Religion and everyday life
As these spirits evolved into gods, the deity then had
 to have its own special type of house  built, a temple. This building 
would then need full-time staff, to attend to the gods wants and needs, 
such as performing the proper rituals, making the proper offerings etc, 
and also to administer the gods blessings back to the people - the 
Priests.  Since the Kings own divinity was legitimized by the 
priesthood, it was also very necessary to insure that the temple and 
priesthood were properly provided for. 
So in addition to the offerings from the people, the 
temple was given large land grants,  to insure a source of income. Then 
of course, the god would need a wife - a high priestess. Here, as with 
the priests, there was a hierarchy, from the high priestess herself, to 
the lowest level priestesses, who preformed household chores and often 
served as temple prostitutes.  In return for these services, the god was
 thought to protect its people, ensuring fertility and well-being. But 
if the gods needs weren't met, the deity might bring down wrath on the 
community, in the form of plague, famine or some such natural disaster. 
The insignia or standard of a Nome clearly showed which god protected 
the town, and as the town gained prominence, so too did the town's god.
Religion was interwoven,  not only into the pharaohs 
power, but into life itself. It was the deity of a town who the people 
turned to, in order to prevent the everyday hazards of living. They used
 magic spells, charms, folklore and amulets to appealed to the deity for
 protection against hazards, and to intercede on their behalf, for 
anything from the Nile flooding, to sowing seeds and harvesting crops, 
to protection from poisonous snakes, and  for safe childbirth.
Only a few of the many original deities ended up in 
the Egyptian pantheon, and even then, their popularity waxed and waned 
through the thousands of years of Egyptian history. Another reason for 
complexity was that when people moved, their god did too. This meant 
that at the new town, there was sometimes a battle between the old and 
new gods - but the Egyptian gods were easily merged, so that you would 
have one god taking over the other god's attributes and abilities. That 
is why, some of the ancient gods of Neolithic and Pre-dynastic Egypt, 
those that had maintained their popularity, became main gods in the 
later Egyptian pantheon: Amun of Thebes, Ptah of Hikuptah (Memphis), 
Horus (the Elder) of Nekhem, Set/Seth of Tukh (Ombos), Ra of Iunu 
(Heliopolis), Min of Gebtu (Koptos), Hathor of Dendra and Osiris of 
Abydos.
        Food
As a matter of fact, the only food prohibition in the 
ancient world that we can find, is the Nubian ban on "FISH" (ya fish - 
go figure). They felt that fish were unclean, and the king wouldn't give
 audience to anyone who had eaten fish. (The logic here may have been 
based on the fact that, some fish - like pork, can have worms in the 
flesh, and will make a person ill, if not cooked properly, that's our 
guess!). Egyptians  had many sources of oil, but they preferred  olive 
oil, which they used for cooking, lighting and as an oil for the skin. 
The prohibition against eating 
"FISH" is taken from the "Victory Stela" of Nubian King Piye. Click here
 for the text of his Stela. "Surrender of the last opponents section": <<CLICK>> 
Clothing
Egyptian climate with its hot summers and mild winters
 favored light clothing made from plant fibers, predominantly linen. The
 manufacture of clothes was women's work. It was mostly done at home, 
but there were workshops run by noblemen or other men of means. Fibers 
were made by beating and combing the flax plant, which could then be 
spun into thread. The weaving was done at first on horizontal looms, 
which were often just pegs rammed into the ground, but later they 
developed vertical looms.  
Their tools such as knives and needles changed over 
the centuries. Blades were made from stone during the Neolithic, then 
from copper, and from bronze during the Middle Kingdom and finally from 
iron. Though flint knives, which had sharper edges than iron ones, 
continued to be used,  ever decreasingly until Roman times. Needles were
 fashioned from wood, bone and metal. The Egyptians succeeded in making 
extremely thin millimeter thick eyes in copper needles. Scissors came 
into general use late in Egypt's history, though the principle was known
 since the second millennium B.C.
     hygiene
Clearly, being so clean all the time, was associated 
with fanatical behavior by outsiders. The ancient Romans thought that a 
lack of body hair, was some kind of terrible deformity. But not in 
Egypt, people there believed that body hair was shameful and unclean. 
Wild animals and barbarian people had hair, not the sophisticated, 
super-advanced Egyptian civilization. 
Being hairless was accomplished by shaving, or using 
depilatory creams, and even rubbing one’s hair off with a pumice stone. 
Men, women, and even the children of ancient Egypt, all shaved their 
heads bald and wore elaborate specially-made wigs.  These wigs were made
 of natural or artificial hair, and were specially designed to keep 
one’s head cool. 
The Greek historian/storyteller "Herodotus" maintained
 that it was the Egyptians, who invented circumcision, and all who 
practiced it, learnt it from them. Which logically follows, because 
there is a hygienic value to circumcision. If not kept scrupulously 
clean, a male can have problems there - it's not all about torturing 
little boys.
       Science
There is always an argument as to whether it was the 
Sumerians, Egyptians or Indus valley people, who invented writing, 
mathematics, astronomy, calendars etc, etc, etc. As soon as a site is 
discovered that proves the one, another site is discovered that proves 
the other. Suffice to say that they were contemporary with each other, 
and in contact with each other. Though logically you could say that all 
things originated in Egypt. So far though, no one has disproved that the
 Sumerians invented the wheel and wagon. Although it was the Egyptians, 
who took the wagon to its highest refinement, with their light and agile
 chariots. 
In writing, the Egyptians eventually came to use two 
scripts for their language. Hieroglyphics recorded their language with a
 mixed system of sound signs and picture signs.  Demotic script is a 
more cursive development of the hieratic script, it was the standard 
script for business and legal affairs throughout the country; 
Hieroglyphics  was retained for writing religious texts and inscriptions
 on monuments.
The Egyptians followed a calendar system of 360 days, 
with three seasons, each made up of 4 months, with thirty days in each 
month. The seasons of the Egyptians, corresponded to the cycles of the 
Nile, and were known as Inundation (pronounced akhet which lasted from 
June 21st to October 21st), Emergence (pronounced proyet which lasted 
from October 21st to February 21st), and Summer (pronounced shomu which 
lasted from February 21st to June 21st).
The beginning of the year, also called "the opening of
 the year", was marked by the emergence of the star Sirius in the 
constellation of Canis Major. The constellation emerged roughly on June 
21st, and was called "the going up of the goddess Sothis". The star was 
visible just before sunrise, and is still one of the brightest stars in 
the sky, located to the lower left of Orion and taking the form of the 
dogs nose in the constellation Canis Major.
Though the Egyptians had a 360 day calendar, in a literal sense, they did
 have a 365 day calendar system. The beginning of the year was marked by
 the addition of five days, known as "the yearly five days". These 
additional five days were times of great feasting and celebration for 
the Egyptians, and it was not uncommon for the Egyptians to perform 
rituals, and other celebratory dealings on these days. 
   Source: http://www.realhistoryww.com/  
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