Ancient Egypt: The Civilization That Built the Impossible
Fexingo History · North Africa
Ancient Egypt: The Civilization That Built the Impossible
Ancient Egypt was not a single, static civilization but a 3,000-year arc of empire, innovation, and collapse. From the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt under Narmer (c. 3100 BCE) to the Ptolemaic dynasty’s end with Cleopatra VII (30 BCE), this show traces every dynasty, every pharaoh, and every monument that still defies explanation. Hosts Lucas and Luna guide listeners through the Old Kingdom pyramid builders—Khufu, Khafre, and Menkaure—whose Great Pyramid of Giza remained the tallest human-made structure for nearly 4,000 years. They explore the Middle Kingdom’s literary renaissance, the New Kingdom’s imperial zenith under Hatshepsut, Thutmose III, and Ramesses II, and the Amarna Period’s religious revolution led by Akhenaten and Nefertiti. The show does not shy from controversy: how were the pyramids built? Why did the Old Kingdom collapse? Did Ramesses II really win the Battle of Kadesh? It also delves into daily life, from the role of the Nile in agriculture to the Book of the Dead’s spells for the afterlife, and the enduring mysteries of KV62—Tutankhamun’s tomb. The civilization’s legacy persists in modern astronomy, medicine, and architecture, yet so many questions remain: how did a people with bronze tools and rope move 2.3 million stone blocks? Join Lucas and Luna as they sift through the sands of time to uncover the human story behind the impossible.