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Request for comments: Ramses/Rameses/Ramesses
editPlease see Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Ancient Egypt#Ramses/Rameses/Ramesses. –Hajor 18:07, 26 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Outdated presentation of the reign of Ramesses XI
editThis page presents as hard fact the traditional order of High Priests (Herihor before Piankh). Since Jansen-Winkeln has proposed to reverse the order of these two individuals, such an approach is no longer viable. It is recommended that this page be rewritten in the light of recent developments.
The text as it stands has multiple issues:
Ramesses XI's reign was characterized by the gradual disintegration of the Egyptian state. Civil conflict was already evident around the beginning of his reign when High Priest of Amun, Amenhotep, was ousted from office by the king with the aid of Nubian soldiers under command of Pinehesy, Viceroy of Kush, for overstepping his authority with Ramesses XI. -"the beginning of his reign" is incorrect: the suppression probably took place just prior to year 19, certainly not at the beginning.
As the chaos and insecurity continued, Ramesses was forced to inaugurate a triumvirate in his Regnal Year 19, with the High Priest of Amun Herihor ruling Thebes and Upper Egypt and Smendes controlling Lower Egypt.
-No longer undisputed. This is merely the communis opinion before the groundbreaking work of Jansen-Winkeln.
Herihor amassed power and titles at the expense of Pinehesy, Viceroy of Nubia, whom he had expelled from Thebes. This rivalry soon developed into full-fledged civil war under Herihor's successor. At Thebes, Herihor usurped royal power without actually deposing Ramesses, and he effectively became the defacto ruler of Upper Egypt because his authority superseded the king's.
-Any relation between Herihor and Pinehesy is pure speculation. There is no basis in fact for them even having been contemporaries. Again, the theory of Jansen-Winkeln reduces most of this to pure speculation.
Herihor died around Year 6 of the Whm Mswt (Year 24 of Ramesses XI) and was succeeded as High Priest by Piankh.
-No evidence at all for these statements. Again, the theory of Jansen-Winkeln reduces most of this to pure speculation. Ignoring this important theory is no option!
In fact, much of Wikipedia's pages on this period (the end of the 20th Dynasty) and related topics are outdated since they do not take into consideration recent developments.
Neferkere (talk) 00:49, 5 July 2014 (UTC)
- No one doubts that "Herihor amassed power and titles at the expense of Pinehesy" but if you change around Ramesses IX's Chronology because you support Thijs' own chronology--something which other serious chronologists such as F. Payraudeau, Beckerath and Krauss do NOT--you will only cause problems for yourself and everyone else since Thijs' own idea on Ramesses XI's chronology is generally considered WP:OR in the Egyptological community. Thijs' can publish in SAK, GM but no one accepts his ideas except Dodson but one scholar cannot outweigh the views of other scholars here. I hope you don't push Thijs ideas on Ramesses XI's chronology...unless you want other Egyptologists to dismiss Wikipedia.
Jansen-Winkeln concentrates on reversing the order of Herihor-Piankh to Piankh-Herihor--and I think he is right--but not on reducing the reign of Ramesses XI by making this king's reign overlap with that of Ramesses IX and XI as Thijs proposes which is fantastic since if there were Two kings ruing over Egypt at the same time, the New Kingdom would have collapsed and Egypt would have been divided into two long before the death of Ramses XI: when this happened under Herihor and Smendes. Regards, --Leoboudv (talk) 09:07, 25 April 2015 (UTC)
- In his book, Afterglow of Empire, Dodson tries to adopt Thijs' chronological proposal to shorten the reign of Ramses XI from 27/31 years to just 15 yrs by dating Ramses XI at 1110 to 1095 BC and placing Ramses II's accession at 1265 BC but Dodson dating of Ramesses II's accession at 1265 BC is...to low. He cannot shorten the reigns of the other Ramesside kings since their reigns are well known so he has to try to place R II at 1265 BC but R II's accession should--at a minimum be placed 14 years earlier at 1279 BC. Once this happens, 14 years should be added to the rest of the New Kingdom, and if we add this to Dodson's 15 year figure of Ramesses XI, we once again ascribe Ramesses XI a reign of c.29 to 30 years (15+14 yrs) which is what the standard Egyptian chronology suggests. Manetho's kinglist for the 21st dynasty kings is considered reliable once his figure of 9 years for Siamun is amended to 19 years and Shoshenq I's reign passed the around the date 925 BC when an Egyptian king named Shishak threatened Jerusalem. Dodson fully accepts the identification of Shishak with Shoshenq I. So, it appears likely that the conventional theory that gives 29-32/33 yrs for Ramesses XI is likely close to the truth.
- DODSON's chronology for Ramesses II's accession at 1279 BC might in fact also be WRONG. As Jared Miller writes in pages 252 to 255 of his important paper here Horemheb likely came to power around Year 9 of Mursili II of Hatti. Mursili II's accession is generally dated around 1322 due to a major Year 10 eclipse that is recorded in his archives that occurred in 1312 BC. With Horemheb acceding to power at 1313 BC, you have:
- Horemheb: 1314/1313-1300/1299 BC
- Ramesses I: 1300/1299-1299/1298 BC
- Seti I: 1299/1298 to 1290 BC (J. van Dijk, "The date of the Gebel Barkal Stela of Seti I" [OLA 204], pp. 325–32. has now argued that Seti I has a 9 year reign and that the Year 11 stela date for this king is damaged and should be read as Year 3 instead)
- Ramesses II comes to power around 1290 BC and not 1279 BC and certainly not 1265 BC as Dodson speculated!
- PS: In Miller's 2007 article, he dated Horemheb's accession at 1319 BC on page 256 since he did not know about the Year 13 and Year 14 wine labels in Horemheb's tomb at the time and assumed that Horemheb had a 27 year reign at 1319-1292 BC rather than just a 14 year reign. In the old chronology, R I, ruled at 1292-1290 BC and Seti I at 1290-1279 BC. The Egyptologists have not yet corrected this and HdO in 2006 did not have the information on Horemheb's correct reign length when that book was published by Krauss-Warburton. That is also why Miller dated Ramesses II's accession at 1279 BC in his paper. But--I am not pushing my 1290 BC proposal on Ramesses II's accession date in his wikipedia article. The Egyptologists will decide this issue eventually in their books and articles, not me. At any rate, Ramesses XI most likely had an independent reign of 29-32 or 33 years even though Horemheb was the real power behind Ramesses XI's throne at Thebes. Regards, --Leoboudv (talk) 10:10, 25 April 2015 (UTC)
- Herihor died around Year 6 of the Whm Mswt (Year 24 of Ramesses XI) and was succeeded as High Priest by Piankh. YES, you are Right! This sentence is wrong and you can change it since Herihor clearly outlived Ramesses XI and then given himself royal attributes at the Temple of Khonsu later most likely in the early years of Smendes...when Ramesses XI had already died. This also shows that Herihor succeeded as High Priest after Piankh's career in this office as Jansen-Winkeln argues. Regards, --Leoboudv (talk) 05:43, 26 April 2015 (UTC)
The Dhuthope fallacy
editI have (once again) deleted the following paragraph:
Unfortunately, however, it must be stressed that there are clear inconsistencies in the description of an individual's precise title even within the same source document itself. For instance, Papyrus Mayer A mentions both a certain Dhuthope, a doorkeeper of the temple of Amun as well as a Dhuthope, Chief Doorkeeper of the temple of Amun. The reference to the first Dhuthope occurs in the regular papyrus entry while the other appears towards the end of the list [citation needed]but few people would dispute that they refer to the same man. Hence, Thijs' case for a Year 33 proper for Ramesses XI should be treated with caution. Since there are two attested promotions of individuals in 2 separate papyri, however, there is a small possibility now that Ramesses XI did live into his 33rd regnal Year.
Since this paragraph has subsequently been reintroduced in its entirety by Leoboudv, I feel I should give my fundamental reasons to delete this text once more, this time on the Talk-page of Ramesses XI.
The reasons for this step can also be found on the Talkpage of Leoboudv, where I wrote:
Likewise, the observation on the discrepancy in the titles of (Chief) Doorkeeper Dhuthotpe in P. Mayer A is misleading to the uninformed reader, since it should have been mentioned that the more modest title appears in an abandoned entry (see my previous TALK). It is a little strained to bring this case forward as ‘evidence against’, while one could even argue that the best way to explain the unfinished entry of 5.15 is to assume that it was abandoned precisely because exact titles mattered to the scribe! Whatever one's preferred explanation, given this undeniable ambiguity, I think the issue does not belong in Wikipedia. The reader should not be bothered with such minor issues which can be explained either way. Naturally, serious objections against the redistribution of sources to the Whm Mswt should be brought forward, but, especially with 'damaging' statements, one should be very, very careful, especially on a forum of non specialists as Wikipedia.
Leoboudv’s reply was:
I know what Thijs says about the titles but the omission of the title 'Chief' Doorkeeper is important shows that the ancient scribes were not consistent in recording people's status in society occasionally in their documents.
My reply:
You wrote: “I know what Thijs says about the titles but the omission of the title 'Chief' Doorkeeper is important shows that the ancient scribes were not consistent in recording people's status in society occasionally in their documents”. Once again, I find your reaction not comme il faut. Now that you have been informed that one of the entries was actually abandoned by the scribe, possibly because he realized that he had just written down an incorrect title for Dhuthotpe, you can’t just return to your original statement as if this alternative is not relevant. It could be argued that by simply reintroducing this bit into the Wikipedia page of Ramesses XI you are actively misinforming readers. The very example you present to them for your point of view can be turned upside down and just as easily used to show that the scribes did care about correct titles. The first time around you didn't know this. The second time you did not have that excuse. Also here, you present your own one-sided idea as ‘fact’, actively withholding the uninformed reader the alternative explanation, which, as you said yourself is a disservice to Wikipedia (and harmful to someone else's theory, we might add).
In my opinion the rendering “If true, then Ramesses XI should have survived into his 33rd Regnal Year or Year 15 of the Whm Mswt era before dying” presents the fact that we are dealing with a theory quite adequately.
The reappearance of Pinehesy in the Whm Mswt
editI have deleted the supposed counter-argument to the following statement:
(Thijs in his GM 173 paper (...) attempted to argue that the Taxation Papyrus also belonged to the whm-mswt era. )
Deleted text:
“ | However, this is not possible since the viceroy Pinehesy was listed as a supervisor in the collection of taxes in the Theban area in the Year 12 Turin taxation papyrus whereas he was designated as an enemy of the Egyptian state in Thebes at the start of the whm-mswt period in Year 19 of Ramesses XI.[1] P. BM 10383 2, 4-5 states that Pinehesy ousted Peison's superior from office at Medinet Habu and dates to Year 2 of the whm-mswt era (Year 20 proper of Ramesses XI). Pinehesy was designated as an enemy of Thebes in several Year 1 and Year 2 papyri of the whm-mswt (or Year 19 and Year 20 proper of Ramesses XI) documents and his name was consistently associated "by the nDs [or] (‘bad’) bird as its determinative" in these papyri.[2] Henceforth, Piankh acting on Ramesses XI's authority expelled Pinehesy from Upper Egypt in a series of civil wars [citation needed]until Year 10 or Year 11 of the whm-mswt (when Piankh returned from his Nubian campaigns and likely died to be succeeded in office by Herihor) and Pinehesy disappears from Egypt's political history. This demonstrates that the Taxation papyrus—and its near contemporary, the House-list, pre-date the whm-mswt era and actually belong to Year 12 proper of Ramesses XI when he was not an enemy of king Ramesses XI. Hence, the House-list must be assigned to Year 12 of Ramesses XI before the whm-mswt started.[citation needed] | ” |
The reasoning in this paragraph is flawed and one-sided:
The fact, in itself correct, that Pinehesy was an enemy of the state in the first two years of the Whm Mswt tells us absolutely nothing about the way he was viewed almost a decade later. It would be simplistic to postulate that he must of necessity have continued to be persona non grata for the rest of his life. In politics it is not uncommon for former enemies to forget their differences and reunite.
To use the unfounded theory of a perpetual status as enemy as a decisive ‘fact’ to dismiss a detailed chronological reconstruction as “impossible” is ultimately a logical mistake.
The paragraph is all the more problematic, since explanations for the reappearance of Pinehesy have been given in Thijs, SAK 31 (2003), 289-306 and Thijs, SAK 35 (2006), 307-326.
Although the supposed reappearance of Pinehesy as Viceroy of Nubia in year 12 is a remarkable feature which requires explanation, it is certainly not "impossible" as the readers of Wikipedia are here led to believe.
-Neither the purpose nor the outcome of the Nubian expedition undertaken by Piankh are known. The sources are severely limited and open to multiple interpretation:
-The Egyptologist Niwiński has suggested that Piankh went to Nubia to negotiate with Pinehesy rather than to fight him
-The Egyptologist Edward Wente has suggested that during the campaign of year 10 Whm Mswt it was Pinehesy and not Piankh who was loyal to Ramesses XI.
-During this period there was some sort of power struggle going on between the king and the family of Theban High Priests which was becoming more and more powerful. It is well possible that by this time Ramesses XI more or less (secretly) teamed up with Pinehesy to curtail the power of Piankh.
-There is evidence in the Late Ramesside Letters that in year 10 of the Whm Mswt Piankh may no longer have been a loyal supporter of Ramesses XI (e.g. the order to secretly interrogate and possibly even kill two Medjay policemen "without anyone in the land finding out"
-etc.
All these alternative explanations for the expedition of year 10 Whm Mswt could be used to explain the reappearance of Pinehesy as Viceroy following the (still mysterious) demise of Piankh
Neferkere (talk) 01:07, 17 July 2014 (UTC)
- There is no evidence that Piankh was an opponent of Ramesses XI and stop pushing Thijs' theories on Ramesses XI here! No Egyptologist except Dodson accept them. Piankh was still openly loyal to Ramesses XI and he never adopted a cartouche...unlike Herihor and even in one LRL letter he may mention that the king's authority has been weakened but it still exists--which is probably why it was Herihor who assumed the kingship instead in Upper Egypt.
- The supposed reappearance of Pinehesy as Viceroy of Nubia in the year 12 houselist only means that the houselist likely dates to Year 12 of Ramesses XI prior to the whm-mswt era. Thijs prefers to date this document to the whm-mswt era in this 2003 SAK paper but this evidence is uncertain. Herihor who succeeded Piankh as High Priest of Amun at Thebes never mentions Pinehesy as his friend and Herihor never controlled Nubia...which was Pinehesy's territory. These are facts. So, there was likely no reconciliation between the successors of Piankh and Pinehesy at all. This is just a theory by Thijs--that is not accepted by virtually all Egyptologists.
- I am reverting your edit because no Egyptologist accepts Thijs theories except Dodson that Ramesses XI spent 16-17 years ruling in a part of Egypt while Ramesses IX's authority was recognized throughout Egypt from Lower Egypt (Heliopolis) to Upper Egypt. If you revert my edit, you would be placing WP:OR theory into Ramesses XI's article. Jansen-Winkeln, Payraudeau, von Beckerath, Krauss do not accept them. Thijs' arguments that Ramesses IX and X were contemporary for the first 17 years of Rmesses XI have not been proven by anyone...except in Thijs' head. Wikipedia is based on facts. A few years ago, who knows, you may have followed Dodson and argued that Psusennes II did not have an independent reign...even though no Egyptologist accepted Dodson's view here and Dodson has now rejected this position too and accepted that Psusennes II had an independent reign. Until Egyptologists accept Thijs ideas, they must stay out of Ramesses XI's article. I will revert your large changes here on this king's article. Thijs' gives his reconstruction of the late New Kingdom chronology but no one accepts him right now and that is the problem. Only Dodson thinks Thijs is right and that is not enough and everyone knows how Dodson's ideas on Psusennes II also were shown to be wrong. Best Regards, --Leoboudv (talk) 06:27, 17 July 2014 (UTC)
- PS: Jennifer Palmer explicitly criticizes many of Thijs ideas in her paper too on page 6-7 if you read it. Thijs' ideas are not acceptable or realistic....not even to Palmer. Most Egyptologists don't accept them either. Thank You, --Leoboudv (talk) 08:01, 17 July 2014 (UTC)
"reigned from 1107 BC to 1078 BC or 1077 BC" - these dates are back to front? Or typo? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Silkfield (talk • contribs) 11:31, 3 December 2014 (UTC)
References
- ^ Jaroslav Cerny, Egypt: From the Death of Ramesses III to the End of the Twenty-first Dynasty', in I.E.S. Edwards, C.J. Gadd, N.G.L. Hammond and E. Sollberger (eds), Cambridge Ancient History Vol. II, Pt. 2, 634. 1965 (reprinted 1975) Cambridge University Press: Cambridge
- ^ The High Priests of Amun at the End of the Twentieth Dynasty by Jennifer Palmer, Birmingham Egyptologial Journal (2014), pp.7-9
Ramesses XII?
edit- Has anyone seen Mladjov's article on a possible new Dynasty 20 king who ruled after Ramesses XI here on The Transition between the Twentieth and Twenty-First Dynasties Revisited in 2017. It is interesting. Regards, --Leoboudv (talk) 01:59, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
- He might be a new Dynasty 20 king and would solve any problems in Jansen Winkeln's theory that Herihor succeeded Piankh as HPA. --Leoboudv (talk) 02:05, 23 February 2017 (UTC)