The double crown of the Pharaoh signified his reign (and the unification) of both Lower and Upper Egypt: the white crown of Upper Egypt and the red crown of Lower Egypt.
The symbol of Upper Egypt is a tall, white crown.The symbol of Lower Egypt is the red crown. So, if you were leader of both, you would wear the double crown(one inside the other). However, the pharaoh would also have a variety of other headdresses to wear eg. the nemes headdress, or the blue war crown, etc.
The white crown is called the 'Hedjet'The red crown is called the 'Deshret'The double crown is called the 'Pschent'The blue crown is called the 'Khepresh'The stripy headdress is called the 'Nemes'
without it there would be no Egypt
Because it was interested in death and dying.
The double crown of the Pharaoh signified his reign (and the unification) of both Lower and Upper Egypt: the white crown of Upper Egypt and the red crown of Lower Egypt.
Upper Egypt and wanted to unify Upper and Lower Egypt so he wore a double crown.
The symbol of Upper Egypt is a tall, white crown.The symbol of Lower Egypt is the red crown. So, if you were leader of both, you would wear the double crown(one inside the other). However, the pharaoh would also have a variety of other headdresses to wear eg. the nemes headdress, or the blue war crown, etc.
On the double crown of Egypt is a cobra ready to strike, symbolizing Wadjet, who was a Lower Egyptian god, and was considered a protector of Egypt.
The double crown was meant to show that they were the rulers of both Upper Egypt and Lower Egypt; which at certain times during Egyptian history were either two separate countries or a single united country.A double crown indicates a united country of both northern and southern Egypt.This is usually referred to as being King of the Two Lands; or being King of upper (south) and lower (north) Egypt.The long pointy crown with a knobbly top is the white crown of Southern Egypt and the one with the flat top is the red crown of Northern Egypt.You often see the white crown inside the red one. Sometimes you also see the King wearing either one or the other.
Pharaohs in ancient Egypt had many crowns, but there are four most prominent ones: the red crown of Lower Egypt (called the d.sh.r.t), the white crown of Upper Egypt (called the h.dj.t), and the blue ceremonial crown (called the kh.pr.sh). Red and white eventually became a double crown symbolizing the united kingdoms of Lower and Upper Egypt, and it became known as the s.kh.mt. or in Greek the pschent. During military campaigns, especially battles, pharaoh wore the blue crown, but it was also used on special days unrelated to war. It's important to note that vowels aren't preserved in hieroglyphic writing, so today nobody knows how these words were pronounced. It's customary to insert 'e' for all missing vowels except where a 'y' might be more appropriate at the end of a word, so the names of the crowns would become Deshret, Hedjet, Khepresh, and Sekhemty.
The white crown is called the 'Hedjet'The red crown is called the 'Deshret'The double crown is called the 'Pschent'The blue crown is called the 'Khepresh'The stripy headdress is called the 'Nemes'
Egypt was split into two sections, each with a king ~ One with a white crown, one with a red. When the two parts were joined together, they did the same with the crown, so Tut lead a unified Egypt.
its not
The crown-of-throns is a large starfish with multiple arms. The crown-of-throns is so important right now because it helps with coral reef biodiversity and acts as a reminder to Christians.
without it there would be no Egypt
there like family