A New Dawn Treasures of Ancient Egypt


A New Dawn

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Egypt - a land of wonder and mystery

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that's too often misunderstood.

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Over the years, the culture of ancient Egypt has

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hardened into a set of visual cliches - the pyramids,

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the great Sphinx, hieroglyphics, the golden mask of Tutankhamen,

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people in profile, mummies and pharaohs

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and strange animal-headed gods.

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But there is a reason why these things are so familiar.

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People say the history of art began in ancient Greece.

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But it didn't - it started here

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in the two lands of Upper and Lower Egypt.

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In this series, I've been tracking down 30 treasures that deserve to be

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celebrated not just as antiquities,

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but also as genuine masterpieces of art.

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The Egyptians didn't have a word for art

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but don't let that put you off

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because the craftsmen who worked for the Pharaohs and their noblemen

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fashioned a sophisticated visual culture that endured in triumph

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for thousands upon thousands of years.

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In this final episode, I'll be seeking ten treasures

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that reflect Egypt's transition during its last millennium

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from an all-powerful civilisation to a lackey state of the Roman Empire.

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The story begins when Egypt was a super-power

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ruled over by the mighty Pharaoh Ramesses II.

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You can see from these colossal awesome statues that this was

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a nation projecting an aura of invincibility.

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But in the centuries after Ramesses II's death, Egypt first teetered

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and then tumbled into this terminal decline.

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A curious thing, though,

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is that Egyptian art didn't suffer nearly so much.

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The conventional view is that as Egypt declined, so did its art.

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But far from being a static frieze of gods and pharaohs,

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the final phase of Egyptian art

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explodes with unruly vigour and touching humanity.

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With the foreign invaders who conquered Egypt came new styles

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that enriched the country's glorious artistic tradition.

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I'm starting my treasure hunt in Egypt's deep south,

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and travelling back to a time known as the New Kingdom,

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when the land of the pharaohs was at the height of its powers.

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Ramesses II, or Ramesses the Great, ruled for 67 years

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in the 13th century before Christ

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and he's known as the great builder Pharaoh.

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His name is incised on more monuments

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than that of any other Pharaoh in ancient Egyptian history

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and he constructed several temples

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here in lower Nubia including these two behind me which were cut out of

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the sandstone cliffs bordering the Nile at Abu Simbel

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and the one to the left, the Great Temple, was once known as

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the "Temple of Ramesses beloved of the god Amun"

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and it's the quintessential expression

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of how pharaohs of the late New Kingdom chose to portray themselves.

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This magnificent temple is my first treasure.

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Standing beneath these four seated colossi is actually quite

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intimidating because you're placed directly in the position of the

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enemies of Ramesses II about to be trampled underfoot,

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so this is truly art for an autocrat.

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It bludgeons you, as the viewer, into submission.

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It's art that tries in a weird way to actually beat you up.

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You realise that for Ramesses II, size did matter.

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Stupendous scale was everything.

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From an artistic point of view,

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size isn't automatically successful.

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In this case, you could say it is slightly crude,

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even a little bit awkward.

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You sense that the craftsmen who created these colossi

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didn't make allowances for looking up at them from this angle,

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where you can see these thick tree-trunk legs like grain silos.

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Really, you're staring straight up

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at Ramesses II's bulging eyes and into his nostrils.

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It's not very flattering.

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But it completely and effectively conveys the information about

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who's the boss here - the overlord warrior king, Ramesses II.

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As you walk up to the main entrance to the temple, you're

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flanked on either side by these sunk relief carvings depicting

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the enemies of Ramesses II.

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Here you have a row of Nubians - they're bound and tethered,

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they're kneeling in humiliation.

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They're about to be crushed

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beneath the clod-hopping feet of the Pharaoh above.

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The Pharaohs understood the power of propaganda,

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but Ramesses II was the master.

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This temple contains a potent example of the dark art.

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This entire north wall of the inner hall of the temple is devoted

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to one of the defining events

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of the early years of Ramesses II's reign - it is the Battle of Qadesh.

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It is one of the most famous battles of antiquity

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and it records the campaign Ramesses waged against the Hittites

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as he tried to take the fortified town of Qadesh.

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You see here this panoply of activity, a whirl, a frenzy of

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all these different people, animals, chariots, and over here you've

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got the enemy who are, well, I mean they're being completely destroyed.

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But immediately the eye is drawn to the larger figures

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and surprise, surprise, the largest figures of all are those

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of the king, carved in this deep sunk relief fashion so that it could

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never be obliterated by future Pharaohs - quite a clever trick.

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He didn't capture Qadesh but you'd never know it

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if you looked at this wall.

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For me it's a bit like the Trajan's Column of Ancient Egyptian art.

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One of the big themes of this temple is domination -

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time and time again, we see Ramesses II in the guise

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of a very effective warlord.

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Here he adopts the classic Pharaoh pose - victorious, striding,

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smiting his enemies with a mace.

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And you can see, for instance, this thick tangle of bodies

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of people effectively cowering, about to be slaughtered at his feet.

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As you leave behind the pillared entrance hall,

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you head towards the much darker inner sanctum of the temple,

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where you encounter this moment of pure theatre.

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At the back you've got these four figures, hewn out of the rock.

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They represent some of the chief ancient gods of Egypt,

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and Ramesses himself, the king, suddenly identifying himself

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with the most venerable gods of Egypt's religion.

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This is his moment of apotheosis, he's now on a par with the gods.

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And you kind of get the sense

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that his megalomania really knew no bounds.

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This type of art leaves me with mixed feelings,

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a bit of a moral dilemma.

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This is quite a salutary lesson for any would-be tyrants -

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you can see the colossal head and crown of this sculpture here

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has landed with a great thump in front of the temple.

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That's the crown, here's the head of Ramesses, with his headdress,

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a giant ear, that's his brow,

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there's another ear around the corner.

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And in some ways, for me, it's a reminder that Abu Simbel

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is almost repellent.

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It's a bit of a blunt display of omnipotence

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and vainglorious chest thumping

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and it's decorated with all manner of propaganda

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so you don't come here looking for refinement.

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That said, these colossal sculptures are viscerally thrilling

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they really are impressive -

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it's impossible not to succumb

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to the shock and awe of this place.

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The temples at Abu Simbel were just two of the many

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self-aggrandizing monuments that Ramesses built across Egypt.

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His capital, Thebes, is filled with vast statues that

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embody his overblown self-belief.

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Looking at all this grandeur, it's easy to assume that Egyptians

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were obsessed with scale, but that wasn't always the case.

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Now this...

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is called a shabti - it's a mini mummy,

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a funerary figurine that was once placed in a tomb.

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The shabtis were mass produced, you could say they were the first

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mass-produced works of art in history and often, like this one,

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they appear just a little bit rudimentary, quite rough and ready,

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but they played an essential role in Egyptian religious beliefs -

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people genuinely believed that shabtis

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were imbued with magical powers.

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And it's the shabtis that are my second treasure.

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Shabtis were servants in the afterlife who would help

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the owner of the tomb with daily chores.

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So these are all made out of faience...

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Out of faience, which is this glassy ceramic material.

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Here you have the normal servants, and then the overseers.

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They have like these kind of skirts. They are the organisers.

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So let's see some here. I will give you an example of one of them,

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which is quite nice, from the late dynasty,

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so I would say 2,400 years old.

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The colour is just beautiful,

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the way it changes.

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Yes, they mastered the use of these chemicals and minerals.

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And the material is essentially clay stuffed into a mould like this...

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No clay whatsoever. It's pure sand.

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Is it? It's just the desert.

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Just the desert - crushed sand with the addition of some alkali

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that acts as a flux to melt the sand and form this glassy layer.

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I love the fact that the material

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is so simple and just comes from the world of Ancient Egypt.

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Absolutely, it's magical.

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The name of faience in ancient Egypt is "tjehenet",

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which means the dazzling, the sparkling.

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And the idea was to replicate semi-precious stones.

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They wanted turquoise lapis lazuli, all the way from Afghanistan,

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so it was more expensive than gold.

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And then all of a sudden by this kind of magical alchemy

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they could turn the sand, which is available everywhere,

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into this magical precious material.

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Here we have a hedgehog, who is a baby hedgehog,

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and what is the fascinating thing about that,

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this is like a rattle, so if you shake it.

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So inside there are little balls of clay,

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to entertain a little child.

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That is the sweetest thing I have ever seen.

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But does that mean that this was made

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to go in the tomb of a baby?

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Possibly, but then why sadness -

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it was associated with a little child, a favourite toy,

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or something like that.

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-Actually, that is quite an affecting thing, isn't it?

-Yes.

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To look at that little face, I think that is really beautiful.

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Do you think that ancient Egyptians considered them as works of art?

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Or did they just have a practical, religious function?

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Both - look at this example, this is from a late dynasty.

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Look at the details here, this is a work of art.

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It makes you realise why people could believe in gods

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and the afterlife, because if something so magical

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could happen turning sand into that,

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then why couldn't people live for ever?

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In a way they lived.

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You know, this is 4,000-year-old objects,

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and they impress us in the same way

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that they impressed the Egyptian at the time.

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Zahed is also an artist who creates his own shabtis with a modern twist

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using the same ingenious recipe as the ancient Egyptians.

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So what goes in our mixture is 90% silica,

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which comes from the sand,

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and then we add the crushed fine natron salt...

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That's my flux,

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and what we found out from the chemistry,

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they add a bit of limestone, crushed limestone.

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OK, this is like the arts Great British Bake Off.

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Here we are, normally is the colour blue,

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comes from the copper oxide, pure copper oxide.

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-Should I put this in?

-Absolutely, yep, go ahead.

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So we'll give it a good mix to start

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and then add some water to make it into a paste.

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-OK, mix this all in.

-We mix it all in.

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You need to mix it a bit more.

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OK, I can see you itching to do some mixing.

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You need to get the water everywhere.

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That's quite good. It's all come together in a big ball.

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This is as good as it gets.

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Pushing, pushing into all the details.

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'The secret ingredient is natron salt - a kind of baking soda

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'that rises to the surface

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'and lowers the temperature

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'at which the sand melts and becomes glass.'

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-Hey, here he is.

-Here we are.

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Our little alien.

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'The next stage is to leave the little alien

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'standing for a day to allow a magical chemical reaction to occur.'

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When we get it out and start drying,

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you see all the salt growing on the surface.

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How odd. It's like it's rusted.

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The longer you leave it, the more flow of air,

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the more florescence, and you have more salt and more salt...

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The salt is the natron - that fuses with the sand.

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It fuses with the sand.

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-And melts at a lower temperature and turns into glass.

-Turns into glass.

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So this one has been drying for how long?

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-That's been one day.

-That's 24 hours of drying.

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-24 hours of drying.

-And he becomes furry.

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And that's ready to be fired.

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-Can I put him in?

-Yes, go ahead. He will stand.

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It's completely white, but when you put it in the kiln...

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Because the property of the glass,

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that white salty layer,

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will show the colour blue. It's an optical thing.

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-How long does it take to do that?

-About 6 hours. 900, you just start.

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Shall I do it?

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'Six hours later, Zahed's new-born figurine is ready

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'to join his army of free modern-day shabtis.'

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So it is a piece of magical transformation, then?

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Yes, from sand to semi-precious stone.

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Shabtis were servants in the afterlife,

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but my next treasure was made by workers in this life.

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And to find it, I'm off to a village near the Valley of the Kings...

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if my donkey, Pops, has the energy.

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Just over the hill in the desert on the west bank of Thebes

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is the village of Deir El Medina,

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which was home to the artists and craftsmen who created

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the temples and tombs for Ramesses II.

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It's a bit like the ancient Egyptian equivalent of those great

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19th century model villages for workers,

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Bourneville or Port Sunlight.

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But to the Egyptians this was no ordinary village.

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It was a sort of gated community, an exclusive place actually filled with

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stonemasons, draughtsmen, sculptors, and they had a very important task.

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They had to ensure the safe passage to the afterlife of the kings

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who ruled over Egypt.

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Now I'd quite like to go and see it, Pops, shall we give it a go?

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Not far to go now, come on, don't give up at this point.

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What's great about this place is that we know

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the names of the artists as well as where they lived.

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They even have tombs, cut out of the rock, some capped by small pyramids.

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It's a bit like a toy town Egypt - a relief from some

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of the overpowering places I've visited so far.

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Deir el Medina is a very special place because it gives us real

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insight, a rare glimpse into the working practices and daily lives of

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artists, but it also lets us see how they decorated their own tombs,

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in other words, what they painted

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when they were left to their own devices.

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I'm hoping to see a departure from the sometimes stifling

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conventions of official painting as I head down into the tomb

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of a stonemason called Pashedu.

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This is where the burial chamber proper begins, and you can tell

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because you are greeted by these two jackal-headed gods, Anubis,

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on either side guarding the tomb,

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against a very colourful background.

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And you come through, into the chamber proper...

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and...

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you've got all the usual gods, Osiris, Hathor,

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there's an ankh sign, hieroglyphics,

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but the thing that really strikes me

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is this bright yellow which links the entire painting of this tomb.

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It's a very lively colour. It's the antithesis of death, I guess,

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it's sunlight.

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This feels like a quite late spring,

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early summer vision of the afterlife.

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It's like coming across a nugget of gold buried deep within the rock.

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And you can see the way, even with these hieroglyphics,

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that they've been painted

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in quite a seemingly spontaneous rapid, brushy feel

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and that gives the whole space an atmosphere, I think, of informality,

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intimacy which aids the scene in a sense

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because you have Pashedu's family.

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You can see his father there with his snow-white hair.

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It's actually quite a down-to-earth tomb.

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It's been painted by a friend for a friend

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and the fact that they have left things slightly spontaneous

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gives it a freedom like the backgrounds here behind Anubis -

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they are really wonderful.

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You can see the speed with which this has been painted.

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And it's not someone who can't paint a geometric zigzag to kind of help

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create this pattern, it's someone who likes that slightly deliberately

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artless effect and thinks that it really adds something and it does.

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It's got that winning charm, the same kind of charm you might

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find in, say, a homespun patchwork quilt.

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It's a rare and special thing to see the art of the workers.

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In other tombs at Deir El-Medina,

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the paintings are just as fresh and vibrant,

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but they don't break free from the age-old rules of Egyptian art.

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My next treasure does just that

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and it was also found in the workers' village.

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Life in Deir El-Medina wasn't all that easy.

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It was difficult simply transporting water up into the settlement

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so the villagers decided to construct an enormous well.

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After they'd dug down for round about 50 metres, though,

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they had to admit to defeat

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but their bad luck was our good fortune

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because they started using this great pit as a rubbish dump

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and the scraps and odds and ends that were discovered

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down there during the 20th century

0:20:020:20:04

transformed our understanding of ancient Egyptian art.

0:20:040:20:07

What the ancients threw away turned out to be

0:20:080:20:11

manna for Egyptologists who discovered thousands of ostraca,

0:20:110:20:15

like these replicas.

0:20:150:20:17

An ostracon is either a pottery shard or a limestone flint

0:20:180:20:23

which has been used to write down letters, lists, or also sketches.

0:20:230:20:28

-So these are a bit like the e-mails of the day.

-Oh, definitely.

0:20:280:20:32

Tell me who this bloke is, because he looks like you could

0:20:320:20:35

meet him down your local boozer sinking a few pints of beer.

0:20:350:20:37

This one is a caricature of a stonemason, actually.

0:20:370:20:41

So you see the toughness of his daily routine

0:20:410:20:44

and he's very muscle man because actually his work is very tough.

0:20:440:20:48

This presumably is a chisel and a kind of hammer...

0:20:480:20:51

And a hammer, exactly, his tools for his daily work.

0:20:510:20:55

So what does that tell us?

0:20:550:20:56

Well, it appears that actually the ancient Egyptians,

0:20:570:21:01

the draughtsmen here, they were able as well to deal with

0:21:010:21:05

the daily realistic images as well as,

0:21:050:21:10

I would say, more idealistic images,

0:21:100:21:13

like what we are most used to see on temples and inside the tombs.

0:21:130:21:18

Obviously this isn't entirely real,

0:21:180:21:21

because still the conventions of Egyptian art apply.

0:21:210:21:23

-Of course.

-Are there any moments within ostraca

0:21:230:21:26

where you feel that the artist

0:21:260:21:28

actually instinctively breaks free of some of those rules?

0:21:280:21:32

Definitely - you have that on this particular ostracon here.

0:21:320:21:36

This is a really nice example of what

0:21:360:21:38

we call a tipsy-turvy...

0:21:380:21:40

-Topsy-turvy.

-Topsy-turvy world, sorry...

0:21:400:21:43

because the usual iconography

0:21:430:21:45

of that is that you see the king in his chariot

0:21:450:21:48

riding a glorious horse,

0:21:480:21:50

but instead of that you have a mouse riding just a donkey,

0:21:500:21:54

so it's like a mockery, or a very high sense of humour of the scribe.

0:21:540:21:59

These discarded fragments give us

0:21:590:22:01

a glimpse into the inner thoughts of the artists.

0:22:010:22:04

Witty, irreverent, free -

0:22:060:22:07

they offer a welcome contrast

0:22:070:22:09

to the straitlaced formality of Egyptian art.

0:22:090:22:12

And in the Cairo museum, there are even more exquisite examples.

0:22:150:22:20

There's a wonderful dog here,

0:22:200:22:23

and there's tremendous observation that's gone into that small drawing.

0:22:230:22:27

And you really feel close here to the artist's hand.

0:22:270:22:30

And this is a really great cabinet.

0:22:300:22:31

You see a whole variety here.

0:22:310:22:33

This is typical of a big theme of the ostraca.

0:22:330:22:36

You have a cat on its hind legs driving a flock of geese.

0:22:360:22:40

In the ordinary world, in our world, cats chase geese and eat them

0:22:400:22:44

but here it has been flipped on its head

0:22:440:22:46

and the cat has adopted the human role as the protector of the geese.

0:22:460:22:50

It's a paradox.

0:22:500:22:51

And then here, down here right at the bottom,

0:22:510:22:54

appallingly displayed, is one of the most beautiful ostraca of all.

0:22:540:22:58

You can see this female musician,

0:23:000:23:02

with very slender elegant limbs,

0:23:020:23:05

the ringlets of her wig coming down and then this quite transparent,

0:23:050:23:10

quite revealing, clinging dress and she's playing a lute.

0:23:100:23:14

And she's fully frontal which is quite rare in Egyptian art -

0:23:140:23:17

mostly people are shown in profile.

0:23:170:23:19

And the immediate thing you think is that it looks very modern,

0:23:190:23:23

it feels like it could have been a sketch

0:23:230:23:25

done by Modigliani in Paris at the beginning of the 20th century.

0:23:250:23:29

CAR HORNS HOOT

0:23:380:23:40

Things are very volatile here

0:23:470:23:48

and one of the ways that that manifests itself

0:23:480:23:51

is that all around the place I've seen lots of examples

0:23:510:23:54

of really quite exciting street art, graffiti on the walls.

0:23:540:23:58

I can't help thinking that the ostraca are the sort of ancient

0:24:010:24:05

equivalent of graffiti but this is really fascinating because

0:24:050:24:08

contemporary street artists, like this one,

0:24:080:24:11

have in turn been influenced and inspired

0:24:110:24:14

by the art of ancient Egypt.

0:24:140:24:16

I meet the artist who painted this graffiti, Alaa Awad.

0:24:190:24:24

Do you remember when you were a boy

0:24:260:24:28

and you first saw Ancient Egyptian art?

0:24:280:24:31

Do you remember how you felt?

0:24:310:24:34

So, I wonder whether at all you have been inspired

0:24:430:24:45

by the ancient Egyptian ostraca?

0:24:450:24:47

One of Alaa's works I saw in Cairo shows a pharaoh,

0:25:210:25:25

like Ramesses II, smiting Egypt's enemies.

0:25:250:25:29

It sounds to me you are very proud of Egypt's past.

0:25:400:25:43

One thing that Egypt's past does tell us

0:25:580:26:01

is that triumph in war comes at a price.

0:26:010:26:04

Ramesses III's campaigns against his enemies

0:26:040:26:07

led to economic disaster at home.

0:26:070:26:09

The artists' village at Deir El-Medina

0:26:150:26:18

became the focal point of the looming crisis.

0:26:180:26:20

It all started when the workers' pay and rations were late.

0:26:200:26:24

Now as a result, they organised the first recorded

0:26:240:26:27

strike in history - they staged sit-ins,

0:26:270:26:31

they marched on royal temples, and they held demonstrations.

0:26:310:26:33

They were protesting, "we're hungry, we're thirsty,

0:26:330:26:35

"there's no more oil, there's no more fish, no more vegetables."

0:26:350:26:39

One worker even threatened to attack a royal tomb,

0:26:390:26:41

which would have been total sacrilege.

0:26:410:26:43

In the end, some say that Ramesses III had his throat slit

0:26:450:26:49

by members of his harem in about 1155 BC.

0:26:490:26:53

It marked the beginning of a long, slow decline for Egypt.

0:26:540:26:58

I've been thinking about this final millennium

0:27:060:27:09

of ancient Egyptian history

0:27:090:27:11

and it's often written off as a period of political fragmentation,

0:27:110:27:14

social turmoil, of decline - it was a chaotic time of power struggles

0:27:140:27:19

and invasions that ultimately brought about

0:27:190:27:21

the downfall of the Pharaohs.

0:27:210:27:23

The economy was faltering, the gifts of the Nile seemed to have

0:27:230:27:26

withered and dried up, and Egypt appeared to be in constant peril.

0:27:260:27:29

The curious thing, as far as art history is concerned,

0:27:290:27:32

is that all of this conflict and confusion sometimes galvanised

0:27:320:27:36

and reinvigorated Egyptian culture.

0:27:360:27:39

Many of the foreign strongmen who invaded Egypt

0:27:390:27:41

and came to dominate the country wanted to present

0:27:410:27:43

themselves as more Egyptian than the Egyptians,

0:27:430:27:46

none more so than their neighbours up the Nile,

0:27:460:27:49

the Nubians or the Kushites,

0:27:490:27:50

who I saw being trampled underfoot beneath Ramesses II.

0:27:500:27:54

In a remarkable reversal of fortune, the Kushites -

0:27:550:27:58

an African people from what is today Sudan -

0:27:580:28:02

seized Egypt in around 750 BC.

0:28:020:28:04

Not surprisingly, my next treasure is a piece of Nubian art...

0:28:050:28:10

and at the Cairo museum, the director, Mohammed Ali,

0:28:100:28:14

is initiating me in the wonders

0:28:140:28:16

of a little-known cultural renaissance.

0:28:160:28:19

Yes, he does! Don't you think it's a distinctive face?

0:28:500:28:55

Which parts of it are Egyptian,

0:29:020:29:05

and which parts of it are more Nubian?

0:29:050:29:08

What shall I say?

0:29:310:29:33

I can't. I'm finding it hard.

0:29:330:29:35

Which one do you like the most, if you had to choose one?

0:29:360:29:39

Can you choose one?

0:29:390:29:40

I think it is very beautiful.

0:30:030:30:06

I believe you.

0:30:080:30:10

I must admit I feel a bit punch-drunk after

0:30:110:30:14

Mohammed Ali's performance.

0:30:140:30:16

But he does have a point.

0:30:160:30:18

While the black pharaohs harked back to the Egyptian past,

0:30:180:30:21

they reinvigorated the art of the portrait

0:30:210:30:24

and created a fascinating hybrid.

0:30:240:30:27

This alabaster statue of a Kushite princess called Amenirdis

0:30:270:30:31

is imperious yet sexy, though I'm not quite sure about her big ears.

0:30:310:30:37

The Kushites were proud of their African origins

0:30:370:30:40

and didn't hide them.

0:30:400:30:41

This pink granite bust of the Pharaoh Shabako

0:30:410:30:45

is inspired by the art of the Middle Kingdom,

0:30:450:30:47

but his facial features are undeniably Nubian.

0:30:470:30:50

And of all these Kushite works in the Cairo museum,

0:30:530:30:57

the one I most admire is the face of Mentuemhat.

0:30:570:31:01

He looks wise, yet tough, thick-skinned yet astute.

0:31:010:31:06

He has the aura of a man who actually lived

0:31:060:31:09

and was capable of ruling a great city like Thebes.

0:31:090:31:12

It's a fascinating fusion of two different artistic styles.

0:31:120:31:17

And this sphinx with the face of the Nubian pharaoh Taharqo

0:31:180:31:21

proves to me that Egyptian art

0:31:210:31:23

really benefited from a bit of foreign DNA.

0:31:230:31:26

Kushite rule over Egypt lasted about a century.

0:31:380:31:41

But Egypt was easy prey

0:31:410:31:43

and faced repeated invasions from other enemies.

0:31:430:31:46

The Egyptians returned to their ancient gods for succour.

0:31:460:31:51

This spawned a bizarre cult - the worship of animal mummies.

0:31:510:31:55

One of its main centres was Tuna al-Gebel.

0:31:550:31:58

I'm heading deep under the desert sands into 2,500-year-old

0:32:160:32:19

catacombs that were held sacred by the ancient Egyptians.

0:32:190:32:25

I have visited catacombs in the past and they are always so spooky

0:32:400:32:44

because you feel immediately that you've

0:32:440:32:46

stepped into the realm of the dead, these subterranean chambers.

0:32:460:32:49

But this one, this is a catacomb with a difference

0:32:490:32:52

because it was a cemetery for millions, quite literally,

0:32:520:32:57

of mummified animals who were placed in these niches.

0:32:570:33:02

The animal mummies were votive offerings

0:33:020:33:05

given as gifts to the gods to bring health, good luck and protection.

0:33:050:33:09

It's like shopping for a loaf of bread in a bakery.

0:33:090:33:12

This looks like a nice chunky baguette.

0:33:120:33:14

If you have a look, this is one of the animals.

0:33:160:33:21

This is actually a mummified bird.

0:33:210:33:23

It's a sacred ibis and you can just about make out

0:33:230:33:26

the head of the bird curled in on itself, swaddled all around with

0:33:260:33:31

the mummy wrappings and then left, placed in this niche for eternity.

0:33:310:33:37

I'd better put it back and see what else I can find.

0:33:370:33:40

In the 4th century BC, these animal cults became immensely popular.

0:33:440:33:49

It was a huge business for the priests.

0:33:490:33:52

They actually bred baboons and ibises

0:33:520:33:55

just so the pilgrims who came here could buy them.

0:33:550:33:58

This is much, much smarter in here -

0:34:000:34:02

you can see these more carefully cut blocks, I suppose of limestone.

0:34:020:34:07

And then these shrines, steps, leading up to - oh look,

0:34:080:34:14

leading up to a baboon.

0:34:140:34:16

That is a mummified baboon.

0:34:160:34:18

And this is a sort of chapel, a shrine to the God Thoth,

0:34:200:34:24

and this would have been an offering to the god.

0:34:240:34:27

I don't know if I'm supposed to go over here.

0:34:290:34:32

Let's see if we can find a baboon.

0:34:320:34:34

And here is the god.

0:34:390:34:40

He is squatting - you can see a very thick muzzle

0:34:400:34:43

and snout, a sun disk on top of his head.

0:34:430:34:46

Original paintwork, a red for his skin this almost

0:34:480:34:52

like a sort of feathery cloak that he has around his shoulders.

0:34:520:34:56

And then look at the eyes. It looks like mother-of-pearl,

0:34:560:34:59

and it's a reminder that this isn't just a piece of art,

0:34:590:35:01

it's an article of belief.

0:35:010:35:03

Mummification was most certainly an art form for the ancient

0:35:070:35:10

Egyptians. I am sure that there were very many different ateliers,

0:35:100:35:14

vying with each other for being known

0:35:140:35:16

for the best embalming in Thebes or Memphis, or wherever.

0:35:160:35:20

And the late period is very peculiar in the way that the ancient

0:35:200:35:24

Egyptians archaised.

0:35:240:35:26

They went back to the past

0:35:260:35:27

to think of a great time of their civilisation.

0:35:270:35:31

This was just after they had been invaded by the Nubians

0:35:310:35:35

and had kicked them out, had kicked out the Syrians as well,

0:35:350:35:39

and so this was a moment of great national pride and a re-crafting

0:35:390:35:43

of national identity,

0:35:430:35:44

and so by doing this they went back to traditions

0:35:440:35:47

that they knew had been common in earlier periods of Egyptian

0:35:470:35:51

culture, and so this sort of made them grand again in their eyes.

0:35:510:35:56

The ancient Egyptians mummified all types of animals

0:35:560:35:59

because they believed the gods could come down in animal form.

0:35:590:36:02

And animals are neither human, nor quite divine

0:36:020:36:05

because they live on this earth, so they are this intermediary group,

0:36:050:36:08

and they can speak to the gods.

0:36:080:36:10

For example, in the morning the baboons would turn to the sun,

0:36:100:36:14

raise up their hands and cry out,

0:36:140:36:15

and that would help the sun rise, according to the Egyptians.

0:36:150:36:19

And so the baboons became associated with the sun god Ra.

0:36:190:36:22

So there were very few animals

0:36:220:36:24

that weren't mummified in religious rituals.

0:36:240:36:26

It's debatable whether they are works of art.

0:36:290:36:32

though this menagerie of the dead reminds me of Damien Hirst.

0:36:320:36:36

As well as mummies, the obsession with animals

0:36:370:36:40

produced refined sculptures

0:36:400:36:42

like this delightful cat that was discovered at Saqqara.

0:36:420:36:46

But my next treasure is no pussy cat.

0:36:460:36:48

It's arguably the weirdest masterpiece of all Egyptian art.

0:36:480:36:52

Allow me to introduce you to a very distinctive deity called Tawaret.

0:37:010:37:05

She's hardly the sexiest of Egyptian Goddesses.

0:37:050:37:08

In fact, she looks quite terrifying.

0:37:080:37:10

She's a composite of several different beasts.

0:37:100:37:13

She has a head of a hippopotamus

0:37:130:37:15

along with a hippo's swollen body.

0:37:150:37:17

She has the paws of a lion, and then some human

0:37:170:37:20

attributes as well, including those pendulous breasts.

0:37:200:37:24

The thing about Tawaret is that, although she looks terrifying,

0:37:240:37:28

she was actually a protective goddess,

0:37:280:37:30

who protected women during childbirth.

0:37:300:37:33

And she's been sculpted from a very hard stone called greywacke, and

0:37:330:37:37

the sculptor's done a tremendous job because he's managed to manipulate

0:37:370:37:42

tough material into plump, soft, Mrs Blobby-like forms - she's swollen,

0:37:420:37:49

almost pneumatic, there's a sense of pressure from within ballooning

0:37:490:37:52

outwards, which is a really effective trick to have pulled off.

0:37:520:37:57

You have to look beyond that slightly grisly,

0:37:570:37:59

scary visage and see the inner beauty within and once you do,

0:37:590:38:03

I think you'll quite like Tawaret as well.

0:38:030:38:06

One of the big turning points in Egypt's long history

0:38:090:38:12

came in 332 BC with another invasion -

0:38:120:38:17

this time by one of the most famous names from antiquity,

0:38:170:38:21

Alexander the Great.

0:38:210:38:23

The Greek hero swept into Egypt and was greeted by the people

0:38:230:38:27

as a liberator from the Persians who had been ruling the country.

0:38:270:38:31

Alexander - seen here in Luxor Temple - did the politic thing

0:38:310:38:35

and paid tribute to the Egyptian gods.

0:38:350:38:38

And his arrival had an immediate and surprising impact on Egyptian art.

0:38:380:38:43

To witness it, I return to Tuna El-Gebel to visit

0:38:430:38:47

the tomb of a priest called Petosiris.

0:38:470:38:49

This tomb is very rare and it's fascinating

0:38:510:38:54

because of the decoration in this inner porch.

0:38:540:38:57

You have these scenes of daily life, everyday scenes

0:38:570:39:00

which, in itself, is quite a traditional Egyptian subject.

0:39:000:39:04

So it's reviving this old Egyptian tradition, and yet the style

0:39:040:39:08

of the scenes doesn't really look Egyptian at all, it looks Greek.

0:39:080:39:12

So if you have a look down here, here are some labourers.

0:39:140:39:18

They're harvesting grapes, they're about to make wine,

0:39:180:39:20

and yet it could be a sort of Bacchic scene,

0:39:200:39:23

these could be followers of Dionysus, surrounded by very lush,

0:39:230:39:26

scrolling vines, there's a sense of energy, a greater movement

0:39:260:39:32

and an attempt at naturalism, which is a sort of Greek trait.

0:39:320:39:35

You can see this go that the artist has had at trying to show

0:39:350:39:40

the drapery as it folds over the human form

0:39:400:39:43

and here there's a naked man, who's plucking grapes,

0:39:430:39:47

but that torso is very different

0:39:470:39:49

to the kinds of torsos you normally find

0:39:490:39:52

in Egyptian art, often quite rigid, blank, little schematised.

0:39:520:39:55

Here, there's an attempt to actually show the musculature.

0:39:550:39:59

You can see, over on the other wall, more of these scenes.

0:39:590:40:02

So for instance, up here they're collecting grain.

0:40:030:40:07

There's a sense of something quite new,

0:40:070:40:09

a glimmer of a whole different style

0:40:090:40:12

that's trying to be grafted onto the Egyptian canon

0:40:120:40:16

with its registers and bands, with its baselines and profiled feet.

0:40:160:40:20

And in many ways it's a little bit awkward,

0:40:200:40:23

it's a little bit misshapen.

0:40:230:40:24

I'm not convinced that this is great art,

0:40:240:40:27

but it is fascinating art and the reason is Petosiris has commissioned

0:40:270:40:31

an artist or a designer, who may have been Egyptian, but he was

0:40:310:40:35

undoubtedly influenced by Greek art and he's trying to demonstrate that

0:40:350:40:39

in the way that he's representing this wall, these scenes.

0:40:390:40:42

And the reason Petosiris did that is

0:40:420:40:44

because he lived at a very important crossroads in history.

0:40:440:40:50

All of a sudden, Alexander the Great had swept in and conquered Egypt

0:40:500:40:54

and no one was quite sure what way the wind was blowing.

0:40:540:40:58

It's possible that the Greeks, the Macedonians,

0:40:580:41:01

wouldn't have lasted and that one day the Egyptians would come back

0:41:010:41:05

into power but for now Greek culture was very much in vogue

0:41:050:41:08

and this is what Petosiris wanted to broadcast.

0:41:080:41:12

I guess it's no surprise that the politically astute Petosiris

0:41:200:41:24

wanted to imitate the art of his new overlords,

0:41:240:41:26

but what about the Greeks themselves?

0:41:260:41:29

They were no strangers to beauty.

0:41:290:41:31

Perhaps they'd fall for the charms of Egyptian art?

0:41:310:41:35

Alexander the Great is a little bit of a glamorous enigma to me

0:41:350:41:38

because obviously he's the peerless warrior king

0:41:380:41:41

but he was dead at 32, and you could argue that he

0:41:410:41:44

destroyed as much as he created,

0:41:440:41:46

most infamously when he sacked the magnificent city of Persepolis

0:41:460:41:49

in 330 BC.

0:41:490:41:51

But he was a man of culture, he had great artists in his entourage,

0:41:510:41:54

he had people like Lysippus and Apelles.

0:41:540:41:57

And he lived at the beginning of this new phase in classical art,

0:41:570:42:01

the so-called Hellenistic style,

0:42:010:42:03

this great thunderous, tumultuous,

0:42:030:42:05

almost Baroque type of art

0:42:050:42:06

that couldn't be more different from that ordered

0:42:060:42:09

and sometimes quite restrained tradition of Egyptian art.

0:42:090:42:12

So I'm really intrigued to find out what happened

0:42:120:42:15

when those two styles came together.

0:42:150:42:18

Did they clash or did they fuse, and ultimately, which one won out?

0:42:180:42:22

After the death of Alexander, one of his generals,

0:42:270:42:30

Ptolemy, became Pharaoh.

0:42:300:42:32

He was the first of a dynasty of 15 Ptolemies who ruled

0:42:320:42:35

Egypt for the next 300 years.

0:42:350:42:38

They based themselves in Lower Egypt, in the north of the country.

0:42:380:42:42

Before he left Egypt to carry on conquering the known world,

0:42:420:42:46

Alexander had a vision of a vast metropolis built here

0:42:460:42:49

on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea, and the city

0:42:490:42:52

that he founded here still bears his name today, Alexandria.

0:42:520:42:56

Alexandria was the powerbase of Ptolemaic Egypt

0:42:580:43:01

and one of the great cities of antiquity.

0:43:010:43:04

Undoubtedly, the most spectacular sight at Alexandria once towered for

0:43:040:43:08

hundreds of feet into the sky, just over there on the Island of Pharos.

0:43:080:43:12

And it was a great lighthouse, topped with this mighty beacon

0:43:120:43:15

that was visible from miles and miles out to sea.

0:43:150:43:18

It was once one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.

0:43:180:43:21

It must have been a colossal statement

0:43:210:43:24

of Ptolemaic power over Egypt.

0:43:240:43:26

The lighthouse was constructed out of these whopping great blocks

0:43:270:43:31

of red granite, each one weighing about 75 tonnes.

0:43:310:43:34

And it was destroyed by successive earthquakes in later centuries

0:43:340:43:39

and most of it's now underwater.

0:43:390:43:43

When marine archaeologists excavated

0:43:430:43:45

the ruins of the lighthouse recently,

0:43:450:43:47

they discovered ancient works of art languishing on the seabed.

0:43:470:43:51

One of the colossal statues that they dredged up from the base

0:43:520:43:55

of the lighthouse is just over there and it's a curious hybrid really

0:43:550:44:00

because it presents Ptolemy II in the traditional guise of a pharaoh.

0:44:000:44:05

You can see the pillar supporting his back.

0:44:050:44:07

He's got the double crown of upper and lower Egypt,

0:44:070:44:10

he's wearing a pharaoh's kilt, he's got that very stiff,

0:44:100:44:13

non-naturalistic torso fully frontal with arms clenched at either side.

0:44:130:44:17

But there is a glimmer of a new style creeping into the statue.

0:44:170:44:21

If you look at the face, which admittedly is quite eroded

0:44:210:44:24

because it's been immersed in the sea, you can

0:44:240:44:26

make out these locks of hair,

0:44:260:44:28

flickering from beneath the headdress - they're very Greek,

0:44:280:44:31

very Alexander the Great.

0:44:310:44:33

In one sense, it's a brilliant metaphor for what happened to Egypt

0:44:330:44:36

in the next few centuries because it's a Greek head

0:44:360:44:38

on an Egyptian body, just as you had this Greek Macedonian

0:44:380:44:42

elite ruling the Egyptian people, but from an art historical

0:44:420:44:45

point of view, it's perhaps slightly less successful,

0:44:450:44:48

because the two styles, Greek and Egyptian, jar,

0:44:480:44:50

they butt up against each other.

0:44:500:44:52

To find my treasure, I am going to have to leave Egypt briefly.

0:44:530:44:57

I return to the Egyptian Museum in Berlin,

0:45:030:45:06

home to the world-famous bust of Nefertiti.

0:45:060:45:09

This time, I'm here to see a less well-known work of art.

0:45:100:45:13

I defy anyone looking at this head to deny that it is a

0:45:150:45:18

masterpiece of world sculpture.

0:45:180:45:20

Now it's a portrait of a middle- aged bald man, probably a priest,

0:45:210:45:26

and it's made from this highly polished hard stone called

0:45:260:45:29

greywacke, and it's slightly smaller than I had expected,

0:45:290:45:32

it's less than life-sized, but it is still this ball of concentrated

0:45:320:45:36

expression and energy, there's such a palpable sense of character here.

0:45:360:45:40

He has this fierce gaze, like a political bruiser, and those

0:45:400:45:44

heavy lips that feel like he is about to argue or remonstrate.

0:45:440:45:47

At any minute he's about to speak to us,

0:45:470:45:50

so that it feels like portraiture

0:45:500:45:52

in a modern sense, in the sense that we would understand today.

0:45:520:45:55

You've got all of these Egyptian traits like the supporting

0:45:550:45:59

back pillar, his outlined eyes, the smooth bald head.

0:45:590:46:03

But you have something else as well,

0:46:030:46:05

the influence of art from the Mediterranean elsewhere in that

0:46:050:46:09

sense of realism - the crows-feet, the wrinkles, the furrows, and

0:46:090:46:13

most important for me, the way that this skin is soft and supple, yet

0:46:130:46:18

stretched tight across all of these different dithers of his cranium.

0:46:180:46:22

That is a brilliant piece of sculpture.

0:46:220:46:24

And in that sense, he is this wonderful amalgamation of two

0:46:240:46:29

different traditions that usually didn't really go very well together.

0:46:290:46:32

So if you still have questions about the lifelessness, supposedly,

0:46:340:46:37

of ancient Egyptian art, just ask our chap here,

0:46:370:46:40

because I suspect he'd give you an answer that would be curt,

0:46:400:46:44

but which you would find pretty persuasive.

0:46:440:46:47

The Green Head is a genuine masterpiece,

0:46:540:46:57

but it didn't herald a new dawn for Egyptian art.

0:46:570:47:01

And I've got a theory that what we call Egyptomania,

0:47:010:47:05

that fascination with the magical and mysterious world of the pharaohs

0:47:050:47:09

actually began long ago in antiquity itself, long before Napoleon,

0:47:090:47:14

English lords, or Hitler became obsessed by Egyptian treasures.

0:47:140:47:18

The foreign conquerors who ruled Egypt were equally inspired

0:47:180:47:21

and seduced by the past of this great country.

0:47:210:47:25

Under the Ptolemies, Egyptian culture

0:47:260:47:29

returned to its archaic roots again.

0:47:290:47:30

Instead of mimicking the classical style of Athens,

0:47:370:47:40

they gave Egypt beautiful temples where the Pharaohs of old

0:47:400:47:44

would have felt quite at home.

0:47:440:47:46

My next treasure is one of the greatest of these -

0:47:460:47:49

the temple of Horus at Edfu.

0:47:490:47:51

Built by the Greeks but dedicated to one of Egypt's oldest

0:47:570:48:01

and most revered gods - Horus the falcon.

0:48:010:48:05

It's fascinating to see how the Ptolemies embraced Egypt's

0:48:050:48:08

well-established visual language with new vigour.

0:48:080:48:11

They needed the powerful Egyptian priests on their side,

0:48:110:48:15

so what better than to give them a temple like this?

0:48:150:48:19

This is probably the best preserved temple in Egypt

0:48:190:48:22

and it provides this wonderful impression

0:48:220:48:25

of the grandeur of the temples

0:48:250:48:27

that was experienced by the ancient Egyptians themselves, because every

0:48:270:48:31

surface is covered with decoration. You can see these sumptuous

0:48:310:48:35

sunk relief carvings and actually, in places, traces of pigment.

0:48:350:48:40

All of this would have been a polychrome display,

0:48:400:48:43

visually magnificent.

0:48:430:48:45

And there's a detail about this colonnaded court that

0:48:450:48:47

I particularly like, which is

0:48:470:48:49

that each of the capitals on the columns is different.

0:48:490:48:53

And the craftsmen have relished the decoration of those capitals.

0:48:530:48:58

They are individual as a snowflake, they are beautiful.

0:48:580:49:01

And over here, there's a surviving colossal,

0:49:010:49:04

black granite statue of the falcon god Horus,

0:49:040:49:08

wearing the double crown of Ancient Egypt,

0:49:080:49:11

upper and lower Egypt combined.

0:49:110:49:14

And it fuses divinity and kingship. It's a very powerful piece.

0:49:140:49:18

It's a very beautiful piece, sleek.

0:49:180:49:19

I bet Brancusi would have loved something like this.

0:49:190:49:22

If you have a look at his expression,

0:49:220:49:24

he looks slightly grumpy, I think!

0:49:240:49:26

Perhaps he's sad that he's rooted to the spot,

0:49:280:49:31

and can't take off and soar above the temple.

0:49:310:49:34

Oh look! There's Horus, look, look, look!

0:49:340:49:37

As in all Egyptian temples, the centrepiece is the sanctuary,

0:49:430:49:47

the holy of holies.

0:49:470:49:49

It contains a replica of Horus's sacred boat.

0:49:490:49:54

But if you look over here, right at the back,

0:49:540:49:56

you've got possibly the most revealing artefact in the temple,

0:49:560:50:00

because this thing is the oldest part of the temple,

0:50:000:50:04

and it doesn't date from the Ptolemaic period at all.

0:50:040:50:07

It must have been the shrine of the temple that was on this site,

0:50:070:50:12

before the current temple was built.

0:50:120:50:15

And it's highly instructive that the Ptolemies have decided to keep it

0:50:150:50:20

because this is a statement of intent on their part.

0:50:200:50:23

They're saying that we want to feel continuous with Egypt's past.

0:50:230:50:29

This way?

0:50:380:50:40

This is a piece of luck really, I've bumped into Mohammed,

0:50:400:50:43

the chief inspector of the temple and he's offered to take me this

0:50:430:50:48

special route, which looks like it involves, well, actually clambering

0:50:480:50:52

up the side of the wall of the temple,

0:50:520:50:54

to get a proper view from the top,

0:50:540:50:55

but it's quite special because people don't normally see this.

0:50:550:50:59

Keep on going?

0:51:000:51:01

It's a little bit hairy there.

0:51:150:51:16

What a fantastic vista.

0:51:180:51:21

This is a great vantage point to get a sense of the plan,

0:51:210:51:23

the layout of the temple.

0:51:230:51:25

You can see this mass of the pylon, the colonnaded court.

0:51:250:51:29

I mean, it's a spectacular temple,

0:51:290:51:32

but I'll tell you what I find quite curious about it is that this

0:51:320:51:35

was built over a period of around 180 years

0:51:350:51:38

during the reigns of the Ptolemies, who were Greek Macedonian

0:51:380:51:42

and I was expecting to see some evidence of that Hellenistic culture

0:51:420:51:47

in the architecture and the decoration but you can't find it.

0:51:470:51:51

Everything here is traditionally on the nose Egyptian.

0:51:510:51:56

And I guess what it suggests is that the Ptolemies didn't feel

0:51:560:51:59

so powerful that they could impose wholesale

0:51:590:52:02

their foreign culture on Egypt.

0:52:020:52:04

Instead they had to embellish and lavish money

0:52:040:52:07

and funds to create enormous temple complexes just like this one,

0:52:070:52:11

essentially to keep the Egyptian priests sweet.

0:52:110:52:15

In the end, it wasn't the Egyptian priests that the Ptolemies had

0:52:200:52:24

to worry about, but a new superpower in the Mediterranean - Rome.

0:52:240:52:28

The Egypt of the Pharaohs was about to

0:52:300:52:32

complete its epic 3,000-year journey.

0:52:320:52:34

Its end came in Alexandria and it couldn't have been more dramatic.

0:52:360:52:41

The scenario pitted the Ancient World's most famous woman,

0:52:410:52:44

Cleopatra, against Octavian, the future Augustus,

0:52:440:52:48

first emperor of Rome.

0:52:480:52:50

The trouble with Cleopatra is that despite her legend,

0:52:510:52:54

she remains elusive.

0:52:540:52:56

In popular culture, she appears as this ravishing temptress,

0:52:560:52:59

so by rights we should be ending the series with

0:52:590:53:02

a beautiful image of Egypt's most famous queen.

0:53:020:53:04

But the trouble is, not many contemporary likenesses of her have

0:53:040:53:07

survived, and of those that have, one of the most reliable is this.

0:53:070:53:11

It's an image on a coin, and as you can see, she was no beauty.

0:53:130:53:18

This is not how Elizabeth Taylor appears playing the role.

0:53:180:53:22

She's got a hooked nose, this very pointy chin,

0:53:220:53:25

she looks really like a wicked stepmother in a fairy-tale.

0:53:250:53:29

Legend has it,

0:53:290:53:30

after defeat by Octavian, Cleopatra committed suicide in her

0:53:300:53:35

mausoleum which is thought to lie beneath the waves in the harbour.

0:53:350:53:38

I leave Alexandria behind in the quest for my final treasure

0:53:410:53:45

and head to a town called Dendera

0:53:450:53:47

where Cleopatra built a temple

0:53:470:53:49

dedicated to the mother goddess Hathor.

0:53:490:53:51

It's one of ancient Egypt's last great temples and it's very special.

0:53:550:53:59

The interior is a stunning multi-coloured visual feast,

0:54:010:54:05

the like of which I've not seen anywhere else in Egypt.

0:54:050:54:09

It's a very vivid space, with bright blues, some of the reds

0:54:090:54:14

and ochres still apparent.

0:54:140:54:16

It's been recently cleaned. You can

0:54:160:54:18

see there's the dark film of filth on one side and it's left

0:54:180:54:22

this visual spectacle of what this temple must have been like.

0:54:220:54:25

Cleopatra features in a massive relief on the back wall

0:54:370:54:40

of the temple with her son by Julius Caesar, Caesarion.

0:54:400:54:43

In artistic terms, it's nothing new.

0:54:430:54:47

I'm here to meet someone else, a character who would have an

0:54:510:54:54

important role to play in Christian art in the future.

0:54:540:54:58

I'm here to meet the forefather of the Devil.

0:54:580:55:02

One of the innovations of temple design under the Ptolemies

0:55:020:55:05

was this building.

0:55:050:55:07

It's known as the Mammisi, or birth house, and it's a smaller

0:55:070:55:10

temple, usually placed at right angles to the big building,

0:55:100:55:14

and it celebrates rituals associated with the birth

0:55:140:55:17

of the child God Horus,

0:55:170:55:19

and his relationship with the mother goddess, Isis or Hathor.

0:55:190:55:23

But my favourite part of the birth house is this guy,

0:55:230:55:27

who's one of the most curious of Egyptian gods.

0:55:270:55:30

He's my favourite member of the Egyptian religious pantheon.

0:55:300:55:33

He's a dwarf god. He's known as Bes.

0:55:330:55:36

Once you've started to see him, then in sites like this,

0:55:360:55:40

he suddenly seems to appear everywhere.

0:55:400:55:42

You see, here he is again, this is Bes, and yep, you can see he's

0:56:010:56:05

got all of his classic attributes here. He's really ridiculously

0:56:050:56:10

ugly, he's got this bushy beard, he's fat, he's squat, he's

0:56:100:56:14

often standing there with his great tongue lolling out of his head,

0:56:140:56:18

you often see his penis, and unlike most of the gods in Egyptian art,

0:56:180:56:23

he is face on, he's full frontal.

0:56:230:56:25

There is something unashamed about Bes.

0:56:250:56:28

And the reason I like him

0:56:280:56:30

is because he's got this real whiff of anarchy and mischief.

0:56:300:56:33

He's so ugly that he's a prototype for devils and medieval gargoyles.

0:56:330:56:37

But in ancient Egypt he was actually a sort of protector god.

0:56:370:56:40

He was on the side of the people.

0:56:400:56:42

He warded off evil spirits during childbirth.

0:56:420:56:45

He was a god associated with music and dancing and sex

0:56:450:56:48

and drinking, all of the good things, and I think of him

0:56:480:56:51

as like the grit in the pearl of Egyptian art.

0:56:510:56:54

I return to Britain and to Kingston Lacy,

0:57:010:57:04

the home of a 19th-century adventurer called William Bankes,

0:57:040:57:09

where I had my first taste of Ancient Egypt.

0:57:090:57:11

Now I've been to many of the places that Bankes explored,

0:57:110:57:15

I feel very different about the art of that great civilisation.

0:57:150:57:18

A powerful Mesopotamian king

0:57:200:57:22

once said that gold in ancient Egypt was as plentiful as dirt,

0:57:220:57:25

and he was right.

0:57:250:57:27

During three spectacular millennia, ancient Egyptian art reached

0:57:270:57:30

uncharted summits of luxury and magnificence and colossal scale.

0:57:300:57:34

But during my travels I've discovered something a little

0:57:340:57:37

less shiny and bombastic, like the vigorous dwarf god Bes,

0:57:370:57:41

friend alike to expectant mothers and beer-swilling carousers,

0:57:410:57:44

or those homely visions of paradise

0:57:440:57:46

in the workers' tombs, humble shabti figurines,

0:57:460:57:49

scraps of pottery decorated with delightfully rapid sketches

0:57:490:57:54

that are thrilled about the texture of a bird's wing

0:57:540:57:57

or the fur of a dog.

0:57:570:57:58

And I used to think that I had something of a handle on what

0:57:580:58:01

ancient Egyptian art was all about, but now I realise

0:58:010:58:04

that to really understand it would take several lifetimes.

0:58:040:58:07

It could be intimate, as well as intimidating,

0:58:070:58:09

it was down to earth, as much as it was divine.

0:58:090:58:12

And why not? Because the ancient Egyptians held fervent,

0:58:120:58:15

profound beliefs about the afterlife, so of course,

0:58:150:58:17

they understood that there could be more than one route to eternity.

0:58:170:58:21

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