The extension of Egypt into the Middle East did not reach that far as it was halted by the southward move of the Hittites. The inconclusive battle of Megiddo in 1482 BCE, claimed as a victory for Egypt's Thutmose III, nevertheless drew a line beyond which Egypt was unable to establish permanent control of Phoenicia, whose independent city-states continued on for nearly another thousand years until brought under control of the Assyrian, then Persian empires.
They moved into the area of today's Lebanon and western Syria and brought them under control. The fact that the Phoenicians were established in independent city-states meant that unified resistance was not a problem to the Persians. However they did not get as far as the Carthaginian colony of Carthage which remained independent and active until demolished by an expending Rome.
Alexander the Great conquered Phoenicia as part of his drive to take over the Persian Empire.
Pharaohs are just like kings. They rule and take care of their country. Just like any European king in mideveil times they led their country through battles and built structures.
In ancient Egypt the Egyptians took the mummified pharaohs and used a hook and took the brain out through the nose.
Greece had take over Egypt in A.D.
No, mostly just pharaohs were buried in pyramids. Some pharaohs actually killed servants to take with them to the afterlife. Pharaohs paid the embalmer to mummify the servants. To the servants it would be a great honor to be mummified and be taken to the afterlife with their king.
The pharaohs were so important in Egypt cuz they counted towards the gods of ancient Egypt so they respected the pharohs and gave them everything cuz they were afraid that the gods would punish them if they don't.
The Phoenicians had goods which Egypt wanted - timber, foodstuffs, purple dye, minerals, and had a trading fleet to transport it to them. Phoenicia was also in the carriage-trade business, able to take Egyptian goods far afield around the Mediterranean Sea, giving Egypt extra outlets for its own goods.
638
About 1650 BCE.
Answer 1First, lets start by stating that Africa did not have to evade Egypt, because they were already there. The founding kings were of African origins. The first kings of Egypt were Africans from Sudan (Kush). The first time that Egypt was unified was during the reign of an African King. You must always remember no matter what anyone says the fact is that if you look at an ancient map of the world you will see what is Africa.Answer 2What the above answer fails to note is that the people of Upper and Lower Egypt were not "typical" Africans in the sense that the term African refers to a person with black skin. The first Pharaohs of Egypt were of the dominant race in Egypt which was a swarthy group of people, similar to modern Arabs, but certainly not "typical" Africans. There were periods in Ancient Egyptian History where Kush (which was an African Kingdom on the modern border between Egypt and Sudan) conquered Egypt (ca. 712-664 B.C.). These Kushitic Rulers (Dynasty 25) were Black Pharaohs. Other than that, the Pharaohs and contemporary rulers of Egypt have been white or swarthy men, but almost no black men.
Both At Different Points in History.Egypt took over nubia once, then got invaded by Libyans then the Nubians Took over again ect.
Hyksos took over Egypt in 1670 B.C