Economic and Cultural - Exchange - Between Kush and Egypt
Economic and Cultural - Exchange - Between Kush and Egypt
Economic and Cultural - Exchange - Between Kush and Egypt
Doctor of Philosophy
1993
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BIBL
I.ON N
(iv
ABSTRACT
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Non fumuin ex fulgore, sed ex fuino dare lucem
Cogitat, ut speciosa dehinc niiracula promat. Horace
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CONTENTS
8
Acknowledgements.
12
A note on definitions.
13
1. Introduction: history and historiography.
21
Part 1: Viceregal lush.
23
2. Dominating Nubia.
37
3. The political geography of New Kingdom Nubia.
52
Li. Ruling Nubia: the Viceregal administration.
The Egyptian elite.
58
The career structure.
The development and structure of the viceregal
60
bureaucracy.
63
The officials of the administration.
63
The Viceroys.
69
The Chief of Bowmen of lush.
70
The Overseers of Southern Foreign Lands.
71
The idnv.
72
The indigenous elites.
75
The elite of viceregal. Nubia.
76
5. Exploiting Nubia? the economy.
78
Geography and ecology.
From fortress to temple-town: the development
81
of 'urbanism'.
The nature of 'urbanisin' and 'colonial' settlement
91
in Nubia.
95
Town and country.
100
Consumption.
An integrated economy: the importance of Kush
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to Egypt.
Trade and profit. 103
Trade and taxation: the tribute of lush. 105
The collapse of the economy in Nubia. 108
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169
Neroe.
The archaeology of Nubia after the New Iingdom. 170
171
9. The Ramesside Succession in Nubia.
The end of the Viceregal. administration.
172
The Viceroy Panehesy.
A successor of Panehesy in Nubia? 176
177
The disestablishment of the Viceregal administration.
179
The Ramesside successors in Nubia.
180
The Neo-Ramesside kings of ICush.
!lenmaetre-setepenamufl KTSN 182
188
Usermaetre-setepenre Ary-mery-amun.
192
Karimala.
196
10. Egypt and Nubia during the Third Intermediate Period.
197
The Theban Viceroys of the Third Intermediate Period.
200
The Illusory Campaign of Shoshenq I.
203
Zerah the Kushite.
204
Egypt and Assyria.
212
The rise of Sais.
216
Nubia and Libya.
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251
Shabaqo's rule in Egypt.
252
The date of Shabaqo's invasion.
256
12. The foundation of the state.
256
The military base of Kushite power.
265
The economic base of Kushite power.
277
The ideology of the early Kushite state.
Appendices.
299
1. The commodities of Nubia.
305
2. The Archaeology of early Meroitic Nubia.
322
3. The Aktisanes episode of Diodoros.
325
4. The Wadi Gasus Inscription.
5. The Kushite succession: Matriliny or patriliny? 330
365
6. Index of Kushite royalty.
404
Notes
458
Bibliography
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Acknowledgements
The circumstances of writing this study have not always been easy.
Of the many colleagues and friends who have been supportive and
encouraging, I note particularly Dr.Alison Roberts and Peter James,
the former, a constant source of help, whose wide knowledge has been
a stimulus and gentle criticism a cause of much revision (at her
suggestion the whole of Part One - when it was ostensibly "finished"
was re-arranged and re-written, and as a result is, I hope, far
clearer and more logical); the challenges to conventional
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intepretations thrown out by Peter James occasionally shocked but
always provoked new ideas.
9-
I have had the opportunity of studying Nubian objects in many
Museums since my interest began. In Oxford, Dr.Eelen Whitehouse
enabled me, with her customary charm, to have easy access to material
of the Oxford Excavations in Nubia deposited in the Ashmolean Museum,
notably from Sanam and Faras. Also in Oxford, my thanks go to
Dr.Jaromr Mlek for help in the Griffith Institute and access to the
excavation records of F.L1. Griffith. My thanks also to Dr.Ch.
Barbotin at the Louvre, Dr.C. Roebrig at the Metropolitan Museum of
Art in New York, and Dr.Peter Lacovara at the Boston Museum of Fine
Arts for supplying information and photographs of material in those
collections.
It is ironic that the only non-private funding for this work came
from the now defunct German Democratic Republic, and it was my
scholarship to the Humboldt-tTniversitt zu Berlin in 1986-1987 that
provided the only period uninterrupted by other obligations or the
necessity to earn money. I would like to express my thanks to the
colleagues and friends who made this such a valuable period. In the
Institut fr Agyptologie und Sudanarchologie-Meroitistik, Prof.St.
Wenig, Prof.Erika Endesfelder, Jochun and Gaby Hallof, Pavel Wolf and
Klaus Finneiser; in the kgyptisches Museum Dr.W. Miller, Dr. H.
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Kischkewitz and Dr.C.-B. Arnst. At the Akadeinie der Wissenachaften,
where I was able to consult the Lepsius Archive, Dr.Stefan Grunert,
Dr.W.-F.Reineke and Dr.Fritz Hinkel. Alas, three of my Berlin
colleagues have since died, two in tragic accidents: Marion Hinkel,
Dr.Ursula Hintze, and Prof.Fritz Hintze. To the last I am
particularly grateful for his classes in Meroitic language. During
my time in the GDR, a most valuable period was spent in Leipzig,
where I was able to examine a large proportion of Steindorff's
material from Aniba. My sincere thanks go to Prof.E1ke Blumenthal
for facilitating access to this important, and too little-known,
collection.
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A note on definitions.
In recent years there has been a move to drop some of the older, more
familiar, terms defining periods or places. 'Ethiopian', as a
general term for things Nubian and Meroitic, or in the case of Egypt,
for the 25th Dynasty, was the first to go. Reisner's terminology,
based upon the first season's work at Shellal, has, perhaps
unfortunately, become engrained: Adams's attempt to replace Reisner's
'Groups' with 'Horizons' seems not to have had any lasting effect,
nor has Trigger's 'Early/Middle Nubian'. Although the history of
post-pharaonic Nubia was divided into 'Napatan' and 'Meroitic'
phases, on the location of the royal burial places, there has been
increasing use of 'Meroitic' to apply to all of post-pharaonic Nubia,
from the 11th Century BC onwards (even backwards to include Kerma).
'Ballana' now more usually replaces 'X-Group' for post-meroitic Lower
Nubia, and the more recently coined 'Post-pyramidal meroitic' for a
comparable phase in the south. With the possibility of confusion
amongst these terms, the following definitions are used here:
!roitic, is here used for the phase from the end of the Viceregal.
administration until the 4th century AD.
Inrru kingdo., this term seems first to have been used by Kendall
(1982), and is applied to the emergent monarchy.
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1
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cultural history, such as music and dance, or food - fundamentally
important in all societies - remain elusive. With the first we can
go little beyond describing instruments, and occasionally contexts.
For the second, knowledge of agriculture and crops is only part of
the whole picture, not always supplemented by literary sources.
Sauneron's study was informative about negative Egyptian attitudes to
Kushite (and Phoenician) food, but not about the food itself [8]. In
these cases, a reliance on the artistic and archaeological record
restricts a better understanding of the culture: only anthropology
can provide parallels.
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diplomatic missions from one African ruler to another might involve
elaborate panegyrics, sung by one or more herald.
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increasingly important contributions. Recent research has focussed
on the important indigenous phases - notably the A-Group and Kerma
and on the later Meroitic period. The Viceregal. period and the
earlier Meroitic period - the 'Napatan' or Egyptian 25th Dynasty -
have still (with a very few exceptions) not been effectively
integrated into Nubian studies [18]. The predominance of Egyptian
types of material (amongst other factors) have left Nubia during
these phases as (peripheral) fields within Egyptology [19].
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Diffusionism was one of the leading models for the historical
process and was advocated by academics across the whole spectrum,
from (for example) Flinders Petrie to the Marxist V.Gordon Childe
[231. As with many theories which become generally applied,
diffusionism confused different issues. So the diffusion of
languages, of technology, and of culture, became associated with that
of race. Similarly, the reaction to diffusionism, emphasising
independent invention, may have underemphasised the possibility of
transmission of technologies and ideas [24].
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Even with the considerable advances in our knowledge of the
archaeology of parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the issue of diffusion of
culture and technology remains controversial [301.
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Egyptian New Kingdom presence in Nubia lasted a long time compared,
for example, with British rule in India, or even Roman rule in
Britain. Factors which were important during the period of expansion
were not necessarily a priority some two or three hundred years
later. Similarly, the indigenous powers opposing Egyptian expansion
(eg Kerma) were not necessarily the major indigenous powers later.
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material from Upper Nubia and the Butana. Nevertheless, it is
appropriate now, while Nubian studies is still a relatively young
discipline, to challenge the conventional intepretation and ask how
these ideas developed and whether they should still be accepted.
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Part 1
VICEREGAL KUSH
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Jew Lingdo Nubte: the response to dosinatlon.
years of domination
Kamose 5 (7) years 1-5
Ahmo se 25 years 5-29
Amenhotep I 21 years 29-49
NB. The small discrepancy between the total years here and the
conventional dates for the New Kingdom, c 1552-1069 (Trigger et al 1983:
184) is accounted for by co-regencies, overlaps of the first regnal
year, possibility of a sole rule for Amenemesse, etc.
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2
Dominating Nubia.
The Theban princes lamose and Ahinose were victorious against both the
Hyksos rulers of Lower Egypt and the Kushite princes. H.S. Smith and
A. Smith [1] have discussed the campaigns of Iamose against Nubia,
and conclude that the main function of these was to establish a rear
protection before directing a major campaign against Avaris. The
effect was the re-occupation and restoration of Buhen, which marked
the southern limit of Kamose's expansion, creating a large buffer
zone between the Kushite kingdom, probably ruled from Kerma, and
Upper Egypt. This expansion was almost certainly before Kamose's
year 3 [2], and consequently must have been his first military
campaign. Whilst it is likely that Kamose would have regarded the
defence of his southern frontier essential as a prologue to any
attack on the Hyksos, the opportunity arose with a change of ruler
within Kush itself, as is revealed by the text of the letter from
Awessere-Apepy to the new ruler (hk3) intercepted by the Thebans 13].
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have ranged farther south. The Emhab text states that the army
reached the territory of Miu, placed by Stork [8] and Kemp [9] in the
Abu flamed or Berber-Shendi region. Stork (101 proposes that the army
was despatched across the Korosko road, in an attempt to distract the
Kushites by a rear attack. Zibelius [11] assumed that Iliu was a more
northerly locality, either one of the re-conquered territories in
Lower Nubia, or a region attacked in a southward thrust into riverine
Upper Nubia. O'Connor [12] prefers a southerly location, in the
Berber-Shendi reach, whilst acknowledging that the Egyptian evidence
(from all periods) is inconclusive. A rearward attack on Kerma
territory would have involved a major expedition, across the Desert
to the Abu flamed reach and then along the river through the 5th-4th
Cataract region, or back across the Bayuda. Until further
documentary evidence is forthcoming, the attack on Miu remains an
obscure episode in lainose's campaigns.
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allowing Ahmose to direct his attention towards the north.
Vandersleyen suggests that the Alunose campaign against Kush took
place around his 15th year.
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struggle for power amongst Kushite chiefs who had formerly been
vassals of Kerma.
It may have been the very power of Kerma which dictated the
aggressive southern policy of the Egyptian rulers: with little hope
of maintaining an unchallenged control of Lower Nubia, suppression
may have seemed the only alternative.
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delimited Egypt's claimed area of domination in Kush, amd were
oriented towards the princedoms of the Berber-Shendi reach and
central Sudan.
If, as seems possible, the latter years of Ahmose atd part of the
reign of Amenhotep I had been occupied with internal politics a major
show of strength in Nubia would have been necessary at this time.
The boundary stelae of Thutmose I at Eagar el-Nerwa and on the
Euphrates mark a sphere of Egyptian influence not extended by any
later rulers.
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with that of Thutmose I. The texts of Tiy and Djehuty are quite
explicit that the expedition was led by Ratsheps'ut in person [35],
but, unfortunately, neither these, nor the Deir el-Bahari texts are
year-dated. Redford, in conclusion, suggests two certain campaigns
during the co-regency; the first, early, being led by the king
herself, and the second dated by the Tumbos inscription of Thutmose
III [36] to his year 20. Redford suggests the possibility of two
further expeditions; if the Deir el-Bahari text is taken as referring
to a different campaign to that in the Tiy graffito, and the Armant
pylon texts [37] and stela [38] relate to an expedition different
from that recorded in the Tumbos inscription [39]. Indeed the Armant
stela, as Redford argues [40], states that a Nubian campaign took
place not long before the first Asiatic campaign of year 23.
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Amenhotep II [46] and contacts continued into the 20th Dynasty [47].
Punt, accessible from the Red Sea, is almost certainly to be located
in the more easterly region of the Central Sudan, extending into, or
close to, the Ethiopian highlands [48]. Since many of the
commodities brought from Punt were identical to those acquired
through Nubia, Egyptian motivation for the expeditions becomes a
major issue. It seems unlikely that the transfer of incense trees,
depicted at Deir el-Bahari, can be seen as an attempt to undermine
the incense (frankincense and myrrh) trade as Dixon proposed [49]:
the quantities used in Egyptian ritual and cleansing must have far
exceeded those which could have been produced by the trees imported
[50]. Liverani [51] emphasises the ideological aspect, that the
creation of a Punt within the temple of Amun was a means of
controlling a country from afar which was, practically, difficult to
reach. Irrespective of this, doubtless rightly stressed, ideological
angle, expeditions to Punt may have had economic advantage, as a
means of weakening the monopolies of the Kushite princes of the
Middle Nile. Alternatively, prolonged military conflict between
Egypt and the Kushite rulers may have caused disturbance to the
transit of products, or at least inflated the 'cost'. The question
of Egyptian contacts with Punt and how this relates to their
activities in Nubia remains elusive, despite the recent
archaeological work in the eastern Sudan and Ethiopia which suggests
a possible equation of the historical Punt with the cultures of the
Gash Delta [52]. The issue is further complicated by analyses which
suggest that the importance of frankincense and myrrh - thought the
main commodities brought from Punt - has been exaggerated [53].
- 29 -
The boundary inscription of Thutmose I at Hagar el-Nerwa was
duplicated, probably in year 35 [55], although the royal presence is
not a corollary of Egyptian activity in the region. The last
recorded campaign in Nubia led by the king in person occurred in year
47, when the fortress of e.3 3svt was founded near Gebel Barkal
[56]. This suggests an expedition covering the 3rd Cataract to
Dongola Reach and the 4th Cataract, although whether it was
militarily active, or a display of strength following the king's
prolonged Asiatic campaigns, is unclear. It is noteworthy that
Thutmose III emphasises that his is the first Egyptian army to visit
Barkal - surely confirming that earlier activities in the Abu Rained
region had been via the desert roads.
- 30 -
been directed against an enemy in the eastern desert of Wawat, and
was not led by the king in person. As O'Connor [69] observed, the
"(presumably nomadic) inhabitants of these regions did not welcome
Egyptian expansion, and perhaps interfered with Egyptian efforts to
exploit the gold". Whilst the Eastern Desert remained the major
focus of military activities in Nubia in the later 18th Dynasty, the
riverine domains were, apparently, mainly peaceful, increasingly
acculturated and developed.
Ibhet [73], focus of the second campaign is, like the toponym
Ikayta, which also now occurs in the topographical lists, to be
located in the gold mining regions of the Eastern desert [74].
O'Connor [75] views this campaign (attributed to year 5) as part of a
"comprehensive plan to expand and improve the exploitation of the
gold mining areas as a whole"; a plan which included the extension of
viceregal authority as far north as Nekhen, thus embracing the gold
mining regions of southern Egypt.
- 31 -
development in the Abri-Delgo Reach, at Soleb and Sedeinga (discussed
below), also indicative of more organised use of agricultural land in
that region.
The events of the reigns of Ay and Roremheb are not well known,
although their Viceroys, Paser and his son Amenemopet, left many
inscriptions. Schulman's theory that a Viceroy Nakhtmin attempted to
seize power at the death of Tutankhamun has little to support it
- 32 -
[85], and there seems to have been no interruption in the building
works and policy.
- 33 -
although there is a possibility that this could be the same Paser
before he became Viceroy [99]. With this identification Spalinger
attributes the campaign to the second decade of the reign, and
suggests that it is perhaps related to reliefs at Derr and Amara.
Conflict appears to have recurred during the Viceroyalty of Setau
[100], before year 44. Setau also campaigned in the western desert
of Lower Nubia, perhaps Selima, capturing numbers of Libyans who were
then put to work on the building of el-Sebua temple [loll. There is
little other evidence of military activity during the reign, and even
in the early years it was Western Asia which preoccupied the king in
person [102].
- 34 -
the bureaucracy and the personalities involved, than specifically
royal activities: this particularly applies to the group of texts
from the reign of Siptah. Egypt may have suffered a number of
internal problems, notably the 'usurpation' of Amenmesse, although
rulers continue to be attested at Sinai and Timna, indicating no
cessation of activities abroad.
- 35 -
emphasised the viceregal control of the Nile valley as far as Napata
and 4th Cataract, perceived to be the frontier. The persistence of
princedoms in Lower Nubia has been amply recognised, but far less
attention has been paid to Upper Nubia. This has, to a certain
extent, been a recognition of the lack of archaeological work in the
region, and that consequently much would be argument ex silentio. A
closer examination of the material we do possess and an application
of centre-periphery models permits an alternative proposition: that
the Egyptians did not 'colonise' the region of the 3rd to 4th
Cataract, but left it as a buffer-zone.
- 36 -
3
- 37 -
dynasty expansion south of the 2nd Cataract limited itself firstly at
Tumbos, and ultimately in the locality of laroy. Most writers have
identified Karoy with the 4th Cataract region [2], some [31
associating the name with the root KUR/IAR and with the modern
Kareima and lurru. Vercoutter [4] suggested that Karoy covered a
large area, most probably including the 4th Cataract and the gold
mines east of Abu Hamed. Many of these writers cite the texts in the
tomb of Huy [51 where, at his investiture as Viceroy, Ruy is given
control of the regions "from Nekhen to Karoy" and "from Nekhen to
Nesut-tawy"; but, rather than poetic variants, these may reflect two
different spheres of authority: Nekhen to Nesut-tawy (Gebel Barkal)
indicating riverine Nubia, and Nekhen to Karoy the deserts and wadis
as far as Kurgus.
- 38 -
implications of, modern terms such as boundary ("the periphery of a
polity"), frontier ("an indefinite zone where the polity comes to an
end") and border ("a fixed line").
The study of centre and periphery in the ancient world has been
developed considerably since Owen Lattimore [11], discussing Chinese
imperial expansion, established a model for other old world
expansions. Lattimore indicated three radii:- unification by
military action; centralization under uniform civil administration,
and economic integration. These radii will, of course, be governed
and modified by a number of factors: the physical nature of the
country; its population, political structure and economic resources;
its proximity to militarily powerful states and other spheres of
influence.
- 39 -
The military expeditions recorded in Nubia after the reign of
Thutinose III were directed against two different regions: the Eastern
Desert (the toponyms of Ibhet and Ikayta) and Irem. In the former,
nomadic tribes presented a constant threat to the gold-mining
stations, and perhaps also to the riverine settlements. The location
of the second region, Irein, has been the subject of some controversy,
but is fundamentally important for our understanding of Egyptian
activities in the Nile valley and Central Sudan.
Whilst the Egyptians may have patrolled the 4th cataract region as
far as Kurgus, and even campaigned further south, the sphere of
control, although not necessarily influence (which may have ranged
much farther) certainly ended at Napata. The natural frontiers are
too formidable for easy integration, military or administrative, of
the region beyond. The later Kushite states did achieve control
over the whole region from Aswan to the Central Sudan, but it has
been frequently argued that during the later Neroitic period (1st
century BC onwards) the two parts of Nubia were in many ways
distinct, culturally and administratively [13].
The lack of Egyptian activity between Kawa and the 4th Cataract
suggests the possibility that this area may have been in the control
of local princes who owed allegiance to the Pharaoh. Such local
chieftains would doubtless have found many advantages in an alliance
with a powerful Egyptian state, although they probably tried to
establish their own hegemonies when that authority ultimately
weakened. Such a situation would also account for the extensive
building works of the Egyptians in the region ininediately to the
north, the Abri-Delgo Reach. The Dongola Reach is the most fertile
stretch of the Nile Valley south of Silsila, which led Kemp [14] to
question why the Egyptian settlement was in the more northerly Abri-
Delgo Reach:
The apparently non-ecologically based distribution of temple towns
looks suspiciously like the result of an over assessment of
agricultural potential based on a false understanding of the
processes of nature.
- 40 -
Since these towns were established in the Abri-Delgo Reach over a
period of some 150 years (Amenhotep III - Ramesses II), and not all
at the same time, a political, rather than ecological motivation for
there siting, seems more convincing. There are reasons for thinking
that, if not totally abandoned, the earlier foundations ceded much of
their importance to the later centres. Consequently, there may not
have been the density of population Kemp assumes [15].
Kemp [16] has argued very plausibly that the Kerma-Letti basin
might have been given over to cattle grazing; whilst very fertile,
irrigation of the basins is necessary for high arable production.
- 41 -
eventual core of B 500, was begun by Horeinheb or Sety I, and
completed by Ramesses II [21]. However, as has been argued for Lower
Nubia, Ramesside temples, whatever their size, do not necessarily
indicate large town sites or population centres. Ramesses II's
temple at Gebel Barkal is similar in size to the temple of Gerf
Hussein.
The major New Kingdom building work was in Lower Nubia and the
Abri-Delgo reach. It is, in any case, hardly likely that the
Egyptians would have built their major administrative centre at the
frontier.
- 42 -
taken there at a later date. The Egyptians would doubtless have
chosen as the position of their frontier fortress a site which was
both easily defensible and had some controlling position. Island or
west bank fortresses had been favoured at the 2nd Cataract, because
the major military threat came from the Eastern Desert. The early-
mid-lBth dynasty fortress in Upper Nubia was on the island of Sai,
and there was possibly a fortress founded by Thutmose I on the island
of Tumbos [25]. The early-l9th dynasty town site of Amara was also
apparently situated on an island [26]. Indeed, the only east bank
site with New Kingdom monuments is Kawa [27]. At Napata the
situation was complicated by the direction of the river, here running
in a great double bend. Military threat from the Berber-Shendi Reach
would thus have come directly from the south along the desert routes
which strike the Nile again at Sanam and Nun. Attack from desert
dwellers would have been possible along the whole north bank of the
river. An island fortress is a logical possibility. As an
historical reality it can only be verified by exploration of the
islands in the Gebel Barkal region.
The area of direct control may, at least for much of the 18th
Dynasty, have ended at the 3rd Cataract, with the Dongola Reach left
in the hands of local rulers. lawa, and perhaps Sanam, might have
been seats of such princes who, like their northern counterparts,
would have been raised at the Egyptian court. They would have acted
as the intermediaries in the cross-frontier trade and transfer of
goods from the central Sudan. The Egyptian presence in Nubia over
such a long period would inevitably have resulted in changes during
the 19th and 20th Dynasties.
- 43 -
cogently argued by Priese [29], and which had gained wide acceptance,
that Irem was to be equated with the Old Kingdom Yam and Ileroitic
Arme/Armi, both perhaps to be located in the Kerma region.
Acceptance of O'Connor's theory would require a complete re-
evaluation of Egyptian military activity in the 3rd to 6th Cataract
region.
In the model advocated here, in which the region between the 3rd
and 4th Cataracts was left largely in the control of indigenous
rulers, Irem could still be located in the Kerma region (although the
- 44 -
factors of the Sety I campaign have to be considered). Kemp [33]
has, independently, located Mm, another important Kushite chiefdom
during the New Kingdom, in the Shendi Reach, and it is certain that
there were important political units within the central Sudan at this
time, whether, or not, they should be identified with Irem and Niu.
These chiefdoms must have been the main suppliers of the "luxury"
commodities which formed a considerable part of the ins and b3kw of
lush.
- 45 -
south may have been controlled by indigenous Kushite princes. A
certain amount of textual evidence can be adduced in support of this,
and the settlement pattern in the Abri-Delgo Reach is most easily
explicable within this model. Further theoretical considerations
make it likely that the Egyptians would have established a buffer
zone between their 'colonised' territory and the actual frontier at
Napata. The parallelism of texts relating to Nubia and Asia
demonstrates clearly that the Egyptians did not view their
relationship with the two regions as essentially different. Both
were suppliers of both mw and b3kw, both had wry-rulers. This
suggests very strongly that the Asiatic and African peripheries of
the Egyptian centre functioned in similar ways.
- 46 -
control the economic wealth may come to rely on the continuance of
'trade' to maintain their privileged positions within the society.
Instances where a stronger culture has come under the authority of a
greater military power, such as Asia Minor under Roman rule, show
quite clearly that certain practices of that controlling power will
be adopted by individuals or groups within the elite, as a strategy
in the constant struggles within the elite itself for prestige and
status [35]. Similarly, when Ife came into contact with Islam
seeking 'luxury' commodities, the power and prestige of the local
ruler who already had a local network at his disposal was emphasised.
Early New Kingdom Nubia, in which the invading power was both
militarily and culturally dominant, may thus have seen the
affirmation of, or increase in, the power of certain local princes
for whom the adoption of Egyptian manners and practices was a means
of increasing their status within their community through their links
with the new rulers.
- 47 -
distinguishing themselves, increasing their status, and consolidating
their political power.
- 48 -
country as totally different from its attitude to the Western Asiatic
dominions. This attitude can probably be derived solely from the
pre-, or mis-conceptions of the discipline. Inherent is the attitude
that the Egyptians thought like 'us' in relation to the south. It is
equally necessary to be wary of imposing upon Egypto-Kushite
relations the diplomatic machinery of the Western Asiatic states, but
at the same time recognise that some sort of contracts must have been
mutually agreed. Whilst this is accepted between the Pharaoh and
Western Asiatic rulers, the idea seems to be prevalent that in Nubia
the Egyptian king could set up an inscription (NB in Egyptian)
effectively saying 'keep out', and he was obeyed. The Nubian
boundary inscriptions are analogous with those in Naharin and at the
Nahr el-Kalb: there is no good reason to believe that they lacked the
contractual background of the Asiatic texts [45].
- 49 -
BIBL
LONDON
UNIV
products, such as gold, incense, ivory and ebony, can be relatively
easily accounted for. Their value in the redistributive economy as
gifts to officials, and within the diplomatic sphere of gift-
exchange, was not purely economic, it also cemented social
relationships, and emphasised the po8ition of the king, both within
the Egyptian hierarchy and in the wider geo-political context.
Fig 1
tribute gift
exchange
- 50 -
Pig 2
Western Asiatic
Libya rulers
rulers of the
EGYPT Eastern Desert
Independent rulers
(Berber - Shendi)
- 51 -
4
- 52 -
the very definite meanings of both terms in Roman politics and
society, whence they originate.
- 53 -
up of lesser bureaucrats, priests, wealthy farmers, artisans and
military officers. The lower class included soldiers, minor
officials and priests, tenant-farmers, peasants and soldiers. This
division is unsatisfactory for a number of reasons, and claims that
the elite "does not seem to have been a strongly entrenched
hereditary aristocracy" should be treated with some scepticism [22].
Power in Egypt was in the hands of the literate, and, equally, the
powerful controlled literacy. Texts such as "be a scribe" [23] which
laud the occupation of a scribe above all others, are documents which
would have been read only by those who were in fact scribes, or were
training to become scribes. Any study of the Egyptian elite must
acknowledge that literacy was the access to power, and that literacy
was limited to possibly as little as 1% of the population [24].
Great emphasis has been placed on the rise of the military in the
New Kingdom, the importance of chariotry, and the possibility of a
'Naryannu' class in Egypt 125]. In the Old and Middle Kingdoms
military commanders were members of the elite seconded for specific
purposes. In the New Kingdom there are indications of a more
structured and professionalised hierarchy, with a tendency to
specialise in one of the institutions, but all had the same elite
education with its emphasis on writing. Whilst the elite doubtless
kept the new art of chariotry as their own preserve - chariots and
horses were "expensive" and presumably only came as gift from the
king - literacy remained the basis of elite education. Indeed,
military commanders are frequently depicted as scribes [26] and the
Bakenkhons cursus suggests that the "stable" was a type of military
academy where writing was learnt alongside the equestrian arts.
- 54 -
important to distinguish the ranks of bureaucrats: a king with a
small attendant nobility preserves his remoteness, but an increased
elite group must ultimately necessitate elevated status for the king.
The social structure did not change, but the elite grew.
- 55-
found after the Amarna phase, with family and religious scenes
supplanting the old royal-official relationship [36].
- 56 -
families kept archives at earlier periods is obvious from the Nose
dispute, which must have detailed the family as recipients of produce
from the jointly held estate, from the beginning of the 18th Dynasty
to year 18 of Ramesses II, some three hundred years [45]. While the
genealogies of official families of the 19th and 20th Dynasties and
of the Third Intermediate Period are extensive, those of the 18th
Dynasty are much more abbreviated. This has perhaps underemphasised
the potential significance of the elite as a political force.
Habachi [46], discussing a monument recording the descendants of the
early Viceroys, as'umed that the family had declined in importance.
This may have been the case, but the evidence does not necessarily
indicate that, since this monument may record only one line of the
descendants of this family. Indeed, depiction of the Viceroy Turo in
the Silsila shrine of Rekhmire's father, has suggested a possible
connection with another highly influential family [47]. The
responsibilities of an extended family, and the limited number of
high positions must be considered before subjective interpretations
are made.
- 57 -
between the families of the Ring's Mother and of the Ring's Chief
Wife.
The generalisation may be safely made that an official was the son
of an official, whose own rank (major or minor office holder) was
only one factor affecting the ultimate success of his children. A
cursory examination of families known over two or three generations
shows that 'major' officeholders (eg high priesthoods, overseer
titles, vizier, stewards etc) may have a large number of relatives
who are only 'minor' officeholders (eg scribal positions, lesser
priestly titles) [57]. Of course, the Egyptian bureaucracy was
actually very small - especially when the most powerful positions are
- 58-
considered. A number of factors may have affected the appointment to
office. The hereditary principle becomes more obvious in the 19th
Dynasty, but it was doubtless dominant in the 18th, and indeed,
earlier literature shove that it was regarded as the ideal in the Old
and Middle Kingdoms. The emphasis on heredity in the 19th Dynasty is
related to a decline in the emphasis (on funerary monuments) on the
relationship of the officials to the king, and their dependency upon
him, which reaches its peak in the 18th dynasty with the reigns of
Amenhotep III and Akhenaten. [58]
- 59 -
might be justified: that Anhurinose, having completed his schooling,
was attached to the navy and army for a period of military service,
before his appointment to priestly office. This text, unfortunately,
doe! not indicate how many years were spent in each occupation.
The Egyptian expansion into Lower Nubia in the reigns of Kamose and
Ahmose was against territories which had been controlled by the
Kushite kingdom of Kerma throughout the 2nd Intermediate Period (641.
The Kushite rulers had installed Egyptian overseers in the fortress
of Buhen, and possibly in others [65], and there was an Egyptian or
Egypto-Kushite population in these centres. Nothing further is known
of the local socio-political composition at this date, although it
seems probable that the three princedoms which are attested later,
already existed, perhaps as vassals of the Kerma chiefs [661. The
changing power configurations of the princedoms of Lower Nubia during
the late-Old Kingdom [67] should serve as an indicator of the dynamic
nature of Nubian society, even though the supporting documentary
evidence is invariably absent. The continued existence of a
'chiefdom' as a territorial unit does not, of course mean that the
chiefs were not replaced by others more amenable to the Egyptian
administration [68]. Since Lower Nubia had a fairly substantial
population the imposition of some sort of civil administration at an
early date was clearly imperative, and there is a strong likelihood
that a Viceroy, Tety, was appointed by Kamose [69].
- 60 -
The reign of Amenhotep II or Thutmose IV saw the emergence of the
mature Viceregal bureaucracy, when the iduw were defined as "of lush"
and "of Wawat", and a dual system was established for the two parts
of Nubia. This was almost certainly a conscious re-organisation
rather than simply a development. At about this time also the
Viceregal title became s3 maw n l3 [70]. This presumably reflects
some change within the Egyptian administration; at about the same
time the highest officials are grouped with the title t3y b.v hr wn7
nswt [71]. No major changes can be seen in the later phases of the
Egyptian domination. The viceregal bureaucracy was almost certainly
controlled very largely by Nubian families, whether of indigenous,
Egyptian, or mixed origin, with only the highest officials being
appointed directly from Egypt.
- 61 -
a,
a,
a,.'-'
a, 0 .4
14Cl a,
1q4 4
a,
o 0Ll
'4
a,
4J
"4
1-I
a, E
em
Wa,
.1-I
a,
14
a,
WI-' '4-'
4-'_ a, 0
- 4
4 a,.
o 0
.14
'i-iZ a,
140 1-4 4-'
0 a, lI1 a,
a, Ii
4I
0
.iajm 4J a,
-'-4
-
a,
ooIi 1I
0
a,
I1
a, 0 a,
1-4
'IJ 4-'
U U
0
14 a,
a,
a,
'I
4-'
'-ii U
.14
Ii
r
4J
1M I
0 I
4-1 I m
140
a,
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-
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- 62 -
Prophets of all the gods of Nubia.
4. The military, under the bry pdt n l3.
5. The Treasury.
6. The gold mines, which would have been under the Viceroy's
direct authority
The Viceroy himself had a large personal staff which comprised the
household officials commensurate with his rank, along with the
cv
scribes and deputies (the rvdw and the av a) who could be
delegated for specific jobs. There is evidence that a number of
Viceroys were accompanied in their official duties by their sons,
either with a specific rank, or office, or simply as deputies.
The Viceroys.
- 63 -
that the title continued in use throughout the Third Intermediate
Period [801.
- 64 -
that Ron's son, the royal envoy Webekhsenu left an cx voto in the
South Temple at Buhen [89]. A graffito on Seheil [90], depicting
both father and son, may have been carved whilst travelling south to
take up his appointment.
- 65 -
Thebes [94] and similarly, the presence of the Viceroy at the head of
the funeral procession of the Vizier Ramose, indicates his importance
amongst the Upper Egyptian officials [95]. Royal visits to Thebes to
celebrate such major festivals as the Opet, may have been a time when
the Viceroy reported on affairs in Nubia, and received royal
directives. The evidence for royal visits to lush is limited to
reports of military activities, although they may have been more
frequent. An accession tour might be expected, although this was
usually accompanied by a display of military strength to quell the
'rebellion' which is often reported. Nubia lacked the ancient
festivals, such as Opet, which were usually celebrated by the king in
person and royal religious visits were more likely to have related to
the sed-festival.
- 66 -
With the increased emphasis on the family, rather than upon the
king, after the Amarna period, there is a consequent increase in
information on the families of some later Viceroys. Whereas some
Viceroys of the 18th Dynasty, such as Nehi, are well-attested by
monuments and inscriptions in Nubia their families remain virtually
unknown [104], the inverse happens for some later officiants. Paser
2, who served Ramesses II, left few monuments in Nubia, but is named
on the family monument of the Chief of the Madjoy, Amenemone,
revealing his connection with a family which held important
priesthoods in Middle Egypt as well as those of Amun at larnak, and
Re at Ileliopolis, and which retained the position of hry pdt of lush
for three generations, as well as being allied by marriage with
Viziers [105].
- 67 -
Buy 1, and mother of the Viceroy Paser 1, and perhaps also of the bry
pdt Khaemwaset.
- 68 -
are affirmed by their numerous graffiti and cx votos which include
the city's eponymous goddess [1231. Priestly titles of the family of
Wentawat suggest that Asyut was their home town [124]. The Viceroys
Messuy and Sety were both buried at Aniba [1251, which, although not
conclusive evidence, suggests that they may have belonged to elite
Nubian families.
Whilst the Chief of Bowmen was undoubtedly the head of the Nubian
militia, it is unclear whether he was subordinate to the Viceroy or
directly to the pharaoh. As the Viceregal office was essentially
civil, the latter may have been the case. Most Chief of Bowmen were
also Overseers of the Southern Foreign Lands - the officials who had
jurisdiction in the Nubian Marches. The importance of the office of
Chief of Bowmen is emphasised by the use of rank of t3y by hr wuay
ns'vt. The office is not well-documented before the reign of
Amenhotep III, and may have been a creation of the re-structuring of
the bureaucracy suggested to have occurred around the time of
Ainenhotep Il-Thutmose IV.
- 69 -
by a woman who holds the offices of wrt hnr of Amun and wrt hnr a Nb -
hprwrC at Faras, called Taemwadjsy [126]. Bell identified this
Ihaemwaset with the First Prophet of Nebkheperure at Faras, Kha,
depicted in the tomb of Ruy [127], assuming an hypochoristic form of
the name. It seems unlikely that a Chief of Bowmen would hold
important priestly offices concurrent with his military duties [128].
Taemvadjsy is, perhaps more probably, to be identified as wife of the
Viceroy Huy, and possibly mother of the Chief of Bowmen, Xhaeinwaset
[129].
- 70 -
"King's son of lush". That it was, however, a more specific, and
meaningful, appellation is indicated by the other holders. It is not
attested for any of the princes of Lower Nubia, but only for
officials who had some jurisdiction over Upper Nubia. Therefore its
connection with Nubia must have been specific. "Overseer of Foreign
Lands" and the variant "Overseer of Northern Foreign Lands", is a
title held by officials at Zawiyat Thnm ci Rakham [133], the
westernmost of the Libyan frontier fortresses, and at Beth Shan (134]
and Negiddo (135]. The most plausible explanation is that "Overseers
of Foreign Lands" were those officials responsible for the frontier
zones: in Nubia these included the Viceroy as chief of the
administration of the Egyptian dominions in Nubia, the Overseer of
Bowmen, as chief of the militia, and, almost certainly, various of
the Upper Nubian Princes as rulers of the Narches [below].
The idnw.
The idnv- appear to have been drawn from the hierarchy within Nubia
and not appointed from Egypt. The best-attested holder of the
office, Amenemopet, worked entirely within the Kushite
administration: beginning as a letter-writer to Nerymose, he was
advanced to be Comptroller of works for Dhutmose, and ended his
career as idnv of lush under Buy. Amenemopet left the record of
advancement at the temple of Ellesiya near Aniba, and he may have
belonged to the elite of that town [137]. His ultimate position saw
him in control of Upper Nubia, and it was in the administrative
capital at Soleb that he was buried [138]. Pennut, Idnw of Wawat in
the reign of Harnesses VI, was the son of an earlier tdnw, although
there is insufficient evidence to demonstrate he was descended from
Pennut who served as idnw of Wawat under Ay [139]. Pennut's
- 71 -
relatives held a number of priestly and scribal offices, and
certainly constituted the most important family in Niam in the 20th
Dynasty.
The princedoms of Lower Nubia are well-attested and the case for
local princes in the 3rd-4th Cataract region has been argued above
[141]. Egyptianisation of the Kushite elite in Wawat was rapid from
the reign of Thutmose I onwards, its effects appearing particularly
clearly during the co-regency of Hatshepsut and Thutmose III. The
local princes adopted Egyptian names, they and their relatives worked
within the viceregal administration, and were buried in Egyptian
style tombs. They received Egyptian funerary objects and their
statues were the product of the royal workshops in Nubia [142]. The
Aniba cemetery similarly demonstrates the numbers and ranks of
Nubians within the administration.
Four sons of the prince of Irem were sent to Egypt along with the
b3kw of year 34. This may be part of the Egyptianisation policy,
although O'Connor [1431 argues that they were prisoners of war from a
campaign in the central Sudan.
- 72 -
Whilst it is self-evident that not all nobles with the title hrd n
k3p were sons of foreign rulers, the k3p was where such aw wry would
have been educated. Heqa-nefer carries the title hrd n k3p along
with such 'honorifics' as "King's sandal-maker" and "Bearer of the
folding chair of the Lord of the Two Lands". Frandsen (1461 has
already argued that the Kushite youths were educated to be members of
the ruling class within Egypt as well as in Nubia. He suggests that
names compounded with hk3, as Heqa-nefer, were, in fact, such
Kushites (147]. It should be noted that others [1481 have regarded
such hk3-names as more generally indicative of foreigners, Asiatics
as well as Kushites [149].
Apart from the princes given court titles, other members of the
Kushite elite were quite probably employed in Egypt itself, although
it is difficult to identify them. The coon name Panehesy can
hardly be used as a criterion, especially as many so-named are
demonstrably Egyptian [1531. That the activities of the Kushite
- 73 -
princes were not confined to the Nubian valley is demonstrated by the
rock inscriptions of Heqa-nefer in the Wadi Barramiya, some 88 kiss
east of Edfu [154] and the recently noted inscriptions on the road
east of Buhen [1551.
- 74 -
Lower down the social scale, there is evidence for marriage
between Egyptians and Kushites [161], as well as Asiatics: although
it is always possible that these were contracted whilst a man was
absent from Egypt.
The elite of New Kingdom Nubia was part of the Egyptian system by
education, employment and by culture. If the indigenous elites
played a significant role in the administration of the country, this
raises questions about what happened with withdrawal of Viceregal
system. It has often been assumed that members of the elite went to
Egypt, but how would they have been absorbed into the Egyptian
administration? The late New Kingdom was a time when the Egyptian
elite families were increasingly pressing their hereditary claims to
offices. There has been no attempt to examine Nubia in the light of
other post-imperial societies and ask, how do elites respond to the
end of imperial rule?
- 75 -
5
- 76 -
discussion, by Bleiberg [9], )luller-Wollerman [10], and Boochs [11].
Specific features, such as land tenure in [12] have also been treated
in some detail.
For Nubia contemporary with the Old, Middle and New Kingdoms,
commentaries have focussed largely on the political implications
[13], and on the individual commodities [14], rather than broader
considerations of the economic structure. The most general
assumption has been of an active, progressive, centre - Egypt -
exploiting a passive and backward periphery - Nubia. A2 Eurocentric
evolutionist interpretation dropped in studies of other premodern
economies, this view has been largely rejected by Trigger [15], Kemp
[16] and Frandsen [17] who all argue that a redistributive economy
was of greater importance in New Kingdom Nubia than had been
previously acknowledged.
The evidence for the later, Meroitic, phases has been treated more
synthetically, and there are discussions of the economy by
Endesfelder [19] and, based largely on the archaeological evidence,
by Adams [20], and evaluating the written sources, by Tr&k [21].
Trigger [22] discusses the material from Christian Nubia. Studies of
one economic feature, trade, have been written by Shinnie [23],
focussing on the Mediaeval period, and, much more detailed, by Walz,
for the period AD 1700-1820 [241.
- 77 -
Our knowledge of the economy of Nubia in pre-New Kingdom times is
extremely limited, and it is thus difficult to assess the impact that
the viceregal administration had, for example, on the ownership of
land. A number of important questions pose themselves for which no
answering evidence survives; nevertheless, enquiries into the economy
cannot be divorced from the broader context. For example, Janssen
[251 rightly stresses the connection between the economy and
historical events, something inadequately considered in Egyptological
history writing, although difficult to illustrate. The importance of
Nubia to the Egyptian economy is well-recognised, in terms of
'luxury' commodities, but this has led to the view that the New
Kingdom pharaohs simply plundered Nubia. Literature has little to
say, beyond the the most generalised statements, of the use made of
these 'luxuries', and hence their economic and social importance. As
already argued this is an overly simplistic interpretation: the
economy of Nubia, and Egypt's attitude towards the country, was far
more complex. That the Egyptian and Nubian economies were integrated
under the viceregal administration has already been stressed by
Frandsen [26]; the ways in which this actually worked on a number of
different levels are discussed below.
The riverine lands of Egypt and Nubia as far as the Fourth Cataract
were largely dependent upon agriculture made possible by irrigation
and the annual inundation: there are, however, major differences
between the two countries which have considerably affected their
demography, agricultural production, social stratification and
political make-up. The central Sudan is again a different ecological
category, in ancient times a savanna land, and this will have had a
similarly strong influence on all facets of its society, as David
Edwards has recently argued [271.
- 78 -
the detailed writings of Burckhardt and other European visitors of
the 19th century AD. Whilst these cannot be simply projected back
otao the past, the archaeological material, as analysed in Trigger's
fundamental (1965) study, shows that the same areas have been
important throughout much of Nubia's history. Trigger [29] notes
that the changing course of the Nile has created broader flood plains
in some areas at different times, but also that these movements have
been much more limited than in Egypt.
- 79 -
to ravaging by the Mamelukes as they retreated before the Turkish
troops of Mohammed All. Burckhardt found that the richest region was
Shalub Batta, where, Trigger [39] suggests, the Nile had moved,
creating a broad flood plain. There are no Early or Middle Nubian
sites, at Shalub Batta, but these are especially numerous at Gerf
Hussein. Such changes were relatively rare, and Trigger has amply
demonstrated the continuity throughout the Nubian phases.
The region south of the 2nd Cataract is barren, but the Abri-Delgo
Reach fertile. Burckhardt (41] found the region was the most
populous south of Ibrim. The island of Sal he found well-cultivated
on its eastern side, where the principal branch of the stream ran,
and thick groves of date-trees, from Sal to Sesebi, produced fruit
which were considered the best along the whole length of the Nile.
Kemp [42] argued that the Egyptians over-estimated the agricultural
potential of this region, a view contested above. The Dongola Reach1
although more fertile than the Abri-Delgo Reach, indeed the most
fertile area south of Silsila, requires irrigation of the basins for
high arable production: its potential wealth is thus of a different
nature and Kemp [43] has argued, very plausibly, that the Kerma-Letti
basin was given over to cattle grazing. The stela of Thutmose II
seems to indicate that the Egyptian garrison at Tumbos or Sai had
grazed cattle in the Kushite territory farther south [441.
Outside of the valley itself, the deserts may have been more
important than has been previously considered. Burckhardt noted the
possibilities for grazing in some of the Wadis, and places where
water could be acquired [45]. Even slightly wetter conditions in
- 80 -
antiquity may have considerably altered the potential for pasturing,
and eased travel. It is certain that the desert roads were being
used in the Old Kingdom, and without camels this must imply a
considerably less hostile environment. There is some evidence that
parts of Nubia, possibly both the valley and the wadis, were more
densely wooded in the Old Kingdom (461.
- 81 -
In the co-reign of Ratshepsut and Thutmose III there was much
building work throughout Lower Nubia, but relatively small-scale, and
within the fortresses. The earliest works outside of the fortresses
were the speoi at Ibrim [52], one dating from the co-reign, and the
rock-cut chapel at Ellesiya [53]. All three are within the district
of Aniba and doubtless had a cultic and economic relationship to the
main temple there. Only one chapel, at Gebel Dosha [54], is so-far
known outside the fortresses in Upper Nubia and the evidence is
slender for supposing that the building programme in the Abri-Delgo
Reach dates back to this period [55]. Thutmose III's fortress of
3-h3swt at the 4th Cataract contained a chapel dedicated to Amun,
but there is no evidence that there was building activity by the king
at Gebel Barkal itself, despite the significance accorded the site in
the king's stela actually discovered there [56] and a second stela
[57].
The short co-regency of Thutmose III and Amenhotep II [58] saw the
construction of the temple at Amada, altered by Thutmose IV [59].
There is little other work attributable to this period of the 18th
Dynasty, which is remarkable, since it was apparently peaceful and
prosperous, and perhaps as long as sixty years [60]. It is quite
likely that many of the features of kingship ideology, and the
phenomena which derive from them, were being developed at this time,
and possibly the plans for the temple-town of Soleb were being made,
even if work was not begun. The viceregal bureaucracy now appears in
its full form [61], and this centralization of the administration is
probably directly related to the new building policy which begins in
the reign of Amenhotep III.
- 82 -
corresponding to that of Egypt. In Upper Nubia the land
redistribution possibly developed alongside increasing Egyptian
interest in the region.
- 83 -
knowledge of Sedeinga is presently even less than that of Soleb,
although the cultic relationship between the two temples was clearly
very close [69]. Nothing of the settlements at these two sites has
yet been uncovered.
The fortress of Sal, which was still occupied in the 19th Dynasty
[72], was superseded as the Upper Nubian administrative centre by
Soleb. However, Sal doubtless retained, as many Lower Nubian towns
and fortresses did, an important role as a staging post and
population centre.
- 84 -
The establishment of vineyards at Soleb indicates that the
prograimne initiated included intensive and long-term agricultural
planning. It is from this time also that manufactured goods appear
in the b3kw of lush, indicating that the towns were also functioning
as production centres, largely for objects made from the 'luxury'
materials, or specifically Kushite products such as leather or
giraffe-hide.
Faras, was the first new town in Wawat to have a large temple
dedicated to the royal cult at its centre. It is possible that
Tutankhamun was building Faras as a Lower Nubian parallel to Soleb.
Faras was a large temple, whereas the only known building of
Tutankhamun in Upper Nubia is the relatively small Temple A at Kawa
[76]. The royal cult in Lover Nubia had previously been promoted
through those of Horus and Senusret I and III: the cult of
- 85 -
Tutankhamun at Paras established the more direct personalised royal
cult of the later 18th Dynasty using the king's throne name Ib-hprv-
RC . A practical advantage of the site was its position at the centre
of a region of agriculturally productive land. Buhen, at the foot of
the Cataract, was part of the fortress network, and remained
important in communications and river transport, but was less
advantageously situated for the requirements of the late 18th
Dynasty. The central region of Lower Nubia already had Aniba at its
centre; it would have been impractical to have replaced a large town
and fortress, administrative capital and cult centre which was
centrally positioned for its agricultural block and for the whole of
Lower Nubia. The evidence from Buhen indicates that it was not a
major centre during the Tutankhamun-Roremheb period [77], although it
doubtless remained important in the communication and transportation
network. Faras retained its importance until the reign of Sety I,
its temple apparently completed and dedicated by Horemheb [78].
Kawa, the most southerly of the New Kingdom Egyptian towns so-far
identified (excepting the frontier fortress at Napata), has been only
partially excavated, and consequently the extent and nature of the
New Kingdom levels are, as yet, unknown [79]. The earliest dated
remains are of the reign of Amenhotep III, but these are small-scale
and could be later introductions [80]. The ancient name, Gem-Aten,
suggests the later years of the reign of Amenhotep III or that of
Akhenaten as the time of its foundation [81]. The complete
rebuilding of the temple by Taharqo may have replaced an 18th Dynasty
structure [82], but the earliest standing monument is the small
temple of Tutankhamun. A mayor (h3ty_C) of Kawa is attested under
Thtankhamun [83], but the status of the town within the Viceregal
domain remains uncertain.
- 86 -
Adams [84], provided one explanation for the presence of the town so
far to the south of the other major centres [85].
Until the early 19th Dynasty, Soleb remained the most important
viceregal town in Upper Nubia, although no significant building work
was undertaken. There are some indications that Horemheb commenced
the earlier part of B500 at Gebel Barkal [87].
Adams [88] and others [89], following Firth [90], have proposed
that after the expansion of Egyptian power in Nubia in the early 18th
Dynasty there was a rapid recession, and because of hydraulic crisis
a decline in the population, throughout the later-l8th and 19th
Dynasties [91]. The apparent disappearance of a large proportion of
the indigenous population in the 18th Dynasty, suggested to have been
retreating into Upper Nubia, may in fact be due to a rapid
acculturation [92], and a reorganisation of the agrarian economy
around the Egyptian "towns" rather than the scattered settlement
prevalent before. The considerable evidence available from the New
Kingdom, and continuing well into the 20th Dynasty, suggests that
contrary to a rapid recession, Nubia under the Egyptian Viceregal
administration maintained an at least moderate prosperity. It should
be remembered that throughout history Lower Nubia has,
agriculturally, never been much more than a subsistence economy.
- 87 -
The brief reign of Ramesses I is marked by restorations and
endowments in the fortresses of the 2nd Cataract. Two stelae from
the North Temple at Buhen, actually dedicated by Sety I, record
Ramesses I's benefactions to the cult of Nin-Amun [93]. Fragments of
another dedicatory stela were found in the South Temple [94]. This
marks the beginning of a renewed importance of Buhen, and belonged to
a wider programme of activity in the fortresses at the foot of the
Cataract, as can be inferred from further excavated fragments from
Dabnarti and Mirgissa [95]. A column base from Dorginarti must have
been transferred there later as this site is now recognised as Late
Period [96]. There is nothing which suggests a major defensive
programme, and Buhen seems to have developed as a walled town
comparable to Aniba, the military being replaced by civil officials.
Sety I founded new temple-towns at Amara West (if this had not
been begun by Horemheb) in tipper Nubia, and at Aksha in Lower Nubia.
It is significant that these are close to Soleb and Faras
respectively, indicating that the areas were controlled in much the
same way, and also that the foundation of these new towns was an
ideologically, rather than politically or economically, motivated
change. The land holdings of the Soleb and Faras institutions and
officials were probably transferred largely, if not entirely, to the
successors at Amara and Aksha.
Amenhotep III had built at Soleb and at es-Sebua, but these do not
in any way seem to have been equal foundations. Nor is there any
evidence that Faras and Kawa constituted a pair. However, with the
reign of Sety I it is clearly Aksha and Ainara which serve as parallel
administrative centres for Lower and Upper Nubia, each with a temple
for the royal cult. The two foundations are roughly similar in size,
and both considerably smaller than Soleb or Sesebi.
- 88 -
intensive agricultural system initiated by Amenhotep III in the Abri-
Delgo reach continued during the early-l9th Dynasty. Indeed, when
Soleb ceased to be used as a major centre, the estates would have
been transferred to the new foundations and restorations of Sety I at
Amara and Sesebi, as happened with the estates of the Rouses of
Millions of Years within Egypt. There is a possibility that the
Nauri decree refers to Sesebi as a renewed foundation of Sety I [991,
or possibly even, to the earliest buildings at Amara West [100].
Wadi es-Sebua, Gerf Hussein and ed-Derr, were attached to the pr-
domains of Amun, Ptah and Re, although whether these domains are to
be identified with the major Egyptian centres of Thebes, Memphis and
Reliopolis, is far from clear [1121. At some, as yet unknown point,
in the 19th or 20th Dynasty, Amara was apparently renamed Hnt 'W3st
[113], the name also of the Ramesseum to which it may have had some
spiritual relationship.
- 89 -
dwindling population, or even a deserted land. Rabachi [114] noted
their position! as staging posts relative to river travel, and Kemp
[1151 has examined the available evidence for them as centres of
settled, albeit small, population. Rather than regarding the temple-
building as some sort of bizarre anomaly, its causes may be found in
the religious developments of the period, amply paralleled in Egypt
itself.
- 90 -
The major centres of Aniba and Buhen have yielded a large number
of 20th-dynasty private monuments, as well as some minor royal works.
Aniba continued to be the major Lower Nubian town until the end of
the 20th Dynasty, the Viceroy Panehesy being buried there in the
reign of Ramesses XI. Statuary of 20th-dynasty date (and earlier New
Kingdom material) has found at Qasr Ibrim, opposite Aniba, on the
east bank of the Nile, but was almost certainly taken there at a
later date. Although rock-cut chapels had been carved in the hill
during the New Kingdom, there is, so-far, no evidence that Qasr Ibrim
was fortified during the 18th or 19th Dynasties [1281.
Evidence from Upper Nubia is, as for the whole of the New Kingdom,
far more difficult to identify, due to a lack of excavation, or
publication, of the major sites. Amara was certainly in constant
occupation, and functioned as the administrative centre for Upper
Nubia, throughout the dynasty until the reign of Ramesses IX [130].
Inscriptions of Ramessesnakht, Viceroy of Ramesses VI, were carved on
the columns of the Temple A at Kawa [131], hence a degree of
Viceregal control at that time can be inferred. A statue of an
official named Bekenwer [132], dated to the reign of Ramesses IX was
discovered at Gebel Barkal, but this statue was probably taken there
at a later date, perhaps from Amara. At Ainara itself, an inscription
in the temple is dated to year 6 of Ramesses IX [133].
- 91 -
18th Dynasty? The model of settlement advocated here would actually
discount this, believing that it is more likely to be have been
peopled by indigenous Kushites than large numbers of transplanted
Egyptians.
- 92 -
population continued to live in smaller settlements, the very nature
of the valley dictated this.
An Abu Simbel text [143] states that king removed Nubians to the
north, Asiatics to the south, Shasu to the west and Libyans to the
hilltops. Spalinger [144] takes this as an historical record,
although it is clearly also an inversion of the world, and like
similar texts should be treated with a degree of circumspection.
Ward [1453 is sceptical of most texts of this date which might be
construed as evidence for mass deportation. There were undoubtedly
- 93 -
large numbers of foreigners in Egypt itself in the late New Kingdom
[146], and there is some evidence that people, especially those
considered "rebellious", might be moved. More direct evidence can be
found from the el-Sebua inscription of Ramose [147] which reports
that in year 44 of Ramesses II, the Viceroy Setau was ordered to raid
the Tjemehu land for people to be used as construction workers. A
private stela, also from es-Sebua, was dedicated to a local form of
Amun, to Seth and to Reshep, by Matybaal, presumably of Asiatic
origin [1481, but doubtless of the official class, and hence a rather
different case [149].
More significant, as Kemp noted, are the letters from Kamid el-Loz
which record the transfer of captives to Nubian towns, whose
inhabitants had been removed by the king [150]. One letter is to
Zalaia king of Damascus and a second to Abdi-milki of the town of
Sazaena. The pharaoh orders the foreign rulers to send a group of
Hapiru to Egypt, these are to be sent to the cities of Kush ( Ia-
a-sa) "in place of those which I have taken away". Edzard concluded
that they were from the same scribal school as EA 162 and 163,
letters from Pharaoh 1151]. The date, as with all EA letters is
problematic [152], but perhaps after the Nubian campaigns of year 5
of Amenhotep III or year 12 of Akhenaten.
- 94 -
or in the production of luxury goods, but not as the largest group of
agricultural labourers. The ruler of Ugarit requested two Nubian
servants to be sent 1158], and the context implies they were 'exotic'
and hence for display in a court context. Indeed, even in Ptolemaic
times, the import of slaves from Nubia and their use in Egypt was
severely limited 11591, and increase in the slave traffic from
farther south probably belongs to the early Roman Empire.
- 95 -
in Nubia, for example, the gold mines. However, land-holding
iusnediately creates an elaborate system which cannot be wholly
exploitative, since it is necessary to feed, even at subsistence
level, the local workers, and also to provide administrative staffs.
Any involvement of the Egyptian temples within Nubia may therefore
have been ideologically motivated. The king was the founder of the
temples, and donor of land: if the Nubian temples were attached to
their respective pr-domains in Egypt this may have been to embrace
Nubia more closely within Egypt.
- 96 -
donation text attests images of Ramesses VI and Queen Nefertari. A
number of different terms are employed for the fields, some of which
are problematic (174].
Apart from the religious institutions and images, the evidence for
the ownership of land in Nubia is scanty, although much of it must
have been held by the offices of state, as is assumed for Egypt.
Doubtless the indigenous princes continued to possess estates, and
the Pennut donation text indicates that the elites held estates
privately as well as by virtue of their offices. Land owned directly
by the king or royal family is less-easily accounted for, although
the title of Steward of the Queen's Rouse, held by Nakhtmin at Bogga
[175], might refer to Nubian estates. The presentation of "gold of
Kush" to Sitamun daughter of .Amenhotep III, on the arm panels of her
chair, might also suggest estates and their revenues owned by the
princess (1761. It is impossible to know whether the dedication of
the Sedeinga temple to Tiye also involved grants of land from which
she was able to draw revenue.
- 97 -
times. Products of the various palm trees, date, argun and dom,
occur freuqently in texts, as leaves, fans, basketry, date-paste as
well as fruit.
- 98 -
what extent the population was dependent upon local production and to
what extent upon commodities from other regions [1821.
Ancient use of the desert roads is another subject for which there
is insufficient information. The desert road from Aswan to Toshka
avoided the large bends in the Lower Nubian Nile and in the Old
Kingdom this road seems to have been used in preference to the river.
Major military campaigns probably used fleets sailing from the area
of Shellal [1891, but some of the inscriptions on Gebel Tingar, which
marks the beginning of the desert road from Aswan, are of 18th
- 99 -
Dynasty date [190] suggesting that the road was still used. There is
a possibility that the roads to Abu Earned and the 4th Cataract
region, along the Wadis Allaqi and Cabgaba, and from Korosko, were in
use in ancient times. The feasibility of using these desert routes
before the introduction of the camel has been doubted, but Burckhardt
considered the possibility that these were ancient, now confirmed by
the discovery of New kingdom graffiti at some wells [191]. The local
form of Amun at Wadi es-Sebua was called "Lord of the Roads",
suggesting one desert route starting in that region [192]. The
inscriptions marking the cattle road of Taharqo also suggest that
long desert routes from the 4th Cataract were being used in the 25th
Dynasty [193]. Most significant-yis the recent identification of a
road running eastwards from Buhen, marked by New Kingdom graffiti,
including one of Reqa-nefer of Mi'am [1941. The Wadi Rowar project
has demonstrated the enormous effect of a very minor ecological
change (such as rainfall) and the possibility that the Nubian desert
was significantly different in the New Kingdom phase cannot be
ignored.
Consumption.
- 100-
the administrators, militia, artisans etc) by the hinterland. Indeed
the 'acculturation' or 'disappearance' of the indigenous population
can be seen in this demographic revision: if, for example, pottery
was paid as part of the rations a decline in the production of local
forms is likely. Such a situation does appear to be the explanation
of the evidence from a number of cemeteries where typical C-Group
tombs contained "not a single sherd of Nubian ware among the Egyptian
pottery" [200]. Sve-S6derbergh noted the late persistence of C-
Group grave-types in the 2nd Cataract region, but without the
expected funerary assemblages.
- 101 -
The evidence for commodities imported to Buhen in the New Iingdom
has been discussed by Smith [209]. Wine predominated, perhaps
because local production was either insufficient in quantity, or
inferior in quality. Commodities not yet attested by dockets from
Nubian sites may have included textiles, especially linen, and
clothing.
The Viceroy could deputise for the king in the reward ceremony: so
Pennut is rewarded in his presence in return for his donations of
- 102 -
land to a statue-cult of Ramesses VI [2221. The appointment of a new
Viceroy seems to have involved the presentation of hsw-revards to the
mayors of Nubia 1223], and doubtless all new officials gave similar
donations as a means of establishing the social obligations between
themselves and their subordinates. It was perhaps one point when the
Nubian officials received 'luxuries' of Egyptian origin. Royal and
religious festivals were also times of reward and it is likely that
the reward was of broader significance than the majority of the
scenes imply: reward to an official was doubtless followed by a
corresponding redistribution of the gifts to the official's retainers
[224].
Frandsen [2261 argues the case for the integration of the Egyptian
and Nubian economies during the New Kingdom against the view of
simple exploitation. Kemp [227] suggests two ways in which the
- 103 -
Egyptians may have derived advantage in terms of economic return from
their expansion into Nubia, particularly Upper Nubia. This was
achieved, firstly, through exploitation of available resources, both
mineral and agricultural, and secondly through trade, since products
were encountered closer to their sources and therefore were
diminished less by customs dues levied upon them by a succession of
local rulers. This analysis of 'trade' may be valid, although it
does raise the extremely difficult and complex issues of whether
customs dues were actually levied, and whether profit is really a
consideration within the terms of the pre-capitalist economies. In
any case, it should be considered whether, if the Egyptians
maintained an actual limit of occupation in the Abri-Delgo Reach,
they actually controlled the trade with the central Sudan. Whilst it
is a common assumption that they did, and that to an extent it was a
motivation for their activity in the region, can we really be certain
that 'control' of trade was desired by the Egyptians? They may, in
fact, have found it more convenient to leave trade in the hands of
the local princes of the Dongola Reach, and receive the commodities
directly from them. There is no evidence that the Egyptians were
directly involved in trade expeditions in Nubia at this time, in any
way comparable to those of the late Old Kingdom.
Foreign trade was probably less for 'profit' than for the
acquisition of luxury or desirable commodities which could not be
produced in Egypt. The agricultural production of Egypt was used
largely within Egypt, as were many of the manufactures. Lattimore
[2281 raises the important point that in China the justification for
commodities passing over the frontier was political rather than
economic. For this reason the economic categories 'trade', 1mw and
b3kv, may be difficult to distinguish; trade being an exchange of
commodities of equal value at one time, whereas gift-exchange was
part of an extended cycle of events. In terms of types of products
exchanged there may have been no distinction. The evidence for
Nubian goods certainly seems to attest the same commodities being
exchanged under the three different categories. The distinction
derives from the social relationship implicit in gift exchange: trade
- 104 -
presumably not involving such complex social obligations. It can, of
course, be argued that almost all cross-frontier trade was conducted
by means of gift exchange.
- 105 -
as such indicating a social relationship rather than the taxation or
levies of an imperialist or political hegemony. The produce or
commodities represented by mw became part of the king's privy purse.
33k, he argues [237] is a transaction between professional groups or
institutions and the king, and is passed by the king to the temples.
Liverani [238], in the most recent discussion, relates t the
economic categories to the ideological perspective.
The economic terms applied to Nubia are the same as those applied
to the Asiatic domain, and indeed, the texts frequently parallel each
other. There is nothing in the ancient sources which indicates that
the Egyptians viewed the two regions as different: it is modern
scholarship which has chosen to impose a division of attitude on the
ancient Egyptians. mu and b3kv are supplied by both regions; it
seems reasonable, therefore, to assume that the economic conditions
which caused these categories existed in both regions. In some texts
b3kv is further defined as a btrv-obligation, to be supplied annually
[239]. One may conclude that Wawat, and certainly part of Yush were
integrated into the b3kv-payment system, with their wru bringing 1mw
on appropriate occasions. The Nubian peripheries paid only mv.
- 106 -
ostrich-feathers being characteristic, along with various types of
live animals. People too are nearly always included, and might be
either prisoners of war, or people captured much further south by
other lushite rulers and sent as slaves along with the other
coimnodities. From the time of Amenhotep III, manufactured goods
appear, made from the typical raw materials, for example chairs,
shields and fans.
- 107 -
prestige goods, and some of the letters from the Amarna archive
specify that gifts were for use in the building of new temples [2451.
Fattovich has suggested that the Gash Delta cultures suffered some
disruption around the end of the Egyptian New Kingdom, which, if this
is indeed the location of Punt, would imply a long-range economic
effect of Egyptian decline.
- 108 -
considerations. Internally, Nubia doubtless possessed a largely
self-sufficient agricultural economy. The 'towns' functioned
primarily as administrative centres with most of the agrarian
population probably living in smaller settlements. However, it is
almost impossible to estimate population density and any increase or
decrease in population throughout the Viceregal period.
- 109 -
6
- 110-
extent, to the remoteness of the Soleb temple itself, the lack of a
publication and also to the greater Egyptological interest in
Akhenaten and Ramesses II [31.
Rabachi [8], followed by Kemp [9], Trigger [10] and others, urged
that the Nubian temples should be looked at within the context of New
Kingdom Egypt and not in isolation. Eabachi's fundamental study of
- ill -
the deification of Ramesses II shoved it to be only another
manifestation of a phenomenon to be found throughout Egypt. Habachi,
however, as many scholars, adopted a conventional Western approach to
the royal cult. He argued that the Egyptians did not worship the
king himself, but the concept of kingship. Posener also stressed the
multiplicity of ways in which the royal ka and persona were
worshipped [11].
Price [13] does not deny the obvious political aspects of the
Roman imperial cult, but emphasises that initiatives could come "from
below", and were not all imposed by central authority. This can be
paralleled in New Kingdom Egypt where private inscriptions invoke
living and dead rulers [14]. The endowment of royal cult images by
members of the elite doubtless guaranteed prestige and may have had
economic benefits, but discussions of these have tended to emphasise
the economic rather than religious aspects. In establishing these
cults, the nobles may have actually believed in them.
Another parallel between the Roman and Egyptian royal cults may be
noted. Price comnents that [151:
In fact, neither the Emperor nor his individual cults endured in
perpetuity. The imperial cult was far from being a static
monolithic structure, erected once and for all. Cults were
constantly being invented and revised.
- 112 -
As in Egypt, the imperial cults did not endure long after the
Emperor's death: deceased emperors and pharaohs joined the ranks of
the gods, but the most potent form of cult was that of the living
ruler.
The royal cult has recently been the focus of much research.
Grimal's monumental study of the terminology has catalogued the
numerous associations of the kingship [17]. Bell's detailed analysis
of worship of the royal ka in Luxor temple 118], and his study of the
cult of Tutankhamun at Kawa [19] have clarified the ways in which the
king and deity were assimilated. Bryan [20] recently presented an
intepretation of some aspects of the worship of .Amenhotep III at
Soleb temple. Her work closely relates the cult to religious
developments in Egypt during this reign. The interpretation here
concentrates on the evidence from Nubia, Yet the theories are not
mutually exclusive: the complex nature of Egyptian religion often
makes it difficult to present one single valid intepretation.
- 113 -
parallel! are noted for this and the general verdict has been that
the Nubians had no deities who could be found Egyptian counterparts,
and that the Egyptians looked down on Nubian religion [22]. It is
quite probable that Nubian culture lacked the range of
anthropomorphic deities to be found in Egypt and Western Asia, but
the nature and practice of religion in early Nubia is still an
obscure subject [231.
The 'Horus gods, Lords of Wawat' [261, as they were later called
(appearing as a triad), were the deities which presided over the
Middle Kingdom fortresses; 13k1(Kubban), P11Cm (Aniba), and Bhn
(Buhen). In the late 18th Dynasty a fourth regional Horus god of
Lower Nubia was added to the others; Horus of Nh3, the region of Abu
Simbel [27]. As well, as the local forms, a more generalised aspect
of Horus, 'the lord of foreign lands' [28] was worshipped during the
2nd Intermediate Period. With the expansion of Egyptian power south
of the 2nd Cataract a new form, "Horus the Bull, Lord of Ta-Seti" was
introduced. Horns, as a manifestation of the conquering king, was a
deity frequently associated with foreign countries, and there is some
evidence that during the Middle Kingdom Monthu as an aspect of the
Horns-king was particularly venerated in the fortresses.
- 114 -
III explicitly state that the king set up a twt-image at the border
"in order that you fight for it" [30]. The cult of Senueret III at
Semna was promoted by Thutmose III and is significant, since it
particularly emphasised the relationship between the hb-ad and the
divinity of Senusret III. The temple reliefs depict Senusret III in
his bark wearing the id-robe, and a statue, possibly the cult image,
also showed the king in the sd-robe [31]. Also of the reign of
Thutmose III, the Gebel Dosha speos was probably dedicated to
Senusret III and to Horus the Bull [32].
The evidence seems to be clear that 'Horns the Bull, Lord of T3-Sty'
was a new tutelary deity created to preside over the new Nublan
territories south of the 2nd Cataract as far as Tumbos. The earliest
monuments attesting the god are from Sal [331, and he appears with
the other Nubian deities in the temples at Semna, Ellesiya and Amada.
Horus the Bull and Senusret III were the chief gods of the shrine at
Gebel Dosha. The god was certainly most important during the early
and mid-l8th Dynasty, but, unfortunately, there are no excavated
Upper Nubian sites (Sal excepted) of the reigns of Thutmose III -
Thutmose IV, so that later developments of the cult are undocumented.
- 115-
to in the Akh-Menu of Thutmose III, in a speech of Sopd (35], who
presents the eastern lands to the king. The text suggests that this
form of Eorus was regarded as the presider over the southern border
lands of Nubia.
This form of Horns is not, so far, attested later than the reign
of Anienhotep III, and the procession of Nubian deities depicted on
the roof terrace of Medinet Rabu indicates that by the late New
Kingdom !mnn-Re was considered the chief deity of Upper Nubia, with
the triad of Horus gods presiding over Lower Nubia. This scheme
probably dates back to the reign of Tutankhamun, if not to that of
Amenhotep III.
The names and epithets of this god indicate a connection with the
king, since all rulers of the New Kingdom, with the exception of the
female pharaohs, took as their srh-name "Horus the (mighty) Bull NW'.
Hatshepsut, assumed as her adi- name 'the Horus mighty of 13w',
itself an obvious allusion to the usual form. The king as the
earthly manifestation of Horns is well-documented textually and
iconographically [39]. The Horns name itself is identified with the
royal ka, and, as Varille [40] has suggested, may be directly
associated with the Monthu aspect of Horns. This is clearly
demonstrated at a later date, in the 'cryptic' writing of the Horns
name of Ramesses II on the southern jamb of the main entrance to the
great Temple at Abu Simbel [41], where 'Horns the Mighty Bull' is
written with images of the falcon-headed king with double-crown,
Aniun-Re-Kaniutef and Monthu [42].
- 116 -
This cult of 'Horus Lord of !lubia', like those of Lower Nubia, was
a cult of kingship in which the ruler appeared as an hypostasis of
Horns and was revered as a conqueror. The solar and warrior
characteristics also indicate an association with )lonthu [43].
The reign of Amenhotep III was a time of change in the royal cult in
Nubia, just as it was in Egypt. Amenhotep III's major Nubian
foundation was at Soleb, where the cult of Horns the Lord of T3-Sty
took a new form. The king made this temple town his major new
administrative centre for Upper Nubia, and called it after his rh-
name, __N3Ct. Soleb was the first of several towns founded in
Nubia in the late 18th and early 19th Dynasties, each of which now
centred upon a royal ka-chapel.
Soleb must have been founded early in the reign, as were the
king's Nemphite and Theban temples [45]. The temple underwent
- 117-
several stages in its development from a peripteral chapel into a
complex multi-roomed structure [461. The final form seems to have
been established by the time of the first hb-sd in the king's 30th
year, elements of which are depicted in the first courtyard [471.
C, 'Living Image of Ib-.3ct-
The temple was dedicated to the bnty
rC and to 'Amun-Re, Lord of the Thrones of the Two Lands, bry ib E'-
.4OCt [48].
- 118-
indicator of temporal authority. Lorton [57] discusses the epithet
ub T3-Sty and its application to deities: he believes however, that
the Soleb cult was that of the deceased Amenhotep III, a view clearly
untenable. Although it might appear to parallel Nb t3wy, 'Lord of
Nubia' does not occur as part of the titulary except when related to
the divine form of the king [58].
The lunar aspect of the king has been associated with the magic of
the eye of Horus represented as the moon [69], but the issue may be
far more complex. The lunar element of the iconography of the
- 119 -
'Living Image of Ib_P13Ct_Rc, associates the king with ICh, the
personified moon-disk and there is the poasibility that the promotion
of i% exhibits a parallelism with the promotion of the Itu and the
king as the Itn by Amenhotep III. This, however depends upon the
interpretation of i% as the personification of the lunar disk rather
than the lunar light (in which case he would be a parallel of Shu).
- 120 -
The great gateway of Amenhotep the Ruler of Thebes, [the name of
which is] IN..1I3Ct_RC...Jho_hears_suppliantsi.
- 121 -
The Cult of Tutankhainun at Faras and Kawa.
- 122 -
lunar deities Shepsy and Thoth [841. Whether such solar and lunar
dualities should be pursued further is more debateable [85].
The lunar association with death and the potential for rebirth is
clearly significant in the worship of Amenhotep III and probably so
in that of Tutankhamun and Ramesses II. More specifically it was
probably connected with the rising of the Nile flood in Nubia. There
is souie suggestion that part of the area around the Soleb temple
would have flooded, or have been a swampy area - the temple itself
representing the primaeval mound (something similar is noted for loin
el-Heitan) [86].
larkowaki [87] has convincingly argued that the king's temple was
paired with the chapel of Hathor of Ibshek, already existing at
Faras, thus paralleling the temples of Soleb and Sedeinga, and the
later temples of Ramesses II and Nefertari at Abu Simbel.
- 123-
Nubia, "the Lord of !th.3", the region of Abu Simbel, appears for the
first time now [90]. This may reflect a renewed emphasis upon the
Horns-king as opposed to the cult celebrated for Amenhotep III,
Ikhenaten and Thtankhamun. The nature of these rulers' accessions
may itself have dictated a more conventional, and less personal cult
form.
-124-
ruler, and further features of the cult, or the divine aspect of the
king, are revealed by the names of doorways and subsidiary
architectural elements of the temples.
The temples of Abu Simbel mark the transition from the early to
the later form of worship. The main work at Abu Simbel was completed
by the mid-twenties of the reign, although there were certainly
additions and alterations later [100]. During the construction of
the temples, there were fundamental changes to the status of the
king, as Habachi clearly showed [101]. Instead of the king being
-125-
worshipped as his 1jntyo , he was included in a number of different
forms. These forms of the king are also found in the later temples
of the reign, with some qualification. Alterations were made in the
decorative scheme of the central axis, to include the divine king.
The outer parts of the third of the late temples, ed-Derr [105],
Pr RC_.is_5 mn In - pr R, were also badly destroyed, although the
depiction of the cult images survived in the sanctuary rooms. It was
usually assumed that ed-Derr was the latest of the temples to have
been built, parts of it being only sunanily decorated. Spalinger
[106] argued it was much earlier, on the evidence of the spelling of
-12 6-
the name Ramesses as RC_i.ss,. It seems likely that, following the
construction of Abu Simbel the three temples, es-Sebua, Gerf Hussein
and ed-Derr were conceived as a unit, each attached to the pr-domain
of one of the state gods. It is significant that the triads at Gerf
Hussein include Ramesses R pr RC and Ramesses pr l.a as well as
Ramesses pt ftI.
-127-
elaborated 'contemporary' long robe. They are called by both nomen
and prenomen, which can be written with, or without, cartouche.
While the solar and lunar forms of the king have a close
relationship to the earlier royal cults, the personified royal name
takes on an importance which it does not seem to have had before.
The earliest examples of the royal name in statue form belong to the
reign of Amenhotep III [114] and a fine statue group depicted
Amenhotep III as NbN3Ct_RC .ry Dhwty [1151 in which the squatting
royal image (nb) was crowned with the sun-disk and carried the .3Ct_
feather. Such 'cryptic' writings of the royal name began to
proliferate in the later-l8th Dynasty, and are common on the
jewellery of Tutankhamun [116]. A particularly elaborate example at
Abu Simbel is to be found on the south jamb of the main entrance
[1171. Of significance, the name Ramesses is there written with the
figure of Re, followed by a child god with lunar disk and crescent
carrying the symbols sw and s [118].
-128-
Simbel the most coon is the icon of the king with a falcon-head
surmounted by solar-disk and carrying the 'usr-sceptre and Maet-
feather. This image is found in many cartouches throughout the
temple [1191, and in its most majestic form within the niche over the
entrance to the main temple [1201. Here the wsr-sceptre and Maet-
feather flank the king, rather than being carried by him. The two
panels of low relief on either side of this niche show the king
offering his name (a figure of Naet carrying the wet-sceptre and
squatting in the nb-basket) to his name. There is no evidence from
the sanctuary rooms that this was the form taken by the cult image of
the king, although that might be suspected.
-129-
All of these images have some sort of precedent in the 18th
Dynasty, but a new form of divine association seems to have been
developed in the later years of the reign, at the time of the
construction of es-Sebua, Gerf Hussein and Derr. Now the divine
image was described as "Amun (or: Ptah, etc)-of (n)-Ramesses (or:
Usermaetre)". The images of the king (both relief and statuary) also
acquire the descriptions a pr J.inIPthI RC.
Broadly, it can be said that the royal cult in Nubia during the
reign of Ramesses II developed from that of the later 18th Dynasty
kings - although this was doubtless by reinvention and revision
rather than any Darwinian evolutionary process. The later forms
embraced both solar and lunar aspects, with human and falcon
-130-
iconography. Significantly, the divine manifestations could be
called by either the nomen or the prenomen. At Soleb the Living
Image of Amenhotep III had been Nebmaetre, and at Faras the surviving
evidence suggests that Nebkheperure was the form used. All of the
known rebus writings associated with Amenhotep III and Tutankhamun
had employed the throne name. With Ramesses II, the nomen and
prenomen are employed with equal frequency, or perhaps with a greater
frequency for the nomen. Quite frequently the nomen is written 1 IIq-
rather than c'(1 . This has been considered as a chronological
determinator, but at Abu Simbel both forms are used, and it also
occurs in the later temples [1331.
The sacred barques and their images have already been noted, but
these were not the only portable statues kept in the temples. A
number of stelae from es-Sebua depicts a portable-shrine containing
divine statues [134]. On these, the figure of the king is shown
wearing the khepresh with a solar disk above it, flanked by Amun and
two other deities, one possibly wearing the white or do,ible-crown
[135], the last a goddess with disk and horns. In all cases the naos
has carrying poles and large lion images at the side [1361. A statue
of Ramesses II, "Ramesses-mer-mun-BelOved4ike'HorUS", probably at
Niam, may have possessed land in the district of Tonqaleh where
stel.ae of Ramesses II and the Viceroy Setau refer to it [137].
-131-
panels by the large-scale image of a .dw-staff (1391. This has a
falcon head with the same double-crown, wavy horns, solar disks and
pendant uraei as the image of the king on the south wall of the
chapel. It also has the curled ram's horn. The staff is flanked by
two deities, Amun-Re-Harakhty-Khepri and Amun of Napata. A stela
from Amara West shows a staff with a royal head and wty-plumes
(140].
No temples of comparable size were built for the royal cult in Nubia
in the later 19th Dynasty. Doubtless the cults of the later kings
were accomodated in the existing temples. At Amara West statue
niches were constructed for the twt-image of Amenemesse [141].
-132-
Despite the sudden collapse of Egyptian authority in Western Asia,
during, or soon after, the reign of Ramesses VI, control of Nubia
continued, and alongside control, veneration of the ruler: Harnesses
IX is invoked as a deity in an inscription from Buhen 1145].
The complex imagery of the New Kingdom royal cult is less well
documented during the Third Intermediate Period in Egypt, although
kings still built 'Houses of millions of years' and priesthoods
attached to royal statue cults continued until the Ptolemaic period.
Cults of members of the 25th Dynasty royal family are known from
Egypt, but from Nubia itself there is little evidence that this most
obvious sign of Egyptian acculturation had any lasting influence on
the practice of religion n Nubia.
-133-
Part 2
-134-
7
The concept of a 'Dark Age' has taken root in Nubian studies, but
unlike the comparable, and contemporaneous, Dark Ages of Greece and
the Near East [3], has not, until very recently, been discussed [41.
The idea of a Nubian Dark Age is to a degree accidental, resulting
from the examination of two different questions within the context of
-135-
an accepted absolute Egyptian chronology, and from an Egyptian
perspective. Some fundamental questions raised by the material, and
by its interpretation, have, as a result, never been pursued. This
approach accounts for the attitude adopted by many scholars to the
period; indeed, one may suspect that a number would have treated it
very differently had they not felt obliged to conform to the accepted
chronology. The currently accepted absolute Egyptian chronology may
be correct; but if it is, some difficult questions arise concerning
events in Nubia during the Third Intermediate Period.
-136-
adhere to the view first proposed by Firth, that ecological problems
were caused by declining Nile levels; Arkell and Desanges regard
political motivation, the hostility between Egypt and Nubia, as more
likely, whereas Katznelson suggests economic decline was a prime
factor.
-13 7-
Any theory of major depopulation of Nubia in the 19th and 20th
Dynasties also requires a rational explanation of the extensive
temple-building and private dedications during this period. However,
agreement is almost universal that from the end of the 20th Dynasty,
or shortly afterwards (c 1080/1050 BC), Lower Nubia was without a
significant population until the Ptolemaic period Cc 300 BC onwards
[13]), even if it is to be attributed to political rather than
agricultural causes (141. Jacquet-Gordon [151 was critical of the
low-Niles theory, but her ideas have not been widely considered. For
the post-25th Dynasty "hiatus", only T&rok and Priese have objected
to the interpretation of the archaeological material, Trk [16] on
the grounds that such a no-man's land is rather unlikely in
antiquity; Priese [17] arguing from the textual material for
campaigns of 'Late Napatan' kings in Lower Nubia. Recent re-
evaluation of the material from Dorginarti suggests an Egyptian
military presence in the Late Period [181, and Lower Nubia may have
been the scene of sporadic conflict between Egypt and Kush. There is
some evidence for a nomadic, or semi-nomadic population, but any
settled population must have been limited in number and living at
subsistence level [191.
-13 8-
Dongola-Napata reach of the Nile, is limited. No major New Kingdom
sites are reported from the region between Kawa and Napata, which,
given the easily identifiable nature of Egyptian monuments elsewhere
in Nubia, must be significant, and strongly suggests that there were
no Egyptian 'towns' in this area. It can be argued that the evidence
in this area has been lost; either because totally covered by sand,
or destroyed. Large monuments certainly have vanished from this
region [27], however, textual evidence and other available sources
should also be considered, and even from the Napatan and Neroitic
periods these record only Pnubs (Kerma), Kawa and Korti as major
centres in this region. The alternative model for New Kingdom
occupation of this region argued here [28] may ultimately be proved
wrong: but this does not preclude its application and a consequent
re-consideration of our preconceptions.
Whether the founders were of Libyan [30], Kerma [31], "local" [32]
or Meroite [33] origin, or descended from Egyptian priests [34], most
writers have accepted that some significant role was played by the
temple of Amun at Gebel Barkal (Napata) in forming the Egyptianised
state in Upper Nubia. Opinion is, however, divided, as to whether
the influence was from a temple which had continued to function, and
with Egyptian priests, throughout the Third Intermediate Period [35]
or whether the cult was revived in the mid-8th century, perhaps by
Kashta, as part of an expansionist prograe by the Kushite rulers
[361.
For Kitchen [371 the main concern within Nubia is the emergence of
the Kushite kingdom as a power in the form of the 25th Dynasty, its
rule in Egypt and its eventual expulsion by the Assyrians. Kitchen
discusses the career of the Viceroy Panehesy, and includes the scanty
-139-
evidence for Egyptian activity in Nubia during the succeeding
dynasties, but he gives little consideration to what else might have
been happening in Nubia during the Third Intermediate Period.
Indeed, few writers considering the end of the viceregal
administration and the rise of the Kingdom of Kurru, discuss the
'dark age' itself, most restrict themselves to a passing comment on
the lack of evidence from this period, or to generalisations.
Adams, in common with other writers [381 proposes that despite the
uninhabited region which separated them, there must have been some
continued intercourse between Napata and Egypt, and this, along with
some vestigial influence from the time of Egyptian domination is
generally seen as the stimulus for the emergence of the Kushite
state. Adams [39] characterises the view:
After the abandonment of Lower Nubia, a native population which
may have been of mixed C-Group and Kerma stock continued to occupy
the Nile Valley above the Third Cataract. Recovering in time from
the natural and political reverses of the Egyptian occupation,
they developed a prosperous economy and strong local dynasty.
Although by no means Egyptianised in culture, they retained from
their earlier contacts a complex of Egyptian religious and
political beliefs, including divine kingship, a state religion,
and a dominant priestly caste.
All discussions of the rise of the Kurru kingdom have been based
upon chronological premises which have affected the interpretation of
the archaeological evidence. Reisner's original chronology was
logically worked back from the, firmly dated, 25th Dynasty. Thus,
20th-dynasty material from the earliest burials at el-Kurru has been
designated 'heirloom' [40], and similar explanations have been given
for anachronistic material in other Kushite sites [41]. Other
factors which might logically have been discussed within the context
of a post-colonial Nubia, and which find parallels in contemporaneous
Third Intermediate Period Egypt, have likewise been judiciously
ignored or explained as 'Late Napatan' phenomena. The assumption of
historians that the Viceregal administration was actually
-140-
disestablished, with the elites moving to Egypt, raises a number of
issues which have never been resolved satisfactorily.
-141-
8
One of the major problems afflicting Nubian studies, and one which is
now being rectified, is the imbalance in the quantity, and nature, of
archaeological material from the north and that from the south. This
imbalance affects many periods and has been at the centre of
interpretations and discussions of the Meroitic period [11. The lack
of archaeological material has - at its most extreme - been taken to
denote no population in Lower Nubia, or at least no permanently
settled population, for a period of three to four hundred years [21.
It is generally believed that the people must have resumed a semi-
nomadic existence. Whilst reversion to nomadic or semi-nomadic has
previous parallels - as at the end of A-group - the situation at the
end of the New Kingdom was very different from earlier periods, and
these factors need to be considered. If the population had been
Egyptianized for close on five hundred years and settled for
considerably longer (there is no evidence of disruption at the end of
the Middle Kingdom), would they have naturally 'reverted' to
nomadism? A period of cultural poverty - with subsistence economy,
but no direct control by Egypt, would result in a lack of official
monuments - but does not necessarily indicate that there was no
settled people. The range of possibilities for what happened at the
end of the New Kingdom is very wide [31.
-142-
on cemetery sites. Firth himself was conscious of the pressure which
obliged him to leave sites untouched, and lamented the number of
sites which had already been lost or destroyed, either through the
rising water, or pillaging [6]. With the exception of a small number
of graves attributed to the 'E'-Group, Reisner and Firth found no
notable remains which could be assigned to the period between the end
of the New Kingdom and the 25th Dynasty. As Adams averred, the lack
of sites from this phase is very suggestive: it is very unlikely that
destruction or excavation of sites would be so selective. The re-
assessment of the material from Lower Nubia by Williams in the light
of the Oriental Institute excavations at Qustul, has, however, shown
that greater understanding of the archaeological material,
particularly the pottery, allows re-attribution of sites excavated
earlier.
-143-
In Upper Nubia, the surveys of Vila south of the 2nd Cataract, in
the Dal-Abri Reach, identified a number of sites which contained
material closely similar to that from Sanam and other southern
Napatan sites. Vila ascribed his sites to the Third Intermediate
Period or the 25th Dynasty. Despite the relatively large size of the
Nissiminia cemetery, Vila estimated that average population for the
settlement was only about 30 people, throughout the period. The
possibility of other as yet unexcavated sites of the New Kingdom-
Napatan period in Upper Nubia is widely recognised [81.
Whilst the majority of writers would accept that Upper Nubia was
settled during the period between the end of the Viceregal
administration and the 25th Dynasty, there is still a general belief
that the archaeological material - even with Williams's re-
attributions - is insufficient to fill the period between c 1070-700
BC in Lower Nubia [101.
-144-
Reisner's E-Group
-14 5-
The Archaeology
Burial Customs
A. Grave types
One group, comprising an irregular tomb with single wall (VF 72A)
and circular graves with flexed or contracted burials (w 46, Argin 6-
-146-
B-18, 24 and G-3-24), contained Sanam "type III" pottery: a
difference of custom, rather than date.
B. Burial types
-147-
Grave-goods.
Pottery
Glyptic
Glyptic is one of the most important categories for the dating of the
Kushite material, because of the large and distinctive collection
assembled from the cemetery of Sanam (24]. This included specialised
forms of udjat, often pierced below the brow and statuette amulets
which have parallels from Meroe as well as Egypt [251. The
iconography of many of the faience amulets has striking parallels in
the 'Egyptianising' ivory work excavated at Nimrud, and other
artefacts from as far afield as Carthage, all having their origin in
the Phoenician workshops.
-148-
were contemporaries of Piye; a gold amulet [26] from Meroe W 816
belonged to the Great Chief Pimay [271, probably to be identified
with Pimay of Busiris son of Shoshenq, one of the Great Chiefs of the
Ma mentioned on the stela of Piye. A silver plaque, perhaps the lid
of a box, inscribed with the name of Nimlot was discovered in the
Treasury at Sanam [281 and a bronze situla with the name of
Peftjauawybast was found at lava [291. An alabaster jar fragment of
"the Commander of the Army, Pashedenbastet, the justified, son of the
Lord of the Two Lands Shoshenq" (perhaps Shoshenq III), was
discovered in the burial of Queen Akheqa at Nun [30]. On the basis
of this inscribed vase fragment, Reisner advocated an Egyptianised
Libyan ancestry for the Kushite royal family (31].
Upper Nubia.
-149-
Cataract - Tabo, Kawa, Sanam, el-Kurru, Barkal and Nun - have
cemeteries and temples wich can be certainly dated to the 25th
Dynasty. Problems of interpretation remain, however, with those
sites which pre-date the 25th Dynasty. Of these, el-Kurru is
certainly the most significant, having been recognised as the
ancestral cemetery of the Kushite rulers ever since its excavation.
- 150 -
Alternative interpretations
- 151 -
calaculated by All Hakem. In this case a family of 'chiefs' ruling
the 4th Cataract region during the time of Egyptian hegemony would
have assumed power after the collapse of the Viceroyalty.
Tr6k [50] has argued that Kurru was a dynastic necropolis divided
into two well-defined units: with kings buried in the main part and
the 25th Dynasty queens in the southern part. The burial place of
pre-25th Dynasty non-ruling family members remains unknown to us.
Trk [51] calculated on a 20-year generation with Kashta ruling 760-
747 BC, and arrived at a date of 1020-1000 for the reign of the the
first ancestor buried in Turn 1.
-152-
The most important element in the puzzle ... is the problem of
determining whether the ancestral tombs are sequential and
evolutionary and follow one another in order without significant
chronological gap, or whether the distinct types of tombs among
them represent isolated clusters, each representing separate
periods of cemetery use, possibly unrelated to each other and
separated by significant gaps in time.
The possibility needed to be voiced for the sake of completeness
[611, since Reisner's view - that there were different grave-types in
each generation - is not paralleled elsewhere in Nubia. Indeed, such
a rapid development seems rather unlikely. As Kendall himself noted,
Reisner later worked out a similar progression from tumulus to
pyramid in Egypt. This, almost 'Darwinian', concept of evolution, is
surely mistaken, and tomb-types possibly represent differing cultural
traditions. If the cemetery did contain two or more clusters, the
earlier could be attributed to local New Kingdom rulers, whose
cemetery was then adopted by the emergent 25th Dynasty.
- 153 -
The form of the later burials has become a subject of some
dispute, and it remains uncertain whether those of the later
generations were in fact pyramid tombs [65]. Reisner himself [661
could not determine whether the burial of Piye had been a mastaba or
a pyramid. As Au Hakem notes [67] Reisner presumed the remainder to
be pyramids without any further clarification [681. The super-
structures were absent and only the shallow foundation trenches
remained with a very few blocks [691.
Kendall proposed that the later burials were pyramids and observes
that
Given their extensive contact with Egypt or Egyptian religious
authorities, the Kurru chiefs of the period can probably be
expected to have received copies of funerary papyri illustrating
pyramid tombs... [74].
Ali Hakem does not rule out the possibility that the later tombs were
also square mastabas, commenting that a "reduced mastaba" was the
-154 -
prevailing form of royal tomb during the 22nd and 23rd Dynasties
[741.
- 155 -
Kendall develops a theory that "the wives' tombs at Kurru were always
built to the S or SW of their husbands', which placed them
symbolically at the ruler's 'right hand sides'."
- 156 -
very crude, heavy hollow cast bronze leg terminating in a bird's
talon" [88]. Kendall speculated that this formed part of a falcon or
ba-bird which had been mounted on the superstructure of one of the
tombs.
- 157 -
vertical-sided vessels of green faience (95]. Trb'k pointed out that
similar faience vessels to those found in Ku Turn 1 had also been
found at Debeira (961.
Calcite vessels from the Kurru graves have close parallels with
material from a number of sites, as widely spread as Nimrud and Assur
(these, Assyrian booty from Syria-Palestine) and the Phoenician
cemeteries of Spain [99]. Of Generation All [1001, Ku Turn I and 5
contained Egyptian calcite vessels of the New Kingdom [101] and some
fragments of strap-handled amphorae of classic 18th-dynasty type
[102].
- 158 -
As with the faience, Kendall argues that the calcite vessels
should be eliminated from consideration as good chronological
indicators.
A scarab, pieces of ivory, gold, shells from the Red Sea and inlay
pieces of lapis lazuli were all recovered from tombs of Generation
-159 -
They formed parts of large amphorae and heavy stemmed and footed
bowls. Kendall [117] points out that the amphorae were made with
holes in heir bases, so could not be used for storage, and that the
funerary nature of the decoration indicates manufacture for the
funeral ceremony itself. Although some have mummiform figures
painted on them there was no indication of mummification in the tombs
where they were discovered. Kendall concludes [1181 that there were
experts in Egyptian ritual in the Napata region and thus:
here we would seem to have good evidence ... that the Egyptian
sanctuaries ... continued to flourish during the dark centuries
after Egyptian political withdrawal ... and came to exercise a
powerful influence on the local native elite and the incipient
Kushite monarchy.
From all of these Generation A/I [1191 tombs were fragments of a
peculiar square pottery jar [120]) a type close to that from the
cemetery at Debeira East [121]. Sve-Sderbergh dated most of these
graves to the mid-l8th Dynasty, but Kendall notes pilgrim bottles of
1st millenium type [1221 and in any case "the Egyptian objects, like
those at Kurru, need not necessarily be contemporary with the graves"
[123]. A squat jar also appeared at both sites [1241.
- 160 -
that has been dated in other contexts to a period ranging from the
mid-eleventh to the ninth centuries B.C.", most of the other pottery
types are dateable to the 8th and 7th centuries [1291. The dating of
this other pottery is based largely upon Aston's study of Third
Intermediate Period tomb groups [1301. Other parallels were dated by
Jacquet-Gordon more generally to the Third Intermediate Period. To
resolve the discrepancy, Heidorn suggests that Aston's dating is
perhaps a little low, and in order to synchronise all of the
evidence, his pottery typology should be regarded as beginning a
little earlier. Hence the Phoenician jars would be at the end of
their usual date-range but still compatible with the other pottery
and the chronology of the cemetery as understood by Kendall and
Heidorn. Heidorn had already allowed the possibility that the
Phoenician jars had appeared slightly later than they would in their
'natural' contexts, since she commented that "Phoenician storejars
were well-manufactured and may have been reused over a long period of
time".
- 161 -
Kendall's choice of material, as he himself admits, has been highly
selective, and the problems of interpreting the Kurru cemetery seem
only to increase.
- 162 -
Interpreting the data: the role of the 'Kurru chiefs'
- 163 -
There are, as has been discussed, a number of alternative
interpretations of the chronology of the Kurru cemetery and it seems
unlikely that these will be resolved until all of the material
excavated has been assessed. In the "long chronology" proposed by
Ali Hakem and Tr5k, the cemetery would begin shortly before, or
shortly after, the end of the Egyptian New Kingdom. Kendall's "short
chronology" assumes an hiatus before the establishment of power by
the chiefs and the beginning of the cemetery. The radical, and
highly controversial, reduction in dates for the New Kingdom
advocated by James and his collaborators would result (assuming their
maximum reduction of 230 years) in two further possibilities.
Assuming a "long chronology" of sixteen generations of c 20 years,
the earliest graves would belong to the early 19th Dynasty.
Following Kendall's short chronology of six generations, the earliest
burials would belong to the mid-2Oth Dynasty.
- 164 -
strong contact! with the eastern Sudan. The lapis-lazuli, if not re-
used from earlier graves, must have been acquired through Egypt.
- 165 -
S*nis.
- 166 -
cave graves, (3) built graves with stairway, and (4) rectangular
graves. Although most of the burials were badly preserved, Griffith
was able to identify many which had contained fragments of bead nets,
cartonnage and traces of coffins, all of which indicated mummiform
burials. Griffith dated these muminiform burials as earlier than the
contracted burials. Because the 'royal' burials at el-Kurru have
staircases only from the reign of Piye (Piankhy) onwards, Griffith
dated the mummiform burials, and the commencement of the Sanam
cemetery, to that reign. The mummiform burials, he proposed,
continued to the reign of Aramateiqo. The later stage of the
cemetery, represented by the contracted burials, covered the century
or so following. This period, Griffith believed, was one of
declining importance for Sanam, indicated by the use of the temple as
a factory for the manufacture of faience [150].
- 167 -
represented by scarabs: Shoshenq I, and Shoshenq III. The 25th
Dynasty and their immediate successors were represented by scarabs
and plaques [155]. As at Kurru, parallels for the faience amulets
and alabaster vessels can be found. A number of objects of Near
Eastern origin were discovered in the graves, but mostly belong to
the period following the 25th Dynasty. A Cypriote (perhaps
Palestinian imitation) vessel with painted decoration 11156] and
spindle-jars [157] were notable amongst the pottery. Yrom farther
away in time and place was an Old Babylonian cylinder fl58].
Sanam stands at the end of the desert road to Meroe, on the south
side of the river (here flowing NE>SW), and it is therefore protected
by the river from attack from the Eastern Desert, known by the
inscriptions of the New Kingdom and Napatan-Meroitic period to be the
major source of problems. It is quite likely therefore that Sanam
was the base of a chiefdom as early as the New Kingdom. This
chiefdom would have controlled the desert road to the Shendi Reach.
The Egyptian fortress of Napata, possibly on an island, dominated the
Cataract and marked the Egyptian 'frontier'; Gebel Barkal as a
religious site apparently developed considerably later than the
founding of the fortress. This relationship of indigenous centre and
Egyptian centre is already found in Lower Nubia where the Princes of
Aniba were buried at Toshka, south of Aniba, and those of Thht at
Debeira, when the centre was Buhen or Faras. If, as suggested in the
model proposed for the New Kingdom, the acquisition of products from
- 168-
the Shendi Reach was left in the control of the indigenous princes
and passed by them to the Viceregal administration, then Sanam would
doubtless have been a principal power base. The continuation of Sanam
as an important centre during the Third Intermediate Period is thus
to be expected, and the burials at Kurru indicate as much. It is
possible that some of the burials at Sanam are in re-used graves of
New Kingdom date belonging to the indigenous princes. The loss of
all superstructures unfortunately renders confirmation of such a
possibility difficult, but a close re-examination of the material
from the Sanain cemetery is certainly a necessity.
)leroe.
- 169 -
The imported pottery at Meroe indicates that commodity exchange was
established rapidly, if it was not already a significant factor.
-170-
9
Nubia in the later years of the 20th Dyna5ty was in the control of a
family of Viceroys; Naherha, Wentawat and Rainessesnakht (4]. Their
monuments are found in Egypt (5] and throughout Nubia, at Abu Simbel
[6], Serra [7], Buhen [81, Semna (91 and Amara (10]. Amara remained
the major southern centre of the Viceregal administration [11], and
work continued in the temple there until the reign of Ramesses IX
[12]. After his time, there are, so far, no recorded inscriptions of
Viceroys or other officials of known date from the region south of
the 2nd Cataract. The name of Ramesses X occurs at lubban [13] and
Aniba [141.
- 171 -
A number of documents from Egypt shows that there were Kushites
settled and working there [16], and, whatever the attitude of
individual Egyptians towards the southern dominion [171, official
policy continued.
- 172 -
It is certain that Panehesy entered Upper Egypt with soldiers from
the Nubian militia, eventually campaigning as far north as Hardal
[25] in Middle Egypt and perhaps into the Delta itself. Wente [26]
argues that the 'barbarians' who seized Medinet Habu in the sixth
month of the suppression of Amenhotep [271 were probably the Nubian
troops of Panehesy, since they are called 3w, not the usual term
for Libyans in this text. Papyrus BM 10053 (28] of year 9 of
Ramesses XI [29] details an investigation headed by Panehesy into the
depredations by priests at Medinet Habu [30]. There is also evidence
for summary execution by the Viceroy (31]. Some local people,
sheltering in Medinet Habu, were taken into slavery [32], and others,
like the wab-priest Peison fled, when Panehesy dismissed their
superiors (33].
-173 -
seen a breakdown in order amongst Kushite troops left in Thebes.
Aldred [42] drew attention to the violent destruction of the
sarcophagus of Ramesses VI, and the damage to other royal mummies,
which, he argued, indicated activities by a large gang who were not
professional tomb robbers. This major looting of the royal tombs
possibly took place during the period of Panehesy's campaign in the
north. Aidred emphasises a number of texts which attest the presence
of Ramesses XI in Thebes [43], possibly to see the destruction
wrought by Panehesy, and his force, and to institute the wh uawt.
- 174-
However, it should be emphasised, that Herihor's position as Viceroy
can never have been more than titular.
- 175 -
Nubian campaign all dates to year 10 of wh* .swt [55], and Panehesy
is mentioned by name, apparently as the opponent of Piankh in one of
the letters [56]. There is no evidence from the archive, or any
other source, to show that there had been military actions against
Panehesy before that year. It is perhaps significant that the
records of the tomb robbery trials in year I of wh. swt contain
oaths sworn by the witnesses that they might be sent to lush, be
mutilated and sent to lush, or sent to the battalion of lush [571.
- 176 -
hieroglyphs in the cartouches are not well-formed, and those of the
text are more difficult, resulting in some difficulties of reading.
- 177 -
campaigning in Nubia was responsible for the de-population, but again
it is difficult to see what the Egyptians would have achieved by
this, other than the repression of a formidable military opponent who
was threatening the security of Upper Egypt. If the titular Viceroys
in Thebes were attempting to re-establish Egyptian authority over
Nubia there would be little point in driving out its population. In
any case, the intensity of the campaigning is hardly likely to have
been greater than that of the pharaohs of the early 18th Dynasty who
established Egyptian control over Nubia; they did not drive out the
population. The disestablishment of the 500-year old administration
can hardly have been effected overnight, and the land-holding
officials may not have wanted to abandon their property.
- 178 -
situation in Egypt possibly distracted him from events in more
southerly parts of Nubia. Certainly, the campaigning of Rerihor and
Piankh would have preoccupied the Viceroy in Lower Nubia, and
possibly have forced a withdrawal of troops from the southern
garrisons, if not an abandonment of the territory south of the 2nd
Cataract.
- 179 -
configurations in Nubia itself rather than the result of direct
external (ie Egyptian) activities. If, as is proposed here, post-
viceregal. Nubia came under the sway of indigenous princes, military
conflict between them, or simply the establishment of local centres
may have had a considerable effect upon the population distribution;
elites attaching themselves to the various 'courts'. Movement of
population, or depopulation, may have taken place over a longer
rather than shorter period.
- 180-
4. Irike-piye-qo
5. Sabrak-amani ry 1mm
Of these only the first and second can properly be said to carry Neo-
Ramesside titularies. The epithet ry 1mm attached to the names of
Kash-[...J and Sabrak-amani is common, and particularly common in
Egypt during the New Kingdom, Third Intermediate Period and is used
again in the Nakedonian period. Irike-piye-qo, himself, carries no
epithet which can be considered Neo-Ramesside, and he is included
only because inscription Kawa XIII [751 records him as predecessor of
Sabrak-ainani. Sabrak-amani's prenomen R'.IIpt had been used as a
Rorus name by Piye (Piankhy). Kash-(...] mery Amun is known only
from a fragment of gold leaf from Kawa (761 and cannot be associated
with any other ruler. There is nothing in the textual or
archaeological sources to link 'Aktisanes' and Aryamani with the
other three rulers, or with each other.
All of these kings have been attributed to this period, the turn
of the 4th-3rd centuries BC, on the premise that they were buried in
the pyramids at Barkal, which, although carrying no royal names,
have, on stylistic grounds, been dated to the period c 320-275 BC
[771.
- 181 -
further in the following discussion. They may belong to the period
320-275 BC, and they may have been buried at Barkal: but the proof is
absent.
Menmaetre-setepen-Amun Itsn
The text on the Barkal jamb reads '(... Nonth]u, Lord of Thebes,
(he) gives might to the Lord of the Two Lands, NflI t_RC_Stp_n_RC,
the Son of Re, [cartouche with name]'. Macadam refused to
transliterate the second cartouche, although he gave his verdict on
each visible sign.
- 182 -
preserved, five-fold titulary. Priese suggested transliterating the
nomen on the Barkal slab and the door-jamb as G3-ti--n. The nomen
is not actually preserved on the Nun inscription, and the
attribution to this king is made through the restoration of the
partly-preserved prenomen as [1n1_X3C t_RC_atp_n_In. The writing G3-
ti-5-n Priese suggests may be read as Itn or Gtsn, whom he
identifies with a king, Aktisanes, whose name is preserved in
Diodoros.
Nearly all of the scholars who have discussed the Aktisanes story
in Diodoros agree that it has no historical foundation. The story is
a direct parallel to that of the invasion of Egypt by Sabacos
(Shabaqo) in Herodotos [82]. Lepsius first noted the parallelism of
the episodes [83], and Wiedemann later suggested the identification
of Aktisanes with Sabacon/Shabaqo [84]. Schafer, however, equated
Aktisanes with Nastasen, assuming a corruption of the Greek from
'Astisanes' [85].
- 183 -
Yet scholars have persisted in a belief in the reign of an
'historical Aktisanes', which must, it has been argued [891, be
placed before or during that of Ptolemy I, when Hekataios wrote.
'Aktisanes' thus appears in the modern Neroitic king lists as
reigning in the 4th century BC, on the assumption that Hekataios had
taken the name of a near contemporary ruler and inserted it into his
narrative [90]. This identification of the 'Aktisanes' of Diodoros
with the ruler named on monuments as Itsn has been assumed by all
recent writers.
- 184 -
Far more important than the narrative of Aktisanes for
establishing the date of Itan are the ruler's monuments, and the
fragmentary titularies recorded on them.
The five-fold titulary was used by the rulers of the 25th Dynasty
and their successors down to Aspelta, but after this is not attested
amongst the Napatan and Meroitic kings with the exceptions of Irike-
Amanote, Harsiyotef and Nastasen. Most rulers seem to have used only
one or two names, although occasionally a Rorus, or Nebty, name is
found. Most significant is the lack of originality when these names
do occur; except for certain periods when there were strong
influences from Egypt, the kings who adopted more than one name re-
used those of predecessors.
That a king should adopt a five-fold titulary, and one which was
not repeating names already frequently used by Kushite kings,
strongly suggests that he had access to a scribe with at least
moderate understanding of Egyptian and the composition of titularies.
Unfortunately the titulary copied by Weidenbach is only fragmentarily
preserved. In his authoritative study, Priese made a number of
suggestions for possible restorations by analogy with New Kingdom
titularies, and based upon the number of hieroglyphic groups which
could be postulated as the length of a line. He conmiented that
"[due Titulatur enthalt typische ramessidische Wendungen", but that
it also showed similarities with other inscriptions attributed to the
Late Napatan or Early Meroitic periods.
- 185 -
Of the Horus name, only the last word, PI3Ct, is preserved. Priese
suggested the restoration [Horus k3 nht mry] N3Ct, 'Horus the mighty
bull beloved of Maet'. This was the usual Rorus name of Ramesses II
and of Osorkon II. The form 'Horu. the mighty bull' was used by
nearly every king from the 18th Dynasty until Shabaqo, after whom
only Philippos Arrhidaios and some late Ptolemaic and Roman rulers
revived it [96]. Philippos Arrhidaios himself used the form Horus k3
nht ry .3t, doubtlessly modelled upon Ramesses II.
Having extended over two lines, only the first and last words of
the Nebty name were preserved: yr [...] Npwt. Priese suggested the
alternatives yr (.nw. pr it.f IJ Npwt, 'Great [of monuments in the
house of his father Amun] of Napata' or yr [phty H m] Npwt, 'Great
of strength, Arising in Napata'. The determinative used for Napata
is transcribed by Priese asb , although Weidenbach's drawing of
the hieroglyph is imprecise. This writing of the name of Napata is
known only from the Nastasen stela, but Kendall has recently argued
that the mountain of Gebel Barkal was conceived as crowned with an
uraeus from the New Kingdom onwards [97]. It is apparently depicted
so in a relief in the temple of Taharqo [981, and a relief at Abu
Simbel also shows a mountain (either Abu Simbel, or Gebel Barkal)
crowned with an uraeus (99].
- 186-
to be attributed to Iten, since the nomen itself is lost: but this
restoration is the most likely because a king with this name and the
epithet is already attested on two monuments. The only possible
orthographic alternative would be Nb_N3Ct_RC, the prenomen of
Amenhotep III and of Ramesses VI. This, however, creates a new ruler
otherwise unattested: possible, but in the light of the other
evidence to be treated cautiously.
The Nomen was lost, apart from the introductory title, 53 Re.
Priese restored Itan on the basis of the restored prenomen.
- 187 -
ex-voto - to claim that there is adequate reason for attributing the
two monuments to one individual. Menmaetre 'Itsn' might equally be a
ruler of Upper Nubian origin.
Usermaetre-setepenre Ary-mery-Amun.
The Horns name, 13 nht mry RC 'Horns the mighty bull beloved of
Re', was a variant Horus-name of Thutmose III (significantly perhaps,
in the surviving scene above the Karimala inscription at Semna),
Ramesses II, and of Shoshenq III. It was the usual Horns-name of
Sety It and Ramesses XI, and, with additional epithets, of
Nesubanebdjed (Smendes) I, Shoshenq I and Osorkon I.
The Nebty name is lost, although the title remains. Macadam [103]
observed that there appeared to be no room for a Golden Horns name if
- 188 -
the lacuna was restored with the prenomen. The Prenomen is preserved
in the lunette scene, preceded by the title nb t3vy Wsr_N3Ct_RC_
stp.n_RC This is the prenomen of Ramesses II, used also by Shoshenq
III, Pimay and luput II. Usermaetre was frequently used as a
prenomen by 20th Dynasty and Libyan rulers, with the variant epithets
r-1i (Ramesses III, Shoshenq 'Iv'), r_Ian_stp.n_RC (Ramessee VII),
spr.n_RC (Ramesses v), h.n-1n (Ramesses VIII), and etp.n-1n (by
nine rulers during the Third Intermediate Period). It was later
adopted by Piye.
-189-
The Temple B at Kawa is adjacent to the 18th-dynasty Temple A
(built by Tutankhamun) and faces the processional way of the main
Temple T (built by Taharqo, possibly on the site of an 18th-dynasty
temple)[1071. Apart from the stone-built sanctuary, gates and the
columns of the courtyard, the temple is of mud brick. The courtyard
has four columns, one of which is totally uninscribed, and two have
inscriptions of Fing Harsiyotef. The fourth column is made up of re-
used drums, which carry dedicatory inscriptions of Shabaqo. The
duplication of the texts indicates that these drums come from two
columns, neither complete [1081. The sanctuary itself is stone-built
with a pylon entrance. It is a single chamber with relief on the
interior walls, and a false door [109]. The scenes on the pylon
depict a number of deities: Amun, Anhur and Tefnut, Monthu and
Khonsu, and Thoth. Anuket and Satet appear on the inside wall of the
pylon. The two major scenes show the king making offerings to Amun,
[Mut], Khonsu and Monthu, and to Ainun, a goddess and a second pair of
deities (probably Inheret and Tefnut). There are traces of gilding
on the figures.
- 190-
The enlarged temple might thus be ascribed to Harsiyotef. Macadam's
idea that the sanctuary was built inside the already existing temple
is difficult to comprehend: if Ary was later than Harsiyotef, it is
surely more likely that he would simply have demolished the whole of
the building, and included the stone elements (the columns and
gateways) in his own new temple.
Stylistically, the reliefs are closer to the late New Kingdom than
to other Kushite work. The sandals are typical of the late 20th
Dynasty [111] and Third Intermediate Periods (112]; a different form
being worn from the 25th Dynasty onwards (113]. Early Meroitic
reliefs again depict different forms [114]. Also, significantly, the
king in the lava reliefs does not wear the necklace with ram-head
pendants, which is a normal feature of regalia from the 25th Dynasty
until the Early Meroitic Period [115].
lawa XIV indicates that Ary had assumed some form of pharaonic
style by his 3rd year - or at latest his 9th - regnal year. No names
or titles were preserved on lawa XV, but it too should probably be
attributed to Ary. The fragments of text record a regnal year 23.
- 191 -
between the two that the possibility cannot be ignored (see below
Chapter 11).
Karimala.
The temple built by Thutmose III within the fortress of Semna, at the
2nd Cataract, carries one of the most intriguing texts to be found in
Nubia. The inscription of Karimala is carved on the facade of the
temple to the left of the doorway, replacing the original 18th-
dynasty decoration on the central part of the wall [1161. To prepare
the area the surface of the wall was smoothed into a panel, cutting
through the original reliefs.
The scene, which forms the left half of the whole relief, depicts
Karimala, followed by a second, much smaller female figure standing
in front of the goddess Isis. Between Karimala and Isis are three
altar-stands with bread, vessels and bunches of flowers. The right
half of the relief is a text of thirteen columns of hieroglyphs.
- 192 -
commentary on it, has been made by Caminos, and will be appear in the
full epigraphic publication of the temple of Semna by the Egypt
Exploration Society [119].
The dating of the relief has been the most difficult problem to
resolve. Lepsius [1231 placed Karimala after Aspelta as one of the
last of the Napatan rulers, which was followed by a number of writers
(this is discussed by Caminos). However, her name has been found at
none of the excavated sites of the 25th Dynasty and Napatan period,
which, considering her obvious importance and the number of female
members of the royal family known from this time, is striking.
Grapow (124] considered that the text was 21st or 22nd Dynasty, on
the basis of the orthography and language. Grapow later attributed
the text to the time of Piye [125]. Macadam was unable to suggest a
date [126]. Caminos has cautiously recommended an 8th to 7th century
BC dating, observing that, although Grapow considered the orthography
and language indicative of a 22nd-23rd dynasty date, palaeo-
graphically the text has no known parallels.
-193-
The style, particularly the image of the queen, is strongly
reminiscent, in Caminos's view, of the representations of Nefertari
at Abu Simbel. The figures certainly follow later New Kingdom
conventions rather than 25th Dynasty-Napatan ones. Lepsius noted
that the figures had a Ramesside quality, and are not unlike work
found in the reign of Ramesses III [127]. Perhaps the closest
parallels are to be found in the depiction of royal women of the
family of Herihor, in the Ihonsu temple at Karnak [128].
The choice of the Semna temple for the carving of such a large and
obviously important text is difficult to account for. All that can
be readily be deduced from this, is that the ruler, possibly Karimala
herself, controlled part of Nubia which included Semna, and at some
time during the Third Intermediate Period. Karimala might have been
the wife of a local king, even of Ary or Gtsn, although the writing
of the titulary and of the text suggested to Caminos that Karimala
herself was the ruler.
- 194-
the prenomen Neferkare was used by Pepy II and followed by a number
of kings during the First Intermediate Period. It is significant
that of some 20 rulers recorded in the Turin Canon during that
period, seven used the name Neferkare and three others variants of
it. The reign of Pepy II, the longest in Egyptian history (at least
90 years) and the king's prestige, led to his emulation, in the same
way that the successors of Ramesses II in the 20th Dynasty and Third
Intermediate Periods followed his style. Whilst Shabaqo may have
adopted Neferkare as the name of Pepy II and thereby begun the
archaising tendency of Late Period titularies, it is notable that
Neferkare had been used more recently as a prenomen, by Ramesses IX.
Two minor Third Intermediate Period rulers also adopted the name,
Amenemnisu and Peftjauawybast of Herakleopolis, a contemporary of
Piye [135].
[Ne?]maetre Kashta
Usermaetre Pi(ankh)y
Neferkare Shabaqo
- 195 -
10
The crisis seems to have begun in the reign of Osorkon II, with
the assumption of royal style by the king's cousin, the High Priest
of Amun Harsiese [3]. The death of Osorkon II was followed by the
rebellion of Thebes, and, apparently the emergence of a king - and
perhaps dynasty - there [4]. Later still, dynasts assumed power in
the Delta and Middle Egypt at Leontopolis, Herakleopolis and
Hermopolis, although the process is still very unclear [51. The most
significant new power in late Libyan Egypt was the city of Sais,
which, after a brief period of ascendancy under Bakenranef and
Tefnakht, eventually achieved supremacy under Psamtik I [61.
- 196 -
on the frontier region 1 and attitudes towards the south. More
fundamentally, recent excavations at Qasr Ibrim have identified
fortifications and related material which will necessitate a total
re-evaluation of activities in Lower Nubia during this phase. A
variety of material indicates the continuing economic relations
between Nubia and Egypt.
On the basis of the titles used by Herihor and Piankh, Reisner [9]
assumed that the later Viceroys functioned from Thebes. The
(presumed) revival of the title for Nesikhons has been considered of
no great significance; but more evidence is now recognised which
suggests that the title continued in use, possibly throughout the
whole of the Third Intermediate Period.
- 197-
presumed to be Siamun [18]. Exactly why Nesikhons was granted these
offices must remain unknown, although there can be little doubt that
they were real functions rather than sinecures.
H3t.-n [btj. This stela might antedate Takeloth II's eleventh year,
the date of the first insurrection in Thebes.
- 198 -
Another possible Viceroy also belongs to the time of Osorkon III
and Takeloth III. Ankh-Osorkon is given the titles s3 nw
h3s'urt rsyvt iay-r gs pr (26]. Although not explicity e3 naw n
the combination of s3 nsw with "Overseer of the southern foreign
lands", is certainly suggestive. Leahy is cautious about a further
title, which seems to read t3ty 3C[ 271, and which suggests that
this man may be identical with another Ankh-Osorkon, who was a
Vizier. This Ankh-Osorkon [28] is not specifically called a Viceroy,
but carries the title Overseer of Prophets of Khnum-Re nb qbh, given
to other Viceroys of the period. There is a possibility that the two
should be equated, in which case this Viceroy was a son of
Djedptahefankh, himself an iy-r b3swtyv [29] and grandson of Osorkon
III [30].
- 199 -
southern countries, they flee into their valleys for fear of him
1331.
Evidence may yet be forthcoming to show whether the office continued
throughout the Late Period, or was only occasionally revived.
Rerihor - Ramesses XI
Piankh - Ramesses XI
Nesikhons - Pinudjem It
[Nimlot ?] - Osorkon II
Rat-n(akht) - Takeloth II
Nesuhor - Apries
After the campaign of Piankh against Panehesy at the very end of the
reign of Rainesses XI, there is no further documentary evidence for
military activity in Nubia during the Libyan period. Given the
situation at the close of the 20th Dynasty, there almost certainly
were campaigns, at least into Lower Nubia, and the excavations at
Aswan might find records of these. On the evidence of the relief at
Karnak, Kitchen [34] proposed that Shoshenq I had led, or sent a
military campaign into Nubia:
The phrase 'thou hast trodden down the natives of Nubia' in line 2
of the rhetorical text of the great triumph-scene at Karnak ... is
reminiscent of that of Merenptah's scene..., but occurs in a
broader context sufficiently original in its manipulation of set
- 200 -
phrases to merit Breasted's inference ... that Shoshenq I
controlled Lower Nubia. Of all the triumph-scenes at Karnak, the
texts of that of Shoshenq I are certainly the most unusual and
original in a very traditional genre.
Kitchen, of course, recognizes that conventionalized scenes of enemy-
subjugation are to be treated with the utmost caution. Originality
and unusual elements in such scenes may, therefore, indicate an
element of historical veracity; particularly if a toponym list is
included, which can be demonstrated to be more than a copy of earlier
such lists. The Shoshenq I relief, the text of which Kitchen cites,
is actually the record of the king's Syro-Palestinian campaign (351.
The scene depicts Shoshenq presenting the captive 'name-rings' to
Amun, the named towns are all Asiatic, and the rings are surmounted
by bound Asiatics. It is only in the introductory text that Shoshenq
makes his generalised claim of subjugating Nubia. Most writers have
identified this campaign with that recorded on a fragmentary victory
stela from Karnak (361 and with the campaign of "Shishak, king of
Egypt" documented in the Biblical record (1 Kings and 2 Chronicles,
12). 2 Chronicles 12: 3-4 says that Shishak came with 1,200
chariots, with 60,000 parasiim ( z "horsemen" ?) [371, and a large
number of different peoples from Egypt: Libyans, Sukkiim, and
Kushites (Nubians). Kitchen [381 comments:-
The inclusion of the Sukki or Tjuk(ten) is an especially
interesting detail, while the presence of Nubians would find ready
explanation in the presence of Nubian militia under Egyptian arms
at several epochs, and in Shoshenq's forces very likely as
conscripts or slave-troops in the wake of his Nubian campaign.
A series of blocks from near the sanctuary of Amun at Karnak contains
fragmentary texts in which a king records offerings of various Nubian
products to Amun. One block associated with these carries the
cartouche of Shoshenq I. The whole group has consequently been
interpreted as the record of the booty of his campaign, or the
revenues from re-conquered territory; and therefore analogous with
the Syro-Palestinian scene.
- 201 -
The Nubian campaign of Shoshenq I has thus passed into history,
being cited in subsequent studies as one of the few historical
moments in a period of Nubian history otherwise drawn as a
notoriously dark age.
- 202 -
influence of Amenhotep III's reliefs on those of Osorkon II has long
been acknowledged (471, it is more likely that an intermediate source
was used: either reliefs surviving in the Theban region, or a
papyrus-type record.
- 203 -
may have been descendants of Kushite troops garrisoned in Philistia
by the Egyptian pharaohs [56].
- 204 -
king's wife [61]. Both incidents are known only from the biblical
sources.
Under the 40-year rule of the Omrides, Israel was at its most
Phoenicophile. The Phoenician cities entered into alliances with
Israel which gave them access to the inland trade routes to Anatolia,
Mesopotamia, Syria, Arabia and Aqaba [70]. Ittobaal of Tyre formed
- 205 -
an alliance with Omri - or his son and co-regent Ahab. Ahab himself
married Jezebel, daughter of lttobaal [711, which led to large-scale
royal patronage of Phoenician cults in Israel. A little later a
further alliance was made between Israel and Judah when Jehoshaphat
of Judah with Ahaziah, son of Ahab, attempted to re-open the gold
trade with Ophir from Eziongeber, although this came to naught due to
the wreck of the ships [721. The biblical record portrays Ahab as a
vassal of Damascus, then under the ruler of Hadad-idri [731, but it
is clear froii the Assyrian accounts that he was one of the leaders of
the coalition at Qarqar [74]. There are good reasons for doubting
the accuracy of the biblical account and while Damascus was powerful,
it was not powerful enough to subdue the Omrides.
- 206 -
Shalmaneser did not go further south, it must be assumed that he was
unsuccessful [81]. Similarly, in the campaigns of years 11 and 14,
Shalmaneser met the coalition, but there was never any follow-up.
The texts do not mention the taking of cities or of the leaders, or
their submission, and it seems that the alliance was strong enough to
prevent the Assyrians gaining any significant ground in central and
southern Syria [821.
- 207 -
The obelisk is dated by Tadmor (921 to 841 BC or shortly after,
when Israel, Tyre and Sidon surrendered to Shalmaneser [II. The
terminus ad quem is 838, the king's last campaign against Syria and
Palestine. Kitchen (93] attributes this to the reign of Takeloth II,
but even a minor revision of Egyptian chronology would place it in a
different reign and historical context (94]. The defeat of the
coalition at Qarqar and the subsequent Assyrian expansion, must have
necessitated Egypt's payment of mandattu - a compulsory payment
levied on kingdoms subjected in war (95] - and they must have
acknowledged the superiority of the Assyrians for a time.
- 208 -
are geographical rather than chronological, but the eponym lists are
helpful: the campaign of 734 was to Philistia; those of 733 and 732
to Damascus (98].
The campaigns of 733 and 732 were directed against Damascus and
Israel. In 733 Damascus was besieged but did not fall; the Assyrians
cut down its orchards in revenge, and Bit-Khadara, the ancestral home
of Radyan, was taken and its people deported. Damascus probably fell
in 732 and the kingdom, Bit-Razael, was made an Assyrian province.
An attack on Hiram of Tyre followed, but not on the city itself:
Hiram paid tribute.
- 209 -
In Israel, Peqah was murdered in a conspiracy led by Hoshea who
replaced him and himself became an Assyrian vassal [1021. The
northern part of Israelite territory now became three Assyrian
provinces, Hoshea being left with only Sainaria and the area around.
With the death of Tiglathpil.eser III and the accession of Shalmaneser
V, Hoshea withheld tribute and sent envoys to Egypt for help [1031.
The events of the reign of Shalmaneser V have generated a voluminous
literature, but there is still dissent on the identities involved.
The biblical text records Hoshea's appeal to "So, king of Egypt", who
has been variously identified with Shabaqo [104], Osorkon IV (1051 or
Tefnakht [106]. No assistance was forthcoming, and Shalmaneser V
invaded Israel in 724. Only Samaria was able to resist, and was
besieged for two years. The city fell to the Assyrians (probably
Shalmaneser V, rather than Sargon, who claimed the victory [107] in
early autumn 722, and the population was deported to Assyria [108].
The fall of Samaria was followed closely by the death of Shalmaneser
V and the accession of Sargon II in 721, which brought a series of
rebellions in both Mesopotamia (Marduk-apli-idinna/Merodach-Baladan
supported by Humbanigash of Elam) and the western provinces.
- 210 -
(karu) of Egypt" and mingled Assyrians with Egyptians [1141. The
harbour was possibly located at el-Arish, the Rhinocorura of the
Greeks even though little of Iron Age II date has been discovered
there [1151.
This move by the Assyrians gave them some control of the road
which ran from Gaza through Raphia, el-Arish and Nigdol to Pelusium
or Tjel [116]. Paucity of water sources and boggy sand confined
armies to specific routes, and limited their size at any given time;
the local Arabs were therefore indispensable to military campaigns in
Sinai as guides and baggage assistants [1171. At this time the
Me'unites appear to have been the major tribe in north Sinai, and
ultimately on the borders of Egypt [1181.
-211 -
either Piye or Shabaqo, current opinion [125] is unanimous in
assuming that the ruler was Shabaqo.
Thus, at the time of the Kushite expansion into Upper Egypt, the
Assyrians were extending their control closer to the eastern border
of Egypt. It is unclear whether the motive was primarily political -
to prevent the Egyptians encouraging rebellion in the Assyrian
provinces and vassals, or whether it was economic, to gain complete
control of the Arabian routes and the Egyptian trade. It seems
unlikely that the Assyrians wished to incorporate Egypt into their
empire - even when forced to take decisive military action in Egypt
at the end of the 25th Dynasty, the Assyrians preferred to retain
vassal rulers. It was probably apparent to the Assyrian kings that
the incorporation of Egypt would have weakened an already
overstretched empire.
The internal history of Egypt in the late 8th and 7th centuries is
the struggle between Kushites and Saites for power. The evidence
from the west Delta, both inscriptional and archaeological is
insufficient to illustrate this other than intermittently. Nekau's
support for the Assyrians can be interpreted in this light and
Redford is indoubtedly right in his observation that the Assyrians
are not vilified in Egyptian tradition because they supported the
Delta dynasts (126]. However, the rise of Sais is as obscure as the
rise of rush.
- 212 -
that this is Necho again, but with a suffix. Ray also sees a
!1anethonic confusion with Bakenranef: Nekauba is also a magician.
- 213 -
Nekau as ruler of Sais, which would date his accession to 671 BC.
Nanethon ascribes Nekau 8 years in all versions, and this would
correspond with the Babylonian record: Nekau is known to have died,
probably killed by Tanwetamani, in 664. Kitchen assumes that Nekau
had already ascended the Saite throne as successor to Nekauba in 672,
and was simply confirmed in his office by the Assyrians. The list of
667 includes Tabnati of Punubu, certainly another Tefnakht, and
ruler of Per-nub or Per-Inbu in the south-west Delta: he may have
been another member of the Saite family.
- 214 -
The titles and territories of Tefnakht detailed in the Piye stela
show the increase of his power. He was now Chief of the West, Chief
of the Ma, H3-wr in Netjer, Prophet of Neith, Mistress of Sais and
sem-priest of Ptah. He had extended his rule over the noises of la-
heseb, Per-Nub and Inbw-hd itself.
-215-
Nubia and Libya.
Reisner advocated a Libyan origin for the 25th Dynasty [142] based in
part on the fragment of an alabaster vessel of Pashedenbast son of
King Shoshenq discovered at Nun [143]. This Pashedenbast, Reisner
believed to be the father of Kashta [1441. The excavations at Kurru
caused Reisner to revise his views about Pashedenbast, but
strengthened his view on the Libyan origin of the dynasty [145]. The
evidence was now arrow heads "of well-known Libyan types" , and the
stela of Queen Tabiry which, in Reisner's translation, called her
"the great chieftainess of the Temehu" [146].
Reisner abandoned his idea that the Kushite royal family were a
scion of the 22nd Dynasty and argued that whilst the Libyans were
moving into the Delta region, other groups were entering the Nile
valley via the more southerly oases [147]. The suffix, -go, found in
many of the royal names was considered to be another indicator of
Libyan associations; an idea supported by Griffith [148].
- 216 -
those of Nubian and the Asiatic states at the Egyptian court, and
could easily have established their own contacts. The material
culture of the Libyans, as revealed by the records of the conflicts
in the reigns of Merneptah and Ramesses III, suggest that some form
of commodity exchange had been established with states in Western
Asia.
Libyan incursions into the Nile valley in Upper Egypt, notably the
Theban region, are recorded throughout the 20th Dynasty [151]. There
is a possibility that Libyans were also entering the Nile valley
further south. Our knowledge of the archaeology of the south Libyan
desert and oases is very sketchy, and whilst there is little that can
be positively said about the region, its potential importance should
not be ignored.
- 217-
the west of the Nile valley [1571, but there has been no attempt to
delimit their area of occurrence. Dixon [158] notes that they were
found at el-Kurru along with similar numbers of "the lunate arrow-
tips which are typically Nubian", although Kendall (159] regards
these as sickle blades. Chalcedony arrowheads which occurred as
surface finds at Amara West may well be connected, and suggested to
Arkell an "early Napatan" presence.
-218-
11
The expansion of Kushite power into Lower Nubia and Egypt, in the
reigns of Kashta, Piye and Shabaqo, must have been based upon a
strong control of Upper Nubia and the Butana region. Whilst it seems
likely that the Kurru kingdom was the master of the desert road to
the Shendi Reach, and consequently significant in the transportation
of central Sudanese products to Egypt, it does not appear to have
been the major power throughout Nubia until the reigns of Kashta,
Piye and Shabaqo. Indeed, the 'Neo-Ramesside' rulers may have used
one of the old Egyptian centres as their base - perhaps Kawa or
Amara. The evidence from the town and cemeteries of }leroe indicates
that it was the major centre in the Shendi Reach by the early 25th
Dynasty at latest; indeed, the Neroe region has been suggested as the
place of origin for the Kurru dynasty royal family [2].
- 219 -
in the emergence of the 25th Dynasty, one based in the Shendi Reach,
the other at lurru.
- 220 -
following Kitchen 1973):
It is of the greatest interest that these events should almost
exactly coincide in our chronology with with (sic) the sudden
infusion of Egyptian influences at Kurru in Generation B. One is
thus drawn to the highly intriguing possibility that the court at
Kurru had received a band of Theban priestly families who had fled
to Nubia in order to escape persecution. (8]
These families, Kendall feels, would have had a hatred of the Tanites
(glossing over the fact that many of Theban nobility were descended
from the Tanite royal house) and would have been only too willing to
serve the Kushites. They thus set up Gebel Barkal as a rival
sanctuary to Thebes. Kendall suspects that there was intermarriage
between the Theban priestly and Kushite royal families [91.
- 221 -
Macadam's fundamental premise was that there was only one family
in the generative stage of the Kuehite monarchy, and this view has
been accepted by all writers who have subsequently discussed the
material. Macadam also argued that the succession was from brother
to brother, then to the children of the eldest brother.
- 222 -
persuasively argued by Macadam, cannot be accepted if the genealogies
are as presented here (see Appendix).
A Dynasty Divided?
- 223 -
There are, however, indications that Piye's memory suffered some
attack after his death, and this is again more readily explained in
the context of two families and a dual monarchy. His figure is
erased on the Victory Stela, as are both his figure and names on the
sandstone stela from Barkal (13]. The name and figure was later
restored on the Barkal stela [14]. Reisner proposed that the
erasures belonged to the reign of Shabaqo, and the restorations to
that of Taharqo. Further confusion is created by the stela of
Aspelta detailing the building and equipping of a tomb and funerary
offerings for Prince Ihaliut, a son of Piye, which has been
interpreted as an attempt to placate Piye's descendants.
- 224 -
forthcoming which does confirm that Piye was a son of Kashta, but the
relationship of Shebitqo and Tanwetamani to Shabaqo, sti.11 makes the
brother-succession theory untenable. A number of very tentative
alternatives are proposed below.
- 225 -
the river to Barkal. Macadam suggested that the name meant 'the high
sandhill' and that it lay in the vicinity of Nun. Pniese thought
it was perhaps Sanaii. The Nastasen stela qualifies the town with the
additional name P3_3i_C3t (161.
There might be a case for identifying Alara with king Ary of the
lava stelae. It is certainly possible that in rebuilding the lava
Temple B, Harsiyotef thought that he was reconstructing the works of
Alana. Alara was supposed, in later tradition, to have had a long
reign, and the lava Inscription XV, probably to be ascribed to Ary,
is dated to year 23. lava XIV refers to the building of temple at
lava, described as 120 cubits in length.
The writing of the name Ary on the lava Stela XIV is similar to
that used for Alara in lava Stelae IV and VI of Taharqo and the much
later Nastasen stela. The differences could be attributed to the
ability - or choice - of the scribes in writing a foreign name.
lava VI Nas tasen
- 226 -
dedicated at lava, since she held the title ihyt n new ntrw.
Pebatama is also called a3t new and ant new, and consequently either
Alara - or in most reconstructions of the genealogy, both Alara and
Kashta - must have been a son of an earlier "king". There is always
a problem in interpreting titles such as s3t and ant new, but in this
case they do seem to conflict with the tradition that appears to
regard Alara as the founder of the monarchy.
Kashta.
- 227 -
Xashta achieved, or even attempted, the expansion of his rule into
Upper Egypt is a debated issue.
- 228 -
associated with his daughter Ainenirdis I as God's Wife of Amun.
Earlier writers suggested that Xashta himself installed Amenirdis I
as heiress to Shepenwepet I, but current opinion favours Piye as the
most likely protagonist [29], and probably before his campaign of
year 19/20. This is equally uncertain, and founded upon a number of
premises, most importantly, that Amenirdis I and Piye were brother
and sister [30]. There are number of factors which suggest that the
older idea is, after all, right, and that it was Xashta who installed
Amenirdis as heiress to Shepenwepet I [31]. The adoption of
Amenirdis by Shepenwepet I was an act of great significance. Just as
the installation of Nitoqert marked the transition of power from the
Kushites to the Saites, so the adoption of Amenirdis must have
recognised the rising power of Kush. Unfortunately, the event cannot
be precisely dated.
Leclant and Yoyotte [1952] c 780
von Beckerath [1969] reign 772-753
Baer [1973] reign 772-753
Arkell [1961: 1211 751
Dunham (1950: 3] tomb 760-751
Kitchen [1973; 1986] reign 760-747
Wenig [1979] reign 760-747
Trk [1986; 1992] reign 760-747
Reisner [1923: 75] reign 750-744
Aibright [1955: 21] death 740
Albright [1956: 25 n 10] death 735
Petrie [1918] reign c 725-715
- 229 -
The absolute dating of Kashta's reign depends on many factors, and at
present cannot be determined. Nor can the events of his reign be
outlined. It can be said with some certainty that he extended lushite
power to the Egyptian frontier, and very probably into Upper Egypt
itself.
- 230 -
entirely alter the complexion of interstate affairs [391. This
emphasises the necessity of a sound chronology; seeking explanations
of 'policy' when the events are misplaced creates entirely false
perceptions. Although this is self-evident it seems too frequently to
be forgotten, or ignored.
- 231 -
instead to Sabacon-Shabaqo:
and the 12 years for Shebitku from the Eusebius figures, and assume
no coregency. The dates for the two kings are then 716-702 and
702-690 B.C., as arrived-at in this work originally.
After the preceding invective this conclusion is rather extraordinary.
- 232 -
The accepted sequence Piye-Shabaqo has affected all recent
interpretation of the history of the dynasty, particularly the
arguments for the exact chronology, and the consequent dating of the
late Third Intermediate Period rulers. A considerable number of
factors challenge the accepted characterisation of the early 25th
Dynasty, and suggest that a radically different interpretation is
viable, if not preferable.
The system of back-dating regnal years during the 25th Dynasty, and
also in the reign of Bakenranef, has been well-discussed by Redford
[51].
The evidence is here considered working back from the certain dates
of the later years of the dynasty, and since much of this material has
been amply discussed [52], it is dealt with briefly.
- 233 -
In advocating a co-regency, albeit brief, Schafer was followed by a
number of writers [56]. Kitchen [571 observed that the co-regency was
unlikely to have been more than a few months, and was chronologically
insignificant. Murnane (58] noted that there was no decisive evidence
but did not rule it out.
Tanwetamani was acknowledged in Upper Egypt until his 8th year, and
is attested by a number of dated inscriptions (59]. Kitchen [60]
cogently argued that the transfer to Saite rule was negotiated, the
diplomatic manoeuvres taking place between year 8 peret 3 of
Tanwetamani and year 9 akhet 2 of Psamtik I, when Nitokert arrived in
Thebes to be adopted by the Kushite princesses as eventual God's Wife
of Amun.
- 234 -
that Taharqo's coronation took place after Shebitqo's death, and there
is no evidence for the co-regency.
The length of Shebitqo's reign is not yet known, and upon this
hangs the absolute chronology of the early-25th Dynasty, and the date
of Shabaqo's invasion. The highest certain regnal year is 3, recorded
by Karnak Nile Level Text No.33 [701. Kitchen [71] argued from his
calculation for the accession date of Shabaqo that:
it is unimpeachably clear that Shebitku must have reigned for not
more than 13 years and not less than 8 years. Therefore, this low
date of Year 3 is of not the slightest value in estimating the
length of his reign. (his italic)
Kitchen rightly emphasises that the few monuments so-far known for
Shebitqo cannot be invoked as evidence of a short reign although for
other kings Kitchen is happy to cite lack of monuments as indicative
of short reigns (eg Amenemnisu).
Despite the Karnak year-3 text being his highest-known regnal year,
Shebitqo is accredited with between 8 and 12 years, principally on the
basis of the Nanethonic sources. Kitchen [76] commented that 3 years
"is nowhere near his real length of reign on any calculation",
revealing his own preference for calculating downwards from the
accession date of Shabaqo as 716.
- 235 -
has normally been allowed. Kitchen [821 observes that the Karnak Nile
level text is not evidence of a co-regency, but does allow one.
- 236 -
Apis bull burial in year 14, proposed by Vercoutter [991 is
insubstantial. The statue of Iti (1001 is dated late in Shabaqo's
last full year, 15 (2 shomu 11).
Given that the accession date of Taharqo is certain as 690 BC, the
absolute minimum chronology for the dynasty -not necessarily to be
preferred - must be:
-237-
690 accession of Taharqo
697 accession of Shebitqo (no co-regency)
712 accession of Shabaqo
The Victory Stela of year 21 [1051 apart, there are few certain,
documented, regnal years of Piye. Two Theban papyri of years 21
[106] and 22 [107], and the Dakhla stela of year 24 [108], are all
dated by the reign of 'Py si-Ese mery-Amun' (109]. No monuments in
Egypt certainly record earlier years, although the Wadi Gasus
graffito is usually attributed to his year 12 [1101. The king's
titulary on the Nutirdis stela implies a date preceding the Victory
Stela, and could be ascribed to an earlier invasion of Egypt.
Unfortunately, the stela's text is concerned with entirely different
matters, and it might equally be a monument contemporary with the
campaign recorded by the stela of year 21. The fragments of a second
granite stela, published by Loukianoff (1111 and reconsidered by
Priese [112], carry a reference to year 4 associated with the
celebration of the Opet festival.
With the exception of the Dakhla Stela of year 24, there are no
regual years from Egypt that are later than year 22 and
unproblematic. A bandage text (113] is argued by Kitchen (114] to
record a year 30 of Piye, which falls within his own estimated 31
years minimum derived from "external evidence" [115]. Redford (116],
discussing the same text, concludes that the remains of the signs
indicate two possibilities; a 'regnal year 20 1+ x]' (but not '30')
or 'regnal year 40'. The problems and uncertainties associated with
this text negate its value as a source.
-238-
This lack of certain regnal years has presented historians with a
major problem: after Piye's victorious campaign in Egypt, which is
presumed, following the date of the Victory stela, to have taken
place in his 19th and 20th years, the king retired to Napata never
again to be seen in Egypt. The advocates of a long reign (as much as
40 years) have never offered any entirely convincing explanation of
this situation; and the most credible assumption is simply that any
monumental or documentary evidence is destroyed, or awaits discovery.
-23 9-
Piye at Gebel Barkal might favour a longer reign length as proposed
by Kitchen.
Placing the entire, and lengthy, reign of Piye before the attested
15 years of Shabaqo, creates a number of problems, some of which have
not been considered in literature. Not least, the generations of
this supposed family are seriously over-extended [1281, as are those
of their contemporaries in Egypt (129].
-240-
the use of regnal years and without building works? Or is the
documentary evidence simply undiscovered?
All of the recent discussions have assumed that Piye's reign and
Egyptian campaign preceded those of Shabaqo. Until the excavations
of Reisner at el-lurru, most Egyptologists had a fundamentally
different interpretation of the available information.
-241-
grounds: consequently all of Piye's reign, and his extensive building
works must predate the accession of Shabaqo.
There can be little doubt that the Kushites were politically and
militarily active in Upper Egypt before the campaign attributed to
year 19. Kitchen [1441 suggests the possibility of Kushite garrisons
in Upper Egypt.
Priese has suggested that the sandstone stela from Gebel Barkal
should be dated to year 3, and, since the fragments of the 'second
historical stela' carry a reference to a "year 4", that Piye
established his authority in Upper Egypt early in his reign.
Although there are no major activities known for the period between
then and the conflict with Tefnakht, attributing the Wadi Gasus
inscription to Piye's year 12 (as many would do), would indicate his
continued authority.
-24 2-
that Piye had allies amongst the Libyans who were working for him,
and that his power extended into the central Sudan [1471.
The campaign of Piye was the response to the Saite expansion into
Upper Egypt: the Kushites certainly had allies amongst the Delta and
Middle Egyptian dynasts, some of whom remained loyal, whilst others
went over to the side of Tefnakht. The initial expansion of Kushite
power into Egypt by Kashta, documented by the Elephantine stela (and
perhaps also by Karnak Priestly Annals no 31), probably brought
Thebes under Kushite rule. There is no evidence that the ICushites
had attempted to seize control of Memphis or Lower Egypt and it was
probably the two expansions of Saite power which forced them into the
north.
-24 3-
establisher of other rulers. Priese [151] read the ruler-
deterininatives in lines 18-19 as wr with the feather of the Libu.
In line 3 Piye is called hk3 n K.t by Amun, and in his own speech
line 19 Piye says that Amun in Thebes [1n W3stl has made him king
of Egypt [hk3 n kt] and that [lines 17-181 "Amun of Napata has given
to me to be ruler of all lands [bk3 n b3a(w)t nb(w)t]". Piye is also
given the power to establish rulers, or not:
He to whom I say "You are wr", he shall be wr
He to whom I say "You are not r", he shall not be wr
He to whom I say "Nake hCw_appearance (as king)",
He shall make v-appearance.
He to whom I say; Do not make Cw_appearance (as king),
He shall not make hCw_appearance.
The text thus provides us with a hint of the situation after the
establishment of Kushite power in Egypt. Piye must have confirmed
some rulers in their office, perhaps removing others and replacing
them with his own vassals, just as the Assyrians did later. That the
Kushites had done something of this nature is clear from the year 21
Victory stela, which makes it clear that Nimlot of Herinopolis and
Peftjauawybast had been closely allied with the Kushites. It is also
clear that Piye retained the prevailing system of kings and vr-
chiefs. Implicitly, the Kushites accepted a system in which there
could be more than one king.
In the titulary of the sandstone stela Piye uses the typically New
Kingdom epithets "king of kings, ruler of the rulers" nay flwyw hk3
hk3w [152].
-244-
the Cairo fragment 47085, which carries the cartouche of Piye. Cairo
47085 [156], unlike the other stela fragments recovered by Reisner
[157] does not fit the year 21 Victory stela.
-24 5-
possible, as earlier scholars originally suggested, that Piye
suffered some opposition in the middle years of his reign, and that
the original stela was damaged or destroyed, requiring a new version
to be carved.
The Golden Horns name uses the same order as Thutmose III's Barkal
stela.
-246-
The Egyptian campaign saw the adoption of a specific militaristic
titulary, but retaining the prenomen:
Horus: S.3-t3wy "Uniter of the Two Lands"
Two Ladies: )Is-h.t "Creator of crafts (?)"
Golden Horns: S3knw He who makes warriors numerous
Prenomen: Nenkheperre
Nomen: Piye
-24 7-
was still alive in 656 BC, some 60 years after her father's death on
his own calculations. Kitchen, accepting the Dunham-Macadam
genealogy, argued that the princesses were installed by their
brothers, by analogy with the brother-succession theory. Shepenwepet
It was not, however, a sister of Shebitqo [1651. Furthermore, the
Nitoqert Adoption Stela implies that it was Piye himself who
installed Shepenwepet II (166]. Piye must have ensured that
Amenirdis I adopted his own daughter as her eventual successor, just
as she had been made heiress to Shepenwepet I (who was almost
certainly still alive in the reign of Shebitqo).
-24 8-
invasion. Assuming that there was no co-regency with Shabaqo, that
Piye reigned for 24 years and that the accession of Shabaqo was c
712/709. If the campaign was launched in Piye's 3rd regnal year,
this would be approximately 733/730; if in the 19th year, c 717 BC.
Redford (1701 raises the problem of the relationship between Kush and
Sais: he accepts that Tefnakht had sworn the oath of fealty, but
points out that there is no evidence as to whether Bakenranef renewed
the oath at his accession. He further comments that "if his
assumption of the kingship had thus been construed as an act of
rebellion, how strange it is that the Napatan authorities had failed
to mete out punishment for over five years". Redford proposes that
the New Kingdom model of oath taking was followed, in the reigning
king's name. Therefore Shabaqo's "perceived justification for his
invasion was most likely either (a) a refusal by Bocchoris to renew
the oath, or (b) some action by Bocchoris which could be construed as
treason".
-24 9-
text of Shabaqo honoured the bull buried in the name of Bakenranef.
This has been generally accepted 1173].
Nanette [1781 was certain of only two bulls buried in the 25th
Dynasty, in year 2 of Shabaqo and year 24 of Taharqo. However, he
also noted [179]:
"J'ai copi dans la chambre oii la stale prce'dente a trouve
la fin d'une lgende royale dont ce fragment de cartouche
etait seul lisible. Je n'ai pas os, sur un document
si incomplet, attnibuer un Apis au rgne de 1'Ethiopien
Schabatoka, successeur de Sabacon."
-2 50-
year), to 1 akhet day 5; three of those of Shoshenq V are dated to 3
akhet day 27, and one to 1 akhet day 18.
Both Piye and Shabaqo may have replaced rulers with their own
nominees, as the Assyrians later did. The Piye inscription clearly
indicates that oaths of fealty were exacted from the dynasts who were
reconfirmed in office.
-251-
There is unfortunately little evidence for the detail of Shabaqo's
reign. Re may have adopted Memphis as his chief residence city in
Egypt, as his successors certainly did. A few fragments survive from
his building-works there (184] ad demonstrate the high quality of
work, much of it in the 'archaising' style. Most Kushite work in
Memphis was later dismantled or re-used by the Saites. Shabaqo
certainly built a new Apis embalming house [185], but this does not
mean that he was responsible for the burial of an Apis bull (although
that is usually the inference). Vercoutter [1861 suggested that a
bull was buried in Shabaqo's 14th year, but again, the evidence is
slender.
-25 2-
must be dated to 712 BC at the very latest [194]. As Redford [195]
countered, there is no alternative but to read the text as clear
evidence that in 712 BC the Kushites had not conquered Egypt; there
is not even the indication that they were in control of Thebes.
Redford identifies Pir'u with Bakenranef because he is "referred to"
(sic!) implying uncertainty as to his throne - war impending or in
progress.
-253-
earlier. As Redford [1971 observes; by the time the Display
inscriptions and annals had been composed for publication at Dur-
Sharrukin (198] in 707 BC, lamani had been extradited to Assyria and
Egypt was in Kushite hands. A treaty must have been drawn up between
Sargon and Shabaqo (199], and the time involved for such a treaty,
and the extradition, suggests that Shabaqo's invasion had occurred at
some distance in time prior to 707 BC.
-254-
of Tefnakht and then of Bakenranef saw a (temporary) eclipse of Saite
influence and the acknowledgement of Shabaqo and his successors as
overlords of the Delta.
-255-
12
The narrative of the Piye stela places great emphasis upon the
horses, and this has excited some coient from writers on the period,
although judgments of character and taste have usually superseded
- 256-
attempts at explanation (61. There has been similarly little
explanation of the horse burials at el-Kurru. Trk [71 discusses
the assessments of the Piye Victory stela's references to horses,
with the depictions at Barkal and on the stela itself. He claims a
Ramesside protoype and, arguing that the reliefs of Neroe temple N
250 are modelled ultimately upon destroyed scenes of Piye's campaign
at Barkal, proposes the use of cavalry in the Piye campaign. Cavalry
are also depicted at Kawa. Within the constraints of the
archaeological evidence and the historical assumptions, there has
been little attempt by Nubianists to discuss the origins and extent
of equestrianism in Nubia.
Horses were introduced into Egypt in the early New Kingdom [81,
and, with the rapid development of chariotry, there was a continuing
import of horses from western Asia [9]. There is no indication
whether horses were successfully bred in Egypt during the New
Kingdom. Epstein has observed that in more recent times horse-
breeding (even from good Arab stock) in the lower Nile valley has
been such a failure, that horses have had to be imported [10].
-257-
Nubia [181. The graffito of Nerymose at 11mm Ashira [191 is, rather
unusually, flanked by figures of horses, presumably contemporary with
the text, and again presumably the Viceroy's.
- 258 -
doubtless the more functional var-chariots were not so worthy of
mention in the diplomatic record.
In his (1. 11) exhortation to his army, Piye tells them to harness
the best steeds of the stable. Later, (1. 21) it is noted that many
horses of the enemy were killed at the battle of Per-Peg.
Peftjauawybast brought the best horses of the stable (1.71) as did
Pediese (1. 110) and the other dynasts (1.113), including,
- 259 -
ultimately, Tefnakht himself (1.138). The most celebrated incident,
and subject of the lunette scene of the stela, is that of Nimlot of
Hermopolis. In chastising Nimlot, Piye several times refers to "my
horses", but whether this should be interpreted as an indicator of
Piye's having given the horses to Nimlot originally, or simply as
their possessor now that Nimlot has capitulated, is impossible to
know. Since Piye and Nimlot had formerly been allies, it is
conceivable that Piye had supplied his vassals with horses and
chariots.
The text of the stela had its visual counterpart in the decoration
of the temple B 500. Here, a large scene shows the bringing of
horses from the stables of Nimlot [36]. Elsewhere, fragments of
military scenes survive. The surviving reliefs are incompletely
published [37], but T6rk suggests that the reliefs at Barkal were
influenced by, or modelled on, Ramesside prototypes.
- 260 -
warfare which characterized the confrontation between Libyans and
Kushites was a continuation of that practised in the Late Bronze Age.
The period of Assyrian expansion certainly witnessed changes in
military tactics in Western Asia, with an increase in the ratio of
cavalry to chariotry. Chariots had dominated Late Bronze Age
warfare, dictated by the type of rather small horses available. A
number of texts give indications of the ratios of chariots to
cavalry. Dailey (661 calculated that at the battle of Qarqar, in 853
BC, the ratio of chariotry to cavalry was 1:1. By the time of
Shamshi-adad V's campaign against Babylon the ratio had changed to
1:2 ie one chariot with a pair of cavalry. The campaigns of Sargon
II also reveal a majority of cavalry; at Babylon 1:10, at Carchemish
chariotry:cavalry 50:200 ie 1:4 (with 300 infantry giving a ratio
1:4:6) and after the conquest of Ramath 200 chariots to 600 cavalry,
a ratio 1:3. While there is thus some evidence for the riding of
horses in Kushite scenes, there is inadequate evidence to propose
large-scale use of cavalry, as by the Assyrians, at least at the time
of the Kushite expansion. The conflict with the Assyrians may well
have led to changes in warfare technology and practice in Kush.
- 261 -
25th Dynasty, and their chariots were usually harnessed with two, not
four, horses. No chariots or equipment was recovered from the Tanis
tombs, owing to the differing funerary customs of the period.
- 262 -
Shilkanni gave Sargon II a tamartu ("gift in honour of a special
event") of 12 "large" horses, which, Weidner pointed out, the annals
specify as "trained to the yoke" [49]. Also of the time of Sargon,
Nimrud letter Nt 16: 33-34 [50], dated by Cogan [51] to after 712
records that:
"the LU.MAI-(foreign) chieftains of the Egyptians, Gazaites,
Judahites, Moabites, Ammonites arrived in Kaihu on the 12th (of
this month) with their mandanatu-tribute" which included 45
horses, and 23 horses from the Gazaites.
Dailey infers the Nubian breed [52]. Eph'al [531 assumes here that
the Egyptians in question were not residents of Egypt proper, but of
the "sealed-off harbour" which was actually in the area of control of
the Assyrians, [541.
- 263 -
The situation is further complicated by the apparent presence of
Kushites in Assyria, and at an early date. The earliest reference
seems to be Nimrud wine list no. 9, of 732 BC, during the reign of
Tiglath-pileser III [62]. Dailey [631 proposed that they might be
best interpreted as horse experts. "Horse traders" appear in the
later 8th century [64], a term apparently not used before the time of
Tiglath-pileser III. Sainaria seems to have been especially important
in the trade.
- 264 -
The most significant evidence is from the later periods. The
origin of the 'Dongola' breed is unknown [73], but it was widespread
in Upper Egypt and the Sudan in the early centuries of the Christian
era and the Middle Ages. It was introduced into West Africa from
Sudan by the Fulani in the 13th century AD. At the time of Bruce's
visit to the Funj sultanate, in 1772, the mek of Sennar maintained
1,800 horse troops. Many of these came from his vassal, the mek of
Dongola whose tribute was paid largely in horses [74]. Slightly
later, Burckhardt [75] commented that Dongola was noted for the breed
of its horses, and that the breed came originally from Arabia,
although the Dongola horses were of greater size.
While the Dongola breed may have been a late (ie post-Meroitic)
introduction, the evidence for quite extensive horse-breeding during
the mediaeval period certainly allows the possibility that horses
provided the Kushites not only with the basis of their military
power, but may also have been significant in the economy of the
emergent state.
-26 5-
administration a local, largely self-sufficient agricultural economy
was established very similar to that in Egypt, but the main trade,
certainly cross-frontier, was luxury oriented.
The collapse of the palace-based states of the Late Bronze Age saw
a change in the main axes of trade in western Asia and the east
Mediterranean, although it should be noted that many features of the
internal economies of, for example, Egypt and Assyria appear to have
continued functioning in very much the same way as they had in the
Late Bronze Age [77]. The new powers controlling trade were now
those at the centre, rather than the edges: the Levantine or
Phoenician cities, and the states of Syria-Palestine, notably Israel
and Aram-Damascus. As outlined above (in Chapter 10), the history of
the 10th to 8th centuries is dominated by the rivalries and
expansions of these various states. This period of change saw the
fragmentation of the old empires of Egypt and the Hittites and the
emergence of the Aramaic and Neo-hittite successor states in north
Syria and along the fringes of the fertile crescent, and the
appearance of nomadic Arab tribes from the south. Israel under
Solomon dominated the trade routes for some time, exploiting the Red
Sea ports and exacting dues from the Arabian tribes. Later attempts
to re-open the Red Sea routes apparently failed.
-266-
LBA to Iron 1 [811 which saw the breaking of the Egyptian monopoly
and the development of the South Arabian routes exclusively by land.
It seems likely that this change in the trade axis to the east of the
Red Sea and an Assyrian desire to control these land routes had a
major impact on the political situation in Syria-Palestine during the
9th-7th centuries. Frankenstein suggests that the problems
encountered by Wenamun at Byblos may already reflect this new
regional configuration, and the first major expansion of Assyria into
western Asia under Tiglathpileser I (c 1115-1077 BC) [821.
-267-
coninodities brought by the queen - gold, spices and precious stones -
were more typically northern than southern Arabian and contests the
assumption that the Arabian incense trade was itself highly developed
so early [891. Incense may have been included in the commodities
brought to Solomon, and small quantities exchanged through networks
to the south, but there insufficient evidence to support the idea
that it was being exploited on a large scale until the first two
centuries AD.
Specific information on the Arab tribes appears for the first time
in the annals of Tiglathpileser III. Zabibe Queen ff the Arabs paid
tribute along with Radyan of Damascus, l4enahem of Samaria, Hiram of
Tyre and others (90] in 738 BC. Zabibe was probably, more
specifically, Queen of the Qedarites [91]. At this stage the
Assyrian expansion had not reached Transjordan and southern
Palestine. However, Zabibe was paying tribute along with other
rulers who depended on the Syro-Arabian trade passing principally
along the King's Highway. This led to Damascus and thence through
Israel to Tyre (92].
The Assyrians were not yet campaigning into the deserts of the
Arabian peninsula, but were primarily concerned with the nomadic
-268-
peoples of the desert margin, who had strong connections with the
states which controlled the trade routes, Damascus and Israel. The
defeat of those powers, in the 8th century BC, had a significant
effect on the Arab penetration of the pasture lands and their
increased role within the Arabian trade. Assyrian control of the
northern termini of the Arabian trade routes ensured that the Arabian
rulers became tributary in order to protect their interests [961.
This seems to have been effective, and It'amara the Sabaean is
usually recognised as a South Arabian ruler who paid tribute to
Sargon II with the same motive [97]. The Transjordanian rulers,
Sanib of Beth-Animon, Salaman of Moab and Qausmalak of Edom, payed
tribute in 728 [98].
-269-
Babylonian merchants [103]. Thus, Frankenstein argues, tribute
relations allowed - even encouraged - trade relations and encouraged
security in which trade could take place.
Control of the trade routes was certainly not the only cause of
the interstate conflicts of western Asia during the 9th -7th
centuries, Nevertheless there does seem to a considerable bulk of
evidence to suggest that the control of the trade routes running from
northern Arabia through Transjordan and thence to the Mediterranean
coast was vitally important to Israel and Damascus. Until further
evidence is forthcoming from Arabia it must remain uncertain whether
incense was, at this time, a significant export. If it was not, we
must ask what commodities were exported, where did they come from and
who controlled the trade in Arabia?
-2 70-
was exploiting, directly or indirectly, the resources of east Sudan
and the Ethiopian highland and establishing contacts with the Western
Asiatic powers via the Red Sea avoiding Egypt?
In Late Bronze Age Egypt the luxury trade was controlled through
the palace. Nubian commodities such as ivory, ebony, incense and
gold figured largely in this. If, as is usually accepted, the Nubian
trade was severed at the end of the 20th Dynasty, Egypt must have
been forced to export different commodities. In the Ptolemaic and
Roman periods cloth, particularly fine linen, and papyrus were major
exports. Egyptian artefacts have been excavated in graves throughout
the Mediterranean, from Spain and Carthage, Etruria and the Aegean
islands, which suggests that these were goods traded with the
Phoenicians. Notable amongst these objects were alabaster vessels
and faience amulets. Neither of these manufactures was new in
Egypt's international exchange [1131. Even if there was disruption
to the luxury trade, which is doubtful, there were products which
-271-
there is good reason to believe were royal monopolies: cloth and
papyrus.
Egyptian linen was in great demand for the eastern trade in the
Roman period, acording to Pliny being exported to Arabia and India
[1141. During the Ptolemaic period the finest quality linen (byssos)
was a royal monopoly, and there is evidence for its manufacture in
temple workshops earlier [115]. Although the Assyrians probably did
not import bulk goods like plain cloth which could have been produced
in their own manufacturing centres, plain cloth may have been
acquired by the Phoenicians, notably Tyre, then dyed in Phoenician
centres and turned into fashionable Western style garments [116].
The Phoenicians must have imported large quantities of cloth, since
they had little possibility of producing it.
The bulk of the papyrus came from the Delta, although some was
harvested in the Fayum [1201. In the Ptolemaic and Roman periods
Alexandria was the main manufacturing centre [1211 - and it was the
second of the three main industries of the city. Lewis points out
the necessity for manufacturing near where the reed was cut [122], so
there were production centres throughout the Delta, at Sais (Saite
was a cheaper type of paper) and in the region of Tanis [123].
-272-
[1261. Consequently the use of paper instead of clay for documents
necessitated the import of the paper. Lewis suggests that the
alaphabet developed to adapt to the use of paper [12711 although it is
equally possible that there was an increased use of paper because of
developments in the alphabet. The increased use of paper instead of
clay tablets in western Asia belongs to the 8th-lth centuries BC.
Enormous quantities of paper were exported during the Ptolemaic and
Roman periods, indeed until 677 AD the I1erovingian chancellery was
still being supplied from Egypt. The value of this trade cannot be
estimated [128].
In the later years of the Libyan period there may have been a
number of centres which were particularly involved in Lnternational
trade. Tanis, both a royal residence city and situated on the sea,
must have been one of these, and one notes the connections of
Shoshenq I, Osorkon I and Osorkon II with Byblos. lieinphis too must
have remained important, and probably continued as a major royal
residence city. It was certainly the northern residence of the
Kushite kings and a temple of Baal of Memphis is attested in the 25th
-273--
Dynasty, which might suggest a well-established Phoenician presence
[138]. In the western Delta, Sais may well have established early
contacts with the Phoenicians. The Phoenician expansion along the
north African coast would have required staging posts (as earlier at
Bates's Island), and doubtless contacts would have been made with
major towns nearby. Certainly the 'Bocchoris vase' and scarabs
suggests that Sais had contacts with the Phoenician traders.
It has been assumed by Trk and Kendall that such trade contacts
as might have existed between Kush and Egypt during the pre-25th
Dynasty would have been with Thebes rather than the Delta. The
presence of Theban marl wares certainly supports a direct contact
with Thebes, but this does not preclude connections with the Delta
rulers. The presence in the Assyrian record of commodities which
surely must be of Nubian origin, suggests that such commodities were
reaching the Egyptian Delta from whence they were 'traded' to the
Levant.
-2 74-
Nubia. It is possible that the gold was acquired directly from Lower
Nubia, but the incense must have been of more southerly origin.
-275-
Period (rather than being a new Kingdom residue), and it seems likely
that faience amulets served as the model for many of the designs.
In return they probably received corn and cloth, which are not
preserved in the archaeological record. It is more certain that
pottery was being imported from the Theban region, presumably for its
contents. Likewise, the the Levantine storage jars were probably
acquired through Egypt, either for their original contents, or re-
-276-
used. In the later Meroitic period, wine was also imported. The
archaeological evidence inevitably emphasises luxury manufacture,
either jewellery, faience or stone vessels, amulets and the like.
}Iowever, there is still no firm agreement on the dating of the
calcite and faience vessels from el-Kurru, and whether they should be
considered as contemporary, or as "attractive 'antiques' of types no
longer produced" in Egypt [1521. They could even be pillage from New
Kingdom burials rather than contemporary imports.
The military potential of the Kushite state and its economic base
have proved difficult to quantify, but even more elusive is its
ideological foundation.
-277-
While there is extensive evidence for the worship of Egyptian
deities in Nubia, it has to be conceded that there is, as yet, little
evidence for the widespread worship of Nubian deities in Egypt. The
chief Nubian deities head the procession of Upper Egyptian gods on
the roof terrace at Medinet Habu, but this, as temple decoration,
reesents official theology - and also emphasises that Wubia was
considered part of Egypt. In the tomb of Tutankhamun's Viceroy, Huy,
funerary prayers are offered to the "(three) Horus gods of Wawat".
The letters of Dhutmose on his journeys in Nubia during the latter
years of Raiuesses XI show that he recognised the local gods (notably
Horns of Kubban and Horns of Aniba) and offered prayers to them for
the health of his family in Thebes, as well as for his own safe
return.
It is clear that, during the later New Kingdom, Ainun was the chief
deity of Upper Nubia. As such he is depicted on the roof terrace at
Nedinet Habu. The Ainun of Napata is first depicted during the reign
of Ramesses II, in the Thoth chapel at Abu Simbel. What forms of the
deity were shown in the earlier temple at Gebel Barkal is presently
unknown.
-2 78-
Kendall has argued that central to the ideology of the early
Kushite kings was the myth of the solar eye. The solar eye had come
to rest in Kush, whilst Egypt itself was torn apart by foreigners,
and the Kushites, in returning the eye to Egypt, acted as the
legitimate heirs of the New kingdom pharaohs and thus justified their
conquest of Egypt. Certainly the statues of the Kushite kings from
Gebel Barkal depict them wearing the four-plumed crown of Inheret-
Shu. The earliest of these statues, however, belongs to the reign of
Taharqo.
-279-
Egyptian origin. There is little firm evidence for this type of
relationship between temples, although it has been suggested that it
existed between some other Nubian temples and their Egyptian
counterparts. It is also very unlikely that the Nubian temples would
have been staffed entirely by Egyptian priests.
Pnubs has been identified with Tabo on Argo island, where the
ruins of a temple survive, closely similar in plan to those of
Taharqo at Sanam and Kawa [156]. Kerma has also been suggested:
Pnubs might actually have embraced both areas. The Amun of Pnubs was
depicted in reliefs of the reign of Taharqo at Sanam [1571 and at
Kawa [158], in both temples in the chapel south of the sanctuary. At
Barkal the god appeared on the pylon of B 700, associated with a
cartouche of Atlanersa [1591. The deity is also invoked in texts and
depicted on amulets [1601.
-280-
Taharqo identifies the deity with Khnum. He appears accompanied by
Anuket and Satet, as well as by Mut. The equation of the two deities
may be of longer standing. The worship of Khnum was certainly
widespread in the temples of viceregal Nubia.
Although there is little evidence for the cult of Horns the Bull
later than the mid-l8th Dynasty, there is another striking parallel
in the 25th Dynasty. The temple of Sanam was dedicated to Amun-Re k3
n T3-sti (161]. Taharqo's fragmentary dedication inscription seems
to parallel the Kawa stelae [162], implying that his new temple was a
rebuilding of an older, ruinous structure. The text also refers to
the removal of statuary from Shaat (Sal), which had been the original
cult-centre of Horus the Bull. Whether a New Kingdom temple, or
chapel, dedicated to Horus the Bull had existed in the region of
Sanam is a matter for future survey to consider. There is the
possibility that the cults of Taharqo's temples owed much to the
'archaising' and research which characterise the Kushite period
[163].
The Sanani temple was badly ruined and although the reliefs of
Taharqo and Aspelta doubtless depicted this form of Amun, none
survive completely [164]. The stela of Nadiqen [1651, depicts the
deity as the typical Theban form of Amun, human-headed with solar-
disk and plumed crown, accompanied by Nut and Ihonsu. The god is
called ItnRC 13 n T3 Sti or I.nR 13 m St [1661. Griffith read the
second title as "Bull of the Place", which is otherwise unattested,
and could perhaps be an abbreviated (or erroneous) writing of Ipet-
Sut.
The temple of Sanam was one of the four main Amun shrines of the
lushite state along with Barkal itself, lava and Pnubs. It was, like
lava and Pnnbs, built by Taharqo, with additions by later kings. An
architrave block of Senkainanisken was found there, and Anlamani [167]
dedicated one of his four sisters there as chantress. Aspelta
himself erected a shrine within the hypostyle, as he also did at lava
(168]. Griffith believed that the temple ceased to be important
-28 1-
shortly after this reign and was then used as a faience workshop
[169]. The latest reference to the deity is in the stela of
Nastasen, which says that the king "opened the doors of the temple of
the Bull of Gold, which is the image of Amun of Napata", in the town
of t[llo] No inscriptions of the later Neroitic period
attest Amun as a bull, although the story of Setne-Khaemwas (Setne
II) refers to "Amun the Bull of Meroe" as the chief deity of the
Kushites [171].
-28 2-
Aspelta, calls it sdn apparently derived from the Egyptian tn.w
[1741, one of the names of the White Crown. As early as the 2nd
Intermediate Period, the ushite kings were occasionally depicted
wearing the White Crown [175], but one should not assume any
continuity.
Exactly how Egyptianised the Dongola Reach was during the New
Kingdom, and how Egyptianised the postulated successor state was, it
is impossible to assess. The iconography of the rulers - just as
-283-
that of the Kerma rulers of the 2nd Intermediate Period may have owed
something to the Egyptian model, but this does not necessarily
indicate that the whole Egyptian theory of kingship was adopted.
Similarly in Western Asia, the Egyptian, and later, Assyrian,
monarchies provided the imagery of rulership. The iconography - and
perhaps some aspects of kingship - must have been adapted to local
circumstances. The same must have happened in lush. Whether the
earlier indigenous lushite monarchies were 'divine kingships' is, as
yet, unclear, although it might be assumed that they were.
-284-
13
-28 5-
Recent years have seen archaeological work in areas surrounding
the Nile Valley which have forced us to re-examine our preconceptions
about Nubia and the way in which it related to Egypt and the rest of
north-east Africa. A number of historical studies, and the
publication of much material from the UNESCO campaign, has similarly
caused a re-assessment of the Viceregal period.
-2 86-
that the riverine border was at the Third Cataract, with a buffer
zone extending to the 4th Cataract - which itself formed a natural
border. Leaving this region under the rule of local princes would
have given the Egyptian-controlled regions some protection from
potential threat from further south, and also meant that local rulers
could acquire the luxuries of the central Sudan which were then paid
as jaw and b3kv to the Viceregal administration. Such local rulers
would have been culturally Egyptianised and have depended upon Egypt
for support for their regimes.
-287-
'chiefdoms' or 'kingdoms' - in that region. It must also be
acknowledged that, during the Ramesside period, Irem posed a major
threat to the southern frontier. It should be asked whether
activities by indigenous rulers of the central Sudan or Dongola Reach
were actually responsible, at least in part, for the downfall of the
Viceregal administration. Attention has always focussed on the
presence and activities of the Viceroy, Panehesy, in Egypt under
Ramesses XI, but there is strong reason to think that the Egyptian
frontier had already been redrawn at the 2nd Cataract slightly
earlier, under Ramesses IX or X. While, at present, there is no
direct archaeological or historical evidence for an indigenous threat
to the southern part of the Viceregal domain, that possibility should
not be discounted.
Egyptian support for local elites would have aided the domination,
with a corresponding reliance of the elites on the Egyptians. There
may even have been dynastic ties and treaties to regulate relations
with each other and to minimise conflicts of interest. If we accept
that the majority of the Nubian officials were indigenes then we
raise a number of questions about what would have happened at the end
of the New Kingdom: would they have attempted to carve out a separate
state for themselves?
-288-
been argued that following the 'collapse' of the viceregal. system at
the end of the 20th Dynasty, people returned to a nomadic way of
life, or "retreated" into Upper Nubia. While, for some elements of
the population, this might not have been too difficult, how do people
who are settled with all of the luxuries and power of an elite
abandon this? Would it have been possible to absorb the elites into
the Egyptian bureaucracy, especially at a time when hereditary rights
to office were being claimed by the Egyptian elite? The issue must
be more complex than is normally allowed.
-289-
example, the Ka (IJlu Burun) wreck, where Nubian commodities - one
(relatively small) piece of elephant ivory, incense, ostrich eggs and
ebony - were found in association with Cypriote copper, Baltic amber,
Mycenaean UI lilA 2 and Cypriote wares, a Kassite seal and a reused
Old Babylonian cylinder. There is also evidence that Nubia's
importance was not restricted to the 'luxuries', but that it also
provided cattle and a number of fruit and vegetable products.
The role of the Egyptian cults remains one of the most difficult
areas to interpret the 'legacy'. Trk (1], although he acknowledged
that there was no supporting evidence, was convinced that the
survival of Egyptian traditions in lush should be attributed to the
continuance of the temple and cult of Amun at Cebel Barkal (with
"perhaps eventual Egyptian supply of its priesthood"). Whilst it is
probable that cults did continue, perhaps at lava, the forms of
worship under the 25th Dynasty show the strong inflence of
-290-
contemporaneous Egypt rather than having persisted in vacuo. The
cult of Amun-Re-the-Bull, Lord of Nubia, at Sanain might be a creation
of Taharqo, rather than residue from the New Kingdom: the
inscriptions of Sanam refer to the transport of sculptures from Sal,
one of the main cult-centres of Horns the Bull, and the cult might
thus be another example of the 'archaising' of the period.
It is argued here that the Egyptians viewed Nubia in much the sane
way that they did their 'empire' in Asia, and that consequently Nubia
functioned in a different way thai( has often been assumed. With
greater emphasis on the role of indigenous elites, and a more complex
society and economy in Nubia, the rise of an indigenous successor
state is more easily explicable. Lower, and perhaps part of Upper
-291-
Nubia at the end of the New Kingdom had a developed state system with
an organised and trained bureaucracy, hierarchies, military forces
(formidable, apparently), control of local resources and agricultural
subsistence. In addition, there were, certainly in Upper Nubia, and
probably still in Lower Nubia, local organised political entities -
'chiefdoms' or 'kingdoms' - which controlled the 'luxury' trade of
the central Sudan and which had their own military forces.
One major difference between the model proposed here and the
conventional view of the extent of Egyptian Viceegal control, is the
status of Upper Nubia from the 3rd to 4th Cataracts. Conventional
interpretations have assumed that this region lay within the
Viceregal domain, and that it was, consequently, Egyptianised, in the
same way as the rest of Nubia. Indeed, some Egyptologists have
argued that Napata was the main centre of the Viceregal
administration. The model argued here would see this part of Upper
Nubia as remaining under the direct control of indigenous rulers
throughout the New Kingdom. These rulers, most probably raised at
the Egyptian court, would have been Egyptianised, and may have
introduced elements of Egyptian culture and religion into their
states, but the majority of the population - even if they acquired
some Egyptian objects, would have remained largely unaffected by
Egyptian culture. Within this model, the 'problem' of
Egyptianisation is reduced. Following on the end of the Viceregal
period, Upper Nubia would have not 'reverted', but simply continued
the Kushite traditions.
-292-
beginning of the Kushite period.
-29 3-
The 'end' of the Late Bronze Age saw changes in the control of
trade and trade-routes: Egypt was far less important than it had been
whilst the western Asiatic powers - the Phoenician cities, Israel and
Damascus became dominant. The increasing use of the camel opened up
the Arabian land routes, although there was some continued use (or
attempted use) of the Red Sea routes by Israel, at times in alliance
with Tyre.
-294-
trade patterns at this time. Whether the expansion of the Arabian
trade routes was related to the collapse of the Egyptian domain in
Nubia remains, for the time being, obscure. It is also uncertain
when the Arabians began to cross the Red Sea; although the middle
first millenium has been suggested, it may be as early as the 8th
century BC [6] and there is some evidence for trade across the Red
Sea in the 2nd millenium. Jacqueline Pirenne has proposed that the
earliest wave of Arabian migration was caused by the Assyrians in the
8th-lth centuries. Fattovich suggested that the Gash Delta cultures
ceased about the same time as the end of the New Kingdom. He has
also suggested the possible influence of Nubia on the pre-Aksumite
cultures and detailed finds of Kushite material in pre-Aksumite
contexts [7]. While our knowledge of the archaeology of western
Arabia, Ethiopia and the Eastern Sudan is still limited for this
period, knowledge has considerably increased in recent years, and it
is important to consider the possibilities of contact and influence,
insubstantial though the evidence may be.
-29 5-
power into Upper Egypt. lush must have been actively involved in
Upper Egypt by the third quarter of the 8th Century.
-296-
already existing poliUcal units, there must have been political,
economic or other factors which caused this.
-29 7-
been seen as opportunistic: Kush was powerful because Egypt was weak.
As with many other successor states, rather than simply filling a
power vacuum, the increasing power of the frontier "barbarians" may
have been a contributary factor to the collapse of the old power.
So, might it not have been the rising power of the Kerma kingdom
which eventually led to the end of Middle Kingdom power in Nubia?
So, we might legitimately ask whether we are right in seeing the
emergence of lush as a world power as Adams and others have done - an
opportunistic successor-state, eventually filling the power vacuum -
or whether in fact, the rising power of a Kushite state in Upper
Nubia or the central Sudan - perhaps even Irem - was itself a
contributary factor to the collapse of the Egyptian New Kingdom?
-298-
Appendix 1
Source .aterials.
Temples
Armant Pylon [Mond and Myers 1940: 26-28, pl.ix; with EES negs 1484a,
1485a-b, l486a-b, 1488, 1493a, 1707 (dupl.1486a), 1708]. This scene
is probably to be related to the campaign of Thutmose III known from
the Armant stela.
Ibrim Shrine 4 [Caminos 1968: 59-75, pls.26, 28, 30, 32; Manuelian
1987: 92-93] Presentation of the 1ev to Amenhotep II upon the great
dais in Thebes. Apparently related to a campaign. The produce
includes: gold, ivory, garnet, ebony, perfumes, chariots, live
panthers, E u-hound s, iv3v- and wndw-cattle. All are reckoned in
man-loads, and as Caminos (1969: 69) observes, this cannot be used to
-299-
gauge the actual quantities or numbers of animals or other
substances.
Tomb scenes
Documentary
-300-
The cooditiea.
Ebony was supplied in small logs. Some idea of size may be gained
from pieces cut closely to the confines of a block such as the chair
or bed legs [London BN EA 24656 and Louvre 173331.
Incense. It has generally been assumed (eg Dixon 1969; Groom 1981)
that the incense imported from the southern regions was frankincense
-301-
and myrrh.
-302-
Rumans also appear in the "tribute" scenes. Males are usually
shown as fettered captives and women come accompanied by children,
frequently carried in a basket on the back. Interpretation of these
scenes, is, of course, difficult and although military action and
presentation of tribute are viewed as inter-dependent historically,
this was certainly not the case in reality. Prisoners-of-war were
certainly taken to Egypt as slaves, but whether the Egyptians
conducted slave-raids (ie the purposeful acquisition of slaves by use
of military force), is far from clear. It is possible that the
campaigns described in texts really had the function of a slave-raid,
even if the excuse given is 'rebellion' or attack on the gold-mining
stations. Captives may have been acquired by the kushite rulers of
southern Nubia and sent as slaves with the inw. Specific groups
named in pKoller are Irmi and Trk. Nhsyv to be fan-bearers are
referred to in the 'preparation for the arrival of pharaoh'
(pAnastasi Iv).
Another group of products has received far less attention than the
luxuries and minerals already cited. These are mainly fruits and
similar products, but were doubtless important, as they occur in
Egyptian administrative documents rather than in 'tribute' lists.
-303-
P.Koller, the identification of which remains uncertain: akrkby;
k3t3.
Weapons include bows (Beit el-Wali) and bows and arrows (Buy),
Shields of cattle-hide, and of leopard skin Those depicted in the
tomb of Buy, are decorated with cartouches, and with images of the
king as a crio-sphinx trampling foreigners, and as a human smiting.
Chariots are referred to in the tribute in the Ibrim Shrine 4 (see
discussion of Caminos 1968: 68-69), but were probably captured in the
battle (perhaps already gift from pharaoh to the local rulers) and
depicted in the tomb of Buy.
-304-
Appendix 2
Philae
A granite altar or barque-stand, now in the court of the Mammisi,
carries a dedication by Taharqo to Amun T3-k(3Ip5 (Griffith 1930).
Sethe (1901: 6) thought that this was the Tachompso of Rerodotos (II
29). Ptolemaic and Roman inscriptions place Kemso, Takemso or
Metakompso in the neighbourhood of Maharraqa. Griffith (1930: 129)
suggested that Takompso was Philae in Taharqa's time, had moved
southward by 450, but that the tradition lingered to confuse the
is sue.
Blocks, possibly from a 25th Dynasty temple were recovered from
the foundations of the Philae temples.
Shellal Cemetery 7
7-2/3: deep pointed-convex bowl (Reisner 1910: fig 326: 17 (see also
16); pp.62-63. see Williams 1990: 7, Form Group III).
7-7: amulets (Reisner 1910: 66-67, p1.70: c4).
7-10: pierced udjat, udjats and probably a deep-convex bowl (Reisner
1910: 68, pl.lO: c3).
7-181: pierced udjats (Reisner 1910: p1.72).
9-9: deep pointed convex bowls; two Kushite type amulets
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(Reisner 1910: 93-94; see Williams 45 n.6)
Williams (1990: 31) concludes that there were 25th Dynasty/Napatan
burials in the related cemeteries 7 and 9 and possibly also in the
destroyed cemetery between them.
Tafa
West of Tafa, half a mile back from river.
Rock inscription of Taharqo year 19: PM VII, 10; Roeder 1911: 211
pl.93.a, 127.b; Weigall 1908: 105.
Ehor Hannshiya
Rock inscription of Taharqo year 19: PM VII, 10; Roeder 1911: 215-216
pls 94, 127.a; Weigall 1908: 68 p1 xxvii.4; cf xxii.4.
Cemetery 119; north of Qurta contained simple shafts and shafts with
chambers.
119-10: Hathor head beads and Bes amulet (Firth 1927: 151 p1.28:
a2 and 28; cf. Griffith 1923: pl.LXV, 13 and LV, 10-11;
Dunham 1963: W 493 (2-5) fig.1: d; W 643 (4-5), fig.28,
ten examples; W 846 (4-8) fig.36: e-f; later examples are
quite rare and probably re-used).
119-13: small Bes (Firth 1927: pl.28: c17).
scarabs and other glyptics have parallels in Kushite contexts
(Firth 1927: pl.36, 124-29 from 119-10); see Griffith 1923: p1
LIII: 6 for examples of other rectangular fish plaques.
Cemetery 120
120-1: plaque with fish
120-2: gold earring damaged but same as a type from Sanam (Griffith
1923: pl.XL: 10-11; Firth 1927: pl.28b, 12 see Williams 45 n
- 306 -
12).
two scarabs and fish amulet comparable to examples from Sanam.
Other tombs were similar in contents and character (Firth 1927: 152-
153, Tombs 1,2,7,9,12,18,19,21,26); most lacked pottery, as did some
of the Qustul tombs and the Nirgissa cemetery.
Cemetery 121
At Qurta. Six tombs of similar size, shape (shaft with side-chamber)
and orientation: two contained bed-burials.
Nost of the pottery is unpublished. Williams comments that the
pilgrim flasks from 121-2 are not of New Kingdom type; nor is the
faience figurine (Firth 1927: 15-56; cf.pl.27, d2 with Griffith 1923:
p1 xxvi, 34 and LV, 12) and parallels for both were found at Sanam.
Cemetery 122
Shaft graves with side chambers, most apparently X-Group.
122-22: udjat plaque in Kushite 'bold style' (Firth 1927: 164; p1
36, 149 see Griffith 1923: p1 XLIX, 3,4,7-10).
122-18: crescent shaped earring (Firth 1927: 164).
122-26: Although attributed to the X-Group, Williams notes that
this tomb also material of 25th Dynasty/Napatan type
(Firth 1927: pis 36, 152-155 and 28b: 11, a close parallel
for aegis Petrie 1906: p1 XXXII ("amulets of XXII
Dynasty" from Tell er Retaba; see also p1 XXXIVA: tomb 20
(with Bes figure and Sakhmet)). Large barrel beads also
listed from this tomb, also apparently of Kushite type.
Cemetery 123
Sixteen shafts with side chambers, these tombs and contents most
closely resembled Sanam.
publication incomplete, but included pilgrim flasks of the same type
as found in Cemetery 121, and similar amulets. Necklace of Hathor-
head pendants/amulets in Kushite 'bold style' (Firth 1927: 166-67; cf
p1 28, a5 with Griffith 1923: p1 LXV, 13 see Williams Chapter 3, p 16
and Dunham 1963: W 567 (3-6), fig 14:c).
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1iharaqqa: Cemetery 131
131-1: amulets, scarabs, bronze vessels and iron weapons. The burial
is shown as if in coffin but Williams suggests that this may
have been a bed. Date assigned by excavator disputed because
iron weapons believed to be inconsistent with such an early
date.
Iron weapons (Firth 1927: 186-187 and nos 215-20 on p1 36).
Williams (1990: 46n 18) says that probably later than Qustul
and other groups noted here, but probably Napatan. It is the
latest burial in a New Kingdom tomb, with bones probably of
disturbed earlier burials.
Plaque with rain's head (Firth 1927: p1 28d, 5, e 5; Griffith
1923: pis XLII, 15; XLVI, 1-2, 4-8).
Large scarab (Firth 1927: p1 28d, 6, e, 6 parallels Firth
1927: p1 28d, 1-2 and 28e, 1-2 with Griffith 1923: p1 LVII, 9-
13 and 15-18).
131-5: Similar group of amulets including glyptic with kushite themes
(Firth 1927: p1 36, 221 and 223 see Williams 1990: 46 n 22 cf
Griffith 1923: pls XLI-LIV).
Kubban
Cemetery 110 (Firth 1927: 60-97).
Williams suggests tombs 110.54, 94, 125, 128, 308 should be assigned
to the Napatan phase.
Amulets of New Kingdom appearance and small figurine amulets of later
type (Firth 1927: 95-96, Tomb 110.308. Williams 1990: 46 n 23 gives
extensive comparative refs.).
Bes-Ptah figurines (Firth 1927: p1 28c:26-27).
Pierced faience rings (Tomb 110.308 parallel Tell er-Retaba, Petrie
1906: pla ccXII, mIll, 60-61).
Two pottery vessels later than New Kingdom.
Maw
A New Kingdom cemetery, but one tomb contained a deep, almost pointed
bowl with a darkened rim as6ciated with a flexed burial. The shape
of the bowl parallels Williams (1990) VA 7-2.
- 308 -
Qatta
Cemetery 267 (Smith 1962: 56-57, fig 12).
Four graves, the burials surrounded with boulders.
267-1: deep pointed bowls; two vessels red-coated, one red rim;
pilgrim bottle of same shape as those found in Cemeteries 121
and 123.
Two other tombs deep pottery bowls of same type as grave 1; one with
beads that closely resembled those from similar tombs at Toshka.
Toshka
Cemetery 260 (Smith 1962: 49).
Oval grave with two coarse brown wheel-made bowls red-coated
interiors and exterior rims same type as Reisner's number 15 (XXV-15)
also found at Qustul.
Qaar Thri..
The temple of Taharqo: JEA 51: 28, p1 12.2; JEA 56: 17-18 p1 25.3;
JEA 61: 16 p1 9; JEA: 63 p1 6.3.
A cartouche plaque of Taharqo ("probably") found opposite Qasr Ibrim
[PM VII 75; Emery and Xirwan 1935: 532, p1 58 (34]).
Shrine 4 at Ibrim, of the reign of Amenhotep II, contained two
paintings of a king, which could be 25th Dynasty, or (perhaps more
likely) Meroitic (Caminos 1968: 73-75, pls 34, 35).
Recent excavations have revealed evidence for pre-25th Dynasty
work at the site, in the region of the southern defences (Horton
1991). The first construction was a terrace made of stone and mud
mortar (Horton 1991: 265) and a second terrace was probably an
extension of this. A substantial mud-brick defensive wall with stone
inner face was probably later than the terraces, and may have had two
phases of modification. Over the entrance to this wall a circular
tower of cut sandstone was built, itself later encased in mud-brick,
creating a polygonal bastion. Horton regarded the next phase of work
(phase 7) to be contemporary with the temple built by Taharqo. There
- 309 -
was difficulty giving a precise date to these early levels. There
was no diagnostic New Kingdom pottery, and all of that found was
'Napatan', the sequence of which, as Horton noted, has not yet been
clearly established. Analysis of the chaff temper of the mud-bricks
in phase 3 provided a radio carbon date of 2690 BP + 90, which to one
standard deviation is 920-800 cal BC. Samples of camel dung yielded
a similar date 1040-770 (two standard deviations)(Rowley-Conwy 1988).
Horton concluded (1991: 268) that phase 3 belonged to the period
920-800, with phases 1 and 2 immediately preceding it, and
considerable work continuing until the Taharqo phase. Far more work
on the material, and on the site, is needed before any historical
conclusions can be drawn. No archaeological material was found
sealed beneath the earliest walls, which indicates that - at least in
that sector of the site - there was no previous construction. It
failed to provide any terminus for the constructions. It may be
safely concluded that they are post New Kingdom, but whether they
belong to an early phase of Kushite independence (such as defences by
Panehesy against Piankh), Egyptian military activities (of Piankh
against Panehesy, or later), the earliest phases of Kushite expansion
northwards (in the reigns of Alara and Kashta), or all belong to a
rapid development of the site dating only from the time of Piye
onwards
Aniba
New Kingdom tombs were re-used in the 25th Dynasty/Napatan period.
The pottery was presented by Steindorff with the New Kingdom material
which, Williams (1990: 34) comments, may have led to the assignment
of many later contexts to the New Kingdom. Some vessels are types
which occur at Abri and Sanam, as well as at Qustul (Steindorff 1937:
pottery bowl type 6b4 (p1 69) see p1 87: types 47-1 (SA 34.7), 47-2
(sA 33.19), 49-2 (sA 36.14), 49-3-6 (SA 37.20-23)).
All tombs had superstructures, which, Williams suggests, may have
played a role in the kushite readoption of the pyramid.
SA 33 (Steindorff 1937: 234-35) SA 34 (Steindorff 1937: 235-236) SA
36 (Steindorff 1937: 238-39) SA 37 (Steindorff 1937: 239-40). SA 33
seems to have been constructed in the 19th Dynasty, but 36 and 37
- 310 -
contained earlier material. Si may also be added to the list also
with vessel 6b4.
Qutu1
Cemeteries W and V (Williams 1990).
Fara.e
Verwers (1961: 15-29; 23-8 fig 5-7 p1 iv-v) published a series of
graves at Faras which lay to the south of the C-Group Cemetery (24-D-
1; 24-E-12, 13; 24-1-10, 11, 12, 13). They were identified by him as
New Kingdom. The graves were irregular pits lined with sandstone
slabs usually against a rock cliff which served as one wall (Verwers
1961: fig 4) with a preferred orientation n-s; the burials were
extended on the back. Similar grave types had been noted by Garstang
and Junker at Arminna and Kubanieh. Williams suggests that these
stone-lined pits may be a variation of the brick-lined pits at Sanam
(Griffith 1923: p1 XIV) or a local cultural variant (see Vila 1980:
176 (4)).
The pottery included simple bowls and beakers, some with red,
streak-burnished exteriors and others with red rim-bands, pilgrim
flasks and small jars. Verwers thought that the pottery indicated a
date in the l8th-2Oth Dynasties. Williams comments that some of the
pottery types (Verwers 1961: fig 7, carinated bowl and larger jar)
are New Kingdom types but continued into the 25th Dynasty/Napatan
period (cf Williams 1990: 7-9; Griffith 1923: pis XVII-XVIII).
The amulets (Verwers 1961: p1 Vc-d (except c3)) included a Bes,
pataikos and scarabs Ed-el which more closely resemble TIP types than
New Kingdom. Williams notes the parallels from Sanam.
Serra West
Three burials sites 24-H-3, 24-11-4, 24 N-B (Verwers 1962: 25) of the
same type as Faras and with similar objects.
Argin
Two sites contained graves lined with sandstone and granite blocks 6-
B-il and 6-B-i2 (Nordstrm 1962: 42-43).
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Cemeteries 6-B-18, 6-B-24 and 6-G-13 (Almagro, Presedo and Pellicer
1963: 187 and fig 6) contained circular pit tombs; all with 25th
Dynasty/Napatan pottery (Nordstr6m 1962: p1 IX:b).
see also Alinagro et al 1965: 82 pis XIV: c, XV:b.
Buhen
Taharqo made additions to the temple. The South temple was restored
with a new intercolumnar screen wall and possibly a new pillared
portico (Smith 1976: 217; Caminos 1974: I 82-86). The stone floor
was relaid and figures of the king added to the door reveals of the
temple proper. There is no evidence for reoccupation of the town,
although presumably some part was occupied by a garrison.
Two papyriform columns (22 and 23: Caminos 1974: I 59-60, p1 71)
formed an entrance on the main axis, in front of columns 31 and 32.
Adjacent was a gateway with jambs placed before columns 32 and 33
(Caminos 1974: I 57-59, pis 69, 70). It is assumed that a number of
relief fragments formed intercolumnar screens somehow related to this
structure. The fragments were not found in situ and it now
impossible to reconstruct the design. They comprise relief fragments
51 (Caminos 1974: I 82-83 pla 99; 100.1) 52 (Caminos 1974: I 83-84,
pis 99; 100.2) 53 (Caminos 1974: I 84, p1 101.1) 54 (Caminos 1974: I
84, p1 101.2) 55 (Caminos 1974: I 84-85, p1 102.1) 56 (Caminos 1974:
I 85, p1 102.2) 57 (Caminos 1974: I 85, p1 102.3).
Figures of the king were added in the main temple, to door
reveals 4 and 5 (Caminos 1974: II 11, pls 13, 14.1-2) and 50 and 51
(Caminos 1974: II 54, p1 47.3-4). Part of a barque-stand (fragment
- 312 -
58: Caminos 1974: I 86, p1 103.1) was recovered, which may originally
have stood in the sanctuary. Other fragments originally associated
with the structure included an architectural element, probably a
door-jamb (fragment 59: Caminos 1974: I 86, p1 103.2-3) and a loose
block with an added Greek inscription, under which was a painted
scene of a black king harpooning in front of Isis (Inscr 1613: Smith
1976: 131 and n.1).
New Kingdom tombs were re-used at this time (Randall-Naclver and
Woolley 1911: 169-170, J 13 see Williams 1990: 47 n 46) and should
perhaps be associated with a garrison here.
Iirgissa
The cemetery, in the north-east angle of the fortress, contained 27
tombs with multiple burials [Geus in Vercoutter 1975: 479-5011.
The amulets are typical Third Intermediate Period, with quadruple-
udjats (Vercoutter 1975: 484, fig 4, no 9); open-work udjats
(Vercoutter 1975: 485, fig 7, no 22 and 9) Bes amulet; multiple udjat
with no details (Vercoutter 1975: 488, fig 10.2; 491, fig 14.2) and
others (Vercoutter 1975: 494, fig 19.1, 2; 495, fig 23.4, 5); sow
amulet (Vercoutter 1975: 493, fig 17.17); incised solid udjat
(Vercoutter 1975: fig 17.11); ram-head pendant (Vercoutter 1975: fig
17.16). A group of Sakhmet amulets in yellow and blue faience are
identical to a large group from Sanam (Vercoutter 1975: 496, fig
24.24, 25; cf Sanani 1.927B (Oxford Ash. 1921.712, 1921.713) Griffith
1923: p1 XXII.4).
Dorginarti
Heidorn's (1991) re-examination of the material from Dorginarti has
demonstrated that the fortress belongs to the Saite and Persian
periods. There is every possibility that it represents an Egyptian
position south of the Dodekaschoinos (which appears to have been an
administrative creation of the 26th Dynasty). There are no
indications that the site has any earlier Napatan or pre-25th Dynasty
remains.
- 313 -
- 314 -
Kingdom. Here 250 graves were made in crevasses in rocky outcrops,
similar to those in the Qatta and Afya regions.
Gaai
Cemetery 500 was dated to the NK by Bates and Dunham (1927 14-15).
It comprised only three graves, one a circular chamber and shaft, the
others rectangular.
Of the pottery, some storage jars resembled New Kingdom prototypes
(Bates and Dunham 1927: p1 LXIX fig 53) but the remainder was
characteristic of the 25th Dynasty: bowls open and conical (p1 XI.2f,
3A-E); one large jar short neck and shoulder (p1 LXIX: fig 39);
pilgrim flasks with candlestick rims do not resemble New Kingdom
types, but close to later examples from Soleb (p1 LXIX fig 44, 43;
LXIV fig 9, 13 from cemy E see Holscher 1954: p1 47: U3 esp U4;
Schiff Giorgini 1971: p1 15.28 also p.196 fig 346).
Tumulus E contained five burials (E2 E20 E34 E42 E81) which Williams
attributes to the 25th Dynasty/Napatan period on the evidence of tall
conical cups with rim-band, bed burial and Kushite bold glyptic
(Bates and Dunham 1927: 54-60; see list El p1 LXIV: fig 13; see pp
16-17 for other graves attributed to the New Kingdom, but probably of
other periods).
Upper Nubia.
Dal-&brl
The survey of the region south of the Dal Cataract, directed by Vila,
located a number of cemetery sites which were assigned to the phase
- 315 -
between the end of the New Kingdom and the 'Napatan period'. The
most important was the cemetery at Missiminia (PASCAD 9: 42 2-V-6)
where Vila attributed 140 graves to a phase covering the pre-25th
Dynasty to the end of Napatan period. Williams (1990: 37, 39-40)
suggested the addition of a number of sites from Vila's survey to the
25th Dynasty/Napatan period by analogy with the Lower Nubian
material.
A.ara West
2-S-35 (PASCAD 7: 100-107) 30 graves.
The EES excavations at Amara West were limited, and remain largely
unpublished (Fairman 1938; 1939; 1948; PM VII 157-164), but the site
is certainly important to the New Kingdom-Kushite transition. The
excavators reported (Fairman 1948: 6) that the debris separating
levels 3 and 2, both of Ramesside date, and level 1, which they
suggested might have been 25th Dynasty (Fairman 1948: 10), "was never
much less than one metre thick". The Ramesside roofs had collapsed,
and there was a "layer of wind-blown sand, succeeded by a thin layer
of squatters' occupation debris and then a second layer of wind-blown
sand". They concluded that "there must have been a considerable
lapse of time" between the levels. Whilst the Amara region is
notoriously windy, and sand accumulates rapidly if not cleared, the
available evidence indicates abandonment of the town in the late 20th
Dynasty, or immediately following. Importantly, a 'Saharan' sherd
was found in an apparently sealed context, below level I (Fairman
1948: 6). Sherds of this type had already been noted elsewhere on
the site (Fairman 1939: 143), but are an archaeological enigma
requiring further research. Surface finds of chalcedony arrow-heads
suggest the possibility of other pre-25th Dynasty presence (Fairman
1948: 10).
Ginis E.
2-T-13 (PASCAD 5: 47-48), Vila attributed to NK. 2-T-17 (PASCAD 5:
53). 3-P-37 (PASCAD 5: 98).
-316 -
Cinis V.
2-T-58 Kashasha (PASCAD 5: 119-122), contained pilgrim flasks
(fig.53, 1 and 2) and a pataikos amulet with winged goddess on back
(fig. 53, 8) headless, but closely similar to examples from Kurru 52
and 53 (Dunham 1950: pl.L, LIV), both attributed to wives of Piye.
3-P-50 (PASCAD 5: 145-159), a large tomb with remains of painted wall
decoration, shabtis of a nbt pr Isis, which suggests a New Kingdom
origin. Some of the amulets are of TIP type.
Attab K. 2-S-2 Saadlin (PASCAD 6: 24-27) Vila thought that these were
New Kingdom, probably in earlier graves.
-317-
A late pharaoniat Sai (Vercoutter 1958: 168 and fig 15; Geus and
Reinold 1975: 21-42).
Sedeinga
Blocks with the name of Taharqo (Schiff Giorgini 1965: 116-123
figs 2-5; more Orientalia 53 1984: pis 31-32), found here led to a
suggestion that he was buried here. The blocks are probably from a
temple in the region which were re-used in the later meroitic
pyramids. The final publication of the Schiff Giorgini excavations
is in preparation.
Soleb
Williams added to the list of 'Napatan' graves, commenting that this
was "certainly not exhaustive". Schiff Giorgini 1971: figs 735: 8c
12; 346: T 15 p13; 368: T 17 p3; 372: T 17 p7; 382: T 17 ci; 380: T
17 p20; 660: T 46 si; p1. XII: T 18 c21, T 35 p3, T 20 p13; pis. XIV:
7; XV: 28.
Apart from the major sites of Kerma, lava, Sanam and the 4th Cataract
(lurru, Nun and Barkal), survey and excavation in the Dongola Reach
are still in their early stages. With the notable exception of
Kerma, excavation at these sites has focussed on the temple
structures, and the royal cemeteries. Whilst this leaves a notable
gap in the available material, it may, ultimately be of benefit to
archaeology, a the exemplary work at Kerisa has revealed the
complexity of the sites.
As a fertile region (Edwards 1989: 93-95), between the known major
sites of the lerma Basin and 4th Cataract, and with a number of
important desert routes joining the Nile here, ancient occupation is
to be expected. A few monuments and objects of 25th Dynasty date
have been recovered from the Letti Basin (PM VII 192), and a temple,
possibly Meroitic, identified at Bugdumbush (Crawford 1951: 38). A
'town', lrtn, occurs in texts, and has been identified with the
district of Korti [Crawford 1951]. Although a large number of
- 318 -
archaeological sites have been reported, few have, as yet been
identified as pre-Meroitic (Edwards 1989: 99-111 details 107 sites).
Tabo
The large temple, probably to be dated to the reign of Taharqo
(Jacquet-Gordon et al. 1969), had blocks built into its pylon
carrying the cartouches of Thutmose III or IV, Amenhotep II and III
(Maystre 1967-1968: 196; Jacquet-Gordon et al. 1969: p1. 23.1), and a
column drum with those of Ramesses II (Maystre 1967-1968: 194;
Jacquet-Gordon et al. 1969: 107). The site was originally suggested
to be the ancient Pnubs (Jacquet-Gordon et al. 1969), although this
has now been questioned. Unfortunately, little more is known of the
site, the settlement and cemeteries not having been excavated.
Lena
Recent excavations at Kerma have revealed Napatan settlement sites
(Bonnet 1988: 19-20, VI) and graves One building giving C-14 dates
800-300 (600-500) (Bonnet and Mohamed Abmed 1984: 35-42, XV1I-xX). A
burial of a Priest of Amun of Pnubs [Bonnet and Valbelle 1980] also
belongs to this phase. There is a possibility that Pnubs is to be
identified with Lena. Pnubs itself is referred to on an abacus of
Piye in B 502 (Dunham 1970: 55 fig.40 column E side B).
Km
The excavations at Kawa concentrated on the temple precinct, and
despite the evidence from there of New Kingdom and pre-25th Dynasty
occupation, there is a lack of archaeological material to expand upon
this. Walls and part of a pylon belonging to an earlier temple were
discovered beneath that of Taharqo (Macadam 1955: 226, p1 7-8, p1
CVIIIg) and there were suggestions that the building had been
destroyed by fire. The textual evidence indicates that the town was,
in some way occupied in the immediate pre-25th Dynasty: Alara
dedicated one of his sisters there; there was a temple of brick;
Piye is called beloved of Amun of Gematen on one of the abaci of B
502 (Dunham 1970: 55 fig.40 column E side D). Whether the site was
- 319 -
in constant occupation from the New Kingdom until the 25th Dynasty is
a matter which can only be resolved by further excavation.
Argi (Edwards 1989: 100 no.9; Arkell 1950: 35-6) opposite Ed Debba,
there is a cemetery where fragments of objects of probably 25th
Dynasty date were left by grave robbers.
The major groups of Napatan material come from the cemeteries of el-
Kurru and Sanam. Other cemeteries, as yet unexcavated, do exist in
the vicinty of the 4th Cataract. Painted tombs of 'Napatan' date
(Leclant and Clerc 1989).
1eroe
The earliest burials in the cemeteries are dated to the early 25th
dynasty. The Amun temple might be 25th Dynasty in origin, shoving
stylistic affinities with B500. The original N 250 is also suggested
- 320 -
to be 25th dynasty in origin. The earliest levels so-far excavated
in the town are dated by their pottery to the 8th and 7th C BC.
- 321 -
Appendix 3
The events recorded in Diodoros (I, 60, 70ff.) are set during the
reign of "Amasis". Amasis is said to have been a harsh ruler, and
that, in consequence, when "Aktisanes, the king of the Aithiopians"
led an army against Egypt, many of the people revolted, Amasis was
overcome, and Egypt fell under the rule of the Aithiopians. This
passage, discussed by Priese (1977) and T6rk (1986: 205-06, no.25),
is therefore believed to refer to the reign of Amasis, Ahmose II, of
the 26th Dynasty (570-526 BC).
-322-
Labyrinth). Diodoros has a further five generations without kings
before Cetes-Proteus who ruled at the time of the Trojan war. Rere
he picks up the narrative of Herodotos again, which is then followed
quite closely, except for the insertion of seven generations of kings
"who were confirmed sluggards" between Rhampsinitus-Remphis and
Cheops-Chemmis the builder of the first/largest pyramid. The pyramid
builders are followed in Herodotos's narrative, by Anysis in whose
reign Sabakon invaded Egypt. The Sabakon episode is similar in both
Diodoros and }lerodotos. Herodotos follows Sabakon's return to
Aithiopia with the restoration of Anysis and the invasion of
Sennacherib, the rule of the dodekarchy, and eventual supremacy of
Psammetichos I (Psamtik I). Then follows the rest of the 26th
Dynasty to the reign of Amasis (Ahmose II). Diodoros differs
slightly from Herodotos in his account of the dodekarchy, but with
the accession of Psamtik I the narratives follow fairly closely
together again.
-323-
name in a Greek source, if nothing more than coincidence, should not
be given undue value, especially if the source is otherwise
universally regarded as totally valueless. A parallel situation
occurred with the inclusion in the Neroitic king lists of
"Ergamenes", again derived from a narrative of Diodoros. Tr'k has
strongly argued that the narrative has taken a contemporary Neroitic
royal name and attached it to an episode recounting the triumph of
Rellenism. A number of Meroitic scholars, however, still prefers to
find a basis in "historical fact".
There is a possibility that there was a ruler whose name was close
to that of the Greek form "Aktisanes", who ruled about the time of
Ptolemy I. The reading of the name on the Barkal jamb is so
uncertain that the possibility of two rulers with very loosely
similar names reigning some considerable time apart should not be
excluded.
-324-
Appendix 4
-32 5-
Were it not for the apparent chronological problems raised,
Osorkon III would be the obvious choice. As father of Shepenwepet I
he is the king who is always associated with her. Ee is also the
only candidate who is both closely associated with Shepenwepet I and
attested monumentally as having a reign of over 19 years. Kitchen
[4] rejected the possible identification based upon his own
reconstruction of events (objecting to the idea that Piye's campaign
"would fall into the 27th year of Osorkon III!"), and most other
writers, usually influenced by Kitchen's premises and arguments, have
not considered it further.
-32 6-
would have been the ruler by whom Shepenwepet would have dated her
monuments: that must have been a close relative.
All of the arguments for the identity of the Libyan ruler have
assumed that the year 12 alongside the name of Amenirdis I belongs to
Piye. Admittedly to challenge this assumption is to cast the apple
of discord into all interpretations of late Libyan Egypt, there is
however, no single piece of evidence which supports the premise. The
ushite rulers named, or appearing on monuments (apparently as
contemporary) with Amenirdis I, are Kashta (always as a filiation),
Shabaqo (specified in a number of inscriptions as her brother) and
Shebitqo. The genealogy of the family as reconstructed by Dunham and
Macadam made Piye an elder brother, but this must be seriously
-32 7-
questioned. Kitchen [14] rejects the possibility of the year 12
belonging to Shabaqo, since, he believes, that year cannot be
equivalent to anyone else's 19th year.
-328-
The possibilities, which should not be discounted, even if they go
against normal understanding of the period are:
-329-
Appendix 5
The genealogy of the 25th Dynasty and its in!nediate successors was
reconstructed by Macadam (1949) and Dunham and Macadam (1949), based
on the inscriptional material from Kava and the Kushite royal
cemeteries. This reconstruction was undoubtedly influenced by
-330-
Macadam's premises about the nature of the Kushite state and by his
own succession theories. The reconstruction proposed by Dunham and
Macadam has since been discussed, but largely accepted by Leclant and
Yoyotte (1951), Kitchen (1973) and Trk (1986). The only major
dissents have been Leahy's (1984) proposition that Tauwetamani was
son of Shabaqo, not of Shebitqo, and Priese's (1973) doubts about
Piye. Wenig recently reviewed a large number of older ideas, notably
those which relate to the accession of Taharqo.
-331-
[3]. This was supplemented in his joint article with Dows Dunham
[41. These works have become the standard theoretical discussions of
the succession and genealogy. Because of the importance of this work
and its wide acceptance, it is worth examining the evidence and
assumptions closely and critically.
Macadam also noted that Pebatma's title ant newt "makes her the
sister as well as the wife of Iashta". In making this assumption
Macadam reveals that he was thinking in terms of only one Xushite
king existing at this time.
-332-
father is known by numerous inscriptions to have been Piye, then Piye
must have been brother of Amenirdis I. On his understanding of the
text the argument was logical. However, Caminos demonstrated quite
conclusively that the text must be understood as saying that Nitoqert
was adopted by Ainenirdis II [91. The text therefore tells us that
Amenirdis II was given by her father Taharqo to his sister,
Shepenwepet II daughter of Piye. Macadam also notes that "the
adoptive mother of a princess tends to be her aunt", citing Pebatma-
Peksater "probably", Amenirdis 1-Shepenwepet Il-Amenirdis II (a
conclusion drawn from his immediately preceding argument); but not,
of course, the political adoptions Shepenwepet 1-Amenirdis I,
Nitoqert.
-3 33-
that they shared the same father and mother (rather than the same
father and different mothers, or same mother and different fathers).
-334-
These conclusions, that Alara and Kashta were brothers; that they
both married their own sisters; that Piye and Shabaqo were brothers,
sons of Xashta, have remained firmly rooted in Nubian studies, and
have hardly ever been challenged.
-335-
the terms s3t naut, unt usut etc. only to those known kings -
Kashta, Piye, Shabaqo etc. He seems not to have considered the
possibility that there were other rulers to whom these individuals
could have been related.
2. directly related to (I) is the idea that there was only one family
involved.
336-
Robins also emphasises that the record of female ancestry does
not, in itself, predicate a matrilineal system. Nor does it
presuppose an important role for women in the society. All that it
can indicate is that female lines of descent were as important as
male ones. This is very clear in Egypt in the New Kingdom and Third
Intermediate Period. Claims on high office could be made through the
female line as well as the male line. Many later cultures have
similarly placed importance on female lines of descent, even if women
were excluded from holding office. Many examples could be cited, two
will suffice. In the Byzantine empire it was quite permissble for a
man to assume the name of his mother's family if it was more
distinguished than his father's. In Britain many families have
passed titles and estates through the female line, those marrying
into the family adopting the older name. In Kush, records of female
ancestry and representations of royal women cannot, in themselves, be
used as evidence of matriliny.
-337-
criteria as this last, it becomes impossible to rationalize the
material: we know simply too little.
Springing from the role of the Great Royal Wife the separate
institution of the God's Wife of Amun developed during the later 20th
Dynasty and Third Intermediate Period and is of paramount importance
during the 25th Dynasty. During the 26th Dynasty the holder of the
office was virtual ruler of the Thebaid and also assumed the role of
High Priest of Amun.
-33 8-
Despite a vast body of material relating to the, particularly 25th
and 26th Dynasty, officiants, the development of the institution is
not altogether clear. The most informative monuments and texts all
date from the latest of the God's Wives, Nitoqert and
Ankhnasneferibre. Fragmentary material relating to earlier holders
suggests that the various rites of passage recorded did begin
earlier, but at exactly what point remains unclear. Indeed there may
have been a gradual accretion of royal attributes and rites. Certain
phrases within the Nitoqert stela imply that similar acts had been
performed for her mother, Amenirdis II. However, it is dangerous to
project back from the latest to the earliest. Nevertheless, the
scenes and iconography of the Heqa-Djet chapel at Karnak do suggest
that some important aspects of the office may go back to Shepenwepet
I, if not earlier. Indeed, Shepenwepet I achieves a far greater
prominence than her predecessors.
-339-
her and was pleased with her; she loved her more than anything and
made over to her the testament which her father and mother had
executed for her; and her eldest daughter Amenirdis, daughter of
King Ta[harqo], justified, did likewise.
The act of adoption was thus sanctioned by a legal document,
witnessed by important dignitaries. From this point the heiress
became the Adorer of the God (d'ur3t utr). This, at any rate, was the
assumption of Sander-Hansen and others. The objections raised by
Caminos [161 notwithstanding, the majority of texts which name both
princesses, the God's Wife and her future successor, seem to
distinguish them in this way.
-340-
Similarly, Taharqo [26] says that Alara dedicated his sisters (one of
them Taharqo's grandmother) to Amun at Kawa. There is a clear
difference between these dedications and the installation of the
God's Wife at Thebes: one (Madiqen), possibly two (Maletarata) of
Anlamani's sisters were also royal wives; Alara's sister was also
married. A parallel might also be found in the role of Pebatina, wife
of Kashta and mother of Ainenirdis 1, as Chantress of .Amun, presumably
at Thebes.
The question again arises: who did install Amenirdis I? The most
obvious candidate must remain Kashta. This becomes more likely if we
question that Piye and Amenirdis I were, in fact, brother and sister.
There are no documents which clearly associate them together and all
of the descriptions of Anienirdis as ant new refer to Shabaqo.
The genealogy of Queen Nasalsa is one of the few which extends beyond
simple filiation. Nasalsa was the sister of a king (generally
assumed to have been Senkamanisken) also his wife (Aspelta's father
was named as a king) and mother of Anlamani, Aspelta and Madiqen
(inscriptionally documented). She was buried in the royal cemetery
at Nun (Nun 24: decorated, and with inscribed objects). She is
depicted and referred to in Kawa Inscription VIII [271; the accession
stela of Aspelta [281, the stela of Prince Ihaliut [291; and the
'Dedication Stela' of Nadiqen [301.
-341-
The genealogy of Queen Nasalsa is recorded on the accession stela
of Aspelta. Aspelta named his father, his mother and her female
ancestry to a further six generations. The names contained in all of
the stela's cartouches were erased in antiquity. The attribution of
the stela to Aspelta is certain, as his Horus, Two Ladies, and Golden
Horus names are undamaged in line 1 [31] and are identical with those
of Aspelta on the Madiqen stela. The surviving information
(tabulated in section II) gives six generations of female descent,
most with the title ant nsa, but the earliest also 'Queen of Kush'.
Nasalsa herself is the first queen for which contemporaneous
inscriptional material gives this title, which is therefore of no
help in identifying the originator of the line. Queen Maletarata
also has this title and although she might be identified with one of
the sisters of Anlamani, her exact placement is uncertain (see
Appendix 6).
-342-
(Taharqo)
I I
(Atlanersa) I Amenirdis
(Senkamanisken) Nasalsa
I III I
( Anlamani)I three daughters Madiqen (Aspelta)
-343-
The inscription narrates the presentation of the royal brethren to
Amun and the selection of Aspelta, followed by the speech of Amun-Re:
"... for his father is Geb, the Son of Re (/11/1)1 .3t hrw, his
mother is the Royal Sister, the Royal Mother, the Mistress of
lush, Daughter of Re (/1/1/1)1 given life for ever; her mother was
the Royal Sister the Adorer of the God of Amun-Re, King of Gods,
in Thebes (11/1/1)1 her mother was the Royal Sister (II//I/) L3Ct
hrw; her mother was the Royal Sister (/IIII/) .3t trw; her
mother was the Royal Sister (111/11)1 3C t hrw; her mother was the
Royal Sister (/1/1/1)1 .3t hrw; her mother was the Royal Sister,
the Mistress of lush (/1/1/1)1 3ct br'w.
mt nswt ([I/1[I/1(II1)
mt nmwt ((II][II][/1)
mt nmwt ([II]EII](/I])I
s3 1C((//J[//J)1
I ant nmwt irt newt bnirt l3 ((Nasalsal)!
-344-.
"the edu-crown of thy brother [sn.kl king (naw bttyl (1/111)1"
The name of (2) the Divine Adoratrix, had two squares, enough for
Amenirdis, although the possibility cannot be excluded that she
reverted to her lushite birth-name.
(3) occupied three squares.
(4) occupied three squares
(5) occupied two and % squares
-345-
(6) three squares
(7) 2%-3 squares
-346-
The conclusions to be drawn from this genealogy in its preserved
state - and its destruction is one of the greatest losses to study of
this period - are limited. Significantly, there is good reason to
suppose from this that there were Kushite rulers who were still
remembered who had pre-dated the time of Alara and Kashta. Whether
they had adopted Egyptian pharaonic style is debateable: the title
But nsvt accorded to the royal women, may be retrospective. The
genealogy, if recording an actual rather than an adoptive line of
descent, must be that of a wife, probably a Chief Wife, of Taharqo.
-34 7-
only genealogies, but also the cultic role of these women. The
situation is very different from New Kingdom Egypt, when it was only
the royal daughters who were given such prominence.
Similar types of headdress are known from the drawing of the Pylon
of B 700 [48]. There, the upper register apparently depicted a queen
wearing three plumes followed by two with two plumes, in these
instances emerging from papyrus umbels. A similar headdress was worn
by the princess Amenirdis, wife of the Vizier Nonthuhotep.
These reliefs show an important role for the royal women, and are
certainly different to Egyptian tradition. They also seem to
indicate some form of ranking system within the hierarchy. However,
with the available evidence it is difficult to penetrate any further.
-348-
The genealogy of Nasalsa, understandably a focus for theories of
matrilineal succession, has already been discussed. Macadam's
theories of adoption amongst the royal women (see above pp.332-336]
are, I believe, grounded in too many suppositions and too little
evidence, to be accepted.
The vt flaw.
Abar
wt naw, ant nsw, hn'vt t3wy
Well-attested on monuments of Taharqo and specifically stated to be
his mother, Abar is not entitled bt nay, although she was presumably
wife of Piye.
Qalhata
.wt naw, ant nay, hnwt n T3-Sty
Depicted on the 'Dream Stela' of Tanwetamani, but without the title
wt nay (see discussion in Appendix 6 sub Qaihata). The decoration
of the burial chamber of Ku.5, the shabtis, (? and a jar fragment
from Ku.4) all call her .vt nay.
. .salka
vt naw
Known only from the Pylon of B 700, hence assumed to be mother of
Atlanersa.
-349-
Nasalsa
wt nsa, ant naw, hnwt n I3
Inscriptionally attested as mother of Anlamani and of Aspelta.
Amanitakaye
wt flaw, ant naw
Assumed by Dunham Macadam to have been daughter of Aspelta, sister
wife of Aramateiqo and mother of Nalonaqen, she is not, however,
called 3t naw or ht maw on surviving monuments, nor do her
monuments associate her with a specific ruler.
Saka'aye
mat nay
The title is known only from the shabtis from Nu.31 [49]. Dunham and
Macadam [50] stated "Mother of (presumably)" Malowiebamani.
name unknown
ant nay, hnvt n Imt, mat flaw
The mother of Irike-Ainanote [51] in a parallel to the Taharqo texts,
comes to see her son crowned. The beginning of line 82 is broken, so
it is uncertain whether any other titles preceded ant nsa, although
it seems unlikely. She was presumably related to King Talakhamani,
whose death is recorded in line 4, and to Malowiebamani of line 12.
Atasamalol
mat flaw, ant flaw, hnvt n L3
Depicted on the stela of her son, Harsiyotef. A fragmentary
cartouche [52] on an altar from Nu. 61, suggested this may have been
her burial place.
Pelkha
mat flaw, ant naw, Imat n 13a
Known only from the lunette of the stela of Nastasen.
Maletarata
mat flaw, ant naw, hnwt K3
-3 50-
The evidence here is uncertain, a full re-examination of all of the
material is necessary.
Dunham and Macadam thought 'Maletaral I' was mother of Senkamanisken;
'Maletaral II' they dated considerably later, c temp Amani-natake-
lebte; Monnet suggested Malatarata to be one of the sisters of
Anlainani. If indeed there was only one of the name, a later date is
more likely. Dunham attributed Nu 25 to this individual, and noted
that although there was a large number of shabtis belonging to at
least 8 others, they were all earlier and most innnediately so, of
"generations 7-12", and also topographically close. The foundation-
deposits of the tomb were of the otherwise unknown Piye-Ariten.
About 86 shabtis were in situ around the walls of the burial chamber.
Of these, about one quarter were of Madiqen. Dunham suggested that
the neighbouring tombs had been robbed to supplement those made
especially for this burial.
1. The preserved titles are wt new, ent new and often bn'wt n 13e
(earlier queens can be hnwt t3wy or bnwt n T3-Sty).
-35 1-
The Assyrian evidence can also be viewed in the light of this.
Tanwetamani is called, in three instances, the son of the sister of
Taharqo. What was the Assyrian source? Are we to assume some form
of accession decree which was sent to neighbouring rulers which
actually stated this relationship?
The title ent new also attested for these kings' mothers is a
common Kushite title. Indeed, there is a much greater emphasis
placed upon the role of ant new in Kush than there had been in Egypt.
Troy [56] observes that it is not common until the 18th Dynasty, and
then it is often an additional designation of royal wives. There is
no evidence for the use of the title as it appears to have been used
in lush. The Anlamani stela [57] states that the king's mother
Nasalsa was "amongst the royal sisters", paralleling those texts
which describe the new or prospective king as among the royal
brethren [58].
352-
Originally the scene depicted two standing female figures facing
right in front of an offering table. Their names are now,
unfortunately, lost, but might be supposed to be Shepenwepet II and
possibly Amenirdis II. A row of seated figures is facing, on the
same base-line, but only half the height of the register, allowing
space for a further row above. The first figure is Amenirdis I, her
cartouches surviving. This figure is partly obscured by the wall of
the Nitokert chapel.
The band of text beneath the cornice records that the chapel was
built by Shepenwepet II and includes the cartomches of Piye, which
are undamaged.
-35 3-
with the evidence for the order of kings along with some genealogical
material. Understandably, scholars have tried to rationalise the
material, and have generally assumed that the order of rulers
suggests a legitimate succession, and hence have tried to find a
theory which fits the evidence.
1. Patrilineal succession.
Patrilineal succession may be affected by a number of criteria: e.g.
-3 54-
the rank of a prince's mother may invest him with particular
precedence.
In New Kingdom Egypt the eldest surviving son ascended, and the
children of elder, but deceased, sons were passed over (Egypt:
Ramesses II > Nerneptah, 13th son). Attempts by a ruler to control
the succession may involve co-regency (Egypt, notably the 12th
Dynasty) or the appointing of a Crown Prince (Egypt, notably reign of
Ramesses II; Neo-Assyrian empire), but this did not prevent palace
revolution at the point of the king's death.
-35 5-
b. father to son, usually eldest: Bugabula [661; Busambiro [671;
Bushubi 168]; Rwanda [69]; Bulamogi (70].
-3 56-
alive to claim the kingship. After the mourning ceremonies a
substitute king was chosen in a mock battle. The accession war
might persist for months, with potential claimants being murdered
or fleeing the country. The successful new king would enter the
royal kraal with his mother and his sister, and kill the
substitute king, after which he was proclaimed. Ritual
purification of the country followed.
2. Brother succession
-3 57-
were potential chiefs were eligible for succession, but they may well
have had to contend with the sons of each of their sisters. This
resulted in horizontal and vertical conflict in generations. The
colonial administration suggested limiting the horizontal element by
considering the claims of only the two eldest daughters of any given
royal woman. As Roberts pointed out "Even if there were agreement on
what constituted genealogical seniority, it would still have to
contend with factors such as personal ability and (in the old days)
force of arms, Richards [961 discussed the beliefs which dictated
the matrilineal system amongst the Bemba. She pointed out that the
father's status did not affect that of the child: 80 a princess could
produce an heir by a slave father without lowering the child's
prestige. The close relationship between brother and sister is based
on the fact the they were born from one womb; this is equally strong
in the case of the royal family when the children are from two
different fathers.
4. Dual-monarchies.
-3 58-
collateral representing the senior male heir. In these instances the
state appointed the king. [991.
5. Election.
The evidence for the succession during the 25th Dynasty is discussed
above (Chapter 11). The succession in the period following the 25th
Dynasty is without firm evidence. The ordering of kings has been
reconstructed on the evidence of texts at Barkal (B 700), the stelae
of Aspelta, stelae from Xawa and from the evidence from royal
cemeteries. The reign lengths are unknown.
Atlanersa - Senkainanisken
The inscriptions of Senkainanisken were added to the altar of
Atlanersa from B 703 [101], Reisner also noted that the decoration
of B 703 was in the name of Atlanersa, with the names of
Senkamanisken on columns in 702, and on the pylon [102]. The
evidence thus indicates that Senkamanisken succeeded Atlanersa, it is
assumed directly.
-359-
The parentage of both Atlanersa and Senkamanisken remains unknown,
although it is generally assumed that Atlanersa was a son of Taharqo.
The description of Amenirdis II as ant maw in the Aspelta stela
genealogy, lends weight to this possibility.
Anlamani - Aspelta
The stelae of Anlamani and Aspelta show them to have been brothers.
It is also clear from the stelae that Analamani preceded Aspelta.
The name of Aspelta's father is, unfortunately, erased on his year I
stela. As noted above [1031, the space is too small for the name of
Senkainanisken, unless the throne name had been used, which would be
untypical.
-360-
Equally, the sister-son relationship of Tanwetamani to Taharqo,
emphasised by the Assyrian texts, might indicate a form of matriliny,
but the evidence is far too scanty to make any general coimnents. I
have argued against many of the matrilineal theories proposed by
Macadam, because I believe them to be founded on insufficient
evidence. Women were undoubtedly important in the Kushite royal
family, and, it seems, in a different way to the role of Egyptian
royal women. However, even if a form of matriliny did prevail, I
feel that - with the type of evidence available - we cannot hope to
define or penetrate it.
-361-
The following tables are to show those relationships of kings which
are fairly certain.
1 Alara
I I
Kasaqa - ALARA sister - X
I
Tabiry - Piye
I
Abar
I
(King)J
Taharqo
Abar as ent newt could be sister of Piye. She is never called a3t
newt, which calls into question the suggestion of Dunham and Macadam
that she was a daughter of Kashta.
2 Kaehta
Ki1ng
I I
Ir-pa-ankh-ken-ken-ef Amenirdis I Shabaqo
I 1
Pekareslo - Piye
Pebatma is the only known wife of Kashta, so it has been assumed that
she was the mother of all of his children.
-362-
3 Piye
I I
5ister Alara - Kasaqa -. - - 1a1hJ Pebatma
I-
Abtj Tabiry - Ihensa - P)Y Ir Pekareslo -
I I I I-i
Taharqo Xhaliut )tutirdis Arty Hat Qaihata Shabaqo Shepenvepet II
ljdjarenes Tanvetamani
4 Shabaqo
I I I
!menirdis SHABAQO - Mesbat Tabektenamun Qaihata Taharqo
I I 1 I
I
ling - Istemkheb Haremakhet Ainenirdis C Shebitqo Tanwetamani
EPA a. V Monthuhotep
Harkhebi
EPA
-363-
S Shebitqo
Kashta
Piye
Shabaqo
SHEBITQO - Arty
6 Taharqo
Alara sister
Abar - Piye
I 1
Shepenwepet II TAR1QO - Tekahatamani Qaihata j Shabaqo
7 Tan'vetaani
Piye
I
Shabaqo Qaihata Taharqo
TANWETAIIANI - Arty
-3 64-
Appendix 6
-365-
1. Abar
Abar's title ant nag- suggested to Dunham and Macadam (1949) that
she was a sister of both Shabaqo and Piye, and hence a daughter of
Kashta [40]. Abar was the daughter of a sister of Alara [3], who was
"born together with him in one womb" (Kawa VI, 11.22-23: Macadam
1949: 36; cf.Kawa IV, 11.16-18: Macadam 1949: 16, 121). Macadam
(1949: 21 n.42) thought that this meant that Alara and two sisters
were triplets: it certainly indicates that they shared the same
father and mother. Taharqo seems to stake at least some of his claim
to the kingship on his relationship to Alara through Abar. Macadam
(1949: 127) proposed that she was the 'adopted' daughter of Kasaqa
[26] (so Leclant LA VI, 166), arguing on the basis of his female-
adoption theories. Macadam assumed, probably unnecessarily, that
Taharqo's reference to the "mothers of my mother" in lava IV 1.16
implied that Abar's mother had two mothers, one at least being an
adopted mother. One of these, he proposed to be Kasaqa. The phrase
could equally imply a female line of descent.
2. Akhe(qa?)
-366-
Dunham Macadam suggested she was a daughter of Aspelta [20],
perhaps by Henuttakhebit (321, and sister-wife of Aramatelqo [161.
3. Akhraaan
1_t nsw
4. AKHRATA
5. ATAA
The yr-Chieftain i3 r (lava IV, 17; lava VI, 22); nsvt (lava IX,54;
Nastasen)
His wife was lasaqa [39], their daughter Tabiry [86] married Piye
[711. His sister was the mother of Abar [1] a wife of Piye and
mother of Taharqo [88].
The texts relating to Alara are all posthumous, dating from the
reigns of Taharqo (lava IV and VI), Irike-Amanote (lava IX) and
Nas tasen.
-367-
The two inscriptions of Taharqo refer to Alara as brother of the
mother of Abar, and in both instances the word wr follows sn (in IV
an emendation see n.39 p.2O). This could be read as sn.e yr "her
elder brother", rather than "her brother, the wr-Chief", but Macadam
(1949: 40 nn.76-77, his emphasis; 122) argued that this was in
"neither case to be translated 'her elder brother' since this same
brother states in V 23 that Abar's 'mother' was his twin sister".
Macadam (1949: 122) stresses that the phrase bat .a(t) hnC.i a ht vCt
"born together with me in one womb", must indicate that Alara and his
sister were twins, therefore, the sign must be read as irr-
Chieftain. An alternative interpretation would see Alara and his
sister as children of the same mother, by different fathers.
6. ANANIASTABARQO
7. AMANIBAIHI (?)
Granite stela from Building Nun 100: Boston lilA 21.3236: Dunham
1955: 271, 269 fig.213, pl.LXX,C.
Granite offering table from Buiding Nun 100, possibly of the same
although the name not enclosed in a cartouche: Dunham 1955: 272 no.6,
269 fig.213, pl.LXXV, B.
8. A-ni.a1o1
-368-
Titles lost, but name written in cartouche.
Statue from Barkal 500: Thartoum SNM 1843: Dunham 1970: 21, no.9,
pl.XVII-XVIII. The head is missing. It is assumed (probably
rightly) to form a pair with a statue of Senkamanisken.
Reisner suggested she was buried in Nun 22, but Dunham Macadam
'unidentified'.
9 AMANI-RATAII-LKBTE
10. A*nitakaye
-3 69-
the foundation deposit makes it very likely that she was that king's
mother. She is not referred to as hmt fl5V.
11. Aenirdie A
Omitted by Dunham Macadam 1949. For titles Troy 1986 177 (GW.4).
-370-
associated with year 19 and the God's Wife Shepenwepet. Kitchen
(1973: 177-178) has strenuously argued must be of Amenirdis I and
Piye, and not of Shabaqo. The possibility that the Wadi Gasus
inscription should be attributed to year 12 of Shabaqo, with year 19
of Osorkon III or Nimlot of Hermopolis is discussed in Appendix 6
Since there are no monuments or documents which attest Amenirdis I
with Piye it might be wiser to leave the Wadi Gasus inscription
unascribed.
12. A.enirdis B
13. Menirdis C
nbt pr rt_pCt wrt i3t wrt hat nbt i.3t bnrt rwt i3hyt hr Hwt-Hr
nbt htpt a3t maw
-371-
Adoratrix Amenirdis II (8L. Leclant (LA VI, 182 n.234) points out
that for her to be the same as the Divine Adoratrix the marriage must
have been later than 656 BC. The identification has been accepted by
later writers (Vittmann 1978: 145) but is far from certain. The
Aspelta accession stela almost certainly carries a reference to
Amenirdis II with the titles of her Theban office, and as mother
(actual or adoptive) of Queen Nasalsa [43]. There is no documentary
evidence to prove that Amenirdis C was a daughter of Taharqo (63];
she could equally have been daughter of Shabaqo or of Shebitqo [58].
It is far from likely that any princess who had been Divine Adoratrix
would have been married to an official, whatever his rank: if she was
married at all it must have been to a king.
14. M4ALMA'AYK
Nun 18: Dunham 1955 150-153. Foundation deposits with cartouche and
plaque: 17-4-944, 945: Dunham 1955: 153, fig 115. Shabtis: 17-3-664:
Dunham 1955: 153, fig 202. Silver bowl intruded in Nun 10: 17-1-
280: Dunham 1955: 155, pl.XC A,B,C.
15. ANLANARI
-372-
Son of queen Nasalsa [60], who is depicted on the Kawa stela VIII.
Kawa VIII records the visits made by the king to various sanctuaries,
the installation of prophets and campaigns, probably part of his
coronation progress. Line 24 records that Anlamani dedicated four of
his sisters to be sistrum-players at Napata, Gematen, Pnubs and
Sanam.
16. ARAMATKLQO
17. Artaha
hmt nsv
Nun. 58: Dunham 1955: 119-120. The only inscribed objects were the
shabtis, of which, it was estimated, there were originally at least
180. There are no recorded intrusive objects.
Shabtis: Dunham 1955: 261, fig.205.
18. Arty
-373-
others (Leclant LA V 519 n.46) 'the royal daughter of Piye, Arty',
the name Piye is written inside a cartouche, that of Arty not.
This formula is quite usual.
Lefebvre (1925: 33) thought that this queen Arty was identical
with Piye-Arty [73], and that s he had married Shebitqo and
Tanwetamani successively. This was followed by Dunham Macadam.
Reisner suggested that she was buried in Kurru 6.
19. Asata
20. ASPKLTA
-3 74-
Falence plaques, Kawa Temple A: Oxford, Ashmolean Museum 1932.749,
Brussels MRC E.7010: Macadam 1949: 89.
21 Atakhebasken
22. Ataaamalo
Mother of Harsiyotef.
23 ATLANERSA
-375-
Fragment of statue base from Barkal: 16-2-470a: Dunham 1970: 88 fig
55.
Obelisk fragment from Old Dongola: Cairo CG 17.027: Kuentz 1932: 55-
57, pl.XV.
A colossal statue from Barkal, B 700 (Khartoum SNN 5209: Dunham 1970:
33, no.17) was attributed to Atlanersa by Reisner (1931: 82 no. 37),
but by Dunham (1947: 63-65) to 'Ergamenes'.
24. Atataka
Dunham Macadam 1949, no.22.
hat naw
Nun 55: Dunham 1955: 134-137.
Shabtis, some in situ, at least 158: Dunham 1955: 136, fig.206.
Heart scarab intruded in Nun 47: Dunham 1955: 174, fig.130.
25 BASKALERKN
Dunham Macadam 1949, no.23.
Nun 17: Dunham 1955: 218-220. Stela from chapel: Khartoum SNM 1859:
17-3-249, p.219, 220 fig.169.
26. Ratahalty.
naw
Nun 44 (Dunham 1955: 228-231) with grey granite stela (17-4-76:
p.230 fig. 177).
Harsiyotef stela: Cairo JE 48864; Grimal 1981b.
-376-
27. Ear
Son of Piye [71], father of Udjarenes [93] wife of the 4th Prophet of
Amun Nonthuemhat (55].
28. Rarpkhet
The eldest son of Shabaqo [81] by Mesbat [541. His wife's name is
unknown, but he was father of Harkhebi [29], High Priest of Amun.
29. Rarkhebi
h ntr tpy n In
-377-
Nitoqert Adoption stela: Caminos 1964: 75, 11.22-23.
Papyrus Brooklyn 47.218.3: Parker 1962: 5, 29, fig.2c p1.1.
Sarcophagus: Cairo JE 55193: Leclant LA V 513 n. 108.
30. KARSITOTEF
31. KenutirdiA
bRt flSw
32. Eenuttiibh.blt
-378-
Stela of Madiqen: Louvre C 257; Schafer 1895.
Nun 28 (Dunham 1955: 126-128) with foundation deposits carrying her
name.
Shabtis from Nun 25: Dunham 1955: 159 17-2-1882.
The last of the three royal woman depicted on the stela of Nadiqen
is the 3nt nay a3t flaw Henuttakhebit. She bears the additional title
'the Great Royal Daughter [s3t nay wrt]' of Madiqen. Macadam (1949:
126) cited the Nitoqert Adoption Stela for the usage of a3t wrt as
'adopted daughter' and proposed that Henuttakhebit was actually a
sister of Anlamani [15], Aspelta [20] and Nadiqen [44] "there having
been no other kings to whom she could at that time have been sister".
Thus, he concluded, Henuttakhebit must have been adopted by her elder
sister, Madiqen. Hennutakhebit was buried in Nun 28 (Dunham 1955:
126-128), confirmed by the foundation deposits carrying her name.
She was assumed (Dunham Macadam 1949: no. 30) to have been the wife
of Aspelta and the mother of Aratnatelqo [161 on the basis of a
fragment of electrum with the title 'King's Mother' (but no name)
from her burial (Dunham 1955: 128 fig.95 17-3-448). As her shabtis
carry only the title 'King's Wife' this fragment might actually
belong to an object of Queen Nasalsa [60]. There is nothing more to
support the theory that Henuttakhebit was a King's Mother. The
shabtis, all discovered in the later tomb, Nun 25 (Dunham 1955: 159
17-2-1882) carry only the title 'King's Wife'.
33. Iretiron
-3 79-
The relief on the pylon of B 700 gives a larger number of titles
bt nay a3t nay ant na y . The name is perfectly conventional
Egyptian, and quite common in the Late Period. The rarity of purely
Egyptian names amongst the Rushite royal family suggests the
possibility that she was the a3t and ant of an Egyptian king.
34. IRIE-AMANOTE
Nun 12:Dunham 1955: 211-215. Blocks from chapel: fig. 162 p1. LVI
D,E; shabti: 17-3-663 fig.203; offering table: 17-1-175, fig.164.
awa inscriptions Temple T (Morkot 1991: 322-323)
Insc.IX: Macadam 1949: 50-67; accession year.
Insc. X: Macadam 1949: 68-69.
Insc. XI: Macadam 1949: 70-71; year 19.
Insc. XII: Macadam 1949: 71-72; year higher than 25.
Dunham (1955: 214, fig.164) compares the titularies from Kawa and
Nun, the prenomen is the same, with variations in other names.
Dunham Macadam assumed him to have been father of Harsiyotef [301 and
Baskakeren [25]; presumably on the theory of brother-succession.
.r wr IL3wty
This man was a royal prince with military command. The stela
inscription says that he arrived in Egypt when he was aged twenty (as
Wenig notes, this was also the age Taharqo went to Egypt).
-380-
36. Iate.kheb
The coffin fragments give the titles "King's Chief Wife, King's
sister, King's daughter [of I (Shabaqo) 3at-3b- bi t [sic]". Thus
Isteinkheb was a daughter of Shabaqo and Chief Wife of another king.
Leahy suggested she may have been wife of Tanwetamani. Aston
[unpub.thesis] considered that she could have been sister of Shebitqo
and his Chief Wife. She may even have been married to one of the
late Libyan dynasts.
37. Kariben
an naw
I4eroe South 500 (Dunham 1963: 380) with black granite stela: Boston
MFA 23.869; 22-1-85: p.379 fig. 206 E.
38 KAWAMAI
-381-
39. laaqa
no titles recorded.
Macadam (1949: 119-130 particularly 128) proposed, and his ideas have
largely been accepted since, that Alara, Kasaqa, lashta and Pebatma
were all brothers and sisters.
40. KASHTA
41. Thalse
42. Khalint
-382-
Stela Barkal 500: Reisner 1934; Dunham 1970: 33 no. 21.
Son of Piye (71]
43. Ihena
Dunham Macadam 1949, no.37. Troy 1986 176 (25.4).
ht maw; sat maw; e3t maw; ht maw wrt; hnwt t3wy; rt_pCt; wrt hts;
wrt liawt; ubt ia3t; bnwt h.vt nbwt.
Kurru 4 (Dunham 1950: 30-37) with granite offering table; alabaster
offering table; alabaster vases; steatite ball (Boston 21.313:)
almost identical to the bead published by Steindorff (1907: 96) and
attributed to an otherwise unknown king.
Silver basin: Boston MFA 21.3091.
Karnak: Gitton 1967.
Bastet-Wadjet statuette: Louvre E 3915: Leclant 1962: 203-207 p1.68-
69)
Kohl tube: Leclant 1962: 207-08 p1.70.
The Louvre statuette has the titles of Usermaetre Piye, and Khensa
can therefore be assumed to be his wife. Uniquely for Kushite
queens, Khensa is called wrt hts (see Troy 1986: 81, 83-85, 116, 189
(B 3/6), a common queenly title in the Old and Middle Kingdoms, but
is attested only once - and then in an archaizing context (Troy 1986:
84) - between then and the 25th Dynasty. The title was used in the
25th Dynasty by Ainenirdis I, but is attested later only in the late-
26th Dynasty. Such archaism, and its use by Amenirdis suggests a
close contemporaneity with Khensa.
44. Madiqen
Dunham Macadam 1949, no.38.
-383-
nt nsv; hmt naw n p(3)
Tdrk [19921] has proposed that Madiqen was the wife of Anlamani
and mother of Henuttakhebit.
45. llalaqaye
ht maw
46. IIALOIAQKN
-384-
Faience plaques from Kawa: Oxford, Ashmolean Museum 1932.748:
Brussels MRC E.7010; Khartoum SNM 2744: Macadam 1949: 89-90, p1.35
(Kawa XLIII).
Gold necklace spacer from Meroe Building 294: see Wenig 1978: 185
no.101.
47. Plaletarata
48. Malotasen
ht
-385-
The title ht nsw C3 is very rare, being attested only for Tabiry
and Nefertiti (see Troy 1986: 193 C217 and variant C2/8 (only
Nefertiti)),
49 )iALOWT.KBANANI
50. Maaalaye
no titles recorded
51. eqo.a10
ht U5W
-386-
52. Meretamun
53. llernua
ht maw?
54. Mesbat
4it ntr
55. Monthnhat
56. 1onthuhotep
-387-
Stela: Cairo: Habachi 1977: 247.
Scarab: Pushkiu Museum: Habachi 1981.
57. MutIrdi
Stela: Louvre C 100: Petrie 1905, 293, fig.121; Kitchen 1973: 137; ef
Leclant LA IV, 1049 n.25.
58. Naparaya
rt pCt; wrt im3t; wrt hawt; b.t new; ent new; hnwt t3wy.
-388-
59. NASA1IIIIA
60. Naalsa
The stela of Anlainani (Kawa VIII, scene) twice depicts the 'King's
Mother' Nasalsa. Following the Taharqo stela and Egyptian ideology,
Nasalsa sees her son crowned as the goddess Isis saw her son Horus
(11.22-24). The name of the wt nw of the Aspelta 'Election' stela
is erased, but can be restored from the 'Dedication' stela, where
Aspelta is shown accompanied by the 'King's Mother' Nasalsa. This
stela states that Nasalsa was also mother of Madiqen herself. The
Khaliut stela (1.13; Reisner 1934: 43) confirms that Nasalsa was
mother of Aspelta. Nasalsa was thus mother of two kings, Anlamani
and Aspelta, and of Madiqen, and possibly also of Henuttakhebit. The
Aspelta 'Election' stela indicates that Aspelta succeeded a brother,
and was son of a king: hence husband was a king, who must
be Atlanersa or Senkamanisken [see discussion above Appendix 5].
61. IAST.AS
-3 89-
Shabtis.
Stela Berlin 2268: Trk 1986: 199-205.
62. Nefrnkekaehta
no title recorded
Kurru 52 (Dunham 1950: 81-85) where a large number ("not less than
286") of shabtis were discovered.
63. Nesanhuret.
64. Nesbastetrud
b.tnaw
-390-
Osiris statue from Samanud: Daressy 1894: 126 no.cxiii. ? z Cairo CG
38 238.
65. Nesiahutefnut
The texts of the scribe statue call him the son of the King's chief
wife, whose name was erased, presumably in the reign of Psamtik II
(Yoyotte 1951: 223 no.64), although the name of Taharqo was left
intact.
[.a.n hRt nsw wrt tpt n hm.f ub [..1 i.3t .rt hnwt t3wy nbt t3vy-
(Il/Il I]
Re may have been a full brother of Amenirdis II, if the God's Wife
was the king's eldest daughter.
66. Pebat.a
bRt n5w; nt n5w; a3t n3w; .vt ntr a dv3t ntr; ihyt a Imin-R naw ntrv
-39 1-
1990: 334-335.
Abydos stela: Oxford, Ashmolean Mus. E.3922: Randafl-Maclver and Mace
1902: 79, 84, 94, 100, pl.XXXI: Schafer 1906a: 50; Munro 1973: 84,
262, Taf.28 Abb.100; Wenig 1990: 335-336.
Stela fragment, Moscow Pushkin Museum, I.1.b.37 (4163): Hodf ash and
Berlev 1982: 164-166.
Mother of the Adorer of the God (later God's Wife of Amun) Amenirdis
I (- Amenirdis A (7]), and therefore a wife of Kashta [40]. Also
mother of Ir-pa-ankh-kenkenef [35] and Pekareslo [67]. Possibly
mother of Shabaqo [811.
The name on the Abydos stela (and hence the same on the Pushkin
fragment) is now recognized as that of Pebatma. Dunham and Macadam
assumed a second person was indicated. They believed the second
'Piebtetemery' to be the mother of Amenirdis II and wife of Taharqo
(- B, 81; v. Zeissl (1944: 73-74) thought that she was a wife of
Piye.
Dunham Macadam 1949, no.54 and 62. Troy 1986: 175-176 (25.3).
a3t flaw; ht flaw; hRt maw wrt; andm lb flr n- ddwt.a nbwt
Stela Berlin 4437: Erman 1892: 47-49; Schafer 1906a: 48-50; Wenig
1990: 336-337.
Stela Bologna 1939: Schafer l906a; Bresciani 19 : no.31, p.84-85
pls.44-45; Munro 1973: 86, 262, Taf.27, Abb.97; Graefe 1981: I, 72-
-39 2-
73; Wenig 1990: 340. -
Abydos door jamb: Daressy 1900, 142; Schafer 1906a: 49; Wenig 1990:
338-339.
Abydos fragment, Cairo JE 32023: Munro 1973: 83; Wenig 1990: 339.
Stela from Abydos, Cairo T.28/6/24/5: Munro 1973: 260, Taf.27,
Abb.99.
Barkal 502: PM VII 219 (32)-(33); Kendall 1992:.
Daughter of Kashta [401 and Pebatma [66], named as wife of Piye [71]
in the Abydos door jamb inscription.
68. Pelkha
69. Peltaeen
70. 'Pihartia'
htnaw
-39 3-
'Piankh-her' [741, not 'Pihartis'. Dunham (1955: 262, Fig.206)
reproduces Reisner's readings. Dunham tentatively accepted Reisner's
reading and tomb attribution, but a close examination of any
surviving shabtis is required before this can be confirmed.
71. m
Macadam (1949: 120) argued that Piye was the son of Kashta [401 which
has been followed by most writers (Dunham and Macadam 1949: 146
no.61; Xitchen 1973 etc.) although questioned by Priese (1981: 51).
72. PITE-ARITN
73. Piye-Arty
74. Piye-her
hmtnaw
-394-
Dunham and Macadam suggested 'Piankh-her' might be "a Napatanized
Egyptian name: P3_C4_ht, 'the king is pleased' or the like ", and
that she was a wife of Aramateiqo [16].
75. Piye-qe'ur-qa
76. Qaihata
-39 5-
Egypt' before the Theban Amun. Whilst this does not confirm, it does
suggest that Qaihata is appearing on the 'Dream Stela' as
Tanwetamani's mother, rather than wife (and mother of a later king).
Her burial at Kurru (Dunham 1950: 38-41) contained jar-stoppers with
the names of Tanwetamani, suggesting that she was buried in his
reign; the painted decoration (Dunham 1950: pis. IX, X) gives her
titles as wat maw, ant maw, and her shabtis (Dunham 1950: pl.XLVII.D)
vt maw.
wt flaw
78. Shakh
Dunham Macadam 1949, no.65.
Stela found built into wall of B 551: Khartoum SNM 1853: Dunham 1970:
34 no.23 pl.XXXIV.
Stela of Nastasen: Berlin 2268.
79. ....aalka
-39 6-
80. SENIANANISKEI
81. SHAUQO
Shabaqo was the brother of the God's Wife Amenirdis 1 [11] and
therefore a son of Kashta (40] (Leclant LA V, 504 n.3). An
inscription from Karnak describes .Amenirdis as 5nt flaw Neferkare
(Shabaqo] bt ntr Ainenirdis (Nanette Karnak pl.45d; Macadam 1949:
120).
cf (Leclant LA I 196-199).
82. SHEBITQO
Manethon states that Shebitqo was the son of Shabaqo (81] but Macadam
(1949: 124) argued that he was brother of Taharqo (88], and therefore
son of Piye [71]. Macadam's arguments have usually been accepted
(Kitchen 1973: 383; Leclant LA V, 514, but cf.516 n.2), but Pniese
(1981: 51 and n.l1) again raised a doubt. Priese cited the text
naming Shebitqo's wife, Arty [18], which calls her a daughter of
Piye, but not a king's sister. It would also be possible, as Macadam
-397-
was aware, to read the Kawa inscription V (Macadam 1949: 28 11.13-14)
as implying that Taharqo and Shebitqo were not brothers:
I came from Nubia in the company of the Royal Brethren [snw nswl,
whom His Majesty had summoned (?) that I might be there with him,
since he loved me more than all his brethren and all his children
(snv.f nbv r sw.f nbwl, and I was preferred to them by His
Majesty
Kawa IV 11.7-9, however, includes Taharqo amongst the royal brethren,
and Macadam used this passage to argue the relationship (Macadam
1949: 15 with nn.14-19):
Now His Majesty tie Taharqo] had been in Nubia as a goodly youth
a king's brother, pleasant of love, and he came north to
Thebes in the company of goodly youths whom His Majesty King
Shebitqo had sent to fetch from Nubia, in order that he might be
there with him, since he loved him more than all his brethren
Macadam (1949: 17 n.19) commented that if "we understand by r snw.f
nbv all Shebitku's other this emphasis] brethren, a sense which is
quite in accordance with Egyptian usage, then it is clear that
Taharqa was Shebitku's brother. That sense, however, might not have
been intended, but when it is remembered in addition that in 1.7
Taharqa is called a 'king's brother', and that he was travelling to
Egypt with the other 'king's brothers', the evidence is seen to be
fairly conclusive that they were all brothers of Shebitku."
83. Shepenwepet
-39 8-
1993, the texts had suffered since H6lscher's photograph was taken
and no traces of the name could be distinguished.
Statue Cairo 59780: Rlscher 1954 p1.20 B-C, from Nedinet Habu.
-399-
funerary equipment, including shabtis, are known (Hdlscher 1954:
p1.20, 21 D-E, C-H).
84. SIC&SPIQO
85 Tabekenaun
Known from the statue of Haremakhet (29] son of Shabaqo [811 (Cairo
JE 49157: Lefebvre 1925; Leclant 1965: 334 n.1; 117 [32 D,2]) which
gives her titles as 'Priestess of Hathor of Aphroditopolis, Priestess
of Hathor of Dendera, Priestess of Neith, i3t maw sat maw hat maw'.
Lefebvne understood the text as indicating that Tabekenamun was the
mother of Haremakhet (and therefore a wife of Shabaqo), but the
sarcophagus names his mother as Mesbat [40]. Dunham and Macadam
suggested that Tabakenamun was daughter of Piye 1711 and perhaps a
wife of Taharqo [88], in which they are followed by Leclant (LA VI,
166) and Troy.
86. Tabiry
-400-
C3 tpt n h.f; s3t new
hMt new C 3t, hmt new
Stela from Kurru 53: Khartoum SNN 1901: Dunham 1950: 87 19-3-1366,
p.90 fig.29f, pl.XXX.A.
Daughter of Alara [5] and Kasaqa [39] and wife of Piye [71].
Macadam (1949 123) said that the name 'Tabiry' "appears to mean
'the Blenmiye woman'".
87. Tagtal
88. TAIIA1QO
That Taharqo was a son of Piye [71] is fairly certain from his being
described as brother of Shepenwepet II [83] on the Nitoqert Adoption
Stela. Son of Aban [11 and great-nephew of Alara [51.
89. Takuehit
Yoyotte (1961: 160-161, and n.5) suggested that the name meant
"the Kushite", and that this princess was the daughter of the Libyan
dynast by a Kushite. Akunosh, Chief of the Ma, was ruler of Tjeb-
neter (Sebennytos), Per-hebyt (Iseopolis) and Sema-behdet (Diospolis
Inferior) (Yoyotte 1961: 159-161; Gomaa 1974: 69-71) [see under
Nesbastetrud [64] above], and is named in the Piye stela.
-40 1-
90. TAT A1IIAMANI
91 TANWETANANI
rt_pCt; bnrt rwt; wrt swt; nwt hvt nbwt; nbt im3t; snt nsw; ht
nay .rt.f; ht naw vrt tpt a hR.f; huwt ray hv; nbt t3wy.
Barkal temple 300: Lepsius V B1.5; Gauthier IV, 41, XLII; Leclant LA
VI, 182 n.225.
-402-
93. Udjarenee
94. Weterik
U5V
Meroe South 20 (Dunham 1963: 399) with sandstone offering table (20-
4-60: fig.221 H.).
Dunham Macadam 1949 read the name "Weterik (?)", but Dunham 1963
comments that the title is "followed by an illegible name".
-403-
NOTES
-404-
Shaw et al 1993, on Ethiopia.
16. Adams 1977: 330.
17. cf B.Lincoln, Priests, warriors and cattle: a study in the
ecology of religions. Berkeley and Los Angeles 1981.
18. The exhibition 'Africa in Antiquity' (Wenig 1978) totally
excluded New Kingdom objects and only one paper (Leclant 1978)
in the accompanying essays volume discussed Old, Middle and New
Kingdom Egyptian activities. The purpose there was to
emphasise the indigenous over the Egyptian, but similar
problems occur in other literature. Adams 1977 is totally
inadequate as a discussion of Viceregal Nubia - which is one of
the richest of Nubian phases in terms of archaeology and
'historical' records. Trigger 1976 is one of the few which
successfully balances the Egyptian and Kushite elements. I
would also observe that the Nubian Conferences have, so-far,
avoided the viceregal period.
19. Trigger et al is one of few general Egyptological studies which
adequately considers the importance of Nubia to Egypt.
20. Robins 1983 was rigorous in its analysis of one particular
piece of Received Knowledge, although the 'heiress-theory' is
still accepted in some literature.
21. Momigliano 1966: 110.
22. Shinnie 1971.
23. On whom see Barbara McNairn, The method and theory of V. Gordon
Childe, Edinburgh University Press 1980.
24. see Kohl 1987.
25. Although it peristed into the l960ies.
26. The writing of Cheikh Anta Diop is best-known throught the
translation of selected parts of Nations ngres et culture 1955
and Antriorit6 des civilisations ngres: mythe ou vrit
historigue? 1967 by Mercer Cook as The African origin of
civilization: myth or reality? Westport, Connecticut 1974.
27. Diop, writing in French, used the word 'ngre'. The 1974
UNESCO symposium on the subject (General history of Africa II.
Ancient civilizations of Africa: especially 74-75rfailed to
reach any consensus on the definition, and there is still no
agreement on the definition of 'black' in this context.
28. Arkell 1961: 174 ff.
29. Shinnie 1971: 451.
30. Okafor in Shaw et al (eds) 1993: 432-434 succinctly discusses
the vexed issue of iron technology; cf Blench in Davies (ed)
1991: 54-56 on cultivated plants and in Shaw et al (eds) 1993
on domesticated animals.
31. Adams' "corridor" was reduced to a "cul de sac" by John
Alexander, 'The Saharan divide in the Nile valley: the evidence
from Qasr Ibriin', African Archaeological Review 6, 73-90.
32. Adams cf conclusion below.
33. Kemp 1978; Frandsen 1979; Nonnet-Saleh 1980; Leclant 1980;
Morkot 1987; Smith 1991.
2 Do.inating Nubia.
-405-
(no.488) 82, 206.
3. Habachi 1972; Sve-S3derbergh 1956.
4. Janssen 1975a: 130.
5. There is a strong possibility that the Hyksos rulers were
supplying Western Asia with 'luxuries' acquired from Kush.
6. ern 1969; Stark 1977: 274-280; Baines 1986.
7. Baines 1986, 41 suggests the events could belong to the reign
of Seqenenre Ta'a II, although, as yet, there is no other
evidence that aggression against the Kushite kingdom began that
early. The possibility should, however, be remembered.
8. Stork 1977: 274-280.
9. Kemp 1978: 290 n 68.
10. St6rk 1977: 274-280.
11. Zibelius 1972: 118-120.
12. O'Connor 1987: 122-124.
13. Vandersleyen 1971: 198-199.
14. Gunn 1929 see also comments of Sive-Sderbergh 1949: 57-58; and
of Baines 1986: 44 on this difficult text.
15. Vandersleyen 1971: 49-74.
16. Vercoutter 1972a: 25-28.
17. Urk IV, 8-9.
18. Vandersleyen 1971: 75-81; Save-S6derbergh 1941: 143; Smith and
Smith 1976: 74.
19. Vandersleyen 1971: 56-61.
20. Vandersleyen 1971: 53-56.
21. Sal had itself been an important centre of the Kerma culture.
22. Bonnet 1987: 90-91, 109.
23. see Sve-S6derbergh 1941: 146-151.
24. Dated year 2, 2 Akhet, day 15.
25. see Vercoutter 1972a: 28.
26. see Urk IV, 8-9; Sve-Saderbergh 1941: 147; Cerny 1966.
27. see Urk IV, 138.16-139.1; Sve-S6derbergh 1941: 149-150.
Breasted (1908: 45) noted a 'brick stronghold' at the south end
of the island. The site has recently been re-examined see
Edwards and Ali Osman 1992: 28 (Gezira Dabaki). Goedicke 1974
discusses the reference in this text to the "inverted water"
usually understood to be the Euphrates, but intepreted by him
to be the 2nd Cataract.
28. Arkell 1950: 36-39; Vercoutter 1956: 67-70.
29. lJrk. IV 138f; Sve-Sderbergh 1941: 151.
30. Habachi 1957b; 99-104.
31. TT 71, PM 11h 140 (2); Urk IV 399, 2, 6.
32. Habachi 1957b: 104.
33. Redford 1967: 58-59.
34. Naville 1908: p1 165.
35. Redford 1967: 60.
36. Sive-Sderbergh 1941: 207 ff with Abb 16, handcopy and
translation after Breasted 1908.
37. Urk IV 1248-1249.
38. Mond and Myers 1940: 8 ff, p1 88; Urk IV 1243-1247.
39. S&ve-Sderbergh 1946: 6 nI, associates the Tumbos inscription
with the year 47 Gebel Barkal stela; Redford 1967: 61, n 30.
40. Redford 1967: 61-62.
41. Formerly read as year 15 after Breasted 1908: 105.
-406-
42. Reineke 1977; Hintze and Reineke 1989: 172 no 562, Taf 239.
43. Kemp 1978: 290 n 68.
44. The Punt expedition of Hatshepsut appears to have been the
first in 18th Dynasty, see Kitchen in LA IV: 1198-1201;
Liverani 1990: 240-246.
45. Years 33 and 38, Urk IV 702, 4-7; 720, 6-7.
46. Nanuelian 1987: 95-97.
47. Probably in the reign of Horemheb, Urk IV 2127/2128. Last
attested expedition in the reign of Ramesses III, pHarris I,
77,8-78,1; BAR IV 407.
48. Kitchen 1971; O'Connor 1987; and most recently Fattovich 1990;
Kitchen 1993.
49. Dixon 1969.
50. Liverani 1990: 242 n 10.
51. Liverani 1990: 241.
52. see notably the works of Fattovich 1989; 1990; 1991 and Sadr
1987; 1990.
53. N. Serpico personal communication.
54. O'Connor 1983: 257.
55. Arkell 1950; Vercoutter 1956: 68 ff (no.4).
56. Stela Boston MFA 23.733; Reisner and Reisner 1933a; Dunham
1970, 25 (2); text Urk IV, 1227-1243.
57. Imada and Elephantine stelae: Urk IV 1297-1298; Save-S6derbergh
1941: 155-156.
58. BAR II 799 see Nanuelian 1987: 94 and n.233; Sve-Sderbergh
1946: 6 n.1 cpnnects this inscription with the campaign of year
47 of Thutmose III, as did Gardiner 1947: 150*_151* and 176*.
On Ninmose see Manuelian 1987: 136-137, 164-166.
59. Shorter 1931; cf Edwards 1939a: 8-9, p1 9 a stela of a 1st
prophet of Inheret, who followed the king "from Naharin to
Karoy".
60. The so-called "marriage" scarab.
61. Caminos 1968: 59-76.
62. Nanuelian 1987: 92-97.
63. The text states "those who were carrying chariots, 50 men":
Caminos 1968: 67. All the 'tribute', even cattle, is cited in
man-loads, making interpretation difficult.
64. See below Chapter 5 and Appendix 1.
65. If correct, the implication must be that the Egyptians were
giving chariots, and presumably horses, as part of the gift-
exchange system; see further below Chapter 2 and 5.
66. Reisner 1920a: 32: 19 monuments of Usersatet are presently
known from Thebes, Silsila, Aswan, the 2nd Cataract forts, Sai
and Amara.
67. Semna Stela BNFA 25.632: Wente 1990: 27-28 (16).
68. Urk IV, 1545.14-1546.3; Save-Soderbergh 1941: 156.
69. O'Connor 1987: 127.
70. Sve-S6derbergh 1941; Dehler 1984.
71. Topozada 1988; see also comments of Kozloff, Bryan and Berman
1992: 63 n 22.
72. The scarab will be published by L. Trk in his forthcoming
report on the Garstang excavations at Neroe. My thanks to Dr.
Trk for his information on this object.
73. Zibelius 1972: 74-75.
-407-
74. Sve-S6derbergh 1941: 163; Zibelius 1972: 95-96; Smith 1976:
129; O'Connor 1983: 260.
75. O'Connor 1983: 259.
76. Philadelphia E.16022 A and B; see now Smith 1976: 125, p1.
Lm, 3,4.
77. Sandman 1938: 146; Gauthier 1910: 122-123.
78. Smith 1976: 129; Schulman 1982.
79. Smith 1976: 124-129 (no.1595).
80. Davies 1905a: pl.mvII-xxxvlll.
81. On the temple of Tutankhamun at Karuak see Eaton-Krauss 1988
and pp.5-6 for the Nubian war scene. Only a few of the Karnak
blocks have been published: Legrain 1929: 135 fig 87 shows a
Kushite crushed by the wheels of the king's chariot, whilst a
soldier stoops to sever his hand; Leclant 1954: p1 xiv fig 4
shows a group of captives led by the king to the presence of
Amun. The Nubian scene is being studied and published by M.
Gabolde, and the complementary Asiatic scene by W.R. Johnson.
My sincere thanks to both for their information, and to W.R.
Johnson for a copy of his reconstruction of the whole Nubian
scene, and photographs of the blocks.
82. Illustrated in Desroches-Noblecourt 1964: p1 XVIIa.
83. Martin 1989: 78-84 (scene 69] pls 78-95.
84. This was suggested to me by both W.R. Johnson and C.E. Loeben
independently.
85. Schulman 1964: 124; 1965: 61-66. Schulman confuses the
contemporary of Tutankhamun with the iry pdt of the reign of
Ramesses II.
86. O'Connor 1983; 1987.
87. Stela S.579: Vercoutter 1972b; IRI I 102-104.
88. Amara stela, now Brooklyn 39.424: Kitchen 1977; KRI I 102-104.
89. Habachi 1957a: 26-7 no.20 - KRI 1.302, 117.3. 11abachi 1957a:
27 no.21 - IRI 1.303, 117.4. Habachi 1957a: 27 no.22 - KRI
1.302, 117.1. Rabachi 1957a: 27 no.23 - KRI 1.302, 117.2.
90. Caminos 1968: 83-90 with full bibliography, p1 39-40. The
inscription, sawn into t& pieces now lies at New Kalabsha.
See also comment of Caininos p.86 sub commentary on lines 2-3
for attribution to this expedition.
91. Spalinger 1979a; 1980.
92. Ricke, Rughes, Wente 1967: pis 7, 9.
93. Spalinger 1979a.
94. on Amenemopet see Spalinger 1979a: 271-286.
95. see below pp 89-90, 124-126.
96. Kitchen 1977; O'Connor 1987: 131.
97. Caminos 1954: 441-442.
98. Spalinger 1980: 97.
99. see however below p.67 (with n 105) on this family, and note
the possibility that this document is not a "real" letter.
100. Kitchen 1977: 221; Heick 1975: 91; Wente 1985: 351 and comments
of O'Connor 1987: 131 on differing intepretations.
101. Yoyotte 1951a.
102. Singer 1988.
103. Singer 1988.
104. Kitchen 1977: 222-224; 1990: 19-20.
105. LD III: 200f; Petrie 1888: p1 11, (70); Rabachi 1957a: 33,
-408-
no.34.
106. Buhen 1731: Smith 1976: 143.
107. Smith 1976: 213.
108. Ricke, Hughes, Wente 1967: 23 p1.21
109. PM VII 57 (15); KRI IV, 33-37.
110. stela CEDAE Amada IV B8; jamb B2, B4 Ti T2.
Iii. LD Text V 188; XRI IV 33-37.
112. KRI IV 33-37; Kitchen 1977: 222-223.
113. Weinstein 1981, 22.
114. Chicago 1930: p1 9.
115. Kitchen 1977: 224; O'Connor 1987: 131.
116. Chicago 1930: pla. i18-iI9A.
117. Weinstein 1981.
118. Weinstein 1981.
119. Singer 1988.
-409-
Reisner 1933b) must indicate construction was well advanced.
22. No Napatan officials of New Kingdom date are so-far documented
and the scenes in the tomb of Ruy indicate that Soleb and Faras
were the major centres. T. Kendall informs me that there are
graffiti at Barkal, but these are unpublished, and no further
details are available.
23. Griffith 1922; and below Chapter 8.
24. LD Text V: 286.
25. See now Edwards and Ali Osman 1992: 28.
26. Fairman 1939: 143-144.
27. See below p 86, for an alternative interpretation of Kawa's
role.
28. O'Connor 1987.
29. Priese 1974.
30. O'Connor 1987: 111, n 57.
31. Kitchen 1977: 220-221.
32. O'Connor 1987: 112.
33. Kemp 1978: 290 n 68.
34. Powis 1984: 63-69, discusses the potential for power conflict
between aristocracies and the state (in a European context),
and the role of aristocracies as leaders of the community
against the power of the state, but only under certain
circumstances.
35. Price 1984: 89-91.
36. Sve-Saderbergh and Troy 1991: 190-204.
37. Urk IV 709.
38. Davies and Gardiner 1926.
39. See most recently Save-S6derbergh and Troy 1991: 207-209.
40. Fakhry 1935.
41. Simpson 1963: 2-18, 24-27; Gardiner and Davies 1926:
42. Ipy: Sve-Sderbergh 1963b: 173-174 fig 8; Sve-Sderbergh and
Troy 1991: 204.
43. Urk IV 139, 4-6.
44. see below pp 70-71.
45. Lorton 1973.
46. Lattimore 1962: 483.
-410-
The fundamental works of Habachi have discussed various
periods.
10. Wilson 1951: 171-172.
11. Such as Amenhotep Chief Steward of Memphis (is discussed in
Morkot 1990); Ockinga, al-Masri 1988: 13, whilst recognising
his elite background comment that Anhurmose's family background
was "not a particularly exalted one" and "there is some
justification for seeing him as a self-made man".
12. This is an old idea which still has currency: see Gardiner
1961: 223-224; Aidred 1957 argued against.
13. Martin 1989: 162.
14. There seems to be no complete study of this subject.
15. Some writers have interpreted the large number of titles as the
stages of the cursus; cf Reisner 1920a and the publications of
many Theban tombs.
16. Powis 1984: 2.
17. Powis 1984.
18. Janssen 1992: 314 comments on the view of some Egyptologists
that there was, in the New Kingdom, a conflict of interests
between a "progressive" army and "conservative" bureaucracy.
Many earlier scholars regarded the temples as a powerful
institution separate from the state.
19. eg Janssen 1975a: 181 on the relation between state and temple.
20. Hopkins 1978: 181.
21. O'Connor 1983: 192-193
22. O'Connor 1990b: 19.
23. In various versions see Lichtheiin 1976: 167-178; Caininos 1954:
50-56 (8), 83-85 (3), 91-99 (6-7) etc.
24. Baines and Eyre 1983, although their conclusions are
controverial; cf comments of Janssen 1992a.
25. Helck 1939; Kadry 1982.
26. eg Smith 1981: 340 fig.327 (Horemheb).
27. see Wilson 1951: 187-188.
28. Morenz 1969 and comments of Janssen 1975a: 183-185; Finlay
1985: chap. 2.
29. Powis 1984: 10, 64, 66 also notes the distinction made between
'plebeian' and 'noble' forms of execution.
30. Kheruef p1 24-63; Khaemhat TT 57, PM 1.2: 116-117 (15): Surer,
TT 48 PM 1.2: 88-89; Save-Soderbergh 1957.
31. Rekhniire, TT 100, PM 1.2: 209 (5).
32. eg Kenamun, TT 93 PM 1.1 190-194 (9).
33. eg Khaenihet TT 57 (LD 111:76) and Kheruef.
34. Davies 1941: p1 XXXIV Ramose (prostration). This scene seems
to be the earliest depiction of the Window of Appearances. At
Amarna the scale of the figures changes.
35. Luxor temple and TT 57 (Khaemhat), Smith 1981: 266 fig 260.
36. There are, of course, exceptions to change in decoration; or
continuation of reward scenes, eg Neferhotep.
37. The 'Harim conspiracy' papyrus [BAR IV: 208-2211 and the 'Stele
der Verbannten' [v.Beckerath 1968] perhaps give some
indications, but there are no third-party sources as for (eg)
Achaemenid Persia or Imperial Rome.
38. Leahy l984a discusses death by fire and the acts of the Crown
Prince Osorkon; O'Connor 1983: 238 the impalation of Libyans
-4 11-
described in the Amada inscription of Merneptah.
39. Willeins 1990.
40. Robins 1979.
41. The lengthy genealogies from this period (reconstructed by
Kitchen 1973; Bierbrier 1975 etc) might reflect Libyan
traditions, which would have been oral, see Leahy 1985.
42. Moller 1918.
43. The fragmentary genealogies preserved in the Karnak Priestly
Annals and other inscriptions in those temples (eg Jacquet-
Gordon 1979). An inscription on the roof of the Akh-Menu ELD
III 255; BAR IV: 374-375 752-7541 records a claim (the nature
of which is not entirely certain) by the wCb_priest Harsiese,
to the High Priest and Crown Prince Osorkon in year 11 of
Takeloth II "I am the Ck_Driest of Iit-wt. I am the son of the
great prophets of Amun through my mother (a3 a ntr
1n hr irt). This man was presumably a grandson of the High
Priest and King Harsiese, hence descended from the 21st
Dynasty.
44, Powis 1984: 15.
45. Gardiner 1961: 268-269.
46. Habachi 1959.
47. Caminos and James 1963: no 17.
48. Sve-Sderbergh 1957: 36.
49. Hopkins 1978: 181.
50. Surer (Sve-Sderbergh 1957); Kheruef; also Ainenhotep, Steward
of Memphis see Morkot 1990.
51. Most recently, Brack 1984.
52. Robins 1983.
64. For the Nubian kingdom of the Second Intermediate Period see
Sve-Sderbergh 1949; 1956; Vandersleyen 1971: 51-52. For the
issue of acculturation or Egyptianization in the Second
Intermediate Period see Sve-S?derbergh (ins) cited in Frandsen
1979: 183 n.13.
-412-
65. See Smith 1976: 80-85, for the history of Buhen in the Second
Intermediate Period; for the officials see Smith 1976: 73-76.
66. Save-Soderbergh 1956.
67. Discussed in O'Connor 1986; 1991.
68. For an example see Lorton 1974: 147-148 (AP no.2).
69. Simpson 1963: 32ff.
70. The first s3 new n La was Amenhotep, who served Thutmose IV.
Various reasons have been suggested for the change in the title
see eg Reisner 1920a: 32.
71. On this title see Pomorska 1988.
72. Israelit-Groll 1983.
73. Vallogia 1976.
74. ST Col 7W: Caminos 1974: I 29-30.
75. Buhen ST 32: Caminos 1974: I 72; cf Smith 1976: 201.
76. Seheil inscription: De Morgan 1894: 86 (29); LD III: 202b;
Habachi 1957a: 33 (35). Aswan-Shellal road inscription: De
Morgan 1894: 28 (6); LD III: 202c; Habachi 1957a: 34 (36).
77. Who dedicated ST 11 E (Caminos 1974: I 34) on behalf of his
father.
78. ST 11 S (Caminos 1974: I 34-35) and probably the ex voto ST 16
N (Caminos 1974: I 46-47) dated to this reign, but without
year. The titles indicate before Hon's elevation to the rank
of Viceroy.
-413-
"Chiefs of the city". These three are the 1st Royal Herald,
the Overseer of the Treasury and the 2nd Royal Herald.
96. Silsila Shrine 11: Caminos and James 1963: 30-34 p1 25; statue
from Deir el-Medina: Urk IV 1487-1489 (462).
97. Caminos and James 1963: 30-34.
98. The relationships between the various individuals represented
in the Shrine is not clear. The statues depicted Wesersatet
and his mother, with the Overseer of the King's Apartments,
Senynufe, and his wife Hatshepsut and the Great Nurse and
Fosterer of the King, Hentowe. Reliefs depicted the Prophet of
Khnum, the High Priest of Harwer and Sobek, and the son of the
High Priest of Nekhbet. These three could be local
dignitaries, or relatives, or both.
99. Note, eg the s3b Heby, father of both the Vizier Ramose and of
Amenhotep Chief Steward of Memphis who was actually Mayor of
Memphis see Morkot 1990. On this family also see the comments
of Kozloff, Bryan, Berman 1992: 54-55, 65 n.l15.
100. On the stela from Buhen, BM 623: Uric IV 1486-1487 (460),
Usersatet is called iy-r pr )Ir-Th.
101. Huy 1 is given the title wpwty nsw in his tomb.
102. Stated in the autobiographical inscription.
103. Hon is attested in this capacity before his appointment as
Viceroy.
104. For Nehi, 27 nionuments are known; a son is named, but there is
no mention of his wife.
105. see Reisner 1920a: 41, 45-46; Gauthier 1936; KRI III, 74-76;
for their connection with the High Priests of Anhur see Bryan
1986.
106. Habachi 1967: 124, 134, 137 discussed this woman and speculated
that she was related to Ramesses II. She might be the same as
the sister of the Chief of the Madjoy, Aineneinone. The Naples
monument of that official (see preceding 11) named a sister who
was married to the Steward of Amun, the office held by Setan
before his appointment as Viceroy.
107. Habachi 1967.
108. The ci lab chapel was published by Derchain 1971, Taf.28-30.
109. The name at occurs at el lab, where a High Priest of Nekhbet
was buried in the reign of Ramesses III (on his family see
Bierbrier 1975: 11-12, 17-18). It also occurs at Thebes, in
one instance, a stela of the reign of Amenhotep III, with dual
dedications to Nekhbet and Amun.
110. TT 289 PM ; some of the funerary equipment see Habachi 1976:
113-114; the sarcophagus, now BM EA78, Bierbrier 1982: 20,
pis.42-43.
111. Davies and Gardiner 1926: 7; Macadam 1949: 4; Bell 1985a: 43 n
8.
112. The offering bowl and blocks from a chapel at Faras, Karkowaki
1981: 130-136 (74-79), 89-90 (8), were dedicated by Taemwadjsy.
A stela from Sebua was dedicated by Mutnofret: Rabachi 1960:
47-48, 49 Fig.3.
113. Shabtis from tombs SA 37 and S 57 at Aniba, Steindorff 1937:
-414-
78, 85, carry different titles to those of Huy's wife.
114. Davies and Gardiner 1926: pl.XV.
115. However, we know nothing of the family of Amenhotep III's
viceroy, despite a large number of surviving monuments.
116. PM VII: 89; KRI IV 166d.
117. eg Webekhsenu son of Hon.
118. eg Amenemopet son of Paser 1.
119. Seni, funerary cones, Davies and Macadam 1957: 342-343. Nehi,
sarcophagus, Berlin 17.895: Ag Insch II 597-601; pyramidion:
Schiaparelli 1887: 420-1; ahabtis. Ilerymose, TT 383: PM 1.2.
Huy 1, TT 40: Davies and Gardiner 1.926. Anhotep, TT 300: PM
1.2: 208; Habachi 1976: 114. Setau, TT 289: PM 1.2: 369.
120. Anhurnakht, TT 282: Habachi 1968; 1976. Pennesuttawy TT 156:
Habachi 1968; 1976.
121. Gauthier 1928; Habachi 1957c: 100.
123. aba 1974: 136-142 nos 101-115.
124. Three female relatives of the Viceroy were chantresses of
Wepwawet, recorded on stela BM 792: Bierbrier 1982: 20-21 (2).
125. Messuy, tomb SA 36 jamb faience plaque; note also shabti from
cemetery 152 at Wadi es-Sebua: Emery and Kirwan 1935: 103-104;
Sety, tomb SA 34, 23 shabtis.
-415-
The idnw
136. Burials of idnw are known from Aniba and Soleb. Door jainbs
with the name of the idn.v n Paser (temp Ramesses III) and of
the idnv Sebakhau were found at Amara: Fairman 1948: 9,
Pls.V.1, VI.4.
137. PM VII: 91 (d-e); Reisner 1920: (8f).
138. Schiff Giorgini 1971: 227 fig 435, 234 fig45l, 277 fig 537.
139. PM VII: 76-77; Steindorff 1937: 242-245.
-416-
5 Exploiting Nubia? the econo.y.
1. Janssen 1975a: 128; see also Janssen 1961: 96; 1979: 505.
2. Weber 1909.
3. Polanyi, Arensberg and Pearson 1957; Dalton 1968; 1971.
4. Arguing strongly against Polanyi, Silver 1985.
5. Humphreys 1978; Zaccagnini 1987; Liverani 1990.
6. The Graeco-Roman period is an entirely different issue with a
number of studies eg Johnson 1936; Praux 1939 and more recent
works.
7. For example Finlay 1985; Lipinski ed 1979.
8. Helck 1960 but see comments of Janssen 1975b: 5
9. Bleiberg 1981; 1984; 1988; see comments of Liverani 1990.
10. Miller-Wollerman 1983.
11. Boochs 1984a; see also comments of Liverani 1990: 260 n 31, on
the "irrelevant polemics" of the ensuing dialogue (Muller-
Wollerman 1984; Boochs 1984b).
12. As, for example, Katary 1989.
13. as in discussions of the journeys of Sabni, Harkhuf see
O'Connor 1986.
14. Sve-S5derbergh 1941; now most importantly Zibelius-Chen 1988.
15. Such at least is the impression given by, for example, Breasted
1924: 537, and the idea that Nubia slowly awakened, cf. Adams
quoted in the conclusion below.
16. Trigger 1965; 1976.
17. Kemp 1972a; 1972b; 1978.
18. Frandsen 1979.
19. Kendall 1982; 1992: Tork 1992a.
20. Adams 1981; also Endesfelder 1977.
21. Torok 1984.
22. Trigger 1970; T3rk 1978.
23. Shinnie 1978.
24. Walz 1978.
25. Janssen 1975a: 129-130.
26. Frandsen 1979: 171-172.
-4 17-
38. Burckhardt 1819: 11.
39. Trigger 1965: 152.
40. PASCAD; the work of the Mahas Survey has now increased our
knowledge of a further region, see Edwards and All Osman 1992.
41. Burckhardt 1819: 56.
42. Kemp 1972b: 667.
43. Kemp 1978: 21, 32.
44. Urk IV 137-141.
45. Burckhardt 1819: 46-47; and notably the narrative of the second
journey from Kom Ombo to Shendi 173, 175, 176, 191.
46. The Old Kingdom texts imply a more densely wooded area,
deforestation may have been caused by natural dessication
during the late Old Kingdom, and by human activity. For
example, the inscription of Antefoqer (aba 1974: 98-109 no 73)
refers to the cutting down of trees as punitive action by
invading Egyptian forces.
47. Kuper's work is known to me primarily through conference
papers, but see Kuper ed 1989.
48. Fattovich 1989; 1990; 1991; Sadr 1987; 1990.
-418-
69. Morkot 1988: 161.
70. The nature of the building and duration of the sites suggests
that there was not continuous expansion.
71. Liverani 1979; 1990: 135-143 (conquest as cosmic organisation.
72. Indicated by the stela fragments of Sety I, Vercoutter 1972bt
and funerary objects Gout-Minoult 1979.
73. Giorgini 1967-1968: 267.
74. Xarkowski 1981: 71, 115-140.
75. The inscription on the second Soleb lion, Edwards 1939a; 1939b.
76. Macadam 1955: 28-44, pis II-V, xxxvl-XL.
77. Smith 1976: 211.
78. Karkowski 1981: 115-117 (58-59) p1 XIII.
79. A few monuments of Viceregal officials were found at Kawa e.g.
Macadam 1949: 1-3 (Inscr I), 3-4 (Inscr II), along with some
re-used Middle kingdom sculpture.
80. A "Marriage scarab" was found below the pavement of Temple B,
Macadam 1949: 83 (Inscr XIX), and part of a base "believed to
be from a sphinx or lion", Macadam 1949: 82-83 (Inscr XVIII).
81. Macadam 1955: 12-14; Breasted 1908: 77-78 thought that Gem-Aten
was to be identified with Sesebi,
82. Dr Betsy Bryan pointed out to me that the granite rams have
been recut, and are possibly of 18th Dynasty date; see now
Xozloff, Bryan, Berman 1992: 221, 222 fig 31a.
83. Macadam 1949: 1-3, pta 1-2.
84. Adams 1977: 228.
85. In Morkot 1987, having no practical experience of this road, I
perhaps over-emphasised its potential. My thanks to David
Edwards for correcting this.
86. Bonnet 1980: 59; 1990: 234-236 (nos 337-343).
87. Reisner 1917: 223.
88. Adams 1964: 107-108; 1977.
89. Some of whom were rather more sceptical, see below Chaps 7-8.
90. Firth 1915: 21; 1927: 26.
91. Adams 1964: 108 citing Firth 1915: 21 suggests that "By the end
of the 18th Dynasty almost all productive activity in the
region had probably ceased".
92. Adams 1964, 106; 1977: 235-240 argues against acculturation as
a satisfactory explanation.
93. Louvre C 57; London BM EA 1189 Smith 1976: 211.
94. EES 1742 A: Smith 1976: 146-148; possibly also EES 1742 B,
Smith 1976: 148-149.
95. 31-12-169: Dunham 1967: p1 LXXXIV, B; Ruby 1964 54-56.
96. Knustad 1966: 182.
97. PM VII: 174; Griffith 1927.
98. see below pp 95-96.
99. Morkot 1988.
100. The newly founded Amara West was called Pr )l_lt3Ct_IC Fairman
1948: 9-10.
101. Firth 1927: 28; similarly Adams 1964: 108.
102. Spalinger 1980.
103. PM VII: 157-164; Fairman 1938; 1939; 1948
104. PM VII: 127.
105. The New Kingdom temple is largely unpublished.
106. Rabachi 1969b: 7 (before year 35); Spalinger 1980.
-419-
107. Spalinger 1980: 98.
108. Rabachi 1969a: 70-71.
109. Habachi 1969b; Spalinger (1980) would associate the Nubian
battle scene with the Irem campaign of the 2nd decade, also at
Amara (passageway of west gate).
110. Built during the viceroyalty of Setau, c years 45-50, see
Habachi 1967; 1976; 1981a; 1985.
111. Statue of Setau, Berlin 2283: Ag Inschr II: 78; and a second
fragment, LD Text V, 58.
112, Morkot 1990: 329-330 and further below.
113. Fairman 1939: 142 and n 2, on the evidence of the priestly
titles of Wentawat see p 65 n93 above.
114. Habachi 1969b: 16; Rein 1991.
115. Kemp 1972a; 1978.
116. pHarris 8, 13; Grandet 1983.
117. Lintel fragment from Kubban LD Text V: 60. Granite seated
figure, bottom part, on naos with cartouches of Ramesses III
(JEA 61 (1975): p1. X.31 discovered at Qasr Ibrim, but doubtless
originally from Aniba, as are a black granite pedestal frag
from a statue (JEA 63 (1967): 43 p1 VI; 40 fig El.
118. ST 12 ST 15: Caminos 1974: I 43.
119. Jamb frags D-J 22, 24-4-53 p1.85, 1; unpublished block of Hon
(SNN 2483) PM VII 145; facade of temple inscr. Grapow 1940: 25.
120. Amara: PM VII: 161 (28), 162 (two stelae). Soleb: votive
inscription Soleb I no 37.
121. The Epigraphic Survey 1964: Pis 563-565.
122. eg Breasted 1924; Wilson 1951; Gardiner 1961; Cerny 1965; also
discussing economic problems and the weakening of the kingship,
but without the notion of 'imperial decline' Trigger et al,
1983: 226-232.
123. O'Connor 1983: 226-229.
124. Ahituv 1978; Weinstein 1981.
125. Ramesses IV: base from Gerf Hussein PM VII, 36 unpub.
126. Weinstein 1981: 20, lists examples from Beth-Shan; Lachish;
Razor; Ashdod-Tell Mor; Megiddo.
127. Adams 1964: 106.
128. The New Kingdom material from Ibnim was discussed by Plumley
1979 who commented (p 128) that a jamb of Anienhotep II is "so
large that it is difficult to imagine that it might have been
transported from Aniba".
129. Rowley-Conwy 1988.
130. There is no inscriptional evidence so-far published which can
be dated later than the reign of Raniesses IX.
131. Macadam 1949: 84 (Inscr XXIII) p1 39, of Ramesses-nakht; 84-86
(Inscr XXIV-XXVII) of the bry pdt Nebmarenakht with cartouches
of Ramesses VI.
132. Dunham 1970: 29 (11).
133. Fairman 1939: 141.
-420-
137. Kemp 1972a; 1972b: 661, 667; 1978: 33f.
138. Frandsen 1979.
139. Finley 1985: 123-149, discusses the relationship of the city
and countryside in the Graeco-Roman world, and although there
are fundamental differences from pharaonic Egypt - such as the
status of the polis, citizenship, monetary economy etc - the
role of the cities as centres of consumption is emphasised.
140. It should be noted that dress is usually known only from tomb
paintings, and varies according to whether the Kushites
(especially the elite) are shown as "foreigners" (as in
'tribute' scenes, eg Huy) or members of the Egyptian elite (eg
the tomb of Djehutyhotep), on which, see comments of Sive-
Sderbergh and Troy 1991: 205-206.
141. S&ve-S6derbergh 1967-1968; Sve-S3derbergh and Troy 1991.
142. Notably the neo-Assyrian empire.
143. Wreszinski Atlas II: 182.
144. Spalinger 1980: 87.
145. Ward 1972.
146. Sauneron 1950 (Asiatics); Kitchen 1990: 21-23 (Libyans).
147. Yoyotte 1951.
148. Habachi 1960.
149. eg the large number of Asiatics employed the palace in the
'Harim Papyrus'.
150. Kemp 1978: 34; also Schulman 1982: 314-315.
151. KL 69:277; Edzard et al 1970: 50, 52, 55-60.
152. Pitard 1987: 71.
153. see also Appendix 1.
154. Janssen 1975a: 171-173.
155. Janssen 1975a: 172.
156. Anderson 1978: chap 1.
157. Finlay 1983; 1985: chap 3.
158. EA 49, Moran 1992: 120-121 (two Kushite palace attendants).
159. On the Meroitic slave trade see Endesfelder 1977: 159-160;
Adams 1981:5; Ahmeed 1992: 22-26. O'Fahey 1973 discusses the
capture of slaves, their export and use within society in early
modern (C17-C19 AD) Dar Fur.
160. Fischer 1961.
161. Fischer 1961: 77.
162. CC 257: model from the tomb of Mesehti Fischer 1961: 63, 65-66;
Bietak 1985.
163. Fischer 1961: 66-67, at Beni Hasan and Bersha.
164. eg at Luxor, Opet procession in the colonnade hall.
165. EA 70: Moran 1992: 139-140.
166. EA 127, Moran 1992: 207-208; BA 131, Moran 1992: 212-214 (100
Kushites); BA 133, Moran 1992: 215 (10 men from Meluhha and
Kushites).
167. EA 287, Moran 1992: 327-330.
-421-
172. Meeks, 1979: 623.
173. Gauthier 1936.
174. Ileick 1986; Janssen 1975a: 141.
175. Nakhtmin might have been a Kushite official working in Egypt.
176. Quibell 1908: pls XXXVIII-XXXIX (general views), XL (Sitamun
receiving gold collars), XLIII (trays of rings).
177. Smith 1976: 162-179, 180-189.
178. Frandsen 1979: 184 n.29.
179. Now being prepared by Dr.Patricia Spencer.
180. see Appendix 1.
181. Blackman 1937: p1 XIII, 149. The excavated remains included
jar-sealings and a broken jar containing incense [Sesebi Day
Book 21.12.19361.
182. Janssen 1975a: 161-164.
183. Janssen 1961: 98.
184. Janssen 1975a: 161.
185. Edgerton 1947: 159; Janssen 1961: 100.
186. Janssen 1961: 100.
187. Janssen 1961: 100-104; 1975a.
188. The 'Prudhoe lions' from Soleb temple are of red Aswan granite,
see now Kozloff, Bryan, Berman 1992: 220 and n.7.
189. Suggested by the large number of military inscriptions on the
road from Aswan to Shellal.
190. Jaritz 1981.
191. The ancient use of these desert roads is now confirmed by the
graffiti at Bir Murrat and Bir Ungat: Damiano-Appia 1992.
192. Habachi 1960: 47, 50, 52.
193. see Appendix 2.
194. Damiano-Appia 1992: 4-6.
Consumption.
-422-
211. liankey 1980.
212. Warren and Hankey 1989: 152.
213. Vercoutter 1955-1956: 8 "two sherds of Mycenean pottery, very
likely from a stirrup vase"; Vercoutter 1962: 114 n 17. The
tomb is apparently datable to reign of Amenhotep II by
inscribed pot.
214. Arkell 1950: 35, two sherds [Khartoum 51711.
215. V. Hankey (pers conma) from Martha Bell.
216. Tomb 17; Schiff Giorgini 1971: 199, fig 395.
217. Warren and ifankey 1989.
218. Firth 1927: 63, cemetery 110.23, p1 27.c.3.
219. Simpson 1963: 32, 31 fig.24, no 14, p1 l5.c.
220. Spindle jars Steindorff 1937: Taf 85 (43 a-b).
221. Generally see Janssen nd.
222. The Viceroy is unnamed, he is accompanied by the steward, Mery.
223. Caminos 1974 : I 26-27, see above p 64 n 87.
224. Gifts were presented to the officials on the occasion of
Amenhotep III's sed-festivals, and feasts provided by the king
for the officials, "from the royal breakfast" on the occasion.
The Amarna reward scenes and those in the tomb of Neferhotep
also indicate that food and drink was part of the gift.
225. 0DM 353 vs.2: Janssen 1975b: 489-490.
-423-
3. Bryan 1991; Kozloff, Bryan, Berman 1992; and Johnson 1990 have
done much to redress the balance.
4. Rabachi 1969b.
5 Bell 1985a.
6. Breasted 1924: 537-538; cf 2 contra the comments of Gardiner
1961: 340.
7. Kendall 1992, discussed further below.
8. Habachi 1969.
9. Kemp 1978.
10. Trigger 1976.
11. Posener 1960.
12. Price 1984: 11-12, 15-17 refs n 50. Similarly, Janssen 1992b:
313 commented on how "Erman's Die Religion der Agypter
shows how little affinity this great scholar had for the
phenomenon of religious belief".
13. Price 1984: 9-10.
14. The worship of Amenhotep I and Abmose Nefertari has recieved
considerable attention (ern 1927). Stelae invoking Ramesses
II are also well-known (Habachi 1969b). The Atnarna tombs
invoke Akhenaten and Nefertiti (Morkot 1986), and many other
rulers are found as intermediaries during their life-times.
15. Price 1984: 61.
-424-
Horns the Bull.
-42 5-
Wissenschaften der DDR.
62. Wildung 1973: 551-2.
63. Bell 1985a: 268-70 (with notes).
64. Goedicke 1978: 140.
65. Leclant 1978: 71.
66. Sve-Sderbergh 1941: 203-04.
67. Varille 1934: 16.
68. Schiff Giorgini 1961: 190, fig.6.
69. see Bell 1985b: n.185 (p.57).
70. Leclant 1978: 71.
71. Bryan personal connnunication; also in a lecture at the Sixth
International Conference for Egyptology, Turin 1991; briefly in
ICozloff, Bryan, Berman 1992: 109-110.
72. Luxor text in Bell 1985a: 290-91, n 216; a text at Abydos in
which Seshat enjoins Sety I - "you shall repeat your youth, you
shall flourish again like Ih-phirty when he is a child"; and an
address to Ptolemy IV at Edfu: "I grant that you may rise like
the sun, rejuvenate yourself like the moon and repeat life like
the flood of the Nile".
73. Louvre E 3408: Drioton 1933a.
74. Saleh 1983: 79, fig 27, p1 64a.
75. Schiff Giorgini 1961: 186, fig 3, and p1 xxi a.
76. Unpublished: known only from its inclusion in a lecture by Dr.
T.Kendall at the Seventh International Conference for Nubian
Studies, Geneva 1990.
77. Smith 1976: 163-4, type 7a-b.
78. Arkell 1950.
79. Edwards 1939a; 1939b.
-426-
The deified Ramesses II in Nubia.
-427-
124. KRI II: 749.15.
125. el-Alfi 1972: 178-179, fig.4 and pl.xxXv.3.
126. Also a scarab see el-Alfi 1972: 178, fig.3; see also Bell
1985a: 56 n 184.
127. Gauthier 1912: p1 LX.
128. CEDAE Gerf Hussein IV: 30 E 51 IMn n (K) - pr 1n; IV: 45 E 78
pl.XXXII Hathor.
129. Personal notes; cf PM VII: 107 (68) "Ainon-Re" (room V; CEDAE
salle R).
130. Also at Aksha, see Fuscaldo 1990, stela of Nakht, which shows
the barque of Amun-(of)-Usermaetre-setepenre, with human headed
aegides with solar disk and ram's horn.
131. Habachi 1960: 47 no 2, 46 fig 2.
132. Bell 1985a: 35.
133. C.E.Loeben is preparing a paper on this point.
134. Barsanti and Gauthier 1911: p1 I stela I; p1 II stela II; p1 IV
stela IX.
135. Barsanti and Gauthier 1911: 66 suggest Osiris with atef-crown.
136. cf the carrying chair used for the statues of Amenhotep I and
the aniconic Amun (Cerny 1927), and for the king at the Mm
festival, also used by Akhenaten (Davies 1905a; 1905b).
137. Weigall 1907: pllxiv, 7; PM VII: 90.
138. Gauthier 1936.
139. From personal notes as n 111 above. A slightly inaccurate
sketch of the head of the staff may be found in Edwards 1878:
322. For the texts see KRI II: 750:a,iv.
140. Amara stela AW.38.39. 208 + 265, EES Ne.0245, now in Denver.
The text refers to a h ntr a 1In-pr-R (without cartouche).
The scene shows two figures before ID_RC nb nswt t3'vy. The
stela will be published in the forthcoming monograph on the
Amara excavations. My thanks to Dr. Patricia Spencer for help
with the archive, and to the Committee of the Egypt Exploration
Society for permission to refer to the records.
141. KRI IV: 203.5.
142. Grandet 1983.
143. Listed in Weinstein 1981: 20, from Beth-Shan, Lachish, Hazor,
Ashdod-Tell Nor and Megiddo.
144. Steindorff 1937: II P1.102.
145. EES 484: Smith 1976: 97.
-428-
7. Firth 1927: 25-28; Adams 1964: 114-5; Dixon 1964: 131 taking
the extreme, and clearly untenable, view that there was no
settled population between Aswan and the 3rd Cataract for over
400 years; Trigger 1965: 112-4.
8. Firth 1927: 28.
9. Trigger 1965: 112.
10. Adams 1977: 241.
11. Trigger in Adams 1976: 105.
12. SAve-Sderbergh 1967-68: 237-242; S&ve-Sderbergh and Troy
1991.
13. For the date of the resettlement of Lower Nubia: see Adams
1964: 115-120; 1976: 137-144; 1977: 333-336; T6rk 1987: 159-
162.
14. O'Connor 1983: 268.
15. In OLZ 1978, a review of Adams 1976. My thanks to Mine.
Jacquet-Gordon for drawing this to my attention.
16. Tr6k 1989: 58 referring to the post-25th Dynasty.
17. Priese in Adams 1976: 87-88; also comments of Adams 1976: 133.
18. Heidorn 1991.
19. For a recent general survey of the evidence from Nubia from the
6th-4th centuries BC see Norkot 1991.
20. Adams 1964: 103-104.
21. Trigger 1965: 117; 1976: 138-140.
22. Adams 1964: 103-04 following Reisner.
23. O'Connor 1982: 268.
24. Goedicke 1972.
25. Trigger 1965: 113-114; 1976: 139 following Goedicke.
26. See also Kendall 1982: 22.
27. eg the temple of Amara East, recorded by 19th century AD
visitors and now totally destroyed (see Wenig in Endesfelder et
al 1977: 459-475).
28. Chapter 3.
29. cf Adams 1984: 245 "It took some time for the lesson of the
Pharaoh's to sink in".
30. Reisner 1919b.
31. Thabit 1959: 17; Arkell 1961: 115; Dixon 1964: 129.
32. Adams 1964: 114-5.
33. Priese 1973; Trigger 1976: 144.
34. Drioton and Vandier 1952: 538.
35. Arkell 1961: 112f.; Adams 1977: 242-3; Trk 1984: 5, with the
proviso that there are no supporting data; TBr6k 1987: 146-146
is even more sceptical; Kendall and Doll in Kendall 1982: 9,
23.
36. Leclant 1963; Trigger 1976: 140.
37. Kitchen 1973.
38. eg Tr&k 1987; 1989; Kendall 1982; 1992.
39. Adams 1964: 114-115.
40. Kendall 1992.
41. On heirloom theories generally see James etal 1991: 45-46, 80-
81, 251-253.
42. The circularity of the argument is discussed below.
43. In the literature on this period only Zibelius-Chen 1989: 341
makes any reference to the Karimala inscription.
-429-
8 The archaeology of Nubia after the New tJ.ngdo..
1. Adams 1976; 1977: chapter 12; T5rk 1987.
2. Dixon 1964: 131.
3. cf the comments of Kemp 1991: 240-241, 243.
4. Kendall 1989: 637.
5. Bradley 1992.
6. Firth 1927.
7. Adams 1977: 265,
8. Edwards and Au Osman 1992.
9. Williams 1990: 45 n 5; Reisner 1910: 56-59; see Williams 1990:
33.
10. Williams 1990.
The Archaeology.
-430-
XLII.20.
38. Appendix 2, notably from the fortresses.
-431-
79. Kendall 1992: 14.
80. Kendall 1992: 16-23.
81. Kendall 1992: fig 7.
82. Dunham 1950: 21, 72.
83. Kendall 1992: 23.
84. Kendall 1992: fig.4.
85. Kendall 1992: 27-29.
86. Kendall 1992: 29-32.
87. Kendall 1992: 29.
88. 19-3-554: Kendall 1992: 31-32 fig 16.
89. Kendall 1992: 36.
90. Boston MFA 21.11724: Kendall 1982: 22 no.1.
91. Kendall 1992; nd: 3.
92. Kendall 1992: 13.
93. 19-3-347; Dunham 1950: 14 fig Ib; cf. Kendall 1992: fig 6b.
94. Kendall 1992: 14 gives the excavation number as 19-3-595, which
in Dunham 1950: 19, 20 fig.4b is the pottery vessel (see below
p 160 and n 120).
95. 19-3-348: Dunham 1950: p.14 fig.Ib.
96. Tr6k 1992a: 5; Save-S6derbergh and Troy 1991.
97. Notably the winged scarabs with rosettes rather than sun-disk
(Kurru 51, 53, 54, 55; Dunham 1950: p1 XLIX.A, LI, LII.D,E,
LIII, LV.A). An identical motif was used on ivories (Nimrud),
metal bowls (Praeneste) and jewellery (Carthage). While these
might have a common origin in a Phoenician centre, the
resemblance to the Kurru amulets is more likely to be
coincidental, ie both are developments of Egyptian originals.
98. 19-3-704: Kendall 1992: 20 fig 13.
99. Culican 1970; James et al 1991: 252-253.
100. Kendall 1992: 10-16.
101. 19-3-345, 354; 19-4-183, 597: Kendall 1992: 13.
102. Kendall 1992: fig 8.
103. 19-3-794: Kendall 1992: 21.
104. Kendall 1992: 21.
105. Beidorn 1992: 6,9.
106. Kendall 1992: 26.
107. Kendall 1992: 26-27.
108. Kendall 1992: 28-29.
109. Kendall 1992: 10-16.
110. 19-3-366: Dunham 1950: 13, 14 fig lc.
111. Kendall 1992: 26.
112. Kendall 1992: 26-27.
113. Kendall 1992: 46.
114. Dunham 1950: 21 19-3-907, fig 22.5b-c; Kendall 1992: fig 10.
115. 19-3-899: possibly intrusive from Ku.13: Dunham 1950: 52 fig
18c cf 19-3-882; Kendall 1992: fig 11.
116. 19-3-834: Dunham 1950: fig 24d; 19-3-887 with 849, 850, 853,
882, 883, 884, 887, 888.
117. Kendall 1982: 22-23.
118. Kendall 1982: 23.
119. Kendall 1992: 10-16.
120. 19-3-924; 19-3-595-601; 19-3-408; Dunham 1950: 20 fig 4b;
Heidorn 1992: fig 1.
121. Sve-S3derbergh and Troy 1991: 200-205 pis 35-38; Kendall 1992:
-432-
15.
122. Sve-S6derbergh and Troy 1991: p1 36; cf Amiran 1969: 276.
123. Kendall 1992: 15.
124. Sve-Sderbergh and Troy 1991: p1 38, 3-4; Dunham 1950: 20 fig
4b; Heidorn 1992: fig 1.
125. Kendall 1992: 18-19.
126. Kendall 1992: 20.
127. Hejdorn 1992: 8 and a 23; further comment in Kendall nd: 4-5.
128. Torok 1992a: 8.
129. Heidorn in Kendall nd: 4-5.
130. D.Aston diss. Birmingham. This was unavailable for
consultation.
131. Trk 1992a: 6.
132. Beck in Kendall nd.
133. Kendall 1992: fig 15.
134. Kendall 1992: 31.
135. Ku 1200: Kendall 1992: 46-48, fig 17.
136. Ku 1300: Kendall 1992: 47-49, fig 17.
137. Trak 1987: 146.
138. Dixon 1964: 126.
139. Kendall 1982: 21-22.
140: T,rk 1992a: 6.
141. Kendall 1992: 50-51.
142. Ku Turn 2 #6: Dunham 1950: 16 fig 2d, Pls LII.A-B, LVII.B.6
Sanam.
-433-
Me roe
-434-
employs the same term, Yar, during a visit to Middle Egypt, and
Wente 1967: 19 n.j suggests the translation "hellhole".
18. Peet 1926: 257-258; 1928: 67-68; Wente 1966; Kitchen 1973: 247.
19. Wente 1966: 74, 86.
20. Aldred 1979.
21. see Aldred 1979: 94.
22. Wente 1966: 73 n.1 for literature.
23. so Lefebvre and Wilson see Wente 1966: 74.
24. so v. Beckerath see Wente 1966: 74.
25. pBM 10052: Peet 1930: 152; Kitchen 1973: 247.
26. Wente 1966: 84.
27. pMayer A, 6, 4-7:
28. pBM 10053: Peet 1930.
29. Not vhm msvt as Peet 1930 thought see Wente 1966: 85 n.52.
30. ern ' 1965: 27.
31. pMayer A 13 B.3.
32. pMayer A, 6, 3-6.
33. pBM 10383, p.2, 11.4-5: Peet 1930: 125.
34. pThrin 1895 + 2006: Gardiner 1941: 22-37; Gardiner 1948: 36;
Helck 1958: 341.
35. ern 1965: 31 discusses the problems of interpretation of the
letter (see next note).
36. pThrin 1896: Gardiner 1941: 31; Pleyte and Rossi 1869-76: 66-7;
akir 1970: p1.24-5 XXXI.
37. Cernj 1965: 31, see also n.53 below.
38. pBM 10053 recto: Peet 1930: 107, 108.
39. pBN 10052: Peet 1930: 147, 151.
40. Cern LRL 630-631; 1965: 28.
41. Aidred 1979: 95.
42. Aldred 1979: 96, 98.
43. Aldred 1979.
44. Kitchen 1973: 248-250.
45. Kitchen 1973: 254-255 cf index for discussions.
46. For his career see Kitchen 1973: 16-17.
47. Kitchen 1973: 17-21.
48. Wente 1966: 85. see eg Tomb Robbery Papyri, where the name is
determined with the sign for evil, see also 'erny 1965: 31 n.4.
49. Kitchen 1973: 17.
50. see Kitchen 1986: 535-6.
51. Niwinski 1988; Jansen-Winkeln 1992; the material is too complex
to discuss here. Jansen-Winkeln offers a valid alternative to
Wente's widely accepted chronology of the material.
52. pTurin 1896: Gardiner 1941: 31. The Steward and Butler Yenes,
is called envoy to the "southern country", in this case Upper
Egypt, indicating Ramesses XI was still resident in the delta.
Yenes is further attested in years I and 2 of whm .awt (pNayer
A; pBM 10052; pBM 10383: Peet 1930: 124, 1421, where he is one
of the magistrates in the tomb robbery trials (see also ern
1965: 31 n3). On the various stones and flowers see Zibelius-
Chen 1992.
53. Cerny 1965: 31 and n.4.
-435-
54. see pThrin 1903: Janasen 1975b: 456-457.
55. Wente 1967: 12.
56, Wente 1967: 24, 25 n.g.
57. eg pBM 10052 p.4 1.22; p.5 11.5, 27; p.7 1.10; p.8 1.18; p.9
1.2; Peet 1930: 147, 148, 150, 151, see comment p.23.
58. Wente 1967 and 1990. In addition to the main archive are
letters BM 10411 [Janssen 1991a: 11-141 (Tjaroy in Nubia or on
his way there) and 10440 [Janssen 1991a: 21-24] (Tjaroy invokes
Horus of Kubban).
59. Tomb SA 38: Steindorff 1937: 240, Taf.29c.
60. Spiegelberg 1921: 57 (no.714).
74. Macadam 1955: 21 with n3; Hintze 1973: 135 discussing these
kings refers to "neo-Ramesside" tendencies in art. Wenig 1973:
152 describes the names as "ramessidische".
75. Macadam 1949; 72-76.
76. Macadam 1949; 90 inscr.XLV : is this perhaps Kashta?
77. Rintze 1973;
78. A view implicit in Macadam (1949)'s discussion; Adams 1964:
115.
-436-
86. The Kushite contemporaries of Amasis are generally agreed to be
Aspelta, Aramateiqo, Malonaqen, Analma'aye and Mnani-nataki-
lebte.
87. See Appendix 3.
88. cf Burton 1972: 27, 180.
89. Priese 1977: 355; Torok 1986: 14-15.
90. Trk 1987: 152-3.
91. Wenig 1978: 16.
92. Thr6k 1986: 156-57.
93. Goedicke 1972: 89.
94. v.Beckerath 1984: 132, b.
95. It could be a writing of nb Ipt or perhaps for nb Ipt Svt.
96. Priese 1977: 357.
97. Kendall 1990: 122.
98. LD V,5.
99. Kendall 1990: 123.
100. Priese 1977: 345-6.
101. Reisner and Reisner 1933b: 73-78.
102. Priese 1977: 346-347.
Usermaetre-setepenre Ary-mery-Amun.
Karimala
-437-
123. Knigsbuch der Alten Agypter, ii, p1.71, no.939
124. Grapow 1940: 27-8.
125. Wb. Die Belegstellen iii:69, ref. 329, 15: this reference from
Caminos.
126. Dunham and Janssen 1960: 11.
127. LD Text V: 198; this reference from Caminos.
128. Khonsn reliefs eg p1.28.
129. so Leclant 1963: 74-81.
130. Priese 1970: 17.
131. Leclant 1963: 75 fig 1; Priese 1970; Vercoutter et al 1976: 91
fig 67 see Chap 11 ii. 23 below.
132. The variants are discussed below pp 246-248.
133. vBeckerath 1984: 270 (E3), also Shebitqo mery Amun (270 E2) and
mery Ptah (270 E3) and Taharqo mery Amun (271 E3).
134. Kitchen 1973: 378.
135. Kitchen 1973: 69-70 (Amenemnisu), 357 (Peftjauawybast); v.
Beckerath 1984: 268.
136. Stylistically, archaism may be found in Saite works which are
contemporaneous with the earliest lushite phase in Egypt; the
'Bocchoris vase' and stela of Tefnakhte.
-438-
24. Bruyre 1957: 16-18, pls.IV-V; Aston and Taylor 1990: 147-148.
25. Aston and Taylor 1990: 147-148.
26. Cairo SE 91300: Gauthier 1921: 223-224; Leahy 1990: 171-172;
1992: 147-148.
27. Leahy 1992: 148.
28. Leahy 1992: 147-148 no.2.
29. Leahy 1992: 148.
30. Bierbrier 1984: 82, 84; and comments of Leahy 1992: 148.
31. Nanette 1881: p1 73 no 73; Gauthier LdR III: 245.
32. The Menkheperre graffito is presumably PM VI: 255 "son of
Amenophis III (?)". I have had no opportunity to locate this
graffito on Bigga island.
33. Louvre A 90: Maspero 1884: 88-90; BAR IV: 989-995.
48. Year 14 of Asa - 897 BC: Mitchell 1982: 462, following the
dates established by Thiele.
49. Kitchen 1973: 309.
50. There is no evidence that the reign was this long, the highest
certain regnal year is 12, and although Kitchen (1973: 110-111)
accepts Jacquet-Gordon's reading of the tIC stela, he contrives
to keep the reign at 35 years.
51. Bersina 1984: 216.
52. Vantini 1975: 108.
53. Rofmann in Meroitica 7: 242.
54. Viach in Meroitica 7: 248.
55. Eph'al 1982: 78 n 234.
56. see Eph'al 1982: 78 n 234.
57. Kitchen 1973; an idea proposed by W.F. Albnight in 1924, see
Mitchell 1982: 463; Bright 1981: 235.
58. Schulman 1983.
-439-
Egypt and Assyria.
-440-
94. Such as the overlap between Shoshenq III and Takeloth II
proposed by Aston 1989, which would place it in the reign of
Osorkon II.
95. Postgate 1974: 120-121.
96. DaIley 1985 discussed below Chap 12.
97. cf Elat 1978 discussed below Chap 12.
98. Pitard 1987: 186.
99. Tablet fragments ND 4301 + 4305 obv 11.13-16: Wiseman 1956; ND
400: Wiseman 1951: 21-24.
100. Brinkman CAR 23ff; Grayson 71 ff.
101. Bright 1981: 274-275.
102. Tiglathpileser's claim to have appointed Hoshea might not be
accurate, but he certainly confirmed Hoshea's position.
103. II ICings 17: 4-6; Kitchen 1973: 372; Bright 1981: 275.
104. As regent for Xashta or Piankhy, a view vigorously defended by
Petrie 1918: 282-283.
105. Kitchen 1973: 372-375.
106. From reading So as "Sais", Goedicke 1963: 64-66,followed by
Bright 1981: 275; see comments of Kitchen 1973: 373 n.748;
Redford 1985; Ramadan Sayed VT 171967: 116-118 proposed the
same ruler but taking So as a transcription of the Horus-name
Si-ib; see comments of Kitchen 1973.
107. Tadmor 1958: 37; Bright 1981: 275.
108. This perhaps did not happen until Sargon's campaign of 720;
Tadmor 1958: 37; Bright 1981: 276.
109. Annals Luckenbill 1927: 3; Lie 1929: 7 11.23-25; Cylinder
inscription: Luckenbill 1927: 61. Discussed by Tadmor 1958:
33-38.
110. That the name is not Sib'e was shown by Borger 1960: 49-53;
hence he cannot be identified with So as earlier writers had
done (eg Petrie 1918: 284) who was the army commander (turtannu
KIJR musuri).
111. Khorsabad, Display Inscription: Luckenbill 1927: 26-27; Annals:
Lie 1929: 9 11.53-57; a short reference in Khorsabad pavement
inscription 4; Luckenbill 1927: 51; cylinder inscription:
Luckenbill 1927: 61.
112. VA 8424 ii 6-7: Tadmor 1958: 77-78; Eph'al 1982: 91-92,93, 107.
113. Eph'al 1982: 103-105.
114. Khorsabad Annals, lines 17-18; Nimrud Prism, Fragment D, col
iv, 46-48; Tadmor 1958: 34, 77-78; Eph'al 1982: 101-102 n 339.
For the term karn see Eph'al 1982: 101-102 and n 340.
115. Eph'al 1982: 102-103 and n 341, 104 n 346.
116. see Gardiner 1920: 99-116.
117. Eph'al 1982: 137.
118. Eph'al 1982: 91 see also Eph'al 1982: 68-71, 219-220.
119. Khorsabad Annals: Luckenbill 1927: 7-8, following the
activities of year 7; the Display Inscription: Luckenbill 1927:
where it follows the defeat of Re'e; Tadmor 1958: 78.
120. Nineveh Prism fragment 79-7-8, 14 cot i.1-8 cf VA 8424 cot ii
Weidner 1941; Tadmor 1958: 77.
121. Nimrud Letter 16 (ND 2765) Saggs 1955: 134-135; Cogan 1974:
118; Postgate 1974: 117-118.
122. Saggs 1955: 152-153; Tadmor 1958: 39; Donner 1957: 181, but see
Cogan 1974: 118.
-441-
123. Display Inscription, Ihorsabad: Luckenbill. 1927: 31-32, 40-41;
Nineveh, Prism A: Luckenbifl 1927: 105-106; Prism B:
Luckenbill 1927: 106, a very fragmentary and brief account;
Tadmor 1958.
124. Tadmor 1958: 84 and n 251.
125. Kitchen 1973; Redford 1985.
-442-
11 The rise of the kingdo. of Xnsh.
A dynasty divided?
Kashta
-443-
The chronology of the 25th Dynasty.
-444-
71. Kitchen 1973: 154.
72. Redford 1985: 13 table 1.
73. Leclant in LA V: 515 n.35 (citing Gomak 1974: 98 ii 27, who
gives no date).
74. Meeks 1979: 673 (25.5.00).
75. My thanks to Dr.C.Roehrig of the Metropolitan Museum of Art for
supplying a photograph of the stela and hand copy of the text.
76. Kitchen 1986 : 551.
77. Kitchen 1973: 170-171.
78. Murnane 1977: 189-190, 235-236.
79. Yurco 1980: 225.
80. Redford 1985.
81. Spalinger 1973.
82. NT 33: v.Beckerath 1966: 53; Kitchen 1986: 558-559, 584.
83. Turin 1467: Fabretti et at 1882, 126; Pleyte 1876.
84. Wiedemann 1884.
85. Petrie 1918: 287.
86. Murnane 1977: 190.
87. NT 30: v.Beckerath 1966: 52.
88. Ni' 31: v.Beckerath 1966: 52.
89. NT 32: v.Beckerath 1966: 53.
90. Yoyotte 1961: 126, 21.
91. So Yoyotte 1961: 134 n.2; found at Sefeta, see Adam 1958: 307,
without year-date.
92. Moscow, Pushkin Mus.I.1.a.5646: Hodjash and Berlev 1982: 165
no.108, p1 on p.163.
93. MMA 55.144.6: Yoyotte 1961: 172 n.4; Schulman 1966: 40 no.38.
94. Louvre E 3228: Malinine 1982-83.
95. Louvre E 3228e: Malinine 1953, 35-42; 1983: 14-17.
96. Couyat and Nontet 1912: 96, p1 XXXV.
97. see Appendix 4.
98. Louvre 3228 b: Malinine 1953: 3-14; 1983: 1-5.
99. Vercoutter 1960: 69-70.
100. BM EA 24.429: Leclant 1954: 15-27, p1 5.
101. Hall 1925: 277.
102. Leclant and Yoyotte 1952: 25 n 3.
103. Nurnane 1977: 188-189, 235. - - -
104. mere seems to e some contusion between the kny as cult-image,
shrine etc. Caminos 1954: 21 distinguishes knyt carrying chair
fro. knl(w) "palanquin" and shrine ef Gardiner 1947: 67. Dr
Alison Roberts suggested to me a possible connection with
funerary ceremonies. A kny of Psibkhanno I is attested (Helck
1961-70: I 121; Kitchen 1973: 265 n 128) and one of <Ramesses
111>-heqa-lunu (Kitchen 1973: 307 a 36 ,). Perhaps a portable
image similar to that of Amenhotep I (Cern 1927).
-445-
109. Parker 1966; Janssen 1968; Vleeming 1980; Kitchen 1973: 152 for
discussion. The unity of Piankhy and Piye/Py is now almost
universally accepted, see Janssen 1968; v.Beckerath 1969.
110. see Appendix 4.
111. Loukianoff 1926.
112. Priese 1970.
113. BM. EA 6640: Redford 1985: 10, fig 1, 12 fig 2.
114. Kitchen 1973: 152.
115. Kitchen 1973: 141-143.
116. Redford 1985: 9-11,
117. Kitchen 1973: 139-143.
118. Redford 1985: 11-12.
119. Redford 1985: 11-12.
120. Kitchen 1973: 140.
121. Priese 1970: 19-20, nfl 18-19.
122. Redford 1985: 13 table 1.
123. Kendall 1986: 9-12, fig 8.
124. Grimal 1981a: p1 V.
125. Kendall 1986: 11.
126. Kendall 1986: 12-16.
127. Kendall 1986: 16.
128. Piye's reign, placed by Kitchen at 747-716 is thus followed by
those of his brother, 716-702, and his two sons 702-690, 690-
664; the God's Wives Amenirdis I ca 740-700 and Shepenwepet It
710-650 sister and daughter, respectively.
129. Aston and Taylor 1990: 143, the children of Takeloth III "would
seem to have outlived him by two generations instead of one".
130. Kendall 1992.
-446-
that it was spoken in Upper Nubia.
148. Louvre C 100; Petrie 1918: 293 fig.121.
Piye's titulary
-447-
179. Nanette 1904: 228.
180. Redford 1985: 8.
181. Nanette 1904: 215; Maspero ed. 1882: 175.
182. Nalinine et at. 1968: plan A.
-448-
12. A stand from Aniba, discussed by Rommelaere 1991: 158-159 (18).
A horse burial was excavated at Soleb: Schiff Giorgini: 1971
260-265, and was calculated as 1.36m "taille moyenne".
13. As was suggested by Judith Forbis, see Rommelaere 1991: 28-29.
14. As was suggested by C.A. Pitrement see Rommelaere 1991: 32.
15. Manuelian 1987: 92-97.
16. Davies and Gardiner 1926: p1 XXIV.
17. Davies and Gardiner 1926: p1 XXXII.
18. As St5rk LA IV suggested.
19. Piotrovsky 1967: p1 xxviii-xxix. Many of the Nubian rock
drawings showing horses and chariots are very difficult to
date. Some bear a resemblance to the Saharan chariot drawings.
20. The Epigraphic Survey 1932: Pla 70, 72, 75 (carrying chariot
with lists of captured horses and cattle).
21. The lack of military scenes from this period accounts for the
apparent absence.
22. Ikeda 1982.
23. 2 Chronicles I: 16-17; Dalley 1985: 43; Xatzenstein 1973: 113-
114.
24. Ikeda 1982: 215 with n 2.
25. For the Musri debate see principally Tadmor 1961; with Ikeda
1982: 215-16 n.4-5; Eph'al 1982: 109 a 368.
26. Their chronology is discussed by Markoe 1985: 149-156.
27. The bowls were catalogued and discussed by Markoe 1985: 242-243
(Cy 1: two-horse chariots and cavalry, also camel); 254-255 (Cy
7: two-horse chariots); 256-259 (Cy 8: grazing horses); 263 (Cy
12: Kourion EMMA 74.51.45531 grazing horses and horses in marsh
with young); 264 (Cy 13: MMA 74.51.4555, chariots, grazing
horses; 265 (Cy 15: Tamassos [Nicosia J755] horse in central
medallion); 278-283 (E2: two-horse chariots with sunshades,
prancing horses); 284-287 (E3: Praeneste [Villa Giulia 61566],
cavalry horses, accompanying figures Egyptian-beardless with
short kilts, interior also strongly Egyptian, grazing horses);
289 (E4: Praeneste [Villa Giulia 61543] prancing horses); 290-
291 (E5: Praeneste [Villa Giulia 13245] chariots and cavalry,
again Egyptian); 292-293 (E6: Caere [Museo Etrusco Gregoriano,
Vatican 20368] cavalry and chariots.very similar to E5); 294-
295 (El: Caere [Museo Etrusco Gregoriano, Vatican 20367]
cavalry); 296-297 (E8: Caere [Museo Etrusco Gregoriano, Vatican
203661 cavalry one chariot; central medallion cov(?) suckling
in papyrus thicket); 298-301 (E9: Caere [Museo Etrusco
Gregoriano, Vatican 20365] exterior: chariots cavalry.
interior: chariots cavalry, banquet scene; central medallion
very similar to E8, but bullrushes rather than papyrus and
uncertain whether cow or ibex); 303 (ElO: four groups alternate
child on lotus and horse against papyrus thicket); 304-306
(Eli: [Boston MFA 27.170] chariots and cavalry); 307 (E12:
(Baltimore, Walters Art Gallery 57.705] chariots cavalry
prancing horses); 308-309 (E13: [Leiden B 1943/9.11 chariots
and cavalry, central medallion suckling ibex similar to E8).
cf the Egyptian relief chalices, Tait 1963.
28. Markoe 1985: 41-42.
29. So Markoe 1985: 55.
30. Berlin Xg Mus 14117.
-449-
31. Unpublished, my thanks to Dr. Georgina Herrmann for information
on this example.
32. Similar bowls have been recovered fom Egypt, but the stylistic
details suggest that the majority, if not all, of those
catalogued by Narkoe, were produced in Phoenician centres.
33. Spalinger 1976: 144-145 n 24.
34. Gardiner 1961: 338 see discussion by T&rak 1991: 195.
35. T&rk 1991: 196.
36. Kendall 1986: fig 8.
37. Trk 1991: 196.
38. Tbrk 1991: 196. Temple M 250 is discussed by Ali Hakem 1988:
191-212. For this scene see Wenig 1978: 60-61, fig 36; Au
Rakem 1988: 192 fig 24. A 'massacre' scene Ali Hakem fig 27.
39. Kendall 1986: fig.1O; cf Spalinger 1981: fig (after Wilkinson
MSS), fig 4 (after Bankes MSS).
40. Kendall 1986: 15; T6r6k 1991: 196.
41. Now Oxford, Ash. 1931.551: Macadam 1955: P1 Th, LXVu; Torok
1991: 196.
42. Trk 1991: 197.
43. Dailey 1985: 37.
44, Dunham 1950: 110-117; Kendall 1982: 32-33.
45. Kendall 1982: 32.
46. Dunham 1950: 113 p1 LXXI.E (19-4-78), 114 (19-4-107).
47. Kendall 1982: 32-33 cat 30.
48. Dunham 1950: 111,
49. Postgate 1974: 11 (6.4).
50. Postgate 1974: 13 (6.7); Lie 1929: 80 line 17; see comments of
Salonen 1955: 87.
51. Weidner 1941-44: 42 line 10 and 44 n 10. Dailey agrees with
Tadmor 1961: 143ff cf reservations of Waefler (Dailey 1985: 35
n 19) 171 see Dailey 1985: 43 n 73.
52. see Saggs 1955: 134-135; Donner 1957: 159-161; Postgate 1974:
117-118.
53. Cogan 1974: 118.
54. Postgate 1974: 117-118; Dailey 1985: 44 n 78.
55. Eph'al 1982: n 342.
56. For another view of the reasons for including the Egyptians see
Donner 1957: 178-184.
57. Pfeiffer 1935: 97-98 no 124.
58. Pfeiffer 1935: 265.
59. Parpola 1983: n p 33; Dailey 1985: 43.
60. DaIley 1985: 43.
61. Orchard 1967.
62. The Egyptianising ivories are generally thought to be of
Phoenician origin.
63. For the Barkal reliefs see Dunham 1970: P1 L, A-C; ef drawing
Kendall 1982: 32; 1986: fig 8.
64. Wilson 1972: 138 collation CTN 111 22
65. DaIley 1985: 44.
66. DaIley 1985: 47.
67. cf Ikeda 1982: 236 on Hamath and the middle Orontes valley.
68. A scene in the chapel of Beg 1 32 [Kendall 1982: 55 fig 691
apparently shows a horse being led to sacrifice. A number of
graffiti at Musawwarat es-Sufra depict horses, and horse-
-450-
mounted soldiers: U.Rintze 1979: 140 fig.13 Sb.513/57, 143 fig
25 Sb.522/2 fig 26 Sb.124/13.
69. Fragments of a yoke (?) from Beg N 5: Dunham 1957: 125 (21-12-
31), 124 fig 82 pls XXXI C, LVIII A; silver harness plaques
from Beg N 16 Dunham 1957: 139, 141 21-3-694a-k 138 fig 90 p1
XXXIII D, LXIII A, B LXIV A; similar harness fittings from Beg
N 18 Dunham 1957: 21-3-659-663, 669d, 672, 687 148 fig 96, p1
LXIV B; Kendall 1982: 48-49 fig 57.
70. T6rk 1988: p1 45, 46, 52, 54, 55, 57, 58.
71. Tr6k 1988: P1 I.
72. Steinborn 1982.
73. For descriptions of the breed see Rommelaere 1991: 44-45.
74. Adams 1977: 602.
75. Burckhardt 1819: 66.
-451-
109. A possibility also noted by Kitchen 1993: 606.
110. Frankenstein 1979: 268; see also Katzenstein 1973: 154-162 on
the 'Lament for Tyre' (Ezekiel 27: 2-36) as a source for Tyrian
commerce.
111. ANET 275-276.
112. ANET 282-284.
113. Note the 6th Dynasty alabasters from Byblos, and Kerma; with
differing interpretations of Kemp (in Trigger et al 1983: 129)
and Lacovara 1991. Rainesside alabaster vessels were excavated
at Ugarit (Aleppo Museum).
114. Johnson 1936: 338; Praux 1939: 93-116; Lucas and Harris 1962:
142-146.
115. Janssen 1975a: 160.
116. Frankenstein 1979.
117. Praux 1939: 187-196; Lucas and Harris 1962: 137-140.
118. Lewis 1974: 120-121.
119. Lewis 1974: 121.
120. Lewis 1974: 4.
121. Johnson 1936: 337.
122. Lewis 1974: 116.
123. Dated 256 BC, Lewis 1974: 117.
124. Lewis 1974: 6-7.
125. Lewis 1974: 8.
126. Lewis 1974: 10.
127. Lewis 1974: 85.
128. Johnson 1936: 337.
129. Lewis 1974: 84; Wilson in ANET 25-29; Lichtheim 1976: (II) 227
11.2,40 reads "500 smooth linen mats" (the translation is
discussed by Goedicke 1975); Elat 1978: 30.
130. For much of this period, Sidon appears to have been a joint
kingdom with Tyre, see Katzenstein 1973: 130-133. Strong
Egyptian influence at Sidon continued into the 5th century BC.
131. The Vassal Treaty of Esarhaddon with Baal specifically mentions
Egypt; Parpola and Watanabe 1988: 24-27.
132. On these vessels and their contents see Leclant 1968.
133. PM VII: 376, a vessel of 81 hin.
134. Culican 1970; Parcerisa 1985: p1 LXXVII (Takeloth II); p1
CXXVII.1 (Osorkon II).
135. Parcerisa 1985: p1 CIX copied from a cartouche of Shoshenq III;
p1 CXIV.1 copied from the Osorkon II vessel.
136. At Carthage: Pedubast scarabs were found in eight graves; Pimay
son of Shoshenq III, in one; Osorkon III in one; at Salamis, an
Osorkon.
137. The 'Bocchoris vase' from Tarquinia appears to be an Egyptian
product, those from Lilybaeum are copies of it.
138. A temple of Ba'al Zephon is documented in the Ramesside period,
along with temples of Ba'alit and Kadesh (pSallier IV verso:
Caminos 1954: 333-349). The existence of'foreign quarters' in
Memphis in the 26th Dynasty has long been assumed.
139. Morkot 1991: 325.
140. Shinnie 1975: 260; Tr&k 1978: 297.
141. Caminos 1958; now also Kendall 1992, 54.
142. The literature is copious; vehemently against the
identification, Kitchen 1973: 106-107, 180-182, 199-200, 330-
-452-
333;; 1986: 546-549. The most recent advocates for the
identification, Aston 1989, with literature; Leahy 1990; James
et al 1991.
143. Caminos 1958: 125ff, 166.
144. Postgate 1974: 283-284; 111. 1.1. A letter of Sennacherib as
Crown Prince to Sargon II, listing contributions received from
Azu[ri] of Ashdod and another nearby city-state, by the palace
at Nineveb. W.L. Martin [in Tribut und tributleistung bei den
Assyrern, Helsinki 1936: 40-49] regarded this as madattu,
Postgate as namartu [cf 129]; it includes gold, silver,
textiles, tents, papyrus, fishes.
145. Frankenstein 1979: 277.
146. Barnett 1975: 164-166; Collon 1977.
147. Barnett 1975: 181, Pl.IX (D.9), 188, Pl.CXI (J.1) with a
minimum di of 19 cm. Barnett (1975: 168) also notes that some
ivory from Samaria was also identified as African. Some
unpublished furniture elements in the possession of the British
School of Archaeology in Iraq are certainly from African bush
elephant. My thanks to Dr.Georgina Herrmann for her comments
on these pieces. It has not, so-far, been possible to
distinguish African from Asiatic elephant ivory by scientific
analysis and estimates of the size of the original tusk remain
the principal criterion. My thanks to Dr.Olga Krzyszkowska for
her comments on this problem.
148. The importance of the 'forest' elephant has surely been
overemphasised and the bush elephant would have been the
dominant species in the Meroitic heartland (see Barnett 1975:
163-164). Large pieces of ivory in New Kingdom contexts, such
as the headrest and scribe's water bowl (di 17.5 cm; Barnett
1982: 21) from the tomb of Thtankhamun, could only be from bush
elephant.
149. Suggested by Barnett 1975: 166, who also (1975: 167-168)
postulated Phoenico-Israelite trade with India (which he
identified with Ophir). The dating of the western Asiatic
ivories has in itself been problemaic.
150. On the date of the foundation of Cathage see Katzenstein 1973:
117-128. James etal 1991: 53-55, 327-328, argue that there
may have been a confusion in the tradition between the
foundation of Carthage (qrthdat 'New Town') and another
qrthdst, Kition in Cyprus.
151. Barnett 1982: 22.
152. Kendall 1992: 50.
-453-
159. Griffith 1922: pl.V.
160. B502 abacus of column B face B, temp Piye: Dunham 1970: 55 fig
40; Griffith 1923: pls L.1O,l1, LIII.1O,11,12.
161. Dedication inscription: Griffith 1922: 102-103 and pis XXXVIII-
XL, 11. 5, 13, 64.
162. Griffith 1922: 102-103 11 1-14, apparently refers to the state
in which the temple of "Mnun-Re Bull of Bow-land" was found.
The text was, alas, very fragmentary, and the references to
Shaat (Sai) might have meant that the temple was there, not at
Sanam, and that the king transferred the cult.
163. Without considerably more material from the preceding reigns
such develoments cannot be traced.
164. Griffith 1922: p1 XLIII.4; p1 XLIV.2 (Aspelta).
165. Schafer 1895.
166. Griffith 1922: p1 XLIII.3; cf architrave block with cartouche
of Senkamanisken Griffith 1922: 101, p1 XI k3 n St.
167. Kawa VIII 1 24; Macadam 1949: 50 n 61.
168. Sanam: Griffith 1922: pls XLIV, XLV; Kawa: Macadam 1955: pls
XVIII.a,b, LVII.a,b (now Oxford, Ashmolean Nus).
169. Griffith 1922: 88-89.
170. Nastasen stela 11 49-50: the preceding events happened in that
'town'.
171. Setne II IV.15, V.30, VI.35: Griffith 1900: 56, 60, 61.
172. Reisner 1931: pls VI, VII.
173. Trk 1987: 5.
174. Russmann 1974: 29; not st.w as Trk 1987: 5.
175. Morkot 1992 part 1; Smith 1976: p1 111.2 (691) 7 (732).
176. Athens ANE 632: Russmann 1974: 57 (1) fig 1.
177. A large number of re-used reliefs blocks have come to light in
recent years at Edfu, also from the hall of Shabaqo in the
'small temple' at Medinet Rabu. Many of these blocks carry the
typical regalia, but the cacrtouches are defaced (usually recut
for Psamtik ii).
-454-
Appendix 4: The Wadi Casua inscription.
-455-
28. Grimal 1981.
29. reign of Aspelta: LB. Reisner 1934.
30. year 3 of Aspelta: Schafer 1895.
31. Grimal 1981b: p1 VI.
32. Priese 1970: 23.
33. Macadam 1949: 125-130.
34. Budge 1912: xciii.
35. Macadam 1949: 126.
36. Habachi 1977.
37. Macadam 1949: 126.
38. Macadam 1949: 127.
39. cf Grimal's re-publication of the Aspelta accession stela with
its facsimilies of the text: 1981b: pls V-Vu.
40. Dunham Macadam 1949: p1 XVI no 67.
41. awa VIII, 1.24: Macadam 1949: 47,
42. Griffith 1922.
43. The term 'stepmother' usually employed has, I feel, too
specific a meaning and is loaded with connotations, at least in
the English language.
44. Macadam 1955: p1 XVb.
45. Macadam 1955: p1 XVc, XIVb.
46. Macadam 1955: p1 XIV a, XIIIa,b.
47. Macadam 1955: LXIV nos 95-98, no 102.
48. Griffith 1929.
49. Dunham 1955: 199-202.
50. Dunham and Macadam 1949 no 64; Dunham 1955: 199.
51. Kawa IX 82: Macadam 1949: 64.
52. Dunham 1955: 234 fig 180 N Reg B.
53. see Troy 1986: 165 (18.33).
54. see also comment of Macadam 1949: 32, n 49, that 3t and snt
nay continue in use, he does not refer to hat nay.
55. Kawa V 16-21 and associated texts; Kawa VIII 22-24 (Anlamani);
Kawa IX 82 (Irike-Mianote).
56. Troy 1986: 106.
57. Kawa VIII 11.22: Macadam 1949: 47.
58. Kawa IV 7-8; Kawa V 13-14; Aspelta Election stela; Kawa IX 3-4.
59. R6lscher 1954: 22.
60. Cohen 1970: 191.
61. Cohen 1970: 191.
62. Cohen 1970: 191.
63. Alpers 1970: genealogy p.208.
64. Alpers 1970: 206.
65. Alpers 1970: 207.
66. Cohen 1970: 191.
67. Cohen 1970: 191.
68. Cohen 1970: 191.
69. Cohen 1970: 191.
70. Cohen 1970: 191.
71. Cohen 1970: 191.
72. Cohen 1970: 191.
73. Cohen 1970: 190.
74. Cohen 1970: 190.
75. Cohen 1970: 191.
76. Cohen 1970: 191.
-4 56-
77. Cohen 1970: 191.
78. Cohen 1970: 191.
79. Cohen 1970: 191.
80. Chilver and Kaberry 1970: 253.
81. Chilver and Kaberry 1970: 255.
82. Alpers 1970: 216-217.
83. Cohen 1970: 190.
84. Cohen 1970: 190.
85. Oberg in Fortes and Evans-Pritchard 1940: 157-161.
86. Cohen 1970: 191.
87. Cohen 1970: 191.
88. Cohen 1970: 191.
89. Cohen 1970: 191.
90. Cohen 1970: 191; 195.
91. Alpers 1970: 209-211.
92. Cohen 1970: 191; 195 gives genealogy.
93. Alpers 1970: 215.
94. Chilver and Kaberry 1970: 256.
95. Roberts 1970: 233-234.
96. in Fortes and Evans-Pritchard 1940: 96-97.
97. Alpers 1970: 215.
98. Alpers 1970: 214-215.
99. Forrest 1968: 21-22, 28-29.
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