Ancient Egypt History
Ancient Egypt - The Land of Egypt
The Nile, as a means of communication | The Nile, as a means of communication |
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The possession of the Nile was of extraordinary advantage to Egypt, not
merely as the source of fertility, but as a means of rapid communication Mountains, forests, torrents, marshes, jungles, are the curses of "new countries," forming, until they have been cut through, bridged over, or tunnelled under, insurmountable barriers, hindering commerce and causing hatreds through isolation. Egypt had from the first a broad road driven through it from end to end—a
road seven hundred miles long, and seldom much less than a mile wide—which
allowed of ready and rapid communication between the remotest parts of the
kingdom. Thirty-two centuries ago an Egyptian king built a temple on the confines of the Mediterranean entirely of stone which he floated down the Nile for six hundred and fifty miles from the quarries of Assouan (Syêné); and the passage up the river is for a considerable portion of the year as easy as the passage down. Northerly winds—the famous "Etesian gales"—prevail in Egypt during the whole of the summer and autumn, and by hoisting a sail it is almost always possible to ascend the stream at a good pace. If the sail be dropped, the current will at all times take a vessel down-stream; and thus boats, and even vessels of a large size, pass up and down the water-way with equal facility.
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