CHAPTER I. ARCHITECTURE--CIVIL AND MILITARY.
Archaeologists, when visiting Egypt, have so
concentrated their attention upon temples and tombs, that not one
has devoted himself to a careful examination of the existing
remains of private dwellings and military buildings. Few countries,
nevertheless, have preserved so many relics of their ancient civil
architecture. Setting aside towns of Roman or Byzantine date, such
as are found almost intact at Koft (Coptos), at Kom Ombo, and at El
Agandiyeh, one-half at least of ancient Thebes still exists on the
east and south of Karnak. The site of Memphis is covered with
mounds, some of which are from fifty to sixty feet in height, each
containing a core of houses in good preservation. At Kahûn, the
ruins and remains of a whole provincial Twelfth Dynasty town have
been laid bare; at Tell el Mask-hûtah, the granaries of Pithom are
yet standing; at Sãn (Tanis) and Tell Basta (Bubastis), the
Ptolemaic and Saïtic cities contain quarters of which plans might
be made (Note 1), and in many localities which escape the
traveller's notice, there may be seen ruins of private dwellings
which date back to the age of the Ramessides, or to a still earlier
period. As regards fortresses, there are two in the town of Abydos
alone, one of which is at least contemporary with the Sixth
Dynasty; while the ramparts of El Kab, of Kom el Ahmar, of El
Hibeh, and of Dakkeh, as well as part of the fortifications of
Thebes, are still standing, and await the architect who shall deign
to make them an object of serious study.
1.--PRIVATE DWELLINGS.
The soil of Egypt, periodically washed by the inundation, is
a black, compact, homogeneous clay, which becomes of stony hardness
when dry. From immemorial time, the fellahin have used it for the
construction of their houses. The hut of the poorest peasant is a
mere rudely-shaped mass of this clay. A rectangular space, some
eight or ten feet in width, by perhaps sixteen or eighteen feet in
length, is enclosed in a wickerwork of palm- branches, coated on
both sides with a layer of mud. As this coating cracks in the
drying the fissures are filled in, and more coats of mud are daubed
on until the walls attain a thickness of from four inches to a
foot. Finally, the whole is roofed over with palm-branches and
straw, the top being covered in with a thin layer of beaten earth.
The height varies. In most huts, the ceiling is so low that to rise
suddenly is dangerous both to one's head and to the structure,
while in others the roof is six or seven feet from the floor.
Windows, of course, there are none. Sometimes a hole is left in the
middle of the roof to let the smoke out; but this is a refinement
undreamed of by many.
At the first glance, it is not always easy to distinguish
between these huts of wattle and daub and those built with crude
bricks. The ordinary Egyptian brick is a mere oblong block of mud
mixed with chopped straw and a little sand, and dried in the sun.
At a spot where they are about to build, one man is told off to
break up the ground; others carry the clods, and pile them in a
heap, while others again mix them with water, knead the clay with
their feet, and reduce it to a homogeneous paste. This paste, when
sufficiently worked (Note 2), is pressed by the head workman in
moulds made of hard wood, while an assistant carries away the
bricks as fast as they are shaped, and lays them out in rows at a
little distance apart, to dry in the sun. A careful brickmaker will
leave them thus for half a day, or even for a whole day, after
which the bricks are piled in stacks in such wise that the air can
circulate freely among them; and so they remain for a week or two
before they are used. More frequently, however, they are exposed
for only a few hours to the heat of the sun, and the building is
begun while they are yet damp. The mud, however, is so tenacious
that, notwithstanding this carelessness, they are not readily put
out of shape. The outer faces of the bricks become disintegrated by
the action of the weather, but those in the inner part of the wall
remain intact, and are still separable. A good modern workman will
easily mould a thousand bricks a day, and after a week's practice
he may turn out 1,200, 1,500, or even 1,800. The ancient workmen,
whose appliances in no wise differed from those of the present day,
produced equally satisfactory results. The dimensions they
generally adopted were 8.7 x 4.3 x 5.5 inches for ordinary bricks,
or 15.0 x 7.1 x 5.5 for a larger size (Note 3), though both larger
and smaller are often met with in the ruins. Bricks issued from the
royal workshops were sometimes stamped with the cartouches of the
reigning monarch; while those made in private factories bore on the
side a trade mark in red ochre, a squeeze of the moulder's fingers,
or the stamp of the maker. By far the greater number have, however,
no distinctive mark. Burnt bricks were not often used before the
Roman period (Note 4), nor tiles, either flat or curved. Glazed
bricks appear to have been the fashion in the Delta. The finest
specimen that I have seen, namely, one in the Gizeh Museum, is
inscribed in black ink with the cartouches of Rameses III. The
glaze of this brick is green, but other fragments are coloured
blue, red, yellow, or white.
The nature of the soil does not allow of deep foundations. It
consists of a thin bed of made earth, which, except in large towns,
never reaches any degree of thickness; below this comes a very
dense humus, permeated by slender veins of sand; and below this
again--at the level of infiltration-- comes a bed of mud, more or
less soft, according to the season. The native builders of the
present day are content to remove only the made earth, and lay
their foundations on the primeval soil; or, if that lies too deep,
they stop at a yard or so below the surface. The old Egyptians did
likewise; and I have never seen any ancient house of which the
foundations were more than four feet deep. Even this is
exceptional, the depth in most cases being not more than two feet.
They very often did not trouble themselves to cut trenches at all;
they merely levelled the space intended to be covered, and, having
probably watered it to settle the soil, they at once laid the
bricks upon the surface. When the house was finished, the scraps of
mortar, the broken bricks, and all the accumulated refuse of the
work, made a bed of eight inches or a foot in depth, and the base
of the wall thus buried served instead of a foundation. When the
new house rose on the ruins of an older one decayed by time or
ruined by accident, the builders did not even take the trouble to
raze the old walls to the ground. Levelling the surface of the
ruins, they-built upon them at a level a few feet higher than
before: thus each town stands upon one or several artificial
mounds, the tops of which may occasionally rise to a height of from
sixty to eighty feet above the surrounding country. The Greek
historians attributed these artificial mounds to the wisdom of the
kings, and especially to Sesostris, who, as they supposed, wished
to raise the towns above the inundation. Some modern writers have
even described the process, which they explain thus:--A cellular
framework of brick walls, like a huge chess-board, formed the
substructure, the cells being next filled in with earth, and the
houses built upon this immense platform (Note 5).
But where I have excavated, especially at Thebes, I have
never found anything answering to this conception. The intersecting
walls which one finds beneath the later houses are nothing but the
ruins of older dwellings, which in turn rest on others still older.
The slightness of the foundations did not prevent the builders from
boldly running up quite lofty structures. In the ruins of Memphis,
I have observed walls still standing from thirty to forty feet in
height. The builders took no precaution beyond enlarging the base
of the wall, and vaulting the floors.[1] The thickness of an
ordinary wall was about sixteen inches for a low house; but for one
of several storeys, it was increased to three or four feet. Large
beams, embedded here and there in the brickwork or masonry, bound
the whole together, and strengthened the structure. The ground
floor was also frequently built with dressed stones, while the
upper parts were of brick. The limestone of the neighbouring hills
was the stone commonly used for such purposes. The fragments of
sandstone, granite, and alabaster, which are often found mixed in
with it, are generally from some ruined temple; the ancient
Egyptians having pulled their neglected monuments to pieces quite
as unscrupulously as do their modern successors. The houses of an
ancient Egyptian town were clustered round its temple, and the
temple stood in a rectangular enclosure to which access was
obtained through monumental gateways in the surrounding brick wall.
Such towns as were built all at once by prince or king were
fairly regular in plan, having wide paved streets at right angles
to each other, and the buildings in line. The older cities, whose
growth had been determined by the chances and changes of centuries,
were characterised by no such regularity. Their houses stood in a
maze of blind alleys, and narrow, dark, and straggling streets,
with here and there the branch of a canal, almost dried up during
the greater part of the year, and a muddy pond where the cattle
drank and women came for water. Somewhere in each town was an open
space shaded by sycamores or acacias, and hither on market days
came the peas-ants of the district two or three times in the month.
There were also waste places where rubbish and refuse was thrown,
to be quarrelled over by vultures, hawks, and dogs.
The lower classes lived in mere huts which, though built of
bricks, were no better than those of the present fellahin.
At Karnak, in the Pharaonic town; at Kom Ombo, in the Roman
town; and at Medinet Habû, in the Coptic town, the houses in the
poorer quarters have seldom more than twelve or sixteen feet of
frontage. They consist of a ground floor, with sometimes one or two
living-rooms above. The middle- class folk, as shopkeepers,
sub-officials, and foremen, were better housed. Their houses were
brick-built and rather small, yet contained some half- dozen rooms
communicating by means of doorways, which were usually arched over,
and having vaulted roofs in some cases, and in others flat ones.
Some few of the houses were two or three storeys high, and
many were separated from the street by a narrow court, beyond which
the rooms were ranged on either side of a long passage. More
frequently, the court was surrounded on three sides by chambers;
and yet oftener the house fronted close upon the street. In the
latter case the façade consisted of a high wall, whitewashed or
painted, and surmounted by a cornice.
Even in better houses the only ornamentation of their outer
walls consisted in angular grooving, the grooves being surmounted
by representations of two lotus flowers, each pair with the upper
parts of the stalks in contact. The door was the only opening, save
perhaps a few small windows pierced at irregular intervals. Even in
unpretentious houses, the door was often made of stone. The
doorposts projected slightly beyond the surface of the wall, and
the lintel supported a painted or sculptured cornice. Having
crossed the threshold, one passed successively through two
dimly-lighted entrance chambers, the second of which opened into
the central court. The best rooms in the houses of wealthier
citizens were sometimes lighted through a square opening in the
centre of a ceiling supported on wooden columns. In the Twelfth
Dynasty town of Kahûn the shafts of these columns rested upon round
stone bases; they were octagonal, and about ten inches in diameter.
Notwithstanding the prevalence of enteric disease and
ophthalmia, the family crowded together into one or two rooms
during the winter, and slept out on the roof under the shelter of
mosquito nets in summer. On the roof also the women gossiped and
cooked. The ground floor included both store- rooms, barns, and
stables. Private granaries were generally in pairs, brick-built in
the same long conical shape as the state granaries, and carefully
plastered with mud inside and out. Neither did the people of a
house forget to find or to make hiding places in the walls or
floors of their home, where they could secrete their household
treasures--such as nuggets of gold and silver, precious stones, and
jewellery for men and women--from thieves and tax-collectors alike.
Wherever the upper floors still remain standing, they reproduce the
ground-floor plan with scarcely any differences. These upper rooms
were reached by an outside staircase, steep and narrow, and divided
at short intervals by small square landings.
The rooms were oblong, and were lighted only from the
doorway; when it was decided to open windows on the street, they
were mere air-holes near the ceiling, pierced without regularity or
symmetry, fitted with a lattice of wooden cross bars, and secured
by wooden shutters. The floors were bricked or paved, or consisted
still more frequently of merely a layer of rammed earth. The rooms
were not left undecorated; the mud-plaster of the walls, generally
in its native grey, although whitewashed in some cases, was painted
with red or yellow, and ornamented with drawings of interior and
exterior views of a house, and of household vessels and eatables.
Sometimes it was surmounted by only one or two of the usual
Egyptian ventilators; but generally there was a small washhouse on
the roof, and a little chamber for the slaves or guards to sleep
in. The household fire was made in a hollow of the earthen floor,
usually to one side of the room, and the smoke escaped through a
hole in the ceiling; branches of trees, charcoal, and dried cakes
of ass or cow dung were used for fuel.
The mansions of the rich and great covered a large space of
ground. They most frequently stood in the midst of a garden, or of
an enclosed court planted with trees; and, like the commoner
houses, they turned a blank front to the street, consisting of bare
walls, battlemented like those of a fortress. Thus, home-life was
strictly secluded, and the pleasure of seeing was sacrificed for
the advantages of not being seen. The door was approached by a
flight of two or three steps, or by a porch supported on columns
and adorned with statues, which gave it a monumental appearance,
and indicated the social importance of the family.
Sometimes this was preceded by a pylon-gateway, such as
usually heralded the approach to a temple. Inside the enclosure it
was like a small town, divided into quarters by irregular walls.
The dwelling-house stood at the farther end; the granaries,
stabling, and open spaces being distributed in different parts of
the grounds, according to some system to which we as yet possess no
clue. These arrangements, however, were infinitely varied. If I
would convey some idea of the residence of an Egyptian noble,--a
residence half palace, half villa,--I cannot do better than
reproduce two out of the many pictorial plans which have come down
to us among the tomb-paintings of the Eighteenth Dynasty. The first
represent a Theban house. The enclosure is square, and surrounded
by an embattled wall. The main gate opens upon a road bordered with
trees, which runs beside a canal, or perhaps an arm of the Nile.
Low stone walls divide the garden into symmetrical compartments,
like those which are seen to this day in the great gardens of
Ekhmîm or Girgeh.
In the centre is a large trellis supported on four rows of
slender pillars. Four small ponds, two to the right and two to the
left, are stocked with ducks and geese. Two nurseries, two
summer-houses, and various avenues of sycamores, date-palms, and
dôm-palms fill up the intermediate space; while at the end, facing
the entrance, stands a small three-storied house surmounted by a
painted cornice.
The second plan is copied from one of the rock-cut tombs of
Tell el Amarna. Here we see a house situate at the end of the
gardens of the great lord Aï, son-in-law of the Pharaoh Khûenaten,
and himself afterwards king of Egypt. An oblong stone tank with
sloping sides, and two descending flights of steps, faces the
entrance. The building is rectangular, the width being somewhat
greater than the depth. A large doorway opens in the middle of the
front, and gives access to a court planted with trees and flanked
by store-houses fully stocked with provisions.
Two small courts, placed symmetrically in the two farthest
corners, contain the staircases which lead up to the roof terrace.
This first building, however, is but the frame which surrounds the
owner's dwelling. The two frontages are each adorned with a
pillared portico and a pylon. Passing the outer door, we enter a
sort of long central passage, divided by two walls pierced with
doorways, so as to form three successive courts. The inside court
is bordered by chambers; the two others open to right and left upon
two smaller courts, whence flights of steps lead up to the terraced
roof. This central building is called the Akhonûti, or private
dwelling of kings or nobles, to which only the family and intimate
friends had access. The number of storeys and the arrangement of
the façade varied according to the taste of the owner. The frontage
was generally a straight wall. Sometimes it was divided into three
parts, with the middle division projecting, in which case the two
wings were ornamented with a colonnade to each storey, or
surmounted by an open gallery.
The central pavilion sometimes presents the appearance of a
tower, which dominates the rest of the building. The façade is
often decorated with slender colonnettes of painted wood, which
bear no weight, and merely serve to lighten the somewhat severe
aspect of the exterior. Of the internal arrangements, we know but
little. As in the middle-class houses, the sleeping rooms were
probably small and dark; but, on the other hand, the reception
rooms must have been nearly as large as those still in use in the
Arab houses of modern Egypt. The decoration of walls and ceilings
in no wise resembled such scenes or designs as we find in the
tombs.
The ceilings were usually left white; sometimes, however they
were decorated with geometrical patterns, which repeated the
leading motives employed in the sepulchral wall-paintings. Thus we
find examples of meanders interspersed with rosettes,
parti-coloured squares, ox- heads seen frontwise, scrolls, and
flights of geese.
I have touched chiefly upon houses of the second Theban
period,[2] this being in fact the time of which we have most
examples.
The house-shaped lamps which are found in such large numbers
in the Fayûm date only from Roman times; but the Egyptians of that
period continued to build according to the rules which were in
force under the Pharaohs of the Twelfth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth,
and Twentieth Dynasties.
As regards the domestic architecture of the ancient kingdom,
the evidences are few and obscure. Nevertheless, the stelae, tombs,
and coffins of that period often furnish designs which show us the
style of the doorways, and one Fourth Dynasty sarcophagus, that of
Khûfû Poskhû, is carved in the likeness of a house.
2.--FORTRESSES.
Most of the towns, and even most of the larger villages, of
ancient Egypt were walled.
This was an almost necessary consequence of the geographical
characteristics and the political constitution of the country. The
mouths of the defiles which led into the desert needed to be closed
against the Bedawîn; while the great feudal nobles fortified their
houses, their towns, and the villages upon their domains which
commanded either the mountain passes or the narrow parts of the
river, against their king or their neighbours.
The oldest fortresses are those of Abydos, El Kab, and
Semneh. Abydos contained a sanctuary dedicated to Osiris, and was
situate at the entrance to one of the roads leading to the Oasis.
As the renown of the temple attracted pilgrims, so the position of
the city caused it to be frequented by merchants; hence the
prosperity which it derived from the influx of both classes of
strangers exposed the city to incursions of the Libyan tribes.
At Abydos there yet remain two almost perfect strongholds.
The older forms, as it were, the core of that tumulus called by the
Arabs "Kom es Sultan," or "the Mound of the King." The interior of
this building has been excavated to a point some ten or twelve feet
above the ground level, but the walls outside have not yet been
cleared from the surrounding sand and rubbish. In its present
condition, it forms a parallelogram of crude brickwork measuring
410 feet from north to south, and 223 feet from east to west. The
main axis of the structure extends, therefore, from north to south.
The principal gateway opens in the western wall, not far from the
northwest corner: but there would appear to have been two smaller
gates, one in the south front, and one in the east. The walls,
which now stand from twenty-four to thirty-six feet high, have lost
somewhat of their original height. They are about six feet thick at
the top. They were not built all together in uniform layers, but in
huge vertical panels, easily distinguished by the arrangement of
the brickwork. In one division the bedding of the bricks is
strictly horizontal; in the next it is slightly concave, and forms
a very flat reversed arch, of which the extrados rests upon the
ground.
The alternation of these two methods is regularly repeated.
The object of this arrangement is obscure; but it is said that
buildings thus constructed are especially fitted to resist
earthquake shocks. However this may be, the fortress is extremely
ancient, for in the Fifth Dynasty, the nobles of Abydos took
possession of the interior, and, ultimately, so piled it up with
their graves as to deprive it of all strategic value. A second
stronghold, erected a few hundred yards further to the south-east,
replaced that of Kom es Sultan about the time of the Twelfth
Dynasty, and narrowly escaped the fate of the first, under the rule
of the Ramessides. Nothing, in fact, but the sudden decline of the
city, saved the second from being similarly choked and buried.
The early Egyptians possessed no engines calculated to make
an impression on very massive walls.
They knew of but three ways of forcing a stronghold; namely,
scaling the walls, sapping them, or bursting open the gates. The
plan adopted by their engineers in building the second fort is
admirably well calculated to resist each of these modes of attack.
The outer walls are long and straight, without towers or
projections of any kind; they measure 430 feet in length from north
to south, by 255 feet in width. The foundations rest on the sand,
and do not go down more than a foot. The wall is of crude brick, in
horizontal courses. It has a slight batter; is solid, without slits
or loopholes; and is decorated outside with long vertical grooves
or panels, like those depicted on the stelae of the ancient empire.
In its present state, it rises to a height of some thirty-six
feet above the plain; when perfect, it would scarcely have exceeded
forty feet, which height would amply suffice to protect the
garrison from all danger of scaling by portable ladders. The
thickness of the wall is about twenty feet at the base, and sixteen
feet above. The top is destroyed, but the bas- reliefs and mural
paintings show that it must have been crowned with a continuous
cornice, boldly projecting, furnished with a slight low parapet,
and surmounted by battlements, which were generally rounded, but
sometimes, though rarely, squared.
The walk round the top of the ramparts, though diminished by
the parapet, was still twelve or fifteen feet wide. It ran
uninterruptedly along the four sides, and was reached by narrow
staircases formed in the thickness of the walls, but now destroyed.
There was no ditch, but in order to protect the base of the main
wall from sappers, they erected, about ten feet in advance of it, a
battlemented covering wall, some sixteen feet in height.
These precautions sufficed against sap and scaling; but the
gates remained as open gaps in the circuit. It was upon these weak
points that besiegers and besieged alike concentrated their
efforts. The fortress of Abydos had two gates, the main one being
situate at the east end of the north front.
A narrow cutting (A), closed by a massive wooden door, marked
the place in the covering wall. Behind it was a small place d'armes
(B), cut partly in the thickness of the wall, and leading to a
second gate (C) as narrow as the first. When, notwithstanding the
showers of missiles poured upon them from the top of the walls, not
only in front, but also from both sides, the attacking party had
succeeded in carrying this second door, they were not yet in the
heart of the place.
They would still have to traverse an oblong court (D),
closely hemmed in between the outer walls and the cross walls,
which last stood at right angles to the first. Finally, they must
force a last postern (E), which was purposely placed in the most
awkward corner. The leading principle in the construction of
fortress-gates was always the same, but the details varied
according to the taste of the engineer. At the south-east gate of
the fort of Abydos the place d'armes between the two walls is
abolished, and the court is constructed entirely in the thickness
of the main wall; while at Kom el Ahmar, opposite El Kab, the block
of brickwork in the midst of which the gate is cut projects boldly
in front.
The same system of fortification which was in use for
isolated fortresses was also employed for the protection of towns.
At Heliopollis, at Sãn, at Sais, at Thebes, everywhere in short, we
find long straight walls forming plain squares or parallelograms,
without towers or bastions, ditches or outworks. The thickness of
the walls, which varied from thirty to eighty feet, made such
precautions needless. The gates, or at all events the principal
ones, had jambs and lintels of stone, decorated with scenes and
inscriptions; as, for instance, that of Ombos, which Champollion
beheld yet in situ, and which dated from the reign of Thothmes III.
The oldest and best preserved walled city in Egypt, namely, El Kab,
belongs probably to the ancient empire. The Nile washed part of it
away some years ago; but at the beginning of the present century it
formed an irregular quadrilateral enclosure, measuring some 2,100
feet in length, by about a quarter less in breadth. The south front
is constructed on the same principles as the wall at Kom es Sultan,
the bricks being bedded in alternate horizontal and concave
sections. Along the north and west fronts they are laid in
undulating layers from end to end.
The thickness is thirty-eight feet, and the average height
thirty feet; and spacious ramps lead up to the walk upon the walls.
The gates are placed irregularly, one in each side to north, east,
and west, but none in the south face; they are, however, in too
ruinous a state to admit of any plan being taken of them. The
enclosure contained a considerable population, whose dwellings were
unequally distributed, the greater part being concentrated towards
the north and west, where excavations have disclosed the remains of
a large number of houses. The temples were grouped together in a
square enclosure, concentric with the outer wall; and this second
enclosure served for a keep, where the garrison could hold out long
after the rest of the town had fallen into the hands of the enemy.
The rectangular plan, though excellent in a plain, was not
always available in a hilly country.
When the spot to be fortified was situate upon a height, the
Egyptian engineers knew perfectly well how to adapt their lines of
defence to the nature of the site. At Kom Ombo the walls exactly
followed the outline of the isolated mound on which the town was
perched, and presented towards the east a front bristling with
irregular projections, the style of which roughly resembles our
modern bastions. At Kûmmeh and Semneh, in Nubia, where the Nile
rushes over the rocks of the second cataract, the engineering
arrangements are very ingenious, and display much real skill.
Ûsertesen III. had fixed on this pass as the frontier of Egypt, and
the fortresses which he there constructed were intended to bar the
water-way against the vessels of the neighbouring negro tribes. At
Kûmmeh, on the right bank, the position was naturally strong.
Upon a rocky height surrounded by precipices was planned an
irregular square measuring about 200 feet each way. Two elongated
bastions, one on the north-east and the other on the south-east,
guarded respectively the path leading to the gate, and the course
of the river. The covering wall stood thirteen feet high, and
closely followed the line of the main wall, except at the north and
south corners, where it formed two bastion-like projections. At
Semneh, on the opposite bank, the site was less favourable.
The east side was protected by a belt of cliffs going sheer
down to the water's edge; but the three other sides were well-nigh
open. A straight wall, about fifty feet in height, carried along
the cliffs on the side next the river; but the walls looking
towards the plain rose to eighty feet, and bristled with
bastion-like projections (A.B.) jutting out for a distance of fifty
feet from the curtain wall, measuring thirty feet thick at the base
and thirteen feet at the top, and irregularly spaced, according to
the requirements of the defence. These spurs, which are not
battlemented, served in place of towers.
3.--PUBLIC WORKS.