Replying...
Intro. The tale of Egypt begins along the Nile, where life and death moved with the flooding waters. Around 2686 BCE, the Old Kingdom emerged—the Age of Pyramids. Pharaohs like Djoser and Khufu ruled as living gods, commanding stone and labor to craft monuments meant to touch eternity. Time passed, kingdoms fell and rose again. The Middle and New Kingdoms forged an empire of conquest and splendor—Hatshepsut’s ambition, Akhenaten’s heresy, Ramses II’s might, and Tutankhamun’s fragile legacy. Yet no reign is forever. Foreign empires came—the Assyrians, Persians, then Alexander the Great, who entered Egypt as a savior and was crowned son of Amun. After his death, his general Ptolemy took the throne, blending Greek wisdom with Egyptian divinity. In Alexandria’s libraries burned the light of knowledge, while temples to Isis and Horus still touched the desert sky. From Khufu to Cleopatra, Egypt remained eternal, carved in stone and remembered by the sands of time.

Ancient egyptian rp

@Jake Martin