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The Pharaoh's Secret Police: Control in Ancient Egypt: Surveillance, Loyalty Enforcement, and the Machinery of Power Along the Nile, 3000–30 BCE
Coles
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The Pharaoh's Secret Police: Control in Ancient Egypt: Surveillance, Loyalty Enforcement, and the Machinery of Power Along the Nile, 3000–30 BCE in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $14.99

Coles
The Pharaoh's Secret Police: Control in Ancient Egypt: Surveillance, Loyalty Enforcement, and the Machinery of Power Along the Nile, 3000–30 BCE in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $14.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
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The image of ancient Egypt most familiar to modern audiences centers on monuments, gods, and dynastic splendor. Less examined is the administrative and coercive infrastructure that made those achievements possible — the networks of scribes, informants, border guards, and judicial officials through whom pharaohs monitored, disciplined, and controlled a population spread across thousands of kilometers of the Nile Valley. This book reconstructs the mechanisms of state control in ancient Egypt through papyrus administrative records, legal documents, tomb inscriptions, and archaeological evidence from police posts, border fortresses, and workers' villages. It examines how the Egyptian state tracked population movement, investigated tomb robbery, suppressed labor unrest, monitored foreign nationals, and enforced loyalty among provincial officials whose distance from the capital made oversight structurally difficult. The narrative traces how control mechanisms evolved across three thousand years of pharaonic history — from the centralized bureaucracy of the Old Kingdom through the decentralized instability of intermediate periods to the sophisticated administrative apparatus of the New Kingdom. It pays particular attention to the Medjay, the elite paramilitary force that served successive dynasties as border patrol, internal security, and royal protection, and to the village of Deir el-Medina, whose unusually complete documentary record offers rare insight into surveillance and dispute resolution at the community level. A carefully sourced account of how one of history's longest-lasting states maintained order — and what that tells us about the relationship between power, loyalty, and coercion in complex societies.
The image of ancient Egypt most familiar to modern audiences centers on monuments, gods, and dynastic splendor. Less examined is the administrative and coercive infrastructure that made those achievements possible — the networks of scribes, informants, border guards, and judicial officials through whom pharaohs monitored, disciplined, and controlled a population spread across thousands of kilometers of the Nile Valley. This book reconstructs the mechanisms of state control in ancient Egypt through papyrus administrative records, legal documents, tomb inscriptions, and archaeological evidence from police posts, border fortresses, and workers' villages. It examines how the Egyptian state tracked population movement, investigated tomb robbery, suppressed labor unrest, monitored foreign nationals, and enforced loyalty among provincial officials whose distance from the capital made oversight structurally difficult. The narrative traces how control mechanisms evolved across three thousand years of pharaonic history — from the centralized bureaucracy of the Old Kingdom through the decentralized instability of intermediate periods to the sophisticated administrative apparatus of the New Kingdom. It pays particular attention to the Medjay, the elite paramilitary force that served successive dynasties as border patrol, internal security, and royal protection, and to the village of Deir el-Medina, whose unusually complete documentary record offers rare insight into surveillance and dispute resolution at the community level. A carefully sourced account of how one of history's longest-lasting states maintained order — and what that tells us about the relationship between power, loyalty, and coercion in complex societies.


















