Already a classic and widely used text, this second edition has been wholly revised and updated in the light of the many discoveries made since its first publication. Michael Rice's bold and original work evokes the fascination and wonder of the most ancient period of Egypt's history.
Covering a huge range of topics, including formative influences in the political and social organization and art of Egypt, the origins of kingship, the age of pyramids, the nature of Egypt's contact with the lands around the Arabian Gulf, and the earliest identifiable developments of the historic Egyptian personality.
Egypt's Making is a scholarly yet readable and imaginative approach to this compelling ancient civilization.
Michael Rice is a specialist in the ancient history of the Middle east . also he is well known for his work in the planning and designing of museums throughout the Arabian peninsula. He is also the highly respected author of Egypt's Making (1990), Archaeology of the Arabian Gulf (1994) and Egypt's Legacy (1997)
This should have been a book I loved. The author has a clear passion for ancient Egypt, and the writing style studiously avoids the dry, soporific effect of academic tomes, preferring instead a fluid and engaging style that holds the attention. Authorial ardour and interesting writing style are two points I usually really appreciate in a book. And yet I found myself unable to truly engage with this one. I found myself distracted and unsettled whenever I cracked it open. Several things just didn’t sit easy with me. First, is that at times it seemed to me that Rice was too enthusiastic. He heaps praise upon the Old Kingdom culture with an effusiveness that just didn’t ring true. As an Egyptologist myself, I understand how fascinating the subject can be, but it definitely had its problems. To Rice, the culture seems to be an unparalleled golden age, an idyll that epitomised perfection. After a chapter or two his gushing wore me down. Another irritation was that frequently Rice would drop a ‘probably’ statement, or even state something as fact, but neither provide a reference nor explain in the text how he knows what he knows. After I spotted a couple of errors (probably due to the outdated nature of this book), my suspicions just became too raised for me to fully enjoy the book. It is worth noting that Rice is not a historian. The book certainly tackles an interesting era in Egypt’s history, and highlights some intriguing aspects of early dynastic culture; it does hold some value for me as a future reference book. I just can’t seem to get into it.
An interesting focus on the earliest era of Ancient Egypt's civilisation. Rice is a specialist in Mesopotamia, and here promotes the idea of a substantial Mesopotamian element in the rise of Egypt. Some of it seemed speculative. He asserts that the red crown of northern Lower Egypt took precedence over the white crown of Upper Egypt; I found no evidence for that. Focussing on the early artefacts, such as a flint and ivory knife, is an unusual and valid perspective.
This is a prettily written popular 'history' of Egypt to about 2000 BCE, after which, in the author's view, Egyptian culture became adulterated through foreign influences. The Old Kingdom and its antecedents, the focus of this study, represent therefore a golden age, a unique instance of a high autochthonic culture virtually free of foreign influence or threat.
Rice's enthusiasm for most-ancient-Egypt is initially infectuous, but I found it tedious after hundreds of pages of superlatives, many of which seemed to me to be dubious when referenced to the many fine illustrations contained in the book. Frankly, a lot of the art and architecture which so impressed him didn't impress me. Rice came to sound, more and more, like someone trying to sell something.
Rice is not, apparently, a professional historian. He does, however, seem quite familiar with the topic--and especially with the early history of the Arabian peninsula, a special interest which leads him to much speculation about trade from the Tigris-Euphrates region to the Nilotic.
Other than extensive treatments of early Egyptian art and architecture and speculations about early trade, this book has a peculiar, concluding excursis into Jungian theories about 'primitive' consciousness, little of which I found particularly illuminating. There's also a brief appendix about dogs in ancient Egypt--for me, the most moving portion of this study.
An oddity - a standard book on Ancient Egyptian history that is as enjoyable as it is informative. Rice's book is driven by a deep sense of wonder as well as profound respect and affection for Ancient Egypt, the forces that shaped it, and the people who created it. The accounting of the events never bogs the reader down in seas of facts yet the book is quite detailed. Rice does not avoid or downplay those pesky archaeological outliers that bedevil egyptologists. Rather, he points them out and gently explains that, while remaining unexplained, they are probably not as sensational as some claim. He does, however, rightly indicate that the recognition of the astronomical preocupations of the Ancient Egyptians was long in coming. On the whole, this is an excellent work from which anyone interested in Egypt will profit.
Emminently readable and authoritative, but somewhat dated now (1990). Porfessional archaeologist Rice was a specialist on ancient Mesopotamia, but used that knowledge to pen this classic on the very earliest period of Egyptian civilisation. I enjoyed this one, and would recommend it if you can find a copy.
In interesting explanation of pre-historic and old kingdom Egypt, those formative times that put ancient Egypt on its course as we now understand it. The book took an unpredictable turn at the end bringing in Jungian individuation as the author felt related to the development of that ancient state.
Dates approximate. Honestly I'm not at all sure I actually read or even really looked like it ... though clearly I checked it out from the library, as I'm holding the check-out slip in my hand.