Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

ZippyDan t1_j72i0ge wrote

>The native Egyptians in Thebaid ("Upper Egypt", ironically now in the south of modern Egypt)

Isn't it Upper Egypt because the Nile flows "backwards" and this is upriver? Rivers generally flow "downward" based on elevation, so upper Egypt was the "higher" ground.

11

Ferengi_Earwax t1_j7367vi wrote

The Nile river flows south to north originating from lake Victoria. It empties into the Mediterranean sea. The "upper Egypt" simply refers to the highlands( south) as opposed to the delta (flatlands, which are to the north). It originates from their originally being 2 Egyptian kingdoms. Lower egypt(delta, but now northern Egypt on the map) and upper Egypt (the highlands, now part of Southern Egypt on modern maps). The first dynasty and pharaohs United both kingdoms and is thought to be depicted in the https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narmer_Palette

They essentially took both kingdoms logo and combined it into one crown you see most pharaohs wearing. https://www.ees.ac.uk/the-royal-crowns-of-egypt

11

ZippyDan t1_j75gviq wrote

You just confirmed what I said...

0

Ferengi_Earwax t1_j77fy8j wrote

I don't mean any insult but your comment wasn't very clear and might be confusing to some people so I decided to clarify it.

3

No-Level-346 t1_j768bku wrote

You're not really answering the question. Why "ironically"?

−1

Ferengi_Earwax t1_j77gl9m wrote

I'm sorry what? I was just clarifying that guys comment for others who might be confused. And as for the irony? Who asked about irony anyway? If you're referring to why it's "ironic" that should be obvious via our comments

1