Passage Six The upcoming
movie "The Scorpions King" is a fiction, but recent archeological studies
indicate there really was a King Scorpion in ancient Egypt and that he played a
crucial role in uniting the country and building it into the world’s first
empire. A depiction recently discovered in the Egyptian desert
of the Scorpion King’s victory in battle against the forces of chaos may be the
oldest historical document ever found, some archeologists believe. New
discoveries in his tomb suggest that the first writing may have occurred during
his reign. Moreover, his tomb in the desert at Abydos may be the rudimentary
blueprint upon which subsequent rulers based their own designs. In short, King
Scorpion was one of the fathers of Egyptian civilization. Great achievements for
a man who for nearly 5,000 years was thought to be mythical.
King Scorpion dates from a time when Egypt was composed of two separate
kingdoms. Upper Egypt surrounded the upper portion of the Nile; Lower Egypt
stretched from just south of what is now Cairo northward to the Mediterranean.
For millenniums, all the way back to the ancient Egyptian historian Manetho and
the lists of kings found in Egyptian temples, the first true ruler of Egypt—the
founder of the First Dynasty of pharaohs—has been listed as King Menes. It was
Menes who was thought to have unified Upper and Lower Egypt.
But in 1898, excavations at Hierakonpolis in Upper Egypt revealed sacred objects
dating back to the very beginnings of Egyptian civilization. The most important
of those objects was the so-called Narmer Palette, which depicted a king not
mentioned in Egyptian histories. This King Narmer—a name meaning "striking
catfish’—was depicted wearing both the white crown of Upper Egypt and the red
crown of Lower Egypt, suggesting it was he who had unified the two
lands. Some scholars believe that Narmer and Menes were the
same person. Others claim Narmer was Menes’ immediate predecessor and that his
name was not included on the lists for reasons that are not yet known. The
argument has yet to be settled. Also found in the 1898
excavations was a mace, the traditional symbol of kings. Themace— the oldest
ever found in Egypt—portrays a man wearing the white crown of Upper Egypt,
accompanied by the symbols for king and scorpion. In the absence of any
supporting evidence, however, most archeologists had believed that this King
Scorpion was a mythical figure. One hundred years later,
however, Gunter Dreyer of the German Archeological Institute discovered a tomb
buried in the sands near Abydos, the Egyptian necropolis, or city of the dead,
that he is confident is King Scorpion’s. The 12-room tomb is constructed of mud
bricks and appears to be a downsized replica of Scorpion’s palace. Although the
tomb had been pillaged and the mummy stolen, Dreyer found an ivory scepter, a
clear indication that it was a royal tomb. Carbon-14 dating showed that the
scepter dates from about 3250 BC, making it the oldest scepter found in Egypt.
One room in the tomb was filled with pottery shards, apparently from jars used
to hold wine and other valuables for the afterlife. Inscribed on each of the
jars in ink was the symbol of a scorpion. Dreyer’s most
controversial find in the tomb was a series of 160 bone and ivory tags the size
of postage stamps carved with simple pictures that Dreyer believes are primitive
hieroglyphs. If they are, in fact, writing, they predate the commonly accepted
origin of cuneiform writing in Mesopotamia by 200 years. More
recently, Yale University archeologist John Darnell and his wife Deborah have
discovered a primitive scene carved on rocks near the Qena Bend of the Nile
River that appears to commemorate a victory by King Scorpion, who already ruled
the kingdoms of Abydos and Hierakonpolis, over the kingdom of Naqada-a city that
worshipped Set, the god of chaos. Darnell believes it is the oldest known
historical document, and that it signifies the unification of Upper Egypt 150
years before Narmer unified the entire country. Conquest of Naqada gave King
Scorpion control not only of the Nile, but also of crucial roads leading east to
the Red Sea and west to the oases of the western desert. According to Gunter Dreyer’s finding, which of the following
statements is NOT TRUE
A. Bone and ivory tags are primitive hieroglyphics.
B. Ivory scepter proved the tomb a royal one.
C. Each of the jars has the symbol of a scorpion.
D. The tomb is constructed of metal.