances on the patients' vulvas to encourage the uterus to return to its proper position.[71] Another tactic was to smell or swallow unsavory herbs to encourage the uterus to flee back to the lower part of the female's stomach.[71]
  • Hematuria: One of the main symptoms of Bilharzia was known and treated by the ancient Egyptians.[72]
  • Colorectal surgery: The Chester Beatty Medical Papyrus, is one of the extant medical papyri, from ancient Egypt. It is dedicated to magical incantations against headaches and remedies for anorectal ailments,[73] and is dated around 1200 BC.

Inventions

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Prosthetic toe from ancient Egypt
 
Inscription detailing ancient Egyptian medical instruments, including bone saws, suction cups, knives and scalpels, retractors, scales, lances, chisels and dental tools.
  • Bandage: The Ancient Egyptians were the first to use adhesive bandages and were also the first to treat wounds with Honey.[74][75]
  • Prosthesis: Prosthetics appeared circa 3,000 BC. with the earliest evidence of prosthetics appearing in ancient Egypt and Iran. The earliest recorded mention of eye prosthetics is from the Egyptian story of the Eye of Horus dates circa 3000 BC, which involves the left eye of Horus being plucked out and then restored by Thoth. The Egyptians were also early pioneers of foot prosthetics, as shown by the wooden toe found on a body from the New Kingdom circa 1000 BC.[76]
  • Intramedullary rod: The oldest intramedullary nail was found in the left knee of a mummy named Usermontu, the remains of an Egyptian man from more than 3,500 years ago. Researchers believe the pin was inserted after the man's death, but before his burial.[77]
  • Cauterization: Cauterization has been used to stop heavy bleeding since antiquity. The process was described in the Edwin Smith Papyrus.[78]
  • Toothpaste: Since 5000 BC, the Egyptians made a tooth powder, which consisted of powdered ashes of ox hooves, myrrh, powdered and burnt eggshells, and pumice.[79]
  • Breath mint:[80]
  • Tampon: The oldest printed medical document, papyrus ebers, refers to the use of soft papyrus tampons by Egyptian women in the fifteenth century B.C.[81]

Innovations

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  • Gynaecology: The Kahun Gynaecological Papyrus, dated to about 1800 BC, deals with women's health gynaecological diseases, fertility, pregnancy, contraception, etc. Treatments are non surgical, comprising applying medicines to the affected body part or swallowing them. The womb is at times seen as the source of complaints manifesting themselves in other body parts.[82]
  • Pregnancy test: The ancient Egyptians watered bags of wheat and barley with the urine of a possibly pregnant woman. Germination indicated pregnancy. The type of grain that sprouted was taken as an indicator of the fetus's sex.[83]
  • Birth control: The Egyptian Ebers Papyrus from 1550 BC and the Kahun Papyrus from 1850 BC have within them some of the earliest documented descriptions of birth control: the use of honey, acacia leaves and lint to be placed in the vagina to block sperm.[84][85]
  • Rhinoplasty: Treatments for the plastic repair of a broken nose are first mentioned in the Edwin Smith Papyrus,[86] a transcription of text dated to the Old Kingdom from 3000 to 2500 BCE.[87]
  • Surgical suture: The earliest reports of surgical suture date to 3000 BC in ancient Egypt, and the oldest known suture is in a mummy from 1100 BC.[88]
  • Ophthalmology: In the Ebers Papyrus from ancient Egypt dating to 1550 BC, a section is devoted to eye diseases.[89]

Mathematics

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Algebra

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  • Numeral system: Written evidence of the use of mathematics dates back to at least 3200 BC with the ivory labels found in Tomb U-j at Abydos. These labels appear to have been used as tags for grave goods and some are inscribed with numbers.[90] Further evidence of the use of the base 10 number system can be found on the Narmer Macehead which depicts offerings of 400,000 oxen, 1,422,000 goats and 120,000 prisoners.[91]
 
Arithmetic values thought to have been represented by parts of the Eye of Horus
  • Binary: The method used for ancient Egyptian multiplication is also closely related to binary numbers. In this method, multiplying one number by a second is performed by a sequence of steps in which a value (initially the first of the two numbers) is either doubled or has the first number added back into it; the order in which these steps are to be performed is given by the binary representation of the second number. This method can be seen in use, for instance, in the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus, which dates to around 1650 BC.[92][93]
  • Fraction and Arithmetics with fractions: The earliest fractions were reciprocals of integers: ancient symbols representing one part of two, one part of three, one part of four, and so on.[94] The Egyptians used Egyptian fractions c. 1000 BC. About 4000 years ago, Egyptians divided with fractions using slightly different methods. They used least common multiples with unit fractions. Their methods gave the same answer as modern methods.[95]
  • Dyadic rational: The Egyptians also had a different notation for dyadic fractions in the Akhmim Wooden Tablet and several Rhind Mathematical Papyrus problems.[96]
  • X (Unknown):
  • Quadratic equation: The ancient Egyptians were the first civilization to develop and solve second-degree (quadratic) equations. This information is found in the Berlin Papyrus fragment. Additionally, the Egyptians solve first-degree algebraic equations found in Rhind Mathematical Papyrus.[97]
  • Exponentiation (Power of two): The ancient Egyptians had laid out tables of a great number of powers of two, rather than recalculating them each time. The decomposition of a number thus consists of finding the powers of two which make it up. The Egyptians knew empirically that a given power of two would only appear once in a number.[98]
  • Regula falsi: The simple false position technique is found in papyri from ancient Egyptian mathematics.[99]
  • Square root: The Rhind Mathematical Papyrus is a copy from 1650 BC of an earlier Berlin Papyrus and other texts – possibly the Kahun Papyrus – that shows how the Egyptians extracted square roots by an inverse proportion method.[100]
  • 0: By 1770 BC, the Egyptians had a symbol for zero in accounting texts. The symbol nfr, meaning beautiful, was also used to indicate the base level in drawings of tombs and pyramids and distances were measured relative to the base line as being above or below this line.[101]
  • Mathematical symbols: The Egyptian hieroglyphic sign for addition resembled a pair of legs walking in the direction in which the text was written (Egyptian could be written either from right to left or left to right), with the reverse sign indicating subtraction:[102]
D54
or
D55

Areas and Volumes

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Measurement

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Cubit rod from the Turin Museum.
  • Area: Records of land area also date to the Early Dynastic Period. The Palermo stone records grants of land expressed in terms of kha and setat. Mathematical papyri also include units of land area in their problems. For example, several problems in the Moscow Mathematical Papyrus give the area of rectangular plots of land in terms of setat and the ratio of the sides and then require the scribe to solve for their exact lengths.[119]
  • Volume:[119]
  • Weight: Weighs were known since the Old Kingdom and perhaps as early as the Early Dynastic Period. Weights were measured in terms of deben. This unit would have been equivalent to 13.6 grams in the Old Kingdom and Middle Kingdom. During the New Kingdom however it was equivalent to 91 grams. For smaller amounts the qedet (110 of a deben) and the shematy (112 of a deben) were used.[120]
  • Triangulation: The use of triangles to estimate distances dates to antiquity. In the 6th century BC, about 250 years prior to the establishment of the Ptolemaic dynasty, the Greek philosopher Thales is recorded as using similar triangles to estimate the height of the pyramids of ancient Egypt. He measured the length of the pyramids' shadows and that of his own at the same moment, and compared the ratios to his height (intercept theorem).[121] Such techniques would have been familiar to the ancient Egyptians. Problem 57 of the Rhind papyrus, a thousand years earlier, defines the seqt or seked as the ratio of the run to the rise of a slope, i.e. the reciprocal of gradients as measured today.

Science

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  • Geologic map: The oldest known geologic map is the Turin papyrus (1150 BCE), which shows the location of building stone and gold deposits in Egypt.[122][123] it would be another 2900 years before the next geologic map was made and this was in France during the mid-1700's. the Turin Papyrus is also a topographic map and the first relatively modern-looking of its kind.

Astronomy

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World's oldest sundial, from Egypt's Valley of the Kings (c. 1500 BC)
  • Decan: Decans are 36 groups of stars (small constellations) used in the Ancient Egyptian astronomy. They rose consecutively on the horizon throughout each Earth rotation. The rising of each decan marked the beginning of a new decanal "hour" (Greek hōra) of the night for the ancient Egyptians, and they were used as a sidereal star clock beginning by at least the 9th or 10th Dynasty (c. 2100 BCE).[124]
  • The discovery of Algol: An Ancient Egyptian Calendar of Lucky and Unlucky Days composed some 3,200 years ago is claimed to be the oldest historical document of the discovery of Algol.[125][126][127]
  • Sothic cycle:
  • Calendar:[128]
  • Star clock:[129]
  • Solstice and Equinox:[130]
  • Sundials: The earliest sundials known from the archaeological record are shadow clocks (1500 BC or BCE) from ancient Egyptian astronomy.[131]

Tools and machines

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  • Core drill: The earliest core drills were those used by the ancient Egyptians, invented in 3000 BC.[132]
  • Papyrus Paper: Papyrus paper was first manufactured in Egypt as far back as the fourth millennium BCE.[133][134][135] The earliest archaeological evidence of papyrus was excavated in 2012 and 2013 at Wadi al-Jarf, an ancient Egyptian harbor located on the Red Sea coast. These documents, the Diary of Merer, date from c. 2560–2550 BCE (end of the reign of Khufu).[134] The papyrus rolls describe the last years of building the Great Pyramid of Giza.[136]
  • Lathe: The lathe is an ancient tool. The earliest evidence of a lathe dates back to Ancient Egypt around 1300 BC.[137] There is also tenuous evidence for its existence at a Mycenaean Greek site, dating back as far as the 13th or 14th century BC.[138]
  • Herodotus Machine: The Herodotus Machine was a machine described by Herodotus, a Greek historian. Herodotus claims this invention enabled the ancient Egyptians to construct the pyramids. The contraption supposedly allowed workers to lift heavy building materials. Herodotus is believed to have encountered the device while traveling through Egypt. With limited reference and no true schematics, this machine has stimulated many historians' theories of how the Ancient Egyptians were able to create pyramids.[139]
  • Lever: Levers (as machines used in lifting heavy weights) were invented in Ancient Egypt. In ancient Egypt technology, workmen used the lever to move and uplift obelisks weighing more than 100 tons. This is evident from the recesses in the large blocks and the handling bosses which could not be used for any purpose other than for levers.[140]
  • Loom: Looms were used in ancient Egypt as early as 4400 BC, a foot pedal was used for the earliest horizontal frame loom.[141]
 
Papyrus (P. BM EA 10591 recto column IX, beginning of lines 13–17)
 
One of four official letters to vizier Khay copied onto a limestone ostracon, in Egyptian Hieratic
 
False door of Nykara, c. 2408 BC, painted limestone, 168 x 111.5 × 6 cm, Cleveland Museum of Art
  • Parchment: Writing on prepared animal skins had a long history, however. David Diringer noted that "the first mention of Egyptian documents written on leather goes back to the Fourth Dynasty (c. 2550–2450 BC), but the earliest of such documents extant are: a fragmentary roll of leather of the Sixth Dynasty (c. 24th century BC), unrolled by Dr. H. Ibscher, and preserved in the Cairo Museum; a roll of the Twelfth Dynasty (c. 1990–1777 BC) now in Berlin; the mathematical text now in the British Museum (MS. 10250); and a document of the reign of Ramses II (early thirteenth century BC)."[162]
  • Doors and Door Locks:[163] – The earliest in records are those represented in the paintings of some ancient Egyptian tombs, in which they are shown as single or double doors, each in a single piece of wood. Doors were once believed to be the literal doorway to the afterlife, and some doors leading to important places included designs of the afterlife. Basic principles of the Pin tumbler lock may date as far back as 2000 BC in Egypt; the lock consisted of a wooden post affixed to the door, and a horizontal bolt that slid into the post. The bolt had vertical openings into which a set of pins fitted. These could be lifted, using a key, to a sufficient height to allow the bolt to move and unlock the door.[164] This wooden lock was one of Egypt's major developments in domestic architecture during classical times.
  • Combs:[165]
  • Bellows: Bellows were used as early as the New Kingdom.[166]
  • Hinge: Ancient remains of stone, marble, wood, and bronze hinges have been found. Some date back to at least Ancient Egypt.[167]
  • Saw: In ancient Egypt, open (unframed) saws made of copper are documented as early as the Early Dynastic Period, circa 3,100–2,686 BC.[168][page needed] Many copper saws were found in tomb No. 3471 dating to the reign of Djer in the 31st century BC.[169] Saws have been used for cutting a variety of materials, including humans (death by sawing). Models of saws have been found in many contexts throughout Egyptian history. Particularly useful are tomb wall illustrations of carpenters at work that show sizes and the use of different types. Egyptian saws were at first serrated, hardened copper which cut on both pull and push strokes. As the saw developed, teeth were raked to cut only on the pull stroke and set with the teeth projecting only on one side, rather than in the modern fashion with an alternating set. Saws were also made of bronze and later iron.
  • Air conditioning: The basic concept behind air conditioning is said to have been applied in ancient Egypt, where reeds were hung in windows and were moistened with trickling water. The evaporation of water cooled the air blowing through the window. This process also made the air more humid, which can be beneficial in a dry desert climate.[170]
  • Hand fan: Hand fans had been used in Egypt as early as 4,000 years ago. Hand fans have been found in King Tut's tomb.[171]
  • Pens and Reed pens: Ancient Egyptians had developed writing on papyrus scrolls when scribes used thin reed brushes or reed pens from the Juncus maritimus or sea rush.[172] In his book A History of Writing, Steven Roger Fischer suggests that on the basis of finds at Saqqara, the reed pen might well have been used for writing on parchment as long ago as the First Dynasty or about 3000 BC.
  • Spoon: Preserved examples of various forms of spoons used by the ancient Egyptians include those composed of ivory, flint, slate and wood; many of them carved with religious symbols.[173][174]
  • Scissors: [175][176]
  • Set square: Found the tomb of architect Kha.[177]
  • Protractors: Found the tomb of architect Kha.[177]
  • Copper Pipes: The c.2400 BCE, Pyramid of Sahure, and adjoining temple complex at Abusir, was discovered to have a network of copper drainage pipes.[178]
  • Archimedes' screw: Although commonly attributed to Archimedes, the device had been used in Ancient Egypt long before his time.[179] The first records of a water screw, or screw pump, date back to Ancient Egypt before the 3rd century BC.[180] The Egyptian screw, used to lift water from the Nile, was composed of tubes wound round a cylinder; as the entire unit rotates, water is lifted within the spiral tube to the higher elevation. A later screw pump design from Egypt had a spiral groove cut on the outside of a solid wooden cylinder and then the cylinder was covered by boards or sheets of metal closely covering the surfaces between the grooves.
  • Screw pump: The screw pump is the oldest positive displacement pump.[181] The first records of a water screw, or screw pump, dates back to Ancient Egypt before the 3rd century BC.[180] The Egyptian screw, used to lift water from the Nile, was composed of tubes wound round a cylinder; as the entire unit rotates, water is lifted within the spiral tube to the higher elevation. A later screw pump design from Egypt had a spiral groove cut on the outside of a solid wooden cylinder and then the cylinder was covered by boards or sheets of metal closely covering the surfaces between the grooves.

Furniture

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Furniture became common first in Ancient Egypt during the Naqada culture.[182] During that period a wide variety of furniture pieces were invented and used.

  • Tables: Some very early tables were made and used by the ancient Egyptians[183] around 2500 BC, using wood and alabaster.[184] They were often little more than stone platforms used to keep objects off the floor, though a few examples of wooden tables have been found in tombs. Food and drinks were usually put on large plates deposed on a pedestal for eating. The Egyptians made use of various small tables and elevated playing boards.
  • Chairs: Chairs were in existence since at least the Early Dynastic Period of Egypt (c. 3100 BC). They were covered with cloth or leather, were made of carved wood, and were much lower than today's chairs – chair seats were sometimes only 10 inches (25 cm) high.[185]
  • camp bed: It is believed that King Tut, who reigned in Egypt from approximately 1332 to 1323 BC, may have had the first camping bed. When Tutankhamun's tomb was opened in 1922 a room full of furniture was found to contain a three-section camping bed that folded up into a Z shape.Though the frail young king, who had a clubfoot, may never have taken part in long-distance explorations, the elaborate folding bed suggests he had an interest in camping and hunting.[186]
  • Chest (furniture): The Ancient Egyptians created the first known chests, using wood or woven reeds, circa 3000 BC.[187]

Arts and Architecture

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Architecture

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Columns with Hathoric capitals
  • Column: In ancient Egyptian architecture as early as 2600 BC, the architect Imhotep made use of stone columns whose surface was carved to reflect the organic form of bundled reeds, like papyrus, lotus and palm. In later Egyptian architecture faceted cylinders were also common. Their form is thought to derive from archaic reed-built shrines. Carved from stone, the columns were highly decorated with carved and painted hieroglyphs, texts, ritual imagery and natural motifs. Egyptian columns are famously present in the Great Hypostyle Hall of Karnak (circa 1224 BC), where 134 columns are lined up in sixteen rows, with some columns reaching heights of 24 metres.
 
Pylon of the Temple of Luxor with the remaining obelisk (of two) in front (the second is in the Place de la Concorde in Paris).
 
Illustrations of various examples of ancient Egyptian cornices, all of them having cavettos
  • Gardens: Gardens appeared in Egypt during the Old Kingdom. There were many types of gardens in Ancient Egypt such as: pleasure gardens, Palace gardens, Temple gardens and Funerary gardens.[191]
  • Windcatcher: Windcatchers were used in traditional ancient Egyptian architecture from the very early historical times,[192] and only started to fall out of use in the mid-1900s C.E..
  • Cavetto: Ancient Egyptian architecture made special use of large cavetto mouldings as a cornice, with only a short fillet (plain vertical face) above, and a torus moulding (convex semi-circle) below. This cavetto cornice is sometimes also known as an "Egyptian cornice", "hollow and roll" or "gorge cornice", and has been suggested to be a reminiscence in stone architecture of the primitive use of bound bunches of reeds as supports for buildings, the weight of the roof bending their tops out.[193]
  • Corbel arch: Corbelling is a technique first applied by the ancient Egyptians and Chaldeans.[194] During the Fourth Dynasty reign of Pharaoh Sneferu (c. 2600 BC), the Ancient Egyptian pyramids used corbel vaults in some of their chambers.

Crafts

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  • Wood carving and Wooden statues: The extreme dryness of the climate of Egypt accounts for the existence of a number of woodcarvings from this remote period. Some wood panels from the tomb of Hosul Egypt, at Saqqara are of the Third Dynasty. The carving consists of Egyptian hieroglyphs and figures in low relief, and the style is extremely delicate and fine. A stool shown on one of the panels has the legs shaped like the fore and hind limbs of an animal, a form common in Egypt for thousands of years.
  • Hollow Glass Production and Glassware: Egypt and Mesopotamia were the first civilizations to produce glass works(3,500 BC.). The oldest specimens of glass are from Egypt and date back to 2000 B.C. In 1500BC the industry was well established in Egypt.[195]
  • Egyptian faience:
  • Cosmetic palette:
 
Painting on papyrus
 
Hieroglyphs: ankh, basket, Eye of Horus, Sun Disk-(Gard. N5)

Music and Dance

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Nefertari, wife of Ramesses II, holding a sistrum
 
Silver and gold plated trumpet and its wooden mute from the tomb of Tutankhamun (1326–1336 BC)
  • Sistrum: The sistrum was a sacred instrument in ancient Egypt. Perhaps originating in the worship of Bastet, it was used in dances and religious ceremonies, particularly in the worship of the goddess Hathor, with the U-shape of the sistrum's handle and frame seen as resembling the face and horns of the cow goddess.[202]
  • Melisma: According to Demetrius of Falorene (3rd century A.D), The Egyptian priests used to praise the gods by singing 7 vowels successively producing sweet sounds. This is the first mention of the melisma which is used in many of the Coptic hymns today.[203]
  • Syllabtic music style: The Syllabtic music style had been used for 2000 years in the coptic church "Tasbe7a".[204]

Literature

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  • Written records: The Ancient Egyptian sentence found in the tomb of Seth-Peribsen is the world's oldest known sentence[205]
 
A raised-relief depiction of Amenemhat I accompanied by deities; the death of Amenemhat I is reported by his son Senusret I in the Story of Sinuhe.

Sports

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Archeologist's drawing of items found in 1895 in an ancient tomb in Naqada, Egypt, thought to resemble the more modern game of skittles. The archeologist conjectured as to the particular arrangement of the items found.[213]
  • Bowling: The earliest known forms of bowling date back to ancient Egypt,[214] with wall drawings depicting bowling being found in a royal Egyptian tomb dated to 5200 B.C.[215] and miniature pins and balls in an Egyptian child's grave about 5200 B.C.[216] Remnants of bowling balls were found among artifacts in ancient Egypt going back to the Egyptian protodynastic period in 3200 BC.[217] What is thought to be a child's game involving porphyry (stone) balls, a miniature trilithon, and nine breccia-veined alabaster vase-shaped figures—thought to resemble the more modern game of skittles—was found in Naqada, Egypt in 1895.[213]
  • Hockey: Drawings on tombs at Beni Hassan in Menia Governorate show players holding bats made of long palm-tree branches, with a bent end similar to that of the hockey bat. The hockey ball was made of compressed papyrus fibers covered with two pieces of leather in the shape of a semicircle.[218][219]
  • Handball: Drawings of this sport are found on the Saqqara tombs, five thousand years old. The ball was made of leather and stuffed with plant fibers or hay, or made of papyrus plants in order to be light and more durable. It was seldom used for more than one match.[218]
  • Gymnastics: Ancient Egyptians were the first to play Gymnastics. They even developed three types of Gymnastics which are: Rhythmic Gymnastics,[220] Gymnastics: Consecutive Vault[221] and floor gymnastics.[222]
  • Weightlifting: Weightlifting was first recorded in ancient Egypt. One method of weightlifting was lifting a heavy sack of sand with one hand and keep it high in a vertical position. The player had to hold that sack of sand for some time and stay in the same position. This rule is still applied in the modern weightlifting.[223][219]
  • High jump:[219]
  • Tug of War: This sport was practiced in the country side.[224][219]
  • Tug of Hoop[219][225]
  • Equilibrium (sport)[219][226]
 
Engravings at the Abusir necropolis showing scenes of archery, wrestling, and stick fighting
  • Fencing: The first historical evidence from archaeology of a fencing contest was found on the wall of a temple within Egypt built at a time dated to approximately 1190 B.C.[227]
  • Tahtib: The oldest traces of tahtib were found on engravings from the archaeological site of Abusir, an extensive necropolis of the Old Kingdom period, located in the south-western suburbs of Cairo. On some of the reliefs of the Pyramid of Sahure (V dynasty, c. 2500 BC);[228] the images and explanatory captions are particularly precise and accurate in their depiction of what seems to be military training using sticks. Tahtib, with archery and wrestling, was then among the three disciplines of warfare taught to soldiers.

Cuisine

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  • Frying: Frying is believed to have first appeared in the ancient Egyptian kitchen, during the Old Kingdom, around 2500 BCE.[229]
  • Banquet: Depictions of banquets can be found in paintings from both the Old Kingdom and New Kingdom. They usually started sometime in the afternoon. Men and women were separated unless they were married. Seating varied according to social status, with those of the highest status sitting on chairs, those slightly lower sat on stools and those lowest in rank sat on the raw floor. Before the food was served, basins were provided along with aromatics and cones of scented fat were lit to spread pleasant smells or to repel insects, depending on the type.[230]
  • Lettuce: Lettuce was first cultivated in ancient Egypt for the production of oil from its seeds. This plant was probably selectively bred by the Egyptians into a plant grown for its edible leaves,[231] with evidence of its cultivation appearing as early as 2680 BC. Lettuce was considered a sacred plant of the reproduction god Min, and it was carried during his festivals and placed near his images. The plant was thought to help the god "perform the sexual act untiringly."[232] Its use in religious ceremonies resulted in the creation of many images in tombs and wall paintings. The cultivated variety appears to have been about 75 cm (30 in) tall and resembled a large version of the modern romaine lettuce. These upright lettuces were developed by the Egyptians and passed to the Greeks, who in turn shared them with the Romans.
 
Fruits of Balanites aegyptiaca from Saqqara. Mastaba of Perneb, 5th dynasty of Egypt. MET.
  • Foie gras and force-feeding: The technique of gavage dates as far back as 2500 BC, when the ancient Egyptians began keeping birds for food and deliberately fattened the birds through force-feeding.[233] Today, France is by far the largest producer and consumer of foie gras, though it is produced and consumed worldwide, particularly in other European nations, the United States, and China.[234]
  • Hardtack and Biscuits: versions using various grains date back to Ancient Rome, and as far back as Ancient Egypt.[235]
  • Smy: thickened milk[b] documented as existent in ancient Egypt.
  • Egyptian cheese: Archaeological evidence for making cheese in Egypt goes back about 5,000 years. In 2018, archeologists from Cairo University and the University of Catania reported the discovery of the oldest known cheese from Egypt. Discovered in the Saqqara necropolis, it is around 3200 years old.[237] Earlier, remains identified as cheese were found in the funeral meal in an Egyptian tomb dating around 2900 BC.[238] Visual evidence of Egyptian cheesemaking was found in Egyptian tomb murals in approximately 2000 BC.[239]
  • Yeast: The earliest definite records of yeast come from Ancient Egypt.[240]
  • Pies: Early pies were in the form of flat, round or freeform crusty cakes called galettes consisting of a crust of ground oats, wheat, rye, or barley containing honey inside. These galettes developed into a form of early sweet pastry or desserts, evidence of which can be found on the tomb walls of the Pharaoh Ramesses II, who ruled from 1304 to 1237 BC, located in the Valley of the Kings.[241]
  • Boiled eggs: In Thebes, Egypt, the tomb of Haremhab, dating to approximately 1420 BCE, shows a depiction of a man carrying bowls of ostrich eggs and other large eggs, presumably those of the pelican, as offerings.[242] In ancient Rome, eggs were preserved using a number of methods and meals often started with an egg course.
  • Marshmallows: The first marshmallows were produced in Egypt around 2000 B.c. and were made by mixing Mallow sap, honey, grains and baked into cakes. Marshmallows were only served to the Gods of Ancient Egypt and pharaohs, as a candy or a dessert.[243][244]

Clothing and Cosmetics

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  • Umbrella: the earliest known parasols in Ancient Egyptian art date back to the Fifth Dynasty, around 2450 BC.[245] The parasol is found in various shapes. In some instances it is depicted as a flabellum, a fan of palm-leaves or coloured feathers fixed on a long handle, resembling those now carried behind the Pope in processions.
  • Hairpin: Hairpins made of metal, ivory, bronze, carved wood, etc. were used in ancient Egypt[246] for securing decorated hairstyles. Such hairpins suggest, as graves show, that many were luxury objects among the Egyptians and later the Greeks, Etruscans, and Romans.
  • Shirt: The world's oldest preserved garment, discovered by Flinders Petrie, is a "highly sophisticated" linen shirt from a First Dynasty Egyptian tomb at Tarkan, dated to c. 3000 BC: "the shoulders and sleeves have been finely pleated to give form-fitting trimness while allowing the wearer room to move. The small fringe formed during weaving along one edge of the cloth has been placed by the designer to decorate the neck opening and side seam."[247]
  • Quilting: The earliest known quilted garment is depicted on the carved ivory figure of a Pharaoh dating from the ancient Egyptian First Dynasty (c. 3400 BC).[248]
  • Makeup: The origin of cosmetics such as Rouge, Eye shadow, etc. dates back to pre dynastic Egypt.[249]
  • Kohl:[250]
  • Liniment: made from Castor oil.[250]
  • Henna and Hair dye: Ancient Egyptian, Ahmose-Henuttamehu (17th Dynasty, 1574 BCE): was probably a daughter of Seqenenre Tao and Ahmose Inhapy: Smith reports that the mummy of Henuttamehu's own hair had been dyed a bright red at the sides, probably with henna.[251]
  • High-heeled shoe: Paintings circa 3,500 BC. show images of men and women wearing high-heeled shoes. High-heeled shoes was also used by butchers to make them move easily over the dead animals.[252]
  • Flip-flops: Thong sandals have been worn for thousands of years, dating back to pictures of them in ancient Egyptian murals from 4,000 BC. Ancient Egyptian sandals were made from papyrus and palm leaves.[253]
  • Hair gel: Analysis of ancient Egyptian mummies has shown that they styled their hair using a fat-based gel. The researchers behind the analysis say that the Egyptians used the product to ensure that their style stayed in place in both life and death. Natalie McCreesh, an archaeological scientist from the KNH Centre for Biomedical Egyptology at the University of Manchester, England, and her colleagues studied hair samples taken from 18 mummies. The oldest is approximately 3,500 years old, but most were excavated from a cemetery in the Dakhleh Oasis in the Western Desert and date from Greco-Roman times, around 2,300 years ago.[254]
  • Gloves:[255]
  • Perfume: The evidence of the first perfumes date to ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Cyprus.[256]

Others

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Hieroglyphs on stela in Louvre, circa 1321 BC
 
A specimen of Proto-Sinaitic script, one of the earliest (if not the very first) phonemic scripts
  • Alphabet: The history of the alphabet started in ancient Egypt. Egyptian writing had a set of some 24 hieroglyphs that are called uniliterals,[259] to represent syllables that begin with a single consonant of their language, plus a vowel (or no vowel) to be supplied by the native speaker. These glyphs were used as pronunciation guides for logograms, to write grammatical inflections, and, later, to transcribe loan words and foreign names.[260] In the Middle Bronze Age, an apparently "alphabetic" system known as the Proto-Sinaitic script appears in Egyptian turquoise mines in the Sinai peninsula dated to circa the 15th century BC, apparently left by Canaanite workers. In 1999, John and Deborah Darnell discovered an even earlier version of this first alphabet at Wadi el-Hol dated to circa 1800 BC and showing evidence of having been adapted from specific forms of Egyptian hieroglyphs that could be dated to circa 2000 BC, strongly suggesting that the first alphabet had been developed about that time.[261] Based on letter appearances and names, it is believed to be based on Egyptian hieroglyphs.[262] This script had no characters representing vowels, although originally it probably was a syllabary, but unneeded symbols were discarded.
 
Senet gaming board inscribed for Amenhotep III with separate sliding drawer, c. 1390–1353 BC
  • Board games / Senet: Senet, found in Predynastic and First Dynasty burials of Egypt, c. 3500 BC and 3100 BC respectively,[263] is the oldest board game known to have existed. Senet was pictured in a fresco found in Merknera's tomb (3300–2700 BC).[264][265]
  • Mehen: Evidence of the game of Mehen is found from the Predynastic period dating from approximately 3000 BC and continues until the end of the Old Kingdom, around 2300 BC.[266]
  • Writing: writing first arose in Egypt around 3300 BC, contemporaneous with Mesopotamia or may predate it.[267][268][269]
  • Monotheism: The earliest known instance of monotheism appeared in 14th century BC Egypt during the reign of Akhenaten.[270]
  • School: Perhaps the earliest formal school was developed in Egypt's Middle Kingdom under the direction of Kheti, treasurer to Mentuhotep II (2061-2010 BC).[271]
  • Sick leave: Already in 1500 BCE, at least some of the workers who built the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs received paid sick leave as well as state-supported health care.[272]
  • Strike action: The first historically certain account of strike action was towards the end of the 20th Dynasty, under Pharaoh Ramses III in ancient Egypt on 14 November in 1152 BC. The artisans of the Royal Necropolis at Deir el-Medina walked off their jobs because they had not been paid.[273][274]
 
A detail from the Narmer Palette, with the oldest known depiction of vexilloids.
 
Designs on some of the labels or token from Abydos, carbon-dated to circa 3400–3200 BC and among the earliest form of writing in Egypt.[288] They are virtually similar to contemporary clay tags from Uruk, Mesopotamia.[289]

Graeco-Roman Egypt

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Hero of Alexandria[290][291][292][293]

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A triangle with sides a, b, and c.
  • He also devised a method for calculating cube roots in the 1st century AD.[295] He also designed a shortest path algorithm, Given two points A and B on one side of a line, find C a point on the straight line, that minimizes AC+BC.
  • Vending machine: The first vending machine was also one of his constructions; when a coin was introduced via a slot on the top of the machine, a set amount of holy water was dispensed. This was included in his list of inventions in his book Mechanics and Optics. When the coin was deposited, it fell upon a pan attached to a lever. The lever opened up a valve which let some water flow out. The pan continued to tilt with the weight of the coin until it fell off, at which point a counter-weight would snap the lever back up and turn off the valve.[296]
  • Force pump: The force pump was widely used in the Roman world, and one application was in a fire-engine.[297]
  • Heron's fountain: A standalone fountain that operates under self-contained hydro-static energy; now called Heron's fountain.[297]
  • In optics, Hero formulated the principle of the shortest path of light: If a ray of light propagates from point A to point B within the same medium, the path-length followed is the shortest possible. In his Catoptrics (1st century CE), he showed that the ordinary law of reflection off a plane surface follows from the premise that the total length of the ray path is a minimum.[298] It was nearly 1000 years later that Alhacen expanded the principle to both reflection and refraction, and the principle was later stated in this form by Pierre de Fermat in 1662; the most modern form is that the optical path is stationary.
  • A wind-wheel operating an organ, marking the first instance in history of wind powering a machine.[299][300]
  • Hero also invented many mechanisms for the Greek theater, including an entirely mechanical play almost ten minutes in length, powered by a binary-like system of ropes, knots, and simple machines operated by a rotating cylindrical cogwheel. The sound of thunder was produced by the mechanically timed dropping of metal balls onto a hidden drum.[297]
  • A programmable cart that was powered by a falling weight. The "program" consisted of strings wrapped around the drive axle.[301]
  • Automatic door: In the 1st century AD, mathematician Heron of Alexandria in Roman Egypt invented the first known automatic door. He described two different automatic door applications. The first application used heat from a fire lit by the city's temple priest. After a few hours atmospheric pressure built up in a brass vessel causing it to pump water into adjacent containers. These containers acted as weights that, through a series of ropes and pulleys, would open the temple's doors at about the time people were to arrive for prayer. Heron used a similar application to open the gates to the city.[302]

Pappus of Alexandria

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Ptolemy

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 .

Others

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The earliest known surviving pair of socks, created by naalbinding. Dating from 300 to 500, these were excavated from Oxyrhynchus on the Nile in Egypt. The split toes were designed for use with sandals. On display in the Victoria and Albert museum, reference 2085&A-1900.
  • Saqiyah: Paddle-driven water-lifting wheels had appeared in ancient Egypt by the 4th century BCE.[310] According to John Peter Oleson, both the compartmented wheel and the hydraulic noria appeared in Egypt by the 4th century BCE, with the sakia being invented there a century later. This is supported by archeological finds at Faiyum, where the oldest archeological evidence of a water wheel has been found, in the form of a sakia dating back to the 3rd century BCE. A papyrus dating to the 2nd century BCE also found in Faiyum mentions a water wheel used for irrigation, a 2nd-century BC fresco found at Alexandria depicts a compartmented sakia, and the writings of Callixenus of Rhodes mention the use of a sakia in the Ptolemaic Kingdom during the reign of Ptolemy IV Philopator in the late 3rd century BCE.[311]
  • Fifteen centuries before Braille, wood-carving techniques were in use in the Catechical school of Alexandria by blind scholars to read and write.[312][313]

Religion

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Islamic Egypt

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Modern Egypt

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Metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET)
 
The PWCT visual programming language.
 
Restoration of Mansourasaurus.

Notes

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  1. ^ Allegedly built so that the circle whose radius is equal to the height of the pyramid has a circumference equal to the perimeter of the base
  2. ^ "Smy, or thickened milk, both human and animal, is often mentioned in medical prescriptions."[236]

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