Dark; blue, not found in Scripture, but frequently referred to in the
Old Testament under the name of Sihor, i.e., “the black stream” (Isa_23:3; Jer_2:18)
or simply “the river” (Gen_41:1; Exo_1:22, etc.) and the “flood of Egypt” (Amo_8:8). It consists of two rivers, the White
Nile, which takes its rise in the Victoria Nyanza, and the Blue Nile, which
rises in the Abyssinian Mountains. These unite at the town of Khartoum, whence
it pursues its course for 1,800 miles, and falls into the Mediterranean through
its two branches, into which it is divided a few miles north of Cairo, the
Rosetta and the Damietta branch. (See EGYPT.)
Source:
Smith’s Bible Dictionary
Nile
nīl (Νεῖλος,
Neílos, meaning not certainly known; perhaps refers to the color
of the water, as black or blue. This name does not occur in the Hebrew of the
Old Testament or in the English translation):
I. THE NILE IN PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
1. Description
2. Geological Origin
3. The Making of Egypt
4. The Inundation
5. The Infiltration
II. THE NILE IN HISTORY
1. The Location of Temples
2. The Location of Cemeteries
3. The Damming of the Nile
4. Egyptian Famines
III. THE NILE IN RELIGION
1. The Nile as a God
2. The Nile in the Osirian Myth
3. The Celestial Nile
A river of North Africa, the great river of Egypt. The name employed in
the Old Testament to designate the Nile is in the Hebrew יאר, ye'ōr,
Egyptian ăūr, earlier, ătūr, usually
translated “river,” also occasionally “canals” (Psa_78:44;
Eze_29:3 ff). In a general way it means
all the water of Egypt. The Nile is also the principal river included in the
phrase נהרי־כוּשׁ, nahărē kūsh,
“rivers of Ethiopia” (Isa_18:1). Poetically
the Nile is called ים, yām,
“sea” (Job_41:31; Nah_3:8; probably Isa_18:2),
but this is not a name of the river. שׁיחור, shīḥōr,
not always written fully, has also been interpreted in a mistaken way of the
Nile (see SHIHOR). Likewise מצרים נהר, nahar
micrayim, “brook of Egypt,” a border stream in no way connected with the
Nile, has sometimes been mistaken for that river. See RIVER OF EGYPT.
I. The Nile in Physical
Geography.
1. Description:
The Nile is formed by the
junction of the White Nile and the Blue Nile in latitude 15 degree 45' North
and longitude 32 degree 45' East. The Blue Nile rises in the highlands of
Abyssinia, latitude 12 degree 30' North, long. 35 degree East, and flows
Northwest 850 miles to its junction with the White North. The White Nile, the
principal branch of the North, rises in Victoria Nyanza, a great lake in
Central Africa, a few miles North of the equator, long. 33 degree East (more
exactly the Nile may be said to rise at the headwaters of the Ragera River, a
small stream on the other side of the lake, 3 degree South of the equator), and
flows North in a tortuous channel, 1,400 miles to its junction with the Blue
Nile. From this junction-point the Niles flows North through Nubia and Egypt
1,900 miles and empties into the Mediterranean Sea, in latitude 32 degree
North, through 2 mouths, the Rosetta, East of Alexandria, and the Damietta,
West of Port Said. There were formerly 7 mouths scattered along a coast-line of
140 miles.
2. Geological Origin:
The Nile originated in the
Tertiary period and has continued from that time to this, though by the
subsidence of the land 220 ft. along the Mediterranean shore in the Pluvial
times, the river was very much shortened. Later in the Pluvial times the land
rose again and is still rising slowly.
3. The Making of Egypt:
Cultivable Egypt is
altogether the product of the Nile, every particle of the soil having been
brought down by the river from the heart of the continent and deposited along
the banks and especially in the delta at the mouth of the river. The banks have
risen higher and higher and extended farther and farther back by the deposit of
the sediment, until the valley of arable land varies in width in most parts
from 3 or 4 miles to 9 or 10 miles. The mouth of the river, after the last
elevation of the land in Pluvial times, was at first not far from the latitude
of Cairo. From this point northward the river has built up a delta of 140 miles
on each side, over which it spreads itself and empties into the sea through its
many mouths.
4. The Inundation:
The, watering of Egypt by
the inundation from the Nile is the most striking feature of the physical
character of that land, and one of the most interesting and remarkable physical
phenomena in the world. The inundation is produced by the combination of an
indirect and a direct cause. The indirect cause is the rain and melting snow on
the equatorial mountains in Central Africa, which maintains steadily a great
volume of water in the White Nile. The direct cause is torrential rains in the
highlands of Abyssinia which send down the Blue Nile a sudden great increase in
the volume of water. The inundation has two periods each year. The first begins
about July 15 and continues until near the end of September. After a slight
recession, the river again rises early in October in the great inundation. High
Nile is in October, 25 to 30 ft., low Nile in June, about 12 1/2 ft. The
Nilometer for recording the height of the water of inundation dates from very
early times. Old Nilometers are found still in situ at Edfu and
Assuan. The watering and fertilizing of the land is the immediate effect of the
inundation; its ultimate result is that making of Egypt which is still in
progress. The settling of the sediment from the water upon the land has raised
the surface of the valley about 1 ft. in 300 to 400 years, about 9 to 10 ft.
near Cairo since the beginning of the early great temples. The deposit varies
greatly at other places. As the deposit of sediment has been upon the bottom of
the river, as well as upon the surface of the land, though more slowly, on
account of the swiftness of the current, the river also has been lifted up, and
thus the inundation has extended farther and farther to the East, and the West,
as the level of the valley would permit, depositing the sediment and thus
making the cultivable land wider, as well as the soil deeper, year by year. At
Heliopolis, a little North of Cairo, this extension to the East has been 3 to 4
miles since the building of the great temple there.
At Luxor, about 350 miles
farther up the river, where the approach toward the mountains is much steeper,
the extension of the good soil to the East and the West is inconsiderable.
5. The Infiltration:
The ancient Egyptians were
right in calling all the waters of Egypt the Nile, for wherever water is
obtained by digging it is simply the Nile percolating through the porous soil.
This percolation is called the infiltration of the Nile. It always extends as
far on either side of the Nile as the level of the water in the river at the
time will permit. This infiltration, next to the inundation, is the most
important physical phenomenon in Egypt. By means of it much of the irrigation
of the land during the dry season is carried on from wells. It has had its
influence also in the political and religious changes of the country (compare
below).
II. The Nile in History.
1. The Location of Temples:
Some of the early temples
were located near the Nile, probably because of the deification of the river.
The rising of the surface of the land, and at the same time of the bed of the
river, from the inundation lifted both Egypt and its great river, but left the
temples down at the old level. In time the infiltration of the river from its
new higher level reached farther and farther and rose to a higher level until
the floor of these old temples was under water even at the time of lowest Nile,
and then gods and goddesses, priests and ceremonial all were driven out. At
least two of the greatest temples and most sacred places, Heliopolis and
Memphis, had to be abandoned. Probably this fact had as much to do with the
downfall of Egypt's religion, as its political disasters and the actual
destruction of its temples by eastern invaders. Nature's God had driven out the
gods of Nature.
2. The Location of Cemeteries:
Some prehistoric burials
are found on the higher ground, as at Kefr ‛Amar. A
thousand years of history would be quite sufficient to teach Egyptians that the
Nile was still making Egypt. Thenceforth, cemeteries were located at the
mountains on the eastern and the western boundaries of the valley. Here they
continue to this day, for the most part still entirely above the waters of the
inundation - and usually above the reach of the infiltration. _
3. The Damming of the Nile:
The widening of the cultivable
land by means of long canals which carried the water from far up the river to
levels higher than that of the inundation, farther down the river was practiced
from very early times. The substitution of dams for long canals was reserved
for modern engineering skill. Three great dams have been made: the first a
little Nile of Cairo, the greatest at Assuan, and the last near Asyut.
4. Egyptian Famines:
Famines in Egypt are always
due to failure in the quantity of the waters of inundation. Great famines have
not been frequent. The cause of the failure in the water of inundation is now
believed to be not so much a lack of the water of inundation from the Blue Nile
as the choking of the channel of the White Nile in the great marsh land of the
Sudan by the sud, a kind of sedge, sometimes becoming such a tangled mass as to
close the channel and impede the flow of the regular volume of water so that
the freshet in the Blue Nile causes but little inundation at the usual time,
and during the rest of the year the Nile is so low from the same cause that
good irrigation by canals and wells is impossible. A channel through the sud is
now kept open by the Egyptian government.
III. The Nile in Religion.
One of the gods of the Egyptian pantheon was Hapi,
the Nile. In early times it divided the honors with Ra, the sun-god. No wonder
it was so.
1. The
Nile as a God:
If the Egyptians set out to worship Nature-gods at
all, surely then the sun and the Nile first.
2. The
Nile in Osirian Myth:
The origin of the Osirian myth is still much
discussed. Very much evidence, perhaps conclusive evidence, can be adduced to
prove that it rose originally from the Nile; that Osiris was first of all the
Nile, then the water of the Nile, then the soil, the product of the waters of
the Nile, and then Egypt, the Nile and all that it produced.
3. The
Celestial Nile:
Egypt was the Egyptian's little world, and Egypt
was the Nile. It was thus quite natural for the Egyptians in considering the
celestial world to image it in likeness of their own world with a celestial
Nile flowing through it. It is so represented in the mythology, but the
conception of the heavens is vague.
Source:
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Nile
Dark; blue, not found in Scripture, but frequently referred to in the
Old Testament under the name of Sihor, i.e., “the black stream” (Isa_23:3; Jer_2:18)
or simply “the river” (Gen_41:1; Exo_1:22, etc.) and the “flood of Egypt” (Amo_8:8). It consists of two rivers, the White
Nile, which takes its rise in the Victoria Nyanza, and the Blue Nile, which
rises in the Abyssinian Mountains. These unite at the town of Khartoum, whence
it pursues its course for 1,800 miles, and falls into the Mediterranean through
its two branches, into which it is divided a few miles north of Cairo, the
Rosetta and the Damietta branch. (See EGYPT.)
Source:
Easton’s Bible Dictionary