All Ancient History: Egypt Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #24 : The Middle Kingdom (2055 1650 Bce)
The iconic blue and white headcloth was most commonly worn by __________.
the ruler of Upper Egypt
the rulers of the Middle Kingdom
the ruler of Lower Egypt
the Ramesside Pharaohs
the ruler of Nubia
the rulers of the Middle Kingdom
The iconic blue and white headcloth, that so often features in modern artistic renderings of the Egyptian Pharaohs, was most commonly worn by the rulers of the Middle Kingdom.
Example Question #25 : The Middle Kingdom (2055 1650 Bce)
In ancient Egyptian art, royal scribes are often depicted as __________.
deities
much darker-skinned than the rest of the population
zoomorphic
much taller than the rest of the population
extremely fat
extremely fat
In ancient Egyptian art, royal scribes and government officials are often depicted as being extremely fat. This was done to demonstrate the scribe’s wealth (he was evidently well-fed) and his exemption from manual labor (he did not work with his hands). This may be understood as related to the way in which ancient Egyptian rulers used art and iconography to control their population and create certain images of authority.
Example Question #163 : Ancient History: Egypt
What is a shawabti?
An astronomical instrument, used by the ancient Egyptians to map the stars.
A figurine of a servant that was buried with a deceased ruler to serve him in the afterlife.
An amulet, intended to provide protection and good fortune for the wearer.
A crown, worn by the ruler of Lower Egypt.
A device used for the construction of irrigation channels during the Late Period.
A figurine of a servant that was buried with a deceased ruler to serve him in the afterlife.
A shawabti is a small figurine of a servant. They were generally buried with a deceased ruler (often in large numbers) to serve him in the afterlife. It was expected that the Shawabti would spring to life in the underworld and serve the Pharaoh for eternity. Most Shawabtis were made of wood beginning in the Middle Kingdom (earlier Shawabtis had been made of stone).
Example Question #26 : The Middle Kingdom (2055 1650 Bce)
A sistrum would most likely have been used in __________.
canal building
irrigation
religious ceremonies
transportation
quarrying
religious ceremonies
A sistrum is a musical instrument specific to ancient Egypt. It is best described as a rattle. The ancient Egyptians shook sistrums during religious rituals to provide musical accompaniment to the proceedings. Music was an important component of Egyptian communal worship, especially during the New Kingdom and later.
Example Question #27 : The Middle Kingdom (2055 1650 Bce)
The Egyptians believed that disease was caused by __________.
a weak heart
laziness
foul odors
malignant spirits
bad karma
malignant spirits
The Egyptians believed that disease was caused by malignant spirits. Specifically, they believed that deceased people could be hostile to the living and that these dead spirits punished the living by spreading disease. The Egyptians conceived of protection against disease as like warding off evil spirits.
Example Question #28 : The Middle Kingdom (2055 1650 Bce)
Which of these is largely absent from Egyptian art?
depictions of pregnant women
depictions of foreign people
depictions of wild animals
depictions of the Gods
depictions of the Pharaoh
depictions of pregnant women
Depictions of pregnant women are almost completely absent from the record of ancient Egyptian art. Women in ancient Egypt were universally depicted as young and fertile and were never shown to be pregnant or middle aged. This was probably done as a form of social control, to emphasize the significance of women of childbearing age and to diminish the importance of older women.
Example Question #31 : The Middle Kingdom (2055 1650 Bce)
False beards were worn by some Pharaohs __________.
to exaggerate their masculinity
to imitate the appearance of religious leaders
of Lower Egypt
to emphasize their divinity
of Upper Egypt
to emphasize their divinity
False beards were often worn by some Pharaohs to emphasize their divinity. The Gods, such as Osiris, were often depicted with a long, false beard, and so the Pharaohs of the Middle and New Kingdom began to wear false beards themselves. This might be understood as part of how ancient Egyptian rulers used images and iconography to cement their authority and reinforce their association with the Gods.
Example Question #32 : The Middle Kingdom (2055 1650 Bce)
The concept of Ma'at was represented in the form of ______________.
a wolf
a cat
a male deity
a female deity
a female deity
Ma'at, the central truth or justice of the Ancient Egyptian religion, was personified as a goddess whose main activity was to weigh the souls of the dead. In some earlier references she is figured as the deity who put the events of the universe into their initial order.
Example Question #33 : The Middle Kingdom (2055 1650 Bce)
Neper and Nepit were the Egyptian god and goddess of ________________.
death and resurrection
grain
hunting
None of these
grain
Nepr and Nepit were the god and goddess of grain. Osiris was the god of death and resurrection, and Anhur was the god of hunting.
Example Question #33 : The Middle Kingdom (2055 1650 Bce)
In the ancient Egyptian religion, Isis was the Goddess of __________.
wisdom and learning
fertility and motherhood
the river
soldiers and sailors
wealth and prosperity
fertility and motherhood
In the ancient Egyptian pantheon of God, Isis was the Goddess of fertility and motherhood. She was one of the most widely worshipped deities in ancient Egypt and worship of her spread throughout the later Greco-Roman world (particularly in certain parts of the Roman Empire). Isis was thought to be the wife of Osiris and the mother of Horus.