Section 6.3: The New Kingdom of Egypt, Part 3 (Akhenaten to … · 2020-03-24 · 1 Section 6.3:...
Transcript of Section 6.3: The New Kingdom of Egypt, Part 3 (Akhenaten to … · 2020-03-24 · 1 Section 6.3:...
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Section 6.3: The New Kingdom of Egypt, Part 3 (Akhenaten to Ramses II)
In the last lecture we ended by looking at the reign of Akhenaten and the reforms he enacted in
Egyptian religion, with special focus on the impact the aten cult may have had on Hebrew
monotheism. But we didn’t ask a central question: why did Akhenaten effect these changes?
Clearly, he was attempting to diminish the power that the Amun Priesthood exerted within Egypt
and reduce its access to financial resources. That was most likely driven by the pharaoh’s interest
in asserting a stronger personal control over Egypt, as is visible in the people he chose for
leadership positions in his new religion. Most were from the lower classes and were honored to
have been elevated by the king to such high standing in society. They boast of this in inscriptions
on the walls of their tombs.
But that raises another, even more difficult question: how did Akhenaten effect such dramatic
changes? Even with all the power a pharaoh had, he would have needed some sort of ally in his
war on the well-established Amun Priesthood. And there is really only one possible candidate for
that co-conspirator, the only other major power in Egypt at that time, the army. We know next to
nothing about what generals and soldiers were doing during this period, but it’s hard to imagine
they would have sat back and passively watched such a radical revolution unfold. But it’s equally
hard to image the leaders of the the army working with such an outlandish figure as Akhenaten.
Still, we must remember that, as odd as Akhenaten might seem to us, his misshaped image and
weird behavior may not have appeared all that strange to Egyptians in the day. Nor was he the
pacifist some modern historians make him out to be. He went on at least one campaign —
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granted, a minor one to Nubia — and his reliefs at El-Amarna depict soldiers. There is even one
piece of art showing Nefertiti holding the decapitated head of an enemy.
Akhenaten appears to have died peacefully of natural causes — there is some evidence, however,
of a plague striking Egypt around this time — and was originally buried no doubt somewhere in
the vicinity of Akhetaten. His body was later moved to the Valley of the Kings. The site of his
original tomb is unknown.
He was succeeded by a mysterious figure named Smenkhare, who first appears in the historical
record about two years before the end of Akhenaten’s reign.
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About that same time a curious thing happens. Nefertiti disappears from the records at Amarna.
One theory is that, after having failed to provide a male heir, Akhenaten pushed her aside for the
son of a secondary wife, Smenkhare who marries one of Akhenaten’s daughters by Nefertiti to
seal his claim on the throne, a pattern seen often in ancient Egyptian history. But that’s only way
to read the evidence, and there are problems with seeing things that way. The sudden dismissal
of a figure so prominent as Nefertiti who was part of the royal family — the god’s family! —
seems out of line with other, well-attested patterns of behavior. This has led some scholars to
make a startling suggestion: Smenkhare was Nefertiti! As Hatshepsut had done a century before,
she took on male attributes. She’d already been seen wearing crowns normally reserved only for
male kings. This way, she could carry on Akhenaten’s religion after his death. It’s an outlandish
theory first proposed in the 1990’s after which it fell out of favor but is now making a comeback.
In any case, Smenkhare, whoever they were, did not last long on the throne, only two years.
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They were succeeded by one of the most famous people in history, “King Tut” whose full name
was Tutankhamun though he was called Tutankh(u)aten at the time of his accession. In his day,
Tut was a weak and insignificant ruler because he had come to the throne as a nine-year-old
child and died at nineteen. At the time of his death he was still being groomed for kingship and
never had the chance to play any real role in governing Egypt.
He married one of Akhenaten’s daughters, Ankhesenpaaten (later Ankhesenamun), no doubt, to
secure his place on the throne because he was the son of one of Akhenaten’s secondary wives,
not Nefertiti.
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During his short reign, the Egyptian government began rolling back Akhenaten’s reforms. The
center of political life was returned to Memphis. Thebes, the home of the Amun cult, became
again the thriving religious capital it had been before the rise of the aten cult.
The right to sell copies of The Book of the Dead, a major industry for the Amun priesthood, was
restored.
And at some point after he was made king, Tutankhaten changed his name to Tutankhamun, the
name by which we know him, in deference to traditional beliefs, now newly revived.The reasons
for Tut’s death have been much debated. It’s always tempting to look for some sort of fatal
genetic defect in a person whose family has been inbreeding for as long as his, but there’s little
evidence to support that.
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Scans of his mummy show that he suffered a serious fracture in his thigh at some point before he
died. That alone could have killed him. Broken bones often became infected in antiquity and
caused septicemia (blood poisoning). His mummy also shows another peculiarity. The left side
of the chest is badly damaged which may explain why his tomb had no canopic jar to hold his
heart. The organ was too badly damaged to preserve. Why? Some historians theorize that he was
killed in an accident in which one side of his body was crushed by a chariot, a not unlikely
scenario if he were preparing to go on campaign. Otherwise, the body is so badly damaged it’s
impossible to make definitive conclusions about the cause of death. For one, the preparations of
his mummy were clearly made in haste. He was put in his coffin even before the oils used to
soak the wrappings had dried and, being very volatile, they caught fire and would have burned
the body entirely if there had been more oxygen in the coffin. For another, when his tomb was
discovered, the body was not treated with care and much damage was done. The tomb itself,
however, not the mummy, is the real treasure archaeologically.
It was discovered and opened by an American archaeologist Howard Carter in 1922, while he
was working in the Valley of the Kings (on the west side of the Nile across from Thebes).
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Many pharaohs of the New Kingdom were buried there among the desert escarpments and
rugged cliffs of its dry gulches.
Tut’s tomb is the one lucky site to have avoided the greedy hordes of looters in antiquity who
broke into the tombs and stole the grave goods of all other kings. One reason is that its entrance
was hidden by the camp site of later workers excavating the tomb of Ramses VI.
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There is also evidence that changes in weather in the century following Tut’s death created
violent rainstorms which flooded the valley and left behind sediment that hardened and made
access to the entrance very difficult. Indeed, Carter had to chisel his way through concrete-like
accretions in the tunnel leading down to the doorway.
When he finally reached the doors to the tomb itself, Carter found them still sealed exactly as
they had been by Egyptian priests three millennia earlier. Actually, it’s the way the tomb had
been not sealed but resealed after robbers were caught in the act of plundering the site.
In the inner chambers, Carter found further evidence that the king’s burial was as yet
undisturbed, door blockings stamped with images of a protective spirit in jackal form.
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The tomb itself proved to be very small by pharaonic standards, a moderate four-room apartment
(with no elevator) …
… but crammed with goods made of precious metals and exotic wood, much of it thrown around
in haphazard heaps, no doubt, the work of the robbers who had broken in and were searching for
the most expensive items.
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Inside a series of elegant, gold-encrusted coffins Carter found Tut’s mummified body …
… covered with solid gold death mask. Egyptians believed that the gods had skin made of gold,
so it was only natural to provide a new god his proper sheathing.
Cleaned up, Tut’s death-mask became one of the most famous discoveries in archaeological
history. Can you see the mix of gender characteristics in the facial features? The full lips but
strong jaw? The soft cheeks and long neck against the regalia of male power? If you look
closely, it’s even possible to see the lines where a new face was welded onto the head. If this
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striking work of beauty was a rush job, what must the mask of a real pharaoh like Ramses II have
looked like?
With Tut’s death, only one adult male of the royal line was left alive to rule, Ay the brother of
Tiye. He was by then a very old man, probably in his eighties. His demise represented the end of
a royal line that stretched back as far as Tuthmosis I, perhaps even Ahmose. It was the end of the
Eighteenth Dynasty and opened the way for a new line of kings, the Nineteenth Dynasty
dominated by a family from northern Egypt in the delta, whose rulers were named Ramses and
Seti. Ay was not of royal blood but had served a series of kings from Amenhotep III to Tut —
wouldn’t his autobiography make great reading? — no doubt, helping to construct and then
deconstruct Akhenaten’s program of religious reform. He was, no doubt, the power behind the
throne when Tut was king.
It is also at this time that a queen of Egypt wrote to the Hittite king Suppiluliumas, asking for
him to send her a son to be her husband. The best bet is it was Ankhesenamun trying to avoid
marriage to her elderly relative Ay. As we saw, it didn’t work. The Hittite son was killed before
ever reaching his queen, which is last word we hear of her, and the genetic line of the Eighteenth
Dynasty.
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Horemheb assumed the throne upon Ay’s death and began a long interregnum between
dynasties, an age of so-called “restoration” during which Egypt was steered back toward
traditional religion and government, and militaristic aggression abroad. As Tuthmosis III had,
Horemheb portrayed himself as both general and gentleman, conqueror and scribe, announcing
his victories in hieroglyphs he claims he could read.
He began a campaign of systematically erasing all memory of Akhenaten and his radical reforms
from every monument and record in Egypt, what one scholars calls “psychological warfare on
the Amarna kings.” With this followed the destruction of the artwork associated with the last few
kings, as evidenced by statues like these Osirid representations of the heretic pharaoh left
shattered in the sand after Horemheb’s goons had done their work. This damnatio memoriae
(eradication from memory) included Tut, Ay and all who had lived the Amarna lifestyle.
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Bypassing all the atenists, Horemheb casts himself in his records as the direct heir of Amenhotep
III. One document speaks of the fifty-ninth year of his reign. He ruled thirty at most. All the
same, there’s evidence he inhabited Akhetaten for at least some of his “interregency.” Horemheb
embodies the transition from the Amarna age to what followed.
Before moving on, let’s take a moment to reflect on that period, a phase of history which later
generations of Egyptians deemed an era not worth remembering. Their assault on its legacy, its
art and architecture, has ironically given us some of the best archaeology in all of ancient history.
Comparisons to Pompeii, the Roman city destroyed and preserved for all too non-human reasons,
are not unwarranted.
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In the ruins of Akhetaten, we can see how Egyptians built and decorated their houses, planned
cities, lived their lives. But how typical is this city of the average Egyptian’s modus vivendi. It
was constructed in less than decade, in a strange new place chosen for the very reason it was
strange and new, to serve a radical vision of the world. How much does it reflect Egypt at large,
or just its own society?
Egyptian did not return to what it was before Akhenaten’s reforms. The cult of the aten was not
eradicated, just reduced in status. Egyptian artists in particular learned lessons from their Amarna
experience and show it in their ability to execute new levels of realism. Gods changed too. From
insane numbers inhabiting an incomprehensible pantheon, their numbers began to focus on a
chosen few. After Akhenaten, a new “trinity of creation” emerges, composed of Ra, Amun and
Ptah (a deity of darkness from the delta), a trio seen to govern all being. Gods could now inhabit
each other, absorb and represent other divinities without destroying them or even denying their
existence. Such a concept would have been inconceivable before Akhenaten. Even the army
joined in this new view of heaven. Its divisions were now named for gods — Ra, Ptah, Amun —
one army made of many gods, just like the re-envisioned pantheon. Is this another example of the
fallout from Akhenaten’s alliance with military leadership?
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And then it all changed again, different colors, different shapes, a new world, a new dynasty
inaugurating a period of refurbishment, a return to the traditional Egyptian values of dominating
foreigners and asserting Egypt’s might abroad. This Nineteenth Dynasty began with the
accession of another general after Horemheb died. For some reason, Horemheb was unable to
assert his family line as dynastic. That new general-king was named Ramses, not the famous one
— that’s Ramses II — but his grandfather. He reigned all of two years but achieved what
Horemheb couldn’t. He put his son on the throne after him.
Seti I became the first true king of the Nineteenth Dynasty. He did that by reconsolidating power
in the hands of the king, not through creating a new religion but by making his family the focus
of power in Egypt. His son Ramses would reap the benefits of that firm hand.
The king list in the temple at Abydos, the most important piece of art from Seti I’s reign, is a
retrospective of Egyptian history leading up to his rule. As we noted earlier in the course, it’s one
of the most significant chronologies preserved. For us, it’s essential to the understanding of early
Egyptian history. To him, it was a way of saying he was part of that long tradition, a typical sign
of the paranoia seen so often in newcomers. It screams “There’s nothing new about me!,” when
exactly the opposite is true. This king list ends with seventeen cartouches of Seti himself,
representing the number of years he reigned, a reflection of a new type of dating based on the
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annual “rebirth” of the king. We’ll see this again later in other periods. It provides historians with
invaluable insight into the development and evolution of a period.
Seti is also known to have restored buildings which Akhenaten had effaced during his reforms.
In addition, he campaigned with great vigor in the Syro-Palestinian area.
His mortuary temple is relatively well-preserved, …
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… as is his tomb in the Valley of the Kings, one of the better ones there. On top of all of this, we
have his mummy, showing he was about five-and-a-half feet tall and had pierced ears.
But perhaps his greatest achievement was to continue the tradition of the royal line inaugurated
by his father Ramses I, and pass on the throne to his young son, Ramses II who would become
one of the most famous pharaohs in history, a king deserving of the title “Ramses the Great.”
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According to his own records, Ramses was an aggressive campaigner, although that may not
have been as true as he would have liked us to believe. His real skill was propaganda, and given
his long reign, he had quite a bit of time to exercise it. That means he hear a lot about him in
Egyptian records, but how much of that is truth and how much royal braggadocio is hard to say.
When it all comes down to it, some would argue that, despite his long life and the many
inscriptions and artworks he left behind, we actually know very little about him, especially in the
last few decades of his reign.
The images we have of Ramses begin in his early childhood …
… and go through his youth, as shown here where he stands next to his father Seti on the Abydos
king list discussed earlier, …
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… and into his early adulthood. It was during this time of life, his twenties and thirties, that he
began asserting his military might in the lands around Egypt, mainly the Syro-Palestinian area.
But that drive to fight wilted almost as fast as it bloomed. There are all but no records of
campaigns in the last decades of his long sixty-five years on the throne.
The drive that stayed with him all his life was to construct architectural projects on a grand scale.
He built many temples — and appropriated more by carving his own name in place of the name
of the original builder —
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… and moved the capital of Egypt to his family’s home turf in the delta, ironically near the site
of the Hyksos capital of Avaris. There he oversaw the construction of new city named in his
honor, Pi-Ramesse (“the House of Ramses”). After its discovery near the modern site of Tell ed-
Dab’a, excavations have continued there since the 1980’s. The location perhaps had more than
just symbolic value to Ramses and his clan. The choice may have been strategic. Situated as the
city was near Egypt’s northern border, it would have provided quick and ready access to
information about movements and uprisings in the Syro-Palestinian area. Building a new capital
also recalls Akhetaten, Akhenaten’s city, with which Pi-Ramesse has more than one point of
comparison. Ramses boasts, for instance, that “everyone comes to live in my city, the sun rises
and sets in my city.” Clearly, not everything about the aten cult died with its king. But unlike
Akhetaten, Pi-Ramesse remained an important metropolis. That is, until the Nile changed the
course of its flow and bypassed the city. Even then, as in so many Mesopotamian riverine
settlements, its citizens just up and moved to a new site on the new banks of the river and built a
capital city at Tanis. They even reused many of the stones that had been employed in the
construction of Pi-Ramesse. Thus, the old city was reborn in a new form. So Horus, so Osiris.
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But far in the south of Egypt by its border with Nubia at a site called Abu Simbel between the
first and second cataract, …
Ramses had a temple built to himself between the twenty-fourth and thirty-first years of his
reign. It is renowned for its four seated colossi carved out of the very cliff face itself, a way of
branding the king’s own image on the land. This bold declaration of geographic domination is a
type of propaganda as old as Naram-Sin. We’ll see the Neo-Assyrians of the next millennium use
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it too. There is no more blatant way to claim ownership of the world than to remake it into your
own reflection.
Others besides the king are recognized at the site, for instance, his wife Nefertari who stands
between his legs — that is hierarchical perspective on steroids! — though she was allowed her
own smaller temple around the corner. The sort of collaborative partnership that Akhenaten and
Nefertiti shared did, it seems, die at Amarna.
E6-
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The temple itself is carved deep into the native rock, creating a series of chambers that celebrate
Ramses, …
… in particular, his purported victory at the Battle of Qadesh. A long hallway flanked with
Osirid statues of the king lead into ea chamber with statues of the gods Amun-Re, Ptah, Re-
Horakhte and, of course, the deified Ramses himself. Twice a year in antiquity, the sun’s rays
reached all the way down the hallway and illuminated these statues, except for Ptah’s, the god of
darkness. The celebrations held at those times of year must have been impressive. Note also the
focus on solar deity Ra (or Re). Some lessons of the Amarna Age lived on.
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But we can no longer see that effect. In the 1960’s Egypt built a massive dam in this area to store
the floodwaters of the Nile so they could be allocated more effectively throughout the year. This
Aswan Dam created a huge lake that flooded the site of Abu Simbel.
To save this monument, the whole temple complex was cut from the rock and moved to a higher
location, but its position relative to the sun had to be changed, spoiling the lighting effect. Now
all the statues are in the dark with Ptah.
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Another important building constructed during Ramses’ reign is his mortuary temple, the so-
called Ramesseum. It’s located on the west bank of the Nile across from Thebes. During the
Roman period, it was known as the “tomb of Ozymandias,” a corruption of “User-maat-re,”
Ramses’ prenomen. The name Ozymandias later became famous in modern times when the poet
Percy Bysshe Shelley used it in a sonnet he published in 1817-18, which goes:
I’m fairly certain Ramses would be displeased to know his name has become synonymous with
the vanity of power and glory. He worked awfully hard to ensure the opposite.
I met a traveler from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert . . . Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command, Tell
that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed:
And on the pedestal these words appear:
“My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!”
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.
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The Ramesseum is another architectural marvel. It’s laid out in an east-west direction so that
twice a year the sun directly strikes the statue of the deified Ramses. It has a hypostyle hall and
two large courtyards, …
… and a sacred boat room, along with a library, storerooms and workshops. It’s as fully
functional as any medieval monastery, only here the god is Ramses.
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As he had at Abu Simbel, Ramses decorated with the walls of the Ramesseum with an illustrated
narrative of the Battle of Qadesh, detailing the terrain around the fortified city, the calm courage
of Ramses himself during the combat. He is shown both seated and riding in a chariot as he
shoots arrows at the enemy and saves the day single-handed. But this was in many ways the last
hurrah for Egyptian military might abroad. From here on, control of the Syro-Palestinian area
would slowly slip from Egyptian hands. The New Kingdom was now looking into the sunset.
In conclusion, the most distinctive feature of this age was not its grand personalities like
Akhenaten or Ramses, but the rise of a standing army. That allowed Egypt to assert its authority
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over foreign lands, though never actual control, nothing like Rome and its provinces. That
characteristic disinterest in the world around them meant the Egyptians left behind little of their
culture or language in the places their armies marched through. People in the Syro-Palestinian
area were never encouraged to learn how to write hieroglyphics or worship Osiris. And all
evidence points to the fact they never did. They continued to pray as they always had and use
local scripts. The converse was at least partially true in Nubia where there was no local script.
There we find many hieroglyphic inscriptions.
What the Egyptians sought from their campaigns was not power or control but resources and
those materials they wanted or needed: copper and turquoise from the Sinai Peninsula, purple-
dyed cloth from Syria, olive oil and wine from anywhere. What they really sought was cheap
access to the huge marketplace that was the eastern Mediterranean seaboard. Despite Ramses’
claims, they weren’t conquerors, not even terrorists.
They were marauding tourist hordes who cared little for the lands they visited and much for the
souvenirs they brought home, and all the better if the bric-a-brac sported Egyptian themes, but
who really cared if the local who made it had ever seen an actual lotus blossom or had any
understanding of what it meant in Egyptian art? One document dating to the reign of Amenhotep
III says it all. It discusses the larger world around Egypt, listing sites in western Asia and Greece,
and gets everything in the wrong place.
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If there were Egyptian cults celebrated in the Syro-Palestinian area during the New Kingdom,
none survived its collapse. An atef crown with the feathers of Amun may adorn the heads of later
Ammonite kings but they probably had no idea what it represented to an Egyptian, only that it
was associated with traditional power. There’s no clear evidence they even knew it was
Egyptian. One important artifact, however, did come from Egypt and make a lasting contribution
to the Syrian life in that day and later the entire world, the alphabet, which was developed out of
from hieroglyphic symbols, but curiously not those that were used during New Kingdom but the
Middle Kingdom. Hieroglyphics may have inspired its creation, but the alphabet itself never took
hold in ancient Egypt. Eventually it would spread to the Phoenicians, the Greeks, the Romans
and ultimately the modern world, making it a grudging bequest of literacy to all posterity, a gift
with no gift tag saying “With love from Egypt.” All in all, Semitic peoples from the Syro-
Palestinian area thrived much better in Egypt than Egyptians did abroad. Toward the end of the
New Kingdom, men with Semitic names served as judges in Egypt. Semitic loanwords entered
the Egyptian language. Semitic cults took root in the delta. What Egypt was to Nubia as an
influencer and foreign power, Semitic culture was to Egypt which would never see again the sort
of independence from outside forces it had in Ramses’ day. The sun was rising on a new and
dismal day, the so-called Late Period.