pharaoh
priests
scribes
all of them
general ancient Egypt
100

As the absolute ruler, the pharaoh owned this entire geographic resource and controlled all its agricultural output.

All the land of Egypt

100

These large stone complexes were managed by priests and served as the earthly homes for the Egyptian gods.

temples

100

Scribes used this formal, picture-based writing system to record sacred texts on temple walls and tombs.

hieroglyphs

100

All three of these roles belonged to this highly privileged, wealthy minority group positioned near the top of the social pyramid.

upper class

100

This vast geographic feature bordered Egypt on the east and west, acting as a natural barrier against foreign invasions.

desert

200

Pharaohs held this supreme military title, personally leading the army into battle to defend or expand Egypt's borders.

Commander-in-Chief

200

Priests performed this multi-step sacred process on the deceased to preserve the body for the afterlife

mummification

200

This reed plant was harvested along the Nile, pressed, and dried into a smooth surface for scribes to write on.

papyrus

200

ndividuals in these roles were unique because they possessed this specific skill, which over 90% of the Egyptian population lacked.

literacy

200

This large, flat-bottomed boat was the primary vehicle used for transporting heavy stones, trade goods, and people along the Nile

barge?

300

To cement their absolute authority, pharaohs were believed to be the earthly embodiment of this falcon-headed god.

Horus

300

Because of their rigorous daily purity rituals, priests were required to wear clothing made from this plant-based fabric rather than animal wool.

linen

300

Scribes were among the few ancient Egyptians who could calculate taxes and measure land borders using this branch of mathematics.

geometry

300

These three classes were completely exempt from paying this, while the lower-class peasants had to pay it using crops and physical labour.

taxes

300

Making up the vast majority of the population, this social class did the heavy lifting of farming, building monuments, and fighting in wars.

peasants

400

This was the pharaoh's primary spiritual duty, a cosmic concept meaning to maintain truth, balance, order, and justice in the kingdom

Ma'at

400

Priests who observed the night sky from temple roofs developed this accurate tracker to predict the crucial annual flooding of the Nile

365-day solar calendar

400

To master the hundreds of complex signs and scripts, young boys had to attend this specialised school for up to a decade

Scribe School

400

Pharaohs, priests, and scribes all shared the heavy responsibility of preserving this cosmic balance, ensuring the kingdom did not fall into chaos.

Ma'at

400

This historical era is famous for the construction of the Great Pyramids of Giza, earning it the nickname the "Age of the Pyramid Builders".

Old Kingdom

500

Lawmaking was entirely in the pharaoh's hands because their spoken word was considered this type of unchangeable command.

Divine decree

500

This powerful individual held the highest priestly title, serving as the pharaoh's right-hand advisor in both religious and political state matters

Who is the Vizier

500

Scribes used this faster, cursive form of everyday handwriting for rapid record-keeping, legal documents, and letters.

Hieratic

500

This common tool, essential to scribes for record-keeping and to priests for temple inventories, was carved from a hollowed-out block of wood to hold black and red ink cakes.

scribe's palette

500

This famous artifact, discovered in 1799, featured the same text written in Hieroglyphs, Demotic, and Greek, finally allowing modern scholars to decipher Egyptian writing.

Rosetta Stone