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    Ramose and the Tomb Robbers

    Page 9
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      Thanks to these beliefs and the fact that many of the tombs were underground, a lot have survived. Even though tombs are all about death, they provide us with a lot of knowledge about the way ancient Egyptians lived.

      The ancient Egyptians lived around three thousand years ago. I find it fascinating that we know so much detail about life so long ago.

      Ramose was a real person. His father, Pharaoh Tuthmosis I, lived from 1504–1492 BCE. Some historians believe that his “chief” wife bore him three sons who all died before the pharaoh. A son of a lesser wife therefore became the next pharaoh. No one knows what happened to Ramose and his brothers. I thought it would be interesting to imagine the reasons for the early deaths of the princes. That is how the Ramose stories came about.

      GLOSSARY

      amulet

      Good luck charms worn by ancient Egyptians to protect them against disease and evil. Amulets were also wrapped inside a mummy’s bandages to give good luck to the dead person as they travelled through the underworld.

      Canopic chest

      When the ancient Egyptians mummified bodies, they removed most of the insides (except for the heart). They put the insides in jars and they were in turn put in a chest. This chest, called a Canopic chest after a town called Canopus, was placed in the tomb with the coffin.

      carnelian

      A red stone used in jewellery.

      cowry shell

      An oval-shaped sea shell. The ancient Egyptians used them as good luck charms.

      cubit

      The cubit was the main measurement of distance in ancient Egypt. It was the average length of a man’s arm from his elbow to the tips of his fingers, 52.5 cm.

      deben

      A unit of weight somewhere between 90 and 100 grams.

      Horus eye

      Horus was the hawk-god of ancient Egypt. Horus lost an eye in a battle, but the goddess Hathor restored it. His eye became a symbol of healing and is used in many paintings and sculptures.

      lapis lazuli

      A dark blue semi-precious stone which the Egyptians considered to be more valuable than any other stone because it was the same colour as the heavens.

      niche

      A space or recess cut back into a wall, usually made to store something or to display a statue or a vase.

      palm-width

      The average width of the palm of an Egyptian man’s hand, 7.5 cm.

      papyrus

      A plant with tall, triangular-shaped stems that grows in marshy ground. Ancient Egyptians made a kind of paper from the dried stems of this plant.

      sarcophagus

      A large stone container, usually rectangular, made to house a coffin.

      senet

      A board game played by ancient Egyptians. It involved two players each with seven pieces and was played on a rectangular board divided into thirty squares. Archaeologists have found many senet boards in tombs, but haven’t been able to work out what the rules of the game were.

      underworld, afterlife

      The ancient Egyptians believed that the earth was a flat disc. Beneath the earth was the underworld, a dangerous place. Egyptians believed that after they died they had to first pass through the underworld before they could live forever in the afterlife.

      vizier

      A very important person. He was the pharaoh’s chief minister. He made sure that Egypt was run exactly the way the pharaoh wanted it.

      First published in 2001

      by

      an imprint of Walker Books Australia Pty Ltd

      Locked Bag 22, Newtown

      NSW 2042 Australia

      www.walkerbooks.com.au

      This ebook edition published in 2014

      The moral right of the author has been asserted.

      Text © 2001 Carole Wilkinson

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means – electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise – without the prior written permission of the publisher.

      National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry:

      Wilkinson, Carole, 1950– author.

      Ramose and the tomb robbers / Carole Wilkinson.

      Series: Wilkinson, Carole, 1950– Ramose series; bk. 2.

      For primary school age.

      Subjects: Princes – Juvenile fiction.

      Egypt – Juvenile fiction.

      A823.3

      ISBN: 978-1-925081-61-9 (ePub)

      ISBN: 978-1-925081-60-2 (e-PDF)

      ISBN: 978-1-925081-62-6 (.PRC)

      Cover image (Luxor Museum Statue) © GettyImages.com/Hisham Ibrahim

      Cover image (hieroglyphs) © GettyImages.com/Adam Crowley

      Map by Mini Goss

      Other books by Carole Wilkinson

      Ramose: Prince in Exile

      Ramose: Sting of the Scorpion

      Ramose: Wrath of Ra

      The Dragon Companion

      The Dragonkeeper series

      Dragonkeeper

      Garden of the Purple Dragon

      Dragon Moon

      Dragon Dawn (prequel)

      Blood Brothers

      Shadow Sister

      Young Adult

      Sugar Sugar

      Stagefright

      Picture Book

      The Night We Made the Flag

      True Tales series

      Ned Kelly’s Jerilderie Letter

      The Drum series

      Black Snake

      The Games

      Alexander the Great

      Fromelles: Australia’s Bloodiest Day at War

      The Beat series

      Hatshepsut: The Lost Pharaoh of Egypt

      Find out about Carole’s books on her website www.carolewilkinson.com.au

     

     

     



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