Breasted Ancient Records II PDF
Breasted Ancient Records II PDF
Breasted Ancient Records II PDF
,**
..*'"
2007
IVIicrosoft
Corporation
http://www.archive.org/details/ancientrecordsof02breauoft
HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS
FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES TO THE PERSIAN CONQUEST, C0LLEC3TED
EDITED AND TRANSLATED WITH COMMENTARY
BY
Ph.D.
VOLUME
II
CHICAGO
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS
1906
CO.
787660,
Copyright 1906, By
Thk Univbesity op Chicago
Published March 1906
or
U.
S. A.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
VOLUME
I
S
of Egyptian History
1-37
Chronology
38-57
Chronological Table
58-75
The Palermo
I.
II.
Stone:
Fifth Dynasties
Predynastic Kings
First
76-167
90
91-116
Dynasty
III.
Second Dynasty
IV.
Third Dynasty
145-148
V.
Fourth Dynasty
149-152
Fifth Dynasty
153-167
VI.
168-175
Reign of Snefru
168-175
168-169
Sinai Inscriptions
Biography of Methen
170-175
176-212
Reign of Khufu
176-187
Sinai Inscriptions
176
Inventory Stela
177-180
188-189
Enactment
Establishing the
1 81-187
188-209
Stela of Mertityotes
Testamentary
11 7-144
an Unknown
of
Endowment
of
His
190-199
Official,
Tomb by
the
Pyramid of Khafre
Reign of Menkure
200-209
210-212
Tomb
for
Him
210-212
213-281
Reign of Userkaf
213-235
V
TABLE OF CONTENTS
vi
....
II.
III.
Nekonekh's Will
IV.
V.
Enactment
of
Senuonekh,
Regulating
231-235
236-241
Sinai Inscriptions
236
Nenekhsekhmet
Stela of
237-240
Inscription of Persen
241
Reign of Neferirkere
242-249
Architect
and Chief
Weshptah
242-249
Reign of Nuserre
250-262
Sinai Inscription
Tomb
....
Inscriptions of Hotephiryakhet
Inscription of Ptahshepses
Reign
of
Menkuhor
263
264-281
264-267
Sinai Inscriptions
Inscriptions of Senezemib, Chief Judge, Vizier,
268-277
'
Nomarch Henku
Inscription of an
Unknown
Thety
....
.
Builder
Uni
Career under Teti (1. i)
Career under Pepi I (11. 2-32)
Career under Mernere (11. 32-50)
III.
Reign
of Pepi I
Hammamat
282-294
282-286
287-288
289-290
Inscription of
II.
278-279
280-281
282-390
Reign of Teti
I.
251-253
263
Reign of Dedkere-Isesi
Tomb
250
254-262
Sinai Inscription
Tomb
226-227
228-230
Reign of Sahure
Tomb
220-222
223-225
Tomb
Tomb
213-215
216-219
Testamentary
291-294
....
....
292-294
306-315
319-324
295-315
Inscriptions*
295-301
TABLE OF CONTENTS
vii
I.
II.
....
III.
IV.
God
Ikhi
Hatnub Quarry
304-305
Reign of Mernere
I.
Northern Inscription
II.
Southern Inscription
316-318
.
Meniere
Harkhuf
Harkhuf (continued)
.....
Reign of Pepi II
of
Land by
Two
325-336
350-354
337-338
339-343
Queens, Enekhnes-Merire
Inscriptions of
336)
344-349
350-354
Letter of Pepi II
350-354
351
III.
IV.
King's Instructions
11.
319-324
337-38$
Sinai Inscription
I.
317
318
Stela of the
306-315
316-336
Conveyance
300-301
302-303
Inscription in the
Inscriptions of
297-298
299
Sinai Inscription
Inscriptions of
296
351
352
353-354
Inscriptions of Pepi-Nakht
355-360
Khui
361
Inscriptions of Sebni
362-374
Inscriptions of Ibi
375-379
380-385
Inscriptions of
Inscription of
Reign
of Ity
Hammamat
Reign
Zau
of
386-387
386-387
Inscription
Imhotep
388-390
II.
III.
Inscription of Tefibi
391-414
391-414
Inscriptions of Siut
I.
393-397
Inscription of Kheti I
398-404
Inscription of Kheti II
405-414
H
TABLE OF CONTENTS
viii
415-459
419-420
Intef
Mortuary Stela
Reign of Horus-Wahenekh-Intef I
Royal Tomb Stela
Reign of Horus-Nakhtneb-Tepnefer-Intef II
.
419-420
.
423A-423G
423A-423G
423H
Reign of Nibhotep-Mentuhotep I
.
Assuan
Reign of
Inscription of
427-433
434-459
Inscriptions
434-459
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
435-438
439-443
444-448
449-451
452-456
Stela of Eti
457-459
Reign of Amenemhet
Inscription of
Hammamat
424-426
427-433
Henu
Nibtowere-Mentuhotep IV
Hammamat
423
424-426
Hammamat
421-423
421-423
Stela of Thethi
463-497
Khnumhotep
463-465
466-468
Inscription of Intef
Inscription of
Inscription of
The Teaching
Nessumontu
Korusko
of
460-750
460-462
469-471
472-473
Amenemhet
474-483
Dedication Inscription
484-485
The Tale
486-497
Reign of
The
of Sinuhe
Sesostris I
498-593
Inscription of
Wadi Haifa
Meri
Inscription of
Inscription of
Mentuhotep
Amenemhet (Ameni)
Stela of Ikudidi
Inscription of Intefyoker
....
.
498-506
507-509
510-514
515-523
524-528
529
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ix
Inscriptions of
The
Mentuhotep
530-534
Contracts of Hepzefi
535~538
First Contract
539~543
Second Contract
544-548
III.
Third Contract
549~553
IV.
Fourth Contract
S54~558
V.
Fifth Contract
VI.
Sixth Contract
SS9~567
568-571
I.
II.
.......
Seventh Contract
VII.
572-575
Eighth Contract
576-581
IX.
Ninth Contract
582-588
X.
Tenth Contract
589-593
Amenemhet
594-613
VIII.
Reign
of
II
Inscription of Simontu
Inscription of Sihathor
........
594~598
599-605
Sinai Inscription
Stela of
606
Khentemsemeti
607-613
Reign of Sesostris II
614-639
Inscription of
Hapu
Inscription of
Khnumhotep
Reign of
614-618
II
619-639
Sesostris III
640-748
643-645
Second Inscription
646-648
649-650
Inscription of Ikhernofret
661-670
Inscription of Sisatet
671-673
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
642-649
First Inscription
I.
II.
640-672
651-652
......
.......
See also
Hammamat
Stela of
676
653-660
fif.
Inscription
and 687
674-675
676-687
Inscriptions of Thuthotep
688-706
Hammamat
707-712
Inscriptions
Inscriptions of Sinai
7i3~738
Wadi Maghara
7^3~7^3
I.
I.
Inscriptions of
Khenemsu
714-716
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Harnakht
Inscription of
II.
III.
Inscription of Sebekdidi
IV.
Inscription of
Sarbiit
II.
Ameni
721-723
el-Khadem
....
Inscription of Ptahwer
II.
Inscription of
IV.
Inscription of Harurre
725-727
730~732
733~738
Turra Inscription
739-742
Inscription of Sehetepibre
743-748
Reign
of
Amenemhet IV
Kummeh
Inscription
750
Reign of Sekhemre-Khutowe
75i~752
of Neferhotep
753~772
.
'
Boundary Stela
Reign of Nubkheprure-Intef
Ameniseneb
781-787
II
....
II.
III.
II.
III.
Ahmose's Summary
4-16
38-39
78-82
17-25
1-1043
1-3
Career under
Biography of Ahmose-Pen-Nekhbet
I.
1-37
753-765
781-787
773~78o
VOLUME
of
773~78o
Reign of Khenzer
Reign
766-772
Coptos Decree
Inscriptions of
751-787
-751-752
Records of Nile-Levels
Reign
749-750
749
Sinai Inscriptions
724-738
728-729
Amenemhet
III.
717-718
719-720
Inscription of Sebek-hir-hab
I.
40]
....
....
18-20
21-24
25
TABLE OF CONTENTS
xi
Quarry Inscription
26-28
Karnak
29-32
Stela
Building Inscription
33-37
Reign of Amenhotep I
Biography of Ahmose, Son
II.
....
Ebana
Career under Amenhotep I (11. 24-29)
of
Biography of Ahmose-Pen-Nekhbet
III.
;|^IV.
38-53
40-42
Biography of Ineni
II.
38-39
40-42
I.
38-53
43-46
44-46
99-108
11 5-1 18
340-343
Stela of
Harmini
47-48
Stela of
Keres
49-52
Reign
Thutmose
54-114
Coronation Decree
54-60
61-66
Tombos
67-73
of
Stela
74-77
I.
Sehel Inscription
75
II.
Sehel Inscription
76
Assuan Inscription
Inscription of Ahmose, Son of Ebana
^ III.
Career under Thutmose I (11. 29-39)
Biography of Ahmose-Pen-Nekhbet
III.
....
.
86-89
90-98
Biography of Ineni
99-108
4-14)
(11.
99-108
109-114
Stela of
Reign of
78-82
83-85
Karnak Obelisks
Abydos Stela
Yuf
Thutmose
78-82
83-85
^11.
77
11 5-1 2 7
II
Biography of Ineni
11 5-1 18
11 5-1 18
Assuan Inscription
Biography of Ahmose-Pen-Nekbet
IV. Career under Thutmose II
1 19-12 2
III.
.'
123-124
123-124
TABLE OF CONTENTS
xii
Campaign in Syria
The Ebony Shrine
#JReign of
125
Der el-Bahri
Thutmose III and Hatshepsut
of
....
Semneh Temple
II.
I.
Inscriptions
Renewal of
The
Dedun and
Nebwawi
Sesostris III
Abydos Stela
^The Birth of Queen Hatshepsut
The Council of the Gods
I.
II.
Interviews Between Amon and Thoth
HI. Amon with Queen Ahmose
IV. Interview Between Amon and Khnum
VI.
VII.
184-186
VIII.
IX.
X.
XII.
XIII.
is
Led
193-194
195-198
Queen Ahmose
.
Birth
Council of
199-201
204
205
206-207
Amon
....
Second Interview of
The
Confinement
to
XL The
192
202-203
The
187-191
Queen Ahmose
173-176
178-183
Statue Inscription
Khnum
168-172
177
II.
V.
131-166
167
Dedication to
Biography of
128-390
128-130
Introduction
I.
126-127
208
209
210
Final Scene
211
212
Statue of Enebni
213
Vase Inscription
214
C^The Coronation
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
The
of
Queen Hatshepsut
Purification
Amon
215
216
Gods
217-220
221-225
.
Names
Amon
226-227
..
228-230
...
VI.
VII.
232-239
Second Purification
240-241
VIII.
IX.
Concluding Ceremonies
....
231
242
243-245
TABLE OF CONTENTS
xiii
ii
246-295
252-253
Reception in Punt
254-258
III.
The
259-262
IV.
I.
II.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
Traffic
266
Queen by
Nemyew
Gifts to Amon
the
267-269
The Queen
270-272
Ofifers the
Expedition before
X.
263-265
Amon
273-282
283-288
of
the
289-295
296-303
The Karnak
304-307
I.
II.
III.
Obelisks
Columns
Side Columns
Shaft Inscriptions;
....
II.
III.
Rock
Base Inscription
.
Reception in Thebes
330~335
336
Wadi Maghara
....
Senmut
Inscriptions on the Karnak Statue
Assuan Inscription
Inscriptions on the Berlin Statue
....
Inscription of Thutiy
Inscriptions of
I.
II.
Puemre
340-343
344
345-368
Inscriptions of
III.
338-339
344
Summary
Conclusion of
337
340-343
Biography of Ahmose-Pen-Nekhbet
II.
322
323-329
Biography of Ineni
I.
312-313
Transport
>IV.
308-311
314-321
349-358
359-362
363-368
369-378
Statue of Inscription
379
380-381
Tomb
382-387
Inscriptions
Inscriptions of
Hapuseneb
388-390
TABLE OF CONTENTS
xiv
39i~779
The Annals
The Annals: Conspectus
I.
II.
of
Campaigns
Introduction
First
Campaign (Year
Wadi Haifa
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
X.
XI.
XII.
XIII.
XIV.
XV.
XVI.
XVII.
XVIII.
XIX.
408-443
23)
Inscription
....
411--437
438-443
444-449
Fourth Campaign
453
454-462
450-452
463-467
468-475
476-487
488-495
496-503
....
....
.
Biography of
504
505
506-515
516-519
520-523
524-527
.
Conclusion
528-539
540
Amenemhab
541-573
574-592
593~S98
599-608
Obelisks
609-622
623
I.
Karnak Obelisks
624-625
II.
Lateran Obelisks
626-628
III.
Constantinople Obelisk
IV.
London Obelisk
New York Obelisk
V.
......
406
407
....
391-405
629-631
632-633
....
634-636
637-641
642-643
Nubian Wars
644-654
TABLE OF CONTENTS
xvii
Tomb
Tomb
Tomb
Tomb
Tomb
Tomb
Tomb
of Merire II
981
of Merire I
982-988
of
Eye
of
of
Mai
Ahmose
Tutu
1009-1013
of
Huy
1014-1018
of
989-996
997-1003
1 004-1 008
Reign of Tutenkhamon
Tomb
of
1 01 9-1 041
Huy
1019-1041
I.
II.
III.
Kush
1020-102 6
1 034-1 041
Reign of Eye
1042-1043
LIST OF FIGURES
PAGE
105
VOLUME
III
1--651
Reign of Harmhab
Tomb
of
1-73
Harmhab
Leyden Fragments
I.
II.
II.
....
I.
Gold
Vienna Fragment
Alexandria Fragments
British Museum Fragments
Reward
rV.
I.
Doorposts
II.
Stela with
13
14-19
14-17
Three Hymns
Coronation Inscription
I.
In the North
II.
In the South
Edict of
Theban Necropolis
Harmhab.
18-19
Harmhab
20-21
22-32
.......
Graffiti in the
of
2-5
10-12
Cairo Fragments
The Wars
2-9
6-9
of
III.
V.
1-21
32A-32C
33-44
34-36
37-44
45-67
\,
TABLE OF CONTENTS
xviii
Introduction
I.
50
51
the People
III.
The
(11.
10-14)
IV.
of
Wood
52
V.
49
......
Introduction:
II.
i-io)
(11.
(11.
....
18-20)
54
Slave Service
55
VII.
VIII.
(11.
22-24)
IX.
53
25-28)
(11.
56-57
X.
28-32)
58
XI.
XII.
Narrative
of
Corrupt
63-65
XIV.
(11.
7-10)
66
Tomb
67
of Neferhotep
68-73
Reign of Ramses I
Wadi Haifa
Reign of
60-62
Judges
01-3-7)
XIII.
59
an Enactment Against
Also
74-79
Stela
74-79
80-250
Seti I
Karnak
Reliefs
80-156
Scene
i.
Scene
2.
85-86
Scene
3.
Capture of Pekanan
87-88
Scene
4.
Capture of
Yenoam
89-90
Palestine
83-84
TABLE OF CONTENTS
xxiii
1.
net
Habu)
85-92
2.
3.
Relief Scenes
4.
on
First
93-99
405
15-135
136-138
139-145
.
Papyrus Harris
146-150
1
Discussion of
00-114
51-41
151-181
182-183
Content
I.
II.
Introduction
Theban
Section
184-246
III.
HeUopolitan Section
247-304
IV.
Memphite
305-351
V.
VI.
VII.
Section
Summary
383-396
Historical Section
397-412
413-415
Harem Conspiracy
416-456
I.
The
The
The
The
The
The
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
Condemned
Condemned
Condemned
Condemned
423-424
425-443
of the
Second Prosecution
of the
Third Prosecution
of the
Fourth Prosecution
Hammamat
Acquitted
Abydos
Practicers of
Magic
454-456
457-472
457-468
Stela
Tomb
457-460
461-468
Stela
Reign of Ramses
Dedication
Reign of Ramses VI
451-452
453
11.
444-445
446-450
Reign of Ramses IV
I.
352-382
Khonsu Temple
...
469-471
472
473
.
473
474-483
TABLE OF CONTENTS
xxiv
Tomb
Reign of
Penno
Ramses VII
of
Stela of
474-483
484-485
Hori
484-485
Reign of Ramses IX
Inscriptions of the
I.
II.
486-556
High
Priest of
Amon, Amenhotep
486-498
Building Inscriptions
488-491
Records of Rewards
492-498
The Records
of the
Royal Tomb-Robberies
499-556
Papyrus Abbott
509~535
Papyrus Amherst
536-541
III.
Turin Fragment
542-543
IV.
Mayer Papyri
Ramses XII
544-556
I.
II.
Reign of
The Report
of
557-603
Wenamon
5 5 7-591
Building Inscriptions in
Kush
the Temple
of
Mummies
Khonsu
592-594
595-600
601-603
604-692
604-607
Reign of Hrihor
Temple
Nesubenebded
Inscriptions of the
Reign of
of
Khonsu
....
627-630
Paynozem
I as
High
Paynozem
I as
Priest
Mummies
King
631-649
631-635
Building Inscriptions
II.
608-626
627-630
Gebelen Inscription
I.
608-626
Mummies
....
....
631-635
636-642
643
fif.
643-647
Building Inscriptions
648-649
650-661
650-658
.....
659
660
661
662-687
662-663
664-667
TABLE OF CONTENTS
xxv
Record
of
Paynozem
High Priesthood
Records on
668
II's Burial
Me," Sheshonk
Pesibkhenno
of
688-692
Mummy- Wrappings
Burial of Nesikhonsu
688
689
Mummies
690-692
693-792
Reign of Sheshonk I
669-687
693-698
699-728
699-700
Building Inscription
701-708
709-722
Presentation of Tribute
723-724
Karnak
Stela
724A
Dakhel Stela
725-728
Reign of Osorkon I
Record
of
729-737
Temple
Reign of Takelot
Gifts
729-737
738-740
High
Priest,
Sheshonk
738-740
Reign of Osorkon II
742-751
Flood Inscription
742-744
Statue Inscription
745-747
Jubilee Inscriptions
748-751
Reign of Takelot II
752-755
Graffito of Harsiese
Stela of
752-754
Kerome
755
75^-777
East of Door
........
West of Door
First Serapeum Stela of Pediese
Record of Installation
Stela of
Weshtehet
756-770
760-761
775~777
778-781
Sheshonk IV
771-774
Reign of Pemou
of
762-770
II.
Reign
"
778-781
782-792
782-784
TABLE OF CONTENTS
xxvi
Serapeum
Harpeson
Stela of
785-792
at
793-883
Karnak
793-794
795
Will of Yewelot
Reign of Piankhi
The Piankhi
795
796-883
Stela
796-883
Reign of Bocchoris
Serapeum
884
884
Stelae
....
Reign of Shabaka
884
885-934
885-888
889
Building Inscription
Reign of Taharka
'
889
892-918
Tanis Stela
892-896
897-900
Inscription of
Mentemhet
Serapeum Stela
Reign of Tanutamon
Stela of
901-916
917-918
919-934
'.
Tanutamon
919-934
935-1029
935-973
93 5-958
958A-958M
Serapeum Stela
Second Serapeum Stela
First
Statue Inscription of
959-962
963-966
Hor
967-973
Reign of Necho
Serapeum
974-980
Stela
974-979
980
Building Inscription
Reign of Psamtik II
Reign
....
of Apries
Serapeum
Nesuhor
981-983
984-995
984-988
Stela
Inscription of
981-983
...
988A-988J
.
989-995
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Reign of Amasis (Ahmose
xxvii
II)
996-1029
Elephantine Stela
Serapeum
Stela
Mortuary
Ahmose
....
Psamtik
996-1007
1008-1012
1013-1014
loi 5-1025
1026-1029
LIST OP FIGURES
fACK
Index
Habu Temple
521
The
except for
4.
The
titles.
in
by superior numbers.
5. The loss of a word in the original is indicated by
three words by
two words by
four
five words by
words by
and
A word in the original is
more than five by
estimated at a "square" as known to Egyptologists, and
the estimate can be but a very rough one.
6. When any of the dashes, like those of No. 5, are inthe translation
"
brackets, the
Roman)
9.
xxviii
REIGN OF AHMOSE
distinction
hotep
I,
and Thutmose
the predecessor of
important, because
I,
Sekenenre.
It is especially
is
under
I,
Ahmose
it
Amen-
I,
Ahmose- Pen-Nekhbet
( 17
ff.),
have
totally perished.
The
family of
the wall of
Ahmose's
first
kings
cliff
I,
655-57, only 26
and very inaccurate; first completely published by Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 12,
a and d; thence inaccurately copied by Rheinisch, Chrestomathie, PI. 6, omitting
d; and equally incorrectly, Lemm, Lesestiicke, 67; Bunsen, Egypt's Place, 2d ed.
lines,
V, 732, 733 (beginning only). I have collated the excellent Berlin squeeze (No.
172)^ which mostly sustains Lepsius, Denkmdler, but furnishes some important
corrections.
Valuable discussion of difficult passages by Piehl, Proceedings of the
Society 0} Biblical Archceology, XV, 256-58, and Sphinx, III, 7-12.
^The family
Museum
gift
by Thutmose
was acquired
It reads:
mose IV.
3
[2
Esneh.^
2.
The
Ahmose took
which they
part are
fall,
as
follows:
Career under
By
the son of his daughter the conductor of the works in this tomb,
perpetuating the
of
Amon,
The
name
draughtsman^
Pahri,^ triumphant.
grandson, Pahri,
who was
a draughtsman.
I.
[LI. 1-24;
continued 38
ff.]
4. After
of Pahri,
his
first
b.
dHis tomb
El Kab, by
is
the
Griffith
fiir
5]
city of
make
their
Hatwaret
city called
14),
where,
stand in
last
It is also
is
Ahmose
I,
and
this stronghold
was
pushed
northward and
also captured.
this
invaded
siege that
Syria,
still
as
It
was
Ahmose
narrated
by
in pursuit of the
5.
army
successive rebellions,
there,
to
to the
He was
quell
two
which had distracted the country since the fall of the Middle
Kingdom. At this point the wars, and probably the reign,
of
Ahmose
I closed,
Ahmose, son
of
it
and interpretations of
tion.
this
is
preserved.
document are
Most
[^^6
Introductory Address
6. 'Chief of the sailors,
know
tell
you,
came
all
Ebana
of
p-ft^-^),
to
me.
to
valiant in his achievements shall not perish ^in this land forever.^
His Youth
7.
He
speaks as follows:
my
{NT}h)y
father being
an
**I
spent
my
youth in the
city of
Nekheb*^
officer of the
'The Offering'
Then
garment.^
on
foot^
fleet,
because of
One
8.
after I set
still
up a household,
my
of the
Two
(still)
the
I),
Lord
sleeping in
was
trans-
valor.
in his ^chariot.
was appointed
in-Memphis.'^
^Ahmose has recorded elsewhere in his tomb (Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 12,
a list of the gifts he received, making a total of 9 men and 10 women; the total
c)
of
land is lost. This does not agree with his narrative, which does not summarize,
but in different gifts mentions in all 9 men and 7 women received from the king,
XXVI,
women
statement
last
is
captured.
41, 42.
cEl Kab.
3.
naval
"on my two
feet;"
this is
emphasized as land
ofl5cer.
gReward
cf.
service,
Ahmose being a
12]
Third Battle
10.
hand
Then
was again
there
hand "there;
to
Avaris
of
I again fought
I brought
One gave
away a hand.
to
me
the
11.
One
living captive, a
.^^
Capture of Avaris
12.
One
women,
^Cut
ofif
^Reward
man and
me
three
for slaves.^
second
^Reward
battle.
dThere can be no doubt that the word {km't) means here, as always elsewhere,
^'this city" is then EI Kab, for the word "south" is an adjective femi*^ Egypt;"
nine agreeing with "Egypt." The phrase can only be translated into a language
like Greek or German, thus: "in diesem siidlich von dieser Stadt befindlichen
Aegypten." The siege of Avaris is therefore interrupted by a rebellion in upper
Egypt, similar to the two later ones (15, 16), and for this reason the narrative
particularly specifies "this Egypt, south, etc."
See also
13,
1.
15.
men
seized
myk
of the city.
^Read hr
for
gReward
^Reward
See
13.
?),
as in
1.
28.
Sharuhen lasted
[13
Siege of Sharuhen
13. ^sQne besieged Sharuhen* (S^-r^-h^-n^) for 6 years,^ (and)
his majesty took
hand.
Then
it.
me
^^One gave
two
Campaign
14.
Now,
ascended the
river
female
me
had
(Mntyw
Khenthennofer (Hnt-hn-nfr),
to
Nubian Troglodytes;^
Nubia
against
his majesty
there,
two
made a
living
to
great slaughter
Stt), ^"^he
destroy the
among them.
hands. One
me two
slaves.'^
with the might of victory, (for) he had seized Southerners and Northerners.
Second Rebellion
15. 2There
came an enemy
approached; the gods of the South seized him, and his majesty found
him
in Tintto-emu {Tynt-t^-^mw).^
living prisoner,
and
all his
I carried
off *^a
away two
^Lepsius, Denkmdler, has "5," which has been generally accepted; Champollion's text and Brugsch's translation have "6."
I repeatedly examined the
especial
care;
it has a clear "6."
squeeze for this point with
The correctness of
the rendering "for 6 years" rather than "in the year 6" has been clearly demon-
See
II,
1.
many
We may suppose,
II.
cCf. Miiller,
^These slaves being women, are not the two captives just taken, as the translations of Renouf and Petrie indicate.
^Lit.,
at Siut,
first
"She
I,
unknown.
BIOGRAPHY OF AHMOSE-PEN-NEKHBET
17]
enemy ;^ one
was done
'^gave to
me
five
my city.^
Third Rebellion
Then came that fallen one,^ 23whose name was Teti-en (Tty-^ n) f
he had gathered to himself rebels.
His majesty slew him and his
i6.
^^
and
fields
(amounting
my
[Continued 38
^^to
me
three heads,
city.
ff.]
BIOGRAPHY OF AHMOSE-PEN-NEKHBET
17.
This El
Kab nobleman,
like
first
Ahmose, son
Ahmose
Ebana
of
Beginning his
^The determinative indicates an enemy, not a proper name, but the meaning
the word {^^t^) is unknown.
The rendering "fievreux" from Chabas is based
There
is
^TeiTji of
no reason
name was
wicked of
especially
fiir
common
name.
On
f.).
heart.'*
for a foe.
contempt
which
text.
exists not."
^^
pieces of land."
lo
[ i8
and a summary.
*=
AHMOSE^S CAMPAIGNS^
I.
[Continued 40]
He
18.
Ahmose
I,
Amenhotep
Thutmose
and
II.
Ahmose I
Career under
/.
19.
Zahi
I,
is
I in
It
phty-R
^,
Ahmose
living prisoner
I),
count,
**I
chief
^i captured for
triumphant,
seal,
him
in Zahi
{D
^-hy)
and a hand."
[Continued 40]
belonging to Mr. Finlay, Zeitschrift filr dgyptische Sprache, 1883, 77, 78; (2) statue-base in the Louvre, Lepsius,
Auswahl der wichtigsten Urkunden, XIV A; Prisse, Monuments egyptiens, IV;
(3) Ahmose's tomb-wall at El Kab, Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 43, a (lower left-
hand
corner),
(i) statue-base
I,
85.
All sources
(i) statue-base
11.
10-20;
dThe
translation of the
I,
in El
85,
campaigns
is
under which he Uved, because they furnish very important historical events, but
his rewards and the summary, being more purely personal, are given in this reign.
A11 except the Finlay text insert other titles here, but, except the
"sole
illegible.
whm
This unusual
first,
have
kf^,
text.
*^
repeating captures.^*
BIOGRAPHY OF AHMOSE-PEN-NEKHBET
25]
II.
21.
'
ii
ahmose's rewards
3
.a
4.
Ahmose,
called
Pen-Nekhbet;
he says:
"By
of gold:
who
the ^sovereign,
lives forever!
silver axe."
ni.
ahmose's summary*
25. ^^He says, "I followed the Kings "of Upper and Lower
to the
South and North country, in every place where they went; [from] '^King
Nebpehtire (Ahmose
[triumphant],
^Unimportant
titles
numbered according
is
I),
of
Ahmose
(see 20,
1.
Auswahl
to text in Lepsius,
i)
very fragmentary;
lines are
triumphant. King
I),
this time,
but Ahmose
like those
Breasted, Proceedings of the Society 0} Biblical Arch(Bology, 1900, pp. 94, 95.
dCf. inscription of
Amenemhab,
585.
I; corrected
by Mas-
Sethe, Unterstcchungen,
I,
Thutmose
1.
11.
10;
11.
3-9.
85, corrected
and
his squeeze.
12
Okhepernere (Thutmose
II),
[26
344]
QUARRY INSCRIPTION^
The inscription records the work of Neferperet, an
official of Ahmose I, who, in the latter's twenty-second year,
26.
Ma
first
its
whose
cattle
titles
{Y^h-ms^
of
Ahmose
I,
and
nfr't-yry).
27. 'Year 22 under the majesty of the king. Son of Re, Ahmose,
who
given
is
life.
limestone ^of
[years],^ the
all
the
Amon
in southern
Opet
*This phrase after Thutmose Ill's name shows that he was living at the time
of this inscription; all the others were at this time "triumphant" (deceased).
Hence Ahmose, now an old man, died under Thutmose III.
^Lit.,
cQn
Ma
dA
their durability.
all
temples,
and
referring, of course, to
KARNAK STELA
31]
The
[in his]
28.
of the
13
stone
The
Lord
of the
ryigilanti^
Good God;
one
of efternity"'],
KARNAK STELAd
29.
Among Ahmose's
and the
Karnak temple
two
lines of inscription, of
stela,
like,
Amon.
of
was
be-
He
containing thirty-
devoted
is
In the course
a vague refer-
his
The
30.
Asiatics
Asia.
He was
The
thus as
much
is
Min
feared in Egypt as in
names
of
(1.
12).
Nubia or
Ahmose I
times stated, e. g., Maspero, Struggle of the Nations, 93; also Petrie, History of
Egypt, II, 36), but only the oxen captured.
m^
<^[Rs]-d^d^,
^A
lit.,
white limestone stela over 7^ feet high and nearly 3 J feet wide; found by
Legrain by Pylon VII at Karnak. It was below the pavement of Thutmose III,
and had been buried before Ikhnaton's time. Published in Annales, IV, 27-29.
14
32.
father
[32
and vases
seals^ of gold;
lapis lazuli;
(wdh'w)
htp) of gold
lapis lazuli
standard of
pink granite,
filled
with ointment
jars (nms't) of
rimmed
and
silver;
sphinxes of silver;
a""
i^
of ""cedar
make
likewise;
his
voyage
new cedar
I erected
IJthereini].
I gave
of the best of
columns
BUILDING INSCRIPTION^
name
mother
She was a queen Tetiof Ahmose I's father and mother.
^^
khig' s-mother and great
sheri, and although she is called a
33.
king^s-wije,^^
she
is
not designated
I's
to us the
of the
daughter.
king's
as
and her
the famous
the father
preposition indicates.
^!^pt,
Schaefer suggests the spd which appears in the Mentuhotep cofl5n at Berlin.
^Meaning "mighty
sacred barge of
f
is the front
Amon."
This
is
the usual
name
of the
Amon.
lished
of
by him in Abydos,
and
III, PI.
3 feet wide,
LII.
BUILDING INSCRIPTION
36]
The
inscription
so picturesque,
is
form, as to be unique.
15
and unconventional
In content
it
in
34. ^Now,
(even)
Ahmose
(I),
it
given
life;
=^
who
liveth,
was with
his majesty.
The Conversation
One spoke
35.
first
month, the
upon the
monthly
feast of
of the
first
earth.
His
feast of the
sister
this
this
What
been
has
Ahmose' s Purpose
36.
The king
the mother of
my
is,
my
'^
*The negative
in
1.
is to
14,
^The
"Her
tomb and her chapel are at this moment {m ty (sic!) *t) on the soil,
etc."
I can only understand this clause as concessive, and that the new buildings
planned by Ahmose are in addition to the ones in 1. 9.
^Lit.,
i6
dug,
its
trees shall
my
majesty.
[37
be
and
ritual priests
man knowing
his
stipulation."
37. ^^Lo, his majesty spake this word, while this was in process of
tonstruction.
^^this
^A
to,
posture of prayer.
lines,
giving the
ofifering.
names
REIGN OF AMENHOTEP
ports
concluded 78
16;
II.
38.
continued from
ff.]
Under this king Ahmose commands the royal transThe enemy is defeated,
in a campaign against Kush.
Ahmose
fighting at the
I), tri-
away
as prisoners,
like those
army;
brought
who
none of them
are annihilated.
Meanwhile
^Bibliography,
missing.
majesty
took
Then
cattle.
was
at the
beheld
thrust *^aside*^
my
head
of our^
bravery.
One
to his majesty.
etc., p. 3, n. a.
( 71,
1.
7).
dThis and 81 are the only places in all the historical texts of Egypt, where
"our troops" are spoken of. It is a real touch of patriotism.
Lit.,
is triie."
17
i8
Egypt
*%om
me
with gold.
[40
Then
brought away two female slaves, in addition to those which I had taken
*9to his majesty.
of the Ruler.'
BIOGRAPHY OF AHMOSE-PEN-NEKHBET^
[Continued from
II.
20;
continued 83
ff.,
and 344]
king.
Campaign in Kush
41. I ^followed King Zeserkere (DSr-k^-R^, Amenhotep
umphant; I captured
for
him
^in
Kush, a
I),
tri-
living prisoner.
Campaign in Libya
42. Again I served for King Zeserkere, triumphant; ^I captured
for
him on
the north of
[Continued 83
ff.,
three hands.
and 344]
BIOGRAPHY OF INENI^
43.
This
Thutmose
I,
official
Thutmose
II,
and Thutmose
Amenhotep
III, reigning
^Bibliography on p. 10, n.
we
I,
with
are probably
a.
BIOGRAPHY OF INENI
44]
He
Hatshepsut.
19
this time,
and
is
his
Ineni was:
Thutmosids.
all
was under
House
Amon.*
of
Amon;
excellency, over-
I.
44.
The
lost,
of a building probably
in the
Amenhotep
name
of the king,
I's
the
is
of
which
I.
lord
XIV,
73, 74.)
The
it is
first
fine limestone of
living forever,
made
"7 or 8 lines"
for
Ayan,
him."
and
also the ends of the first 14 remaining lines; following these are 6 complete lines.
The wall scenes and plans of the tomb (also the long inscription) have been published by an architect, H. Boussac {Memoires de la mission frangaise au Caire,
XVIII). To the Egyptologist the publication is little more than worthless, and the
work must be done again. But the long inscription has now disappeared.
*One
ff.
numbered them!
20
[Amenhotep
2.
white limestone
It is
[45
I];
made
Sed Jubilee.
first
Turning again
to
'Hatnub (Ht-nb),
45.
made
in one sheet;
made
vessels,
under
under
my
was foreman
of
every work,
all
offices
were
Amon,
was made
father
Inspection
control.
I inspected
my command.
seasons;
its
lord of Thebes;
for
they were
4r_i.
Death
oj
Amenhotep I
in happiness
life
[Continued 99-108]
STELA OF HARMINI^
47.
Harmini
name than
chief
^^
scribe, ^^
magistrate
^As in the
(hr-myny) prefixes
first,
of
but he was no
no other
less
Nekhen-Hieraconpolis.
title
man
to
his
than the
This impor-
Reich (Strassburg, 1898; and Sethe, Gotting'sche Gelehrie Anzeigen, 1902, No. i,
29-31), The temple is referred to as ^^ House of Zeserkere {Amenhotep I) on the
See also Sethe, loc. cit., 30.
west of Thebes" (Lepsius, Denkmdler, Text, III, 238).
cMortuary
stela of
in the
Florence Museum, No. 1567; published in Catalogue, 288-90; Piehl, Recueil, II,
122-24. I had also my own photograph of the original.
STELA OF KERES
49]
Nubian
21
Wawat
in lower
Nubia,
or his
in
Nekhen.
first
it
hands
from
of the ^^king's-son 0}
Kush^^ ( 1034
king,
later in the
^^trihute^^
ff.).
appointment of a
king^s-son of Kush,^^
^^
by Thutmose
(6i
ff.).
Hence we
48. After
the
usual
continues, in Harmini' s
I passed
many
mortuary prayer,
the
inscription
own words:
years as
and no occasion was found against me. I attained old age in Wawat,
being a favorite of my lord. I went north with its tribute for the king,
each year; I came forth thence justified; there was not found a balance
against me.
STELA OF KERES*
49. Keres, like his contemporary,
Yuf
( 109
ff.),
was
The question
whom
in
arises
Keres
Amenhotep I, in whose
tenth year her command was issued, or Ahhotep (I), mother
As Ahhotep II was never the mother of
of King Ahmose.
a king, it must have been Ahhotep I, who had a tomb
served,
was Ahhotep
(II),
wife of
^Limestone stela, 0.82 m. high, from Drah abu-'n-Neggah, now in Cairo, without
a number. Published by Bouriant, Rectteil, IX, 94 f., No. 74 (his text is excessively
incorrect);
I
am
much
better
by
original.
22
erected at
whom
Abydos
We
for Keres.
[50
still
living in the
who was
and a statue
at
of the
first
month
of
first
King of Upper and Lower Egypt: Zeserbody: Amenhotep (I), beloved of Osiris, given
Son
of Re, of his
life.
^Command
$2.
seal, sole
steward of the
of
king's-mother,
who liveth the herald {whm w) Keres {K ^ rs) The king'smother has commanded to have made for thee a tomb ^at the stairway
3 Ahhotep,
'
among
There
There
shall
the followers of
shall
and every
"^in
whom
.^
stny), as the
prince, count, wearer of the royal seal, the steward, the herald, Keres
(Krs), only favorite united ^with the limbs of Sekhmet, following his
He
to-
whom
"
"
making agreeable unpleasant matters, one upon whose word his queen
depends, approaching the truth, knowing the affairs of the mind,
profitable in speech to his queen, ^great in respect in the house of the
who
mouth concerning
that which he
bRead
wsf.
STELA OF KERES
53]
53.
citizens
as ye
verily
He
(^
"O
says:
23
nh'w) of the army, as your city-gods favor you, and love you,
would bequeath your office (s) to your children ^^after old age;
,^
so shall ye say: 'An offering which the king gives;
king, of the two lofty plumes, lord of Ufe, giver of that which
^5lord of burial after old age.
May
ka of
^ Keres, a
forth
him who
desired,
upon the
is
man
r
is
">
Two
without
table of ^^the
his
"
^%im
(sic!),
sending
mouth, accurate
like
heart to hear matters, the likeness of a god in his hour, real rconfidant^
"of his
queen,
whom
Two Lands
Keres."
^Name
^His
of
titles.
Amon
has advanced.
REIGN OF THUTMOSE
CORONATION DECREE^
54.
day
king^s coronation
is
to the viceroy of
Nubia, Thure,
name to be used
name to be used in the
in-
full titulary,
offering oblations,
and the
the royal
in
royal
for he
is
records of
Thutmose
I's
to be cut on
stelae
and
set
He
ff.).
up
Wadi
in
Haifa, ^
Kubban, and
55. Royal
countries,
*^
command
Behold, there
is
brought to thee
my
oj Accession
this
[command]^
of the^ king in
*In two copies: (i) a sandstone ( ?) stela, 72 by 84 cm., found at Wadi Haifa,
in Cairo, published from a copy of Brugsch by Erman {Zeitschrift fiir dgyptische Sprache, 29, ii7=Erman, Aegyptische Grammatik, 37*-38*); (2) a sandstone stela, 67 by 76 cm., found by Borchardt at Kubban (Zeitschrift fiir dgyptische
Sprache, 36, 26, n. i), now in Berlin (No. 13725, Ausfuhrliches Verzeichniss des
Berliner Museums, 131), unpublished. The beginning is lost on the Cairo stela,
and the end on the Berlin stela; the two thus furnish a practically complete text.
The relief at the top is lost on both. I used my own copy of the Berlin text.
now
29,
117).
ibid., 36, 3, n. i.
Harkhuf
(I,
351,
1.
2).
"dawned;"
the
same word
It is
24
CORONATION DECREE
6o]
25
Titulary
56.
Make my
titulary as follows:
Two
Great in Strength;"
Name
to he
"Performance
on behalf
is
given
of the
King
of
life."
Name
to he
who
name
of
my
in health.
is
Conclusion
59. This
is
is
well
and prosperous
it;
and
of the fact
Date
60. Year
i,
^These
the
month
third
day
Erman
(seventh month)
common
title
to all
are individual.
title
on the king's
behalf.
^
26
^^^^^^^ '
'
II.
11
.III
II
.III
[6i
^^M
6i.
name
of the author
is
lost.
and has
who
also placed
under Thutmose
also served
his
inscription
III,
Service under
pehtire
62.
(Ahmose
I)
good character in
a^Inscribed
text:
of
all
Ahmose I
he made
me
overseer of the
of very
his court.
Ill's
Semneh temple;
Young, Hieroglyphics, 91; Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 47, c. The upper half
the lines has been cut away for a later relief of Thutmose III.
I am indebted
^If he
30 for
also note
on
I,
1.
XII, 104.
See
TOMBOS STELA
67]
Service under
27
Amenhotep I
(Amenhotep
[Zeserkejre
the works in
I) 4
the granary of
Karnak
pi
didi] for
Lower Egypt
Amon, to conduct
him the excellent
^
.
The King
64.
mose
I)
of gold
of gold
of
he appointed
me to
be king's-son of [Kush]
gave
he
me
me
more
heart.
"
He
"'^
"
"
65.
The
first
-with
King
he made
II);
of
fme""]
^4
Upper and
.c
me
in the midst
TOMBOS STELAd
67.
Three important
scription
Amon;
refer to
Museum,
is
826),
11.
the
in Suti
and
16, 17.
hopelessly obscvire.
cHere are the remains of a royal oval, which certainly contained the name of
Thutmose III; in this king's second year, a viceroy of Kush is mentioned in this
same temple ( 170, 1. 2)^ but the name is unfortunately broken out. He is doubtless
the same as our viceroy.
<iEngraved on the rocks on the island of Tombos, just above the third cataract
published by Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 5, a, and thence Piehl, Petites
etudes egyptologiques.
The Berlin squeeze (No. 284) permitted some important
corrections, but the publication (Lepsius, Denkmdler) is a brilliant example of corof the Nile;
rectness in the
form of the
signs, as
drawn by M. Weidenbach.
28
1.
[68
I defeated the
Nubians
He
Tombos, remains
which
of
survive,
still
(cf.
3, 4,
(cf.
11.
(cf.
this point
1.
13);
and
10).^
on the south
to
campaign did not take place until after this Nubian expedition (see 81, 1. 35).
Hence we must suppose, either that
he had already made an Asiatic campaign of which no
account has survived; or that his predecessors had already
made the conquest of the country as far as Euphrates, and
thus he could refer to it as in his domain. The latter is the
more probable supposition.
68. Other interesting data are the fact that the oath, even
made
14),
accorjling
to
the
in the
name
instructions in
his
of the king
coronation
announcement
(cf . 58)
in going up-stream^
(cf.
1.
13, note).
inscription of his,
^his
some
it
left
TOMBOS STELA
7o]
5-9,
epithets
worst in
It is at its
ligible.*
left
29
11.
untranslated.
Introduction
69. ^Year
2,
first
Mat (M^^t);
Two
Strength
Goddesses:
Golden Horus
Hymn
70.
the
Favorite
is
given
live
life;
King
Son of
of Victory
Two Lands,
of the double crown, the staffs of his majesty; he hath taken his inheri-
assumed the seat of Horus, in order to extend the boundThebes and the territory of Khaftet-hir-nebes ;^ so that the
tance, he hath
aries of
^rAn abomina-
(^ kb't);
Okheperkere (Thutmose
There
is
I),
who
^The coronation
letter
dThe myth
has ''great in
Good God,
Semneh
the
all
the primor-
mighty one,
letter
(56).
Horus and Set states that they divided the Nile country between
them; over both these domains the Pharaoh rules, and hence follow the words:
"uniter, etc.,"
It is possible that "Horus and Set" should be translated only "the
of
two lords;" see Piehl, Proceedings of the Society of Biblical Archaology, XX, 199,
200.
I,
692.
8The pronoun
refers to
her buildings.
^To Thebes,
to
be employed on
30
Two
Lands,
to him,
The
bowing down
the
He
71.
two^
his
there
it
He
'"Nubians"';
is
Amon; Keb,
of
staff
Negro
among them.
the
of their
"'
is
who
The
their
mouths
cut from
the
The fragments
a violent flood.
is like
his front. *^
fall
on
is
peoples^
[Sand]-dwellers,
Nubia
[71
'^interiori*
name
the
^^
is
hidden,
divine
Tomhos
The
72.
Fortress Built
made a
army,
*'None-Faces-Him-"Among-the-Nine-Bows-Together;"^
(called)
cattle;
the
fame
hke
of his majesty
blinded them.
Universal
Triumph
73. (He) brought the ends of the earth into his domain; (he) trod
its
his
battle;
he
(but)
'
cThis means the sacred uraeus serpent on his forehead, as the determinative
shows.
dSee
An
III, 61),
XXII,
261
f.,
311,
I,
1.
14.
by
1.
4);
107,
11.
7, 8.
^Determinative
BThe
first
is
an
XV,
eagle.
half of line 9
is
king.
^It
fortress
is
which
is
referred to
is
the
It is
inscription ( 121,
1.
7).
74]
31
had not
seen.
is
^^xhe
his
penetrated the
taken^ by
fame
Two Lands
it (viz.,
name)
his
it
has
the oath
is
^^xhey
of his majesty,
like
(viz.,
who
gives his
breath to the one that follows him, his offerings to the one that treads
^^his
His majesty
way.
is
gods
Thutmose
is
isles of
(I), living
forever
and
is
who
Thebes,
is
given
life, stability,
feet; '^bodily
ever.
^
son of Re,
Amon-Re, king
of
Some
74.
eight
months
cataract,
Assuan.
*See Sethe, Verbum,
II, 967.
cThe Euphrates.
t>Nubia.
dFor the Egyptian on the Nile north was '' down-stream " and south was "upstream."
It seemed very curious to him that in another country as here on the
Euphrates, one went south in going down-stream; hence the anomaly of the text,
which becomes clear, if we substitute "south" for "up-stream." See also IV, 407.
^Heaven, earth, and the nether world, include the entire Egyptian universe.
^In the coronation
the oath
is
sThe
given (see
58).
pre-dynastic kings,
king's
title
to
be used in
^
now
mythical demigods.
32
I.
On
75.
[75
SEHEL INSCRIPTION*
arriving at the
first
I,
642
fiF.)
stopped up.
found the
He
cleared
it,
of
Year 3,
the King
is
given
it
first
of
life.
[sail]ed
The
[down-stream] upon
it,
he found
He
it].
king's-son, [Thure].^
II.
SEHEL INSCRIPTION^
Year
3, first
this canal in
of
wretched Kush.
The
king's-son, Thure.
in.
On
77.
he
left
the
ASSUAN INSCRIPTION'
at Assuan,
where
a similar record:
Year 3, first month of the third season, day 22, under the majesty
His majesty arrived from Kush, having overthrown
of Thutmose (I).^
the enemy.
649
restorations are
No.
from Thutmose
13.
Ill's
copy of
this inscription
f.).
Thure, also
55.
Full titulary.
41,
No. 185.
Mor-
8o]
33
ni.
78.
active
He
campaigning.
in
first
is
still
sails
one of
the royal
downward
79. It
bow
at the
was not
famous expedition
to
Naharin
Nubian campaign
that the
set out.
up his boundary tablet beside that of his father ( 478), and it must have been on this
campaign that this first boundary tablet was set up by'
Thutmose I.^ For it is always supposed that this campaign was the only Asiatic expedition of Thutmose I; but
Thutmose
as the
Tombos
inscription ( 67
ff.)
campaign
against
Nubia
I),
triumphant,
when
p. 3, note a.
34
[8i
region.
prisoners.
all
countries in his
[prowp
of
Asiatic
Campaign
among
(N ^-h ^-ry-n ^)
36his
majesty found
that foe
great
which
brought
his majesty
^The
from
off
his victories.
made by
Meanwhile
was
^The
text
cThis
is
at
battle
precisely
1.
9, II,
what
121)
said of
is
when
the
a sign in the
f
The
gThe
last
9 inches of the
line.
is
from the
Amida
tablet of
Amenhotep
1.
17,
An
JFrom
the squeeze;
cf.
also
1.
17.
BIOGRAPHY OF AHMOSE-PEN-NEKHBET
85]
35
a chariot,
its
One
to ^his majesty.^
presented
me
measure.
39When
BIOGRAPHY OF AHMOSE-PEN-NEKHBET
[Continued from
42;
III.
In
this reign
Campaign in Kush
84. I ^followed the King Okheperkere (Thutmose
I captured for
prisoners,
him
whom
^in
Kush, two
triumphant;
I),
Uving
Campaign in Naharin
85. Agains I served ^for King Okheperkere (Thutmose
^See note on
horse,
1.
cf.
Naharin (N^-h-ry-n^)j
also
1.
27.
is
of
lacking.
a.
^Showing
paign.
trium-
26, 39.
cHe continued
I),
official
count.
after the
Nubian cam-
36
[86
KARNAK OBELISKS^
86.
in the great
Kamak
Pococke saw
still
by Thutmose
temple;
is
Their erection
105).
it
himself (see
Sethe, Zeitschrijt
Only
fiir
are later
of
Thutmose
I;
the
titu-
dedication, as follows:
^Text: Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 6; ChampoUion, Notices descriptives, II,
127 f.; Champollion, Monuments, IV, 312-313; Rouge, Album photographique, 50,
See also Pococke, Description of the East, I, 95; and Brugsch, Reise53> 54> 68.
berichte, 159.
Thutmose
III.
90]
Mighty
87. ^Horus:
bull,
Two
of the
Okheperkere, Setepnere
who makes
37
Son
Golden Horus
Thutmose
of Re,
Shining-in-Beauty.
He made
(it),
monument
as his
88. ^Horus:
Mighty
Amon, Lord
bull,
of the temple.
89.
A fragment
an
of
Thebes,
Re, forever.
life like
Two
of
obelisk''
Thutmose
obelisks*^ at the
chief of the
double facade
of
on the
island of Elephan-
I^s jubilee.
It still
bears the
words:
Thutmose
monument
granite.
(I);
Shining-in-Beauty;
he made
as his
to his father,
First
(it)
of
ABYDOS STELAs
90.
This
temple of Osiris.
ently held
In the
lost introduction
11.
works
in the
Abydos
he has appar-
side.
side.
9-11, 105.
dAbout one-third of the hne is flaked off; the material of the pyramidions
crowning the obelisks was usually copper or bronze.
eBrugsch, Thesaurus, V, 1220.
The epithet, " Skining-in-Beauiy," is found
on Thutmose I's Karnak obelisk, and is not used by other Thutmosids. Hence
the obelisk certainly belongs to
f
Thutmose
I.
^Sandstone
stela
38
[91
whereupon the
priests
The
chief treasurer
is
On
beautiful
''How pleasant
is this
is this
for Osiris, thou beautifiest the First of the Westerners, the great
founded.
As
Atum
whom
How
whom
advanced,
god
of
he magnified before
thine
is
the silver,
there
^if
isi
which
is
art gold,
in him,
in thy house ;
Thou
their temples.
a wish in thee,
it
must be done
is rcollectedi
;
it is
that which
Royal Instructions
to the
Chief Treasurer
causing to come
who knows
and is skilful in
that which he knows, who does not transgress what was commanded
the best of his lay priests,
him,
7[rto erect^]
lasting statue.
the
monument
the directions
Make
for
him
the portable
black copper,
Words
^The number
t>The earth-god.
is
uncertain.
cPtah.
ABYDOS STELA
97]
3q
tinue them.
new cedar
lake;^
its
to
Peker" {Pky),
Statues 0} the Gods
95. Furthermore,
ennead
commanded
majesty]
^[his
to shape^
of gods dwelling in
of
Khnum,
Abydos
(statues
them is
Abydos;
Up wawet
of the North;
mys-
Nun.
Words
of the
King
him
abide and
loved
so
my monuments
all
Address
[I
say
to]
my name might
my father, Osiris,
97.
my
to the Priests
ritual priests, dwellers in the place of the hand,^ ^^all the lay priests of
the temple;
offer ye to
my
tomb, present ye to
*Read:
'^Meaning
kh as in Ineni
it
( 105,
1.
my
majesty;
my
oblation-tablet;
mention ye
see
not
clearly ( 888,
uncommon
^These are the standards upon which the statues were borne.
title.
^An order of
priests of
name;
10).
ePriestly
my
whom we know
nothing.
(cf. I,
1.
20).
672).
40
remember ye
the statue of
my titulary;
my majesty;
my memory among
of
of
give ye
set
Upraises to
my name
^'I
likeness;
mouth
in the
For
your children.
my
am
of
[98
praise ye
your servants,
what he has done; the unique in might through the (mere) mention
^^ which I made in this land, till ye know it.
There is
his name
"
no
lie
have beautified
I have
^therein.
made monuments
have
have surpassed ^^that which was done before. I have informed the
priests (w'^b'w) of their duties, I have led the ignorant to that which
he did not know.
have been before
me
the gods
work
had joy
in
my
in festivity.
Universal
98. I
made
(t
the
Triumph
"
^1
mose
(I),
life,
stabihty, satis-
BIOGRAPHY OF INENI^
[Continued from 46; continued
II.
(lL.
4- 1 4)
I,
115]
The
the narrative
of
his
accession
unfortunately
1.
fall
4).
in
The
the
biog-
r-d
^'t.
c.
BIOGRAPHY OF INENI
iQo]
superintendence
the
of
41
building
king's
Kamak
projects
(102)
pylons of Thut-
mose
I,
the priests of
Amon
Thutmose
builder,
(131
I,
ff.),
Thutmose
or the w^eakling
II,
this hall
reference to the
^^
1.
7,
itself is
and
1.
and
its
in
The
unfortunately
8 begins with a
But Thutmose III informs us of the interesting fact that he replaced with stone columns the cedar
columns erected by Thutmose I in this hall ( 601). Indeed,
Thutmose I himself was obliged to replace the northernmost
two of his cedar columns by stone ones before the end of his
reign. ^
The fact is recorded by him on one of the new columns (see Piehl, Actes du 6""^ congres des orientalistes a Leide,
of
which
1883,
follows.
IV"'*'
partie, section
unfortunately
of
which
columns
now
3,
monument
This inscription
is
little is intelligible.
is
203-19).
The
as follows:
''Thutmose
Amon-Re,
/,
he made
chief of the
{it)
as his
Two Lands
a hint as to the length of his reign; he must have reigned long enough
for the wooden colonnade to begin to decay.
aThis
is
42
[ loi
ff
lOi.
^the
who
He made
boundary as
the ^Horns of the Earth,* and the marshes in Kebeh {Khh)
might,
Elephantine.
The
his majesty
me
far as
his
under
forwarded them to
Everything was
made
to
Ineni^s Promotion
102. 7He
filled his
my
my
administra-
tion.
Karnak Pylons
made
Ayan (^ nw) august
the temple of new
on
its
inspected
^Such a passive
is
in
an act of the
king.
cAn idiom
dRead:
nh't.
Meaning
the slopes of
Lebanon;
cf.
the "Myrrh-terraces."
for
them
BIOGRAPHY OF INENI
io6
43
Karnak Portal
104. I inspected the erection of the great doorway (named)
Mighty-in-Wealth;"^
its
of Asiatic copper
*'Amon-
whereon was
Karnak
Obelisks
its
and landed
length, 40 cubits in
Karnak
at
its
the
width, in order
^*^biiilt
Its ^tracki
was
wood.
Thutmose Ps Clifj-tomb
106. I inspected the excavation of the cKfif-tomb of his majesty,
no one
alone,
^things
seeing,
no one hearing.^
upon
I
excellent.
"i^
made
"
^I
was
fields of clay, in
which
is
it
"
*The name
is
^Explained
cHence
not
among
^i
by Mariette, Karnak,
889, note.
Petrie,
II, 67).
38.
The standing
is
under misappre-
(Petrie,
History of
of ''two great obelisks" (88); hence Thutmose III must have appropriated the
now fallen obelisk after it was up, and before the inscriptions were cut.
<lThe
see
326, note.
Fund
^Egypt Exploration
Read hip,
BThe same
f
ndy
feet,
and 40 royal
cubits
=68.86
feet.
wd .
dgyptische Sprache, 23, 59. See Breasted, Proceedings of the Society of Biblical
ArchcBology, XXII, 90-94.
The construction of such a tomb is described in the last
twelve lines of Sinuhe; see Goodwin, Zeitschrift filr dgyptische Sprache, 1872, 21 ff.
Lit.,
"My
44
who should be
after
me.
was a work
It
to
my wisdom
me
after
My
my
heart,
my
[107
virtue
command by an elder.
years, by those who shall
^^while I
was
was
I shall
imitate
Rewards
Ineni's
107.
of
my
love
my
among
the court.
Death
108.
The king
rested from
oj
Thutmose I
life,
[Continued
1 1 5-18]
STELA OF YUFb
109.
This
official
served
the
^The same
rare phrase in
( 6,
1.
3).
m. high, from Edfu, now in Cairo, old No. 238; published by Bouriant, Recueil, IX, 92, 93, No. 72.
I had also a carefully revised
copy, kindly loaned me by Schaefer.
^Sandstone
stela, 0.62
STELA OF YUF
113]
45
Relief
no. In
left
the middle
women
are two
is
an
which on the
and on the right a man, standing,
sitting,
Before the
but his
ka,^^
^^King's-wije,
king^s -sister
."
first
man
name
is
is
illegible;
^^His son,
(fern.)
Below
Mortuary Prayer
111. 'An offering which the king gives; Horus of Edfu, Osiris and
Isis;
may
they give bread, beer, oxen, geese, everything good and pure
ka of the great
for the
I),
Restoration of Sebekemsaf^s
The
triumphant.
Tomb
Tsecond'''^
of the altar,
3 the
son of
Iritset
it
tomb
{Yw f)j
(ysy) of ^the
beginning to go to ruin."
Then
"^o
ye
wife,
Ahhotep.
who
my
pass by this
stela, I will
offer to her;
She gave
to
me
she intrusted
bread:
me
'joo (by't-)
the preceding.
^S
h' kwy, as in
Ahmose,
6,
1.
3.
46
She repeated
to
me
it
me
all
[114
her property in
whom
king
appointed
me
^Okheperkere
to
(Thutmose
I),
and a
joint
She
triumphant, loves.
me
She intrusted
me
^^I
was endowed
^ffrp;
majesty."
hence we
Horus
may
of Edfu,
Denereg (Dnrg).
possibly render:
"to present
who made
it
(the
income?)
the document.
to
her
REIGN OF THUTMOSE
II
BIOGRAPHY OF INENI*
[Continued from io8; concluded 34off.]
III.
115.
According
to this biography,
Thutmose
II
Thutmose
II succeeded
mose
I;^
II.
Succession of Thutmose II
116.
The Hawk*^
as]'^
the ^sKing of
Upper
he became
possession of the
Two
Regions in triumph.
Ineni' s
Favor
117. I was a favorite of the king^ in his every place; greater was
that
me
than^ those
who preceded
(me).
I attained
the old age of the revered, I possessed the favor of his majesty every day.
I
c.
cThis
is
who
also suc-
dErman's
*The
^Lit.,
restoration.
cultivable land
"one who
filled
Sethe, Untersuchungen,
and the
I,
40, n. i.
desert.
sSupply of course: "than that which he did for those who, etc.;" or "than
that which those did who, etc." meaning he received greater favor than from preceding kings.
47
48
[ii8
the king, beer likewise, meat, fat-meat, vegetables, various fruits, honey,
cakes, wine,
My
oil.
necessities
Hfe,
Death of Thutmose II
Ii8. (He) went forth to heaven, having mingled with the gods.^
[Concluded 340-43]
ASSUAN INSCRIPTION^
119.
senger
who announces
a mes-
a rebellion in Kush,
to his majesty
and mentions a frontier fortress of the king's father, Thutmose I (see 72) (11. 5-9) (2) the anger of the king (11. 9-1 1)
(3) his dispatch of an army thither (11. 11, 12); (4) the overthrow of Kush, and the capture of one of the chief's children
with some other prisoners (11. 12-15); (4) ^^^ complete
;
(11.
The
15-17).
inscription
is
7,
his father,
Thutmose
I,
was
120. 'Year
i,
first
Two
Divine in kingship;
Goddesses:
Golden Horus:
Son
of
Re: Thutmose
(II),
Beautiful in diadems,
11.
7, 8).
on the road from Assuan to Philae; text in Lepsius, DenkMorgan, Catalogue des monuments, I, 3, 4, and Rouge, Inscriphieroglyphiques, 250, 251 but the best text is revised from a squeeze by Sethe,
^Cut
Untersuchungen,
I,
translation, 38.
81;
cThe "appearance"
construed with "upon,
first
(lit.,
dawning) of a king
is
names
is
his coronation;
of the king.
As
first
it
is
to
be
day of the
reign.
ASSUAN INSCRIPTION
i2i]
Thebes;
3 they
smite for
fame
him
is
is
49
his protection,
his enemies.
is
in
is
in the land,
Horns
Earth^
of the
(his)
among
is
arm
as far as the
*^the
marshes of
messenger
of his
not
is
Announcement
of Rebellion
Lord
The
Two Lands
of the
purpose
hostility,
this ^fortress
away
King
of
my
let live
anyone among
Cf. 70,
^Cf.
1.
loi,
Amon,
their
males
"among them."
2.
1.
and Index V.
5;
cSee Index V,
s.
v.
dLit., "to
form
make prosperous
is
the conventional
cattle of
"neigen
2,
north side)
Biindniss?"
h Compare the
1.
zum
is still living.
50
II
[ 122
The Campaign
Then
122.
(T^-pd't) on his
those
who were
Two
his
first
"Then
all
Lord
of
barians;
to all the
command
^^chief of
the
Kush
Lands.
this
the people
Lord
of the
Two
his divinity.
came
It
to pass
Amon
examples of
his majesty,
loved
satisfaction, like
life, stability,
Re, forever.
BIOGRAPHY OF AHMOSE-PEN-NEKHBET^
[Concluded from
IV.
123.
The
II
officer, at least in
it,
was a cam-
^Partially
^The
in
the northward
march
broken away.
negative
is
text,
but
a place under his majesty'* ^^ the place where his majesty was.
dBibhography on p. 10, note a.
cLit., "to
1.
10.
CAMPAIGN IN SYRIA
125]
Niy
against
This
( 125). ^
last
campaign
51
prisoners;
CAMPAIGN IN
125.
The
SYRIA<^
overlooked in
(Thutmose
the histories,
all
to]^ the
fame
11)^
*horse[s]
'kings
out of
^his
majesty in
of the king,
Okhepernere
3elephant[sp
Niy
^[when] he came
*The reign of Thutmose II was so short that we can hardly suppose that he made
more than one campaign into Asia, in addition to his Nubian campaign ( 119-22).
^Published by Maspero {Zeitschrijt fiir agyptische Sprache, 1883, 78) as
"Thutmose I;" corrected as above, Maspejo, Struggle of the Nations, 239, n. i.
^Fragment from the Der el-Bahri temple, middle colonnade, toward the right
end of the Punt reliefs ( 272). Only the extreme tops of nine lines are preserved.
Text:
Bahri temple, giving the usual dedication of a doorway which he erected there
(Brugsch, Recueil de monuments, 69, i).
<iSethe,
Untersuchungen,
I,
40.
ichen give
Thutmose
II.
22-25,
588) under
Thutmose
in
Amenemhab
52
II
[126
126.
by Naville
left
in the
an ebony
side-panel of
shrine, unearthed
It is in the
name
of
was
( 375,
1.
24).
Upper and Lower Egypt, Okhepernere, Bodily Son of Re, Thutmose (11)^; he made (it) as his monument for his'^ father, Amon-Re,
making for him an august shrine of ebony of the best of the highlands,
that she might live and abide^ ^ioi him^e like Re, forever.
of
as Sethe has
shown
on the shrine
also,
I!
XXVII
is
They
are ignored
by Naville;
REIGN OF THUTMOSE
AND HATSHEPSUT
III
INTRODUCTION
The
close of
same
time.
periods, there
is
the
this period.
It
seems
It is the first,
names on
is
to the
the
and thus
first
far
and
reckoning with
fol-
all
the materials.
lowing propositions:
The
1.
another royal
name
is
name;
hence
The
2.
and Thutmose II
of
Thutmose
name of Hatshepsut on
with Thutmose III, shows
names
Thutmose I and
The
3.
he at
^^
first
earliest
with him.
129.
was
I.
The
real succession
on the
first fall
Thutmose
of
Thutmose I
54
2.
III
& QUEEN
[130
coregent.
3.
About year 6
Thutmose
of
III,
Thutmose
and II
together gain the throne, for a brief coregency, but are not
reign
4.
(numbered from
Thutmose
with Hatshepsut
III,
the throne,
Thutmose
numbered
III
finally
his years
130. It will
and they
rule together
undivided
when
possession.
He
till
the bulk of
associated with
holds
from
till
now
Thutmose
Thutmose
I falls before,
and
Thutmose
lies
II falls in the
between.
Hence
old order.
It
difficulties
Thutmose
I.
above conclusions.
the rest, the student
Some
is
of
it
will
referred to Sethe's
first treatise
{Untersuchungen,
I),
his
CORONATION INSCRIPTION
i3i]
beset
any theory
of the
Thutmosid
be regarded as
finally
The above
struggle.
55
demonstrated, but
it
is
perhaps not
at least deals
diffi-
On
all
the
Karnak temple, sometime between the years 15 and 22 (1. 17), Thutmose III held an
audience and addressed his court, informing them that he
owed his crown to Amon, and that he had shown his gratitude by great buildings and sumptuous offerings (11. 1-22).
The court replied, acknowledging his divine call to the
numerous additions
to the
throne
All this
(11.
22-24).
is
now
recorded as an in tro-
pin the Karnak temple of Amon, on the exterior of the south wall of the chambers south of the sanctuary; three fragments were first published in 1863 by Brugsch
{Recueil de Monuments, I, PI. XXVI), then entire by Marie tte {Karnak, 14-16) in
1875, with lines numbered backward and incorrect arrangement of fragments;
then more accurately, but less completely and without the fragments, by de Rouge
(Inscriptions hieroglyphiques, 165-74) in 1879, with lines numbered correctly;
then much better than either, with correct arrangement of fragments, by Brugsch
(Thesaurus, 1281-90); finally I published the coronation portion alone, based on
the old publications {New Chapter, 6-9).
But I have since secured much
them.
EIGHTEENTH
56
DYN.:
duction to a three-fold
god:
first,
list
his buildings
(11.
[132
the field,
third,
The
(11.
48-49)-
an account of
his
youth and of
In
king.
only
(1.
3)
compares himself
Delta marshes.
This very
to the youthful
Horus
common comparison
in the
of the king
conclusion, however,
hardly to be justified
is
then
as
if
This
we notice
now current,
if
translated backward!*
133. Translating the king's
it
This
becomes coherent
each
line,
and
tells
a remarkable
story.
The king
states,
ment
Amon,
as priest {hn-ntr,
^^
prophet,^ ^^
1.
2);
and that he
later
Amenmeses,
III,
'^It was the following context which misled Brugsch, for he remarks that such
comparisons were an "oft wiederkehrende Redensart junger Konige" (365).
^Geschichte, 365, and 288, 289; for the same error recently repeated, see Proceedings of the Society of Biblical Archceology, 1904, 37.
^Revue
critique,
1880,
I,
107, n. i;
and
1882, 133.
^Brugsch, the entire inscription, beginning with the last line, and ending with
the first.
As far back as 1879 the publication of the admirable de Rouge had
added the proper numbering to the lines; Brugsch has it in his Thesaurus (1891).
*
Of
later.
CORONATION INSCRIPTION
134]
office of
^^
Pillar of his
57
Mother
^^
(1.
3).
(who
is
ducting
ceremonies
the
(1.
down
before
Then
king;
passed
procession
the god
in adoration, but
(1.
was
7).
it is
now
the gods^^
him
ately following
him king
The
5).
him
splendid
hall
sought for
134.
The
around the
raised
4),
(1.
3).
(1.
is
a reference to the
^^
secrets
in the hearts of
make
8).*'
Thus he
12-14).
is
authority established at
is
referred tq
by the court
in their reply
Horus-throne of the
^Compare
15,
16),
his
in
king.
"He
(11.
and
(1.
23),
and by Thutmose
58
order that he
(11.
may
offer the
him
ones
buildings,
of
ff.),
humble rank
Amon
fact.
The
(III,
This
Harmhab
is
Karnak temple
unquestionable
a long
that of
official
Harmhab
is
that
rank
Harmhab
reached
it
of
life
Thutmose
offerings
17-22).
(11.
tion of
Amon
135.
22
[135
in the temple.
from
Any
directly
it
from
his
Suppose that
Thutmose III was the oldest son of Thutmose I, born before
the latter's accession; his mother being, as we know, a
is
to pass distinctly
fact
named
to
theory.
Isis.
why we
find
as his father,
from theory
^Harmhab
who
is
Thutmose
I,
had done.^
And now we
pass
to fact again.
1.
15).
CORONATION INSCRIPTION
138]
On
136.
59
when
the god
all ar-
and
shall indicate
him
as
The plan
is
of imagination
visit to
The
The
inscription refers to
gifts are
year;
it is
tween
this date
(year 22),
and
own name.
later buildings
Thutmose
campaigns
domains in Syria
his great
34),
he was
as
still
Lebanon ;^ and
it
was
to suppress
*=
138.
that I should be
my
upon
is
he; I
am
his son,
whom
he commanded
in his
^This coincides with Sethe's conclusion that Thutmose III succeeded Thutmose I
a time alone, before the legitimists forced Hatshepsut upon him as coregent.
^Where his forest domains of cedar must have been located.
cFor a full exposition of the historical and other data in this remarkable inscription, see the author's A New Chapter in the Life of ThtUmose III (in Sethe's
for
^The king
holding audience.
occurred
the sitting
There is httle doubt that 1. i began ''year x, month x, day x,
The audience now begins with a
(Jppr hms't"), as, e. g., at Der el-Bahri ( 292).
from
the
throne.
speech
eThe
in the relief
god's;
is
(1.
2).
left,
'
EIGHTEENTH
6o
my
my
installation to
Horns
in
III
& QUEEN
there
is
[139
no lie therein
before occurred
I
THUTMOSE
me in uprightness of heart
nest ;* he begat
since
DYN.:
Khemmis.
be prophet
was standing
my
majesty.
The Feast
the splendors of his horizon.
139.
his beauty;
The
"Coming
forth of
him ^[praise]
the ^altari
His majesty placed for him incense upon the fire, and
of his temple.
offered to
festive
Harakhte."
He made
him a
goats, ^
140.
both
hend
sides^ of
it,
the heart of
recognizing me,
*A common
lo,
he halted
my
on
front did not compreof the hypostyle**
[I
On
see 116.
cA title of the god Horus, and then of a priest; (see New Chapter^ 12 and 30)
as it was an office which could be held by a high priest {ibid., 30), this indicates
promotion of Prince Thutmose from the rank of '' prophet."
<iThis
is
by Thutmose
I in the
between his two Pylons (IV and V, see 99 and my New Chapter,
12-14, 30* 31)- As it was later dismantled by Hatshepsut for the erection of her
obelisks in it, we have here also a terminus ad quem for the date of Thutmose Ill's
coup d'etat. On the later history of the hall, see 600, 601, and 803 Q.
Kamak temple
A common
the
first
f
is
show.
words of the
line
line,
sOr
the procession.
^Where Prince Thutmose has already been stationed by the god (1. 3).
^ Meaning the colonnades on either side of the central aisle;
Prince Thutmose
is
standing in the
left,
or "northern," colonnade.
CORONATION INSCRIPTION
143]
6i
me
''Station of the
Ascent
141.
Heaven
to
form in heaven;
Horizon-God upon
hawk, beholding^
I
feast.
his mysterious
ways
saw the
in heaven.
Coronation in Heaven
142.
Re
upon ''[my
forehead]
\he satisfied] me with all his glories; I was sated
with the counsels of the gods, like Horus, when he counted his body
I was fpresentTjed with the
at the house of my father, Amon-Re.
his head, his serpent-diadem, rested
"
my
diadems.
Fixing Titulary^
143. His
own
titulary
was
'*
affixed for
himself;"
viz.,
me.
he raised
me up and
set
me
before
himself.
^The "Station
of the
King"
is
stood in the performance of the prescribed state ritual. One is known in Amida,
in Elephantine, in Thebes (temple of Memnon colossi), and, as above, at Karnak.
(See Spiegelberg, Recueil, XX, 50, and my New Chapter, 16, 17.) I have since
found another at Memphis (III, 532). The placing of Prince Thutmose at this
oflBicial
is
"Station of the
King"
is
cThe usual meaning of this phrase applied to a king is that he died, but this
clearly not its meaning here, where the king on the throne uses the phrase him-
self in
<iSo
Brugsch, but Gardiner and photographs have only a lacuna for " beholding."
it
occurs
EIGHTEENTH
62
DYN.:
Name
First
He
bull.
my
'3[in this
my
fixed
mighty
Name
Second
144. [He
my
made my
Two
Re
like
[144
Re
in heaven,
in]*^
this
Heaven."
in
Name
Third
He formed me
as a
Diadems"].
Name
Fourth
146.
Lord
of the
Two
[in this
Name
Fifth
am
147. I
Egypt,
his son
who came
forth
he beautified
all
my
forms, in this
my
Recognition of
148.
tries
my
my
my
's
His Authority
terror
was
sandals.
He
gave victory by
boundaries of Egypt]
^This
(really the
Nine Bows;
my
because
all
my majesty;
so much
him.
He
the
is
not
it
literally certain,
occurs elsewhere.
(or
Thothmose)
is
compounded.
CORONATION INSCRIPTION
i5o]
more than
rejoiced in me,
since
it
63
(in)
was loosened.^
Purpose
149. I
am
His Choice
oj
whom
cause to encompass
ment abiding
in
^^
which he established,
Karnak.
requited
to
is.
make a monu-
his
greater than
it
my ffather!]
18
upon earth
descending
^^
limit.
''fori
things,
fied
that
Thebes
is eternal.
Amon, Lord
of
Erection oj This
150. I
way
made my monument,
of the lord of
Karnak,
is
in this land
*^
Monument
I recorded
my commands
at the stair-
is
therein
"
"
**
with the things of his gods, when the god is satisThe monument is a work in the temple for a
fied with his things.
memorial of my beauty in his house, and I shall endure in the mouth*^
libation, together
forever.
it is
not
now
visible
on the
wall.
at the beginning,
EIGHTEENTH
64
DYN.:
[151
May
word
of
Re
writing speak,^
established
is
The
oracle of the
Thoth
*4
may
is
Two
is
assigned to thee;
A New
152.
is like
thy annals as
the
H.
thy majesty
god himself,^
His kingship
rejoicing.
which
in the court, L. P.
we have heard
this [word]
*s
for thee
Chapel^
ment of fine white sandstone. The king himself performed with his
two hands the stretching of the cord and the extension of the line, putting
(it) upon the ground, and furnishing on this monument the exaction of
work, according to the
command
of *^
hands.
A Holy
oj Holies
153. Behold,
the favorite
*7
Red Moimtain.^
Its interior
Three Portals
154. I [erected] the first portal, (named:) " Menkheperre-is-Splendid-
in-the-Opulence-of-Amon;"
"Menkhe-
cHere the audience of the court seems to have been concluded, and the
buildings
and
Com-
list
of
offerings begins.
is like
e^ear Cairo (cf. Baedeker's Egypt, 1902, 77; wrongly stated to be near Syene
in Egypt under the Pharaohs, 176), about two miles east of the city.
It yields a
reddish, sandy conglomerate called "gritstone."
This passage shows the elastic
character of the word rendered ''sandstone" {rwd't); it indicated only gritty, hard
stone, and usually sandstone.
See also Erman, Life in Ancient Egypt, 478, n. i.
CORONATION INSCRIPTION
J T56]
65
(named:)
wrought
"MenkheperreJ^-is-the-Great-One-of-the-Souls-of-Amon; "
with real electrum, through which Mat*^ enters for him
making
monument.
festive the
He
*^
life,
and
Pylon VI
My
155.
ioned of
new
doubly
It
him a
with copper.
"refined^
I erected for
'"refined"'
made
the
"
"
thereof were of
156.
new cedar
and the
statues^
of
my
fathers,
before me].
aMariette found six gates bearing the name of Thutmose III in Karnak; but
of the three above named he could only find the last (see Marie tte, Karnak, Textes,
The first was found by Legrain
58, and Brugsch, Thesaurus, VI, 131 1, 1312, 1315.
never been found.
service,
the
second
has
{Annates
du
II,
in 1901
227);
^Inserted by Brugsch, but no longer visible on original.
cGoddess of
truth.
^This pylon of the interior is, of course, the pylon (VI) of Thutmose III,
behind the two pylons (IV and V) of his father, Thutmose I, and just in front of
the holy of holies.
The back of this pylon is occupied by the conclusion of the
Annals and the record of feasts and offerings ( 541 ff.), and the front by Nubian
lists.
^Apparently
further
reference
to
the three
portals
mentioned
before
(154).
it
on the
it
is
no
wall.
gThese statues were those of his ancestors mentioned in the list in one of the
rear chambers of the Karnak temple and now in Paris (see 604 f.).
66
A
157.
my
[for]
Restoration^
father
Amon-Re
in
upon
him a monument anew,
him his temple which built^ for him 33[my majesty]
my
Behold,
the ancestors.
My
[157
beautiful
upon
monument
this
34
" Menkheperre-
(Thutmose - III) - Adored - of - the - People - is - Great - in - the - Strength - of Amon." Its great door was of cedar of the royal domain,*^ wrought
with [copper; the great name upon it] was of electrum. 3S
.
Conclusion of Buildings
He [rdid""] more than any king who has been since the beginning.
158.
his majesty in
"i
36
ance "^ at
of very great
Amon
his father
monuments,
excellent in
work according
much
loved
[Qord of Thebes'"].
stands.
As
in the
list,
its
conclusion or dedication
and
is
cin contrast with his restoration of it in stone (which here falls into the following lacuna) cf. Thutmose Ill's Ptah-temple at Karnak, which bears the inscription:
;
His
^^
domain must have been in Syria, for cedar did not grow
This indicates that Thutmose III maintained his authority there before
ning of his great campaigns (see my New Chapter, 28, 29).
<iThis
in Egypt.
the begin-
tacit restoration.
At this point begins a part of the lost upper portions of the lines, preserved
on two blocks at the top of the wall. They have been set on wrong by Mariette,
and should be shifted two lines to the right. From here to the end, the average
loss is from one-quarter to one-half line.
*
gOf
CORONATION INSCRIPTION
i63]
New
The
159.
king himself
Amon-Re,
67
Offerings
commanded
to
make
lord of Thebes,
30 jars of
fruit,
100
white
Live Offerings
My
160.
majesty furthermore
commanded ^ho
present an offering,
Vegetable Garden
My
161.
to
him
made
majesty
and
vegetables
for
and Lands
beautiful flowers.
all
in order to present
My majesty furthermore
many
lands in
^ ""stati.
Foreign Slaves
162.
the south
and north
I filled
it
Khenthennofer, according as
chiefs] of
silver, gold,
my
father
my
majesty
made
for
him
^*anew.
Another
163. Year 15,
New
Offering
life,
my
year""]
prosperity,
father
and health
Amon may
of
my
majesty
[Tin
my
the
majesty,
be supplied for
all
eternity.
1.
30,
and
note).
^Numeral
dSee
New
is lost.
Chapter, 28.
is
1.
42 on,
now no
164.
trace of
it.
EIGHTEENTH
68
THUTMOSE
DYN.:
III
& QUEEN
[164
to
him
many]^
[very
of
monuments: a great vase (hst) of electrum, of 7 cubits*^
silver, gold, bronze, and copper, they shone over the (sacred) lake;
Two Lands
the
body
of Nut, while
real
my
work
of the
2 great
the
jars, as
bersi ^
made
of the
my
My
My
first
father
Amon,
my
lord of Thebes,
many Tcham''enclosure'',
A Harp,
165.
him
god himself,
seat ^^
for
it
like in this
hands of "Him-Who-is-South-of-His-Wall."
""beyond everything!
him
Ofifering-tables of electrum of
statue followed.
which
Etc.
and every
made anew,
names
supplied with
all
['^which'']
I [""exact^Jed for
it.
Conclusion
166.
My majesty did
recompense
for the
are in
temple
[this]
this for
permanence
the limbs, as
an everlasting work,
New
to
make
Year.
^The Egyptian uses the word "monument" also for smaller works, vessels,
which a list begins here.
^So Brugsch, but Gardiner has the mh-sign and a lacuna.
clf this refers to the height, as seems certain, it was of the astonishing height
utensils, etc., of
of twelve feet!
^-n-yb) occurs in
original.
1.
4).
^Sh}},'t.
1 1,
^The god.
i68]
69
167.
ground up,
Of
temple stands.
whose
fortress of
Semneh
the
(I,
it.
piously set
also
had
offerings
III.
More than this the old temple was sacred to Khnum and
Dedun; but Thutmose III adds to them Sesostris III, now
apotheosized as the hero who conquered Nubia^ (see I,
There is here a noble regard for the greatest king
of the Middle Kingdom, which contrasts very strikingly
with the shameful desecration of which the Nineteenth
640
ff.)
Dynasty was
Thutmose
guilty.
new temple
early in his
Queen Hatshepsut's
I.
RENEWAL OF
regnancy.*"
SESOSTRIS
lIl'S
LIST OF OFFERINGS*^
Scenes
On
168.
baldachin.
is
enthroned under a
left
stands
Thutmose
III.
^Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 47, at-56, b; Young, Hieroglyphics, 91-95. Steindorff's collation of Lepsius with the original shows that the latter's plates are very
accurate.
earlier
than
this,
but
cOn later traces of her in the reliefs, see Sethe, Zeitschrift fiir dgyptische Sprocket
36, 59-63,
^On
and
Pis.
VI-X.
EIGHTEENTH
70
DYN.:
[169
Inscription
169. ^Year
day
2,
^Thutmose
Decree 0} Renewal
170. That which was spoken by^ the majesty of the Court, L. P. H.,
^:
offerings,
-in the
of
Two
and the
who
begat him;
in the house
{Ss^'w)',
while he lived
Sesostris
of
IIPs
List
Wawat
Nubia, a
Dedun, pre-
southern grain, 15 heket;^ for his father Dedun, presider over Nubia:
of southern grain, 645 heket; of spelt, 20;
Bows: a
New
Khnum,
Year (wp-rnp't);
aPuU titulary.
bLit., "from" (m).
cThe name of the official is lost, but it is almost certainly the viceroy of Kush,
who was appointed by Thutmose I ( 61 f.), whose name was probably Thure.
^His Horus-name follows.
^Restored after
1.
7.
sThe
ofiFerings are
separated by a semicolon.
XIV,
430).
172]
Dedun: a
^a bull of the
bull
71
(named:)
feast,
beginning
linen, 8
"the
[for]
month)
feast,
first
of the
Khnum,
binder of the (Nine) Bows, smiter of the Shasu: southern grain, 26 heket;
year for the great king's-wife, Merseger (Mr-sgr), at (the feast) "Binding-of-the-Barbarians:" southern grain, 135 heket; of spelt, 10; each
172. '3His majesty enjoined them upon the chiefs, and governors
of the fortresses of Elephantine of the South, as dues of each year to
n.
III
Scene ^
173.
Thutmose
My
174.
III
of
Dedun
how
beautiful
is this
beautiful
monument, which thou hast made for my beloved son. King of Upper
and Lower Egypt, Khekure (Sesostris III). Thou hast perpetuated
his
name
aSee
654.
I,
^The season
cThere
and the
live.
feast of victory
seem
to
have
is
tiProbably
this
feast
mayest
Thutmose
fallen together.
is
probably 205.
month.
There
is
no doubt that
this is
r,
"at, " as in
Inside,
1.
There
10.
is
EIGHTEENTH
72
175.
Thou
satisfying Ufe,
his
Thou
him many
hast presented to
gold, bronze,
176.
scene ^
The
[175
Dedun adds:
memoriam.'^
and
DYN.:
monument
in
offering-tables of silver
The reward
is
is
as follows i"^
for the
although
ing
to""
it
(it)
Regions,
set
my majesty found
in
to
him
the
Two
this land.
have
^who assigned
be Horus, lord of
to
as he gave
that I should
his
He
hath given to
me
and
BIOGRAPHY OF NEBWAWI
177.
This
official
Thutmose
and continuing under Amenhotep 11. The narrative of his career was evidently distributed upon a number of monuments,* some of which are
lost, so that we now possess only the story of his earliest and
latest years, the former on a statue, the latter on a stela,
both of which were gifts from the king.
in the reign of
III
b.
ing.
"a monument
Compare Hebrew, H?
is,
CO
BIOGRAPHY OF NEBWAWI
i8i]
I.
This
178.
the
to
Thutmose
III; during
Hatshepsut
is
Nebwawi during
nine years of
first
73
which he
rises
It is significant that
At
abruptly concluded, as
if
to
Given as a favor
King
of
First Period
180. I
made
filled
the
chief in the
every day
first office
in the house of
my
father, Osiris; I
A royal command
of the temple.
came before me
'"31.^
My
lord, the
King
III), praised
was
me
.^
of
Upper and
for
it.
Second Period
181. I was appointed to be High Priest of
office of this
my
Another time
it
^On
^Lit.,
cAn
"pressing
(i. e.,
<ilt is
following) the
its
length
is
way
*Lit., *'to
cause
to
dawn.'*
of, etc."
is
to be read 2;
giving 3.
EIGHTEENTH
74
Panopolis, at
prophets and
all
the
It
The majesty
nome.
DYN.:
workmen
[182
my
in the Thinite
Third Period
182. I was appointed to be chief in the
King
the year 9.
I repulsed
him
that
II.
184.
ABYDOS STELA ^
Amenhotep
monument
is
gift of
Thutmose
Thutmose
was called to
of
II
^^
This conclusion
is
name
Nebwawi
the court,
III.^
Amenhotep
11.
coregency.
*This is the sacred barge used in the drama of the Osiris-myth; see the same
connection in the inscription of Pefnefdineit (IV, 1023).
the feminine
is
referred to.
^On
I,
55.
It
late
in the year 53, or early in 54, for we find Thutmose III still alone in year 52 (Lepsius,
Denkmaler, III, 45, e; Sethe, Uniersuchungen, I, 23, n. i), and Amenhotep II
i87]
Reign
185.
Thutmose III
oj
High
He
75
saith:
''I
many works
conducted
Nebwawi.
Priest of Osiris,
in 3the house of
my
father
stone.
these were
my
upon
my
house of
my
place was
was summoned
made among
my
lord, as pro-
^I attained reverence*
father.
and
seal, (for)
his princes.
^to his
^My
under the
house of gold,
(w^
h)
was
at
my
Reign
186. His son repeated to
of
me
King
favored.
Amenhotep II
favor, ^the
King
of
He
gave to
me
of
domain.
L. P. H. of the Son
^^
Amenhotep
Re, forever."*^
tian king
It is
tale
title,
aOld
to
us in
the
age.
mortuary prayer.
^A series of reliefs and inscriptions in the Der el-Bahri temple, occupying the
north half of the middle colonnade (corresponding to the Punt reliefs on the south
half, 246 fif.).
They were uncovered by the excavations of the Egypt ExploraPublished in
tion Fund under Naville, which began excavating the temple in 1894.
Naville, Deir-el-Bahari, II, 46-55.
76
bom among
and
The
tale current
common
of Egypt, lineal
this
corre-
a thou-
As Re
descent from him
people.^
from
first
monuments thus
t88
by Re,
became the
astonishing prodigies,
all
Pharaohs
but in
its strictest
sense the
title
indicated
up around
a theme a
so
These finally
took stereot3^ed form, and the pictures, accompanied by
explanatory text, made up of fragmentary quotations from
the story in poetic form, have been preserved to us by
Hatshepsut at Der el-Bahri and by Amenhotep III at Luxor.
i88. The Papyrus Westcar,^ dating from the rise of the
Eighteenth Dynasty, has preserved to us the charming
pictures of the various incidents in the drama.
"^
I,
69
f.
^The Papyrus Westcar (see Erman, Die Mdrchen des Papyrus Westcar, Berlin,
1890; Erman, Life in Ancient Egypt, 373 ff., and Aus den Papyrus des koniglichen
Museums zu
from 700
i9o]
in
folk-tale
circulated
which the
among
the
state fiction
common
texts,
accompanying the
hotep
poem
77
The explanatory
Hatshepsut and Amen-
people.
reliefs of
fine
in
is
common
same gods
For
and at least in
two incidents the same words are employed by both.
189. Later every king claimed Amon (successor of Re)
as his physical father, and in Ptolemaic times the incidents
the
temple
the
reliefs.^
Amon
190.
it
result
202).
was
in
some cases
Undoubtedly,
this
fiction as
legitimate
The
fitted
fiction to
only to a man.
startling inconsistency
tale
was
of
Hatshepsut' s
(e. g.,
divine
II,
annuaire 1897).
^See Mahaffy, The Ptolemic Dynasty, 15, 16.
EIGHTEENTH
78
DYN.:
[191
paternity,
I.
Scene
192.
Amon
two rows
enthroned at the
at the
right, before
twelve gods'" in
left.
Inscription
The
tween
Amon and
lines'^
be-
and those
of
Amon
(all
the rest) in
Two Lands
in peace
I will give
*See 841 ff. I have arranged the Der el-Bahri and Luxor texts in parallel
columns, and find that they largely supplement each other. They are practically
identical.
two
lines
^Amenhotep
III has
Thoth before
this council of
gods at Luxor.
195]
79
n.
Scene
Amon
193.
stands at the
Thoth on
before
left
the right. ^
Inscriptions^
The words
of
Ramses
of
Amon
Without them,
it is
the interview.
The words
of
Words
of
thou maiden
194.
Thoth
exact purpose of
Thoth^
whom
Lo,
"
ii,
to her.
are
now
195.
other;
life.
They
feature omitted in
Der
and Hathor standing between Amon and Thoth. Hathor embraces the queen,
and the fragmentary inscription would indicate that the goddess is informing the
queen of what is to befall her.
^Between and over the gods.
^End
of
an optative imperative
is
Amon
gOn
the right of the preceding scene (Naville, Deir-el-Bahari, II, 47; Luxor,
63 (71).
^Naville, Deir-el-Bahari, II, 47, Luxor, Gayet, 63 (71); a much better text
than Gayet's, although with impossible conjectures in the lacunae, is by Bouriant,
Recueil, IX, 84, 85.
EIGHTEENTH
8o
DYN.:
[196
upon the heavens,^ symbolic of the exalted character of the interview, supported by two female divinities
who are seated upon a couch. ^ The inscriptions are as
are sitting
follows
The Interview^
196. Utterance of
He made
form
his
kere (Thutmose
Amon-Re,
like the
He found
I).
palace.
He went
cum
he imposed his desire upon her, he caused that she should see him
in his
form of a god.
When
of the
god flooded;
all his
Words
Queen^
oj the
"How
great
united
my
is
thy fame!^
It is splendid to see
Amon, Lord
of the
mouth.^
dew
Two
this saying
is
in all
^Upon which
<iThe following
my limbs."
my
daughter,
^Plainer in Luxor.
Thebes:
be the name of
shall
of
Amon^
"Khnemet-Amon-Hatshepsut
whom
all
of
Words
198. Utterance of
Amon, Lord
whole land.J
Amon.
^The connection
is
not clear.
302]
My
soul
rule the
is
Two
rV.
199.
my
hers,
'"bounty"' is hers,
may
my
lead
crown
all
''is
hers,''
8i
that she
may
.^
the living
Amon now
created man.
Scene
accompany them
Instructions of
Amon^
Umbs which
all
have begotten.
all
Kamak:
are in
have given
all offerings,
Reply
of
and
my
" Go, to
me;
make
her,
go, to fashion
daughter,
whom
and
all
Khnum
will
V.
CHILD^
Scene
202
he
is
(!)
children,^
the
first
being
state, follow
= Luxor,
and employed
Read twt ny f
* Luxor adds:
"together with
Khnum
all.
all his
= Luxor,
reliefs
82
[203
The frog-headed
Hatshepsut and the second her ka.
goddess Heket, * kneeling on the right, extends the symbol of
life
to the
two children.
Inscription
203.
Amon,
them now
putting
Utterance of
Khnum,
"I have
have come
(fern.) all
and
from
to thee
me;
I have given to thee (fem.) ^all health, all lands; I have given to thee
(fem.)
all
aJOl
have given
like
^ I
Re, forever;
have given
to thee (fem.) to
Lower Egj^t,
of
King
of
Horus
be before the
of
Upper and
commanded.
VI.
Scene
204.
Thoth,
who
the right
arm
is
saluted
by
at the left.
Inscriptions
They
Vn.
titles
and epithets of
QUEEN AHMOSE
IS
is
not clear.
LED TO CONFINEMENT*
Scene
*At Luxor
it is
Hathor.
^In Papyrus Westcar (X, 14) Khnum ''makes sound his limbs"
cUnimportant variants in Luxor.
^Two short lines lost.
THE BIRTH OF QUEEN HATSHEPSUT
2o6]
83
Inscriptions
They again
and
epithets of praise;
the
some references
^^Thou didst conceive imme-
we can
to the scene;
discern:
"
thou
a child
with
\JGo^]
Amon
hacked
doubtless contained
out,
lines,
the
now
completely
description
the
of
scene.
THE
VIII.
BIRTH''
Scene
206.
The queen^
sits
the child.^
five
goddesses;^
upon a couch.
upon a couch, we
their
life.
arms
the foremost,
The
entire
see directly
for
row
rests
and
west.*^
right,
the
left,
Bes and
also interesting
functions.
^Khnum
or
Amon ?
name
(=Luxor, 65
of Hatshepsut
position
identity
here.
is
Among them
Isis
Re
in
23).
^
EIGHTEENTH
84
DYN.:
[207
The
207.
Meskhenet
on the
( 203).
DC.
The
child
is
now
1.
right in the
all
Khnum^
speech of
208.
divinities
Amon, who
is
standing on the
left.
Inscriptions
2.
The
one can
brief
still
words
of
Words
3.
Utterance of [Amon]
Amon
^
Makere (Hatshepsut),
oj
arm
was born,
[Amon to] his bodily daughter [Hatshepsut]: "Gloriwhich has come forth from me; king, taking the Two Lands,
Utterance^ of
ous part
forever."
of the
cise
to
^In Papyrus Westcar (X, 13, 14). Meskhenet says: "^4 king,
the kingship in this whole land."
cNaville, Deir-el-Bahari, II, 52
= Luxor,
who
shall exer-
^Exactly the same phrase (ndm yh) is used by the divinities in Papyrus Westcar
(XI, 5), as they announce the birth of his children to Rawoser, saying: "Z^/ thy
heart he happy, Rawoser; behold three children are born to thee."
^
Under
his extended
arm.
2io]
85
X.
Scene
209.
Amon
enthroned at the
is
left
Behind the
to its
who
is
They
XI.
made
little
more than
out.^
CHILD*'
Scene
210.
On
a couch at the
left
(above)
sits
Queen Ahmose,
its
It
has almost
all
her ka'sJ^
*She
is
^'Luxor
lacking at Luxor.
is
no
better.
(Luxor, 66
and
193,
and
<JThe children have been hacked out, but they are clear in Luxor. There is a
splendid granite statue of such a Hathor cow in Florence, suckling the infant King
Harmhab.
EIGHTEENTH
86
DYN.:
[211
Xn.
Scene
211.
its
ka.*
Inscriptions
is
of
the
Xni.
Scene
Khnum
At the
left
divinity.
Be-
purpose of
its
it
is
therefore impos-
this scene.
The
child
is
career.
STATUE OF ENEBNI^
213.
Thutmose
^Hacked
statue
refers to
^^
out.
Museum.
(=Luxor, 67
Inscription:
(68), Fig.
"Lepsius,
195,
and 64
Auswahl
(69),
der wichtig-
Urkunden, it; Sethe, Untersttchungen, I, 123, e, and cf. also 6, 7, and 51;
also Maspero, Proceedings of the Society of Biblical Archceology, XIV, 170 ff.
sten
215]
87
Two
Lands,
Made
as a favor ^ of the
Good Goddess,
Mistress of the
Makere (Hatshepsut), living and abiding like Re, and her brother the
Good God, Lord of Offering, Menkheperre (Thutmose III), who is
given
life like
An
Re, forever.
^ for the
ka
of the only
excellent one, the favored of his god, the beloved of his lord, because
of his excellence; the follower of his lord
on
South
country and the North country,*^ the king's-son, chief of the archers,
VASE INSCRIPTION^
214.
by Hatshepsut
to her mother,
made
(it)
for
The
of
of
Senmut
statue
^Showing
queen
titles
Sethe, Untersuchungen,
same
I,
31 and
36,
fact.
and inscriptions on the wall of the northern half of the middle colonnade in the Der el-Bahri temple; they begin on the south end-wall (directly over
the first scene of the birth series, which they continue), proceed northward along
the west wall, and conclude on the north end-wall (directly over the last scene of
the birth series).
They were uncovered by the Fund excavations under Naville,
and pubUshed by Naville, Deir-el-Bahari, III, 56-64.
f
Reliefs
88
III
& QUEEN
[216
They
gods;
and
finally
enemies.
The
THE PURIFICATION*
I.
Scene
216.
The
Khonsu on
the
who
left,
Amon
on the
right
and
of
dignity of
King
living.
217.
his
left,
representing
'^all the
upon
at
Der
(= Luxor
el-Bahri, but
is
preserved at Luxor.
221]
89
Inscriptions
They have
218.
name
where
it
Ramses
of
II.
Amon
my
of South
*^
to look
220. ^Utterance of
[Hatshepsut],
*She
"Be-
upon
the gods:*
to]
is
Thou
who
all
liveth,
Words
the gods,
we
[to]
life
and peace.
now thy daughter of thy form, whom thou hast begotten, prepared.
hast given to her thy soul, thy
in
",
"
Horus
Gods
oj the
all
We
of Set in satisfaction.
have given to
here
in.
With
221.
queen's childhood
we
pass
II's restoration
name
of the queen
out,
Ramses
II has
inserted ''Amon.'*
cLit.,
to see her."
scenes ( 198).
Periods of 60 years.
gRamses
^Text
209-11.
first
life,
Amon
much more
wrong
place.
After
satisfaction, etc.
Later and
in the
and
EIGHTEENTH
90
a kernel of
fact.
DYN.:
Having
[222
know
now
slightly
nothing) and
ment
of her
hood
it is
to
northward.
(11.
8-15)
is
Following
this,
came
is
to her as she
journeyed
inscription
journey northward
is
That
this
kingship; and, as
we
Atum's successor
at Heliopolis, Re,
all
In accordance with
of
this old
225]
91
who
heard, falling
all this
down
for terror
among them.
^Her majesty
grew beyond everything; to look upon her was more beautiful than
was like a god, her form was like a god, she did
anything; her r
^everything as a god, her splendor was like a god; her majesty (fem.)
">
was a maiden,
divine form to
beautiful, blooming,
flourish,
a ^favor
ofi
him
^She
made
her
The Journey
224. Her majesty (fem.) journeyed
^to the
North country
after her
father, the
forever.
mistress
Montu, lord
of
all
the gods
They
brought
all life
behind her;
and
to its ruin,^
^it
thou shalt pass through the land^ and thou shalt embrace ^many
Thou
countries.
the
shalt strike
among
thou shalt seize ^Hhe chiefs of Retenu, bearing the sword, the survivals
*What
thing
is meant is not clear; possibly it refers to the preceding presentawhich she narrates now to the people. Then follow her growth
^Ywlj/r
is
is
<iRead }pns't t^
{t
^Meaning those
whom
for
two land-signs).
her father Thutmose I had
left;
hence
this is further
EIGHTEENTH
92
DYN.:
of thy father.
Thy
thy rrewardi
"thousands of men
Thou
is
tribute is myriads of
thee with
givest offerings in
of Thebes.
life
and
[226
'"present"'
hath
They
with children
"
'^
beloved.
IV.
it is
the daughter
CORONATION BY ATUM^
is
led
by Hathor^
the right.
into the
In Luxor, after
queen
in
of
Thoth
put
titulary
V.
228.
The
coronation before
Atum
is
followed by a similar
^Amon-Kamephis.
57,
58
= Luxor,
73 (66), Fig.
191,
and 74
dThere
another divinity before the queen, and there were others behind
Hathor, but all have disappeared.
is
probable that this scene was also in the Der el-Bahri series in the
erased space immediately following the above introduction to Atum.
^'It
is
Luxor
l^This
is
1 231]
93
Scene
The queen,*
standing,
is
points.
Inscriptions
Re; thou
Lands by
shalt
is this
this its
is
Two
name
Presented to thee
shalt take the lands
is this
by
its
diadem, by
Reception of
this its
name.
Names
There was here a scene (wanting in Luxor), representing the reception by the queen of her new royal names,
conferred by the gods."" The scene is totally destroyed,
with the exception of the figures'^ of Sefkhet and Thoth ( ?)
on the right accompanied by the words:
230.
King
VI.
of
Divine of Diadems.
Writing
231.
The
queen,
in
king's
crown
of
officials
by the god
( 239).
94
EIGHTEENTH
DYN.:
[232
Inscriptions
The accompanying
set
these
thy
head].^^
Vn.
We now
232.
^^Thou hast
queen, which
is
command
that she
of
This
233.
another
still
more
given as the
first
decisive.
The
of Thoth,
New
The
remarkable coincidence.
Year's Day, of
Thutmose
which
itself
is
is
ex-
I in a passage,
states :*=
^First published
212; finally,
60-63.
much
by Naville
PL
I,
III;
possible.
is
as follows:
234]
**He (Thutmose
New
on^
I)
Day
Year's
Thutmose
Day
But
if
very
(of years) of
many
day
and
of the
jubilees."^
tion.
we
spending of myriads
95
New
Year's
inscription (318,
1.
8),
regnal year
fell
the thirtieth of
Day.
Bahri temple,
coronation of
is
Der
el-
Amenemhet
III
in
the
Middle Kingdom
lists
of
Ramses
Habu, which
the Eighteenth and Nine-
III at Medinet
lists
of
coronation of
an artificial
creation, a fiction of later origin, prompted by political
As such it is closely paralleled by the similar
necessity.
representations of Ramses II in his great Abydos inscripHatshepsut,
like
the
supernatural birth,
is
tion (III, 251-81), with the sole difference that his father is
on the throne.
Scene
234.
Thutmose
I is
enthroned at the
left,
iers
^Lit., "of,"
H 239,
11.
making
the phrase,
''New Year's
33, 34.
cFragments
in Berlin (Nos.
1 5801-4;
den
character
of
knowledge
the
owe the
of these fragments to
to them.
coronation."
who
kindly called
my attention
EIGHTEENTH
96
DYN.:
[235
Inscriptions^
They
tion, in
court.
to be
is
Crowned
this
Horus;^ how
(for) great is
her crown
*she advocates her cause rin^ truth, ^exalteri of her royal dignity,
of that
palace of
and the
in the palace,
shalt
were
living
".
me
Thou
^The
and
be powerful in the
Two
mayest
Lands; thou
with the double diadem, resting upon the head of the heiress of Horus,
whom
The
of the
to thee
gods.
Thutmose I Summons
^My
236.
and the
and
companions, ^the
The language
is difficult
may do homage,^
^They are
the Court
is
in
many
to set the
maj-
^Hatshepsut.
I,
to
whom
all
Of course, read:
f
<^-f-n-ys' t
as in
1.
10.
it
1.8).
is
to reign;
the phrase
to Sny't.
^Ndt-hr.
is
not
uncommon.
238]
There was a
sitting^ of the
97
"
in his palace of
i.^
Thutmose Fs Address
who
.mon, Hatshepsut,
my
my
successor^ ^^upon
my
liveth, I
it
assuredly
command
name
who
evil in
upon
Horus
by
(viz.,
whom
my
name).^
day according
shall die.
of this
shall sit
is
is
she
'^shall enter
[her]
it is
ye shall be united at
live,
my daughter, Khnemet-
have appointed
throne, she
Court
to the
it
For ^^thou
fight;
was done by
art divine,
behind
to the
whom
command
they
of her
the
New
Queen
238. ^^The dignitaries of the king, the nobles and the chief of the
people J hear ^this
command
for the
advancement
of the dignity of
I.
^See
1.
itself.
"were upon
1.
i).
their bellies."
is
^This word (ys'ty) is very important; for it indicates, not association as coregent, but accession as successor.
It is used in the same sense, precisely, by the
nomarch Key
(I,
692).
l^That
as
is,
the
named
in
11.
is
1.
father.
8, 9.
JSee 236,
securing entrance
9, n. f.
98
III
& QUEEN
[239
[to]
them.
dwelUngs
(it)
soldiers
on
soldiers
"
1,^
(it)
name;
They
heard;
the
name
of
* ^turning''
"=
that
it
Makere
was the
The majesty
this,
for king.
incUned to
[her] exceedingly.
all
Names
ritual priests
be brought
who
Two
New
Year's
*See
^A
Day
236,
1.
9, n.
^See
cf.
of the
f.
verb of shouting
^Written twice,
and
is
lacking, as
it is
note a.
236, n.
240]
spending of myriads
many
jubilees.
make
made them
it
99
They
pro-
should be in their
before:^
Two
Goddesses:
''Fresh in
who Uveth
name
Kjng
of
forever."
her real
It is
of
name which
made
the god
beforehand.
SECOND PURIFICATION*
VIII.
The queen
led
is
away by
Inscriptions
The
first
(day) of the
first
season.
New
first
of the
Two
Shed
Mother,"
of the
to enter the
"Great House"
"Great House"
(rfor
thei)
(""byi)
the "Pillar of
purification of the
"Great House."
aThey were inspired to announce the same names which the god had already
conferred upon her before ( 230). This is to explain how the officials knew the
same names already conferred by the god.
^'' Mighty of doubles."
cW^d't
^The complete
ing.
This
^Ntr't-}}^ w.
rnp'wt.
last fifth
personal
names
the queen.
hCf.
150.
I,
here lack-
gOver
is
JA
priestly title.
EIGHTEENTH
icx>
DYN.:
[241
Second Scene
sign of
life.
Inscription
over
epitheta;
all
satisfying
many
jubilees, like
Re, for-
ever.
DC.
242.
The queen
CONCLUDING CEREMONIES*
is
now
led
several
of the wallj^^ in
above. ^
The
^^
making
coronation
is
title
0} the circuit
of the
now regarded
north
queen used
as complete, for
is
is
to
make
represents
him
It
^In
240,
and elsewhere.
cOn
the north side of the third southern pylon, left wing, below; text: Lepsius,
Denkmdler, III, 18; Sethe, Untersuchungen, I, 113, 114; translated by de Rouge,
The
inscription
is
i).
245]
loi
245.
"
come
(the
dominion
of)
my
11,
divinities.
1.
do obeisance^
and Lower Egypt, Makere^ (Hatshepsut), who Uves forever, just as thou
^^.
didst put (it) under (the dominion of) my majesty
Thou hast given to me the kingdom of every land in the presence of the
Two Lands, exalting my beauty while I was a youth .... [the Black
Land] ^^and the Red Land are under my dominion. I am satisfied with
victories, thou hast placed every rebellious land under my sandals which
.
[of
me]
^stheir
them
[they
come
to
Tribute
because
of
her
^ ^^
^^fthe
made my subjects;
countries with bowed head.
all
are
the heart of
my
^Lit.,
I,
majesty
is
glad
my daughter
whom thou hast
concerning
petition^]
command; they
gifts;
28) that
it
"that"'
thou mightest
1,
113.
^The black land of the valley and the red of the desert hills.
^The name has been changed to that of Thutmose II, but the queen's name
can
still
be read.
^The conventional praise of the king; in the following lines which are very
fragmentary, only the references to the queen are translated.
gHorus-name of Hatshepsut.
^Apparently a play on her name, "Associaie
of
Amon" (Khnemet-Amon).
I02
EIGHTEENTH
[to]
[my]
beloved
me
[246
her grasp.
concerning
DYN.:
first
time,
(fem.)
my
petitions
under
her
majesty (fem.).
of
They
are as beautiful
an important expedition
of the
queen
They
thither,
record
which was
The
only
earlier
evidences of
intercourse
1.
i).
with
Punt are as
follows: In the
*In the Der el-Bahri temple, occupying the south half of the middle terrace
(corresponding to the Birth and Youth on the north half, 187 ff.). See accompanying plan (p. 105). First copied by Diimichen and published by Diimichen,
Historische Inschriften, II, 8-20, and Fleety 1-3, and 18, a; then by Mariette,
Deir-el-Bahari, 5-10.
The excavations of the Egypt Exploration Fund since
1894 have for the first time uncovered all the Punt reliefs, and they have all
now appeared in the superb publication of the Egypt Exploration Fund (Naville,
The Temple of Deir-el-Bahari, Introductory Memoir, Pis. 7-10, and Vol. Ill,
Pis. 69-86).
Unfortunately, the old publications have not been collated and the portions since lost, added.
It is therefore still necessary to collate Mariette and
Diimichen; I have placed all copies in parallel columns as a basis for the present
translation.
The inscriptions and reliefs have suffered, not merely from the hand
of time and modern vandalism, but the inscriptions and figures of Hatshepsut were
hacked out by her political enemies after her fall, and the figure and neighboring
inscriptions of Amon, wherever occurring, were later erased by Amenhotep IV.
The faint traces remaining on the wall are difficult to read; hence the numerous
errors in the old publications.
The most useful treatments are Erman {Life in
Ancient Egypt, 505 ff.), Maspero (Struggle 0} the Nations, 247-53, with very full
citation of the older bibliography) and for Punt especially see Miiller (Mittheil;
ungen der Vorderasiatischen Gesellschaft, III, 42; also Orientalistische Litteraturzeitung, II, 416) and Krall (Beitrdge zur Geschichte der Blemyer und Nuhier,
" Denkschriften der Wiener Akademie," Philologisch-historische Classe, Vol.
XLVI, 4te Abhandlung) to which is added an excursus on Punt).
^Lepsius, Denkmaler, II, 23; see
Erman, Aegypten,
670.
J 248]
103
Dynasty, an
officer of
(I,
there
was
None
of
also
The
reliefs illustrating
Der
and only
full
of ancient
The
M.
of the Sesostrises."^
is
^A
of
made by one
fairy-tale in
St.
Punt.
dStrabo, XVII,
Enenkhet
i,
26.
(I,
360).
his expedition
I04
was
it
was
[249
and probably
certainly in Africa,
249.
The
scriptions
successive scenes
tell
introductory outline
is
necessary.
250. Historically,
it
is
and that
reliefs,
no
the queen
in-
is
in
a sub-
concerned,
The arrangement
Amon
( 284).
on the wall is interesting; Punt is at the extreme south (left) on the end wall
of the colonnade (see plan), and the fleet bound thither is
placed by the artist with prows literally toward the south,
251.
Punt
fleet is
of the reliefs
in the south
and bows
The
to the north.
and
I.
already under
the pilot's
The
sail.
command,
to a tree has
above
it
and health
of Punt
prosperity,
mistress
"
Dumichen,
72> 73t>Lit.,
''maker
Fleet of
^\An
"
its
(fem.),
that she
rest
stern
of her majesty
porV^
the words:
moored, the
bearing over
last vessel
^'Steer^ to
still
may
to
lije,
Hathor,
bring wind;^^
an Egyptian Queen,
i;
EIGHTEENTH
io6
DYN.:
THUTMOSE
is
III
& QUEEN
being
made
[253
ashore
as they leave.*
Inscriptions
253. ^Sailing in the sea, ^beginning^ the goodly way toward God'sLand, journeying ^in peace to the land of Punt, by ^the army of
the
Lord
Two
of the
Sof the
Lord
other kings
"who have
been
II.
^*in this
RECEPTION IN PUNT*
254.
land ^3forever.
safely
has landed.
Scene^
On
head of his
etc.,
king' s-messenger^^
advances at the
A pile of necklaces,
hatchets, daggers,
^^
from the
left to
^Cf.
offering
sons*
^Lit.,
cSee Oracle,
^On
way"
285.
<iThe queen's
hence
two
his
father"
and
1.
10.
^Lowest row.
sOnly
258]
107
among
these:
Over
the Egyptians
life,
prosperity,
and health
of her
majesty.
Before
256.
The coming
the-
Puntites
bowed head,
to receive this
lord of gods,
Amon-Re
army
.^
Over
the Puntites
257. They say, as they pray for peace: '*Why have ye come
thither*^
unto
this land,
258.
aQnly
The
chief of Punt,
Perehu {P'^-r^-hw).
^Egyptian
"hy"
cHere evidently the name of the queen originally stood; it was then erased by
Thutmose III, and in the time of Ramses II the blank was mistaken for an erasure
Traces of
of Amon's name by Amenhotep IV, which name was then inserted.
the old inscription are visible at the end.
^Lit.,
"Why
The people
^The
supplied.
text has
Egypt
"Re"
(rm{).
285,
1.
10.
something must be
EIGHTEENTH
io8
DYN.:
His Wife
Before
[259
(^Z);).^
The
ass
which bears
his wife.
THE TRAFFIC^
ni.
Scene^
259.
who
At the
right
stands before
is
^^
king^ s-messenger,^^
it.
left is
and
enormous
his
At the extreme
wife.
left
the Puntite
landscape, as in II.
In
260. Pitching the
teixt
the Tent
of the king's-messenger
side'^ of
and
his
army, in the
262.
The coming
Punt bearing
of the chief of
who
follow her:
^^
His
II.
son;**
"His
^Egyptian "by."
f
it is
uncertain
how much
has been
265]
109
IV.
Scene
Two
Over
264. (^Look
to!) ^
Men
your
feet,
ye people!
Behold
the load
is
very
heavy
^Prosperity rbei with
rus,""
Amon;
there
myrrh
is
it
shall
mand.
Over
the Vessels
265. ^The loading of the ships very heavily with marvels of *the
country of Punt; all goodly fragrant woods of God's-Land, heaps
"with skins
*dogs, ^'and
and
^stheir children.
^^of the
any king
^South wall, uppermost row; first scene on the west wall, upper row; Mariette,
Deir-el-Bahari, 5 and 6; Diimichen, Historische Inschrijten, II, 9 and 12;
Fleet of an Egyptian Queen, 2; Naville, Deir-el-Bahari, III, 69 above, and 74
below.
^At the
cA
left,
guess;
part of the
men
traffic.
is
to
as speaking Egyptian!
^Words
of a second
man.
^Fragments of the Punt wall show the felling of the ebony trees, with the
inscription: "CtUting the ebony in great qtiantities*' (Naville, Deir-el-Bahari, III,
70).
^
EIGHTEENTH
no
DYN.:
[266
V.
Scene^
full sail,
the
army
of the
Lord
of the
Two
behind them.
that, the
Hke
of
of heart,
this
by
country
brought for other kings, being marvels of Punt, because of the greatness of the fame of this ^revered god,
Amon-Re, Lord
of Thebes.^
VI.
Scene^
267.
At the
led
by four
left,
two
lines of
badly
men
with
is
vessels loading.
therefore
upon
upon
the
Red
Sea.
ePunt.
^Restored by Ramses
erased by Amenhotep IV.
II,
In
reality, it
Amon had
been here
was the name of Hatshepsut which had
been erased.
gMariette, Deir-el-Bahari,
Naville, Deir-el-Bahari, III, 74
6;
and
76.
14,
15;
Red Sea
27i]
iii
Inscriptions^
268.
'
Wosretkew^ (Hatshepsut) by
the Nubian Troglodytes of Khenthen-
of
hath
(fern.) is
every country
lord of Thebes, as
Amon
the Chiefs of
Punt^
269. They say as they pray for peace from her majesty
to thee, king (sic) of
Egypt,
Re
(fem,),^
VII.
^who
Over
''Hail
is
f sea^]
fame
of
(fern.):
'
Scene
270.
of
The queen
stands at the
left;
tion,
271. The King himself, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Makere (Hatshepsut) ; presentation^ of the marvels of Punt, the treasures
^he
queen's Horus-name:
"Mighty in
The remains
^Feminine;
Senmut
bo's.
^Referring to
here.
Amon.
cf.
Horus"
(obelisk-base, south,
Nemyew.
1.
i,
314;
gTraces of the cartouche in Naville, (PI. 74); the determinative for "sea"
also probable, and suits the context admirably.
hMariette, Deir-el-Bahari,
17;
7, 8;
iAn absolute
being the date.
infinitive
Dumichen, Historische
78, and 80.
used as the
title
is
name
EIGHTEENTH
112
DYN.:
[272
of
Amon,
to^
prosperity,
and health
of the
By
of
the Trees ^
trees,
Amon,
King
lord of Thebes;
Under
Electrum;
eye-cosmetic;
the Trees^
throw-sticks
of
the
Puntites;
ebony;
With Panther^
[south] countries.
Miscellaneous Objects
Electrum;^
Vin.
many
is
This scene
273.
panther-skins;
It is
it
cLower row.
^Upper row.
^Lit.,
"brought" (ynyy);
of wild beasts, e.
g.,
it is
text:*
and apparently
also
Two
inscription.
^On the right of the preceding scene in two rows; Mariette, Deir-el-Bahari^
Diimichen,
Historische Inschriften, II, 18, 19; Naville, Deir-el-Bahari, III,
8;
79, 81, 82.
Thutmose
III
|,
277]
113
274. ^The king himself, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt,
Makere (Hatshepsut).*
laying the hand on the
"
things.
first
of the harvest
countries of Punt.
The
lord of
of
good
Thebes,
Khmimu
grance
is
is
There
rejoicing
is
by
all
is
gilded
festival-hall,
Makere (Hatshepsut)
*=
in her
happened
for her.
like
Measuring Scene^
Two
Thutiy^^ (369
for the queen;
ff.),
who
is
Thoth
Amon.
performs a similar
office for
Over
the
Myrrh Heaps
Over
the
Men
Measuring
aThe
date.
life,
^Read
prosperity
and health
.^
-s for -/.
1.
hue of the
2.
eThat
is,
"kings"
^Lower row
erased.
EIGHTEENTH
114
DYN.:
[278
Bejore Thoth
Weighing Scene^
huge pair of balances piled on one side with commercial gold in large rings, against weights in the form of
cows on the other side, is presided over by the gods Horus
and Dedun of Nubia,^ standing at the left. At the right is
279.
Round and
cow
^^
up beside the
Over
balances.
the Balances
280. The balances, accurate and true, of Thoth, which the King of
Upper and Lower Egypt, [Makejre (Hatshepsut), made for her father,
Amon, lord of Thebes, in order to weigh the silver, gold, lapis lazuli,
malachite, and every splendid costly stone, for the sake of the life, pros.^
perity, and health of her majesty (fem.)
Under
the Balances
Kamak
Amon-Re,
lord of Thebes,
presider over
A
Before Sefkhet
hundreds.
^Amon
is
Kamak.
^Upper row
Ramses
name
II;
see
end
of 9.
284]
115
IX.
Scene
before
queen
is
283.
Thutmose
before which
III*=
Amon
offers
borne by priests,^
"(?/
myrrh J^
Inscription
284.
This long
Amon
of
all
this favorable
7-9),
^^
of the
and
queen
that
two parts.
It is here
statement that
To
into
(11.
1-4), followed
(11.
was made.
by the oracle
statement
Amon
(11.
when
the
by Egyptians, but
their
The
6).
(1.
is
(11.
promised, and
his
is
the queen,
for trans-
lation.
^^Ibid.,
82.
EIGHTEENTH
ii6
Titles
DYN.:
and Encomium
of
[285
Hatshepsut
Two
throne, for
Lands, the
inclose.
among
who hath
set all
lands beneath
hfer
sandals.
The Oracle
The
(Hatshepsut).
The majesty
of the court
made
supplication at the
ways
to
the great
Punt should be
searched out, that the highways to the Myrrh-terraces should be penetrated: *^"I^ will lead the
from God's-Land
It
was done, according to all that the majesty of this revered god commanded, according to the desire of her majesty (fern.), in order that
she might be given life, stability, and satisfaction, like Re, forever.
Promises of
Amon
"Welcome! my
Upper and Lower Egypt,
*The
first line
my
favorite, the
King
of
This
first
^^
Comet Cornel in
peace.''*
2^8]
monuments, who puriof the great ennead of gods for my dwelling, as a memorial
^Thou art the king, taking possession of the Two Lands,
,
the seat
fies
of her love.
Khnemet-Amon, Hatshepsut,
Thou
my
satisfiest
satisfaction
heart at
from me,
is
times;
all
all
them
loj
of the gods of
all countries,
for thee,
""of
all
all life
all
lands and
from me,
all stability
glad.
beautiful
117
all
and
joy
wherein thy
and the
aeons shall
Punt as
God's-Land."
it
was heard
of
from mouth
to
of the ancestors
will
the time
old, as a
Punt under
288. "But I
knew
the
Queen
^^i
delight.
have made
it
all
gods.
wished, they loaded the vessels to their hearts* content, ^^with fresh
myrrh
(rm/)
trees,
know
every good
gift of this
not. Southerns of
^Meaning that
in going
country, Puntites
God's-Land.
I conciHated
the people
them
by^^ love
^The Myrrh-terraces.
cThis is the word {wh
used long before of exploring unknown countries
Old Kingdom by Harkhuf (I, zZh 334) and employed again by the queen
'=>)
the
whom
dRead
elsis.
1.
r for yr.
11).
^
Hatshepsut's people.
in
in
EIGHTEENTH
ii8
DYN.:
[289
that they might give ^^to thee praise, because thou art a god, because
fame
of thy
^1
the begetter,
know
Amon-Re
my
am
thy father,
come
who
^^gum
am
who
daughter,
binds the
lords,-
'them'',
is
am
in the countries.
all
of
my
My
among them.
name
is
temple, ^^in
name^
is
before
^and cleansed, in order to express the ointment for the divine limbs,
to offer myrrh, to
make
am making
laces, while I
of seeing thee."
my
X.
Scene
289.
kiosk,
(see
The queen
is
enthroned at the
left
in
a splendid
^Feminine
scourge; the
The
is
visible
^The verb
is
1.
under the
18.
II,
434).
dThe remainder,
lines, is
very fragmentary
of the gods.
On the south side of the causeway which ascends through the center of the
middle terrace. The date and a few random words were published by Dumichen
{Fleet of an Egyptian Queen, 18, a); but the first complete text by Naville {Recueil,
18, PI. Ill, corrections, ibid., 19, 212, 213;
much
291]
119
"
Inscriptions
The
290.
texts
Behold,
it
the First
was commanded, as
Man
L. P. H., to the hereditary prince, count, wearer of the royal seal, sole
With
Two
the
oj the court, L.
^^^
the middle:
Steward
of
favorite of the
queen
no individual
hacked out by
mose III.
inscription.*"
(see
This
Punt
is
expedition
in
Senmttt,^^jthe well-known
345
The
ff.).
All three
third
man
bears
have been
figures
Inscription^
It furnishes the
series.
man
political
The Long
291
king^s-dignitarieSj the
Amon,
Punt."
Men
Other
[to]
had already
The
safely returned.
when
queen, having
having announced
its
Amon
success to
the
himself (IX),
and
now
*The meaning
of the phrase
is
it
seems as
if
**
^This
man
who commanded
the
word "dispatch"
parallel case of
Henu
Punt expedition.
(I,
427
f.;
mean
But
this conclusion
to conduct, as
especially 432,
11.
( 260, 261)
does not follow; the
expedition only to the sea and then dispatched (sby) it to Punt, returning then,
not from Punt, but merely "from the sea." Hence we have no evidence that Nehsi
did more than accompany the expedition to the sea, and the " king' s-messenger"
is
cHe
last
so.
is
22, 115-25) to
be Thutiy ( 369
ff.).
din 22 columns before the queen; it has all been more or less hacked out, the
six lines (excluding one phrase) and the upper fourth of lines 6-16 completely
EIGHTEENTH
I20
DYN.:
[292
She
expedition.
Amon
in
Egypt ^
glorifies herself as
(11.
established
8 and 15).
(11.
This
last
292. ^Year
9,
his*^
palace.
the grandees:
Queen's Speech
293. **I shine forever in your faces through that which my father
hath desired.'i Truly, it was greatly my desire in doing, that I should
make
sgreat
should
him
make
splendid for
the ancestors
Lord
that begat
knew
of Eternity;
done.
him
not, I
I will cause
am
it
to
me; and
am
in assigning to
my
father, that I
that which
my
fathers,
'How
beautiful
is
she.
*In the weighing and measuring scene the trees, of which there were three,
appear planted in tubs; and again they appear planted in the ground, and thus
a ^^Punt" was made for the god. It is possible that not only the trees, but also
the terraces of the temple are a part of this "Punt," and that the terraced structure
of the temple planted with myrrh trees thus reproduced the "myrrh-terraces."
This could not be better described in the text than by calling it "a Punt." The
fact that the temple is a reproduction of the small terraced temple of Mentuhotep
III does not prohibit us from supposing that the queen was conscious of the resemblance above noted. The service and equipment of the temple receive some light
from the mention of its High Priest, with twelve subordinate priests in four orders
(see note, 679).
^See
I,
239,
and
note.
cThese masculine pronouns simply represent the word "king" here, {^ h ^stny and Sps'w-stny is what is meant), and do not refer personally to the queen.
d" I shine as king, because my father Amon willed it so."
^" Great
One"
is
Isis,
referring to that
which
Isis
did for
295]
through
to
is
whom
this
my
due
to him.
am
He
among you;
ye
may
of
qualities
worW.
my
grasp
Ye
of
virtues.
fails
my mouth^
for the future. I have given a command of my majesty
of him who begat me should be made splendid, that
Your
in the nether
it
"
and
my
hath recognized
121
lifetime
is
"
isi
in
"
>>
294.
fa decree
my
ofi]
open
"
command
of
my
father,
Amon.
owed
ground in
'3[Eg)^t]*^
set
They
were brought^ bearing m)TTh therein for expressing ointment for the
divine limbs, which I
owed
to the lord of
Gods."
Punt in Egypt
295. Said
my
majesty (fem.):
*'I will
cause you to
know
that which
is
*Two
that
in his
different
not clear;
"for his heart."
is
^My
pits in
which certain
dRead: yn'tw.
fiir
trees
EIGHTEENTH
122
THUTMOSE
DYN.:
III
& QUEEN
[296
house, to plant the trees of God's-Land beside his temple, in his garden,
according as he commanded.
offerings
which I owed.
It
^5
"
i.
in it."^
^7
22
she hath opened to thee (fem.) her two arms with resin
has
left
and had remained so down to her reign. There is a reference to the Punt expedition (1. 13), so that the inscription
dates from some time after the ninth year. Its references
to the Hyksos coincide remarkably with the account of their
treatment of the temples as recorded by Manetho. The
Hyksos are called ^^ A sialics ^^ (^^mw), and their city is
^^Avaris (h't-w^r't) of the Northland.''
the cliff-temple of Pakht, on
cut, is
building of
inscription
is
pious works.
is
The
The language
is
often unusual,
many
omis-
*Lit.,
"under
it,'*
299]
123
=^He
'
heavens.
Red Land
of the
Goddess
of the
'records''
Mountain^ as
like the
^r
set his
the
is
colonnades
Emu.^
with electrum of
Every
command
are perpetuated,
their
on
its
body
of
its
regulations of the
commandant
My
divine heart
this
^
.
known
[statue] is overlaid
which
that which
command which
it
had not
he Uveth by
am "a
to
it
Hkeness from
make
(the truth)
my
it is
bread, I eat of
[his]
He
lord"!
its
"My
authority.
^See Sinuhe,
^The passage
I,
493,
1.
"in
lands.
The
15.
mw;
iBeginning with
7,
inscription, the
that
brightness,^ I
Atum
under
to
my
my
know
The
[I]
1.
cf.
the
Miiller,
first
ein the sun-hymn of Sute and Hor (British Museum, 826, 1. 16), Sute says to
the sun-god, "/ acted as an effective leader among thy monuments, performing the
truth of thy heart, I know thou restest in truth."
^An extraordinary
like.
EIGHTEENTH
124
DYN.:
land of ^^Reshu* and the land of Yu,^ they cannot rhideT from
Punt
esty;
is
fields of
Restoration of the
my
maj-
^sMy
since
[300
my
soldiers
appearance as king.
Temple
of
Cusae
*^
the ground
it,
"
its
301. Pakht the great, who traverses the valleys in the midst of the
I made her
eastland, *whose ways are fstorm-beateni
The
temple with that which was due *'to her ennead of gods.
The
.
and
this;
her city
*^
in
made divine
^^l
"
"
^ssilver,
arms
22
3-3f 3
*^of alabaster of
w probably
^Fourteenth
He
*^
of the god.^
were
an Unknown Temple^
^1
"
302
Restoration of
bronze.
their
.
knew
priests
fitted with:
doors
nome
for
of
'-if
^-ty;
of copper, the
und Europa,
local
"
its
'^
133.
Hathor.
but this
is
a mere
guess.
'Nearly one-half
line.
8The paragraph
who he may
be.
herself.
and
his temple;
it
is
not clear
3033
thereon
were
electrum,
splendid
"
Feathers."*
with feasts
of
"
I [honorjed ^^the
with
offerings,
125
majesty of
him
this
["offerings"']
god
anew
Khnum
in
[all]
build
great in 34walls,
and
in foundation.
equipped
it;
made
it
festive,
to
Hyksos
was
I have
I
have
have raised up that which was unfinmw) were in the midst of Avaris of the
ruins, I
(^ ^
"the lofty of two feathers," a title of Min, a figure of whom was therefore on the door.
The ^'shadow,*' which was often put on the door, has the determinative of Min's figure; hence there is no doubt that it is such a "shadow,"
*Lit.,
which
is
meant
here.
^This rare phrase (m ^3]i y^'y) occurs also on the statue of Senmut (Lepsius,
Denkmdler, III, 25, /, correct nh to k), and in a clear passage over vases "of costly
which his majesty made according to the design {k^'t) of his own heart"
(Brugsch, Thesaurus, V, 1187) among ofiFerings of Thutmose III. See Breasted,
Proceedings of the Biblical Society of Archeology, May, 1901, 237.
stone,
^3tp-h^ty-^,
lit.,
"begun;"
cf.
mw
it
indicates
And
"Them" is
"Asiatics."
is
very
common
of
it
EIGHTEENTH
126
DYN.:
[304
ing that which was made, while they ruled in ignorance* of Re.
command
When
my
against
enemies.
of Re, I
tains;
my
when
commanded
majesty;
my Horus
is
It is
my
that
(its)
majesty (fem.).
was ennobled
until the
as Hor-watit^ ^oflaming
came
my
until
He^
[I]
[titulary]
upon the
r
titulary of
forever.
Of
Kamak, one
pair
is
PL
one
still
companion
lies
of
near by.
Standing Obelisk
The
standing survivor
high.*^
is
now
The
^w, or
it
may mean
^A sudden change
cEach
of
history of these
two important
Work upon
of
Mechir
(sixth
month)
in the
"without."
of the
Hyksos
is
meant.
trod.
on standing obelisk: Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 22-24, d; ChampoUion, Monuments, IV, 314; Notices descriptives, II, 133 ff-; Rosellini, Monumenti Storici, I, 31 f. Fallen obelisk: Lepsius, Denkmdler, HI, 24, a-c; Recueil,
X, 142; 23, 195 f.; Champollion, Notices descriptives, II, 136.
^Inscriptions
gPetrie, History of Egypt, II, 131 (Naville's statement that they are the largest
known (Zeitschrift fur dgyptische Sprache, 37, 52) is an error; the obelisk of Thut-
mose
Lateran in Rome,
is
the highest
known;
see 626).
305]
127
queen's favorite
enormous
shafts from the granite at Assuan was completed on the
last of Mesore (twelfth month) of the queen's sixteenth
year, seven months after beginning.
Transported to
Thebes on a huge barge, drawn by a large fleet of galleys
(see 322 ff.), they were destined for erection, not before a
( 345
fT.).
temple, as
his
two
of clearing the
is
Kamak
planted by
Thutmose
Whether
III.
procedure
in the following
is,
Thutmose I,
had been sup-
umns
of
Thutmose
her
on the southern
all
she
all
side
hall,
hall,*^
"^
The king
father,
himself;^
Amon-Re,
the
Two Lands
beginning;
318,
1.
life.
^IV and V.
8.
See
317,
11.
7-8.
II,
the
ff.).
Guimet,
XXX, PL
The
and
fully
XII, A).
is difficult.
EIGHTEENTH
128
306.
On
DYN.:
[306
erection, the
Some time
and the
top,
inscriptions never
before the
the
obelisks
from the
were finished
(see
Sethe,
I,
54, 55).
They
fifteenth
viz.,
queen's reign.
^^the first
occur-
thirtieth
fifteen
years
I.
Two
Lands, Makere,
brilliant
emanation of Amon,
whom
he has
caused to appear as king upon the throne of Horus before the splendors^
of the
Great House,
be mistress of the
satisfaction,
and joy
They have
of gods
of
Amon-Re, king
have brought up
Son
of gods,
life,
Khnemet-
of Re,
who
to
is
given
life,
Re, forever.
^Only down
Denkmdler, Text,
to the surrounding
III, 21
(see Lepsius,
f.).
^Side columns of the shaft inscriptions, south and west sides (312).
^The meaning of this phrase is clear from the last scene in the Punt reliefs
( 292,
1.
i).
3ii]
129
West Side
309. Horus: Wosretkew; Favorite of the Two Groddesses; Fresh in
Years; Golden Horus; Divine of Diadems; King of Upper and Lower
Egypt: Lord of the
ment
Two
Lands, Makere.
Amon,
(it^)
as her
monu-
him two
great
wrought with
She made
**
life
Re, forever.
North Side
310.
Her
father
Amon
the august Ished tree; her annals are myriads of years, possessing hfe,
stability,
she
may be
given
life
forever.
East Side
311.
live
forever."
*The
cThe
obelisk.
t'This
is
favor" shown to her father consisted in the honor paid him in that
the following oracle of Amon came to the queen regarding her father.
^^
dOf the
jubilee.
These are the two obelisks before the Karnak pylon of Thutmose I (see
86ff.)f
That
is,
had done.
EIGHTEENTH
I30
DYN.:
II.
312.
[312
on
scenes, eight
monument
Amon-Re,
oj his father
The pyramidion
313-
Amon
resentation of
who
lord of heaven.
blessing
restored the
^^^
a fourfold rep-
*"
BASE INSCRIPTION
III.
Titulary and
Encomium
oj the
who
exists
Queen
daughter of Amon-Re,
whom
of the
who hath
Khepris (If pry), who shines with crowns like "Himof-the-Horizon," the pure egg, the excellent seed, whom the two Sor3
who
exists like
ceresses^ reared,
^These axe
whom Amon
later additions.
monument, which
the lord of diadems, Seti-Merneptah, made."
This is the restoration by Seti I of the
name of Amon, erased by Amenhotep IV. This erasure is found only in the five
upper scenes, showing that the obelisk was surrounded by masonry up to that
point; cf. Sethe, Untersuchungen, I, 54, 55.
Cf. similar restoration by Seti I, 878.
^This
is
on the south
fiir
"Renewal
of the
PL
II).
<iSouth side.
^A god's name,
KGod
of
of continued existence;
paronomasia:
thys;
lit.,
of the queen;
cf.
him*' {yr-sw), a
common term
for
"his
father."
^A
full titulary
}}pr't lj,prw
divine name,
it is
Horus
lit.,
my
fipry,
"two great
this
315]
throne in Hermonthis,
whom
131
to rdefendi the
people; the female Horus, avengeress of her father, the oldest (daughter)*
of the '"BuU-of-his-Mother,"^
swhom
make
Re'^ begat to
for himself
excellent seed
portrait,
Queen's Dedication
315. ^She made (them) as her monument for her father, Amon,
lord of Thebes, presider over Karnak, making for him two great obeUsks
of enduring granite of the
South ,^
(their)
^^sidesi of
the river.
have done
^^''I
upon
this
for
my
father
Amon;
was wise by
his excellent spirit, I did not forget anything of that which he exacted.
^^My majesty (fem.) knoweth that he is divine. I did (it) under his
command, he it was who led me; I conceived not any works without
I have entered
it
*Sethe, Untersuchungen,
'^An old
title
I,
46.
Kamephis.
cThese are old conventional phrases; of course, Amon is the father of the
queen (see 187 ff.), but he has gradually been identified with Re.
The
^See a similar epithet applied to the queen in the Punt reliefs ( 274,
long list of epitheta is here ended, and the real matter now begins.
^The
cated
is
obelisks;
1.
3).
cf.
"fecit."
^The quarries
at
Assuan.
^The queen
and continues
to
1.
4,
JThe
first
west side.
1.
35).
plan.
^West
line.
side begins.
EIGHTEENTH
132
my
wise* before
know
father, I entered
not turn
Karnak
that
DYN.:
is
3upon^ the
the horizon
<=
on
[318
but turned to
earth, ^the
it
the face.
beginning, the sacred eye of the All-Lord, the place of his heart, which
who
follow him."
of the Obelisks
317. The king himself, he saith, 5" I set (it) before the people, who
shall be ""after^ two aeons, ^ those whose heart shall consider^ this monument, and that which I have
"
and who
for
my father,
whose
point[s]^
heart led
^those
who
shall
speak
remembered
him two obeUsks
made
me
to
make
for
nade between ^the two great pylons^ of the king, the mighty
bull, the
of
Oath
"0 ye people,
318.
to
Posterity
my monument
who shall speak of that which I have made, beware (lest) ye say, *I
know not, I know not *why this was made, (and) a mountain fashioned
entirely from gold like anything ""which happensl^
I swear^ as Re
^Lit.,
"wise
" my heart
was
the
one.**
similar.
dThis phrase, "Bearer 0} his beauty** {wis' t-nfrwf), is usually the appellation
of the sacred barque, in which the image of the god was borne.
Two
"whose
Lit.,
^The word
is
to be expected here.
These are Pylons IV and V, between the ruins of which the obelisk stands,
surrounded by the fallen columns of the colonnade.
i
North
^As
*
side begins.
if it
Compare
( 121,
1.
10),
II
319]
loves me, as
satisfying
my
favors me, as
son of
like the
Amon
father
with
life,
as Horus^
Re
^my
133
sets in the
for
me
Isis,^ as I
like the
son of Nut,'^ as
he joins his two mothers^ in the divine barque, as heaven abides, as that
ishable,'^ as I shall
down
my
father,
Amon,
like
an Imper*
my
be unto eternity
shall
in order that
temple forever and ever, (so surely) they are of one block of enduring
seam or
granite without
"
^joining
first
My
1.
of
Mechir
year 16, the last of Mesore (twelfth month) making seven months of
exaction in the mountain.
History
was
my
*their side
(it)
desire to
upon
make them
their
i;
I thought
how
I laid
my
mouth was
excellent
^The
of the
text has
Tombos
inscription of
Thutmose
1.
1.
2).
cOsiris.
^Honis.
dLit., "visit or
elsis
I ( 70,
is
approach" {s'lv^h).
9, 7.
of the solar
and Osirian
myths.
fName
gSun-god.
of a star.
Meaning
it
continued
''until,'' etc.
*A grain measure (nearly 5 liters); this is literally true, for Thutiy records
gives the
the measurement of electrum by the heket under his supervision, and
total between 13 and 14 bushels! ( 377, 1. 38).
n^The quantity of precious metals, but
cf.
Sethe, Untersuchungen,
I,
48.
134
[320
Conclusion
shall
shut say,
father!'
^who
it is!
no enemy
I have
therefor.
he has made
my
boundary
lie
which I have
is""
any land,
in
countries are
all
my
(for)
^of a truth,
my
all
who
father;
glorifies
him,
Ufe, stability,
offer
it
and
subjects,
who
is
with
am his daughter
is with
exacted my r
to him.
that which he
requital
the sun has labored for me, which he has given to the one
him^
said,
in
it
it is
"
satisfaction,
of
320.
The
**
Thutmose
The
III.
inscription,
of
an interesting
fragments^
are
still
visible
321.
made my kingdom,
excellent
He
hath
knew
that I
Recjieil,
X, 142;
ChampoUion, Notices
*The amount
f.
line,
gAmon ?
^It looks as
aries.
if
the scribe
322]
135
1 4
Punt has been brought to me
all
the luxurious marvels of this country were brought to my palace in one
malachite in the
collection, which the Asiatics presented s
They have brought to me the choicest products
country of Reshet.
^
"1* consisting of cedar, of juniper, and of meru wood.
of r
The myrrh
"
of
all
woods
of God's-Land.
besides
all
his
tion
and dedication
of
reliefs
the
reliefs,
bows
is
is
The
in
Der el-Bahri
country.
^Lit.,
circumference =the girth of the beast before the skin was removed
for the
all
pronouns and
and
inscriptions in the
Der
lower colonnade, in the south half; the transportation published by Naville (in
Egypt Exploration Fund Archaological Report, 1895-96, PI. and pp. 6-13).
^Thebes and General View, 90, published in 1831. Naville denies the existence of obelisks at Der el-Bahri; but he ojice unreservedly accepted their existence.
{Deir-el-Bahari, Introductory
to
were planted for obelisk-bases, as Naville states (Zeitschrift fiir agyptische Sprache,
It is possible that they have either been broken up since Wilkinson's
37, 52).
day, or that Naville's search has missed them. The map of the French expedition
in the Description shows a block of granite on the very spot where the right-hand
obelisk would have stood.
EIGHTEENTH
136
DYN.:
THUTMOSE
III
& QUEEN
[323
TRANSPORT
Scene^
323.
upon
it,
is
in
is
accompanied by an escort
lying trussed
*"
"^
nine
The tow-boat
of three boats, in
which
reli-
324.
The
following
is
it
contains:
a) Titulary
h)
The command
needed
c)
and encomium
of the
queen
to gather material
(11.
i-?).
vessel
The command
to
muster
men and
The
*It is diflScult to understand how Naville can maintain that the queen erected
only two obelisks at Karnak {Zeitschri}t }ur dgyptische Sprache, 37, 52), when three
obelisk-summits of hers are still in existence.
^The whole scene is very fragmentary, and as it was put together from squeezes,
is no doubt that some blocks are put together in questionable places.
there
^Oi
refers to two.
Mariette, Deir-el-
Bahari, 11, Diimichen, Fleet of an Egyptian Queen, IV); below this in one long
row are the marines (on the right) and the offering scene (on the left), with priests
and
approaching ( 333-35).
The texts are badly mutilated.
officials
328]
Titulary and
137
Queen
of
Amon-Re,
of [her] father,
lord
who has
[heaven],
of
removed from the father of all gods, ^shining in brightness Hke "TheHorizon-God" (Y^hwiy); Rayet (R^yt)^ she illuminates 4like the
sun, vivifying the hearts of the people,
it
is
exalted in
name
Circle'
who
(Okeanos)
^^their
(so that)
the
Great
tribute
7chief
326. Give ye
the
work
Muster
327.
to load
oj
1,
Two Lands
in order
the people in
in every
The Transport
328.
sailed
crew
jubilee,
Two Lands
the
this point.
of lines
Trejoicedi the
''Half
is
now
,
|
lacking,
peace.
line is lost.
and numbering
is
impossible
dThe wanting end of the line is not long enough for the dimensions of the boat;
but we find Ineni ( 105) giving the size of the boat on which he moved the Karnak
obelisks of Thutmose I.
His boat was 206.6 feet long and 68.86 feet wide for an
obelisk about 75 feet (Murray) high; hence the boat of the queen (if these are the
large Karnak pair) on the same proportion would have been about 268^ feet long
and 89^ feet wide. The proportion between width and length
Egypt Exploration Fund Archaological Report, 1895-96, 9, 10.
^Confer the muster of
men
is
to 3.
See
ff.)-
to the
reliefs {ibid.).
EIGHTEENTH
138
The king
Khnum.
DYN.:
himself,
1
of
Amon
have estabUshed^
of the
King
in this
Amon-Re
with praise,
of
[329
Over
the Pilot-Boats'"
behold
this
[Amon].
n.
RECEPTION IN THEBES
Scene^
330.
On
At the opposite
end
(the left)
is
of the obelisks,
^This
may
^Possibly:
has given
"\Her name
to thee."
is established], in this
broken
monument, and
fixed;
off.
which she
now
is
arrival
have
perished.
original,
In one long row immediately below the transport scene published by Mariette,
Deir-el-Bahari, 11; Diimichen, Historische Inschriften, II, 21, and Fleet of an
Egyptian Queen, 4, 7, 8; see also Sethe, Unterstcchungen, I, 104, 105, where both
the texts are combined.
^
333]
139
Inscriptions
331.
They
work
of the obelisks.^
It is
assist in the
332. The rejoicing by the royal marines of the ship of the king
^They
say,
"Hark
the acclamation!
Heaven
is
.^
hath rejoicing.
his
men
sake of the
of the
who
King
giveth
of
and health
life;
prosperity
An
offering for
make healthy
who liveth forever.*
of the
may be
With
333.
King
life,
Egypt
recruits of the
of
the Offering
thy ka,
name. Then follows " Rejoicing by the marines of the ship of the king, Okhepernere
(Thutmose II), 'Star-of -the -Two -Lands;* they say: 'This beautiful feast of
(queen's cartouche cut out) whereon Amon appears, increasing the years of his
son, King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Menkheperre {Thutmose III), upon the Horus-
terrace.
that of Hatshepsut.
same place
priests in the
EIGHTEENTH
I40
DYN.:
[334
monuments
As she
is,
"O
king, beautiful* of
it
the soldiers of
III.
336.
officials,
this building
to
Amunre, by
the
side*^
monarch who
it
of the
little
of
that
is
to.^
The
"
Amunneitgori^ continues:
work
erected to
this
(who
him two
is)
name of Pharaoh
She has made (this) her
Amunre, lord
of the regions,
the giver of
life,
like the
(and)
she did
sun."^
^Not yet published, and probably partially lost since seen by Wilkinson.
Hence I can only offer Wilkinson's remarks {Thebes and General View, 92).
cThe right-hand end of the colonnade on the northeast (practically north)
side of the ascent to the next terrace.
distinguishing
fore
it is
there-
sThis old translation is without a flaw, except in the last sentence, which
should be "that she may be given life, etc.," and even this change, with the exception
of the "final" construction, was suspected by Wilkinson (p. 94, n. i).
339]
ROCK INSCRIPTION
IN
141
WADI MAGHARA^
inscription:
*'
oj,^^
which
Below
relief.
is
is
to
be
a much-
Horus who
,^
is
in the palace,
by
An
by Hatshepsut.
in the
Thutmose.
339. ^Live the Horus: Wosretkew; Favorite of the Two Goddesses:
Fresh in Years; Golden Horus: Divine of Diadems, Ruler of South
and North; King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Makere; =Son of Re, of
I,
728.
^Fragments,
messenger.
362.
among them
I,
name
of the
Stela in the Vatican (No. 130); published by ChampoUion, Notices descripI had
lives, II, 700, 701; Piehl, Recueil, II, 129; Sethe, Untersuchungen, I, no.
corrections.
some
furnished
also my own copy of the original, a collation of which
f
EIGHTEENTH
142
^la
^m\0
was
DYN.:
more than
all
(*^
nw).^
It
was according
sHer
this,
[340
Amon
so
Hke Re,
life,
much
forever.
BIOGRAPHY OF INENI^
[Concluded from
IV.
118]
III
AND HATSHEPSUT
under
son^^
(1.
The
16).
position of Hatshepsut
described in
is
and
ruling power,
'^his son^^
really the
is
merely a figurehead.
341. His^ son stood in his place as king of the Two Lands, having
become ruler upon the throne of the one who begat him. ^7 His sister
the Divine Consort, Hatshepsut, settled the raffairs^^ of the
by reason
of her plans.
to labor with
Two Lands
bowed head
for
^The
original
modern
it is
very faint
incorrect restoration.
c.
IThutmose II' s son; this passage would prove that Thutmose III was the
son (and not the brother) of Thutmose II, but see Sethe, Uniersuchungen, I, 7 ff
Cf. also Maspero, Proceedings of the Society of Biblical Archceology, XIV, 178, and
Petrie, History of Egypt, II, 78, and Sethe, Untersuchungen, I, 42, 43.
"made
Two
Lands.'*
BIOGRAPHY OF AHMOSE-PEN-NEKHBET
3441
143
The
Northland
excellent,
who
is
command,
Two Regions, when she
satisfies
the
speaks.
filled
my
house with
silver
and
royal house.
As
sacred things.
for the
memory and
good name
shall
favorite, his
be in the mouth
be forever.
Amon,
The
the scribe,
BIOGRAPHY OF AHMOSE-PEN-NEKHBET<=
[Concluded from
Conclusion of
344.
'8The
Divine
Summary
the
Consort,
25]
Great
King's-Wife,
Makere
moored
is
at
bow
'^J
will
is
the mooring-lines.
vessel
same
"my
misfortune
was not;"
construction.
c.
all
show
the
144
[345
INSCRIPTIONS OF SENMUT
Senmut was
345.
who supported
group of
He was
Hermonthis; and
In the
^^
Amon,
to
his
statues of
he appears
Makere {Hatshepsut), by
Senmut.^^^ This
Among
of
and
Giving praise
and health
prosperity,
the steward of
el-Bahri,
of the
Der
the
Hatshepsut.
in
among
works
is
in
a remarkable evi-
Karnak he
erected
now
in
He was
ff.).
much
to
Amon, he would
^The base
naturally have
of that expedition,
of several lines
being
which were
contained
^Benson and Gourlay, The Temple of Mut in Asher, 310. The building
The fragmentary end
inscriptions or dedications of this temple have not survived.
monuments,
{Recueil
de
Brugsch
of such an inscription was seen by
69, 6), which
is
as follows:
"
Ayan;
its
."
Still
which {former) kings knew not
name of Thutmose II has been inserted over that of the queen, is preserved toward
making for him a great temple of myriads of years {named)
the end: "
House-of-Amon-Most-Splendid;' of fine white limestone of Ayan, in his seat, etc.^*
first
time,
'
Sethe, Vntersuchungen,
I,
93.
II,
34 = Sethe, Unterstichungen,
I,
109.
INSCRIPTIONS OF SENMUT
348]
145
He was
347
selected
by the queen
to rear her
daughter
ff.),
himself,
many of
he controlled
and
all
There
office.
is
Thutmose
measure
opposition to
we can
no doubt that
It is
and
in great
The same
persistent persecution
is
unknown
a
^^
tomb
queen
of
tomb of
power to Sen-
evident in the
in that of
Senmut; and
at Silsileh.
In
all
an
in that of
these the
I,
iii.
Untersuchungen,
e.
I,
128
f.
EIGHTEENTH
146
DYN.:
[349
common persecution is quite sufficient to show that these men formed the
queen's party of legitimists opposed to Thutmose III, who
has therefore treated their monuments and their memory as
name
of the
owner
is
chiseled out,
and
this
he did hers.*
INSCRIPTIONS
1.
349.
to
Senmut by Hatshepsut
steward of
memory among
of the granary
^Small objects from Senmut's tomb, see Spiegelberg, Recueil, 19, 91; and
Newberry, Proceedings of the Society of Biblical Archceology, XXII, 63, 64; full
list by Newberry, Benson and Gourlay, The Temple of Mut in Asher, 310.
.
would expect.
^Construe with
*^
given."
INSCRIPTIONS OF SENMUT
SS2]
His
351. ^flt
of
Amon,
Duties as Architect
Karnak, in Hermonthis,
in
in the temple of
147
Mut,
[in]
the
all
^Der el-Bahri,
in Ishru, in southern
Opet
of
Amon
(Luxor), in [the presence] ^of this august god, while maintaining the
monuments
Lord
of the
of the
Two
was commanded
It was commanded him that [rhei] should be
at the court, L. P. H.
^because he was so excellent for the heart (of the king). It came
to pass in every respect,^ as was commanded by doing according to the
"His true servant, without his
desire of his majesty concerning it.
like;*^ strong-hearted, not lax concerning the monuments of the lord
without deafness, (but) according to
9 works,
all
that
His
352.
He
Praise of Himself;
says:
Amon, "[Se]nmut.
His
Offices
one who heard the hearing alone in the privy council, steward of [Amon],
^3Senmut, triumphant."
"I was
^4
of truth, not
Amon, Senmut."
palace,
Senmut."
"I commanded
divine offerings of
Amon, Senmut."
conducted
^7
d Qf
^j^g gQ^jg
of Amon, Senmut."
prosperity,
all
Amon
life,
"
great, ^^[overseer] of
the prophets of
^Read yn
Montu
in Hermonthis,
Senmut."
(Sethe).
much" (wr wr
mnlf).
cLit.,
dThe
first
word
EIGHTEENTH
148
DYN.:
[353
"I was one ^^to whom the affairs of the Two Lands were [reporjted;
that which South and North contributed was on my seal, the labor of
all
my
charge."
steps were
known
Address
to the
Amon, Senmut."
353. *^"0 ye living upon earth, lay priests of the temple,* who shall
see my statue, which I have formed as a likeness,^ ^^that I may be remem-
may your
'
A royal
offering,
Mut
which
of I[shru] gives
the following of
the just;
king to
i^ini
'^^May
May
Senmut.
steward of
of]
^=^7for
Amon,
the steward of
Amon,
Amon,
at every
arm; who followed the king in the South, North, East, and West
countries,
Senmut.
May
1,^
to
whom was
may he
lord of gods;
may he be
may
his
name
^The temple
^Lit.,
is
of
Mut,
in
set up.
^Newberry begins a new numbering here (Benson and Gourlay, The Temple
Mut
of
left side
of the
^Title omitted.
Goes
of
Mid
^Goes
of
Mut
^Goes
Mut
in Asher, 309).
of
in Asher, 308).
to the front
in Asher, 309
and
( ?),
Sethe.
INSCRIPTIONS OF SENMUT
356]
to
whom
know
of that
there
had access
354
149
to
I did not
[to]
the hereditary
Amon,
when maintaining
their
monuments
them
every day.
^Overseer of the
fields of
^Overseer of the
355. ^The oblations in the South for the ka of the magnate of the
South and North, Senmut. May she (Mut) give ^the food-offerings in
the Northland to the ka of the greatest of the great, the noblest of the
May
noble, 3[Se]nmut.
table in
to the
Kamak,
ka
4[in]
all
that
356.
May
oxen, geese; and to drink ^water at the Hving stream; to the ka of the
Museums,
160).
^Above the knees and arms on the sistnim; Benson and Gourlay, The Temple
0}
Mut
in Asher, 300.
t^,
as published).
evidently to be connected with one of the verbs "to give" in the other
f.);
texts.
EIGHTEENTH
150
chief steward of
of
Amon,
of
'[Sejnmut, triumphant;
[357
^Amon, Senmut;
**overseer
DYN.:
storehouse
the
He
of
^^Amon,
^^Senmut,
^^triumphant;
the ka
of
* ^begotten
^to
ASSUAN INSCRIPTION*'
n.
He
appears in
relief
following inscriptions:
Titles
Accompanying
the
Queen
Mid
in Asher,
307)-
^The idiom
INSCRIPTIONS OF SENMUT
363]
of
Elephantine,
beloved
the
the
liveth,
151
beloved of Satet,
Khnum,
of
lord
of
the
Cataract.
Accompanying Senmut
361. Ascription of [honor] to the Divine Consort, Sovereign of the
entire Two Lands, by the wearer of the royal seal, companion, great in
love, chief steward,
Senmut (Sn-Mwt).
362.
Came
Figures^
by
Two
who
who
Two Lands
Nefrure (Njrw-R'^),
who
it
m.
INSCRIPTIONS
This
The
inscriptions contain a
death of Thutmose II
whom
he reared.
( 368,
11.
to the
7, 8).
I,
cLit.,
82.
"The coming
Pylons
etc."
two Karnak
obelisks,
between
IV and V.
The name of a
feast, see
above,
333.
^Certainly from Thebes, but probably not from his tomb; now in Berlin
(No. 2296, Ausfiihrliches Verzeichniss des Berliner Museums, 137-39); published
by Sharpe (Egyptian Inscriptions, II, 107) and Lepsius (Denkmaler, III, 25);
(ibid.,
translation
corrections by Sethe {Untersuchungen, I, iii); partial
SO, 51).
152
[364
writingsii of the
Two
to the thought*^ of
my
heart
which
I did according
Mortuary Prayer
365. 'A royal offering, which Amon-Re and the King of Upper and
Lower Egypt, Makere, give; may they^ grant the mortuary oblation of
bread, beer, oxen, geese, linen, incense, ointment.
Royal Gift
[to]
the hereditary
Amon, Senmut.
Mortuary Prayer
"
me
exalted
before the
Two
Lands, he appointed
lord,
who
enteredf
Two Lands.
me ^to be chief
He^
of his
whom Senmut
On
35,
1.
he in
'Corrected from
the front.
8 An idiom
1.
is
my own
copy.
sympathy with;"
cf.
obelisk of Hatshep-
8.
Karnak
statue ( 349
ff.).
INSCRIPTION OF THUTIY
369]
was
153
of superiors,
command
was
in
life
Two
INSCRIPTION OF THUTIY^
Thutiy was a loyal supporter of Queen Hatshepsut
348), and hence throughout his tomb his name and
369.
(see
that of the
entirely erased.
and
^^
He was
the
Punt
(11.
33-38).
by means
name and
of his
title,
^^
is
Scribe and
*This probably refers to the death of Thutmose II, the predecessor of ThutSee Sethe, Untersuchungen, I, 50.
^On
titles
of Senmut,
and
Neggah on
lines
the
two
"Book
of the
Dead."
154
EIGHTEENTH
[370
steward,
figure
DYN.:
Thutiy,^^
the tomb.
Prayer for the King and Queen
prosperity,
forever,
Re, forever.
Titles of
Thutiy
Two
Lands, Thutiy.
Thutiy.
^Hereditary prince, count,
how
who
who
reveals
to work, Thutiy.
[to]*^
him who
is
skilled in
work, Thutiy.
'[Hereditary prince, count]
who
[''vigilant''
count],
is
com-
^Spiegelberg "anleitet;"
cThe parallelism
clearly
(1.
(1.
lit.,
^^
who opens
demands "/o"
5)
sh
6)
wn
hr
the face
to, etc.**
(m), thus:
n wb
\hr w]
^'
5if ^
w r yr'
w yrw't
Spiegelberg has supplied the hr {"face") in the lacuna, but overlooks the n {"to")^
necessarily common to both lines: "who opens the face to (two different words for
*^open" sb^ and wn). Compare wb^-yb on Lateran obelisk (side lines, 836).
INSCRIPTION OF THUTIY
374]
155
"Hereditary prince, count, knowing the useful things that are established forever, Thutiy.
Thutiy.
^4Hereditary prince, count, of sweeping step^ in the court, Thutiy.
^sHereditary prince, count, wearer of the royal seal, overseer of every
handicraft of the king, Thutiy.
Lord
of the
Two
List of
Works
372. ^7He says: "I acted as chief (r^-hr)j giving the directions; I
led the craftsmen to
work
in:*^
Second Nile-Barge
Two Lands
with
its
rays.
Unknown Shrine
374. ^9a shrine, the horizon of the god, his great
of the best of the highlands, in
work
2Seret-mat (s^rt-m^^'t);
its
seat, of
electrum
[Amon].
^That this is the proper rendering is shown by the words of Amenhotep, son
of Hapi ( 917, 1. 38).
Spiegelberg's rendering: "nach dem Vorbild der Arbeiten,"
demands a word ("Vorbild") not in the original, and makes Thutiy represent
himself as merely working after the patterns of someone else.
cThis line (17) is vertical, extending along the ends of 11. 18-32 like an embracing bracket, thus:
1.
17
-1.18
1.
32
Before each of the fifteen works enumerated in 11. 18-32 we are to understand the
The preposition
sentence of 1. 17: "I led the craftsmen to work, etc., on**
"(?" must be changed to "iw" according as a small monument or a temple follows,
a difference not necessary in Egyptian.
last
^^See
^Lit.,
32.
^^
sending up {exhibiting)
truth,**
EIGHTEENTH
156
DYN.:
[375
Amon,
silver; its
its
floor
ebony of Nubia {T
^-pd't)
it,
its
''silver^;
it
illuminated
brightness.
Works in Karnak
376.
=^^great doors,
and every
costly stone.
which
filled
the
Two Lands
wrought through-
one sheet;
*Name
of
its
likenesses likewise.
^The making
berry, PL XVIII.
of metal doors
may be
seen in the
tomb
of Rekhmire, ed.
New-
^This
is
some part
of the
Der
el-Bahri temple.
Der
126).
^A
in the inscriptions.
Its
purpose and
no doubt that these obelisks were in Karnak, but the height given
Karnak. The theory that
the height of the pair has been combined in one datum receives some confirmation
from the discovery that the two obelisks on the barge in Hatshepsut's relief lie end
^^There
is
to end;
^
38, a,
but the
total is
There
is
INSCRIPTION OF THUTIY
377]
^many
offering-tables of
Amon
in
Karnak,
157
electrum without
of
work
its
is
durability
is like
the pillars
a thing of eternity.
Measuring
of the
Punt
Tributey Etc.
377. 33Behold, all the marvels and all the tribute of all countries,
the best of the marvels of Punt, were offered to Amon, lord of Karnak
<=
[for the
He (Amon)
Two
34 (for)
Now,
his
Lands,
I
suite 35
my
He
knowing that
appointed
was instructed
me
to him.
tj^g
double
Amon
in
the
silver-
Karnak,
one
in work.
them
was so excellent in
me more than his
offer
He recognized me, as
my speech concerning
him.
spoken, concealing
is
since
d of
*A number
Amon
shown
in the
Punt
^The
line
cThis
is
has been cut wrong, was filled with stucco, and cut again;
stucco has fallen out, revealing the old mistakes and producing confusion.
in
is
Punt
the
ducted by someone
<*It is
word
Punt
although
it does not mention electrum particularly) would indicate that the balance had
been made especially for the purpose. In Papyrus Harris (IV, 256) the balance
is also of electrum.
Spiegelberg conjectures "eine grosse Haufe," but it is only
tion over the balance in the scene of the weighing in the
the
^One
referring
in
^^
reliefs.
back
to
it
reliefs ( 280,
and
similar inscriptions,
1.
33.
EIGHTEENTH
158
DYN.:
Statement thereof:
of electrum
prosperity,
who
shepsut),
life,
is
given]
life
and health
of the king
[378
(x+) 57^
[Makere (Hat-
forever.
Conclusion
378. I received (snw-) loaves from that which comes forth before
my
who guard
may
praise
"
INSCRIPTIONS OF
379.
One
PUEMRE
under Hatshepsut,
and later under Tliutmose III, was Puemre, wlio has left
some references to his building activity, in his tomb inscriptions and on his statue.
I.
STATUE INSCRIPTION^
Construction of
Ebony Shrine
Mut, mistress
of Ishru.
who
cLit., **the
^His
dRead: yWty'sn.
soul.
On a
of
Mut
one
Mut,
at
Karnak;
published by
INSCRIPTIONS OF PUEMRE
1 385]
159
Uncertain Building
Ayan by
II.
TOMB
INSCRIPTIONS''
Relief Scene
left sits
Puemre
overseers of workmen,''^
behind
382.
^^
At the
I.
The
(see 624).
whom
Over Puemre
383.
2.
Upper and Lower Egypt, Lord of the Two Lands, Menkheperre (Thutmose III) made for his father Amon, in Kamak,*^ of
silver, gold, and every splendid, costly stone; by the hereditary prince,
the
King
of
384.
The approach
3.
official,
"Thy
heart
is
glad because
all
they
On
4.
.....
his father,
the Obelisk^
.^
for
Relief Scene^
385. 5.
Puemre stands
at the
and baton in
bringing tribute, which
left,
staff
course
lost.
gOn
PI. I;
f.
Wiiste,
EIGHTEENTH
i6o
DYN.:
Inscription before
6.
of
[386
Puemre
of the southern
seal,
sole
Puemre, triumphant.
386.
7.
"
Upper Row
the tribute of the ends of Asia.
Middle
Row
8.
9.
Amon
Lower Row
10.
11.
and northern
oases.
Fragment^
387.
12. Inspection
,
of
the
which
Emu
his majesty
living captives,
Menkheperre (Thutmose
{^m^ w),
all
sweet woods
III).
INSCRIPTIONS OF HAPUSENEB^
388.
Hapuseneb,
vizier
and super-
^W ^'it-Hr, *^'way 0} Horus " (in Sinuhe, it is written w^'ivt Hr^ '^ways of Horus**
^ty't?).
As used in Sinuhe it must be on
but other texts write as above; read
or near the Asiatic frontier of the Delta; but as it sends tribute, it must be in Asia.
There was an Egyptian governor there in the Eighteenth Dynasty. His title was
ymy-T^ ys't m W^ 'ti-Hr (Sharpe, Egyptian Inscriptions, I, 56, statue of *nbny).
INSCRIPTIONS OF HAPUSENEB
389I
161
monuments.
His works
a sadly fragmentary
state,
of
Thutmose
II
in Hatshepsut's
^^High Priest
of
Anion, and chief of the prophets of South and North,^^^ besides a number of positions which he held in the treasury.
He
all
the
power
of the adminis-
zation
enlisted
on the
side of
Hatshepsut.
Introduction
king's-house,
whom
she magnified
over
excellence of
city, vizier,
[whom] ^her
among
(sic
!)
majesty
"
overseer
'
before
of the
miUions
Cliff -Tomb
'He
saith:
the temple.
^to
first
cDown
^'Louvre statue.
<^Here the
name
"
me
effect of cutting
"^
in
cHff-
out the
i62
EIGHTEENTH
tomb
(hr't),
DYN.:
Karnak, in
of
I
i
of
^of gold
"
He
^3
that I should be
plans.
Amon,^
Amon-Re, king
commanded
^Myi lord
was made chief (Hry) in
appointed me,
my
[390
should be appointed
Various Works
390. b^4By the majesty (fem.) of the king, the Lord of the Two
Lands, Okhepemere, the living.*^ Lo, I was leader (frr/>) of the works
[on] *s
[in
^^
chief, of
^Amon
it
^Right side; the arrangement of this and the following lines is the same as in
the stela of Thutiy ( 372, 11. 17 ff.; see note); 1. 14 above is numbered 26 in the
publication, and is to be understood before all the works enumerated, one in each
of the following lines.
Not
^Feminine participle!
^This monument
8The
last three
^Ll. 24
and 25
is
^A kind of wood
a door.
words are
are broken
silver, as in
the publication.
is
broken out.
lost.
oflf,
and possibly
still
a third
line.
REIGN OF THUTMOSE
III
THE ANNALS^
This document, containing no less than 223 lines,
the longest and most important historical inscription in
391-
is
of giving a clear
for
it
atic records
of a military campaign,
demonstrates the
It
which surrounds
by Thutmose III,
holy of holies was finally inserted by Phillip Arrhidaeus) about 25 meters in length
from east to west, and 12 meters wide. The east end was left bare. The Annals,
beginning at the northeast corner, read westward along the north wall, and southward along the west wall, terminating at the door in the center of this wall. At
the other side of this door terminate also the presentation scenes and inscriptions
( 541 fif.) which read from east to west along the south wall, and northward along
the west wall to the said door.
Or, as Mariette says: "
apres avoir enjambe
sur la parol dans laquelle se trouve la porte d'entree (in middle of east wall) vont
se rejoindre en se terminant aux deux scenes d' adoration qui forment I'encadrement
de cette porte" (in middle of west wall; scene, Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 30, a.
See Mariette, Revue archeologique, i860*, I, N. S., 30).
Of the Annals walls, he
further says: "EUe se decompose en trois parties qui sont les suivantes:
built
"1.
Un
a toujour s, ce
(voy. Lepsius, Denkmdler, III,
comtne
le soleil
M. Lepsius n'a connu que 11 lignes; voy. aussi Birch, The Annals of Thothmes
III, dans les Archaeologia, Vol. XXXV, 121).
"2. Un seconde chapitre de
lignes qu'une porte laterale (la porte nom31,6;
no
i64
Til
[392
giving a detailed account of each invasion in language indicating the strategic operations of the
many
The
account of the
Now,
first
campaign
(11.
its
"
Amon
(the
and
day's) name under
roll
of leather* in the
We
even
know
^^
the
named Thaneni,
these records.
Thebes,
others,
indicated in the
to this day.
22).
who kept
its
recorded upon a
is
of:
title
temple of
noticed
first
HI,
each of
all
his wretched
( 568,
in
campaigns.
392.
the
army
31, a;
M.
)."
aechaoitre-
3* chapitre
19 lignes
no
94
.
^7 lignes .
lignes/
.
'43 lignes .
6 lignes perdues
lignes
.
.
14 lignes
20 lignes
Total:
.
.
223 lignes
Mariette gives 233 as the total, but refers to 223 {loc. cU., 32).
They are in a very bad state of preservation, the upper courses having mostly
disappeared, and with them the upper parts of the vertical lines of the inscription.
The translation begins at the extreme northeast corner on the north wall and
proceeds to the left.
The complete
dgyptische Sprache,
XXXIII,
125.
*On the use of leather, which was very common, see Birch, Zeitschrift fiir
dgyptische Sprache, 1871, 104 and 117; and Pietschmann, Leder und Holz als
Schreibmaterialien bei den Aegyptern (from Beitrdge zur Theorie und Praxis des
Buch- und Bihliothekswesens, Heft
2).
I,
THE ANNALS
393]
165
"I followed "the Good God, Sovereign of Truth, King of Upper and
Lower Egypt, Menkheperre (Thutmose III); I beheld the victories of
won
in every country.
He
down
he cut
no country remained
their groves ;
victories
There
is
some
of
of
The
account of the
first,
have a somewhat
full
a plan of the
excerpting
is
we
field of battle.
it is
battle,
possible to
draw
confined to the
end the
toward
its
begin.
(1.
*A comparison of
the phrases
makes
distinctly
is
13, 472),
^^
harbors
This
is
:^^
those of
a question whether Thaneni could have been the author of the earliest campaign records, for he is still in active service under Thutmose IV (see Recueil, IV,
130), so that, supposing he began with the Megiddo campaign at twenty-five years
of age, he would have been over eighty years old at the accession of Thutmose IV,
under whom he completed a census of the people and live-stock in all Egypt (see
ChampoUion, Notices descriptives, I, 487), which is recorded as follows: "Mustering
of the whole land before his majesty, making an inspection of everybody, knowing
the soldiers, priests, ^ royal serfs^, and all the craftsmen of the whole land, all the
cattle, fowl, and small cattle, by the military scribe, beloved of his lord, Thaneni."
On his wide powers, see also the inscription in Brugsch, Recueil de monuments,
66, 2, a.
On his tomb, see Bouriant, Recueil, XI, 156-59; ChampoUion, ibid.,
It is
I,
^The omission
anyway,
may be
ff*)-
I,
CVII,
D-
clearly seen
i66
"They
(the supplies)
remain
[394
ested
to its
The
more interin the booty than the strategic operations which led
capture, because this booty was largely given to his
394.
down
is
summary
of the booty
and
tribute.
Indeed,
it
may
full
be said
that,
record of his
which we
call the
Annals serves as
of feasts and offer-
*=
395.
The
that he
is
to
march
Thutmose
III
Thutmose
had been
the Euphrates without meeting any serious
able to
out by
*This register of daily supplies is, of course, not the ephemerides of Thaneni;
but the fact of excerption is equally clear, nevertheless. This interesting statement
finds a parallel in the tomb of Hui, where it is said concerning his praises: "One
mentions them (one) time (each) by its name, (for) they are too numerous to put them
in writing" (L^psius,. Denkmdler, III, iiy =Denkmdler, Text, III, 302).
is
on
this
same wall a
relief
really
means "expedition."
THE ANNALS
397]
167
we know.
The
is,
results of his
Then
year 15.
upper
Orontes,
which united
all
the
kingdom and
quietly
organized
it
was
city of
still
held in the
Kadesh, on the
formidable
revolt,
army
397.
is
The
first
He
then
by the fleet.
the king disembarked
incidentally
11.
is lost.
in
his
i68
[399
army
in
supplies
of rebellion
there.
398. It
was not
march
Megiddo
had
now
repeated since
Thutmose
successfully
I.
24,
king of Assur
victory, the
was
The
Kadesh, been the heart and soul of the Syrian resistance, was
totally defeated,
boundary
his
tablet,
last
has
left
Thutmose
III sets
up
limits of his
Thutmose
I.
Before he
On
The conquest
^On
the arrangements of
^Amenemhab,
583.
etc.,
all
and
the news
his return to
Lebanon
shall
provisions.
THE ANNALS
4oil
169
Only a voyage
inspection along the Phoenician coast was required in
of
still
to
be reckoned with.
the next year (34), but the revolt of the king of Mitanni
Thutmose
called
after
into
Naharin
and
The
records of the
next two years (36 and 37) are lost, but in the year ^S we
find the king punishing the princes of the southern Lebanon
region, in order to protect the road north between the
nons.
On
of Cyprus,
and
Leba-
he receives
gifts
Assyrian province.
400.
The punishment
of the raiding
Bedwin
of southern
in
the leader.
revolt in Syria,*
efforts
continued
*When
is
the
Syria,
it
I70
The
402.
by two
lists
conquered Asiatic
of
Karnak
[402
is
further indicated
cities left
by Thutmose III
temple.
well as
cf.
Mliller,
Damascus and
its district.
in
it.
introduced by the
'
superscription:
List of the countries of
Megiddo {My-k-ty)
in the city of
up
Amon, who
led
The
copy of the
same
third
him
of his father
to excellent ways.
list
[presider over]
Karnak, on
are,
command
of the
his
fill
Amon,
first, etc.
list
aThe first copy is on the west side of the Pylon VI, north end; the other two
one on the north side and the other on the south side of the Pylon VIII,
Text: ibid., 17-20; important corrections by GolenischefiE, Zeitschrift jiir dgyptische Sprache, XX, Pis. V and
VI, and more fully by Maspero, Recueil, VII, 94-97. Treatments by Maspero,
Zeitschrift fiir agyptische Sprache, XXIX, 11 9-31, and Muller, Asien und Europa,
156-64, 144, and 154 f.; less critical Tomkins, Transactions of the Society of BibBaedeker's Karnak, or the Vllth, Mariette, Karnak).
lical Archceology,
text).
a place of confinement
or dwelling for the foreign princes residing in Thebes as hostages. In the sixth
campaign ( 467) the purpose of thus keeping them is given.
^Swhn
of thy
father
Amon-Re,
THE ANNALS
405]
171
which
his majesty-
title
number
list
of "Feasts
and Offerings from the Conquests" ( 547 ff.), the Building Inscription of the Karnak Ptah-Temple ( 609 ff.), the
king's obelisks (6295.), and his "Hymn of Victory"
(655
The
ff.),
survived (593
405.
ff.)-
The tombs
Theban cemetery
The
material.
of these,
is
of
the
officials
in
the
career of
Amenemhab,
contemporary
tomb
of the objects
ff.)-
of
mentioned
in the tribute
campaigns
The
( 755).
"Hymn
of Victory" ( 655
ff.)-
^On
Karnak
und Europa, 286IX, 227-54, depends too much on modern names for his identi-
Archceology, IX, Pis. Ill, IV; the best treatment, Miiller, Asien
und Europa,
287.
172
The tomb
[406
Puemere contains a relief showing the reception of tribute from ^^the ends
^
of Asia^^ ( 385), and that of Imnezeh^ (F m-ndh) a similar
scene of tribute from ^^Retenu the wretched.''^ Finally,
among the most interesting of these contemporaries is the
court herald, Intef, who tells how he preceded Thutmose
III on the march and prepared the Syrian palaces for his
the tribute of Asia ( 772
ff.).
of
CONSPECTUS OF CAMPAIGNS
406. FIRST
ff.,
616)
(Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 31,
11.
b,
1-67;
11.
and 1-2 1;
1-79,
11.
1-32 =
Bissing's unpublished
collation.^)
these.
11.
21-28;
11.
3 2-39
= Brugsch,
Thesaurus, 1166-
and
31.)
Plants of Retenu.
la mission frangaise
au
Caire, V, 356
f.
my
CONSPECTUS OF CAMPAIGNS
4o6]
173
(Lepsius,
Karnak,
13,
Statistische Tajel,
^^";
sacrifice to
Amon;
"^w
of tribute received
list
i-7
11.
= Bissing,
1-7.)
11.
1-7; Mariette,
11.
in
sailed
Arvad;
home.
(Lepsius.
Karnak,
13,
11.
7,
Statistische Tajel,
= Brugsch,
11.
7-9; Mariette,
11.
7-9 = Bissing,
7-9.)
11.
Karnak,
13,
Statistische Tajel,
9-17.)
11.
Wawat.
[eighth campaign], year 33 (476-87)
(Lepsius,
ette,
Auswahl
Karnak,
13,
11.
17-29; Mari-
11.
11.
17-29.)
Conquest of Naharin;
(capture of Carchemish)
battle in
Naharin;
the booty
tablets; tribute of
of
Babylon;
of
Wawat.
[ninth campaign], year 34 (488-95)
(Lepsius,
Mariette,
Auswahl
Karnak,
13,
der
11.
wichtigsten
Urkunden, XII,
29-35 = Brugsch,
11.
29-37.)
Thesaurus,
11.
29-37;
1175-77,
11.
174
impost of
Auswahl
1.
o, U.
= Bissing,
Revolt of Naharin;
supplies for
35 (496-503)
37-44, and
Retenu
tribute of
[406
11.
37-41; Lep-
Statistische Tafel,
battle
11.
37-44.)
in
(504)
36]
Lost.
37]
(505)
Lost.
1178-81,
11.
31,
a,
3-io=Brugsch, Thesaurus,
11.
2-9.)
Capture of Nuges;
booty of same;
tribute of Syria;
prod-
1181-1182,
11.
11.
9-13.)
11.
1-4;
photograph by Borchardt.)
11.
11.
1182,
and Wawat.
Kush
4o8]
1183-85,
Campaign
Kadesh; booty
known
(528-39)
42]
photograph by Borchardt.)
10-20;
11.
11.
175
harbor supplies;
of these;
I.
tribute of un-
Menkheperre; Son
commanded
of
Re: [Thutmose
to cause to
be record ed
[therein.
It
father. Re,
INTRODUCTION
[his victories
Two Lands :^
3 His
.^
(III)]
maje sty
which his
father,
in tEe^m5ie~whicE~Tus''mi!jestF
by
its
his
gave to him.
II.
paigns in Asia,
is
23)*^
Ill's
^Omitted by Brugsch's
cam-
The
text.
may
be found passim.
^Really temple wall; more often this word (wd) means a stela or slab of stone
set
up by
itself.
This line is unfortunately also broken away in Lepsius, Auswahl der wichUrkunden, XII; the restoration is probable, but conjectured.
tigsten
f
horizontal line.
176
from Sharuhen
[409
among
his
to the Euphrates.
common
make
and hence conflict reWe are taken with the king and clearly shown
sulted there.
his operations day by day till he overthrows a coalition of
practically all Syria at Megiddo, headed by the king of
Kadesh. He then besieges and captures Megiddo, but from
the surrender of Megiddo on, the record degenerates, as in
\all the other campaigns, to little more than a list of spoils.
'Fortunately, this latter part of the campaign is supplemented
'and really continued by the introduction to the list of feasts
and offerings^ established on the king's return to Thebes from
this campaign.
The close of the campaign is there narrated,
mentioning a fortress established in the Lebanon, whither the
king had marched after the fall of Megiddo, capturing there
the three cities at the seaward bend of the Litany River,
which we may call the Lebanon Tripolis:^ Yenoam,
Nuges, and Herenkeru, commanding the thoroughfare
northward between the Lebanons. All this serves merely
as an introduction to the splendid feasts of victory celebrated by the king, as is distinctly stated ^^on his return
The date of these
from the first victorious campaign J
:elebrations is preserved, and enables us for the first and
only time to determine the length of an Egyptian campaign
cause with the revolters;
^in
Syria.
409.
The
be determined,
is
as follows:
^Only the spoil of these cities is enumerated in the Annals, the march thither
being entirely ignored. The record of feasts and offerings only mentions them
later to say that they were given to Amon.
4io]
177
Modern
Egyptian Calendar
Approximate
Distance
Event
(English Miles)
In Thani
In Gaza; Feast of Coronation
Departure from Gaza
In Yehem
In Aruna
Departure from Aruna
160
..
March
Calendar
Year of
Reign
22d
23d
Calendar
8th
9th
(<
c.
80 to 90
((
<(
/
<(
}^- 4 or 5
((
(<
to
April 19
"
28
over 900
Oct. II
14th
of
10
13
14
14
15
15
2d
May
at least 75
Herenkeru
Construction of fort in Lebanon.
Return to Thebes, not later than
25th
4th
Sth
1 6th
19th
20th
20th
((
>
Lebanon
Capture of Yenoam, Nuges,
Approximate
Date
2ISt
2ISt
<(
.
Day
Month
Thut-
marched northward
captured
it;
Lebanon
itself,
and
and
built
a fortress
there;
The
first feast
of
Feast of
Amon
entire
at Thebes.
Fortunately,
we
are able to
and
tell
in
(See
409,
*For
this
purpose we have
= de Morgan,
first
I,
121).
178
column).
last
It is
[411
falls
celebrated
viceroy of
campaign, as follows:
who
412.
Mighty
^
lie.
came
Amon, who
Atum, beloved
the Two Lands may
Son
no
was
army
himself, that
forth
me
decrees
of
of
my
of
see
am
the
Montu,
it;
it is
victory.
413. '*The king himself, he led the way of his army, mighty at its
head, like a flame of fire, the king who wrought with his sword. He
went
none
forth,
(Rtnw'tf
sic\)f
^^like
do obeisance because
of the
to their horses.
fame
The
Tehenu
tribute upon
countries of
was at home in February after the campaign of the year 24; and
Harmhab decree (III, 58) shows that Thutmose III was accustomed to be at
home each year at the feast of Opet early in October after the summer's campaigning.
The campaign of the year 31 also began in April (469, 1. 9); the Syrian
we
see that he
the
(III,
ff.)
also
fell
37 129).
y
^On a
for
it
pillar of the
Empire temple.
It is
me by
dated "year
23"
am
Professor Steindorff, as
indebted
it is
still
am
it.
417]
the breath of
414.
as
to
them
life.
There
is
army through
leading of his
Megiddo
179
battle.
Furthermore,
and
the mountains
we
see that
in
the
Libyans came
The
22, fourth
the Frontier in
month
Tharu
[his
victorious expedition to
majesty was
in]
Revolt in Asia
416. 9N0W,
(at) that
agreement,! each
man
[fighting'^]
it
majesty.
first
the fourth day, the day of the feast of the king's coronation, (he arrived)
'4at the city, ^the possession of the ruler ,^
*The day
Gaza^ (G
^-d ^-tw)
last
is
^Or: "Now, at the time of these ^events, during years'^;" there are traces of the
two words {m rnp'wt) at the end, before the lacuna.
^Restored from the determinative.
<iThat
is,
Maspero
and Struggle
Karnak
has
(1.
of the
7)
f.)
same
Pylon VII
date.
^This is possibly a proper name, made up of a verb (in relative form) and a
noun, meaning: "Which the ruler seized" (nih' n p'> hk^ ?).
8 About 125 miles
i8o
[418
418. [Year
23] ^sfirst
month
^^in
on
power, and
commanded
on the
Amon-Re,
'^had
that he seize.
Yehem
Arrival at
419. Year
23, first
month
Council of
Yehem (Y-hm).
War
saying as follows:
Kode (Kdw),
["^fight
Megiddo
Officers
upon
this road,
behind]
soman
it
[will]
^The king
of Kadesh.
^An idiom
for "dependent
is
Shall
likewise ?
is it,
that
While
"How
man
(My-k-ty).*
."^
me
Advice of the
they
far as
have arisen to
Tell ye
and as
Naharin
^^the Kharu {H^-rw)^ the
is
our
[Tadvance-guardT]
upon" or
(other)
at
3ibe
Aruna
roads:
34Taanach
"subject to."
dSee
424,
1.
55.
Maspero, Recueil,
"rear-guard."
II, 52;
the determinative of
II,
men
is still
preserved after
'
424]
we
by a
difficult*
road."
King
Decision of the
422. Then
had
^ ^SFmessengersi concerning
Court, L. P. H.:
my
me, as
*'I [swear],
[nostrils]
as
Re
loves
[this]
uttered, in view of
will [bring us
shall
(My-k-ty).
it
i8i
my
me, as
father
Amon,
my
favors
majesty
who
will
who
will
among
Let him
you, go
'
they
pro-
they
think."
Submission of the
Officers
423. 47They spoke before his majesty: ''May thy father Amon,
lord of Thebes, presider over Karnak, ''grant thee life^.
^Behold, we
are the following of thy majesty in every place, whither [thy majesty]
is
behind
[his]
master."
[upon]
road'^
."
majesty, in
the entire
which threatened
"None
my
commanded
shall
go forth
to
P"in
army
march^]
be [narrow.*^
His
[^to
horse behind^
bVerb
lost.
cText has an
^Ci.
1.
^) is
Amon
27, above.
*Lit., "steps of
marching."
80r
the
mountain pass.
i82
Aruna
Arrival at
425. Year
23, first
nineteenth day;
of
city
Aruna
month
5 7 in
month), on the
Amon-Re,
father,
my
arms]^
>;.^C
fi^'
,,^->^4the
^^'in
jT^
sword
numerous
battle array
the
Mountains
The
of
majesty."
Battle in the
^3
at the
my
was
"^^over
[425
^7
wretched foe
^^they
^^
.^
fell;
^]),
^^His
behold, that
(^^-rw-n^).
^Perhaps we should supply: "life, prosperity, and health," as in Ramses II's
march to Kadesh (1. i); but above, the said phrase is used after "tent," to express
the adjective "royal," and would hardly appear twice in the same phrase.
^Three days
tains, is reached.
twentieth
(1.
Yehem, Aruna, lying in the midst of the mounHere they spent the night of the nineteenth and marched on the
58).
^Restored from
430,
1.
3.
<lMaspero {Recueil, II, 56) following Brugsch, supplies Megiddo here. This
is quite possible, but only on a different supposition from that of Maspero and
\ Brugsch, viz., that the position described here is that of the Asiatic forces, not of
I the
Egyptians, for the latter do not arrive "south of Megiddo" until long after
i^is ( 428).
Furthermore, it is quite impossible for the Egyptians to have had
their southern wing at Taanach, while defiling through the Megiddo road.
This
seems to have been the view in the translation in Petrie's History (II, 106), buf'no
mention is made of an encounter with the enemy in the mountains in the summary,
r p. loi. The passage is important, for it decisively determines (even without
supplying Megiddo above) the location of Megiddo against Conder's identification
with Mujedda*^. An Asiatic army which, we know, fought before Megiddo, has
j
its southern wing at Taanach, which is known to be Tannuk of today; it must
V follow that Megiddo is northward from Tannuk. See Breasted, Proceedings of
\
(
There was some encounter with the enemy here in the mountains, and this
moves the officers to urge calling in the straggling rear as soon as possible. This
encounter has escaped all the historians except Meyer {Geschichte, 239); cf. Maspero, Struggle of the Nations, 257: Wiedemann, Aegyptische
Petrie, History of Egypt, II, loi; etc.
^
There
publications.
is
a loss of
before
1.
69, but
it is
Geschichte, 347;
429]
183
Danger
Rear
of the
427. Now, the rear of the victorious army of his majesty was at the
city of 7Aruna {^^-rw-n^), the front was going forth to the valley of
Then
;^
it
has
filled 73the
army and
come
forth to us behind;
barbarians; then
we
'4let
his people.
army
77army."
exit
upon
this road,
shadow had turned,*^ and when ^^his majesty arrived at the south
of Megiddo (My-k-ty) on^ the bank of the brook of Kina (Ky-n^), the
seventh hour^ was turning, (measured) by the sun.
the
Camp
in Plain of Megiddo
429. Then was set up the camp of his majesty, and command was
given to the whole army, saying: "Equip yourselves! Prepare your
heart
advance to
fight
morning."
watch
shall
'"affairs''^
of the
Watchful
Watchful
!^
One came
the South
and North
Watch
"The
for
life
land
is
The
Steady of
well,
of
likewise."
^It
<1A
twentieth,
night, to
here.
the twenty-first.
f
p.
m.
eThe
"one"
1.
i84
Battle 0}
430. Year
430
Megiddo
23, first
army
to
move
morning, behold,
.
command was
weapons
Amon,
father,
of his majesty
was on a hill south of the [brook of]* Kina (Ky-n^)j the northern wing
was at the northwest of Megiddo (My-k-ty)^ while his majesty was in
their center, with Amon as the protection of his members,
the valor
Then his majesty prevailed against them at the head
4of his limbs.
of his army, and when they saw his majesty prevailing against them
they fled headlong to Megiddo (My-k-ty) in fear,*^ abandoning their
horses and their chariots of gold and silver. The people^ hauled them
(up), pulling (them) by their clothing, into this city; the people of this
city having closed (it) against them [and QoweredTj ^clothing to pull
them up into this city. Now, if only the army of his majesty had not
given their heart to plundering the things of the enemy, they would have
[captured] Megiddo (My-k-ty) at this moment, when the wretched foe
of {Sid-l) Kadesh and the wretched foe of this city were hauled up in
haste to bring them into this city. The fear of his majesty had entered
^[Ttheir hearts"!], their arms were powerless, his serpent diadem was
'^
"
^victorious!
among them.
The Spoil
431. Then were captured their horses, their chariots of gold and
silver
1.
their
like fishes
i.
^This shows that Thutmose has gone around Megiddo toward the west and,
having his army partially on the north of the city, has intercepted the enemy's
northern line of retreat; at the same time probably securing his own line of retreat
along the Zefti road (see 421, 1. 35). This position corroborates the position of
the Asiatics with their southern wing at Taanach on the day before the battle
(see 426, especially note).
This move must have been made by Thutmose in
the afternoon or during the night before the battle.
cLit.,
^Megiddo.
^Read
year 31,
1.
The two
ys-h
"one."
k (Sethe, Verbum,
10 ( 470).
^Lit.^
of fear."
II,
700),
433]
The
185
army of his majesty went around countBehold, there was captured the tent of that wretched
ing their portions.
.a
^
foe [in] which was [his] son
The whole army made
jubilee, giving praise to Amon for the victory which he had granted to
on the ground.
his son
victorious
They brought up
<^
The Rebuke
432. [Then spake his majesty "on hearing! the words of his army,
saying: **Had ye captured [this city] afterward, behold, I would have
^
given
has revolted
this
cities,
is
Re
this
within
it;
capture of
g ^
mightilyi^
Siege 0} Megiddo
rounding
it"!]
Its
was
^Or: "the
cCut
off
1.
with
its
thick wall.^
III)-is-the-SurrDunder-
7 is lacking.
from the
fortification
^About a quarter of
all
etc.'*
slain.
<iAbout one-fourth of
1.
is
lacking.
many
offerings to]
Re
this
kLI. 9-19 generally lack about one-third their length at the beginning.
^Thutmose
way (567).
(jbnr) literally
own garden
of
Amon,
in the
same
Possibly fruit
means "sweet."
iAbout one-third
line lacking.
^The same
temple ( 616,
1.
thick wall
11)
is
this
campaign
( 596,
I.
7).
i86
[434
of-the-Asiatics.'*
whom
."*
was said: "Steady of heart! Watch
His majesty "[commanded, saying: "Let not ^on]e among them
[come forth] outside, beyond this wall, except to come out in order to
majesty; to
it
Now,
his
under the
upon a
and
name,
all
""
title of:
roll of leather in
"
"
"
the temple of
(the day's)
Then
.^
Amon
its
this
day
it
was recorded
Surrender of Megiddo
do obeisance^
to the
this
fame
nostrils,
bearing their
gifts,
^^the country^
came
Kode^
''Each of the
of his majesty.
tribute southward.
to his fame,
(Kd-{'w)^
for the
army
the
14
^The lacuna
is
is
slightly longer
than
So
this.
dThe king
of Kadesh.
Kings
f
first
(e. g.,
Kings 15:23).
Almost one-third
8The royal
line lacking.
secretary
this record
(see 392).
^Lit., "to smell the earth.^*
1.
23,
420.
The
sentence
is
line lacking.
436]
187
Spoil of Megiddo
*
435foals; 6 stallions;
340
living prisoners; 83
young
wretched army;
rsuit^ of
total,
924^ (chariots)
Megiddo {M-k-ty)
a beautiful
200
7 poles of
297
,^
suits of
armor, belonging
bronze armor,
rsuiti of
majesty ]took
cattle,J
large
1,929
cattle,
[his
2,000 small
me
and
is
the
first
sign at the
end of the
^This word (ssntwt) I have elsewhere translated "horses" for what seem to
sufficient reasons, but in this context we have a clear distinction between mares
stallions.
list
of
armor following.
line lacking.
KThe king
of Kadesh.
iSheep
armor of the
officers,
line lacking.
^Goats
'These three
formed a political whole under a single ruler ("that foe"), and were given
as a whole to Amon by Thutmose III (557).
The location of these cities in the
plain of Megiddo (Petrie, Syria and Egypt, 14) is plainly due to overlooking the
other evidence (see Miiller, Asien und Europa, 200-3) though Petrie is undoubtedly
right in denying the identity of Nuges and Nukhasse, already opposed by Miiller
three cities
{ibid., 394).
If "that foe" refers to the king of Kadesh here, as it does elsewhere
throughout this inscription, we have an important indication of the extent south-
ward
i88
together with
all
and
;^
of the chiefs
and female
who were
Besides
18
^d
Kharu
flat
and
men;
foe, 103
(j^ ^-rw)^
Gold
with him,
[437
t),
[8]7 knives,^
hands
rings,
amounting
various drinkto
784 deben .
and silver
in beaten work ^^
of the artificers,
silver statue
human
6 chairs
faces;
in
many
of that foe, of
ebony and carob wood, wrought with gold; 6 footstools^ belonging to them; 6 large tables of ivory and carob wood, a staff of carob
ivory,
all costly
it
foe, of
of
all
lapis lazuli
much
inlaid""]
with
fields,
which the
*About one-third
line lacking.
^'Brugsch, 39.
cThe prisoners enumerated foot up to 2,029; hence 474 must have been
mentioned in the lacuna at the head of 1. 17. These must have included ^Hhat
foe and the chiefs who were with him" and probably others whom we cannot
identify.
dAbout one-third
is lost in this
^Hebrew,
*
line lacking;
lacuna.
"jSiX
1.
17.
list
of articles.
^235. 46 pounds.
About one-third
line lacking.
^Hdmw, Hebrew,
'From
D'^IH
line is lacking.
chair.
439]
harvest.
from the
189
Megiddo (My-k
that which was cut
fields of
grain, ^^besides
The
which
inscription to
first
this
fragment belonged
of
Thutmose
Ill's
at the close of
It is
war
probably
and
records,
introduces an offering-list.
The
Insurrection
aries.^
their faces
of
my
to invade
majesty.
my bound-
They
fell
upon
Megiddo.
*The possible uncertainty is not more than 200 more. This makes about
112,632 imperial bushels (of 2,218.19 cubic inches). It is impossible to say how
much an acre would yield at this time, but at twenty bushels to the acre, this harvest
covered a territory of nearly nine square miles. (Mr. Petrie's reckoning of 150,000
is based on an error in the original number of fovirfold heket; he has
280,500 (History of Egypt, II, 112), while the text gives only 208,200, or possibly
bushels
208,400.
^About
see the
ff.
Amon
first
and
campaign.
is
then
I90
[440
Siege 0} Megiddo
my
440. Then
^
majesty surrounded
their
"wall"'
with a wall,
it
life,
my
thick
surrounded in front of
made
majesty.
Surrender of Megiddo
fcame
forth^] to the
who were
fame
of
Megiddo ^
Menkheperre (Thutmose III), fgiven
in the wretched
saying"!]:
'^
impost."
all
that
my
we may
life,
442.
life
"
all their
goods, bearing
Further
led
443.
14
me
wood
way
like
III.
'3
these
inclosed in
d 22
^7
I did this **
^3
the living
of
March
c 16
TTyre""^ ^s
"
a goodly
to
to give to
was
of
Re, forever.
24)*
444.
march through
Palestine
(1.
25), to re-
"Give our
^The
line is
{P 3-r 3),
it
may
(Amenemhab,
1.
occasion.^*
of foreigners.
11.
11.
THE ANNALS: SECOND CAMPAIGN
447]
of]
191
year 24.^
Tribute 0} Assur
and
deben and
9 kidet ;^ fine lapis lazuli from Babylon {Bh-r^)\ vessels of Assur {ys-
sw-r^) of
{hrtt-)
stone in colors,
^^very
many.
Tribute of Retenu
belonging
horses
P"to her^];
5 chariots,
rpoles^ of
g'
103
total, 10;
45 bullocks^
many
of
silver
in battle
"
g-f^ and
much
two-colored
^Brugsch (with sic!), Champollion, Lepsius, and Bissing, all have 40, in which
4 units have unquestionably been miswritten by the ancient copyist, for 2 tens
an easy error. Griffith does not give Burton's reading. The emendation to 24 is
certain from 1. 25, dated year 24.
but the text uses the same word as in the case
of the chiefs of Retenu.
It is at the head of the Ust, for it reached him early as
a result of the Megiddo victory in the preceding year.
^These
is
^12.40 pounds.
So the texts of Champollion and Bissing.
*Or: "of the foreigners" (^^ ^tyw).
sThese 65 slaves are not among the tribute of Assur, as Miiller indicates,
being misled by Champollion Notices descriptives, 158 (Miiller, Asien und Europa^
278).
is
possibly a lost
325.47 pounds.
^ About one-third of the line.
at the
'Or:
^iTwo
55.
end of the
line (22).
^^'^
192
fire
wood,
all
wood,
mrw
[448
was
of
pitched.*^
Appendix
Year 24.
448.
fame
of his majesty
wood;
finest^ of
igo{-\-x)
*'
wagons
343 pieces; carob wood, 50 pieces; mrw wood, 190 pieces; nhy and
*^
J
k^nk wood, 206 pieces; ^olive wood^,
IV.
The Annals
450.
25)*^
^Two
^Same
cLl.
sorts oi^g't.
as
"merywood."
line is
to the king
wanting.
was brought
chariot.
n. 3.
of
wood."
Brugsch, neheb;
So Lepsius;
unknown.
''Reliefs
and
wood) appear.
inscriptions
(rear) sanctuary of
visible, in
4531
back from
this
They
campaign.
193
following inscriptions:*
451. ^Year
were found by] *his majesty when his majesty proceeded to Upper
Retenu, to subdue |JallT| the countrie[s,] ^according to the command of
his father,
-to
from
his sandals,
[Jthe
year
i^]
myriads of years.
452. His majesty said: "I swear, as
Amon,
desire to put
(as)
them ^before
me] ^as
453.
it
my
^r
happened
My
^i.
father
to
my
my
^I
have not
majesty; I have
Amon,
father,
this
from
FOURTH CAMPAIGN
V.
lost;
[loves
Amon,
Re
The account
of this campaign,
if
any
existed, is
of the Annals,
and
*The only other inscription of year 25 is a stela cut on the rocks of the Sarbfit
el-Khadem, and dated in the ^^year 25." Above is a relief showing Thutmose III
offering
"chief treasurer,
Vertical
tt>
line
text, Mariette,
Thane ni
( 820),
and
my
left
is
in 888.
majesty."
Karnak,
of the door;
31.
numbered from
sometimes applied
to Asia;
right
same
in
194
VI.
The
[454
first
was after six years not yet subdued in the cities of Zahi,
which the king had not yet visited. The wars in the Annals
are thus divided into two great groups, the
first
group being
certain.
^The
beginning at the jog in the north wall (see Mariette, Karnak, PI. 13). Only
the lower ends of the lines are still in situ, the rest having been barbarously
quarried out by Salt; this section is now in the Louvre. Text of Louvre
and part
Auswahl
Urkunden,
Karnak,
1-6;
XII, 11, 1-7; lower ends of same lines, Mariette,
both,
13, 11,
Brugsch, Thesaurus, V, 1168-70, 11. i-7=Bissing, Statistische Ta/el, xxvii f^
section
U. 1-7.
der wichtigsten
458]
195
Introduction
455. ^His majesty commanded to cause that the victories which his
father [Amon] had given him should be recorded upon the stone wall in
made anew
by
setting
Amon,
mand which
its
gave to him^]
Campaign in Zahi
456. ^Year
29.
Behold,
majesty was
[his]
on the
fifth
Unknown
Capture of
subduing the
victorious campaign.
[in Za]hi
City
)e
(W^
457. Behold, his majesty captured the city of Wa
This army offered acclamations to his majesty,^ giving
praise to
victories
They
Amon
Sacrifices to
458. After
ing[s], to
this his
give a sacrifice to
calves, fowl,
(Thutmose
[""for
the
who
III),
life,
Amon and
prosperity,
giveth
1.
to
life
cf.
Harakhte^ consisting
and health
(1.
5,
Menkheperre
forever.
same beginning
of^i]
of oxen,
is
also
6,
ff.).
407).
Young shows
that the
1.
its
number,
for
name ended
in
t.
About
five
h,
1,
6).
XV) makes the obvious comparison with the menpresence of the gods of Egypt in "Dunip" {Amarna Letters, ed. Winckler,
in the Amarna letters.
196
[459
459. List of the plunder taken out of this city, from 3 the infantry of
that foe of Tunip {Tw-np), the chief of this city, i; (T-h-r-)^ warriors,
329; silver, 100 deben;^ gold, 100 deben;^ lapis
of bronze and copper.
lazuli,
malachite, vessels
Amon-Re, with
joy of heart.
Capture oj Arvad
its
grain, cutting
down
all its
pleasant
city of
trees.*^
Arvad
{^-r^-ty-wt)^
found fthe products^ of all Zahi. Their gardens were filled with their
fruit, stheir wines were found remaining in their presses as water flows,
their grain
on the
terraces^ '"upon
">;
it
470 {mn-)
flat
this expedition:
lazuH, green felspar, 616 large cattle, 3,636 small cattle, loaves, various
purpose.
^See
1.
for
Megiddo.
ff., who makes the passage too difficult;
Proceedings
the
Society
and Piehl,
of
of Biblical Archceology, 1889-90, 376, whose
emendation is not necessary. Precisely the same figure, with the same grammatical construction occurs in Papyrus Harris (IV, 213 and 216 = 7, ^^ ^^^ ^> 6)-
*The sloping
fields of the
mountain
side.
464]
of this country.
anointed with
197
oil
Vn.
volters, defeated at
severely punishing
He
assisted.
returned to his
fleet at
and
Amenemhab
Simyra, proceeded to
might be sent back gradually to replace the old hostile generation of Syrian princes.
Year
464.
30.
^Lepsius,
Karnak,
13,
Tajel,
7-9.
11.
Auswahl
11.
7,
^This is not stated in the Annals, but as he returned to the coast at Simyra,
and as Simyra was the port nearest Kadesh, the objective of his campaign, there
can be little doubt about the place of landing.
cAlthough it still remained the center of S5Tian rebellion and revolted
again in year 42 ( 531, 532). Amenemhab refers to both conquests ( 585 and
589^-).
dThe word
is
manner
in
which the king proceeded to Syria (cf. Wiedemann, Zeitschrift der Deutschen
Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft, 32, 128; also Bissing, Statistische Tajel, 19).
198
Punishment
465. (He) arrived at the
down
cut
Sywi,^
city of
[465
of
city of
groves, harvested
its
III
its
Arvad
it.
Tribute
466. List of the tribute ^brought to the souls of his majesty by the
chiefs of
Retenu
in this year.
467. Behold, the children of the chiefs (and) their brothers were
brought to be in strongholds in Egypt.^ Now, whosoever died among
these chiefs, his majesty
would cause
and
{x-\-)2^ persons;
chariots,
List
181
VIII.
The king
468.
31)^
from harbor
He
and laying up
its
^This fragmentary name must indicate the country north of Kadesh, for,
according to Amenemhab ( 584), Thutmose went to Senzar on this Kadesh campaign.
^The
first
^Lepsius,
Karnak,
13,
Tafel,
9-17.
11.
11.
in a special place of
cf.
part of the
Auswahl
number
is
broken out.
11.
11.
9-1 7
= Bissing,
Statistische
47i]
199
and
his
future operations.
Wawat.
Year
469.
31, first
3.
List of
Capture of Ullaza
470. Booty brought from the city of Ullaza {^n-r^-tw)^ which is
i^ of
upon the shore of Zeren (rpV-w^),* 490 living captives; [3]
"
total,
ment
Tunip
(^ Thv-n[p\)
chief of the
"
1,
Twenty-six horses; 13 chariots, 'and their equipthe weapons of war. Verily, his majesty captured this city
494 persons.
of all
in a short hour,
and
all its
'^
72
wrought with
silver;
silver,
"the equipment of
li
"woods
1;
their
weapons
total,
of
19 chariots,
with
*^slaves,
do obeisance
male and female;
to
with bullocks;^
who came
and
all
of this country.
It
a body of water.
^Hnty.
6 ( 431), and "Hymn of Victory,"
Cf. Sethe,
the identical phrase in Ahmose-si-Ebana, I. 21 (15).
cCompare a
1.
9 (657);
Verbunij II, 70.
1-
^Numeral
lost.
i85.5 pounds.
^Cf. Lepsius,
five
I.
33,
1.
12.
200
[472
The Harbors
472, Now, every harbor^ at which his majesty arrived was supplied
with (n/r-) loaves and with assorted loaves, with oil, incense, wine,
honey,
f[ruit]
Harvest
of
*^
Retenu
much
wine,
it
to
oil,
33 various
this country,
the
is
counted
^^of rsparkle"';^
[all the]
good
[things] of
this country.
*That these are the harbors on the Phoenician coast, there is no doubt. The
word is a feminine noun (mny'wt) from mny^ ''to land,'* and sometimes has a ship
as determinative (Papyrus Anast., IV, 15, 4).
Some of the supplies with which
these mny'tut were equipped were ships and spars ( 492).
These cannot apply to
When we
inland stations!
^Hrwy't.
(III, 63,
1.
The word
4), indicating
notice that
is
rare,
it
is
Harmhab
^Meaning, perhaps, that there is room on the wall only for offering the circumstances under which the spoil was taken, without enumerating the same.
dOver one-third of the line is broken out, and this is the case with each line as
far as
1.
35.
Not ground.
^The tense shows that we have here the very words of the government
scribe's
books.
KThe word has the fire determinative; same word in forty -second year, 1. 14,
533j and Papyrus Harris three times (not four, as given in Piehl's Dictionnaire, 21,
Hence Bissing's conjecture that it means a
22), each time referring to costly stones.
founder's mould of stone is impossible (Bissing, Statistische Tafel, 28).
476]
201
474.
When
230 bulls;
calves;
total,
Impost of Wawat
of Wawat; 31
475. [List of the impost of Wawat (W ^-w > /)]: 5
oxen and calves; 61 bulls; total, 92; ^^besides vessels laden with all
In
Wawat,
likewise.
IX.
476.
the harvest of
in the preceding
it,
cities,
and
and
filling
The
story
is
The voyage
the Orontes
to
and
The crowning
to the Euphrates,
down
^Lepsius,
13,
11.
11,
Auswahl
11.
11.
17-29 = Bissing,
5'/a/j5/wc/je Tafel,
17-29.
Pylon VII
Orontes valley
by Damascus seems
Ketne was
campaign.
in the
it
202
drives
him
field.
Amenemhab mentions
[477
in flight, capturing
of
the
march
The king
was met by the subordinate princes, who immediately submitted and brought
Even far-off Babylon sends gifts, which, of
their tribute.
course, the king calls tribute, and also the Hittites, who here
southward
make
to
Niy on
their first
that the
appearance
Lebanon princes
On
his return, he
in history.
shall
It is
now arranged
Wawat
is
Year
477.
paid as usual.
33.
[he] arrived
Boundary Tablet on
478. [He
set
up a
kere (Thutmose
the Euphrates
I).
Battle in
Naharin
479. Behold, his majesty went north capturing the towns and laying
waste the settlements of that foe^ of wretched Naharin {N-h-ry-n^)
*^
*This
is
narrated out of
its
Hittites.
^This
cSee
is
Amenemhab,
^The king
583,
of Mitanni.
11.
8, 9.
on
pursuit,
11.
18, 19.
and the
482]
fled,
iter (ytr)^ of
sailing;
^forsooth,^ like a
203
'"herd"'
not one
of
moun-
The Booty
of:
480. fList of the booty taken^] among the whole army, consisting
princes, 3; ^their wives, 30; men taken, 80; 606 slaves, male and
those
who
Arrival at
Niy
481. His majesty arrived at the city ^'^of Niy (Nyy), going southward, when his majesty returned, having set up his tablet in Naharin
(N-h-ry-n^),^ extending the boundaries of Egypt.*^
Tribute of
482.
Naharin
and bullocks; 564 bulls; 5,323 small cattle; incense, 828 (mn-) jars;
every pleasing [thing] of this country;
sweet oil and [green oil]
all fruits in
quantity.
^In view of the parallel passage in the Semneh stela of Amenhotep III, where
the words, *^ytr of sailing," are followed by a numeral, the word must be the linear
measure, ytr, and not the word ytr, "river." Hence the rendering of Miiller
{Asien und Europa, 254): "er (iiberschritt) den Fluss des Rundf ahrens ( ?) " must
be given up. There is no statement of a crossing of the Euphrates here, but that
Thutmose III really crossed this river is stated on his Constantinople obelisk
" ThtUmose (III) who crossed the Great Bend
(Lepsius, Denkmdler, HI, 60, W,)
of Naharin (N-h-r-n) with might and with victory at the head of his army" (631).
That this crossing of the river was on this campaign is not to be doubted, and the
second tablet of 1. 17 was therefore set up on the "east" of the Euphrates. A
further striking corroboration of the crossing is in the "Hymn of Victory" (656,
:
11.
7, 8).
^k
rare
New
Egyptian
particle,
m-dwn;
cf.
^The remainder
of the
brief, as it
occupied only
204
[483
The Harbors
483. Behold, 24these harbors were supplied with everything according to their dues, according to their contract of each year, together with
"
Tribute of Babylon
484.
lazuli,
The
4{+x) deben;
lapis lazuli;
and
^^15 kidet;
real lapis
Babylon (B-b-r^)
^) -^
vessels
485. The tribute of Kheta (H-t^) the Great, in this year: 8 silver
rings, making 401 deben ;^ of white precious stone, a great block;
(P-gw-) wood
^^Naharin {N-h-ry-n
^),
coming from
419
total,
[this]
country
*The harbors lying at the foot of the Lebanon along the Phoenician coast would
naturally be supplied by the Lebanon princes. It is to be noted that these supplies
were collected as "impost" (not "tribute"), and probably by an Egyptian officer,
as was the "impost" of Nubia.
by Brugsch {Or. Oase, 91) with the biblical Shinar (5w c r),
an identification which was overlooked in favor of Meyer's identification with
Singara. Meyer {Aegyptiaca, 63) now sees in S^-n-g^^ the Sanhar of the Amarna
letters {Amarna Letters, ed. Winckler, 25, 49), which also leads him to recognize
Shinar in both, although Brugsch's identification of S ^-n-g-r ^ with Shinar seems
not to have been noticed.
^Identified long ago
cText really has "face," but the wall paintings show complete heads in such
cases.
<i97.74 pounds.
is
m, "from."
(hr);
it
is
49o]
Impost
205
Wawat
of
13
male [negro]
total,
slaves;
total,
with every good thing of this country; the harvest of this place likewise.
X.
488.
The king
more
little
and the
and Cyprus.
The harbors are stocked with supplies as usual, including a
of submissive towns,
fleet of
tribute of Retcnu,
of
is
recorded as
usual.
489.
Year
Behold, his
34.
Zahi
(P^-hy).
he surrendered
490.
fully
to
2
his
majesty with
silver
deben, 8 kidet;^
""silveri
total, 3.
wrought with
vessels of this
rfeari.
f 40 horses;
Captives
who
surren-
15 chariots,
50 small goats; 70
asses; a quantity of {P-gw-) wood; ^armanyis chairs of black wood
(and) carob wood; together with 6 tent-poles, wrought with bronze and
copper
;^
wood
set
13,
11.
of this country.
29-37.
cOnly the number is lost; von Bissing gives no lacunadAbout twelve and one-quarter pounds, troy.
*About thirty-seven and three-tenths pounds.
fThe fragment marked 11. 55-62 (in Lepsius, Auswahl der wichtigsten Urkunden, XII) nearly fills out completely the gap between Lepsius* text and Mariette's
(see Mariette, Karnak, 13).
sPossibly ''many'' belongs here, which might then give "many tree-trunks.'*
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: THUTMOSE HI
2o6
Tribute of Retenu
[491
* horses; 31
491. Tribute of the chiefs of Retenu in this year:
(H-jc) [chariots,] wrought with silver and gold, and painted; 70(^ + 31]
slaves,
33of
(mnw-) stone;
lead, II blocks;
r
'^
colors,
13 oxen and
a quantity
of
(/ ^-gw-)
riogs^ of
every
wood
of this country.
^id
of his majesty.
Tribute of Cyprus
493. Tribute of the chief of Isy {Ysy) in [this year]: 108 blocks of
pure copper (or) 2,040 deben; 5(+^) blocks of lead; 1,200 ^pigs^^ of
lead; lapis lazuli,
no deben;
ivory,
Impost
oj
Kush
is
wood.
tusk; 2 staves of
{-^-x)
deben; 60
36total, 64;
oxen,
lacking.
cW. M. Miiller {Asien und Europa, 339) inserts a lacuna between the initial
5 of this word and the end; but a glance at the neighboring lines (Lepsius, Auswahl der wichtigsten Urkunden, XII; and Mariette, Karnak, 13), especially 56
The place
( = 32), will show that there is room for only the 5^-sign in the lacuna.
is unknown.
See also Bissing, Statistische Tafel, 1. 34.
dSome construction of wood.
^Nws; see Papyrus Harris, passim.
^About 408 pounds.
^Persons of some
of the Nations, 267;
sort.
iThree persons must have been mentioned in this lacuna; but Bissing, Statistische Tajel, has no lacuna.
498]
[95;
and
all
207
Impost of
Kush
likewise.
Wawat
XI.
35)^
This
The
Aleppo.
allies
were defeated
in a battle at Araina,
(587,
1.
19),
not mentioned
the impost of
as usual;
Year
497.
is
on the tenth
35.
it
spoil.
Amenemhab
The tribute
are noted.
victorious expedition.
Revolt in
When
498.
the king of
Naharin
and people;
[his]
earth.
majesty
majesty.
as
it is,
it
amounts to
61.91 pounds.
^Lepsius,
31, a,
11.
Tafel,
i-3
11.
Auswahl
= Brugsch,
Thesaurus, 1177-79,
11.
11.
37-44.
cNot Aruna, as sometimes supposed; it is an unidentified city, but was perhaps situated in the land of Tikhsi, where Amenemhab ( 587) mentions a
battle.
dLit.,
"Hymn
of Victory" ( 661,
1.
20).
2o8
Battle in
[499
Naharin
499. Then his majesty advanced [to fight]* with them; then the
arffry of his majesty furnished an example of attack,^ in the matter*^ of
and taking.^ Then his majesty prevailed against [these] bar39of Naharin
barians by the souls of [his] f[ather] A[mon]
seizing
They
(N-h-r-n^).
fled
majesty.
500. List of booty which his majesty himself brought away from these
barbarians of Naharin {N-h-ry-n^'):
bronze
deben
oV] armor;
[fsuits
Army
Booty of the
501. List of booty which the army of his majesty brought away
from
41
bows
2o(+:x;)
chariots,
954[+^] (mn-)
^^
cosmetic
Kharu
gold
fire
work
captures
a chariot,
silver,
;
of
of
Kush
226
armor
wood.
Impost
of
21 (mn-) jars
^Fringsi, bracelets,
wild goats,
'^suits'i
jars
60 chariots;
(Palestine)
f
43
together with
oil,
of
^^2
in other [rcountriesTI
13 bronze
i^ inlaid corselets;
made
180 horses;
10 living prisoners;
[these foreigner]s:
Cf. the
kidet; slaves,
[besides vessels
Megiddo
battle
(1.
i,
429).
II, 109).
^I^n as in ^tn-n-mdw t.
^Numeral
lost.
The block containing the tops of 11. 42-54 in Lepsius, Auswahl der wichtigsten
Urkunden, XII, should be pushed to the left at least the width of three lines. This
is evident from the text in Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 31, a, and Brugsch, Thesaurus^
1178-84, with which we begin a new numbering of the above block.
f After
course wanting.
^Probably several
lines are
^Numbered according
wanting here.
to Lepsius,
Denkmaler,
III, 31, a.
11.
42-44 are of
5o8]
209
laden] ^with ebony, ivory, all the good products of this country, together
Wawat
Impost of
503. [Impost of Wawat]
Wawat,
XII.
[likewise].
36)
37)
504. Lost.
XIII.
505. Lost.
XIV.
506.
The king
Lebanon region
directs
of
Nuges
attention
his
to
again, where he
who
is
the
southern
obliged to sub-
known
as an Assyrian province.
7,%.
^on the
thir-
Nuges
the district of
{^ n-yw-g-s^).
508. List of booty which the army of his majesty brought away
from the
Nuges: 50
with [their weapons]
district of
the region of
of
living captives;
^of
Nuges
war;
horses;
3 chariots;
Wawat
is
an
Wawat
a,
11.
11.
2-9.
2IO
[509
Syrian Tribute
509. Tribute which was brought to the fame of his majesty in this
year: 328 horses; 522 slaves, male and female; 9 chariots, wrought
with silver and gold; 61 painted (chariots)
a necklace of real
total, 70;
a (two-handled ^-k^-n^-)
lapis lazuli
head of a Hon,
vase; 3
work
flat
of Zahi
(sj't-) oil,
asses; 5
incense, 656
blocks;
(/jiw/)-jars;
all
oil
and green
12 oxen;
oil,
46
sweet
weapons
of war;
sweet
wood
of this country,
all
the
good
oil,
incense, [win]e.
Tribute oj Cyprus
horses.*
Tribute oj Arrapachitis
and
all
Product of Punt
Probably
^-r 3-r-/>-^
= Arrapachitis,
is
meant.
end of
1.
6)
means "head,"
not,
^Lit.^ "spans.'*
279-
gin the year 33 the gifts of Punt are introduced by the words: "Marvels
brought to his majesty, etc., (see 486); hence restoration. There is no expedition
this time, as the preposition is "from," not "in," as in 486.
5i8]
211
Impost of Kush
514. Impost of the wretched Kush: gold, 100 [+:x:]* deben, 6 kidet;
36 negro slaves, male and female; iii oxen, and calves; 185 bulls;
total, 306 (sic!),^ besides vessels laden with ivory, ebony, all the good
products of this country, together with the harvest of this country.
Impost of
515. Impost of Wawat:
[gold],
Wawat
2,844 [deben,
kidet]; 16 negro
slaves,
[vessels]
laden
XV.
516.
39)''
Defeat of Shasu
517.
Year
39.
[his]
going
Syrian Tribute
518. List of [the tribute
"229
horses;
deben,
kidet;
of]
325 various vessels (of silver): together with silver in rings, making
made [with] "white costly
1,495 deben, i kidet ;^ a chariot
stone, white
2646
[-{-x jars];
^There
is
room
oil,
green
all
honey
for several
hundreds more.
bThe
total
212
bronze
^Hhe pleasant
good products of
;*
[519
this country,
this country.
the
The fragments
tribute -list of
oil,
w[ine]
FIFTEENTH CAMPAIGN^
XVI.
520.
[or soult^ward]'^
of
Kush and
Wawat.
^[Year 40j
.s
Tribute oj Cyprus
40 bricks;
lead,
^The
line is
wanting.
^Restored from
brick.
^Nearly half a
chief] of Isy
1.
1.
7, p.
210.
thirteenth expedition.
7,
harbors.
eAll the rest (about nine-tenths) of the line
is
wanting;
left,
it is
on
back of Pylon VI) southward to the door. It doubtless concluded with the impost
of Kush and Wawat, which could not have occupied more than the rest of this line.
continued on the back of Pylon VI, The visitor on the
lower third (or less) of these twenty vertical lines on
the pylon (north of door) is preserved; hence the first date is lost, and unfortunately
The text in Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 30, a
also all the others on this wall section.
= Brugsch, Thesaurus, V, 1182-85. The fragment certainly contains data from
three different expeditions; it must remain somewhat uncertain whether the first
of the three is the conclusion of the fourteenth expedition in year 39 or part of a
It seems probable that the long lacuna (nearly the whole 1. i,
fifteenth in year 40.
west wall) contains the conclusion of the fourteenth expedition, which must otherwise have occupied more space than either of the campaigns before or after it.
Line i of the west wall, therefore, begins the fifteenth exjjedition. Miiller {Asien
und Europa, 54) sees difficulties in this arranggment, which are not apparent to
f
The Annals
are
now
me.
the
525]
213
Impost of Rush
522. Tribute of
this year:
oxen
.*
in]
and female;
.b
Impost of
Wawat
this country^]
SIXTEENTH CAMPAIGN
XVn.
[Year
Tribute
41.^
2 rings.
of]
Tribute oj Retenu
525. List of the tribute of the chiefs of Retenu, brought to the fame
of his majesty in 5[this year]^
of
rflint^,
bronze spears
[Tribute of
logs;
4o[-h:x:]
.^
a sword
blocks
small
ivory,
cattle
1^
tusks;
^ ^incense likewise.
Tribute of the chief of Kheta (H-t^) the Great, in this year: gold
8
note
f,
p. 212.
Wawat
some other
list, it is
evi-
dent that we should begin another year at this point, as usual, with Retenu; probably year 41.
So Lepsius;
Brugsch has
**
second time."
is
is lost
in the lacuna.
214
III
[526
Impost oj Kush
526. [Impost of Kush^ the wretched in this year; gold, x-\-\ 94^
deben, 2 kidet; 8 negro slaves, male and female; 13 male (negroes),
brought for following ;
Impost
527. [Impost of Wawat]:
and
79 bulls;
calves;
total,
of
.d
oxen,
total, 21;
Wawat
35 oxen
besides vessels laden with ivory
114;
IO_
SEVENTEENTH CAMPAIGN^
XVIII.
528.
The
last
now probably
who
are
supported
by
auxiliaries
later
over seventy
subjugated
it,
than
Having
old enemy, Kadesh, whose prince led the allied forces, which
Thutmose
III
had routed
at
and
Amenemhab,
the walls
it
cAs pedessequii.
^Restored after
dSee note
f,
^766.35 pounds.
fifLepsius,
Denkmdlery
p. 212.
III, 30, a,
11.
539.
11.
10-20.
l^Erkatu ('^-r-k^-iw) must have been on the coast somewhere between the
mouth of the Orontes and the Nahr el-Kebir. As it is the same as Irkata of the
Amarna
have landed at
upon
was not
from Simyxa. Thutmose maySimyra, as be had evidently often done before, and hence he marched
Letters
it
far
532]
215
the impost of
Overthrow of Erkatu
529. [Year 42.]^
the
Fenkhu {[F]nh-w).
Behold,^ his
majesty was upon the coast road, in order to overthrow the city of
Erkatu^ f r-k ^-tw) and the cities of "^
Kana {K ^-n ^)
;
this city
its districts.
Overthrow of Tunip
530. (His majesty) arrived at Tunip (Tw-np^), overthrew that
harvested
its
grain,
its
groves
"
city,
the citizens of
the army.
Overthrow
of Cities of
Kadesh
District
district of
Kadesh
its
who were
d Qf ^j^g
'3
as auxiUaries
among them,
*Here a new year should begin for the same reason as in 1. 4; see note. That
number should be 42 is clear from the date in the last line of this section; see
note, 540.
^Read
yst instead of
"Anton"
incorrectly restored
by Harmhab.
is
there
any
trace
(horizontal).
This
makes the identity of our word, with Irkata of the Amarna Letters a certainty.
See also Eduard Meyer, Festschrift fiir Georg Ebers, 69, n. 2 and compare above
;
528, note.
<iSee
note
To
strike
f,
p. 212.
*He
is
Tunip on turning
therefore
inland, Erkatu
^Including, of course,
Kadesh
itself.
2i6
691 people;*
29 hands ;^
[533
44
horses;*^
.d
14
Unknown Country
Tribute of
533
in this year:
68 horses; 3 golden flat dishes;^ 3 silver flat dishes;^ (twohandled ^-k^-n^-) vases, 3;^ ^sparkling"* stones,^ together with silver
female;
15
Tribute of
Tunip?
lead, 47
534. [List of the tribute (or booty) of ^Tunipi^]:
bricks; lead, 1,100 deben; colors, ^emeryi, all beautiful costly stones of
bronze
country;
this
weapons of war
armor;
^suits^ of
^^
[all the]
'^[likewise]
Tribute of
together with
making 33^
kidet, a fine
Unknown Country
{t
2 kidet;
^-gw-)
wood
flat
genuine lapis
staff,
dishes,
lazuli, i
native copper
heads
block,
^^
^Of
f,
much
larger
number.
p. 212.
1.
in 473,
15, q. v.
and
note.
^Above (1. 12) some captives were taken from Tunip, but the spoil of
Tunip is perhaps not yet enumerated. Among the following list the rare emery
occurs, which is found in the spoil taken from the Tunip auxiliaries in the
" (year 29, 461); hence this list may here belong
unknown city of "PFa
to Tunip.
Possibly another nation has been introduced in the lacuna; see note
p. 212.
i
bulls'
vessels, as depicted
in the reliefs.
is
f,
54o]
217
Tribute of Tinay
iron,^
4 hands of
work
silver,
chief] of
silver
(if
'^-w '-
vessels of
.
Impost of Rush
538. [The impost of the wretched Kush in this year]:
[besides vessels laden] with every good thing of this country; the harvest
of the wretched Kush, Hkewise.
Impost of
539.
ao
nthe harvest of
Wawat
kidet,
Wa]wat.
XDC.
CONCLUSION
life
forever.
vessel
Antarna
Letters, 393,
1.
61).
^By 3.
Over 578 pounds.
dQne wa has been omitted in Lepsius' text.
^See note f, p. 212.
gQf course, 22 or 23 is to be read, the reading is based on: (i) our knowledge
of the date when the campaigns began; (2) the fact that 22 is clear and there is only
room in the possible lacuna for one unit more (3) the fact that the list of offerings
;
2i8
and additional
Thutmose
paigning ceased.^
occurrence of the
to
Lebanon
new
offerings
[541
till
from the
The
record,
campaign in
when his cam-
first
campaign,
it
Megiddo,
refers to
a fortress
which he
built there,
the motive.
with the
lists
made
to
Amon
at the
feast of his
rich
appear.
*Wall inscription ia the Karnak temple on the back of the south half of Pylon
It therefore
p. 239).
by
its
by
its
con-
whole.
^The date
by the
tablet,"
list
of the beginning
is
clearly
shown
in several places;
that of the
of Asiatic
which
is
end
of this
544]
The
542.
FROM CONQUESTS
Amon, now
(11.
219
richly in-
14-25),
and
be true
Abydos (97
ff.)
to
to their duties
due him, a
543.
of
list
Karnak
stantinople (629
obelisks,
ff.),^
depicted in a wall
is
Annals.
Chief
one of which
is
among them
now at Con-
But the
relief
array of
varied
chests,
temple doors;
besides ornaments
bronze,
silver,
The
exquisite
and
costly
vessels;
for
the
altars,
divine
and
statue,
stones,
lazuli.
The purpose
of the gifts
is
(htr).
indicated
by such accom-
Over a
jar:
(Of) alabaster;
By
filled
rich necklaces:
Ornaments
of the
**
Appearance
Festival;"*^ amulets
upon
the divine
limbs.
aOn
by
first
I,
plate
^In the relief, this obelisk bears the complete dedication, of which only the
half is preserved on the original in Constantinople.
See Breasted, Zeitschrift
jiir
cWhen
ff.,
and
infra, 630,
will
220
545.
The
[545
much
etc.:
costly stone;
Over a vase:
(Of) costly stone, which his majesty
of his
own
to the design
heart.*
on the
right,
Amon
receiving
547. It
sits
left,
enthroned,
before
whom
that he
may be
Presentation of
given
made according
monuments by
the king
Re, forever.^
is
clear
from
this
548.
his*^
the
in the land of
name
of
which
is:
Lebanon
Retenu (Rtnw) as a
among
the chiefs of
"Menkheperre (Thutmose
fortress
which
Lebanon (R-mn-n)j
III)-is-the-Binder-of-
the-Barbarians."
made
of four ktp-signs, precisely like the great alabaster altar recently found
cThe
text has
Megiddo
"my."
first
the expedition
return to Egypt from that expedition (1. 2). The three cities which he captured
Of the
in the Lebanon are enumerated in the First Campaign, 1. 16 ( 436).
historians only
to
Lebanon.
this
march
552]
FROM CONQUESTS
221
Arrival in Thebes
when my majesty
time,
first
victorious expedition,
<=
550. [The
first
the
first
^]
Amon,
in order to
make
it
feast)
tion.s
make
it
Third Feast
The
552.
of
Amon
in (the temple)
[in order to
of Victory
make
of
it
'^five
feast
days' ^ duration].
c 408
line
flF.
is,
of course, an error.
Amon.
(^The
of
restoration
"in order
is
the
to
certain
first
cause that
it
feasts;
5 days."
^This is the feast mentioned by Piankhi (IV, 836, 1, 26), who gives the date
as the second of Hathor, which thus determines the date of the second Feast of
Victory.
iThis
is
the
name
Thutmose
III
opp. p. 254); as the earliest known reference to this building, it is particularly interesting, because it shows that already in his twenty-third year, Thutmose Ill's
mortuary temple was complete and in use (see also Lepsius, Denkmdler, Text,
III, 139).
that
JThe name of the Amon Feast here followed, the order being
in the first two feasts.
different
from
222
III
[553
Amon^s Voyage
to
Luxor
554. [Year 23, second^ month] of the first season, (day) 14, when
the majesty of this august god proceeded, to make his voyage*^ in his
southern Opet (Luxor)
for this
day
make
{wm' t-)
order to
make
him
for
linen;
from the
first
his storehouse,
fill
of the victories
"
peasants
the harvest, to
to the goodly
fill
"
peasant-serfs, in
t-)
linen, {Ihr'w-)
which
my
fields, in
father
[Amon]
way.
Gifts of Slaves
555. Statement of the Asiatics, male and female, the negroes and
negresses, which my majesty gave to my father Amon, from the year 23
until the recording of this tablet
(^ ^-rw)
upon
this sanctuary:^
i>578 Syrians
^The numeral
their dates, he
now proceeds
to the
is
of the campaign in
cThis
is
partially
409.
the beautiful ceremony of the god's voyage in his sacred barge, called
Thebes " Userhetamon " (for a description of the barge made for this purpose
by Ramses III, see IV, 209). It was probably on the above occasion that the officer
Amenemhab officiated (see his inscription, 809, 11. 33, 34). It was on the day
of the return to Karnak from this voyage, called the " Day-oj-Bringing-in-the-God,^*
It therefore continued for five days
that the Second "Feast of Victory** began.
after the return, during which the Second Amon Feast also continued (see Zeitat
first, etc.,"
oblation.
eThe concluding words of the annals are: "from the year XXI[II] until the
year [XIXXXII, when this tablet was recorded upon this sanctuary;^' hence the year
42 was probably also the year when the feast inscription was recorded.
56o]
FROM CONQUESTS
223
Gifts of Cattle
556.
to
be offered
[to]
my
father ^[Amon].
Gift of Three Cities
My
The dues
another.
divine offerings,
Wmpost
consisting of the
my
[of]
father
cities in
Amon
558.
and Stones
malachite.
monument
my
of
father,
Amon.
make
every
II.
Gifts of Poultry
My
559.
12
my
former offering to
Amon
the (sacred)
|Tthe
fill
my
father,
Amon.
consisted^ of various
loaves, 1,000.
My
560.
majesty
commanded
first
my
(called):
13
an increase
3^
various
of that
632
of every day, as
Amon.
^Lit.,
cBrugsch, 3; photograph,
2.
is
the
name
of
Thutmose
Ill's
Karnak
halls;
and IV,
224
Gifts of
[561
Lands
561. I took for him numerous fields, gardens, and plowed lands,
of the choicest of the South and North,* to make fields, in order to offer
him
clean grain^
^^
.
Further Offerings
562.
My
of each year.
Harakhte, when he
father,
for]
him a
rises *s
the month);
and as a
new moon,
day
(of
my
Behold,
majesty found
it
very good
^^
in
various loaves, and 4 {ds-) jars of beer, which were for each one of these
obelisks; 25 (loaves) of bread, i (ds-) jar of beer.
Offerings for Statues
statues*^ of ^^
Evening Offering
565.
My
My
good
18.
^he
is
(I,
496,
1.
80).
(I.
gifts
12).
cSee 623
<iln
1.
27
ff.;
it is
written phonetically.
604).
1 569]
FROM CONQUESTS
225
Feast of Peret-Min
566.
My
Forth-of-Min " consisting of oxen, fowl, incense, wine, loaves, everything good; 120 "heaps* of offerings supplied with everything;" for the
sake of the
prosperity,
life,
and health
an increase
of that
f)
My
my
majesty.
of wine ^
commanded
['each'']
year as
A New
567.
of
majesty
made
for
Garden
him a garden
for the
first
time, planted
with every pleasant tree, in order to offer vegetables therefrom for divine
offerings of every day,
that
which
my
Wise Administration
568. Behold,
my
majesty
made
my father, Amon-Re,
that
which he commanded
as he
which
commanded.
father,
who
his fame.
body ;^ while
lord of Thebes,
knew
was wise
in
**
his
My
father ^^[Amon]
My
majesty found
excellent things,
all
my
by en actments^*^
by
23
569. Behold,
my
beginning of the seasons yearly, and of the appearance (of the god)
of
reliefs.
See
I,
"beauiies" (nfr'wt).
^Meaning where the most secret affairs of the god were, as it is frequently said
the king, "Ae knows the bodies,^* or that which is in the bodies of men, that is,
their thoughts.
<^Or possibly:
"by recording
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: THUTMOSE HI
226
my
Karnak, after^
my
father,
[570
done
tion
I have not
it.
done (anything)
might be uttered.
have done
to people, against
this for
which contradic-
my father =^5[Amon]
Instructions to Priests
-Qq
^d
5171,
careless concerning
any of your
rules ;
lest
your speech
^^
steps therein!.
my
to
monuments which
I have
made
made.
man
^looking to his
own
the
"
\ every
Bring ye up for
t-)
Hnen
^^
offer
me
ye to
me
shoulders of
came
my
mortuary oblations of
ye for
fill
that which
{pk'
me
me
my statues
according as I supplied those who were before me;^ bring forth my
statues on the day when your hands row,^ giving praise hd^ my father.
incense be
'9
tables of silver
and gold
give ye to
^This must be Amon, who, says the king, sees and knows everything and
would detect a
lie.
^Compare
Abydos (97ff.).
The
which follow are the mortuary offerings for the king, to which he exhorts the
^The
offerings.
up
in the temple.
3ln the periodic voyage of the god upon the Nile or sacred lake.
lists
priests.
BIOGRAPHY OF AMENEMHAB
574]
He
will
227
count
30
it
various loaves of the divine offering; 132 (ds-) jars of beer; of grain,
nd^^ oi
(ht-^^-) fowl 31
h-) herb; 2
many<i Qpi-^^
(*
-)
fattened
of incense;
of
nd^^ of dates;
fowl; 5 vesselfuls
^
4 {pg-) vessels of honey; 2 {mn-) jars
^; i
white loaves of dk, 15 white loaves in oblations;
32
6 ibexes;
(/j/-<^^-)
9 gazelles;
fowl; 258 flocks of
125
(i(/-)
Offerings for
Four Obelisks
33
incense
572. (For the) four obelisks: incense, 318 white loaves;
104 heket of [in]cense, making 334 pd't of incense; 21
life
through him
like
Amon-Re,
Re, forever.
BIOGRAPHY OF AMENEMHAB^
574.
This inscription
adventures of an
officer
is
an account
of the services
named Amenemhab on
and
the Asiatic
^These
lists
contain
^Apparently an
dThere
is
is
many
unknown measure
is
159,
1.
37).
These are cakes in the shape of the top of an obelisk; in the Berlin Kahun
papyri occur pyramidion (hnbn) loaves of white bread. The other two varieties
were doubtless also made in the shape indicated by the name.
f
Harmhab,
by Amenhotep IV.
^Engraved upon the walls of his tomb in the necropolis of Thebes, which was
noted by ChampoUion {Notices descriptives, I, 505, Tomb 12; hence not "discovered" by Ebers, as he stated (Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenldndischen
Ebers, however, did discover and publish the text:
Gesellschaft, 30, p. 391).
first in Zeitschrift fiir agyptische Sprctche, 1873, 3-9 (corrections by Ebers and
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: THUTMOSE
228
[575
Thutmose
III,
This narrative
Amenhotep
II, to
whom
directed.
of
mutilated,
and
this is followed
by a
ably year 35), and the elephant hunt at Niy (year 33);
while the whole series concludes, as it should, with the siege
of
Kadesh on the
year 42.
last
Arranged
in
in the
Amenemhab
XVII
20.
See
also
Piehl,
O-CXXVII, P and
for a careful scale
Inscriptions,
I,
Pis.
CXXV,
Newberry
BIOGRAPHY OF AMENEMHAB
577]
^;;^
and
588),
229
at
in
Niy
Naharin
581-
( 588).
35
Negeb
( 580).
Kadesh
( 589)..
from
is
is
his first
ten months,
230
[578
vouched for by his tomb and other contemporaneous monuments of his.* The manuscript of the story is
reality is
later.
his
biography,
( ?)
on the maintenance
of the army.^
among
his titles:
Two Lands
on
He was
evidently a favorite of
Thutmose
III himself.
Introduction
579.
The
officer,
Amenemhab; he
says:
'"I was the very faithful one of the sovereign, L. P. H., the wisehearted of the King of Upper Egypt, the excellent-hearted of the King
^A
list
of
them
in
^This scene
that of
is
I,
68
f.
Amenemhab {Memoires
^Memoires de
la mission frangaise
au
Caire, V, 245.
BIOGRAPHY OF AMENEMHAB
583]
Battle in
231
Negeb
581.
off three
"When
his majesty
men from
came
Naharin
to
living prisoners."
Battle in
Wan
6''
Again
I fought
"
Battle of
Carchemish
**
^This is clearly the Hebrew Negeb = "50m^A country;''* the fourteenth campaign of the Annals was against the Bedwin (Shasu) of this region.
^The following
on a campaign
in Naharin, probably
by
Miiller {Asien
which would
f,),
The
made
men
of
it,
viz.,
carried one.
Bronze helmets are mentioned in Annals (year 35, 1. 41), and perhaps it is not an
accident that "ij inlaid corselets and ij bronze suits of armor" are also mentioned
in the Naharin campaign of year 35, 1. 41 ( 501).
*This was on the northern march described in the Annals
( 479,
1.
18).
232
[584
hand, to
a great reward;
I [set]
list
them before
thereof:^
my
"
He rewarded me
lord.
my
with
."
Battle in Senzar
584. "I beheld the royal victories of the King Menkheperre (Thutmose in), given life, in the country of Senzar {Sn-d^ -r^)^^ when he
made a
[great] sl[aughter]
^^[among] them.
honor;
list
thereof:
hand
two
^^
hand
I fought
He
there.
gave to
me
hand
to
the gold of
silver rings."
Capture of Kadesh
585. "Again I beheld his bravery, while I was among his followers.
[He] captured [the city of] ^^Kadesh (Kd-Sw) ;^ I was not absent from
the place where he was; I brought off two men, lords (m-r^ -y-n^)y
as [living prisoners; I set them] ^^before the king, the
Lands, Thutmose
He
a lion; 2 necklaces, 2
flies,^
gave to
^^list
Lord
me
of the
Two
gold because of
thereof:
of the finest
4 arm rings."
my
lord
^7
in
in
^*Ha
Then
was raised
to
be the
"
"
his
forms
{H^
all
).
."
see 11.
16.
1.
*^
It
was taken
in
465).
lords."
BIOGRAPHY OF AMENEMHAB
59o]
233
Battle in Tikhsi
587. ^9" Again I beheld his victory in the country of Tikhsi {Tythe wretched, in the city of
l^-sy)
hand
hand
to
my
^^Then
arm
Two Lands
fought
^I
).
men, as
Hunt
list
female slave,
Niy
He hunted
and
in
[JI
while he
slave."
Elephant
of the
{Mr-yw
me
lord gave to
golden necklaces, 4
and a male
living prisoners.
thereof:
Mero
"
^^i
">.
hand*
Then my
and
gave
lord rewarded
me
3 changes of clothing."
Siege of Kadesh
her
god
tail,
I set
He
for
endued
it
my
*^it
my
it
filled
my
limbs."
Assault on Kadesh
=^9"
590.
is
first
man
time, which
of his army, in
meant.
the
wounded
elephant,
the rocks.
cOn
tioned by
the last
in year 42 ( 531)
and
the last
men-
Amenemhab.
^FoT the purpose of exciting the stallions of the Egyptian chariotry and thus
confusing their line of battle but Amenemhab leaps down from his chariot, and,
pursuing her " on foot," slays her. See Borchardt, Zeitschrift fiir dgyptische Sprache,
;
31, 62
f.
^The preposition
is
incomplete.
faithfulness of a servant; e.
it
g.,
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: THUTMOSE HI
234
other before
y-n
of
^)
it,
me
who
did
pierced
(it).
it,
went
being the
forth, I
Again
first
no
brought
my
[591
off 312
with 3aevery good thing for satisfying the heart, of the king's-
presence."
Feast at Thebes
591 *' I made this capture while [I] was an officer of the navy
^ [Qiis vessel""]
I was the chief
was the commander of
.
33l
"
when
all
the land
was
3s''Lk)j the
in acclamation."
Death
592.
oj
ThiUmose III
from year
of his
III),
many
years, splendid
month) under
triumphant.
month
[the majesty
He mounted
heaven, [he] *^joined the sun; the divine limbs mingling with him
to
who
begat him."
[Concluded 807-809]
From
tlie
VII
it is
im-
^This is perhaps the celebration of the Feast of Southern Opet on the fourteenth
of Paophi, after the return from the first campaign ( 550), which Amenemhab
here relates after the campaigns exactly as the inscription of Feasts and Offerings
continues the Annals.
cThat
is
month (Phamenoth)
as he
was crowned
on the fourth of the ninth month (Pakhons), he lacked one month and four days
of concluding his fifty-fourth year, dying on the seventeenth of March, while his
would have been completed on the nineteenth of the following
April (his coronation day coming over thirteen days earlier than when he was
crowned fifty-four years earlier). If born before his father's accession, as seems
probable, he was at least eighty-four years old at his death.
fifty-fourth year
^Fragments of a great granite doorway some forty feet high through the center
of Pylon VII (Baedeker's plan), the northernmost of the southern pylons, were
595]
VII
235
but even from the fragments the great historical value of the
monument
evident.
is
It
costly
the
Kamak
temple.
It begins
Thutmose II, and furnishes our most imporThurmose Ill's coregency with Thutmose 11,^
to the reign of
tant proof of
whom,
The
^^
father y^^ as
in referring to deceased
first
campaign,
its
capture,
594. Year i, first month of the third season (ninth month), the
fourth day, occurred the coronation of the king's-son
.
Second Fragment^
595.
^before
me
Two
at
I, PI.
LXI,
LXIV,
and p. 30), shows their two names together, as having been coregent during work
on the Eighteenth Dynasty Abydos temple.
^Legrain's E. 279.
236
[596
Spoil of First
Campaign
s
it with
596. His majesty commanded to build stone
electrum. The divine shadow was the hkeness of a ram, whose name
was made:
Monuments."
''Menkheperre
All
its
when
^[""captured
Amon
besieged
it* like
Lo,
my
went
victorious
cam-
put in
As
terrible lion.
.
it
the favorite
his majesty
first
decreed to him
is
were of electrum,
vessels
paign, which
It
My
majesty
for
majesty carried
off the
quished one, together with fhis"^ children, and the wives of the chiefs
name
the
my
of another.
father,
Amon,
made
this
equipment
to overlay
My
-of
majesty
Kadesh
12.
[a barge] of the
**Userhet,"^
with
^11
hewn
[of
"Begin-
cedar]
these countries.
Third Fragment^
their horses
597.
who came
my
to fight
majesty
impost.
their
Lo,
my
commanded
Lo,
my
[father]
Amon
Amon.
Then
dues as yearly
I,
274.
6oo]
my own
with
anew
for
my
237
Bekhu (Bhw).^
father, Amon.
None
Fourth Fragment^
598.
of
Ketne {Kd-n
^)
.^
to repel
particular,
it
is
In
Karnak
temple.
The
we
Thutmose
see that
Ill's splendid
it
recorded
colonnaded halls
lines, of
which the
first
seems
to contain
some reference
^A
^The record of
his
Theban
is
coronation inscription ( 131 ff.). Of his buildings elsewhere, he has left but
slight record: a fragmentary dedication at El Kab (Lepsius, Denkmaler, Text,
IV, 37); a similar fragment at Erment {ibid., IV, i); and a record of his share in
this building
was
called:
"ilfew-
was
name
still
in
Thutmose
Ill's time.
238
6oi
must be noted here. The colonnaded hall built by Thutmose I between his two pylons (IV and V) formed the
entrance-hall to the Karnak temple, and at this time was
the largest hall in the building, the only one sufficiently
which took
as king by the
place there
priests.
for use
by
northern end.
columns
of
Amon-Re,
erecting for
him
[4
(it)
as his
monument
columns] of sandstone
set
up^
[in]
the
hypostyle, as
countries,
stone.
The
my
of the
father,
height thereof
fame
of
my
all
Amon-Re, assigned to me, shaped^ of sandwas made 30 cubits,^ on both sides of the
throughout. They illuminated Karnak
^Read: smn.
cThis reference
and shows
that
is
the
Thutmose
first
in
an Egyptian temple,
(See my New Chap-
dPiehl.
That
and
is,
by Thutmose
I (
100
note).
of cedar"
(1.
KOver
wooden predecessors
fifty-one feet.
New
Chapter, 13.
viz.,
"wrought,^* "estab-
in contrast with
of the four
new
"shaped
stone columns.
6o2]
God
(viz.,
to ruin
Thutmose
my
I).
established
upon
favors me,^ I
of that
my
which
it
monument,
great, excellent
abiding
and useful
Amon,
my father Amon,
my father, the Good
of
like
239
made
father
it]
anew
for
silver,
my
father,
an increase
had made.
end
of
The
nade.
be made
fit
Thutmose
masonry
dispensable,
still
On
his
return from the second^ campaign, in the year 24, the building
Mekhir, that
thirtieth of
is,
in
his
cThis
the south
is
clear
end
<iNot the
1.
common form
of royal oath,
e. g.,
Hatshepsut's obelisk
2.
from the
Amenhotep
II,
( 805).
first
fiir
agyp-
240
[603
On
The
603.
dedications :^
made
'^He
(it)
as his
monument
Amon-Re,
lord of
fine
Another form of
to
Thutmose
Til's
this dedication is
an epitheton attached
name:
fine
white Hmestone
of Ayan.
for
It is as follows:
of myriads of years,
names
""^
was
to establish for
and
to fashion statues
of
[what
formerly].
605.
access,
^This
were, of course,
made
from
this hall
the walls a
list'
gave
of the
^Hryt-yb.
PL
ChampoUion, Notices
V).
descriptives, II, 168;
This
first
Removed by
is
the
h"o/
timer
Prisse to Paris,
famous Karnak
list
where
of kings.
it
their bodies ?
now
See
is,
I,
"
p. 197, note a.
6o7]
up
in
it.
241
in this temple,
is
also referred to
(772ff.).
The
on our granite
stela is as
follows
The Oracle
606.
'
The king
himself
commanded
who
those
to
my
on earth
Amon-Re,
are
father,
My majesty desired
in
him
this
put in ^writing,
monuments before
make a monument
him upon
to
to
Amon-Re,
block of enduring
lord of Thebes.
stone,'^ exalting
made
and magnifying
it
my
for
greatly,
since
607. I built
that which I
it
for
^he
an
usual titulary of
oracle.
dMariette states that this tablet is of "granite gris" (Mariette, Xarwa^, Texte,
47); so that rwd't cannot mean '^sandstone" here.
^As Brugsch has supposed (Egypt under the Pharaohs, p. 180), this temple, or
shrine of Nun, was in the way of enlarging the Amon-temple.
It seems, therefore,
to have been taken down and rebuilt farther eastward.
242
my
Behold,
this temple.
[6o8
mud
brick,
My
another.
one,
my
abomination
great
really.
know
speak
to
is
that he
is
there
lies,
no
is
fiction
in
pleased therewith,*^
Foundation Ceremonies
My
608.
be prepared
throne.
this, I
of
Amon
last
in
proceeded
^af teri
day
(of
god marveled
monument, which
god rejoiced in
this
his majesty
He
set his
rfori the
had exacted.
monument
[the
(my) father,
this
New Moon,
""at
ffori
my
Then I went
lord.
He
^before him.
led
^^
1^
the
first
^By a
^Or:
slight
^'for
the
"
1^
emendation of the
^viz.,
1.
7,
^Over one-half
line.
line.
all
made.
idea.
following.
f.).
The remaining
common
line.
that he
text.
first time.'*
^About one-third
"
iNearly two-thirds
still
have to do
it.
line.
^See Brugsch {Thesaurus, VI, 1291); I do not understand the passage, and his
explanation does not seem to me probable.
6o9]
243
His majesty rejoiced exceedingly when he saw the great marvels which
a
^3
his father [Amon] had performed for him.
j^y heart
dilated at every beautiful approach to begin this monument, enduring
b all the
^4
names
who
Karnak and of
a
the gods and goddesses 's
^11 the people made jubilee.
^ electrum, which [my majesty] made for him
After this '^
of the great gods
17
are in
TEMPLE
609.
to ruin.
The
offerings,
doorposts, falling
new
was
also
From
newly and
As this temple was one of the stoppingAmon, when his processions moved out from the
richly furnished.
places of
Karnak temple, on
all feast
Amon
^About
line.
^The remainder
of the tablet
at least as
many more
lines
as the above.
Large gram'te stela 1.50 m. high, 0.74 m. wide, and 0.32 m. thick, found in
the Ptah-temple at Thebes; now in Cairo, thus far without number.
It was published and translated by Maspero, Comptes rendus de Vacademie des inscriptions
et belles-lettres, 1900, Tome I, 113-23, with facsimile plate; and again by Legrain,
AnnaleSy III, 107-11. I had also a copy of the original, kindly loaned me by
Schaefer.
244
6io
whom
says:*
it
[He made
as his
(it)
monument]^
erecting for
of
him
new cedar
was
anew
[of] fine
Lo,
before.
Two
my
monument
down
ancestors.
612.
It is
,^
Our
made
is
is
of the
temple of
this
an abiding
makes for him.
to flourish,
stela inscription
it
(III),
surmounted by a
relief,^
restoration
^Brugsch, Thesaurus, V, ii88
Annates, III, 98, 99.
^The
Legrain
is
= L.epsius,
Denkmdler, Text,
is
III,
not correct;
7=Legrain,
and that of
impossible.
cName
of Ptah erased
^This entire
relief
by Ikhnaton;
6i5]
Menmare
245
(Seti I)
made,
On
Thutmose
Behind
the king is the divine wife {hm't ntr) Sityoh (S^'t y^ h)^^
On the left, before the same god, Thutoffering ointment.
mose III, offering a libation of water, is followed by the
same princess,^ again offering ointment.
The inscription below the relief is as follows:
the right,
Introduction
Thutmose
life
New
commands
Temple
a station (w^
is
hy t)
my
of
beloved of Ptah-South-
forever.
Building the
614. *My= majesty
III,
Lo,
^My
go to ruin.
majesty
year,
when he proceeds to
its
commands
doorway
of
wood, beginning to
upon
this
temple anew, erected of fine white sandstone, and the walls around
work enduring
of brick, as a
new cedar
doors of
for eternity.
^My
mounted with
my
majesty.
New
615.
before.
My
majesty
made him
I overlaid for
^The name
Equipment
him
oj the
rich,
like,
before
my
it^
it
Asiatic
name
of
majesty.
Temple
when
^We
expect some verb like "rests" or "turns aside," but the text shows only
the verb ^^ give" and a very small lacuna.
is,
246
the countries.
^AU
vessels
silver,
III
[|6i6
when my majesty
Campaign
6i6. I
filled his
my
from
which*
my
father,
up
fell,*^
'^who
I snared
wall, to
them
in one city.
The
fear of
my
when I
among them.
into
life,
my
left
majesty
New
of)
Offerings for
before.
Amon
in
every feast of
Amon,
being^
"heaps
day of *'Bringing-in-the-
an increase
and health
of
of
my majesty .
^This shows the wide extent of Zahi, evidently far beyond the limits of Phoenicia.
cThe
text has
may
be corrupt;
"fell"
{J}r)
may
be
is
See
566.
line.
1.
to
19;
1.
1.
19 overlooks hn.
62o]
618. Now,
^5
when
247
with
is satisfied
my
father,
Karnak; ^^and 6 ''heaps of offerings, supplied with everything"* and with bread of^ the ''Coming Forth" (to be issued) before
the statue of miUions of years of my majesty, which follows to this temple,
which is in the domain of the majesty of ^'this august god, for the sake
of this offering, *=the name of which is: "Menkheperre-is-Grcat-in- Offer-
Amon,
in
ings."
Offerings for
Ptah
619. Now, when this statue is satisfied with this offering, there shall
be issued for the temple of ^^Ptah, lord of truth, South-of-His-Wall, in
Thebes, according to the measure of the customary^ offering, which
is
in this temple.
New
620.
ings
My
anew
commanded
for
my
to
found divine
father, ^^ep^ah-South-of-His-Wall in
60 various loaves,
sisting of
of that
of
life,
[this]
statue of
my
my
is satisfied
majesty,
Thebes, con-
vegetables, bread
an increase
prosperity, and health
offer-
when
My majesty
["commandsT] ^ *Ho have executed every contract of the court, for his
father, Ptah-South-of-His-Wall, in
*This
is
to separate
Amon
Thebes
in
it,
as
Maspero
does,
and read
^*six loaves
Karnak.
it is
possible
of, etc."
^Or: "for the Coming Forth;" in which case the parenthesis must be inserted
bread {to be issued) for the Coming Forth, etc."
after ** bread" thus: "
cThis relative clause, as the gender shows, does not belong to "offering," but
The order of words above is as in the original, which is very conto "templet"
fused.
Such royal statues are depicted in reliefs "following" in procession to the
temple.
ni,
377,
The
1.
word
(jntt),
see 798;
14.
Amon
this
word.
and
the Treaty,
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: THUTMOSE HI
248
Further Addition
My
day.*
to
Ptak's Offerings
season
first
[621
month), twenty-sixth
(first
(mnw)
jars
of
from the
*^for
prosperity,
Offerings jor
My
20 white loaves,
life,
622.
cakes,
Mut-Hathor
fixed as
*'
Altar-of-
month
of the
^,
4 measures {dny
(P 6-) jars
of the garden,
and every
plant,
t)
"
^^
this goddess,
every day.
2
7[It is]
in this
my [majesty] who
good hour
Texactlyi, in
*This
does
all
which
the burning.
It is
my
majesty
409
is
ff.)-
cTo be
restored from
1.
in the restoration.
25.
<iMaspero restores: nw = "o/;" but the context demands the usual connection,
viz., "for the sake of (hr-d ^ d ^), etc.," which Schaefer read; and this is shown by the
photograph to be correct.
where
it
798.
f
Restored from
kA
1.
23.
above in
1.
23.
the
same
OBELISKS
624]
249
OBELISKS
In celebration of the usual jubilee on the thirtieth
anniversary of his being proclaimed crown prince, and on
623.
Thutmose
III erected a
were
five
in
we
624. If
KAENAK OBELISKS
now
Kamak;
by Thutmose III (see 105, 86 ff.), but only inIn the year 42, however, he had already
scribed by him.
erected in Karnak four obelisks, for which he decreed offerWhether he later erected more, we cannot
ii^gs ( 563, 572).
tell, but it can hardly be an accident that other sources also
refer to four at Karnak, two being recorded by the king
erected
aA record
is
Mentioned
in texts at
Karnak
....
Lateran obelisk
Heliopolis obelisks
Total
7
HI. There
Thutmose
by
completed
The Lateran obelisk was, of course, not
A new obelisk of
is a small obelisk of his at Sion house; see Birch, History, 102.
"Thotmes" (not stated which one) is mentioned in Egypt Exploration Fund
See Breasted, "The Obelisks of Thutmose III
Archaeological Report, 98, 99, 22.
in
250
tomb
is
and
Puemre
( 382
presenting to
in gold
of
silver
Amon
[625
Thutmose
and the
Among
like.
etc.,
titles,
ff.)
gifts
Thutmose
III,
He made (it) as his monument [for his father, Amon, lord of Thebes],^
erecting for
him two
great
and mighty
obelisks of granite;
the pyra-
As
the inscription
tomb
is
different
Thutmose
625.
of
III at Thebes.
scarab,^ issued in celebration of the erection of
Thutmose
III,
in the
house of Amon.
Thutmose
III
had
at least
in-
one more
^In the corridor of the Annals in the great Karnak temple; published by
Champollion, Monumenis, IV, 316, 317; partially by Rosellini, MonumerUi Storici,
Text, III, I, plate opposite p. 125; partially by Burton, Excerpta hieroglyphica, 29,
and Bnigsch, Thesaurus, V, 1185 flf.
full,
it
in
cSee Ineni ( 103, 1. 8); Lepsius says of the obelisk in tomb of Puemre: "das
pjrramidion ist gelb gemalt," of course representing electrum (Lepsius, Denkmdler,
Text, III, 244). On the other obehsk the same inscription with the variant "obelisks'* (for the dual).
iNone of these can be the Lateran obelisk, for it was not one of a pair; but the
Constantinople obelisk is one of the first pair above mentioned, for the position,
of the representations and the wording of the inscriptions tally exactly (the only
difiference is the omission of dsr-h ^ m; in the Golden Horus name in the Karnak
relief).
See Zeitschrift fur dgyptische Sprache, 39, Tafel III, i and 2 (opp. p. 56),
and
p. 57.
^Virey,
^Berlin,
Memoires de
No
la mission frangaise
au
Caire, V, 209,
1.
15.
Museums,
417.
OBELISKS
626]
from
its
itself
Lateran Obelisk.
LATERAN OBELISK^
II.
626.
251
history.
It
was
But he apparently
but before it was erected
Karnak.^
it
was
erected.
*"
The
is
the
first
next date of
history
is
that of
its
egiziani di
Roma, Tav.
and
II.
^Thutmose III says it was set "? the forecourt of the temple over against
Karnak;" Thutmose IV refers three times to its location: (i) when found it was
lying "on the south side of Karnak;" (2) it was erected "in Karnak;" (3) it was
erected "at the upper portal of Karnak." Taken altogether, these data show that
in No. 3 the southern entrance through Pylon VIII is meant, and there the obelisk
There is a reference to the same portal in the inscription of Beknekhonsu
stood.
In both cases the same
(III, 567, 1. 5), where it is also called the "upper portal."
word (hr) is used for "upper." It is unusual in this sense, viz., referring to the
river, but occurs twice in the same way in the inscription of Zoser (Sehel, 11. 16
and 30).
cHence
it
obelisk, as
Wiedemann
states
252
lines, those of
much from
lines. ^
restoration
[627
at the last
erection.
Dedication {South Side)
627
ment for
Thutmose
Amon-Re, lord
^
his father,
{wb
Karnak, as the
^)
He made
(III).
(it)
of the
monu-
as his
him a
single
w)
first
life.
North Side
(Thutmose IH), son of Amon, of his body, whom Mut
bore to him in Ishru, of the same hmbs as he who fashioned him, Son of
Re, Thutmose, Beautiful of Form, beloved of Amon-Re, lord of Thebes,
given
life,
Re.
like
East Side
(Thutmose
628
Amon; making
made, who were
his
III), rich in
monuments
monuments
in the house of
was made
Re, Thutmose, Ruler
of Heliopolis,
through him
may
Amon,
be given
life
{nj).
West Side
(Thutmose
He
Karnak.
sends
III),
Amon
is
''Enduring in Kingship."*^
celebration of
the
this
Amon, when he
rises in
son,
thee
life.
CONSTANTINOPLE OBELISK^
III.
sius
praises
629.
who
from Eg)rpt
^These
latter will
to Constantinople.^
It
originally
ff.
Egyptian Inscriptions,
stood
II, 65.
is
III,
preserved.
60;
Sharpe,
obelisks
63t]
somewhere
The
in
there,
relief
253
by Puemre,
evidently
The
of the pylon.
9),
inscriptions
630
<=
(Thutmose
Amon-Re,
his father,
III)
he made
lord of Thebes;
erecting ^[for
given
life,
like
monument for
him very great
as his
(it)
that he
may be
Re, forever].
North Side
(Thutmose
III),
whom Atum
be king;
extent of time;
all
lands, the
East Side
West Side
(Thutmose
III),
who
crossed
the
at
"Great Bend" of
the head of his army,
is
the
ff.)
note).
last fifth
name.
campaign of the
thirty-third year.
See 477
ff.
254
[632
LONDON OBELISK^
IV.
632.
III
its
fellow,
The London
which had
fallen early in the fourteenth century, was removed thither
It is
in 1877 and landed in England in January, 1878.
Barbaras was
prefect.
obelisk,
"^
tance;
Thutmose
father,
as follows:
is
(III)
he made
as his
(it)
monument
for his
so
much
[given
life]
through him
May
the
Son
of Re,
Thutmose
(III),
be
(/).
L IH
KAI^AP^
BAPBAPO^ ANE0HKE
APXITEKTONOYNTO^
TTONTIOY
BARBARUS PRAEF
AEGYPTI POSUIT
ARCHITCTANTE PONTIC
t^See
in the garden of
Maecenas
Gorringe.
lines are
OBELISKS
J 636]
255
634. It
skill
Gorringe,*" landing
in July, 1880.
illegible,
admirable
is
They
of the king.
are as follows:
East Side
Lord
Son
of Heliopolis,
of his body,
House
whom Thoth
fashioned;
whom
hmbs, knowing
North Side
636. Horus: "^Taking^ the white crown; King of Upper and Lower
Egypt, Menkheperre;
Golden Horus:
decreed for
him
mose
(III)
and might
of the
sword by
of Re,
Thut-
New
^For
see 632.
and other
the
London,
are
dThe inscriptions
by Ramses II, as
eThis
Paris,
is all
of
Thutmose
in
London.
in one cartouche,
obelisks.
fashioned," above.
256
[637
The
at Thebes,
is
that
it
by the
so shut in
it is little
noticed
by the modern visitor. It was begun by Thutmose I. Although Hatshepsut certainly had a share in it, the dedication
inscriptions attribute its erection to Thutmose III, but refer
to an earlier temple on the spot, meaning the work of Thutmose I. They are as follows:
He made
638. ^
monument
as his
(it)
Amon-Re,*^ king of gods, making for him a great temple upon the
district of the
Amon;"'^
life,
West
of
Thutmose III
(called):
" Splendid-is-the-Seat-of-
forever.
He made
639
as his
(it)
monument
first
beginning.
majesty established
beginning to
fall to
it
it
anew, that he
forever.
erecting for
beginning, establishing
it
life
My
him
life like
Re, forever.
making for him " Splendor-of- the- West," to shelter its lord and these lords of the district of Thamut {T^ -mw t)
641.
^The following
have omitted in
all
i304-=-6.
Thutmose
c,
and
d.
III.
dOr:
*'
is
" Splendor-of-the-West."
On
this
Rouge, Inscriptions hieroglyphiques, 130, and Dilmichen, Historische Inschriften, II, xxxvi; titulary and introduction omitted as above.
The other two are also
from the same sources.
f
NUBIAN WARS
644]
He made
257
He made
**Lord-of-Life"
A round-topped
642
relief
showing Thutmose
Below the
Harakhte.
III,
relief is
upper two-thirds
offering
an oblation
to
Year 47, under the majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt:
Menkheperre; Son of Re: Thutmose (III), [living] forever.
His majesty commanded
of stone-work, for his father
Heliopolis, the house of
643.
muse
to encircle this
Re-Harakhte
Re
forever,
when he cleansed
.^
Thut-
III, as follows:
He made
making
for
(it)
as his
lord of Heliopolis,
stone, (called):
"Pure-are-
the-Ofiferings-of-Menkheperre-Beloved-of-the-Gods-of-Heliopolis."
NUBIAN WARS
The
records of
;
others add:
ff.).
region;''
<iSharpe,
Egyptian Inscriptions,
II, 34.
2S8
[645
relief,^
now
in
a very fragmentary
state, representing
The
the
scene
He
has
filled
of gods with
it
he has Tconqueredi.
The
for-
was a
list
similar inscription,
now
too
both the
further
lists is
Nubian Troglodytes of Khenthennofer, whom his majesty overthrew, making a greats slaughter among
them, (whose) number is unknown, and carrying away all their subjects
List of these south^ countries, the
fill
is
it is
in front
^^Mariette's 116
is
an
error.
the
'The duplicate has "south and north/" but as the two lists are duplicates, and
Nubian god Dedun presents them to the king, "north" is certainly an error.
e" Great"
is
NUBIAN WARS
649]
Amon-Re,
lord of Thebes.
647. Finally,
on
Lo,
all
259
Karnak, the
too
known
little
cluded in these
Thutmose
The geography
on Pylon VI.
lists,
and
it is
uncertain
how
As
able that
Thutmose
thither,
if
648.
captives
wars at
Amon
On
old
prob-
way
prepared the
tomb
of Ineni refers to
and
living captives,
the wretched,
all countries,
King Thutmose
is
by the king
I.
649.
it is
which
was over-
his
least
and health
Napata,
perity,
his
up the Nile
son Amenhotep
far
from Nubia:
spoil
among
"
Ill's
and
Nubia
of
majesty
life,
pros-
III.^
Karnak temple
( 541
ff.).
CANAL INSCRIPTION*^
of
III
(I,
642
fif.)
Karnak, 24-26;
I,
129,
<^,
lipr-k ^-R
made only
I;
but tnn of
life, etc.,**
Mnwere
on the rock of the island of Sehel, at the first cataract. It was discovered
by Mr. E. C. Wilbour in 1889, and published in Recueil, XIII, 202 f.; again,
inaccurately, in de Morgan, Catalogue des monuments, 85, No. 18.
<*Cut
26o
Thutmose
it
(74!?.).
III
He
ordered
it
[650
his father,
and was
cleared,
He
up a record
put
and
Elephantine responsible for the yearly clearance of the passage in the future.
650. Year 50, first (month) of the third season (ninth month), day
22, under the majesty of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Menkheperre (Thutmose III), given
life.
he had found
down-stream upon
The name of
it,
it.
He
it^
sailed
Menkheperre-Living-Forever."
The
II.
651.
Kush,
in the
office of ^^King's-son,^^
KUSH
or viceroy of
when he
erected
'^
in restoring the
monument
^^
bringing stone
oj eternity
^This probably indicates that we are not to understand literally the identical
statements made by his father as to his actually sailing on the canal. Thutmose III
was now an old man of eighty years at least, and it is impossible that he should
have accompanied the expedition himself.
^Lit., ''after his finding (infinitive)
cit
is,
of course, the
name by each
it.*'
canal, but
is
given a
new
king.
dQutside, south wall, Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 47, a, below, at the right of
the door; the "governor of the sotUh countries," whose name is lost on the left of
the door, belongs to the Ramsessid period, as he is adoring Ramses III.
NUBIAN WARS
653]
261
The
Nehi
(Nhy).'*^
is
Nehi:
and ebony,
sole
seal,
Horns of the
the divine limbs; com-
liing at the
panion, approaching the mighty sovereign, vigilant for the lord of the
palace, king's-son, governor of the south countries, Nehi.
He
saith:
**I
am
house with
"whosei praise
filling his
Another
and titles,
Semneh.
III.
653.
Thutmose
inscription^' of
is
on the island
of Sai, one
name
III,
shows
who
Amon
I,
I,
21
f.
e.
23, n. i.
^The
inscription of course
I,
80.
8See Index.
l^Read: nh}.
^A
h.
262
[654
The whole
pendants.
is
and
inscription
654.
of the
Two
may
that he
live forever.
HYMN OF VICTORY^
655.
At the
top,
stela,
Thutmose III,
Theban necropolis,
to Amon, with the
of
the
usual superscriptions.
The hymn
mainder
was
itself
*=
in twenty-five lines
of the stela,
is
the great
here
style,
by
Karnak temple^
The hymn
is
its class,
re-
and
which
this tablet
was
set up.
occupying the
made
for
its
rhetorical
^A
cThe whole of both scenes was hammered out by Amenhotep IV, and has then
been restored.
Du
HYMN OF VICTORY
656]
263
my
son,
my
My
heart
*is
my
temple;
How
pleasing
my
have established
3 thee
in
have
Thy
my
is
body.*
dwelling,
and
set
life.
lands.
all
The
among
the
Nine Bows.
si myself
my
two hands,
I have
I
tens of thousands
and thousands,
have
Thou
felled thine
of thousands as captives.
'hordes'' of rebels
according as I
commanded
thee.
The
earth in
length
its
subject^ to thee,
^Thou tramplest
None
While I
Thou
all countries,
am
Bend^
of ^Naharin
(N-h-
with might.
^Lit.,
it is
<iEuphrates.
is
found
explained by the
On
facej'*
for "subject."
Tombos
the obelisk of
an idiom
tablet,
Thutmose
11.
campaign
(Recueil, XI,
same
phrase is applied to him: " who crossed the Great Bend 0} Naharin (N-h-r-n) with
might and with victory" (631). This statement is therefore not merely poetic
hyperbole, and coincides with the Annals, 477fF.
264
[657
657. I have decreed for thee that they hear thy roarings and enter
into caves;
have
9l
My
consumes them,
it
'
It
devours those
'It
who
(^ ^
its
flame.
mw)^ there
is
not a rem-
nant of them;*^
Fallen are the children of their mighty ones.
'^I
My
There
is
no rebel of thine as
all
lands,
^3i
K)
I have hurled
I
Thou
hast
made
'^I
image.
VJWhen thou
my
like
to see thy
takest the
weapons of war
in the chariot.
Thou
I have caused
When
659.
it
^^I
them
who
to see thy
majesty
and
a circling
like
gives forth
its
star,^
dew.
11.
is
without determinative;
it
1.
10,
6, 7, 71, q. v.
cLit., "their
^Ymyw-st't.
remnant
is not.**
^^^mw.
*See
I,
511,
1.
2.
Tom bos
HYMN OF VICTORY
66i]
Firm
265
have come, causing thee to smite those who are in their marshes,
The lands of Mitanni (My-t-n) tremble under fear of thee.
^71
them
I have caused
Lord
have come, causing thee to smite those who are in the isles;
Those who are in the midst of the Great Green (Sea) hear^ thy roar660.
^^I
ings.
Who
^9l
rises
ty)
to see thy
lion,
661. =I have come, causing thee to smite the uttermost ends of the
lands.
The
I
circuit^ of the
is
Who
seizeth
upon
much as he desires.
those who are in front^ of
their
land.
Thou
them
I have caused
Lord
to see thy
of running, stealthy-going,
who
roves the
Two
Lands.
*^I
As
far as
"
1^
"Firm
0} heart"
^Wtntyw; unknown.
^Lit.,
^A designation
^This
is
of the
hawk.
1.
20;
Maspero's rendering,
"duars"=
protected inclosures,
harbor-mouths {h
e^
='/,
name
wt) under
of
is
Ramses
III.
266
I have caused
them
to see thy
[662
have united
their
my
thee,
beloved son,
whom
I have begotten, in
me
my ka
that
all
desired
Thou
my
hast erected
The
great
(it)
doorway
of
Amon-Re,
Thy monuments are greater than (those of) any king who has
When I commanded thee to do it, I was satisfied therewith;
upon the Horus-throne
I established thee
Thou
been.
of millions of years;
TOMB OF REKHMIREd
663.
This tomb
of the Empire.
is
The
monument
its
walls
depict
aHonis and
dA
Set.
^Isis
and Nephthys.
^See
138,
1.
i.
menti Civili, 52-54; Hoskins, Travels in Ethiopia (London, 1835), 328; Lepsius,
Denkmaler, III, 40, 41, and Text, III, 270 f.; Prisse, Histoire de Vart igyptien,
1863 (plates not numbered); Piehl, Inscriptions hieroglyphiques, 113, 114, pp.
The first attempt to pubhsh the entire tomb was made by M. Ph. Virey.
92, 93.
It was published by him in 1889 {Memoir es de la mission jrangaise au Caire,
V, "Le Tombeau de Rekhmara"), but his work is so incomplete and incorrect, both
in the drawings and the texts, that it is unusable; indeed, Virey himself translated from
priceless
effort
it
vizier
backward
last century,
it
was
Thus
this
without a serious
rescued by Mr.
finally
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
J 665]
267
He came
and as
his career
of eminent
in the vizierate, ^
Woser
during the most stirring years of Thutmose Ill's great conquests, he has put
the fullest
known
much
of
it
in his
We
tomb.
find in
it
and the administration of the Pharaoh's government under the Empire, beside the best known representations in color of the peoples and products of Punt, Kef t yew,
Retenu, and Nubia.
664. Incidentally, Rekhmire also throws light upon the
character of Thutmose III. After modestly remarking
of himself that ^^ there was nothing of which he was ignorant
in heaven, in earth, {or) in any quarter oj the nether worldf^^
and again: "/ was a noble, second to the king;^^ he says of
the king: ^^Lo, his majesty knew that which occurred; there
he was Thoth in
was nothing which he did not know
^^
enjery thing, there was no ajjair which he did not complete,
the state
I.
665.
The
inscription
office
narrates
in the
Rekhmire's
kingdom.
The
Newberry, who published the first instalment of his complete copies in 1900 {The
From this careful work,
Life of Rekhmara, by Percy E. Newberry, London, 1900).
for which we are much indebted, the following translations have been made; the
plate numbers referred to are always those of Newberry's work.
*For a full account of his life, see Newberry, 13-20.
^He
is,
and
to political matters.
268
[666
gives
administration of his
him
instruc-
Unfor-
office.
mentary than
it
impartial
but
(1.
to
still
is
is
exhorted: to legal
the
8), just
(1.
be seen
(1.8),
and
to
It will
instructions
given
18, 19);
be administered according
22).
(1.
(11.
The
instructions
are
As they present
appreciation of justice.
of Egyptian government,
is
it
the fundamentals
difficult.
also to
Hapu,
vizier
Rekhmire,
'^
be presented
["Tiis
ffor"!]
vizier,
Rekhmire.
majesty^]
commanded
fTake
bitter'^ is
he,
when he
^Newberry, Rekhmara,
cName
p, 34.
intentionally erased
^See Gardiner.
officials
that ^the
first
time.
done therein.
*The
addresses
vizier,
Behold,
behold, he
is
copper
is
'^of
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
669]
toward the
Behold, he
is
officials
Behold,
269
7a
man is in the
does not
[he]
[brethren]
for another.
667. Behold, the petitioner of the South, [the North] and the whole
land, shall come, supplied
thyself,^ to
do everything
do everything according
he
may
and wind
not
he
is
it;^
reported ^water
unknown
not one
"or an
known
it is
is
lifting
an
Then one
official.
the safety^ of
lo, it is
is
he
for
that
deeds;
Do
when he has
official,
it
is
Behold, as for an
just.
which
after that
to
be
shall not
be ignorant of his
do things according
official to
to the
^
by doing that which is spoken by the petitioner
668. ^slt is an abomination of the god to show partiality. This is
the teaching: thou shalt do the like, shalt regard him who is known
regulation,
him who
him who is far
to thee like
like
is
unknown
'^an official
when he
to thee,
speaks.
As
Thou
for
the head
near to
then shall
hast
who
near,
which he
let
saith in
him hear
fhat
man
show
forth the
if
afraid.
man show
m^k
is to
him a myriad
do
^^justice.
of times, there
translation.
whom
Behold,
is
some-
Dupl. has
nk.
on
is
will
one
^^the things
shalt punish
i^avoid^
is
like this,
not
who does
Do
1.
it
13 there
not, {for)
is
he
is, etc'*
a reference to an unjust
^Lit.,
vizier
"refuge."
uncertain.
^For a similar antithesis of tkn, "be near," and w^y, "be far," see Hierat.
Papyrus aus den koniglichen Museen zu Berlin, II, 36, 1. 8.
270
Be not known
a man."^
''He
not say:
(only)
is
desire to
do
Now,
office,
justice
the people, he
fHe who
dispenses^
man
Behold, a
the vizier.
is
there shall be a
Lo, a
man
is
Do
told him.
Lo,
thereof.
fearful
is
"
when he
not
let
one
thy
is
^^that thou
in
Do
*4
lo,
given to him.
given! to thee;
broad-hall therein
shall
lie
"A
and they
to the people;
*'
[670
n.
unfortunately
Newberry
fill
Two
incomplete.
out
many of
duplicates^
found
by
This
especially unfortunate,
is
by
most
intelli-
of the
is
far the
gible
is
is
the
I to his
son Sesostris
I (I, 479,
11.3-5).
683,
"mighiy-hearted."
1.
14.
dPls. II
reign;
berry, 25
f.).
and HI.
Thutmose
Ill's
New-
Amenhotep
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
672]
subsequent to
and the
this,
271
vizier to
officials to
the
It will
and that
He
all
grand steward of
is
all
Egypt,
he
judiciary;
is
is
chief justice, or
head of the
all
may
no prime function
indeed,
must be
this office
to
whom
The
offer
is
in
mind
he seems to
There
of the state
He
office.
many
is
all is
whom
royal possessions.
functions
distributed
are
promiscuously
throughout
the
document, as follows
I.
II.
III.
War {^^y^
'93-95' 702).
iNavy (710,
687).
272
IV.
[673
V.
673. It
is
it is
known
its
origin
to exist in
case,
it
at the time,
docket,
it
some
are
important.
The
only
Decree of Harmhab
undoubtedly
rolls
^'^
is
The language
and demonstrates how
674.
of
of
the
Harmhab.
document
is
very
difficult,
knowledge
we
pass
from the conventional language of the few classes of monuments familiar to us, to some untrodden path. Especially
the legal enactments of the
abound
in technical terms,
first
totally
unknown
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
676]
to
These render a
US.
many
273
translation
final
impossible,
in
places.
External Arrangement 0} the Sitting
As
vizier.
for every act^ of this official, the vizier while hearing in the
he
shall sit
upon a
chair, *^ with
floor,
and a dais upon it, a cushion^ under his back, a cushion under his feet,
upon it, *and a baton at his hand; the 40 skins shall be open before
a
him. Then the magnates of the South^ (shall stand) in the two aisles
before him, while the master of the privy chamber is on his right, the
"receiver of income^ on his left, the scribes of the vizier at his (either)
One
to another, with
is
messenger of the
at his proper
shall
"There
man
each
at
who
my
who
is
in front.
If
vizier.^
World
676. There shall be reported to him the seaHng of the sealed chambers
shall
up
to (that)
title
"every doing"
There
of the South and
to (that) hour.
(inf.!).
cEvidently a particular kind of chair called phdw, a word not occurring elsewhere.
The 40
hm
Only
the
Thutmose
III ( 433)-
vizier
with
whom we
are dealing
is
e"One"
company
l^Meaning that as soon as a petitioner in front sees no one before him {"cU
his hand"), he may say so, and be taken to the vizier by his messenger.
274
The going
North.
out of
all
[677
all
that
comes
in (and)
eveiything going out on the floor of the court, they shall go out (and)
who
go in
(and) go out.
Reports of Overseers
The
to him
677.
report
overseers of hundreds
of
to
shall
Pharaoh
and there
shall
He
shall
affairs of
affairs of the
go in to Pharaoh, before
^^^
their affairs.
Daily Report
Two Lands
Then
the
Then
to
Each Other
come
to
prosperous*"
saying:
court
is
Then
^"All thy affairs are sound and prosperous; every seat of the
to
me
*The '' king' s-house" is a whole, of which the "court" is but one part, in which
Entrance to the "king's-house" was only reported to the vizier,
king
lived.
the
while entrance to the " court" could be gained only under conduct of his "messenger."
^Mr-lprp.
cThe
chief treasvirer;
iOn a fragment in
was decorated,
like the
temple
line
of twelve priests: three of the "first order" three of the "second order" three of the
Over their heads are fragments of
"third order," and three of the "fourth order."
two
lines, as follows:
''
in the temple of
Amon, in Most-Splendid-of-Splen'
(name of Der el-Bahri temple), hy the High Priest of Amon in 'Most-Splendidof-Splendors,' Senu (Snw)y triumphant
of Amon and of Hathor, Mistress
They praise thee, they love thee, for all thy affairs are sound and prosof Thebes.
perous in this temple." The High Priest of Hatshepsut's temple of Der el-Bahri
is thus eulogized in the formal terms for a faithful officer's report.
See the same
words in the report of the lay priests at Illahun, Zeitschrift fiir agyptische Sprache,
dors'
37 97-
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
682]
275
the sealing of the sealed chambers to this hour (and) the opening of
them
to (this) hour,
officials,
then the vizier shall send ^to open every gate of the king's-house, to
cause to go in
wise,
by
all
that goes in, (and) fto go out^]^ all that goes out like-
his messenger,
who
shall cause
among
Irregularities
in his hall.
It is the vizier
who
official
reported ftoT]
be put in writing.
to
the Princes
official
it
shall
he'^
be brought
officials in
to the judgment-hall.
is
fault.
There shall be
against the hall, Twhen he
hall.
repairs thereto.
682 As for every messenger ^whom the vizier sends with a message
for an official, from the first official to the last, let him not be Tswervedi,
and let him not be conducted; the official shall repeat his vizierial message
while he stands before ^Hhe official, repeating his message and going
His messenger shall seize the mayors and village
forth to wait for him.
.
sheiks for the judgment-hall; his messenger shall give the fregulationT]
his
official so
and
so;
**I
^'
messenger.
the sense
demands
cSk.
^The confusion
of pronouns
*The messenger.
is
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: THUTMOSE HI
276
to
Hear
me.*
[683
""the affair'
of this
official
by the vizier in
ment than by cutting
gation
liti-
a limb.
Criminals
and as
for every
vizier,
fhe
He who
He who
is
\ then
it
be
shall
when
their
case comes on another time, then one shall report and determine whether
it is
Loan
of Vizier's
Records
684. As for any writing sent fby the vizier^ to] any hall, being those
which are not confidential,^ it shall be taken to him^ together with the
if
it, it
officers,
after
he
shall return to its place, sealed with the seal of the vizier.
^"^a,
it
not
Summons
of Petitioner
685. Now,^ as for every messenger whom the vizier sends on account
of
any
petitioner,
^Erman;
cLit.,
lit.,
"warded
^On our
^Of the
off
the evil."
ff.
vizier.
f Lit.,
"wrapped up."
sThe
official
^On
this
37 38.
by, etc."
and
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
690]
277
As
which
him
is
is
to the
*^
in his hand.
687.
who
It is
[to]
officials of
him
the district;
it
is
he
Wills, Etc.
is
brought to him;
it is
he
who
seals
it.
689.
for every
shall
*It is
he
examine whether
it is
under the
in all regions.
is
unsettled;" one
who
As
unsettled
then
it.
do not look
^P^d^'t.
**at
Whether
anything therein.
this is
is
to
be incorrect.
frequently a
will.
A will, with
PI.
XIII,
11.
9-12).
upon
it, is
The document
is
These lands
(irj)
are thought
^Meaning?
sUnregistered land ?
Erman.
by Moret
to
278
Manner
One
691.
shall
after
he puts
(it)
of Petition
Every petitioner
petition orally.^
L. P. H.,
who
he
It is
who
is
be reported to him,*^
in writing.
692.
[691
sent to the
mayors and
village sheiks.
It is
he
who
house.
he
It is
who
who
[in]
the South
and North,
*3it is
694.
It is
he
who
who remain
Army
General
Orders
Advisory Functions
office,
from
first
697.
It is
he
who
dispatches to cut
down
cphe
^A
table.
vizier.
district
In the
Lit.,
"every
first office to
every last
the prince's
ojfice."
^Only the determination of a verb of motion occupies the place where the verb
should be.
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
705]
279
Water-Supply
698.
It is
official stafif, to
attend to the
Annual Plowing
699.
It is
village sheiks to
plow
Overseers of Labor?
700.
It is
the king's-house.
Town
Audience for
701.
sheiks
Authorities
It is
who go
forth in his
village
Administration of Fortresses
is
and every
Nome
703.
it.
It is
"
"
of every
is
for seizing
it is
and
It is
nome;
rdistricti soldiers
which
It is
arrest
him
all lands.
^
1,
all
It is
he
in
who makes
divine offerings^
and
every contract.
704.
It is
rejoinder
705.
It is
when any
for
argument with
comes
is
his opponent.^
litigant
it
to
him from
the king's-house.*^
judgment,
It is
he
who
aSee
I,
407,
1.
^Temple income.
6.
36, 37-
is
of special
concerned.
comts
for cases
28o
[706
706.
he
It is
divine offering.
gives
it
to
him
the court.
It is
"
he*
who
every
it is
crown possessions.
under his
he who hears
It is
seal.
The
that
every
^^it
him
[all]
Qist^ is
It is
he who
lands^
which a
dues
he who
It is
it.
their
is
who
income, and
he who seals
It is
every matter;
who
It is
of'
made.
It is
"
3 2 concerning
first
of
judgment-hall.
Every
district supervisor,
man
and every
709.
shall
shall report to
"
"
him.
It is
.
of the Nile.
the king
*Read: ntf.
^This function of the
of wall scenes in this
<=See
is
( 760
requisition
34
made upon
of the king's-house to
it is
he
who makes
tomb
There
Navy
he
When
33they
"
It is
of]
710.
[""overseer
High Nile
and the
Administration of
him,
report
a splendid
series
ff.).
gaise
au Caire, V,
visible:
"
0} the
high Nile"
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
714]
3sReport
is
made
to
him by
all
of the keeper of
"
who
is
281
It is
he*
who
the king's-house.
Method
of Reporting to Vizier
who
ni.
Scene
712.
The
him
before
vizier sits
are the
of the vizjer,^^ in
^^
in this aisle, directly in front of the vizier, are the forty rolls
of the law
petitioners
(see
down
675,
1.
the aisle,
2).
Two
713.
by the hereditary
(mr t-ntr-)
vizier;
a mouth giving
satis-
men
forth satisfied,
judging the weak and the powerful, not 'T^ringing sorrow^ to the one
petitioned him;
Two
who
Lands,
him who
is
in the palace.
IV.
The
RECEPTION OF PETITIONS^
following
scene
ntf.
^Pl. IV.
See the description of the sitting in the first three lines of the preceding inscription (675).
cPl.
XV.
282
[715
Scene
715. Going forth over the land every morning to do the daily favors,
to hear the matters of the people, the petitions of the South and the
North; not preferring the great above the humble, rewarding the
oppressed
"
^,
[Rekhmire].
V.
These important scenes,* representing the only taxlists we possess, show the local officials of Upper Egypt
paying their dues {yp 'w) to the vizier. Just what part of
the total revenues of Upper Egypt these dues formed,
but that they were only a part is
it is impossible to state;
For the inscription clearly indicates that they are
certain.
only the dues exacted from the local officials (as a tax upon
their offices), and not the taxes paid by the people, for
which we find a different designation (bk'w), from that
employed here. This tax {yp w) upon the officials is the
one remitted by Harmhab (III, 63). It was collected by
the vizier, while the tax (hk'w) upon the people was, of
It is noticeable
course, collected by the chief treasurer.
716.
'
jurisdiction.
Owing
it is
vizier for
Lower
to the loss of
and VI. They are published for the first time by Newberry, having
been passed over by all previous students of the tomb. We are therefore much
indebted to him for their rescue.
^A rehef at Berlin, for example, shows the two viziers (No. 12411); see additional references, Newberry, 17, n. 3, and a full statement, Gardiner, Inscription
It is probable that the office was not divided before the Empire, and
of Mes, 33.
probably not before Thutmose III.
*Pls.
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
7i8]
283
of the
A.
Scene
Over Rekhmire
Inspection of the taxes {yp' w) counted to^ (the credit of) the hall of
the vizier of the Southern City, and counted against the mayors, the
town-rulers, the district officials, the recorders of the districts, their
scribes,
and
their field-scribes,
who
Commandant
tress of
*There are
of the for-
Bigeh
{Sn-mw t)
beginning
[Rekhmire].
Tax
718.
20 deben of gold
5 good hides
apes; 10 bows
20 large staves of ^cedar^
wood
still
^The two
<=
="A
opposed
to:
See Uni,
1.
'^
cOmitted
titles.
me
is
a debt").
284
Commandant
of the for-
Elephantine
tress of
[719
Tax
719.
III
a pedet of raiment
a large rbolti
Elephantine
Kenbeti of Elephantine
Scribe of Elephantine
720.
Recorder of
Ombos
Ombos
Kenbeti of
721.
Mayor
of
Ombos
Edfu
deben of gold;
deben of gold;
deben of gold, in tribute weight
w)
oxen {ng
^'
3 large bolts;
deben of silver, in tribute weight
His scribe
Recorder of Edfu
Town-Ruler of Pr-mr-yw^
gold (amount
?)
ox
deben of gold
oxen
4 deben of gold
722.
Mayor
of
Nekhen
deben of
ox
two-year-old
3
2
Kenbeti of Nekhen
{d
lost,
top row)
(Name
lost,
top row)
chest of
W-) linen
Garments,
(Name
silver
2 {pdt-) bolts
t-) '"bolt"'
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
728]
285
Tax
723.
Town-Ruler
of
Esneh
,
of silver
8 of gold
2 oxen; grain, linen
2 deben of gold
i deben of
Esneh
f
silver
I
V
(wn-dw-) ox,
(d ^ W-) linen
I
yearling; linen
Kenbeti of Esneh*
grain
"^
724.
Recorder of Gebelen
2 calves, 2
I
oxen (s^)
silver
725.
Scribe of the District of
"
lings;
two-year-olds;
(num-
bers lost)
.
deben of gold
30 pigeons
nb-tm /
2
726.
Scribe of the Islands
which are in the South
=*
<^
<
{tp-r^y)
\
2 oxen, 5 yearlings
I chest of (mt-) linen
'
727.
Recorder of Hermonthis
lo^nb-ttn^'t
I
Hermonthis
of
the
Gold (amount
(d
40 pigeons
District
Hermonthis
Grain, honey
4 deben '"of gold
I
lost)
W-) linen
2 deben of gold
I
Scribe of
deben of gold
Hermonthis
deben of silver
bead necklace
''of'
gold
728.
Recorder of House of
Hathor (Pr-Hthr)
(Lost)
^Only the end of the name is preserved. In the second row next to Esneh
He brings gold (amount ?),
there is another Kenbeti, whose place-name is lost.
I chest of {mt-) linen, 2 heket of grain, and i heket of grain (sic!).
286
The scene
is
[729
BELOW THEBES
B.
729.
III
the
same as before.^
Over Rekhmire
Inspection of the taxes (yp' w) counted to (the credit of) the hall of
the vizier of the Southern City (and) counted against the mayors, the
town-rulers, the district officials, the recorders of the districts, their
scribes
and the
of their fields,
to
below
S[iut],
by
[Rekhmire],
Tax
deben of silver
3 deben of gold
730.
City (Thebes)
2 two-year-olds
3 yearlings
731.
Honey
3 heket of grain
3 yearlings
Rs-nft
3 two-year-olds
ft
full-grown (oxen)
gold (amount
732.
3
I
of Cusae
V
of Cusae
ate
the
lost)
bead necklace
deben of gold
bead necklace ^oP gold
deben
deben
of gold
of silver
*The two lower rows have mostly disappeared; twenty-four figures of officials
Of these twenty-six,
visible, and the tribute of two more is partially preserved.
dues of one are totally lost, while five more figures (at least) with their dues
the
number
of place-names lost
(if
any)
is
uncertain.
have been
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
737]
287
Tax
deben of silver
i deben of gold
10 measures of {y
733.
734.
'
h-)
gram
heket of grain
deben of gold
calves
of silver
(y
h-)
gram
10 heket of grain
Dendera
(hbtf
t-)
jar of
honey
5 calves
two-year-olds
V
735.
'
5
I
ox
deben of gold
deben of silver, tribute weight
'
{s}}t-)
loaves
Mayor
-3 wan
10 sacks of
of
t)
5 calves
3 yearUngs
3 two-year-olds
2 (full-grown) oxen
736.
Recorder
oiW^
h-ys'
500 pigeons
i deben of gold
I
two-year-old
bolt of {d ^ -W-) linen
t
\
W^h-yst
737.
cattle
5
deben of gold
heket of
(3>
Recorder of Diospolis
Parva (Ht-sfpm)
^ -)
grain
pigeons, linen
grain
(tb-)
(many items
deben of gold
lost)
'
288
III
[738
Tax
738.
deben of gold
{mt-) linen
Recorder of Abydos
W-) linen
I Qihnt-) jar of honey
I two-year-old
I deben of gold
3 two-year-olds
I deben of gold
I bead necklace ^of^ gold
I heket of grain
2 heket of southern grain
{d
His scribe
Scribe of the District of
of Abydos
Kenbeti of Abydos
<
oxen
6 deben of gold
739.
i deben of
(y
silver
Mayor
10 sacks of
10 ^nh-tm'^'t
2 heket of grain
50 heket
10 heket of grain
of Thinis
(hbn't-) jar of
honey
5 calves
6 yearlings
3 two-year-olds
2 (full-grown)
oxen
740.
deben of gold
deben of silver
bead necklaces fof
r
[gold]
200
2 heket of grain
mim)
''
calves
two-year-olds
I
741.
Recorder of Itfit
His scribe
(full-grown) ox
honey
(full-grown) oxen
(hbn
t)
jar of
742.
Mayor
of
Pr-Hr
(wn-dw) ox
two-year-old
(Sw-) rolls
and
cattle;
the gold,
if
figure
any,
now
is lost.
lost,
This
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
747]
289
Tax
1,000 (5^^) loaves
(sw't-) grain
3 measures of grain
southern grain
2 heket of grain
10 (kw-) loaves
I (hbtf /-) jar of honey
743.
Mayor
ttn'^t
744.
yearling
(full-grown) ox
deben of gold
heket of grain
chest of (d
[deben] of gold
745.
W-) linen
Grain
I
(hbn'
t-)
jar of
honey
Kenbeti of Siut
VI.
746.
In
products of the
of
Amon.
The
field,
is
represented
tlie
reception of
tlie
747.
at the right.
bPls.
XII-XIV.
behind him,
is
enthroned
suite
scribes, the
storing, recording,
name
officials
and preparing
29
Throughout
[748
countries.
tions:
Over Rekhmire
*
h)
and honey
White House of
Amon], by virtue
in the
h) in the [temple of
Over Trituration
in
of
Amon].
Grain
Hshed anew.
Over Flour-Sifting
Over Bakers
Making Qoavesi
safely
of the cake.
Over
Men Doing
prince!
Doing
fleet- captains:
all
Reverence
"According
is
countries:
oil,
incense, wine,
Over
Men
Carrying Tribute
Rekhmire.
On
Gold-houses of the temple.
gold-house.
vizier,
Rekhmire.
the Storehouses
Double
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
754]
291
VII.
Scene
Rekhmire,
752.
men
lines of
(figure
and
erased)
furniture,
utensils.
Inscription over Rekhmire
and the beautiful monuments, which he executed for the Sovereign, the Good God, Lord of the Two Lands, Menkheperre (Thutmose III), given Hfe forever, for the temple of Amon, and the temples
[Rekhmire].
by
which are in his
his
Vin.
753.
who
We
are
INSPECTION OF CRAFTSMEN^
making
inspecting
Amon
the
artificers,
various vessels,
Scene
who
who
directs the priests to their duty, governor of the (residence) city, chief
of the six courts of justice,
api.
XXII.
tPls.
Rekhmire.
name
XVI-XVIII.
would
292
III
[755
number
Their
is
Rekhmire.
Making all vessels for the divine limbs; multiplying vases of gold
and silver in every (Style of) workmanship that endures forever.
Over Coppersmiths
755. Bringing the Asiatic copper which his majesty captured in the
victories in Retenu, in order to '^cast"' the [two doors*] of the temple of
Amon in Karnak.
mose
He
Its
repeats
monuments
(as)
he
is (so)
Over Cabinet-makers
Making
by
this official
who
of cedar
rX.
756.
The
*=
"in
likeness to"
XX and XXI.
TOMB OF REKHMIRE
759]
293
Scene
man
all
works
know
to
Amon
of divine offerings of
his way,
by
Karnak;
who
By
in
[Rekhmire].
Bricklayers^
I"
fingers, skilled*^
";
among
the Tconqueredi,^
who hear
official, skilful in
us with bread, beer, and every good sort; he leads us, with
["supplies!]
mose III), who builds the sanctuary of [^the gods'"]; may they grant to
him a reward therefor with myriads of years.
The taskmaster,^ he says to the builders: "The rod is in my hand;
be not idle."
By
Brickmakers^
759. Captivity which his majesty brought, for the works of the
temple of Amon.
By
Laying the brick,
of
Amon]
aPl.
^A
of
XX.
Bricklayer
wh^-hr, and
temple
<iThe captives of
war shown
lit.,
in the
same scene
"
he
1.
and a
little
doubtful.
12).
instructed, skilful."
gSome
[in the
Karnak.
<^Wn-hr,
anew,
who
causes to be vigilant.'*
294
By
760
Builders
this official
in restoring the
His name
The
is
Let us lay
This
work
X.
760.
''Strengthen
is
in ancient Egypt.
him
led
which on
its
much
of the early
utterly.
Scene
761.
At the
At the head
tribute as
it is
right stands
of each line
is
a scribe,
who
records their
Inscription
the
booty of
all
countries
aThis scene has not yet been published by Newberry; I had only ChampoUion,
Notices descriptives, 1, 505-10; Brugsch, Thesaurus, V, 1 1 lo-i 13 (whose description
is taken bodily from ChampoUion); and the two plates in Wilkinson, Manners
and Customs, I, PI. II A and II B.
763]
Menkheperre (Thutmose
^ Rekhmire.^
A
heap
by the
brought;
hereditary
prince
weighing scene
of
III),
295
*=
36,692^ deben.^^
ACCESSION OF AMENHOTEP
XI.
This scene
762.
describes
it
(op.
Hatsekhem
him "the
presenting to
but Newberry
20) as showing
cit.,
sailed down-river to
is
II
to
royal insignia."
763.
heraW^
of
Thutmose
stela
III,
following:
Hereditary prince and count, companion, great in love, count of
Thinis of the Thinite nome, lord of the entire oasis region, great herald
of the king.
^Titles, etc., of
^An
Rekhmire.
eNow
in the
Louvre (C.
26),
(troy).
It is nearly
Thutmose III.
Kingdom,
Middle
often
The important conclusions regarding the oases in the
drawn from this inscription (e.g., Maspero, Dawn, 432, n. 3, and ibid., 459, n. 3),
that this conclusion is correct,
and that
296
Or
[764
again:
Hereditary prince and count, wearer of the royal
Good God,
seal, sole
compan-
Again
First herald of the judgment-hall (^rryt).^
764.
The
Pharaoh.
stela contains,
in
formal
less
list
than the
^^
royal herald
^^
(whm-stny''
lit
^^
royal
herald.
The management
of the formalities
and ceremonies
of court
2.
affairs of the
5)-
stela;
oasis, see
Recueil^
X, 141.
cSo in Ahmose-pen-Nekhbet
(11.
"whm-
n-Stny."
f^Here he
vizier (Duties, 4,
1.
5);
but
communicated
personal matters, of which we have an example in the brave deeds of Ahmose,
which are regularly reported to the king by the "royal herald" (9 ff.)
the vizier evidently reported larger affairs of state, while the herald
767]
297
The communication
4.
laid
countries, of the
same
(1.
8,
and
1.
amount
27 end).
7).
to
and
of their taxes,
This
commissions
verification of
but a specialization of
is
4.
To
To
its
(11.
13-20), to which
truth
(11.
20-22), a
(11.
22-24).
abroad
24-27).
(11.
was Thutmose
instance,
III,
As
the Pharaoh, in
to town,
and
Address
live
to
Passers-hy
upon
who
tomb
of
the necropolis;
offering
if
ye love
life,
gives, etc
>
11
Intel's Duties
767. 4For the ka of the hereditary prince, count, wearer of the royal
seal, sole companion, favorite of the king, as leader of his army, who levies
298
III
768
and the soldiers, who counts the companions, who conducts the nobles, who makes the king's-confidants approach their places,
leader of leaders, sguide of millions of men, superior of advanced offices,
the official staffs
advanced
who
who
(rhy't),
who
sends up the
Two
who
Lands,
enters with
good things and comes out with favor, ^who places every man upon his
father's seat, who makes glad the heart and favors the favorites, at whose
words the great
arise,
who
who
man
to
7in
know
power
who
his duties,
the palace),
(i. e.,
every
who
['"great"']
and
it
be done," and
the people
it is
done on
lays
for
who makes
ry /),
who guards
originates honors,
(^
heart of
numbers, prepared
the palace
(i. e.,
to do,
the king), the eyes of the king, the heart of the lord of
who
quiets the
"
from the
hostile,
who
who
the mighty-hearted,
high,
who ""shortens^
brings
down
the
evil-
"hearted,
who binds
among
the adversary,
its
and
laws,
is
among rebellious-
who
nome,
is
Intef, triumphant.
Inteps Qualities
768. ^3The only wise, equipped with knowledge, the really safe one,
man
-l
77o]
accurate-minded, with no
lie
299
inter-
^^the truthful,
come
there
forth
from the
none,
is
lips,
whom
him
him
to
that
who does ^
,**^not mild toward the rioquaciousi, but opposing him by doing
to
the truth, content with giving satisfaction, not exalting him that knew
not above him that knew, going about after the truth, giving attention to
^^for him who is without offense and for the
hear petitions, judging
speaks the truth, disregarding
that speaketh
lies,
"
free
liar,
guilt,
mother of the
orphan,
fearful,
advocate of him
^^of the
stronger
than he, husband of the widow, shelter of the orphan fmakingl the
wee]^9per rejoice,
for
for
"
^1,
who
is
whom the worthy thank god, because of the greatness of his worth,
whom health and life are besought by all people (rfpy't), great
who
all
estate, to
whom
all
umphant.
Inters Asseveration
He
769.
there
is
there
is
no deceit therein;
no exception
was
my
Nor was
therein.
lies,
was
my
ing of
my
*On
my heart which
affairs;
my
service at
His
Success
it,
by
its
lead-
my
its
my
it is
my
Inteps Explanation 0}
there
300
its
leading; I prospered
[771
on account
of
it
exceedingly.
He
is
a counsellor,
whom
it
Abroad
Intej^s Duties
Two
*s
the
earth, I arrived at
my
its
equipped
it
valor
is
made
better than the palaces of Egypt, ^^purified, cleansed, set apart, their
which I
its
proper purpose, I
did,
made
the
numbered the
incense, wine."
TOMB OF MENKHEPERRESENEB^
772
This tomb
Thebes.
tant at
Amon
Priest^ of
of
tomb
As
Amon, and
treasurer,
he
is
^^
chief
depicted
Shekh Abd-el-Kurna at Thebes, published by Piehl, Inscriptions, I, PL 127 P-129 and 102-5; Virey, Memoires de la mission frangaise au
Caire, V, 197 ff.
I had also a copy of the building inscription, kindly furnished
me by Mr. Newberry.
*In the
cliff
of
was a son
of Rekhmire.
8, 9)
to
which he
TOMB OF MENKHEPERRESENEB
775]
Ill's great
works
301
in the
in this
ff.).
773-
Two
The
Asiatics are
an
inscription:
Two
God's-Land:
stone
line
the Asiatics;
the bulk of
is
is lost:
it
in all lands.
Thou
hast overthrown
cities,
their
Reception of Gold
Another scene shows the deceased receiving shipments of gold, from the ^^ captain of the gendarmes of
774.
Coptos^^
Inspection of
by Menkheperreseneb.
Workmen
made
and
in real malachite,
^These very works are shown in the great relief depicting the presentation
of monuments to Amon by Thutmose III at Karnak ( 545), accompanied by the
same words, showing that Thutmose III himself furnished the design to the craftsmen.
302
Amon,
776
A
*'I
inspected
when
the lord.
Shrine
King Thutmose
^wrought with
electrum, the TialP being of sandstone, wrought with gold of the best of
the
hills
Second Shrine
Amon.'"
Colonnade
his majesty
Obelisks
I inspected
when
work on
the
his
."
with electrum
**
made a
and Flagstaves
Amon.
monuments.
and numerous
flag-
STELA OF NIBAMON
777.
This
mosids, and
official lived at
finally
became steward
of -Nebetu, one
of
may
by Bouriant,
tomb
in the hill of
STELA OF NIBAMON
779]
Thutmose
His tomb
Ill's wives,
and
stela is chiefly
303
fleet.
king.
He
then says:
Favor under Thutmose II
778. ^7My lord, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Okhepernere
(Thutmose II), triumphant, repeated favors to me; he appointed me
overseer of the hall (^
^)
of the king.
My
(Thutmose
until I was
lord, the
King
III), given
at the front ;
life,
he appointed
me
Then
REIGN OF AMENHOTEP
II
ASIATIC CAMPAIGN
780. Syria,
mose
III,
of course, revolted
and already
in his
on the death
second year
we
of
Thut-
Amenhotep
II,
already in early
northern
He
Amon
him and
received
cele-
and fourteen
Niy, which opened its
there,
city
June
of
Ikathi,
which was plotting against its Egyptian garrison. Somewhere in Naharin he set up his tablet of victory, ^ as his father
and grandfather had done before him. Here the sources fail,
and the further course of the campaign is unknown until the
king's return to Egypt; but it is clear that the coalition
against Egypt
was crushed
in Tikhsi,
Amon.
( 800).
304
In both he
set
up a
ASIATIC CAMPAIGN
;82]
same
305
The
said
Amada and
Elephantine
stelae,
another
Above
781.
is
relief in
this
ment by Seti I,
Amenhotep III.
at
monu-
just
inscription
from a tomb
at
of:
Part of
Atum;
refers to his
campaigns in calling the deceased "a follower of the king on his journeys on water
on land, and in every country; to whom has been given favors of the king' s-presencey
consisting of rings of electrum " (Piehl, Zeitschrift fur dgyptische Sprache, 1883, 135).
^A pink
Ikhnaton.
cThe tablet of Amada below ( 791 ff.), dated in year 3, speaks of an Asiatic
campaign already completed; it can hardly refer to any other than this campaign
to Niy.
Hence the latter would have taken place in the year i or 2, more probably the latter. The lacuna at the beginning of each line is four or five words long.
dThe complete
titulary of
Amenhotep
II.
3o6
Favorite of the
Crowned
in
Two
Mighty
Goddesses:
in
II
Opulence,
[783
Who
is
Thebes;
Son
of Re, of his
Amenhotep
(II),
Shemesh-Edom
783. 3[His majesty was] in the city of Shemesh-Edom {S-m-iw-ytw-my) ;^ his majesty furnished an example of bravery there his majesty
;
himself fought
hand
to
was
his
hand.
Lebanon {[R-m]-n-n)^
^r
lion,
s-f^w'^
name.
Booty
18 living persons;
on
this
day: Asiatics,
16 horses.
Battle
on the Orontes
784. First month of the third season (ninth month), day 26; his
majesty crossed over the ford of the Orontes^ on this day, caused to
cross
sr
Thebes.
like
the might of
Montu
of
His majesty raised his arm, in order to see the end of the
dRemnant
of the
name
of a chief or a country.
de Roug^ have
'^
oxen,''
but
^^
horses"
is
certainly con-
Texts
all
ASIATIC CAMPAIGN
786]
earth;*
6r
307
with his weapons of battle, his majesty conquered with^ the might ^of
They
Then
them.
his chariot,
and
"
with
1.
feast
when
joy of heart
retreated
all his
[to]^
weapons
his father,
"
",
one
"^oi^
his spear
^his horses,
of battle.
Amon; he
id^
(his majesty)
gave to him a
^.
Booty
785. List of that which his majesty captured on this day:^^ ^his
horses, 2; chariots, i; a coat of mail; 2 bows; a quiver, full of arrows;
a corselet; and
"
"".^
Arrival at
Niy
786. Second month of the third season^ (tenth month), day 10;
passing ^southward toward Egypt, his majesty proceeded by horse to
Kishon (Petrie, History of Egypt, II, 155) is impossible, for the king is already
The route by which Amenhotep
in the Lebanon, and has left the Kishon far behind.
advanced northward from Shemesh-Edom is not certain, but the crossing of the
Orontes is doubtless the last one as he turned toward the Euphrates. This would
be most naturally at Senzar. He would then march by way of Aleppo to Niy,
which was about 175 miles from Senzar. That he reached Senzar is shown by
This suits his marching speed also, as he would have made
his list in 798A.
about 12I miles a day from Senzir to Niy.
*There may be a reference here to the common designation of this remote
region as the ^^end of the earthy' but it more probably refers merely to the king's
shading his eyes that he might scan the horizon.
bLit.,
"behind."
dhntw.
^L.it.,
f Restore
eThere
is
, "to,*'
no
line
is
of course impossible;
it is
improbable also at
according to
Am^da
tablet,
11.
16, 17 ( 797).
to the corselet {h
nr)
is
found in Thutmose
23 (shnw-ty ?).
iThe texts of de Rouge, Bouriant, Wiedemann, and Brugsch's translations
show "month II," not III, as usually read from ChampoUion. That Shemu
(not *akhet) is to be read here is clear from the determinative and the other dates
Maspero now accepts this (Maspero, Struggle 0} the
note, 1. 13).
(11. 4 and 13;
Ill's first
campaign,
1.
Nations, 291), although he formerly read 'akhet. Petrie's date (Petrie, History
of Egypt, II, 155) is therefore about five months too late; for had this date been
The arrival at Niy is therefore
in another year, the year must have been added.
fourteen days after the crossing of the Orontes.
3o8
were upon
city,
"
787
Revolt of Ikathi
787. Behold, his majesty heard saying, that some of those Asiatics
(St' tyw) who were in the city of Ikathi {Y-k^-ty) had '"plotted^ (ngmgm)
make a plan
to
Then
majesty.
[his]
who were
loyal to his
in this city
\ made the
*3
he
[this] city
entire
.^
The remainder
traces,
his
*^of
as far as
^^his charioV^
^^[weapon]s of
27);
city of Ikathi
1.
21);
(1.
third season
of
children.
captured^
(1.
16
^5
[Y-k^yt^
scattered
"
'^
,^
788.
"fwho
(1.
26);
^^list of
[his] regalia^^
(1.
28);
(1.
29).
captives
The
^^
^^his
record
789.
30
P-n^) united
31
Overthrow
of
His majesty
Khatithana
His
(H^-ty-
were carried
name
season, not
month
(in
1.
showing
1.
(i) that
10 above,
^Verb.
^The
is
not certain.
11.
31 and 32
79i]
ASIATIC CAMPAIGN
Return
33
day 27;
to
309
Egypt
his majesty
alive
s-^SSo
Their [wiv]es
r\^essels
(+^)
240
wrought^ of gold
6,800^ deben
Copper
500,000*=
Horses
210
Chariots
300
deben
II.
boat;
at
Elephantine,
the
king
once
name
Amon and
etc.
with
is lost.
II.
the interior of the back wall of the sanctuary of the temple of Am^da.
Text: Champoliion, Notices descriptives, I, 105-7 (very imperfectly and incorrectly
copied); Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 65, a; Brugsch, Thesaurus, 1280 (only 11. 12-20).
^On
collated
Steindorff.
sFrom a
3IO
II
792
of the kingy^
The
nil.
The Elephantine
differences in
stela
wording
has an interesting
4.
3, third
month
upon
exist;
whom
a second
is
not found.
He
is
is
not one
who
"
in the
hour of
trampling
down
knew not
that
it
was
earlier
Min
^Chiseled
away and
reinserted (Steindorff).
^This
is
794]
ASIATIC CAMPAIGN
There
he makes a Tslaughter^
among
311
is
Nine Bows
likewise.
All
countries
all rebellious
"
There
of smiting.
no boundary made
is
for
him toward
countries
hke
all
There
is
none among
them
that escapes
seize
and countries
them immediately with victory and
the lands,
all
power.
Buildings and Offerings
plenty and
He
and small
calves,
young
cattle,
its lord,
time
in
without
\^
be known of
and beer
time, loaves
(J}t- ^ ^)
large cattle
forever;
first
He
all.
Completion of Temple
794. Behold, his majesty beautified^ the temple which his father,
Eling of Upper and Lower Egypt, Menkheperre (Thutmose III), had
shall be.
cLit., "begotten of
Amon" =\he
king (Erman).
Khnumhotep inscription
^Elephantine: " Khnum."
dSee long
^''Beautified''
with inscriptions,'*
(I,
637,
1.
201).
means here
(as
312
made
The
work.
walls around
great
name
it
II
[795
an everlasting
Son
of Re,
Thutmose
(III),
may remain
in
this
Foundation Ceremony
"
"
of
'^making
796. Then his majesty caused that this tablet should be made and set
up in this temple in the place of the Station of the King,^ and engraved
with the great
Amenhotep
name
(II),
of the
Lord
of the
Two
the godsjj after the return^ of his majesty from Retenu the Upper,
having overthrown
on the
first
all his
victorious campaign.
^Elephantine: "the doors of cedar, wrought with copper, the portals of enduring
granite .^^
1.
8. ( 103).
The temple.
f Elephantine
^ft-hr. The first pylon and the colonnaded hall behind it are
referred to; but these, with the exception of the back row of columns, were all
inscribed by Thutmose IV, and must have been left unfinished by Amenhotep II.
tlElephantine:
"Khnum.'*
into a
list
Elephantine:
"Khnum,
See
140,
1.
7,
and
note.
^If he arrived at about the time of Thutmose Ill's return from the first campaign ( 409), the Am^da stela is then dated about nine and a half months later
than his arrival; for it is impossible to suppose that this Shemu of the Asiatic
campaign is the same as the Shemu of the Amada stela, which would then be only
twenty-five days later than the last date readable in the Asiatic campaign.
ASIATIC CAMPAIGN
798]
313
'797.
When
Amon, he
own weapon
^7 with
and had been placed head downmajesty's barge, the name of which was:
all
lands
and countries of the land of the Negro; since he had taken the Southerners and bound the Northerners, the back-lands of *the whole earth,
upon which Re shines; that he might make his boundary as far as he
desired, none opposing his hands, according to the command of his
father Re, Amon-Re, lord of Thebes; in order that the Son of Re, of
his body, his beloved, Amenhotep^ (II), divine ruler of Heliopolis,
might be given
through him,
life, stability,
like
798.
The Elephantine
stela
"^
Year
4.
to
have the
sails^
to
made
sails,
for the
each one of
sails of 3 cubits.
Anuket, to
her feast of Nubia (Pd'U)j at her voyage of the "Beginning- of- theRiver."
fruit,
The
supplies are:
every good and pure thing, as dues each year, as an increase upon
*These unfortunate kings were sacrificed by the Pharaoh himself before the
god, as so often represented in the temple reliefs.
^Chiseled
collection at
Alnwick
Castle, England.
at Elephantine;
Khnum, making
it is
now
in the
"Amenhotep II;
him two obelisks
for
as his monument for his father
pyramidion
shows the
The
given
forever.'*
be
might
life
of the altar of Re; that he
king worshiping before "Khnum, residing in Elephantine" (Birch, Catalogue
Alnwick, 345; Bonomi, Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, New Ser.,
he made
(it)
1843,
170).
I,
fabric
is
may be
meant.
314
first
make
798A
to abide
and
to endure; that
he
may be
given
life
KARNAK CHAPEL
III.
forever.
*=
relief
by the words:
List of those countries which his majesty smote in their valleys,
overthrown in
[their]
blood
life
forever.
The
following are
still
legible
TURRA INSCRIPTION^
799.
Above
is
relief
as follows:
left side is
He made
dedication at the
(it)
as his
monument for
Ayan.
word
1.
18,
and
III,
377, note.
^That
is,
Cf. the
same formula
in the feasts of
victory (550-52)-
V at
34, 35-
dXhe same
was
is
shown
that Senzar
^Cut in the rock walls of the limestone quarry of Turra, south of Cairo. Published by Vyse, Pyramids, III, 95; less fully by Lepsius, Dgnkmdler, Text, I, 20.
TURRA inscription
8ot]
Below the
800.
^Year
4,
[Amenhotep
relief is
315
II],
life.
[to
It
was
my
given satisfying
4Made under
hand
by maintaining
were
that he might be
Re, forever.
like
the
quarry-chambers
[the
majesty
life,
found
his
TOMB OF AMENKENd
The tomb of Amenken,^ a treasurer of Amenhotep II, whose name is ever)rwhere erased, shows a remark801.
New
Year's
enthroned at the
gifts
right,
He
sits
him
and the
gifts
^This was on the Asiatic campaign ( 780 ff.); and makes at least four such
one of Thutmose I, two of Thutmose III, and one of Amen'
hotep II.
tablets in Naharin,
and
1020.
inscriptions in a
Theban tomb,
at
Shekh Abd-el-Kurna;
and Text, III, 274; Champollion, Notices descriptiveSy I, 500 f.; Rosellini, Monumenti Civili, 121 Mond, Annales,Y, 97 ff.
^The name is not found in Lepsius, Denkmdler, but is given by Newberry,
Benson and Gourlay, The Temple of Mut in Asher, 328, and Mond, Annales, V, 97 ff.
published, Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 63, 64,
^They are not presents from the noblemen to the king, as Erman supposed
(Aegypten, 177); one of the statues bears the words: "Given as a favor of the
king' s-presence,'" the usual formula upon gifts from the king, e. g., Nebwawi ( 186,
1. 10) received as a gift from this same king, Amenhotep II, a statue of the king's
father, Thutmose III, it being customary for the king to present such royal statues
to his favorites.
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: AMENHOTEP
3i6
Production of the
New
Year's
works of
The
802
[802
King
II
all
gifts:
craftsmen
7 shields,
680;^*
*^
Leather
(fipS-)
silver
and
8 neck-
250;"
swords ;^^
gold,
marked:
"50
;^^
staves
6 whips, bearing
the words: ^^220 gold, ivory, and ebony whips ;^^ 7 elaborate
chests;
sun shades,
it
is
not the
of times that
but
nificant,
accompanying
appears.
vases,
objects.
number
chairs,
the
inscriptions
name
the
of
Amenhotep
II
""
KARNAK BUILDING
INSCRIPTION^^
eight standing,
Denkmdler, Text,
III,
two
276
sitting,
three kneeling;
f.
^On
58o4]
hypostyle of
sut
her
introduce
to
obelisks
(304).
The
317
northern
(6ooff.).
wars follows. ^
Universal
Sway
Golden Horus: Seizing by his Might in all Lands, Good God, Likeness
^ Son, whom he begat, whom
of Re, Splendid Emanation of Atum,
he made to shine in
do that which
to
living,
things;
He
Kamak.
ka did;
his
skilful-hearted like
Ptah
King
(Amenhotep
in
seeking excellent
his avenger,
among
of
to
who
The
chiefs of
whom
Mitanni
{My-tn) come to him, their tribute ^upon their backs, to beseech his
may
mighty occurrence,
it
life.
This country which knew not Egypt beseeches the Good God.
my
that I
would
offer
it
to him.
He
assigned to
^**
It is
father
beauty.
me
that which
is
my
knew
with him,
every
circuit, the
like
Ruler of Thebes, living forever, only vigilant one, begotten of the gods."
aOf
no
narrative.
See Spiegelberg, Recueil, XVI, 30, and XIX, 88, 89; also Petrie,
Six Temples.
^Probably the name of
Amon
is
11.
3, 4;
infra, 285,
11.
3, 4-
3i8
II
[805
Dedication
He made
805.
for
as his
(it)
monument
making
him
made
ment
sr
in
It
1.
majesty should assume the throne, as one does a useful thing for his
upon
I rested
father.
have no enemies
he gave to
his throne ;
*^in all
me
the land
"
1.
lands.
Temple Equipment
806. I made for him an adytum {sl}m) of gold;
I
made
for
him many
His silver-house,
of the stars.
every country.
upon the
him
floor
was
of silver.
it
walls.
things of
vessels ; they
its
him
divine offerings.
Son
of
I restored the
life, stability,
satisfaction, like
Re,
forever.
BIOGRAPHY OF AMENEMHAB
[Concluded from
592]
^Read
scene^ in the
dhn'n' f
^Memoires de
wy
r nb.
la mission frangaise
^Double name.
au
Caire, V, 245.
BIOGRAPHY OF AMENEMHAB
8o9]
Amenhotep
flowers
319
II appear
and food.
808.
"When
the
arose,
(II),
and the
given
life,
39was established upon the throne of his father, he assumed the royal
titulary.
He
he mingled with
all,
^^ in
^othe
Red Land;
off the
809.
43[his]
42
down immediately
of
my
of the
The
father.
army
deputy,
was abiding
character; I
(Amenhotep
II),
4S
he said
to
1.
me,
*I
bowed
know thy
i
Mahu, executed
(all)
Nations, 290).
dThe
lite
troops as in
1.
29; k
is
h,
as the
3.
Amenemhab
first
sign of the
1.
29.
REIGN OF THUTMOSE IV
SPHINX STELA*
m
8io.
stela
It is besides filled
with
in
a monument of
it
It is therefore to
this class.
it
is
be regarded
monument
of
which
*A huge red granite tablet, standing between the paws of the Great Sphinx,
made from one of the architraves of the neighboring (so-called) Temple of the Sphinx.
The lower third of the face
It is II feet ID inches high, and 7 feet 2 inches wide.
has flaked off, so that over half the inscription is lost. It was uncovered by Caviglia
in 1818, copied by Salt in 1820; his manuscript text is in the British Museum,
Memoirs on the Pyramids and the Great Sphinx, fol. 1820; it was published from
manuscript in Young's Hieroglyphics (London, 1823), PI. 80; again from the
in Vyse Appendix to Operations Carried on at the
Pyramids of Gizeh (London, 1842), III, 115; more accurately than any of these,
but with further lacunae, in Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 68; repeated partially by
Brugsch, Zeitschrift fiir dgyptische Sprache, 1876, 89-92. Finally a collation of
all texts by Erman, Sitzungsberichte KonigUchen Akademie, Berlin, VI, 428-37.
I
had collated all old publications and BerUn squeeze, and my readings have now
been confirmed by Erman's text.
this
same
conclusion, which he
320
SPHINX STELA
8ij]
321
it
is
is
4,
life]
chief of the
beloved of Harmakhis^
Re, forever.
like
^
I,
army
of his father,
pleasure walk^
eldest king*s-son,
Amenmose,
commander
in
occupied by an
is
form
of a sphinx.
Introduction
third
i,
satisfaction, like
in
and the subsequent careless restoration, as in the Theban stelae (e. g., 878 fif.).
That this objection cannot hold is evident; for the Sphinx is a sun-god, and the
monuments of the sun-gods, especially of the Horuses, were respected by Ikhnaton,
and not erased. It is impossible to conceive that Ikhnaton would erase the inscription to a god called " Harmakhis-Khepri-Re-Atum" (1. 9) in said inscription.
stone vessel in the Louvre, of which only a fragment, inscribed on two
From my own copy of the original. See Erman, ibid., 1063.
faces, survives.
*A
bThe Sphinx.
^R Swtwt hr
id
cQther
^
hr, as
on Sphinx
face.
stela.
322
Re;
came
who
[813
sovereign, begotten of
who
forth
IV
Youth
When
0}
Thutmose
his majesty
Hunting Expedition
Behold, he did a thing that gave him pleasure^ upon the highlands of the
its
shooting at a target with copper^ bolts, hunting lions and wild goats,
coursing in his chariot, his horses being swifter ^than the wind
Midday
together
it.
Rest
814. Now, when his hour came on for giving rest to his followers,
(it
was always)
^Read my
at the ""shoulderi of
for
in Rosta,
my hk ^
cThe usual predicate is here cut in two, with half of it after each name; the
two names are in inverted order also. This could only have happened from the
scribe's use of an original in which the two names were in two vertical lines, with
the predicate under them (Erman).
^Harendotes, a
title
^Passive of "see;"
of Horus.
cf. videri.
^Not bronze, as in
all
the versions.
la mission
SPHINX STELA
8i5]
Renutet in
Wall
of the
^
la
of the South,
of the northern
Sekhmet ^presider
(fern.)
the mistress
over
Khas
{If
s)
lords of
On
hs^ west of
Now,
(HeHopoHs).
Mut
in heaven,
323
The
tarries.
quarters of
Memphis and
upon
all
the
to
in:
The Vision
815. One of those dayss
it
came
Thutthe shadow
(when) the
this revered
god
shall
be thine in
length
its
and breadth,
The food
of the
Two Lands
shall
face
is
thine,
tector "(for)
sand of
this desert
^The
first
also
"the
first
be to
limbs
me
"
T ^ -mwt
vest goddess.
e. g.,
i.
to
My
a pro-
The
me, to
meaning which suits Renutet, a harthe name of a The ban region (Djeme) it occurs
grains, a
I, 11, i).
time."
"horizon."
If
This
is
^Lit.,
"give."
would seem that the preceding lines narrate the hunting expedition(s ?)
as customary, and on "one of those days" the following incident of the dream
It
occurred.
^^The Sphinx.
Young:
tp
t ^
J}nt ^nl}>'w.
^
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: THUTMOSE
324
IV
[8i6
have that done which I have desired, knowing that thou art my son,
my protector; Tcome hither^, behold, I am with thee, I am "*thy leader.'*
When
he had finished
^Hesaid:^ "Come,
heart.
let
this god,
"
and
all
Khaf[re],
14
silent in his
the
*^
nofer,^
and he kept
oxen
made
statue
for
Wen-
Atum-Harmakhis
ASIATIC CAMPAIGN
8i6.
The
records of
Thutmose IV's
It
Naharin paid
been necessary.
817.
tribute,
The king
left
Asiatic
clear,
is
war or wars
however, that he
former northern
its
limits.
war in
which he had
first
Asia in a
*A11
cQr:
^All
list
of offerings
from Young.
"we?"
"that
^Bnigsch's
we may
protect
text.
.... and
that
we may bring"
(so
Erman).
from Young.
This mention of King Khafre has been understood to indicate that the Sphinx
was the work of this king a conclusion which does not follow; Young has no
trace of a cartouche.
11.
^Young shows two fragments, each bearing a few words (from the middle of
16 and 17 and 11. 18 and 19) which probably refer to further offerings.
^Fragmentary lower ends of ten
Hatshepsut's
obelisk;
published
Mariette,
Karnak,
33= Rouge,
surrounding
Inscriptions
by Borchardt.
"
ASIATIC CAMPAIGN
8i9]
818
This
is
325
calls
Lord
battlefield;
companion
of the feet
Two
of the
a powerful noble,
and served as
chief
III.^
treasurer
under
Thutmose IV. It
a "naos'' at the left; before him are magnificent vessels
Asiatic workmanship in gold and silver, and quantities
to the reign of
whom
is
the inscription
of
bowing
of
^)
life
by the princes of
be granted to them.
which thou
givest,
*Sharpe, Inscriptions,
mighty
I,
**
king.'*
93.
Abd el-Kurna
^In the
cliff
in the reign of
of
Amenhotep IV.
cSee 87ofif.
i;
ChampoUion, Noticts
326
820.
tomb
of
IV
Thaneni
is
[820
accom-
silver, gold,
commander
his beloved,
821.
gifts'^]
to the
king^s-scribe,
mortuary temple
inclosure
Settlement of the " Fortress of Menkheprure," with Syrians {J^
city oi
K^ -d^
-rw),
(rGezeri).
title
KONOSSO INSCRIPTION^
823.
many Nubian
wars, and
but
it is
its
inter-
content
so incorrectly
While engaged in
the ceremonies of the Theban temple, on the second of
Phamenoth, in the year 8, Thutmose IV receives a message
published that
it
is
^Scheil,
Memoires
^Petrie,
Six Temples,
difficult to follow.
de la mission jrangaise
au
Caire, V, 601.
I, 7.
cDe Rouge, Notice des monuments, 153; and text, Brugsch, Thesaurus, VI,
1461, No. 113.
dCut on the rocks of the peninsula (high-water island) of Konosso by Philse.
It was first very incorrectly published by Bouriant {Recueil, XV, 178, 179);
The inscription
again, still worse, in de Morgan, Catalogue des monuments, 66, 67.
contained 40 lines, of which the latter portion is much destroyed; only 23 lines
are published.
KONOSSO INSCRIPTION
826]
reporting a revolt in
The
Wawat.
327
The
expedition
where the
divinities
come
way
forth
meet the king, and gird him for battle.^ The result of
the battle,^ fought doubtless somewhere in Wawat, is of
course a foregone conclusion, and the enumeration of the
to
824.
The
prisoners
whom
to
an end.
mortuary temple
comes
tablet
"=
at
Thebes,
bearing the
back
victories.
The Konosso
inscription
as follows:
is
Introduction
^ the
month
Announcement
of
who
day
King
is
of
given
forever.
^Year
2.
Nubian
Rebellion
826. Behold, his majesty was in the Southern City, at the town of
Karnak. His two hands were pure with the purity of ^a king, and he
Dmkmdler, III, 69 e = ChampoUion, Notices descripiives,
I, 164) on Konosso, dated year 7, on the eighth of the same month, shows the king
before the god Dedun, smiting his enemies.
*A
tablet (Lepsius,
is
cFound by Petrie
it is
now
in Haskell
Oriental
Verbum,
II, 725.
328
IV
[827
gathers to
himself
the
^all
of
other
countries."
Oracle of
Amon
827. The king proceeded in peace to the temple at the time ^of morning, to cause that
of his beauty.
and inform
do that which
^to
He went
"
1.
"
(for)
he sent him
Voyage Southward
828. After these things his majesty ^proceeded to overthrow the
TNegroi in Nubia {T^ -pd'
t)
"
like
Re when
^ His army
he shows himself^ in the celestial barque "
'^of his victories, was with (him) on both banks, while the recruits
were upon
its
(one) shore,
Stela
(1.
9,
is
illuminated
He
his attend-
copyist.
815).
cA common phrase
of the sun-hymns,
Museums,
e. g.,
108.
dAbout one-half
we have
of Sesostris I
(I,
511,
1.
2), also
compared
^
LATERAN OBELISK
830]
[his]
Montu^ was
at the message.
danced
every limb;
^sbore the
Erment
as the protection of
the adornments of
me
in
329
my
'"me^,
she
bound
for
the
Ombo
^8.
The
Battle
Sekhmet
He
dew
He
jackal
found
like *^a
valleys
their hacks
LATERAN OBELISK^
830.
Although
this
obelisk
aThere
is
Thutmose
III^s
They
name.
The advance
up-river
is
marked by
cRead smn'n's.
cf.
the
reference to
same occurrence
at
to the
some
feast.
Abydos
(I,
gRead i ?
^Of
course,
is
first
763).
person.
330
IV
[831
North Right
^ (Thutmose IV)
831
who
to
Amon, Kamephis,
North
whom unknown
Thutmose
(IV),
given hfe.
Left
832. King of Upper and Lower Egypt, beloved of the gods; whose
excellence the ennead of gods praise;
who
ing-barque;
Two
praises
Atum
who
sends
Re
in the morning-barque;
Lord
of the
forever;
the house of
Atum,
Amon
is satisfied
Diadems, beloved of
Kamak.
The ennead
of gods of
upon
Amon-Re.
in
his throne,
Thutmose
(IV), Shining in
South Lejt
it
South Right
834. Son of Re, Thutmose (IV), Shining of Diadems. He erected it
in Karnak, making its pyramidion of electrum, (so that) its beauty illu^Accepting Thutmose Ill's death as the probable cause of the unfinished
monument, we should have an important chronological datum, if
only Thutmose IV had given us the year of his own reign in which he found it.
condition of the
But as
it
is,
the
datum
Amenhotep
II
and Thutmose IV
cThat
is,
finished
and inscribed
it.
may
LATER AN OBELISK
837]
331
It
name
and endure
in the
of his father
might abide
Shining in Diadems,
may
be given
life
through him
(/).
West Right
835
He made
monument
Amon-Re,
erecting for
(it)
him a very
as his
great
obelisk at the upper portal^ of Karnak, over against Thebes, that the
Son of Re,
given
life
Thutmose
his beloved
through him
may
be
(nf).
West Lejt
836
Menkheprure,
"Him-Who-is-South-of-His-Wall" (Ptah).
He
pletion of time"*.
He
erected
it ""at
who
the com-
fashioned him;
.
East Right
fame
of his majesty;
*The entrance
to the
where
it is
also called
who spoke
countries do obeisance to
Karnak temenos on
It is
all
"upper
332
his hands.
All that he
of abiding
IV
of
[838
Upper and
name
in
Kar-
life.
East Left
838
in
barge of
the great
the
Kamak,
all its
of
Retenu,
first
May the
of the "Beginning-of-the-River."
STELA OF PE'AOKE*^
839.
The mortuary
of the royal
{P-srt)
barge,
of the people.
clear,
The
of their record
is
is
not at
all
only incidental,
*The same
in
Thutiy
(1.
of
18, 373).
It
was some
feast
on the
river,
perhaps
had
my own
53; see
III ( 888,
11.
16, 17).
100.
dNo. 148; it is the mortuary stela of Neferhet {N}r-h^'t)y the chief of works
in tile palace (from my own copy of the original).
STELA OF PE'AOKE
84o]
there,
333
interest
Abydos on
in
and lands
the part of
Thutmose IV.
840. There came a royal messenger of King Menkheprure (Thut-
mose IV), who is given Hfe, to his father, Osiris, lord of Abydos, to give
to him all his property which was with all the people (rliy i), being
bulls, oxen, wild cattle, fowl, and all his ^^propertyi which was therein.
Again one came to give the lands of Osiris to him,* which were
[with] all the people (rfpy't); the stat (st^'t) being 1,200.
[to]
The order
him
all
of words
is
the lands
I),^ in
is
unusual
REIGN OF AMENHOTEP
III
The
scenes and
inscriptions
representing
Amen-
NUBIAN WAR
and sixth years, Amenhotep III found
it necessary to invade Nubia as far as Karoy,^ the district
conquered by his grandfather, Amenhotep II (797),
and his great-grandfather, Thutmose III, and probably
much farther. He has left us a list of the Nubian regions
842. In his fifth
*In the Luxor temple of Amon in the first chamber on the east of the holy
of holies, on the west wall. Partially published by Champollion, Monuments,
IV, 339, No. 2-341); Rosellini {Monumenti Storici, 38-41), and Lepsius (Denkmdler, III, 74, c-75).
First completely by Gayet, Memoires de la mission frangaise
au Caire, XV, PI. 62-66 and 75. Besides errors innumerable in the texts, every
plate bears two numbers, and on these plates every figure bears two numbers;
in each case only one is correct!
The errors in the texts, evident everywhere,
can be demonstrated easily by a comparison with the texts of the queen's
interview with Amon, which have also been published by Bouriant {Recueil, IX,
84, 85).
to,
NUBIAN WAR
844]
335
now
granite statue,
Louvre.*
I.
843.
in the
The upper
before
The
him
occupied with a
down an
is
are
Asiatic
name
stored), but
shows clearly
Amenhotep
III
of
was obliged
5,
third
is
owing
to
very
IV
and
in
re-
a revolt in Nubia,
and
fifth year.^
month
of the
first
2,
Two
Two
* Quieter
of
Lands;
(A
belonged perhaps
to a king of the Twelfth Dynasty.
See Maspero, Dawn, 491, n. 6. I have verified
this usurpation on the original.
The list is published by Sharpe (Inscriptions,
*Tliis statue
18)
III;
it
II, 26).
^Cut in the rock on the road from Assuan to Philae. Text: Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 81, g; de Rouge, Inscriptions hieroglyphiques, 254; de Morgan, Catalogue des monuments, I, 4.
cA second
stela in the
same
ments,
is
too fragmentary
1, 5).
<iBased on an ostracon in
London (No.
15).
of the eleventh month, see Brugsch, Egypt under the Pharaohs, 213. Sethe, however, has shown (JJntersuchungen, I, 12, n. i) that this ostracon does not specify
which Amenhotep is meant, and rightly refers it to some one of the three other
Amenhoteps.
336
III
[845
Son of Re: Amenhotep (III), Ruler of Thebes; beloved of AmonRe, King of Gods, and Khnum, Lord of the Cataract (Kbh), who giveth
Ufe.
40ne came*
"The
foe of
Kush
the wretched,
Montu (Mntw)
like
campaign.^
victorious
""
he seized
"^
Kush.
like
c
Nibmare (Amenhotep
'"Alli
n.
his first
Horus,
^jjg ^^^^ew
III)
was a
845.
forth
on
it
^"
STELA OF KONOSSO^
regions * to
the
sYear
victorious
first
made
his
5;
^of
Kush
triumphed on his
the wretched;
He
pillars
having
which
set
^Compare a
text: Lepsius,
67, 68.
These
are:
Wrm
(?)
and
rk.
"He (Amon)
NUBIAN WAR
846]
BUBASTIS INSCRIPTION^
in.
846.
The fragment
inscription
historical
337
preserved
unusual
of
to
us
interest,
belonged
to
an
containing the
The fragment
to Sesostris III.^
This
Amenhotep
II on.
coronation anniversary
tioned
(1.
"^
It is
men-
and before
third
Now,
third
the coronation of
month
Amenhotep
festival
on
his
Nubian campaign.^
It
is
^By Naville
(Bubastis, 9).
fiir
338
847
The
847.
expedition
is
very
its
follow in the
to
difficult
as follows:
up
Nubia.
in
is
army is
king makes
high, the
it
The
1-5).
(11.
expedition
camp
(1.
anniversary;
reference
6).
is
made
to former troops;
a certain well
(1.
the
(1.
7),
9);
first
and reference
river to
to
made
men was
sent out
(1.
8).
from the
a well^
is
uncertain, but
it
was evidently
the customary
procedure to go out to these outlying wells, for in his expedition of the sixteenth year, Sesostris III ^^went jorth to their
wells^^^ (I, 658,
The
1.
purpose
is
not stated.
Hua'^
(1.
10),
way
(1.
11).
whereas Amenhotep III apparently actually celebrated the feast in Nubia ( 844,
The question arises whether the cataract stela (8435.) represents the
5).
party as having actually arrived at the first cataract on the return from the campaign,
on coronation day. If so, we then have two different expeditions of Amenhotep III.
In attributing both inscriptions to the same expedition, I am assuming that the
cataract inscription gives the date of the battle, which is coronation day in both.
1.
^Many
villages in
supported by wells.
NUBIAN WAR
849]
of
Hua
(1.
12).
Hua,''^
.... came
that
jorth,^^
They passed
camp
rose
to the
is,
339
there
Uneshek (^W^
land of
the
(1.
of
13).
Khesekhet
(h^sfj^'t)
by Thutmose III
of
lists
Karnak
walls
Ye
for
your
'
Negroes
[rsee^l
who
beyond anything
my
fell,
came
Now,
affair '^which
of the Negroes
this
majesty mentions^^
in order that
behold, as
r
^i
ye do
^this^
it
command
to these people, to
make them.^
Hw
They
^^W^nSk
(1.
Hw^t
Hw
^^
it is
cThe preceding last context perhaps contained some statement like: "[The
army departed for] the height 0} Htm" etc. It cannot be the arrival, for that does
not occur until 1. 12. The unknown land of KLhesekhet {^^^ s}i,'t) occurs in the
southern Usts of Thutmose III (Mariette, Karnak, PI. 22, No. 95, and PI. 25,
No. 95), and is usually rendered simply " barbarians." It is however a proper
name, having nothing to do with ^^sty, "barbarian."
dLit.,
"a command
especially in
of
making them."
Papyrus Ebers
receipts.
genitive
is
common,
340
infantry of the
army
His
which was of
[850
[the place] in
which they
southward
of the
to
make known
the
ways
of sailing
month
Hua,
dis-
first
^*
season
was very
high for the coming forth of the height of Hua; the coming forth of this
'3
was
its
The
refers to the
Hua,
resting in the
camp made
there
SEMNEH INSCRIPTION*
rV.
851.
of
Uneshek (^W^n^k)^
campaign
in
is lost,
A revolt
Nubia.
but
it
doubtless
having occurred
is
lacking, but
apparently
it
^The name
of
some land
"123"
followed.
is
See
incorrect.
847.
cThis lacuna probably contained some further remark that the expedition
advanced "southward," etc. Evidently "the height of Hua" is the point by which
the course of the ship was governed! The "coming forth" of the height indicates
its rise into view on the horizon.
The whole description sounds so much like
a sea- voyage that, were it not for the mention of "western Khesekhet" (1. 6), one
might see in it a voyage along the Red Sea coast to Punt.
^Naville's "203" (ibid.)
is
incorrect.
facing p.
text
in
388;
with the
in the British
necessary.
British
Museum, published
by Birch,
Berlin
ArchcBologia,
399.
afterward
XXXIV,
I collated
with
the
Birch's
original
NUBIAN WAR
854]
Army
Muster of the
*
852.
341
Every
man
^reported^^
with^ his village; 4from the fortress of Beki (Bky)^ to the fortress of
Defeat of Ibhet
853. 5The might of Nibmare took them in one day, in one hour,
^their cattle; not one of them
making a great slaughter
fear.
escaped; each one of them was brought
The might
of Amenhotep took them; 7the barbarians among them, male as well
as female, were not separated; by the plan of Horus, Lord of the Two
Lands, King Nibmare, mighty bull, strong in might. Ibhet had been
he slew them by
ruler,^
father;
it
command
^in
of
Amon-Atum,
lion,
his august
List of Prisoners
and Killed
854. List of the captivity which his majesty took in the land of
Ibbet, the wretched
150 heads
no heads
Living negroes
Archers (ntygy)
Negresses
*Servants (sdm- ^
S) of
250 heads
55 heads
175 heads
the negroes
Their children
Total
Hands
thereof
connection,
cLit.,
is
down
1,052
lost.
him"
"was high-voiced"
^In a cartouche.
342
Words
[855
of the Viceroy
855. The king's-son, vigilant for his lord, favorite of the Good God,
governor of the entire land of Kush, king's-scribe, Mermose. He
saith:
him
"O
"Praise to thee!
Good God!
Great
is
we have made
thee to say:
*The
hast slain
all
fire
that
Thou
TABLET OF VICTORY^
up by Amenhotep III in his
mortuary temple at Thebes, to commemorate his victories
Above is a relief twice showing
in the north and south.
Amenhotep III before Amon. Both figures of Amon were
cut out by Ikhnaton and restored by Seti I, with the usual
856.
set
legend
Restoration of the monument, which the Son of Re, Seti-Merneptah,
made
857.
Below
is
Amon.
a second
relief,
in
On
over which
is
bound upon
his horses,
the legend:
858. In the
left;
86o]
like
sic!)
343
in
Thebes (Montu)
line of inscription
[every]
country,
the
Lower
people
all
sic!),
{rj}yt')^
all
populations
Good God,
like
Re,
forever.
859.
Amenhotep
gives to
cance
is
to
The Amarna
(S^-n-g-r).
XXI,
be attached
^^
Captor^ oj Shinar^^
show
Letters
to this epithet.
that
no
The
decorations
signifi-
on the columns at Soleb show captive figures representing Shinar, Naharin, Hittites, Kadesh, Tunip, Ugarit,
Keftyew, Carchemish, Asur, and Arrapachitis. ^ But such
decorations are far from showing that Amenhotep III had
conquered or maintained his conquest in these
far-off
regions.
On
commemoration of
Amenhotep IV issued a series
on the under
of scarabs inscribed
side,
recording the
fol-
lowing matters:
I.
II.
III.
Ten
IV.
V.
Years* Lion-Hunting;
Naharin
( ?)
list
at
The above
Karnak
and Shinar.
are
all
344
As
far as
we know, he was
who
[86t
did
this,
Thutmose III
(625) and the capture
e. g.,
of Kadesh.
I.
is
names
*"
on
3^
At
Europe;
see
list,
^The absurd story of the king's meeting and falling in love with Tiy on a
hunting expedition in Mesopotamia, which has been added to the English edition
of Brugsch's Egypt under the Pharaohs (214), it is hardly necessary to say is totally
without documentary foundation.
864]
345
n.
863.
of
the
Amenhotep
first
hunting achievements
III.
Unfortunately,
the
it
life,
aFull titulary.
may be
net,
may be
346
"There are
majesty:
region* of
v/ild cattle
865
to say to his
far as the
'^Sheta'* f^/^'')."
royal barge,
One came
to his majesty.
Khammat {H -m-m ^
'^
"^
"
/)
ning the goodly way, and arriving in safety at the region of rShetai
(^5/ ^
i")
morning.
at the time of
His majesty appeared upon^ a horse, his whole army being behind
him.
the citizens^ of
i^them
the
army
commanded
commanded
wild
His majesty
Statement thereof:
170
cattle.
hunt on
in its entirety
all
this
56 wild
day:
cattle.
His
to give fire to his horses.
His majesty tarried 4 days
majesty appeared upon a horse fa second time^. Statement] of these
wild cattle, which he captured in the hunt: 20 {+x) wild cattle.
(+x) wild
[Total]^ 75
cattle.
in.
of these scarabs, to
*Read
w w, as in
commemorate
7; the
1.
number
line.
cSee
is
I,
^^The
681,
11.
and
3, 4,
same words
for
ture of
Megiddo
note.
same way
in
Thutmose
(sbty),
( 433).
is literal;
it
heretofore.
and "inclosure"
sum
of the
two days
is
not
less
^At least thirty of these scarabs are in European museums, and three in the
Art Institute of Chicago; they have been often published; e, g., Maspero, Struggle
of the Nations, 298; Biblical World, June, 1896, 449 (with translation), Pierret,
Recueil
d' Inscriptions, I,
381, n. 6.
The above
88; a
list
of
translation
is
866]
Live
Amenhotep
(III),
who
i to
life,
liveth.
347
down
with his
own
IV.
When
Amarna correspondence
in 1887 has
done
In a
so.*'
Mitanni.^
their
father^
of
apull titulary.
bSome have
no
ing text.
in private hands.
XV,
by Maspero,
Recueil,
200; finally Brugsch, Thesaurus, VI, 1413; another specimen, Recueil, XVI, 62.
^Zeitschrift fiir dgyptische Sprache, 1880, 86.
^Erman, Zeitschrift fiir dgyptische Sprache, 1890, 112; Evetts, ibid., 113;
Jensen and Winckler, ibid., 114.
elbid., 21, 18, 19.
fWinckler, Amarna Letters, 16, 5, and 41, 42.
the Pharaohs, as
Kings of Egypt.
Princesses.
Shuttarna
I
Dushratta
III,
Mutemuya+Thutmose IV
I
Tadukhipa+ Amenhotep IV
See Maspero, Struggle of the Nations, 281.
>
shown
in
348
I St
Series,
Tiy,
who
867
^.
^the
Son of
(III),
Ruler of Thebes,
V.
868.
(viz.,)
317 persons.
Amenhotep
The opening
of the lake
was doubtless
The usual
fell
in connection
were given.
full titulary.
list;
we should
e. g.,
cFour copies of this scarab are known: (i) in the Vatican (Rosellini, Monumenti Storici, 44, No. 2= Stern, Zeitschrijt fur dgyptische Sprache, 1877, 87, n. 2
= Marucchi, Bessarione, 1899, 122); (2) private collection of W. Gol^nischeff
(privately distributed photographs); (3) collection in Alnwick Castle (Birch,
Catalogue, No. 1030, 137); (4) fragment in University College, London (not published).
The first three of the above were collated and published by Steindorfif
{Zeitschrijt fur dgyptische Sprache, 1901, 63).
fiir
^844, 1. i; Lieblein (Sphinx, VI, 113 ff.) has calculated the date of this
opening in terms of our calendar as September 26, Julian, or November 5,
Gregorian.
JUBILEE CELEBRATIONS
871]
869. Year
11, third
majesty of
349
who liveth.
His majesty commanded to make a
month
of the
when
first
his
JUBILEE CELEBRATIONS
Amenhotep
870.
the
jubilees:
III
first in
celebrated
Ramses
and the
The
is
three
royal
jubilee
least
at
II, in the
year 34;
celebration of the
first
able reliefs.
The
871.
right;
first
before
him
is
in state at the
the inscription:*
are
all to
be rejected.
^Vatican copy has 600, the others 700. Steindorff reads here "upper arms'*
{rmn) instead of ''cubits" (nthy). This distinction, although evident on the surviving cubit rods, is not carried through on the monuments. At Benihasan, the
rmw-sign occurs in door dimensions, where it is clear that the cubit is meant;
see my remarks (Proceedings of the Society of Biblical ArchcBology, March, 1900,
88-90).
list
fiir
dgyptische
VI, 1456).
gAmong
his titles
of:
"Lord
of the Jubilee.'*
350
Khamhet
[872
reading to
him a docu-
in five
vertical lines:
Communication
the
""estatesi^ of
Kush
of
boundary
The king
left;
is
Khamhet with
who
ears in the
nomes
the inscription:
satisfies the
to
cities of
(named),
Khamhet.^
cOr possibly
better "income;**
ovur
and note
227,
^His titles are written more fully in Champollion, Notices descriptives, I, 840;
"Hereditary prince, count, who fills the heart of his lord, favorite of the Good God, to
whom
1 companion
are told all the affairs of the ^palace
of the feet of the Lord
of the Two Lands in every place which he treads, chief of the archers of the Good God
875]
351
with the chiefs of the South and the North after the statement* of the
overseer of the granary concerning them:
"They have
increased the
The
873.
is
following heading:
"Year
36.
874.
The ceremony
of
is
also the
symbol of
Osiris,
stability,
875.
Theban
tomb.*^
by the king
and recorded
in
opened
an inscription*
work
in Lepsius, Denkmdler.
cThat
this is
Amenhotep
III
is
of
Queen Tiy
in the
titulary.
^The quarries
at el-Bersheh
fCut on the walls of the limestone quarry at Turra; published Lepsius, Denkmaler. III, 71, a-d, and Vyse, Pyramids, III, 96, Nos. 3 and 4.
gThis second inscription of the same content, Lepsius, Denkmdler,
Compare the similar inscription of Ahmose in the same quarry ( 26-28).
71, &.
352
in the
second year.
scene,
and
*Year
2,
his majesty
The
latter is
[876
surmounted by an offering
as follows:
is
commanded
to
Amenhotep (IH)
in order
Ayan
.^
(^
to
It
majesty
life, stability,
was
my
Re, forever.
The
876.
granite quarry at
Assuan was
visited
by an
This
officer
relief^
to the
Near by
is
statue, to
refers.
877.
commanding
in
official refers to
Sinai
by the sea
fragmentary
for translation.
The
full titulary,
I,
II,
39;
63.
^The connection
c^ Ordnance
BUILDING INSCRIPTION
879]
353
BUILDING INSCRIPTION*^
878.
an
interesting
honor of Amon,
career.
Memnon
its
inscrip-
to
The
Amon.
Amen-
^One can
end of 1.
untouched (see,
three lines
zine,
No.
5,
156, 157.
by
monument;
similar
fif.
354
[88o
Amon:
Introduction,
1.
11.
1-2 (882).
2.
3.
4.
6.
7.
Hymn
5.
The
Amon
of
to the King,
11.
The
subject.
and
3, II,
22)
is
of Syrians
The
king's selection of
historically of
importance
3, 11),
ment
(11.
(11.
is
also.
important.
his
where he was so
worshiped.
It
active,
is
to
be
king
"House
0}
BUILDING INSCRIPTION
883]
355
Who
881.
ited in
a place of
monument
raises a
in
an inclosure made
shine with
made like
lazuli;
in heaven,
Re forever.
monuments, made to
to flourish with
life like
The Son
of Re,
all
Amenhotep,
ruler of Thebes,
all
the gods.
He
Amon,
made
it
lord of Thebes,
life,
stability,
Re, forever.
satisfaction, like
Of
is
and
all
to his fame.
so
introduced
is
pre-
officials,
is still
all this
makes no mention.
It is as follows:
Introduction
882. ^Live
of
Amon,
Amenhotep
(III),
Karnak; given
heart, that he
like
possessor of
for
king of gods;
great his
Temple
of the
Good God,
him that begat him, Amon,
(Amon's) house,^ who hath
his
Memnon
joy of his
ka
desires.
Colossi^
life,
satisfied
with making a
^This section
is
covered by a
Roman
wall.
The
colossi
known
as the
Memnon
XX,
colossi (cf.
40.
11.
4, 5) still
temple, the entrance of which they flanked, has disappeared; see above, 878.
It was the mortuary temple of Amenhotep III, of which there is a further account
inscribed on a huge stela now lying in the scanty ruins behind the colossi ( 904 ff.).
For an account of the excavation around this temple, see Petrie, Six Temples in
Thebes; the temple itself has never been excavated. View of the colossi, Mariette,
Voyage dans la haute Egypte, II, 57, or my Egypt through the Stereoscope, No. 64.
1.
it is
also plural
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: AMENHOTEP HI
3S6
He made
(it)
as 3his
monument
Amon,
lord of Thebes,
eternal, ever-
adorned with
[884
with electrum;^
it is
made
very wide and large, and established forever; and adorned with this very
great
monument.^
of
granite,
numerous in royal
It is
gritstone, of
costly
statues, of Elephantine
heavens, their rays are in the faces (of men) like the sun,
early in the morning.
It is
when Re
and
fish
it,
shines
up
"^
"
fowl, pure in
Its
884.
it
rises therein.
when he
^estab-
Wealth
with male and female slaves, ^with
children of the princes of all the countries of the captivity of his majesty.
and Spiegelberg,
Recueil,
XX,
XX,
49.
as a stronghold;
cf.
48.
cjust
how
Egyptian temple.
^Probably the
stela
on which
XX,
49) calls attention to the fact that the French expedition found eighteen of these statues on the west shore still in situ, some of which
^Spiegelberg (Reciieil,
now
museums:
in the
and Bonomi,
Gallery,
in the British
PL
(1.
906).
4,
^The enormous
stela lying
The word
( 796,
1.
BUILDING INSCRIPTION
886]
357
up
good
things,
millions.
Western Pylon
885. The bow-rope of the Southland ^in it^ and the stern-rope of
the Northland,* even his majesty revealed^ himself like Ptah, was
skilful-minded like Him-South-of-His-Wall (Ptah), searching out excel-
Amon-Re, King
over against Amon.
making
of Gods,
Its beautiful
majesty
his
a place
*^
made was:
name which
of rest for the lord of the gods at his " Feast of the Valley"
may endow
he
him
for
^his
Amon
to
on
life.
Luxor Temple^
886. King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Lord of the Two Lands:
Nibmare, Heir of Re; Son of Re, Lord of Diadems: Amenhotep (III),
Ruler of Thebes,
is satisfied
^Inscription of Ineni (1. 17, 341) has: '*the bow-rope of the South
It seems to me
the stern-rope of the North is she" as epithets of Hatshepsut.
that Spiegelberg (Recueil, XX, 50) has overlooked the determinative (a rope) in
his rendering
suchungen,
seems to
52).
I,
me
"Bug" and
impossible,
"opened himself;" cf. wb^sw, a synonymous phrase (Lepsius, Denk18, 1. 3), which Miiller renders ''sich zeigen" {Recueil, IX, 162).
^Lit.,
maler, III,
cThis
is
Memnon
Colossi, but is
now
entirely gone.
dThe
beauty;'*
literal
it
was a portable
for the
barque
is:
"Bearer of his
shrine.
like:
was
was
of brick
"who
the entire
"who again
erected
that
which
On
built temples
358
Opet (Luxor),
made
electrum,
its
"and
wrought with
When
887
beauty increased.
its
its
^,
to his majesty.
king Nibmare
*=
"
Near Luxor
Buildings
him an
Amon;
making
for
Opet;
""inclosure^ as
is
planted with
every season;
all
^^more
countries
is
received,
how
flowers;
Re when he
beautiful
Many
midst^ like
its
is its
Nun
is
like
in his pool at
full Nile,
born of
numerous
tribute
He
all lands.
is
brought before
hath assigned to
me
my
father,
the princes
each one
is*^
like his
neighbor; their
and
every
and thousands.
my
have done
(it)
for the
me
^Corrected from
^Restored from
1.
1.
3, at
the end.
^Lit.,
"washed"
22.
"more
to it is
"wr
nf yrp."
1.
3).
miiden, 62).
Erman has
XX,
51).
BUILDING INSCRIPTION
889]
359
Amon^
Sacred Barge of
888. King of Upper and Lower Egypt: Nibmare, Part of Re; Son
of Re: Amenhotep (III), Ruler of Thebes.
I made another monu-
ment
him who begat me, Amon-Re, lord of Thebes, who estabrmei upon his throne, making for him a great barge* for the
for
lished
**Beginning-of-the-River" (named)
of
" Amon-Re-in-the-Sacred-Barge,"^
of God's-Land.
'^
"
rbrightnessT;^
great crowns,
its
is
of electrum so that
its
two
praise
its
The gods
of
Pe make
jubilee to
up before
it;
beauty,
heaven, to
its
bows make
make
Nun
it;
they bear
^they exercise
sides;
it fills
it
wrought
it^
is
beautiful
the gods of
Nekhen
to shine^ as
when
Opet on
his western
Third Karnak
Pylori)^
889. King of Upper and Lower Egypt: Nibmare, Son of Re: Amenhotep (III), Ruler of Thebes, *'who is vigilant to seek that which is
^A
measurements in the
Hams
Papyrus
(infra,
IV, 209).
PL
4,
1.
shrine,
which was
set
3).
l^This
is
known
as Pylon III.
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: AMENHOTEP
36o
III
890
is
no instance
^towers^
each
erected another
(sbJ}' t)
adorned with
silver;
one on
^'Its floor is
it.
Its
side.
who has
its
Temple
oj Soleh
monuments
for
(III),
Amon, ^^whose
like
Khammat (H ^ -m-m
(named):
place for
stone;
my father
it is
Ruler of Thebes.
hath not been.
^
^ ^'
,^
t)
'^^
other
Amon-Re,
of
made
lord of
Thebes
It is finished
its floor is
adorned with
The Shrine
of Saft-el-Henneh, PI. 6,
1.
i).
'^campaign
... of
^Emended.
sThis
the
is,
5 in each;
and scarab of
slaying.''*
of course, an error.
name
1.
in I, 503,
1.
16.
BUILDING INSCRIPTION
892]
on each
When my
side.
following.
Two
361
have offered
^^to
him thousands
^am among
his
Hymn
0}
Amon
to
up
thee
me.
people.
My
I
when
work a wonder
I turn
I cause
Bearing
When
^hhe
my
set
chiefs of
my
upon
They
for thee
to turn to thee.
their backs.
Bearing
work a wonder
I turn
According as I have
When
upon
their backs.
When
I turn
my
work a wonder
life.
Tehenu (Tyhnw),
for thee;
no
remnant of them.
CTheyi) are building*^ in
I turn
I cause to
my
come
of
^^my majesty;
to heaven,
When
name
Nubian Troglodytes.
work a wonder
for thee;
^The
a nominal sentence;
cf.
I,
117),
Sethe, Zeitschrift
fiir
cAs slaves
362
[893
all
fied;
that he
heart
may
may
be given
be joyful,
like
life, stability,
satisfaction, health;
that his
Re, forever.
893.
number
of
name
found
in
his
Among
building records.
in the
account of
Theban
great
Amon,
contains a
other things,
they
which is not
the building given by the king
of the temple,
building
inscription
(890).
The
Museum.
894. The
inscriptions
*^
fortress,
^
and ever. Live the Good God
He made (it) as his monument for his father, Amon, lord of Thebes; making for him an august
temple, made very wide and large, and its beauty increased. Its pylons
reach heaven, and the fiagstaves, the stars of heaven; it is seen (on)
Two
Lands.
896]
On
said to be
is
dedicated to
Amon
ka.
Making
for
896.
The famous
from the
data,
men), the
lions'^
of Ikhnaton,
is
The
dedications
who
all its
."
Divine Shadow
of
"in the
is
363
They were
restored
own
by Tutenkhamon,
restoration thus:
the
Two
Lands, Lord of
King
of
of
of
Son
of Re,
Amenhotep
(III),
^On
this
He made
(it)
as his
c.
890.
and
Ruler of Thebes.
1.
24).
e.
<iThese two magnificent animal figures were later carried away from Soleb
erected in Gebel Barkal (Napata) by the Ethiopians. That there should
ever have been any doubt about this, especially in the minds of the British Museum
authorities, (see Budge, History, TV, 112; VI, 100) is, to say the least, surprising.
Not only do the above dedications show that the lions were originally erected at
Soleb (Khammat), but the breast of one bears the inscription of the Ethiopian,
stating that he removed it, as follows: ^'Good God, Lion of Rulers, fierce-eyed Lion
^Cartouche with
name
erased.
The name
Urkunden, XIII),
364
Amon-Re,
lord of Thebes,
Atum,
monument
Heliopolis,
lord of
like
life,
897
Re,
forever.
On
897
hotep III
king
Amen-
name
of the
is
(containing
later
He made
as his
(it)
monument
for "
(sic!).
dedication
He made
^
:
(it)
monument
as his
All
its
This pylon,
now
Karnak
hypostyle,
of
to
it
^The inscription occurs twice on this lion, once in front and again behind.
In front (facing the avenue) it has been completely hacked out, but behind the
iconoclasts of Ikhnaton have hastily cut out only the royal names.
^Incorrect restoration
by Tutenkhamon;
it
III.
On the east face of the southern tower of the third pylon, in 71 vertical lines,
of which only the lower ends have survived, the ends of the last 23 lines containing
f
It
INSCRIPTION OF THIRD KARNAK PYLON
9oo]
Amenhotep
ern tower
365
still
Amon
2.
Offerings to
3.
4.
Third Pylon
(901,
11.
24-34).
11.
24-39).
39-71)'
11.
The
inscription
so fragmentary that
is
much
of
it
is
and beauty.
Laudation oj the King
Qoo.
^^
luxuries
and benefactions
him who
him.
is
created him;
their
like
with one
""accord^.
He whom
he hath chosen
His eye
prosperous
is
to present to
7
making brightness
him (Amon)
whose path
created him,
hath led
first
"^
'"sends
men.
How
of the sun
satisfied
of millions.
upon
He
his
is
name
whose ^word^
be the Sole Lord, whose doing
away^, whose
repels,
when he
good shepherd,
vigilant
*This
and
for all
with knowledge
circles
the sun,
His two hands hold^ might, his word bears victory, in order
forever.
the
is
is
1.
^Full titulary of
cLit.,
Amenhotep
"are in might."
III.
366
whom
maker
^^
lord of plenty,
"doing that
the
rejoicing in plans
"
his satisfaction,
is
is^
901
beholding benefactions
which occurs
examples of truth,
""evil^
is
in
r
whose decree is the breath of life, prosperity, and health ^3
in his body all his '"brightness! to the form of the majesty of Re his
^^
divine and beautiful emanation which he made for
like
Thoth, who gives the Two Lands to the balances.^ There are no rebels,
(for) his strength is like the might of the son of Nut; there are no
;
milHons
and
^^
make Egypt
all
by the plans of
adorning the splendid Great House
Truth, because she does
of him who begat him, with monuments of beauty and splendor forever,
the wealth of Ptah,^ great in his
which he decreed for his son ^^
form. He created him as his son, endowed with his beauty ^^
He gave to him the thought of every day as a benefaction, in ^magnifyingi the wonders of
He rejoices in remembering ^9
joy
of heart. He created me before him, while I was a youth therein. How
desire
to
^^
beautiful
is
the ^
accustomed splendid
seat,
form
made
am
in Thebes, they
born son
his first
it
wherein he alighted
"
^3
901.
offerings
My
^i
1
him
jjij^
^2
under
Offerings to
in the beginning.
his
His
jn his
1.
his authority, I
power
^4
Amon
anew
^s
my
produced fulness
of food
*To be weighed
as tribute.
903]
367
the unique one of the gods* so that they are satisfied every day 3
true,
and
eyed
My face
works
with millions, as a
it
33
him
34
who
fronts^ those
1
august father
fierce-
r^hen
terror
my
31
my
it
grasp.
in the presence of
my
902
He is
35
divine in
that I
may present
genuine lapis
lazuli,
malachite 36
him
He
38
may
37
jn
He made me
maker made.
silver, gold,
flowers
his
together, that I
present 39
food at
all times.
If there
be the
like ^i
all
in
i^pleasing^
The weight
it.
of this
monument
42b________
4,820 deben.
3,623 deben.
Malachite:
"
{J^nty
43
flourishing
(Amenhotep
44
r
III)
made
and
established,
which
his
The number
for him.
son,
Khammat
of these
things
is:
45
^6
it
[its
door]
368
land,
beauty seems
its
fmade!] wide
an august
him
for
for
49
its
like
extent,
desires
them
52
55
as leader of
domain
them
august
s7
47
father""
in 56
jje
of electrum S4
[904
an august judgment-hall of 48
the maker of his majesty as my
so
way
III
of
electrum,
of
it,
every land
new cedar
"
of the royal
obelisk[s]^
ss
DEDICATION STELA^
904.
This
stela
which
of the King,^^
similar stelae of
(
791
ff.),
^^
Amenhotep
II at Elephantine
Station
like
the
and Amada
of holies.'^
to
The upper
is
Amenhotep
III,
and
his
^These obelisks probably stood in front of this pylon (III); they must have
been removed to build the great hypostyle; the only obelisks of Amenhotep III
now known at Karnak are in the northern temple, but only fragments have survived (Lepsius, Denkmaler, Text, III, 2). Perhaps they stood on the two bases
referred to in Baedeker's Egypt, 1902, 253.
^Ll. 59-71 contain only
62
entirely gone.
dThe
11.
Amen-
hotep III in this same temple ( 883, 1. 5), where it is called " station of the king,
wrought with gold and many costly stones." The word "station" is here determined with a stela, and the text would indicate that it was overlaid and
incrusted.
DEDICATION STELA
9o6]
^^
369
and ^^Amon-
The
Amon
a presentation address*
in
accepting
(11.
2-13);
to
Amon
(2)
it
the king
(i)
14-20);
(11.
of places.
I.
(lL. I-13)
Temple
905. ^Live
thou,
Amon-Re,
(III).
King Amenhotep
made
Kamak;
^When thou
made
it
Its
face
is
horizon of heaven,
ceasing.
"Come
*Hesaith:
is
it
shines
'^^
"
Colossal Statues
906.
My
majesty
filled
^The
erection of the
it
gritstone.
same temple
When
is
recorded in
11.
my
(rin"")
[rstatuesTJ^^
their place,
is
cThe usual
full titulary.
ntW'>
^Though
The parallelism
can be made of this
f
gThis restoration
are of gritstone.
s't
may be used
intransitively, e. g.,
1.
1.
3 of
24 below.
phrase.
is
(Memnon)
temple
370
there
lb
is
upon the
stone;
made a double
majesty
of alabaster, pink
is
it
I-
made
and black
[907
^likewise a
granite;
my
my
father;
statues
thy ka,
satisfied
Offerings
know
my father ^
My
majesty hath
that
they will
all
that
the west.
Obelisks
majesty
*The
my
majesty
i.k
made
Thou
hast
shown favor
'^ Again
Memnon
"
made
for thee
monuments on
the
colossi are
^There
sThis
god on
is
'Meaning
iLit.,
"life,**
"o/."
^A
little
over one-third
line.
INSCRIPTIONS OF AMENHOTEP
9ii]
my
to furnish
had done
impost by the
(it)
for
my
my
[Qiand"'] of
'^^
army.
in order
I rejoiced ^*when
father.
works
all
371
day
for^]
thy temple;
^^the
prophets,
its
its
whole land
Accept that which I have made, revered father, Amon, of the beginning
of the world."
SPEECH OF AMON
n.
T4-20)
(lL.
:^
''Come, my son Amen909. ^^XJtterance by Amon-Re,
hotep,^ ^51 hear what thou sayest; I have seen thy monument, I am
^.
for
me."
(LL.
910. Utterance
into
done
*3.
kingdom
I accept the
he (the king)
.g
is
Thou
on
20-24)
^:
son,
'^"Come
who has
This famous
official,
who
lived
under Amenhotep
of this temple
He
883, note.
cHalf a line of
titles.
gMuch
or the king.
^Both names.
out, the
remainder contains
line.
Amon
372
On
wisdom.
an
[912
the
inscription says of
of a mortuary papyrus'" to
The
him
is
found
probably a pseudepigraphon,
is
in
temple;^
He was
his statue
colossi
inscription,
Memnon
an
error
'^
which a careful
He
lived to
be at
when
the
Amon
23.
dgethe, ibid.
of
filr
fiir
Kinnales,
on the basis
96
ff.
iSee 917.
IT, 272,
of historical value.
1875, 125-27)
INSCRIPTIONS OF AMENHOTEP
913]
373
Karnak,
Amon
in
companion, fan-bearer on
the king's right hand, chief of the king's works even all the great monufor the hereditary prince, count, sole
Amon
in the South
steward of
costly stone;
and North,
who
overseer
liveth;
no
years.
In
later ages
Manetho's time,
seemed
him
that
he
I.
913.
STATUE INSCRIPTION
This inscription
introduction
(11.
is
very
difficult
*=
and obscure.
The
Introduction,
914, H- 26-27.
First Promotion, to
11.
27-29.
Second Promotion,
to
916,
11.
29-37-
all
Public Works,
917.11- 37-43-
aSethe, Festschrift
filr
I,
26.
cThe
third statue of
by Borchardt
Amenhotep
at
374
[914
Introduction
914.
saith:
26
**I
words^ in
xhe
was
king's-scribe,
head of the
great, at the
''^the ^council"'
Amenhotep, triumphant;
he
915. The Good God, King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Nibmare
I was
(Amenhotep III), firstborn son of Harakhte, praised me.
appointed to be inferior king's-^scribe
^^I
me
*9on
all their
matters.
Second Promotion
916.
My
lord again
showed favor
^1 levied the
to
Upper and
me, and the
of
(military)
classes of
my
lord,
my
pen
houses with the numbers belonging thereto, I divided the troops (of
workmen) and
appointed
I levied
all their
troops
{ts't),
the battlefield.
I placed troops at
the heads of the way(s) to turn back the foreigners in their places,
ssxhe
Sand-
rangers.
*Term
for the
for hieroglyphics.
^SS-Hny-ltry
which were
d^d\
books in Neferhotep
(I,
758).
d\
of old
Two
Lands.'*
"at the head(s) of the shore of the front mouths;'* the mouths of the
Nile are indicated. The meaning "river-mouths" or "harbor-mouths" is clearly
determined by the use of the word (r *-h ^'wt) in the wars of Ramses III (year 5,
l^Lit.,
INSCRIPTIONS OF AMENHOTEP
917]
closed under
375
I did
commanded
things which he
them
I found
3? me,
the future.
Third Promotion
917.
hotep
My lord
an eternity of
all
(III),
works.
gritstone, for
he
name
he, to
Amen-
chief of
before.
is
is
^s^^y lord
I established the
that which
'
him a mountain
my
of
desire,
executing his likeness in this his great house, with every precious
stone, enduring like the heavens;
there
1.
year
8,
1.
Two
Lands.
it
^I con-
mouths of the Nile" (Maspero, Struggle of the Nations, 299), while hardly derivable
from this passage alone, are amply corroborated by the Amarna Letters, which
show that there were custom-houses on the coast of the Delta {Amarna Letters,
29; 32 and 33).
^Possibly *'the
^Ys-h
Nubians
cText has
k't.
"my
favor."
eThe temple
of
is
statue
fiir
(cf.
actually
still is
^The rendering, "there was not a king, etc.," of Brugsch {Zeitschrift fiir dgyptische Sprache, 1876, 98) and Piehl {Petites etudes, 37), is due to the misreading of
the particle Swt as itn{y), "king;" cf. Erman, Aegyptische Grammatik, 320.
376
taller
[918
Its length
places forever
918.
3f
I [saw]
battlefield, while
he was
like
hims
Min
King
fighting
hand
to
"
I recorded the
in the year of
(it),
was versed
before him.
men
my
in her art
lord,
and
"
"
was great
919. Behold ye, I did excellent things; do (so) to me, and it shall
be done (likewise) to you; for I am an heir who furnished his city, and
expelled
my
its
"
(tw
^)
god*^
from every
^
place.
^
;^y
My lords did
^A
statue of
Amenhotep
benefactions for
southern lake
error.
Harmhab's
pylon at Karnak was about 15 meters high, and is probably the one referred to;
for it is not stated that the statue was 40 cubits high, but the block in the quarry
was 40 cubits ''long." A similar reference to the block in the mountain in I, 698,
1.
6.
cThe same as the "Red Mountain" of Mariette, Karnak, 15, 24 (I, 493, 1. 15,
note) near Cairo, and still called Red Mountain (Gebel el Ahmar) cf. Baedeker's
Egypt, 1902, 74. The phrase "at the side of Re-Atum" refers to its location
near the HeliopoHs sanctuary of Re. Sethe notes similar phrases on the Sphinx
tablet, 11. 6 and 7 ( 814).
dFrom
^About one-half
line.
sThe
b.
king.
city, Athribis.
INSCRIPTIONS OF AMENHOTEP
922]
and
their
and
was one
"
upon
1
377
their shores.
his city.
the house of
because of
my
family
"
on
He made
7
city greatly,
and
earth.
Royal Favor
920. I buried
He-Loves "
my
I interred
did.
my necessities, causing me
to
me
There
""
:
no
is
^ it
my mother
to receive
{^w
^)
to
whom
My lord
^
.
bread
Men said
Two Lands.
citizen
truth
which "The-Son-Whom-
I executed
n.
This document
an
endowment for the maintenance of Amenhotep's mortuary
cult.
It was publicly read in his mortuary temple at Thebes
to the more important officers of state assembled there in
921.
who
The
it,
or suffer
surviving original
first
*Two
King
of
lines of self-praise.
^Hieratic text, being a copy of very late date, on a limestone stela in the British
Museum, No. 138, published in transliteration by Birch (Chabas, MSlanges egyptologiques, II ser., 324-43); again by the same author in facsimile {Inscriptions
I collated the original exhausin the Hieratic and Demotic Character, XXIX).
It was translated by
tively and found the latter publication very inaccurate.
Brugsch, Zeitschrift }iir dgyptische Sprache, 1875, 125-27; Erman, Life in Ancient
Egypt, 148 {Aegypten, 214, 215); the present translation is much indebted to
Erman's
version.
cNot
II, as
Brugsch has
it;
even 41
is
possible.
378
[923
The Assembly
923.
On
this day,
*of the
whose excellence
Huy, Son
of
Hapu,
is ""extoUed^,^
with slaves, male and female, forever; son to son, heir to heir; in order
upon
it
it is
forever.
upon
It is
earth; she
commended
is
to
Amon-Re,
is
Curses on Violators
me and
who
any business
"accursedi.^
of
man
field) for
endow-
^Xhen
my
may
his
body be
if
Amon,
satisfied
lord of
with the
^He (Amon) shall deliver them into the flaming wrath of the king on
the day of his anger; his serpent-diadem shall spit fire upon their heads,
shall consume their limbs, shall devour their bodies, they shall become
like Apophis on the morning of New Year's Day.
They shall be
engulfed in the sea,
^it
them
They
by the flood
who do
of those
not respect
it
who do
begins with
1.
is
very doubtful.
respect the
7.
fiir
endowment;
INSCRIPTIONS OF AMENHOTEP
927]
379
The
it.
not set foot in their houses as long as they are upon earth
nobles shall
the leaders of
the two sides ^ shall not introduce them, nor shall they hear the words
of the king in the
on the day
hour of gladness.
"They
sword
when
their
bodies be consumed, they shall hunger, without bread, and their bodies
If the vizier, overseer of the treasury, chief
shall die.
overseer of the
priests of
Amon,
whom
to
and
show
touch them, and them
Hapu,
shall not
926. But
if
my
^^endow-
Amon-Re, king
of gods,
all
favor shall be
shown them.
life.'^
field) for
The king
.^
There shall be doubled for you
you 'Sas he ""rewards"!
They
office upon office, ye shall receive from son to son and heir to heir.
shall be sent on as messengers, and the king of their day will reward
them. ""Their^ bodies shall (rest) '^in the West after (a life of) no years,
"reward""
Warning
927. As for the
officers of the
to
Gendarmes
gendarmes, H^elonging
of the
just.
'^They shall
Codicil.
rest in the
The mayor
is
he who
my
servants
the
(whm'w).
^The
38o
[928
STATUE OF NEBNEFERa
This statue was probably dedicated in the chapel
of Prince Wazmose; at least, there is a reference to this
prince among the inscriptions which it bears.
On the
928.
an
is
Hui
special
Royal Message
On
this day,
behold
South-of -His-Wall,
lord
[his
of
Life-of-the-Two-Lands.
Message, con-
High
Priest of
Amon,
"I^t the
came
from
'[Meriptah]^
chief
to the
Amon."
^Fragment of limestone sitting statue, now in the Museum of Brussels; published by Capart and Spiegelberg in Annates de la Societe d* Archeologie de Bruxelles,
Tome XVII, i' et 2' liv., 1903, 19-28.
epithets.
cThis was probably not Memphis, but the temple of Ptah at Karnak, which
bore the same names as the Ptah-temple at Memphis.
^Supplied from
1.
8;
longer.
up the
STATUE OF NEBNEFER
93i]
381
Installation
930. Then
forever."
Witnesses
prophet,*^
Kham-
is
common; hence
in office,
"Le
pronounced
passage semble
cThe four prophets (the High Priest's title really reads "first prophet") represent the temple, and for the incumbent there are only himself and one more.
REIGN OF IKHNATON
QUARRY INSCRIPTION AT
932
This inscription
is
among the
SILSILEH*
earliest surviving
docu-
seems to be
development.
in full
cult already
Amon
is
not
yet banished,
Karnak
Karnak pylons
in the
of
to
but scattered" in
Erment,
chiefly,
how-
The name
Harmhab.^
of
^Tablet fourteen feet high, cut on the quarry wall at Silsileh; published by
'Le'psvaSy. Denkmaler, III, no, i; Legrain, Annales, HI, 263.
l^On the Aton-temples at Akhetaton (Amarna), see tomb of Hui ( ioi6f.);
and on the ones at Heliopolis, Hermonthis, and elsewhere, ibid. On the Atontemples in general, see my remarks in Zeitschrijt fiir agyptische Sprache, 40,
no
fF.
cSee Nestor I'Hdte, Papier s inedits, III, 80, q6, 97, loi, 104, 105 (not seen);
Prisse, Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, 2d Ser., I., 76-92, and again
Prisse, Monuments egyptiens,
and XI; following Prisse, J. S. Perring, Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, 2d Ser., I, 140 ff.; Brugsch, Rectieil de
monuments,
PI.
Recueil, VI, 51
41),
which
57, 2, a-k;
f.;
and a
letter
names
of
as occurring in blocks
in
Karnak
941, note.
382
{ibid,,
52);
in
town of Luxor
QUARRY INSCRIPTION AT
933]
and
it
was
large
SILSILEH
383
^^
at
Thebes
was now apparently called ^^City (nw tyoj-theBrightness-of-Atonj^^ and the temple quarter was known as
as a whole
*
'
Brightness-of-A ton-the-Great.
933
The quarry
officials of
sportation.
'
'
The
The work
first
in the
or second year.
Over the
inscrip-
was 13 inches long; the dy-\o2ii was 12 inches high. The names of Aton
and the king had been expunged before the destruction of the building.
vessel
^From my own
Amarna
we
find the
( 949 S.).
sculptured before the sixth year.
On Canopies
Legrain,
384
was a
tion
934
Amon, but it
The inscription below
is
as follows:
of
living forever
make
make a
great
plate,
Being
is
of
Re"
Amarna
means: "Beautiful is
Wanre, the second part of the name, means, " Uniqtie One
Letters;
it
of Re."
^This old
name
of
it
contained the
Amon.
^Erased.
KThe
it
(after
is
in original).
it
has "works," but Brugsch has a similar example {Hieroglyphischdemotisches Worterbuch, Supplement, 1337), with "the people" as object of the
verb, showing clearly what is meant here.
text
^^Like the
to Beersheba."
On
first
cataract,
TOMB OF THE
936]
Behold, the
officials,
the
VIZIER
RAMOSE
385
TOMB OF THE
VIZIER RAMOSE^
reliefs
Governor
of
the
(residence)
Horus
in his house;
count
of
deceit,
monuments,
sole
city,
chief of prophets of
"hereditary prince,
vizier;"
seal, chief of
lord,
in
whom
the
vizier, just
Lord
judge;
of the
Two
Lands loved because of his remarkable traits, who enters the palace,
and comes forth with favor, with the utterances of whose mouth one
(= the king) is satisfied;" "(wr/-/r-) priest, the mouth that makes
content in the whole land, (sm-) priest, master of
all
wardrobes, enter-
ing into the secrets of heaven, of earth [and of the nether world];"
Mat,
aSee
to
Nekhen, prophet
chief justice."*^
Hammamat
Stela of
tologie,
Ramses IV,
Hood
1.
in i860,
cThese are
all
the
titles
my
copies.
EIGHTEENTH DYNASTY: IKHNATON
386
^^
11^
ii
^l^^|^rl
iii
[937
...i
and
administrative organization, must have been the most
powerful official at the court of Ikhnaton. He had been
vizier under the king's father, Amenhotep III;^ he v^as
early won over to the Aton faith, and the particular value
of his tomb lies in the fact that we may trace in it this con937.
Ramose, as head
Ramose
version of
at a time
and
This
^^the gods.^^
the
of
still
judicial,
when Ikhnaton
still
called
permitted references to
Amon
last
religious,
at
later date.
The
name
of
materials in
Relief Scene^
938.
king
figure executed in
the goddess
^It
Mat
enthroned on the
and
the usual conventional style; behind him
before him, with upraised arms. Ramose.
sits
face
right, his
inscription
on the island of
Sehel,
'^Hereditary prince, the two eyes of the king in the whole land, governor
and vizier, Ramose" (Brugsch, Thesaurus, V, 12 16, gg =
de Morgan, Catalogue des monuments, I, 90, No. 79). See also Wiedemann,
is
called:
^This expungement
word
is
No. 21;
it is
ibid., 72,
not the
name
of a particular
''gods,"
the
sondern viel allgemeiner gewesen sein." Lepsius (Denkmaler, Text, III, 8; read
also end of section), and see ibid., 31.
By comparing Leyden Stela, V, 26, and
Vienna Stela, 53, it will be seen that the wife of a certain "overseer of the cattle of
Amon" was a "musician of Upwawet;" but when her husband became "overseer
of the cattle of the house of Aton," she was obliged to drop her title (see Baillet,
Notice sur la collection egyptienne de I'Abbe'Desnayers, 40, and Recueil, 23, 144;
also Bergmann, Recueil, IX, 42).
The persecution therefore included all the gods.
See Breasted, Zeitschrift fiir dgyptische Sprache, 40, 108-10.
dinner wall,
first
chamber,
left
of door.
TOMB OF THE
942]
'
'
'
The accompanying
939.
given
RAMOSE
387
"
the
1.
King^
of
life,
inscriptions are:
Over
King
VIZIER
.11.
'
Over Mat
Mat, daughter
Over Ramose^
940. Utterance of the governor of the (residence) city, the vizier,
Ramose, triumphant, for the benefit of thy ka: *'An adjuration to thy
father,
Harakhte-Rejoicing-in-the-Horizon, in his
he
is-[in]-Aton,'*^ that
may
thy annals
he
may
may
may
fell
may
all
lands
the throne of
Re
all life
may
be jubilees; that
name Heat-Which-
may
all
be under thy
joy
may
feet, that
be with thee,
all
forever.'*
Relief Scene^
941.
Under
queen, worshiping,
all in
the peculiar
temple.
942.
The
officials.
ain two lines; a third mutilated line is omitted above. Over the king's head
''The Edfuan (Horus)
is also the winged sun-disk, with its usual inscription:
great god, etc.'\ This disappears entirely during the later Aton movement.
bThis entire speech of Ramose to the king appears twice over his head, with
slight variants.
cThis and the mention in the Silsileh inscription are the earliest occurrences
of Aton's name; it is not yet in the cartouche.
dinner wall,
first
388
By
the
943
Sun-Disk
**'Harakhte-Rejoicing-in-the-Horizon;
name: Heat-Which-
in his
By
the
King
Over
the
Queen
Two
Lands,
living, flourishing.
These two
943.
was
in full
Aton faith
swing under an Amenhotep whose prenomen
reliefs
show,
first:
that the
the
latter's
Ikhnaton
did,
bears
IV.
The remaining
944-
reliefs illustrate
king.
Scene
kneeling,
in cartouches.
^This
the king
(see
my
fif.).
TOMB OF THE
947]
RAMOSE
VIZIER
389
by congratulating
met
friends,
rejoicing
when he
and
is
carrying
flowers.
Inscriptions
945.
The
inscriptions
were very
brief,
Ramose
of the
Aton
unfortunately
faith,
much
broken.
It is as
follows
thee,
them
It
stood
."
946.
is
to
me.
my
august father,
All that
in order to ""exalt^
was known
The king
of
in
is,
me
his
since the
To
this
Ramose makes
"Thy monuments
is like
Aton
therein.
shall
The
endure
like the
existence of thy
Thou
is
monuments
One
is like
the exist-
of [Aton], in possession of
their secret
chambers,
is
in the
947.
An
Ramose was
later buried in
Good God.
inscription in the
in peace at
my
my
West
of
my tomb
{hr't)y
upon the
great
Thebes."
^These accompanying inscriptions are directly below the upper row, depicting
the decoration, and belong with a lower band connected with the same incident.
They are only in ink and very faded; I believe my copy of them is the first made.
They have never been published.
bSee similar idea, Kubbftn Stela,
1.
6 (III, 285).
3QO
948
new capital.
This tomb at Thebes
arrangement,
in
is
The
Amarna,
and
which
style,
for
rich gifts to
Ramose
which
it
depicts
Having
finally
royal residence,
and determined
to
found a new
as capital
city
and
devoted
The site
east
bank
of
^No. II in Daressy's list {Recueil, XV, 50); I copied the inscriptions in the
tomb (doorway, thickness, right hand), and they give this Ramose the titles:
" Commander of the army of the Lord of the Two Lands, ^overseer of the White Housed
ofAmenhotepIII" which do not correspond with those of the Theban Ramose;
but the rapid and sudden changes of the time may have transferred him to the
head of the army. See also Wiedemann {Recueil, XVII, 9, 10) who opposes the
identity.
^hese
5 feet
wide and 8
They
clifiFs,
Daressy, Recueil,
2.
XV,
Monuments
egyptiens,
XIV,
11.
20-25 (^^d);
61.
95o]
cliffs,
391
miles long.
Akhetaton,
^^
this plain
Horizon
of Aton,'^
but
it
was
city,* called
his design
from
first
to consecrate
lines,
and western
reliefs
II,
321
cliffs,
midway between
the northern
and south-
f.
K
U
X
is
at
my
disposal.
to the locality,
392
on the east
are broken by incoming valleys,
where the
cliffs
new
stelae
[ 951
all
(total, fourteen).
951
In form these
stelae
are practically
all
of
one design,
altar
The
titles.
few
On
vertical
lines,
continues
of the king
The
and
stelae
below in horizontal
were often
altars
lines.
with statues
his family.
(called
^^
fall,
The
first class is
represented by two
ing a detailed
endowment
to the gift of
Akhetaton.
stelae,^
contain-
They were
first
half can be
discerned.
953. After the date,*^ the
the king's
first visit to
all
being
^See conclusion of Stela A (971), which is different from that of the others,
and clearly defines the position of the original six stelae.
^hese two
positions:
cThe date is lost on X; in K, Lepsius, Denkmdler, has "year 4," with signs
of weathering; but the month, which is the same as on all the second class of stelae
(which are all of year 4), shows that Lepsius, Denkmdler, has misread 6 as 4.
^:
956]
( 959
ff.),
393
the king:
upon
954.
Then
eration, in
their
gift of
Akhetaton to Aton
His majesty raised his hand to heaven, to him who made him, even
Aton, [^saying: "This
forever, this
ton for
is
my
landmark
my father
as a dwelling for
I have
.
is
my
witness
made Akheta-
on its south, on its north, on its west, on its east. I shall not pass beyond
the southern landmark of Akhetaton toward the south, nor shall I
pass beyond the northern landmark of [Akhetaton toward the north].
He
has made
for his
its circuit
whereon I make
own
offering to
him;
he hath made
this is it."
land
(cf. Ill,
Harmhab):
63,
come hitherT] for the beautiful seat of Akhebe another seat, and I will give them audience,^ whether
[Tshall
"
956. After a
short
that he
this [place]
may
made a temple of
Aton for Aton, my father, in Akhetaton in this [place]. I have made
I have made
[for Aton], my father, in Akhetaton in this place.
be
satisfied
therewith, forever
stelae
and
my
ever.
I have
father, in
Akhetaton in
this place]
bLit., ''hearing."
another of these phrases follows here, but the object made is lost; possibly each refers to a different temple at Akhetaton, of which there were at least
three called ''Shadow of Re'' (see 1017 ff.).
cStill
394
From
957.
dition thai
is
in
little
[957
It is
endowing Aton
with lands and revenues outside of Akhetaton. This is
thirty-seven
lines
contained
the
decree
"As
my rground^ in
for
it
is
my
it
shall be
brought
my
for Akhetaton."
In
in
1.
Kush.
958.
The second
class of stelae, of
on each
twelve.
later increased to
first visit
and oblation
to
there
Aton
words
first
class of
in praise of his
stelae
stelae,
city,
marked by
six
The
*They occupy both sides of the river, three on the west and nine on the east
bank. The three on the west are the three original stelae, matching three original
stelae on the east side, which were later increased to nine on the east side.
The
northernmost of the original eastern three has never been found; X, at present
the northernmost on the east side, belongs to the first class, and not to the second
class, to which the original six belong.
The six are: (i) on the west side: A, B,
and F; (2) on the east side: S, U, and the northeast stela still undiscovered. A
differs in its conclusion from the others (see 970-72).
959]
395
959. Year
'Live the
Aton;
6,
fourth
Good God,
father;
live
month
satisfied
Two
Lands;
live
Which-is-in-Aton,"
who
is
given
life
forever
and
of -the-Name-of-Aton ;
King
Two
of
Heat-
ever.
my
Two
in
life
forever
and
ever;
Good God
whose beauty
^In Egyptian one word nb'ty, a feminine dual noun, with an adjectival ending,
so that the whole means "he who belongs to, or is protege of, the two goddesses,"
but the word for the latter is not as prominent as in English; hence Ikhnaton
retained the old royal titulary without change, even including this somewhat compromising title, to preserve the old titulary complete. This is one of the few compromises with a traditional form by Ikhnaton. That he no longer retained a belief
in the two goddesses is shown by the fact that the vulture, which regularly appears
with wings outspread in protection over the heads of the other kings, is never
found with Ikhnaton, but it is replaced by the sun-disk enveloping Ikhnaton in its
rays.
^The
first
part
is
^Yr-sw="He
<iLast
Amarna Letters;
Unique One of Re.'*
that
made him."
1.
1.
396
[960
is
Two
Lands, Nefernefruaton-Nofretete.
Founding
960. 50n
this
in
oj the City
stufif
he
filled
way
the
Two Lands
when he
On
it*^
it
as a
On
day
^was founded Akhetaton for the Uving Aton, that favor and love might
be received, on behalf of King Ikhnaton.
cattle, fowl,
wine,
''gold^,
King Goes
to
Southeastern
this
Landmark
making youthful
<'
etc."
Under the orthodox regime offerings were officially made "on behalf of"
{hr d^d') the king (see 57). We see here that their specific object was "favor
and love;" of course, those of the god. It is this which is referred to in the stereotyped form of the royal oath: "As Re loves me, as Amon favors me." Cf. IV, 958D.
^This stela (S), from which this translation is made, is at the southeast corner.
The
other
stelae
KThis rendering of the word ^ njj. here is made certain by the introduction to
the second date (1. 25) " Repetition of the vivat (= n}i)" followed by the date. The
full vivat is the n^, followed by the entire titulary of the god, as we have it at the
beginning of the inscription; but to save space the second date is introduced merely
by the words: "Repetition of the vivat" which are thus a kind of abbreviation of
:
964]
spake: "Live
is
my
"Aton, who
father,
is
given
life
who
brings long
She
My heart
forever!
life
397
who
and
bring long
ever,
"with
life;
is
daughter, Meketaton, her children, being under the hand of the King'sWife, ^3their mother, forever and ever. It is my oath by the truth,
(namely), that which
speak
my
forever
is falsity;
and
ever.^
962. ^4As for the southern landmark, which is upon the eastern
mountain of Akhetaton, it is the landmark of Akhetaton, as far as which
make a stand
;*=
Middle
of Eastern
963. As for the middle landmark which is upon the eastern mountain of Akhetaton, it is the landmark of Akhetaton, ^^as far as which I
make a stand, ^ upon the eastern mountain of Akhetaton; I shall not
pass beyond
mark which
against
it,
it
is
and ever. The middle landupon the western mountain of Akhetaton is made over
toward the
east, forever
opposite.
make a stand
;*^
landmark, which
against
it,
it is
it
is
upon
ever.
The
northern
is
over
opposite.
*Lit.,
"who
^The
N.
970).
cOr a "halt."
on all the stelse of the second class (except A), may
one taken from the legal form used in establishing boundaries;
be either a traditional
or it may be an extraordinary statement peculiar to this remarkable king, asserting
that he will never pass beyond the boundaries of Akhetaton, but remain within his
god's domain
differs slightly
clauses.
398
[965
Area Contained
965. ^^Now, as for Akhetaton, from the southern landmarks to the
northern landmarks measured between landmark and landmark upon
the eastern mountain of Akhetaton,
it
makes 6
iter, ^^i
khet,
half-
quarter-khet,*
Deed
of Gift to
A ton
966. 2Now, as for the area within the four landmarks, from the
[eastern]
it
mountain
belongs to
my
[to
father, Aton,
whether mountains,
fields,
^'^or
who
cliffs,
is
given
life,
or marshes, or
forever
"
1^
or uplands, or
anything
it
^^ which
for Aton,
my
Aton,
my
father,
father, forever
has made,
and
made
ever.
967. Moreover,
I have
Landmarks
^^it is
limit likewise
^^of
Akhetaton.^
here
it
303-6), and Sethe {Utitersuchungen, II, 3, 11) could now strike out his minimum
of 1 1 km.
But these calculations antedate the discovery of the northeast stela,
which was also unknown to Levy, Recueil, XVI, 162-72. See also Loret, Sphinx,
^The word
^M 3 tvt,
fiir
a kind of land.
is
omitted.
97i]
Permanence
968.
It shall
If
it
Record
shall not
be washed out,
be abraded,
not be erased,
oj the
it
which
it
which
it is.
is,
it
shall not be
should
I will restore
fall,
Inspection
Two
it
399
[it]
it
shall not
shall not
^^the stela
be
upon
Years Later
landmarks
of Aton,
which are in
970.
The
and ever
stela at the
conventional text of
all
the
stelae,
from
all
the demarcation,
etc.,
in
It
runs thus:
when
setting
forever
and
these landmarks
up
"As
ever:
*^
(cartouche) given
up at
eastern moun-
which I have
upon
the
life,
set
is
of]^
Akhetaton
1.
10, 961.
cThe numeral
is
S.
dThe
restoration
is
clear
of the northern
400
mark which
is
[972
Deed
to
A ton
or
life,
its
forever
or
exist,
all its
people, or all
upon which
its cattle,
my
offered to his
or anything
and ever.
ka, the beautiful rays receiving them
mountains, or
Aton
its
in Akhetaton, forever
They
shall
be
."
The
sculptor at
Assuan
is,
of course, to be explained
ract,^
from the
relief
aThis
It
fact
same
of Ikhnaton's figure
tion of his
by the
at
Memphis,^
is
Heliopolis,*^
and the
limits thus
and
marked;
preserved.
and the
relief faces
976]
the Delta
cities,
The temple
for
401
like all of
Ikhnaton's buildings
The
tablet
as follows:
is
Relief Scene
left of
scene
this
The
is
On Each
Side of the
Sun
Aton in Akhetaton.
Over Bek
Giving praise to the Lord of the
Two
^)
whom
Royenet {R^
Red Mountain,
*=
Bek
Men
(iWw),
the assistant
on the great
Aton
in Akhetaton,
bom
of the matron,
-yn't).
left
another figure
of the
I,
is
III,^
presenting a food-
under
weathered
493
on the great
more
whom
he, of
inscriptions,
and
off.
i5 ^^ote.
dThis
and
king,^^
Amenhotep
of sculptors
is
402
To
977
the
of these offices,
necessary
Ikhnaton.
so
Like
much
of
all
it
ancient Egyptian
cities,
the
life
of Akhetaton,
as has survived,
dead than in
of Akhetaton has survived
city of the
in its
cemetery than in
its streets.
^^We
official:
see the
good
on the
cliffs
their walls.
Amarna
la mission frangaise
au
full
of
all
been begun by N. de G. Davies, for the Egyptian Exploration Fund, and two
volumes have appeared.
^Tomb of Ani
but
is
XV,
45).
(see e. g. I, 242
F.),
THE TELL
98o]
978.
EL- AMARNA
TOMBS
403
Of
the inscribed
The
all
we know
These hymns
that
favor with the king, prayers for the king, as well as for
and
prosperity
^'goodly
buriaP^
for
the
himself.
reciter
These
historical
980.
all
aTomb
of
Mahu.
l^The longer will be found in the author's De Hymnis in Solent sub Rege
Amenopkide IV Conceptis, with Latin translation, and thence translated by Griffith in Petrie, History of Egypt, II, 215-18, and in the author's History of Egypt
(New York, 1905); and also in the section devoted to religion, which will later
appear in
this series.
404
[981
One
981.
of the
of
Merire II
at
companied by inscriptions, is in
It shows Ikhnaton, his queen, and six daughters, in a kiosk,
The king and queen enthroned side by
or covered dais.
side have just stepped from their sedan chairs, which are
With trumpet sounding, Eg)^set down before the dais.
tian troops defile before them, and on either side of the
military appear foreign embassies with their tribute: Nubians, Syrians, Libyans, and especially Hittites, who are here
depicted for the first time on an Eg3^tian monument. They
bear elaborately decorated vessels, undoubtedly of gold and
silver.
TOMB OF MERIRE
982.
The
unusual
reliefs
and
The
interest.
I^
inscriptions in this
tomb are
of
Aton,
is
^A
cliff-tomb (No. 4) in the northern group of Amarna (Lepsius, No. 3) parpublished by Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 92-97, d; superb sketches by Nestor
I'Hote, in Amelineau's Histoire de la sepulture, II, PI. 85, 92.; plans, also Prisse,
Histoire de Vart egyptien, and often, e. g., Erman, Life in Ancient Egypt. The
entire tomb has been published by Davies, Rock Tombs of El Amarna^ Part I,
;
tially
"Tomb
of
Meryra" (London,
Davies, Amarna,
I,
Pis.
1903).
X-XX.
had
also
my own
copies.
984]
may
in the A ton-temple in
A khetaton.
' *
The
first
impost 0} Aton
occasion
first
405
is,
therefore,
^^
"He
983.
As
trains*^ the
surely as the
The
**
Aton
is
he shall be forever."
rises,
Aton
Aton
"How
984.
named Tenr,
doubtless his wife, sings praise of Aton and the royal family:*
"Thy
rising
is
beautiful,
Davies, Amarna,
I, Pis.
VI-VIII.
^Or: "classes" {d*inw)\ see IV, 402.
^Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 97, a; Davies, Amarna, I, xxxvi: she does not
belong to the company before the king, but her words well suit the occasion, espeHer hymn or song
cially her reference to the queen's presence beside the king.
much
for
of
it
day.
f First
cartouche.
gSecond cartouche.
4o6
thou
them
and
all reptiles
when thou
Lord
of the
may
live
all
ever,
when they
living in truth.
may
Two
be by his
beauty; grant to
side,
made every
him eternity
May
day.
Two Lands."
Two Lands, Tenr
as king of the
thou
with thee forever, that the Great King's- Wife, his beloved.
The
and them
settest.
Two
Mistress of the
and
that fly
sleep
make
horizon of heaven, to
[985
(Ty-n-r^)j
[whom] reckoning
son,
is
made.
Wanre (Ikhnaton)."
985.
ment
The king
of Merire as
High
Priest
(^^
great seer^^) of
Aton thus:
King^s Speech
Two Lands
Aton
in Akhetaton,
which thou
S),
who
Hrsu
art charged,
my
'Thou
heart
As
is satisfied
for
Neferkhep-
"Behold, I
Aton
am
in the temple
"O my
hearer of
986.
In another scene
*^
Amarna,
I,
VIII.
Denkmdler, 97,
e;
Davies, Amarna,
1,
xxv, xxix-xxxiii.
it
for love
989]
the king
The
commands
407
The
his favorite
Words
of the
King
Aton
"Put gold
in Akhetaton, Merire:
at his throat
and
at his back,
and
gold on his legs, because of his hearing the teaching of Pharaoh, L. P. H.,
made
in*^
much
Aton
Pharaoh has
in Akhetaton, filled
Merire's Reply
may
Two Lands,
him
forever
and
ever.
TOMB OF EYE
989. Eye,
who
left
a fine
ibid.,
xxx.
I,
xxx.
^H't-bnbn.
fLit.,
life
"make
(ntr), is evidently
is,
may he
live as
long a
as the god.
4o8
down
balcony, throwing
and
we
and
collars
990
Eye
vessels of gold to
tomb (982
here wanting.
ff.)
are
of Eye's servants in
He was
not an
on the right
in
official of
of the king,
his
master of
all the
Fan-hearer
favor
^^
in his childhood.
He
me my
doubled for
first
"truei
number
my name
to
in his opinion.
of the sand;
was the
am
because of
my excellence
from year
is
to be,
tell
of Hfe.
I bear
given by Lepsius as from a second tomb [No. 3] of the same man this is an error
which has been perpetuated in the modern histories. Eye had but one tomb
at Amarna; it contains all the material given by Lepsius as from two tombs.
See
Breasted, The Dial, Chicago, May i, 1897, 283.) The two long hymns were published by Bouriant, Memoir es de la mission frangaise au Caire, I, 2-5, and Daressy,
Recueil, XV, 46, 47; both are excessively incorrect.
The following translation
(of Daressy's hymn) is based on my own copy of the original.
Unfortunately, I
had not yet made these copies when I published my De Hymnis in Solem sub
;
Rege Amenophide
^Erman
Egypt,
IV
gives
an
Conceptis.
excellent description of the
19-2 1.
992]
Hymn
409
to
horizon, O Hving
991. **Praise to thee!
Aton, lord of eternity. Obeisance to thy rising in heaven, to illuminate
Thy
like
Aton.
When
thou
rays are
Thou
given him;
risest, eternity is
begettest
Lower Egypt, living in truth. Lord of the Two Lands, NeferkheprureWanre; the Great King*s-Wife, Nefernefruaton-Nofretete living forever and ever.
;
Hymn
to
Aton and
the
King
992. ^The divine father, favorite of the Good God, fan-bearer at the
right of the king, master of all the horses of his majesty, truly beloved
He
He
saith:
*'
Praise to thee!
all
living Aton,
because of his rising; their hearts ^are happy with the joy of their lord,
Irsu^
who
shineth
upon them.
Thy
eternity,
When
he
rises in
heaven, he
this lord
who forms
like
Aton; rich in
Wanre;
living
and sound
Thou
he begat thee."
L. I contains the usual title: "Praise of Aton, the king and the queen," indicating the content of the hymn.
bSee
J 985.
4IO
[993
Selj-Praise
993. '^The divine father, etc., Eye; he saith: "I am the truthful one
of the king whom he created, the upright one of the Lord of the Two
Lands, useful to his lord, following the ka of his majesty, like his favorite,
who
head
when he appears'
*
companions
He
lying.
know
that
Wanre
is
like
and gold;
^
am
I
"^
my
rejoices in
He
^Hhe lord
"
body, and
it
doubles to
first
am
at the
put truth in
tion
in his palace.
my
abomina-
me my
head
favors in silver
me.
How
prosperous
Lands
who performs
thy favorite,
is
satisfied
is
lord,
who forms
me
^^Grant
long
Lord
of the
with
is satisfied
and
the people,
of the
life,
in
life
All
Two
when he
creates duration,
life,
he
of life;
How
is lying.
is satisfied
prosperous
my
grant to
me
Grant
to
me
command
in
mountain
is
without ceasing, ^^and his two eyes see Aton every day.
is
me
to rest, in the
May
I hear thy
995. ''May he
jubilees like the
numbers
and
of the shore,
ever;
may he endow
(or)
thee with
ipet-rod
a statement
in balances;
(or)
the feathers of the birds, *(or) the leaves of the trees, in jubilees for the
king,
Wanre
^H't-hnhn.
997]
411
Aton
and
ever.
May
Two
Lands, Nefemefruaton-
Thy
in them.
father
Aton
sends the
who
rises in
me
996. Grant
to kiss the
may
that
2^my mortuary
who
is
priest
favorites,
rest.
commanded
May
thy ka.
TOMB OF
lives again.
MAId
Two
follows
his
who
it,
officials at
seal, sole
companion,
Lands, overseer of
the
the
Two
"House-of-Sending-Aton-to-Rest;" king's-
attendant in his august barge, master of the suite behind the Lord of
the
Two
aSee
Lands, chief of
959,
1.
all
4.
^There was a "house for sending Aton to rest," at Amarna, of which Mai was
overseer (mr). Here doubtless the vesper service in the daily ritual was held at
sunset.
cHis
titles,
The tomb
is
unfinished, but
it
hymn
doorpost), an
speech, all ye people,"
(left
412
He
998.
has
[998
left
Hymn
to
^^
teaching^'
A ton
Thou
Thy
Thou
made.
them
art Re,
and thou
takest
them
all
all
Praise of the
Thy
rays are
Re
in her midst;
lovely
and
beautiful;
when one
sees her,
it is
When
the
like
is
rejoicing.
She
is
a glimpse at heaven;
Aton
rises in her,
he
fills
her with his rays, ^and he embraces his beloved son, son of eternity
who came
on
forth
Every land
is
King
oblations to his ka, to Aton, rising in the horizon every early morning.
^Thy^ son presents truth to thy beautiful face thou re joicest when thou
Thou settest Hiim^ as king
seest him, (for) he came forth from thee.
like the Aton, Neferkheprure-Wanre, living and sound, like the Aton.
;
the usual title {^^ Praise of Aton, the king and queen"),
which characterizes the content; although this does not contain any praise of the
queen, as in Eye ( 989 ff.).
*L1.
and
2 contain
985, note.
991,
1.
4.
It
I004]
413
Self-Praise
(M ^ y)]', he saith
"I am his servant, whom he created; upright for the
Two Lands, one useful to his lord, who put truth in my
abomination
is
lying.
'I
know
numbers
Lord
body; (my)
(for)
of the sand.
me my
he hath doubled to
am
and
My eyes
of the
I hear his
(because)
word without
ceasing.
1003.
perous
"O my
'*he
is
seeing thee,
which thy ka
[in]
How
gives, in the
May he
of life!
Grant
me
be
satisfied
me
live;
thou Myriad of
prosperous
may
to rest,
is
grant that I
abide forever.
May
may be
beseeching
Wanre
satisfied
Thou
all
thou
madest
with
fol-
(Ikhnaton).
him
with
Myriad
pros-
How
that he does
mouth was
full of truth."
TOMB OF AHMOSEa
1004.
Ahmose was
steward of the
estat'e
of
Neferkheprure-Wanre (Ikhnaton).^*
this doorpost is
short time at
now
my
so mutilated that I
disposal.
made no attempt
414
He
has
hymn upon
left
1005
the doorposts
of his tomb.
The two
1005.
portions of this
The
(979).
the god,
introductory praise of
the
king,
King
Praise oj the
1006.
presenting
them
The
[and the
to thy ka.
isles]
sThy
child
whom
and the
east,
His
southern boundary
is
and
(his)
northern as far as
heart, like the sands of the shore, like the scales of the ^fish in the
May
the
Good God
until
Hymn
1007. ^Thy setting
the
Two
is
Lands,
beautiful,
to
Aton
Two
King
of
who
created""]
aRead hn c
I be a follower of
them,
Lands.
The
people
-k.
*rrhe second portion (Lepsius, Denkmdler, III, 98, a, right doorpost) begins
here.
It is cleariy the second half of one hymn, the first half containing the praise
of god, king, and queen; the second chiefly the prayer of the deceased as usual.
ioTo]
415
(Ikhnaton).
of that
which
is
not, the
maker
come
forth
from
thy mouth.
1008. Grant to
me advancement
ceasing;
life
in prosperity.
I be a follower of the
may
feet, for
I be the
he was at the
May
and
com-
child, until
when
every day.
feast,
TOMB OF TUTU^
Tutu (Tw-tw) was an imi-khentit (ymy-^nty t) in
Akhetaton. He was decorated with gold, like most of his
colleagues, and has recorded some remarkable statements
concerning his king in the following hymn:
1009.
loio.
'
who came
him
in thy office of
circuit of
(for)
Aton.
thy son
is
King
Thou
of
givest
forth
Two
from thy
^This beginning
address.
is
hymn.
apparently not a
title,
4i6
ion
upon thy beloved son; thy hand carries satisfying life. Thy love
is great, immense,
i, by thy august skin, when thou floodest heaven
and earth with thy beauty. (Then) thy son, who came forth from thy
limbs, adores thee, thou hearest for him that which is in his heart, (and)
thou doest according to that which comes forth from his mouth. He
Although thou art in heaven,
is thy beloved, thou makest him like Aton.
thy rays are upon [earth]. ^ ^As thou begettest thyself every day without
ceasing, (so) thou hast formed him out of thine own rays to spend the
are
"
When
lifetime of Aton.
thou
sailest the
thy favorite.
rays,
therewith.
made them,
Aton
to
awaj
when he
When he made to
who makes
Two
Lands.
the darkness.
light
When
(When)
the
Two
up
heaven,
who
illuminates
he created, he drove
up before
is filled
thee;
the
make
rises in
living, the
places.
the
all
is
great in duration.
Hymn
radiance,
he
Thou
their products.
risest in
their clothing,
hast
awakened
Their
mouths are filled with that which thou givest. All small cattle rest
upon their herbage; thou expellest evil and hast given health. Every
one
lifts
himself
their lord
(when)
he appears
Praise of the
King
who came
Neferkheprure-Wanre,
my
god,
Amenophide IV Conceptis,
^Ibid.,
34 and 36.
my
hymn
19, v. 11).
forth
King
in thy
Thy
form
(see
of
my De Hymnis
ioi4]
417
me
10 13. Grant
adore him, that
me
my
that
and
may
am the
is
lying in
(for) I
may
favorite servant,
(for) I
my
know
body,
my body
may be
[Thears'']
before
his teach-
without ceasing.
I will
my
abomination
my
know
who
that he lives
hands may
his
eye
ear
without ceasing.
ing,
my
My
voice
was not
[lifted
it
ableness every day, because I so fully carried out his teaching, not
transgressing
his majesty;
by any
may
"
evil thing
mountain
of
Grant that
I be his follower.
burial
may
be
**after old
satisfied
age
Akhetaton
TOMB OF HUYb
1014.
His
Huy we
In
offices
offices.
As
tomb shows
^Ll. 12-15 ^^^
overseer of
i,*'
his
^^
the
for
he
White
great king^s-wife,
tomb
are naturally
overseer of the
tribute.
White
scene
<^
in
in these hjonns
my own
<iLepsius,
copies.
Denkmdler,
III,
100, 6.
4i8
1015
my father,
12,
8.
Live
Kmg
of
Upper
[Aton],* given
life
forever
and
and Lo wer Egypt, [Ikhnaton] and the Great King's-Wife,Nef ernefruatonthe tribute of Kharu
Nofretete, living forever, at the arrival
united in one head, the
(^ ^ -rw) and Kush, the west and east
on the side
the tribute
isles [in the midst] of the sea
the
may
give to]
1016.
As steward
of
of the
into
Huy
which she
On
who
the king,
it
he
life.
another occasion
[that
is
"
",
Before
"Shadow-of-Re."
1017.
^^
Shadow-o}-Re,^^
is
""
above, the
appended
r
i,^
to
of the
relief
titles
TiyV
It is
shows,
it
at
Amarna.
Denkmaler,
^Uncertain
f Petrie,
title
XV,
similarly
c.
213, 214.
III, 102.
Amarna,
Aton,
of
the
statues,
*Two
As
and PL
XXXV.
and
in 1014.
ioi8]
419
referred to
It refers
daughter
Meretaton
(called):
in
chamber
the
Akhe-
taton^
1018.
to in
The
singers
This
'^
is
Shadow-of-Re^^
tion of
was
""
is
perhaps the
erected
at
^
^
The temple
of
Aton
first
Hermonthis,* was
called:
(ynw
'
called simply:
^'
This was
Another Aton-temple
Memphis, was
and
at Heliopolis
{y ^ hw t-n-ytn) - in - Hermonthis
in
sanctuary,
official
called
own
J>
^^
Horizon- of -Aton-
^ )
"
Still
another,
Museum,
me
this
passage
is
also
XVI,
1.
4;
Mariette,
Monuments
divers,
56 =
REIGN OF TUTENKHAMON
TOMB OF HUY^
So little is known of the immediate successors of
Ikhnaton that the tomb of Huy, viceroy of Kush under
Tutenkhamon, is of the greatest importance. We know
that this king marked the transition from the Aton faith
back to Amon, having changed his name from Tutenkha/(?n
to Tutenkhamon ;^ but on returning to Thebes he extended
the temple of Aton.*" Nevertheless, he was forced by the
1019.
monuments
power
in
bore.^
We
might infer
That
of
Nubia
tomb
likewise indicate.
These scenes
three series:
*Hewn
of Kurnet-Murrai
cliff
^Fragments of his extension are now rebuilt in the pylon of Harmhab at Karnak, Lepsius, Denkmaler, III, a-b; Bouriant, Recueil, VI, 51 ff.; and Piehl, Zeitschrift fiir dgyptische Sprache, 1884, 41.
The name of Eye is found on similar
reused blocks also.
dSee
II, 896.
420
TOMB OF HUY
I023]
421
I.
The
important
interesting
Karoy,
variant
unknown
thus
region, designated
locating
otherwise
this
1022.
Huy
The
An
officer
as he advances,
accompanied by several
Over
The
the Officer
who
"This
is
the
seal*^
from
from Nekhen
Napata."
Over
1023. King's-son of Kush
Words
"Thou
all
courtiers.
art the
countries
come
Son
of
Huy
.
of Courtiers
Amon
;^
of their
countries."
Scenes and
inscriptions copied
his notes
by
Brugsch {Thesaurus^ V, 1133-41)tn^his had been already noticed by Erman (Aegypten, 666), and was not new, as
I supposed when I called attention to it in Zeitschrift jur dgyptische Sprache, 40, 108.
cReading the w^'-sign as the usual determinative of htm, *'seal;" see Piehl
{Inscriptions, I, 112, n. 5).
illegible.
422
Investiture of
1024.
Huy
No
Huy.
this scene
appears an
of office.
The
inscriptions.
who
official
holds a small
which is to be
Immediately beside
seal,
extends to
Huy
the seal
inscriptions are:
Over
1025. fTakeT] the seal of
Official
office,
Over
The
who
delivered to
king's-son of [Kush].
Huy
office is
1024
Hiiy
object,
Nekhen
to Karoy.
1026.
and
officials
as he issues
The
^^
inspectors'^ {rwd''w))y
Huy
Good God
He
it
to the
to
Lord
of the
Two
n.
1027. It
is
Kush now
Huy's brother,
Amenhotep, here appears as ^^ King's-son of Kush,'' For
reasons not evident in the inscriptions, these two viceroys
of
of the
the
for
North.
What
North
was
that Eg)^tian
power
One might be
in Asia
at
TOMB OF HUY
io3o]
423
Theban tombs
Dynasty induced
Huy to add the tribute of the North as a pendant to the
tribute of the South which he actually collected.
But it
should not be forgotten that one of Ikhnaton's successors
carried on war in Asia (III, 20), and this can hardly have
been any other than Tutenkhamon. He may thus have
been able to collect some northern tribute.
earlier
of the Eighteenth
Scene
who
bring a magnificent
and
horses.
The
1029.
following inscriptions
Over
Huy
Amon,
Huy {Hwy)^
Two
Thou
Nine Bows.
Thou
art heaven,* abiding like its four pillars, the earth sits
permanence,
he
of the
art Re,
May
is
his emanation.
beneath
good ruler."
With Amenhotep
1030. Bringing in
the presents of
all
countries,
Amenhotep, triumphant.
424
With
103 1. Vessels of
Vessels
With an
is
great
none
The
thy fame,
is
1031
all
"How
1;
they say:
knew
to us the breath
which thou
below)."
Over Asiatics
The
shall
chiefs of
be in peace."
in.
In
embark
for
Nubia, and
local ofiScials,
is
to
by
his
Thebes.
Scene
1035.
King Tutenkhamon
Huy
is
scene,
silver,
with
before him.
*The two
viz.,
"that
we may
tell,
etc:'
^See Lepsius, Denkmdler, Text, III, 301-6; where the inscriptions are
more accurate than in the foHo of Lepsius.
much
TOMB OF HUY
I038]
425
Huy
receiving three
lines of
In the top
line of
prince,
priest,
Huy
from the house
king's-son
of
of the hereditary
Kush,
Huy
fhaving
writing.
The
ruler.^
The
all countries.
Over
of the
live
chiefs of
the
Middle Line
of
Nine Bows!
by thy
The
chief of
Wayet (w^y't).^
The
Negroes
of
chiefs of
Negroes
thee,
givest.
Men
love."^
Over
the Egyptians
still
^Lit.,
474).
dThe presence of these chiefs shows that the country was still under its native
in sole control.
rulers, and that the Egyptian administrative officers were not
eAs in Champollion {Notices descriptives,
^Very much the same inscription
Denkmaler, Text, III, 303).
is
I,
478).
426
1039
Amenhotep
living again.
They
sun
rises;
**
say:
many are
the best of
whom the
Over
Arrival from
in creation, for
Kush bearing
the Boats
good tribute
this
Landing
Kush, Huy.
Scene
1039.
dahabiyeh with
sail spread, and another with sail furled, bearing a chariot
and horses. On the boats approaching Huy, are four
rows of officials under Huy, followed by sailors and women
of his family; before
The
with tambourines.
inscriptions
The
post.
and
Huy
is
now
Over
1040.
show
richly decorated
Huy
the temple of
Amon
great
king's-scribe,
,
Amenhotep
The
^^his mother,''^
and
^^his
sister,''^
may be
distinguished.
^The door
^The change
of person is difficult.
is
it
are
TOMB OF HUY
I041]
Over
1 04 1.
I.
Overseer of
Deputy
cattle.
of
Kush.
4.
427
Officials
Mayor
2.
.
5.
Khammat
of
Deputy
of the fortres:
"Neb[khepr]ure*-Satisfier-of-the-Gods,"^ Penno.
fier-of-the-Gods."
7.
*'Satisfier-of-the-Gods,"
fortress:
Mermose;
*'Satisfier-of-the-Gods."
^Tutenkhamon's throne-name.
^S'htp-ntrw.
cCartouche.
8.
9.
(Soleb)
Priest of
.
6.
Mayor
^ fini]
,^
3.
(called):
of "Satis-
the fortress;
residing in the
REIGN OF EYE
LANDMARK OF EYE*
Documents
1042.
This
stela
shows
abandoned by him
by the king
no longer visible, and
whose name
Mutnezmet.
officials,
wife,
1043. Year
day, of
first
3,
third
is
month
to
The
one of his
to the latter's
life,
His majesty commanded to endow him with lands, a reward for the
,^ and for his wife, Mutnezmet.
It was laid out in the
king's
,
district called:
mose IV)," a
The
north
is
field of
154 stat.
"
House-of-MenKheprure (Thutmose IV);" the
south is the
the '*House-of-Ptah" and the " House-of-Okheperkere (Thut-
transfer
it.^
^Stela now in Cairo; found by the Great Pyramid, in the chapel of Pesibkhenno; published by Daressy {Recueil, i6, 123) and from Daressy by Spiegelberg
{Rechnungen, 36).
^FuU fivefold titulary is used in the original.
cThe lacuna contained the remainder of a royal ofl&cial's title, and his name,
which latter ended in /.
^The land, as already stated, lay in the j&elds of the House-of-Thutmose I and
the House-of-Thutmose IV; the southern and eastern boundaries were formed by
the House-of-Thutmose IV, and the northern boundary by the House-of-Thutmose I.
Hence it is probable that the western boundary was also formed by the House-ofThutmose I, and that Daressy has overlooked it in his copy, owing to its identity
with the preceding boundary.
^As witnesses? Spiegelberg renders "those who came," but the nt which he
renders as the relative pronoun occurs above, with the first, "his f i (nwy)," and
must therefore belong to nwy here.
The
land.
428
q^
eoh'M'
?^
TORONTO LIBRARY
57
U