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victory in battle against the forces of chaos may be the oldest historical
document ever found, some archeologists believe.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. The passage is most likely a part of ______.
A. a piece of news
B. an interesting interview
C. a research report
D. a fiction novel