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You do know that everyone else who wasn't a priest or a royal lived even worse lives than that, right?
Okay, great, I see our argument is "Words don't matter, corvee isn't corvee, unskilled labor isn't unskilled labor; because they lived in a barracks and were fed well".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corv%C3%A9e
How does that describe pyramid workers?
I'm not seeing the unskilled Egyptian workers we're talking about here miss any of these criteria.
What do you think 'obligatory labor' in the context of a 'feudal'-like system for the Pharaoh by commoners on a massive construction project is exactly?
They were unpaid because Egypt didn't have the concept of currency. They weren't forced, they volunteered their services. All work in Egypt was intermittent due to Nile floods. It wasn't for the purpose of public works, it was for the purpose of religion.
But you've got me on the imposed by the state part.
You don't need currency to be paid.
That's not what 'obligatory labor' means.
Okay? All work for peasantry is intermittent due to the changing of the seasons. That doesn't mean you can't impose corvee on a peasant - in fact, peasant farmers are USUALLY the ones who ARE getting corvee'd precise BECAUSE their own ordinary labor is intermittent. The point of distinguishing corvee as intermittent is to differentiate it from slavery and ad hoc forced labor, not because picking up drifters who do small jobs instead of full-time factory workers changes the nature of a corvee.
It was a public monument by the government. Your own link says, and I quote: