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قراءة كتاب A History of Art in Ancient Egypt, Vol. 1 (of 2)

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A History of Art in Ancient Egypt, Vol. 1 (of 2)

A History of Art in Ancient Egypt, Vol. 1 (of 2)

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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A HISTORY OF ART IN ANCIENT EGYPT.

A HISTORY OF ART IN ANCIENT EGYPT

 

FROM THE FRENCH
OF
GEORGES PERROT,
PROFESSOR IN THE FACULTY OF LETTERS, PARIS; MEMBER OF THE INSTITUTE
AND
CHARLES CHIPIEZ.

 

ILLUSTRATED WITH FIVE HUNDRED AND NINETY-EIGHT ENGRAVINGS IN THE TEXT, AND FOURTEEN STEEL AND COLOURED PLATES.

 

IN TWO VOLUMES.—VOL. I.

 

TRANSLATED AND EDITED BY
WALTER ARMSTRONG, B. A., Oxon.,
AUTHOR OF "ALFRED STEVENS," ETC.

 

London: CHAPMAN AND HALL, Limited.
New York: A. C. ARMSTRONG AND SON.
1883.

 

London:
R. Clay, Sons, and Taylor,
BREAD STREET HILL.


PREFACE.

M. Perrot's name as a classical scholar and archæologist, and M. Chipiez's as a penetrating critic of architecture, stand so high that any work from their pens is sure of a warm welcome from all students of the material remains of antiquity. These volumes are the first instalment of an undertaking which has for its aim the history and critical analysis of that great organic growth which, beginning with the Pharaohs and ending with the Roman Emperors, forms what is called Antique Art. The reception accorded to this instalment in its original form is sufficient proof that the eulogium prefixed to the German translation by an eminent living Egyptologist, Professor Georg Ebers, is well deserved; "The first section," he says, "of this work, is broad and comprehensive in conception, and delicate in execution; it treats Egyptian art in a fashion which has never previously been approached." In clothing it in a language which will, I hope, enable it to reach a still wider public, my one endeavour has been that it should lose as little as possible, either in substance or form.

A certain amount of repetition is inevitable in a work of this kind when issued, as this was, in parts, and in one place[1] I have ventured to omit matter which had already been given at some length, but with that exception I have followed M. Perrot's words as closely as the difference of idiom would allow. Another kind of repetition, with which, perhaps, some readers may be inclined to quarrel, forced itself upon the author as the lesser of two evils. He was compelled either to sacrifice detail and precision in attempting to carry on at once the history of all the Egyptian arts and of their connection with the national religion and civilization, or to go back upon his footsteps now and again in tracing each art successively from its birth to its decay. The latter alternative was chosen as the only one consistent with the final aim of his work.

Stated in a few words, that aim is to trace the course of the great plastic evolution which culminated in the age of Pericles and came to an end in that of Marcus Aurelius. That evolution forms a complete organic whole, with a birthday, a deathday, and an unbroken chain of cause and effect uniting the two. To objectors who may say that the art of India, of China, of Japan, should have been included in the scheme, it may be answered: this is the life, not of two, or three, but of one. M. Perrot has been careful, therefore, to discriminate between those characteristics of Egyptian art which may be referred either to the national beliefs and modes of thought, or to undeveloped material conditions, such as the want or superstitious disuse of iron, and those which, being determined by the very nature of the problems which art has to solve, formed a starting point for the arts of all later civilizations. By means of well-chosen examples he shows that the art of the Egyptians went through the same process of development as those of other and later nationalities, and that the real distinguishing characteristic of the sculptures and paintings of the Nile Valley was a continual tendency to simplification and generalization, arising partly from the habit of mind and hand created by the hieroglyphic writing, partly from the stubborn nature of the chief materials employed.

To this characteristic he might, perhaps, have added another, which is sufficiently remarkable in an art which had at least three thousand years of vitality, namely, its freedom from individual expression. The realism of the Egyptians was a broad realism. There is in it no sign of that research into detail which distinguishes most imitative art and is to be found even in that of their immediate successors; and yet, during all those long centuries of alternate renascence and decay, we find no vestige of an attempt to raise art above imitation. No suspicion of its expressive power seems to have dawned on the Egyptian mind, which, so far as the plastic arts were concerned, never produced anything that in the language of modern criticism could be called a creation. In this particular Egypt is more closely allied to those nations of the far east whose art does not come within the scope of M. Perrot's inquiry, than to the great civilizations which formed its own posterity.


Before the late troubles intervened to draw attention of a different kind to the Nile Valley, the finding of a pit full of royal mummies and sepulchral objects in the western mountain at Thebes had occurred to give a fresh stimulus to the interest in Egyptian history, and to encourage those who were doing their best to lead England to take her proper share in the work of exploration. A short account of this discovery, which took place after M. Perrot's book was complete, and of some of the numerous art objects with which it has enriched the Boulak Museum, will be found in an Appendix to the second volume.


My acknowledgments for generous assistance are due to Dr. Birch, Mr. Reginald Stuart Poole, and Miss A. B. Edwards.

W. A.


CONTENTS.

PAGE
  INTRODUCTION i-lxi
  TO THE READER lxiii-lxiv
 
CHAPTER I.
  THE GENERAL CHARACTER OF EGYPTIAN CIVILIZATION.
§ 1. Egypt's place in the History of the World 1-2
§ 2. The Valley of the Nile and its Inhabitants 2-16
§ 3. The Great Divisions of Egyptian History 16-21
§ 4. The Constitution of Egyptian Society—Influence of that Constitution upon Monuments of Art 21-44
§ 5. The Egyptian Religion and its Influence upon the Plastic Arts 44-69
§ 6. That Egyptian Art did not escape the Law of Change, and that its History may therefore be written 70-89
§ 7. Of the place held in this work by the Monuments of the Memphite Period, and of the Limits of our Inquiry 89-93
 
CHAPTER II.
  PRINCIPLES AND GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS OF EGYPTIAN ARCHITECTURE.
§ 1. Method to be Employed by us in our Study of this Architecture 94-96
§ 2. General Principles of Form 96-102
§ 3. General Principles of Construction.—Materials 103-106
§ 4. Dressed Construction 106-113
§ 5. Compact Construction 113-114
§ 6. Construction by Assemblage 114-119
§ 7. Decoration 119-125
 
CHAPTER III.
  SEPULCHRAL ARCHITECTURE.
§ 1. The Egyptian Belief as to a Future Life and its Influence upon their Sepulchral Architecture 126-163
§ 2. The Tomb under the Ancient Empire 163-241
  The Mastabas of the Necropolis of Memphis 165-189
  The Pyramids 189-241
§ 3. The Tomb under the Middle Empire 241-254
§ 4. The Tomb under the New Empire 255-317
 
CHAPTER IV.
  THE SACRED ARCHITECTURE OF EGYPT.
§ 1. The Temple under the Ancient Empire 318-333
§ 2. The Temple under the Middle Empire 333-335
§ 3. The Temple under the New Empire 335-433
§ 4. General Characteristics of the Egyptian Temple 434-444

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

  COLOURED PLATES.  
    To face page
  The Arab Chain, from near Keneh 102
  The Pyramids, from old Cairo 102
 

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