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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which examines whether or not it was greatly beneficial to nations to be a part of the great Egyptian empire. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAegemp.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
extent. There were numerous states that were, or were not, affiliated with the grand empire. But, one may wonder what benefits one could gain from belonging to the empire, relying
on the empire of Egypt. In some cases we can know that military strength was a point of support for relying on the empire, but that could not be the
only concern of peoples during these ancient times. The following paper examines the good and bad points of belonging to, or relying on, the Egyptian Empire of the 18th Dynasty.
Being Part of an Empire First and foremost one can assume, and perhaps rightly so, that to have the military power of the Egyptian Empire on ones side
would be enough to support the empire and be a part of the empire. However, in one particular relationship this was not the case. The Hittites had apparently gone through
many weak periods in history, losing its small empire. But, over the years they grew strong once more and those who they were threatening, those who had taken over their
empire, the Hurrians, "ran to Egypt for an alliance. Suddenly, upon coming to the throne in 1380 B.C., the Hittite king Subbiluliumas sent his forces into Syria (Macqueen 46). The
king of Egypt was unwilling to commit military to defend northern Syria" (The Gathering Storm, 2005). Perhaps because of their resistance in helping the Hittites were ultimately successful in threatening
some of Egypts power. What drove some nations to break from Egypt related to religious conditions. If a nation was truly faithful to their religion and did not wish any
interference, or change, they would not necessarily benefit from being part of the empire, or being privy to the empires rule. However, for the most part it made sense for
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