Revision as of 13:09, 28 August 2005 editGene Nygaard (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users90,047 edits remove unexplained images which have no obvious connection to rope stretching← Previous edit | Revision as of 13:19, 28 August 2005 edit undoGene Nygaard (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users90,047 edits partial revert of myself, there was some kind of explanation for this one image, put that in captionNext edit → | ||
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] palette ] assists ] by opening the ways of ], the personified god of the land itself, shown here as a man with a field growing out of his head.]] | |||
In ancient Egypt '''Rope stretchers''' were ] who ]d out the sides of fields 3ht using ] which they stretched in order to take the sag out of the rope and keep the 3ht measures uniform. As far back as the ]s of ] and the ] the Egyptians document the process the royal surveyors used to restore the boundaries of fields after each innundation or ]. | In ancient Egypt '''Rope stretchers''' were ] who ]d out the sides of fields 3ht using ] which they stretched in order to take the sag out of the rope and keep the 3ht measures uniform. As far back as the ]s of ] and the ] the Egyptians document the process the royal surveyors used to restore the boundaries of fields after each innundation or ]. | ||
] and the Scorpion ] portray themselves controlling the land through their control of the water that irrigates the land. |
] and the Scorpion ] portray themselves controlling the land through their control of the water that irrigates the land. | ||
The ] pose is a man striding forward with raised mace toward a subservient subject, which in this case is labled st3t or a field whose kht is 100 royal ]s. | The ] pose is a man striding forward with raised mace toward a subservient subject, which in this case is labled st3t or a field whose kht is 100 royal ]s. |
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In ancient Egypt Rope stretchers were surveyors who measured out the sides of fields 3ht using knotted cords which they stretched in order to take the sag out of the rope and keep the 3ht measures uniform. As far back as the palettes of Narmer and the Scorpion King the Egyptians document the process the royal surveyors used to restore the boundaries of fields after each innundation or flood.
Narmer and the Scorpion King portray themselves controlling the land through their control of the water that irrigates the land.
The Narmer pose is a man striding forward with raised mace toward a subservient subject, which in this case is labled st3t or a field whose kht is 100 royal cubits.
The knowledge of pleasing proportions of the rope stretchers was incorporated by the Greeks
"Of the officials, some are market commissioners, others are city commissioners and others are in charge of the soldiers. Among these, the first keep the rivers improved and the land remeasured, as in Egypt, and inspect the closed canals from which the water is distributed into the conduits, in order that all may have an equal use of it. The same men also have charge of the hunters and are authorized to reward or punish those who deserve either. They also collect the taxes and superintend the crafts connected with the land -- those of wood-cutters, carpenters, workers in brass, and miners. And they make roads, and at every ten stadia place pillars showing the by-roads and the distances.
Now that is kind of interesting because many people think the Romans imvented the idea of the milestone