Blind History
@Blind-History-with-Josh-Barry First Intermediate Period and Middle Kingdom (c. 2181–c. 1650 BCE)From Collapse to FragmentationWhen the Old Kingdom waned around 2181 BCE, the grand age of pyramid building came to an end and Egypt entered a time of instability later called the First Intermediate Period. Instead of a single, dominant pharaoh ruling from a strong capital, power fractured among regional elites, especially in Upper and Lower Egypt. Local governors, often descended from families that had grown wealthy and influential under the Old Kingdom, began to act more like independent rulers than royal appointees.Multiple factors likely contributed to this breakdown: strain on resources, possible low Nile floods, and the growing autonomy of provincial families who controlled land, labor, and local cults. Without strong central authority, the administrative machine that had coordinated large building projects and national taxation no longer functioned smoothly. Some regions prospered under assertive local lords, while others suffered neglect or conflict.This fragmentation did not mean that all cultural and religious patterns vanished. The ideals of kingship, maat (order), and the traditional gods remained powerful. But instead of being focused on a single monarch, these values could be interpreted and invoked by competing centers. Different cities—especially Herakleopolis in the north and Thebes in the south—emerged as rival bases for would-be unifiers who claimed the right to restore Egypt’s unity.
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