Early Civilizations: Ancient Egypt in Context

Front Cover
American Univ in Cairo Press, 1993 - History - 158 pages
For anthropologists an 'early civilization' is historically the earliest form of a class-based society. In this original and provocative book, Bruce Trigger places our understanding of ancient Egypt in perspective through a comparative examination of Egypt during the Old and Middle Kingdoms with the early civilizations of the Inkas, the Shang and Western Chou of China, the Aztecs and their neighbors, the classic Mayas, the Yorubas and Benin, and ancient Mesopotamia. Professor Trigger investigates the economic foundations of these early civilizations, their politics and culture, and their religious traditions, drawing some surprising conclusions. His innovative work adds a new dimension to our understanding of early civilizations, charting new courses for their study in the future and indicating for both anthropologists and Egyptologists the value of comparative studies. Enhanced by an important bibliographical essay, the book broadens our understanding of the similarities and differences among ancient civilizations.
 

Contents

III
1
IV
6
V
8
VI
14
VII
17
VIII
22
IX
23
X
25
XXV
74
XXVI
81
XXVII
84
XXVIII
86
XXIX
87
XXX
89
XXXI
94
XXXII
98

XI
27
XII
28
XIII
34
XIV
38
XV
44
XVI
46
XVII
49
XVIII
52
XIX
55
XX
61
XXI
64
XXII
66
XXIII
69
XXIV
71
XXXIII
105
XXXIV
108
XXXV
109
XXXVI
113
XXXVII
115
XXXVIII
117
XXXIX
118
XL
119
XLI
120
XLII
121
XLIII
123
XLIV
147
Copyright

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information