Ec egypt 9 (1)

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Egypt in the first millennium BC (1) ‘Libyans and Nubians’ Tony Leahy

Transcript of Ec egypt 9 (1)

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Egypt in the first millennium BC (1) ‘Libyans and Nubians’

Tony Leahy

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Foreign contacts • Libyan invasions/migrations began c. 1300 BC –

eventually became kings by c. 1070 BC

• Nubian invasions and loose overlordship, c. 730-660 BC

• Assyrian invasions, 670s-660s

• Greek soldiers + traders in Egypt c. 650 BC onwards

• Persian Conquest, 525 BC

• Macedonian ‘liberation’ by Alexander the Great, 332 BC then 300 years of rule by descendants of a general, Ptolemy

• Roman conquest 30 BC

• Resilience and vibrancy of pharaonic culture despite all

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Libyan, Nubian, Persian and Greek

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Third Intermediate Period (c. 1070-664 BC)

• Dynasties 21-24 – Libyan Period

(rise to power of descendants of immigrants from a semi-nomadic society, period characterised by fragmentation of country)

• Dynasty 25 – Nubian (Kushite) Period (invasion from south, imposition of tribute, no major change to political structure, clashes with Assyria)

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The end of the New Kingdom c. 1070 BC

• invasions of Libyans and ‘Sea Peoples’

• high-priests of Amun/military commanders based at Thebes, ruling most of the Valley,

• kings of the Twenty-first Dynasty ruling the Delta

• shift of northern capital from Piramesse to nearby new city of Tanis

• new type of royal burial at Tanis

• social crisis, reflected in tomb-robberies?

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Egyptians victorious? Medinet Habu, mortuary temple of Ramses III

“Egypt’s last great hero”?

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Prisoners to kings

Ramses III’s prisoners Medinet Habu, c. 1170 BC - among the ruling elite in the person of Herihor within a century

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Sheshonq I: pharaoh and foreigner

‘Great chief of the Meshwesh’ to ‘King’

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Amun’s warrior: Sheshonq I

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What’s in a name?

• Six kings called Sheshonq

• Five called Osorkon

• Three called Takeloth

• Significance of retention of Libyan names for centuries?

• How far are names a clue to ethnic identity?

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Traces of a Libyan Period temple at Balamun

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Tanis: royal tombs of Dynasties 21-22 (‘Raiders of the Lost Ark’)

Major changes in nature and location of royal burials

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New and old at Tanis: funerary mask and reused sarcophagus from Valley of kings

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Multiple usurpation: a sphinx from Tanis

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Craftsmanship in metal and stone under Osorkon II

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Greater prominence of women

Women alone in divine presence God’s Wife of Amun

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Laments of a general for his dead king and of a child for her

premature death

• ‘Though I am but a child, harm is what

befell me, • When I was but a child (one without fault

reports it). • I lie in the valley, a young girl, I thirst with

water beside me! • I was driven from childhood too early, • turned away from my house as a

youngster, before I had my fill of it. • The dark, a child’s terror, engulfed me, • while the breast was in my mouth. • The demons of the hall bar everyone from

me. • I am too young to be alone. • My heart enjoyed seeing many people, • I was one who loved gaiety. • O king of the gods, lord of eternity, to

whom all people come, • Give me bread, milk, incense, water that

come from your altar, • I am a young girl without fault.’

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An oracular amuletic decree

Mont-Re-Harakhty, lord of Thebes… said:

' I shall keep safe Paditwerisheru called Djedmontefankh, whose mother is Nespernub, son of Djedkhons (the) son of Hori, my servant.

I shall keep him healthy (in) his flesh and his bone(s). I shall keep healthy his head, I shall keep healthy his right eye and his left eye. I shall keep healthy his ears. I shall keep healthy his nose. I shall keep healthy [his] mouth. I shall keep healthy his tongue. I shall keep healthy his teeth…

I shall enable him to grow up. I shall enable him to develop, I shall enable him to become excellent and I shall enable him to become clever. I shall enable him to see himself with his hand bent towards Amun, Mut, Khons, and Mont, lord of Hermonthis.'

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Personal protection

the Horus child on the crocodiles

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Genealogies in stone in temples:

statues and footprints

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The divisions of Egypt, c 730 BC (invasion of Pi(ankh)y)

As many as five ‘kings of Upper and Lower Egypt’

Numerous ‘great chiefs of the Meshwesh’, just as powerful?

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The tribal chiefs flourish down to the seventh century BC

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The Nubians arrive c. 730 BC: invasion of Pi(ankh)y

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Nubian adoption of Egyptian burial customs

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The Kushite kings (25th Dynasty): a distinctive iconography

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Summary of key points

• Period of fragmentation in which local power seems to be accepted as political ‘norm’ – different from earlier ‘intermediate’ periods.

• Major social and religious developments

• Ethnic dimension – impact of Libyans on political structure of country and its culture