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Which Social Position Would You Have Had In Ancient Society?

What do you like to do in your free time?

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Do you have any of these negative traits?

2/20

What kind of student were you in school?

3/20

Do you have a green thumb?

4/20

Would you say you are any of those things?

5/20

What animal fits you the best?

6/20

Are you athletic?

7/20

What would be the best part of living in ancient society?

8/20

Which of these would describe you the best?

9/20

What do you like to do the best while vacationing?

10/20

What kind of god would have an altar in your home?

11/20

What is a modern invention you couldn't live without?

12/20

What is the most important quality to you?

13/20

Do you like being in a leadership position?

14/20

What is something you're good at?

15/20

You find yourself in an ancient town, where do you head to first?

16/20

What is one item that could come in handy for you?

17/20

What would you like to eat or drink?

18/20

Are you artistic?

19/20

Which of these positive traits do you possess?

20/20

Which Social Position Would You Have Had In Ancient Society?
Craftsman
Craftsmen were trained laborers and skilled in a variety of crafts, including carpentry, textile weaving, metalworking, and others. They made clothes, furniture, dishes, weapons, and many other functional objects, as well as decorative items, art, sculptures, amulets, etc. Craftsmen were a vital part of an ancient society, and a community's prosperity often depended on how good they were at their jobs.
Scribe
Scribes were educated in the arts of writing, including hieroglyphics. They kept records of everything, including the stocks of food, court proceedings, tax records, magic spells, and other things. They had an extremely important position in society, so important that they didn't have to pay taxes, be part of the military or do heavy manual labor. Much of what we know about ancient Egypt is thanks to their work.
Priest
Priests had the privilege to enter the temples and approach various gods or goddesses, something that ordinary citizens were not allowed to do. Priests were responsible for performing religious ceremonies, making offerings to deities, and taking care of their temples. They were considered sacred people, with special access to gods, believed to be able to communicate with them. A priest could be a very influential figure.
Soldier
Soldiers led a tough life, trained from a very young age in handling weapons, and combat skills to increase their strength and dexterity. When the army went to battle, they could be gone from home for months at a time. In return for this time and service, however, the soldiers were rewarded with treasure and land. They were also very respected by the common folk and seen as heroes.
Farmer
Farmers were mostly peasants or villagers. They would grow various crops such as barley, wheat, figs, grapes, onions, beans, and many others. Farmers would trade some of their crops for other things they needed, and they and their families would live off of the rest. Even though their position on the social scale was rather low, they were respected for their hard and much-needed work.
Pharaoh
Pharaoh was the most important person in ancient Egypt's society. Pharaohs were believed to be representatives of the gods on earth, or even to be gods themselves. Pharaoh was the king of Egypt and the High Priest of all temples. His (or her) power was absolute and overwhelming. Everything in Egypt belonged to the pharaoh. His job was to run the country and take care of the people.
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Ancient societies of Egypt, Greece, and many others remain a fascinating subject for us here in modern times. We love learning about the ancient people and how they lived, how they worked, what they did for fun, what was sacred to them, and simply how their lives were back then. Sometimes we might wonder, what would we do in those times? What would our lives look like in ancient Egypt, for example? Today our quiz will help answer the question: what would your position be in ancient society? Let’s dive in!

The history of humans and their communities started with people living in small groups or tribes. Gradually those groups became bigger, forming large communities. After came societies, which then turned into civilizations. Modern times owe a lot of inventions, ideas, and philosophies to the earliest civilizations that emerged after millions of years of human evolution.

The Mesopotamian civilization was the first known civilization to emerge. Mesopotamia was not a single civilization, but a region and several cultures that benefited from the fertile lands that today include southwest Asia and swathes along the eastern Mediterranean ocean. The origin of Mesopotamia dates back so far that there is no known evidence of any other civilized society before them. The timeline of ancient Mesopotamia is usually held to be from around 3300 BC to 750 BC. It was somewhere around 8000 BC that people developed the idea of agriculture and slowly started to domesticate animals for food and to assist in farming.

Mesopotamia is credited with the beginnings of human civilization and many things that would change the world — the invention of time, the wheel, mathematics, maps, writing, and sailboats. The Sumerians – people of southern Mesopotamia – were responsible for many of the most important innovations, inventions, and concepts used in the present day. They essentially “invented” time by dividing day and night into 12-hour periods, hours into 60 minutes, and minutes into 60 seconds. Their other innovations and inventions include the first schools, the earliest version of the tale of the Great Flood, other biblical narratives, the oldest heroic epic, governmental bureaucracy, monumental architecture, and irrigation techniques.

The Ancient Egyptian civilization is one of the oldest and the most culturally rich civilizations that ever existed. Ancient Egyptians gave us pharaohs, pyramids, hieroglyphics, and much more.

The civilization united around 3150 BC with the political unification of Upper and Lower Egypt under the first pharaoh. The history of ancient Egypt can be divided into a series of stable kingdoms separated by periods of relative instability known as intermediate periods: The Old Kingdom of the Early Bronze Age, the Middle Kingdom of the Middle Bronze Age, and the New Kingdom of the Late Bronze Age. Ancient Egypt reached its pinnacle during the New Kingdom, when pharaohs like Ramses the Great ruled with such authority that another contemporary civilization, the Nubians, also came under Egyptian rule.

The society of ancient Egypt was divided into a strict hierarchy. On the top was the pharaoh. Then there was the vizier, the pharaoh’s right hand as well as other high government officials like the chief treasurer and the army general. Next were the members of the pharaoh’s court, priests, and nobles. Then – soldiers and scribes. Lower were craftsmen and merchants, then farmers and unskilled workers. The lowest on the social scale were slaves.

The pharaoh was considered to be a god (or a representation of gods on Earth) and the ultimate authority in ancient Egypt. His or her duty was to make the law and maintain order in the Kingdom. The people of Egypt expected the pharaoh to keep the gods happy so the Nile river would flood and the harvest would be plentiful.

Government officials consisted of members of the royal family, nobles, and priests. The vizier was the pharaoh’s second-in-command. He oversaw the political administration and all official documents had to have his seal on them. The vizier managed the taxation system and monitored the supply of food. He listened to problems between nobles and settled them. The vizier also ran the pharaoh’s household and ensured the royal family’s safety.

Priests’ duty was to serve the gods and communicate with them. At times, they were even more influential than the pharaoh. They spent their time conducting rituals and ceremonies in temples to keep the gods happy.

Nobles were the only group, besides the royal family, who could hold a government office. They ruled the nomes (regions of Egypt), made local laws, and maintained order. Nobles also owned farmland which the peasant class worked for them.

Scribes were the only people in ancient Egypt who could read and write. They kept records of everything that happened in the country, including the amount of food produced, gifts to the gods, the number of soldiers in the army, and many others things. They also wrote copies of the Book of the Dead and biographies found in ancient Egyptian tombs.

Soldiers were trained to be skilled warriors. They protected Egypt from outside attacks as well as suppressed social uprisings.

Merchants sold the goods made by craftsmen. Craftsmen or artisans included carpenters, jewelers, metalworkers, painters, potters, sculptors, stone carvers, and weavers. Women could work in some of the crafts, such as weaving. Craftsmen often worked in workshops with other artisans of the same type.

Peasants were the farmers, servants, and construction workers. Farmers had a very important job of growing food which fed the whole country. Pharaoh, or the nobles they worked for, provided them with food and clothing. This was an exchange for their cultivation of royal or noble land.

Slaves had the lowest position in ancient Egypt society. Most of the time, the ancient Egyptians acquired slaves as prisoners of war. Slaves worked in the homes of the nobles, in the royal palace, and the temples. They also mined and quarried stones and precious materials.

What position would you have in ancient society? Do you want to know? If yes, take the quiz we prepared and find out now! We’re very curious about your results.

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