The chariot is perhaps more properly considered as a means of transportation. It was the vehicle of choice of the elite and royalty while the common people had to make do with carts towed by oxen or the humble donkey. It was also used by the pharaoh to indulge in a spot of hunting. However, in ancient Egyptian art the image of the pharaoh riding into battle on his chariot was a very popular device for proving to everyone that the pharaoh was the brave military leader of his people.
It is generally considered that the Hyksos introduced the chariot to Egypt. The names commonly ascribed to the component parts of the chariot were semitic and common design motifs were Syrian in origin. If the story of the exodus is to be taken at face value and the ancient Egyptians rode chariots when pursuing the fleeing israelites, then it would seem that the exodus occurred after the Hyksos incursion.
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However, the discovery of horse remains dated to the Thirteenth Dynasty (during the second intermediate period) strongly suggests that horses were introduced into Egypt before to the Hyksos occupation. Furthermore, a stela depicts Army Commander Khonsuemwaset, son of Dudimose (an obscure Thirteenth Dynasty King) seated with his wife on a chair with a pair of charioteers gloves depicted underneath him, indicating that he was a charioteer. |
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By the New Kindgom the chariot was very much a part of ancient Egyptian society and pharaohs such as Thuthmosis II had over a thousand charioteers in his army. The Egyptian chariot was lighter and faster than the standard form used in the ancient world and was perfectly adapted to carry the feared egyptian archers into battle.
A chariot team was generally composed of the driver holding a whip and the reigns, the archer (who often carried spears to use when his arrows were spent) and a number of charriot runners who flanked the chariot. However, when hunting (a favourite pastime of the elite Egyptian) the pharaoh would often man the chariot on his own.
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