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Ahmose I

Ahmose I (Ancient Egyptian: jꜥḥ ms(j .w), reconstructed /ʔaʕaħ'maːsjə/ (MK), Egyptological pronunciation Ahmose, sometimes written as Amosis or Aahmes, meaning "Iah (the Moon) is born"[24][25]) was a pharaoh and founder of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt, classified as the first dynasty of the New Kingdom of Egypt, the era in which ancient Egypt achieved the peak of its power. He was a member of the Theban royal house, the son of pharaoh Seqenenre Tao and nephew of the last pharaoh of the Seventeenth dynasty, Kamose. During the reign of his father or grandfather, Thebes rebelled against the Hyksos, the rulers of Lower Egypt. When he was seven years old, his father was killed,[26] and he was about ten when his brother died of unknown causes after reigning only three years. Ahmose I assumed the throne after the death of his brother,[27] and upon coronation became known as nb-pḥtj-rꜥ "The Lord of Strength is Ra".

Ahmose I
Amosis, according to Manetho,[1] also Amasis[2]
A fragmentary statue of Ahmose I, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Pharaoh
Reignc. 25 years in the mid 16th century BC[note 1] (Egyptian chronology) (disputed)
25 years and 4 months in Manetho
PredecessorKamose (Upper Egypt)
Khamudi (Lower Egypt)
SuccessorAmenhotep I
ConsortAhmose-Nefertari, God's Wife of Amun, Ahmose-Sitkamose, Ahmose-Henuttamehu, Kasmut, Thenthapi
ChildrenAhmose-Meritamun
Ahmose-Sitamun
Siamun
Ahmose-ankh
Amenhotep I
Ramose
Mutnofret
FatherSeqenenre Tao
MotherAhhotep I
Diedc. 1525 BC
BurialMummy found in Deir el-Bahri cache, but was likely originally buried in Abydos
MonumentsPalace at Avaris, Temple of Amun at Karnak, Temple of Montu at Hermonthis
Dynasty18th Dynasty

During his reign, Ahmose completed the conquest and expulsion of the Hyksos from the Nile Delta, restored Theban rule over the whole of Egypt and successfully reasserted Egyptian power in its formerly subject territories of Nubia and Canaan.[27] He then reorganized the administration of the country, reopened quarries, mines and trade routes and began massive construction projects of a type that had not been undertaken since the time of the Middle Kingdom. This building program culminated in the construction of the last pyramid built by native Egyptian rulers. Ahmose's reign laid the foundations for the New Kingdom, under which Egyptian power reached its peak. His reign is usually dated to the mid-16th century BC.

Family

Ahmose descended from the Theban Seventeenth Dynasty. His grandfather and grandmother, Senakhtenre Ahmose and Tetisheri, had at least twelve children, including Seqenenre Tao and Ahhotep I. The brother and sister, according to the tradition of Egyptian queens, married, and had sons Kamose and Ahmose I, as well as several daughters.[28] Ahmose I followed in the tradition of his father and married several of his sisters, making Ahmose-Nefertari his chief wife.[29] They had several children including daughters Meritamun B, Sitamun A and sons Siamun A, Ahmose-ankh,[30] Amenhotep I and Ramose A[31] (the "A" and "B" designations after the names are a convention used by Egyptologists to distinguish between royal children and wives that otherwise have the same name). They may also have been the parents of Mutnofret, who would become the wife of later successor Thutmose I. Ahmose-ankh was Ahmose's heir apparent, but he preceded his father in death sometime between Ahmose's 17th and 22nd regnal year.[32] Ahmose was succeeded instead by his eldest surviving son, Amenhotep I, with whom he might have shared a short coregency.[33]

There was no distinct break in the line of the royal family between the 17th and 18th dynasties. The historian Manetho, writing much later during the Ptolemaic Kingdom, considered the final expulsion of the Hyksos after nearly a century and the restoration of native Egyptian rule over the whole country a significant enough event to warrant the start of a new dynasty.[34]

Dates and length of reign

Ahmose's reign can be fairly accurately dated using the Heliacal rise of Sirius in his successor's reign, but because of disputes over from where the observation was made, he has been assigned a reign from 1570–1546 BC, 1560–1537 BC, 1551–1527 BC and 1539–1514 BC by various sources.[35][36][37] Manetho supposedly gives Ahmose a reign of 25 years and 4 months[35] (but, as Manetho called the first ruler of his dynasty "Tethmosis", he probably intended someone else). This figure is seemingly supported by a 'Year 22' inscription from his reign at the stone quarries of Tura.[38] A medical examination of his mummy indicates that he died when he was about thirty-five, supporting a 25-year reign if he came to the throne at the age of 10.[35] The radiocarbon date range for the start of his reign is 1570–1544 BC, the mean point of which is 1557 BC.[39]

Alternative dates for his reign (1194 to 1170 BC) were suggested by David Rohl,[40] but these were rejected by the majority of Egyptologists.[41] A radiocarbon study published in 2010 suggested minor revisions in the traditional chronology but did not support Rohl's theory.[39]

Campaigns

 
Dagger bearing the name Ahmose I on display at the
Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto
 
Cartouche of Ahmose I on the dagger pommel,
Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto

The conflict between the local kings of Thebes and the Hyksos king Apepi had started during the reign of Ahmose's father, Seqenenre Tao, and would be concluded, after almost 30 years of intermittent conflict and war, during his own reign. Seqenenre Tao was possibly killed in a battle against the Hyksos, as his much-wounded mummy gruesomely suggests, and his successor Kamose (likely Ahmose's elder brother) is known to have attacked and raided the lands around the Hyksos capital, Avaris (modern Tell el-Dab'a).[26] Kamose evidently had a short reign, as his highest attested regnal year is year 3, and was succeeded by Ahmose I.[42] Apepi died around a decade later.[43]

Ahmose ascended the throne when he was still a child, so his mother, Ahhotep, reigned as regent until he was of age. Judging by some of the descriptions of her regal roles while in power, including the general honorific "carer for Egypt", she effectively consolidated the Theban power base in the years before Ahmose assumed full control. If in fact Apepi II was a successor to Apepi I, then he is thought to have remained bottled up in the delta during Ahhotep's regency, because his name does not appear on any monuments or objects south of Bubastis.[28]

Conquest of the Hyksos

Ahmose began the conquest of Lower Egypt held by the Hyksos starting around the 11th year of Khamudi's reign, but the sequence of events is not universally agreed upon.[44]

Analyzing the events of the conquest prior to the siege of the Hyksos capital of Avaris is extremely difficult. Almost everything known comes from a brief but invaluable military commentary on the back of the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus, consisting of brief diary entries,[45] one of which reads[46]

Regnal year 11, second month of shomu, Heliopolis was entered. First month of akhet, day 23, this southern prince broke into Tjaru.[46]

While in the past this regnal year date was assumed to refer to Ahmose, it is today believed instead to refer to Ahmose's Hyksos opponent Khamudi since the Rhind papyrus document refers to Ahmose by the inferior title of 'Prince of the South' rather than king or pharaoh, as a Theban supporter of Ahmose surely would have called him.[47] Anthony Spalinger, in a JNES 60 (2001) book review of Kim Ryholt's 1997 book, The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, c.1800–1550 BC, notes that Ryholt's translation of the middle portion of the Rhind text chronicling Ahmose's invasion of the Delta reads instead as the "1st month of Akhet, 23rd day. He-of-the-South (i.e. Ahmose) strikes against Sile."[48] Spalinger stresses in his review that he does not question Ryholt's translation of the Rhind text but instead asks whether:

 
Copper axe blade inscribed with the titulary of pharaoh Ahmose I, Ashmolean Museum.

it is reasonable to expect a Theban-oriented text to describe its Pharaoh in this manner? For if the date refers to Ahmose, then the scribe must have been an adherent of that ruler. To me, the very indirect reference to Ahmose—it must be Ahmose—ought to indicate a supporter of the Hyksos dynasty; hence, the regnal years should refer to this monarch and not the Theban.[49]

The Rhind Papyrus illustrates some of Ahmose's military strategy when attacking the Delta. Entering Heliopolis in July, he moved down the eastern delta to take Tjaru, the major border fortification on the Horus Road, the road from Egypt to Canaan, in October, totally avoiding Avaris. In taking Tjaru[46] he cut off all traffic between Canaan and Avaris. This indicates he was planning a blockade of Avaris, isolating the Hyksos capital from help or supplies coming from Canaan.[50]

Records of the latter part of the campaign were discovered on the tomb walls of a participating soldier, Ahmose, son of Ebana. These records indicate that Ahmose I led three attacks against Avaris, the Hyksos capital, but also had to quell a small rebellion further south in Egypt. After this, in the fourth attack, he conquered the city.[51] He completed his victory over the Hyksos by conquering their stronghold Sharuhen near Gaza after a three-year siege.[35][52] Ahmose would have conquered Avaris by the 18th or 19th year of his reign at the very latest. This is suggested by "a graffito in the quarry at Tura whereby 'oxen from Canaan' were used at the opening of the quarry in Ahmose's regnal year 22."[53] Since the cattle would probably have been imported after Ahmose's siege of the town of Sharuhen which followed the fall of Avaris, this means that the reign of Khamudi must have terminated by Year 18 or 19 of Ahmose's 25-year reign at the very latest.[53]

Foreign campaigns

After defeating the Hyksos, Ahmose began campaigning in Syria and Nubia. A campaign during his 22nd year reached Djahy in the Levant and perhaps as far as the Euphrates, although the later Pharaoh Thutmose I is usually credited with being the first to campaign that far. Ahmose did, however, reach at least as far as Kedem (thought to be near Byblos), according to an ostracon in the tomb of his wife, Ahmose-Nefertari.[54] Details on this particular campaign are scarce, as the source of most of the information, Ahmose, son of Ebana, served in the Egyptian navy and did not take part in this land expedition. However, it can be inferred from archaeological surveys of southern Canaan that during the late 16th century BC Ahmose and his immediate successors intended only to break the power of the Hyksos by destroying their cities and not to conquer Canaan. Many sites there were completely laid waste and not rebuilt during this period—something a Pharaoh bent on conquest and tribute would not be likely to do.[55]

Ahmose I's campaigns in Nubia are better documented. Soon after the first Nubian campaign, a Nubian named Aata rebelled against Ahmose, but was crushed. After this attempt, an anti-Theban Egyptian named Tetian gathered many rebels in Nubia, but he too was defeated. Ahmose restored Egyptian rule over Nubia, which was controlled from a new administrative center established at Buhen.[29] When re-establishing the national government, Ahmose appears to have rewarded various local princes who supported his cause and that of his dynastic predecessors.[56]

Art and monumental constructions

 
Fragments of an armband of Ahmose I, Musée du Louvre.

With the re-unification of Upper and Lower Egypt under Ahmose, a renewal of royal support for the arts and monumental construction occurred. Ahmose reportedly devoted a tenth of all the productive output towards the service of the traditional gods,[57] reviving massive monumental constructions as well as the arts. However, as the defeat of the Hyksos occurred relatively late in Ahmose's reign, his subsequent building program likely lasted no more than seven years,[58] and much of what was started was probably finished by his son and successor Amenhotep I.[59]

Work from Ahmose's reign is made of much finer material than anything from the Second Intermediate Period, though the craftsmanship from his reign does not always match the best work from either the Old or Middle Kingdoms.[12] With the Delta and Nubia under Egyptian control once more, access was gained to resources not available in Upper Egypt. Gold and silver were received from Nubia, Lapis Lazuli from distant parts of central Asia, cedar from Byblos,[60] and in the Sinai the Serabit el-Khadim turquoise mines were reopened.[61] Although the exact nature of the relationship between Egypt and Crete is uncertain, at least some Minoan designs have been found on objects from this period, and Egypt considered the Aegean to be part of its empire.[60] Ahmose reopened the Tura limestone quarries to provide stone for monuments and used Asiatic cattle from Phoenicia to haul the stone, according to his quarry inscription.[62]

 
 
Pharaoh Ahmose I slaying a probable Hyksos. Detail of a ceremonial axe in the name of Ahmose I, treasure of Queen Ahhotep II. Luxor Museum[63][note 2][65]

The art during Ahmose I's reign was similar to the Middle Kingdom royal Theban style,[66] and stelae from this period were once more of the same quality.[61] This reflects a possibly natural conservative tendency to revive fashions from the pre-Hyksos era. Despite this, only three positively identified statuary images of Ahmose I survive: a single shabti kept at the British Museum, presumably from his tomb (which has never been positively located), and two life-size statues; one of which resides in the New York Metropolitan Museum, the other in the Khartoum Museum.[66] All display slightly bulging eyes, a feature also present on selected stelae depicting the pharaoh. Based on style, a small limestone sphinx that resides at the National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh, has also been tentatively identified as representing Ahmose I.[67]

The art of glass making is thought to have developed during Ahmose's reign. The oldest samples of glass appear to have been defective pieces of faience, but intentional crafting of glass did not occur until the beginning of the 18th dynasty.[68] One of the earliest glass beads found contains the names of both Ahmose and Amenhotep I, written in a style dated to about the time of their reigns.[69] If glassmaking was developed no earlier than Ahmose's reign and the first objects are dated to no later than his successor's reign, it is quite likely that it was one of his subjects who developed the craft.[69]

 
The jewels and ceremonial weaponry found in the burial of Queen Ahhotep, including an axe whose blade depicts Ahmose I striking down a Hyksos soldier, and the golden flies awarded to the Queen for her supportive role against the Hyksos

Ahmose resumed large construction projects like those before the Second Intermediate Period. In the south of the country he began constructing temples mostly built of brick, one of them in the Nubian town of Buhen. In Upper Egypt he made additions to the existing temple of Amun at Karnak and to the temple of Montu at Armant.[61] According to an inscription at Tura,[62] he used white limestone to build a temple to Ptah and the southern harem of Amun, but did not finish either project.[61] He built a cenotaph for his grandmother, Queen Tetisheri, at Abydos.[61]

Excavations at the site of Avaris by Manfred Bietak have shown that Ahmose had a palace constructed on the site of the former Hyksos capital city's fortifications. Bietak found fragmentary Minoan-style remains of the frescoes that once covered the walls of the palace; there has subsequently been much speculation as to what role this Aegean civilization may have played in terms of trade and in the arts.[70]

Under Ahmose's reign, the city of Thebes became the capital for the whole of Egypt, as it had been under the 11th Dynasty in the early Middle Kingdom. It also became the center for a newly established professional civil service, where there was a greater demand for scribes and the literate as the royal archives began to fill with accounts and reports.[71] Having Thebes as the capital was probably a strategic choice as it was located at the center of the country, the logical conclusion from having had to fight the Hyksos in the north as well as the Nubians to the south. Any future opposition at either border could be met easily.[57]

Perhaps the most important shift was a religious one: Thebes effectively became the religious as well as the political center of the country, its local god Amun credited with inspiring Ahmose in his victories over the Hyksos. The importance of the temple complex at Karnak (on the east bank of the Nile north of Thebes) grew and the importance of the previous cult of Ra based in Heliopolis diminished.[72]

Several stelae detailing the work done by Ahmose were found at Karnak, two of which depict him as a benefactor to the temple. In one of these stelae, known as the "Tempest Stele", he claims to have rebuilt the pyramids of his predecessors at Thebes that had been destroyed by a major storm.[73] The Thera eruption in the Aegean has been implicated by some scholars as the source of the damages described in the Tempest Stele.[74]

Pyramid

 
The ruins of the Pyramid of Ahmose

The remains of Ahmose's pyramid in Abydos were discovered in 1899 and identified as his in 1902.[75] Most of its outer casing stones had been robbed for use in other building projects over the years, and the mound of rubble upon which it was built has collapsed. However, two rows of intact casing stones were found by Arthur Mace, who estimated its steep slope as about 60 degrees, based on the evidence of the limestone casing (compare to the less acute 51 degrees of the Great Pyramid of Giza).[76] Adjacent to the main pyramid temple and to its east, Harvey has identified two temples constructed by Ahmose's queen, Ahmose-Nefertary. One of these structures also bears bricks stamped with the name of Chief Treasurer Neferperet, the official responsible for re-opening the stone quarries at el-Ma'asara (Tura) in Ahmose's year 22. A third, larger temple (Temple C) is similar to the pyramid temple in form and scale, but its stamped bricks and details of decoration reinforce that it was a cult place for Ahmose-Nefertary.[citation needed]

The axis of the pyramid complex may be associated with a series of monuments strung out along a kilometer of desert. Along this axis are several key structures: 1) a large pyramid dedicated to his grandmother Tetisheri which contained a stele depicting Ahmose providing offerings to her; 2) a rockcut underground complex which may either have served as a token representation of an Osirian underworld or as an actual royal tomb;[77] and 3) a terraced temple built against the high cliffs, featuring massive stone and brick terraces. These elements reflect in general a similar plan undertaken for the cenotaph of Senwosret III and in general its construction contains elements which reflect the style of both Old and Middle Kingdom pyramid complexes.[77]

 
Dagger of Ahmose I, Luxor Museum

There is some dispute as to if this pyramid was Ahmose's burial place, or if it was a cenotaph. Although earlier explorers Mace and Currelly were unable to locate any internal chambers, it is unlikely that a burial chamber would have been located in the midst of the pyramid's rubble core. In the absence of any mention of a tomb of King Ahmose in the tomb robbery accounts of the Abbott Papyrus, and in the absence of any likely candidate for the king's tomb at Thebes, it is possible that the king was interred at Abydos, as suggested by Harvey. Certainly the great number of cult structures located at the base of the pyramid located in recent years, as well as the presence at the base of the pyramid of a cemetery used by priests of Ahmose's cult, argue for the importance of the king's Abydos cult. However, other Egyptologists believe that the pyramid was constructed (like Tetisheri's pyramid at Abydos) as a cenotaph and that Ahmose may have originally been buried in the southern part of Dra' Abu el-Naga' with the rest of the late 17th and early 18th Dynasties.[61]

This pyramid was the last pyramid ever built as part of a mortuary complex in Egypt. The pyramid would be abandoned by subsequent pharaohs of the New Kingdom, for both practical and religious reasons. The Giza plateau offered plenty of room for building pyramids; but this was not the case with the confined, cliff-bound geography of Thebes and any burials in the surrounding desert were vulnerable to flooding. The pyramid form was associated with the sun god Re, who had been overshadowed by Amun in importance. One of the meanings of Amun's name was the hidden one, which meant that it was now theologically permissible to hide the Pharaoh's tomb by fully separating the mortuary template from the actual burial place. This provided the added advantage that the resting place of the pharaoh could be kept hidden from necropolis robbers. All subsequent pharaohs of the New Kingdom would be buried in rock-cut shaft tombs in the Valley of the Kings.[78]

Mummy

 
The mummified head of Ahmose I at the Luxor Museum.

Ahmose I's mummy was discovered in 1881 within the Deir el-Bahri Cache, located in the hills directly above the Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut. He was interred along with the mummies of other 18th and 19th dynasty leaders Amenhotep I, Thutmose I, Thutmose II, Thutmose III, Ramesses I, Seti I, Ramesses II and Ramesses IX, as well as the 21st dynasty pharaohs Pinedjem I, Pinedjem II and Siamun.[79]

Ahmose I's mummy was unwrapped by Gaston Maspero on June 9, 1886. It was found within a coffin that bore his name in hieroglyphs, and on his bandages his name was again written in hieratic script. While the cedarwood coffin's style dates it squarely to the time of the 18th dynasty, it was neither of royal style nor craftsmanship, and any gilding or inlays may have been stripped in antiquity.[80] He had evidently been moved from his original burial place, re-wrapped and placed within the cache at Deir el-Bahri during the reign of the 21st dynasty priest-king Pinedjem II, whose name also appeared on the mummy's wrappings. Around his neck a garland of Delphinium flowers had been placed. The body bore signs of having been plundered by ancient grave-robbers, his head having been broken off from his body and his nose smashed.[81]

The body was 1.63 m (64.17 in) in height. The mummy had a small face with no defining features, though he had slightly prominent front teeth; this may have been an inherited family trait, as this feature can be seen in some female mummies of the same family, as well as the mummy of his descendant, Thutmose II.[citation needed]

 
Ceremonial Axe in the name of Ahmose I, found in the tomb of queen Ahhotep II. This axe celebrates the victories of Ahmose. It bears the king's titulary, along with images of the king smiting an Asiatic enemy, and prayers for many years of rule. 18th dynasty, from Dra Abu el-Naga. CG 52645 / JE4673 Luxor Museum.

A short description of the mummy by Gaston Maspero sheds further light on familial resemblances:

...he was of medium height, as his body when mummified measured only 5 feet 6 inches (1.68 m) in length, but the development of the neck and chest indicates extraordinary strength. The head is small in proportion to the bust, the forehead low and narrow, the cheek-bones project and the hair is thick and wavy. The face exactly resembles that of Tiûâcrai [Seqenenre Tao] and the likeness alone would proclaim the affinity, even if we were ignorant of the close relationship which united these two Pharaohs.[57]

Initial studies of the mummy were first thought to reveal a man in his 50s,[57] but subsequent examinations have shown that he was instead likely to have been in his mid-30s when he died.[56] The identity of this mummy (Cairo Museum catalog n° 61057) was called into question in 1980 by the published results of Dr. James Harris, a professor of orthodontics, and Egyptologist Edward Wente. Harris had been allowed to take x-rays of all of the supposed royal mummies at the Cairo Museum. While history records Ahmose I as being the son or possibly the grandson of Seqenenre Tao, the craniofacial morphology of the two mummies are quite different. It is also different from that of the female mummy identified as Ahmes-Nefertari, thought to be his sister. These inconsistencies, and the fact that this mummy was not posed with arms crossed over chest, as was the fashion of the period for male royal mummies, led them to conclude that this was likely not a royal mummy, leaving the identity of Ahmose I unknown.[82]

The mummy is now in the Luxor Museum alongside the purported one of Ramesses I, as part of a permanent exhibition called "The Golden Age of the Egyptian Military".[83]

Succession

 
Osiride statue of Amenhotep I, currently housed in the British Museum

Ahmose I was succeeded by his son, Amenhotep I. A minority of scholars have argued that Ahmose had a short co-regency with Amenhotep, potentially lasting up to six years. If there was a co-regency, Amenhotep could not have been made king before Ahmose's 18th regnal year, the earliest year in which Ahmose-ankh, the heir apparent, could have died.[32] There is circumstantial evidence indicating a co-regency may have occurred, although definitive evidence is lacking.[citation needed]

The first piece of evidence consists of three small objects which contain both of their praenomen next to one another: the aforementioned small glass bead, a small feldspar amulet and a broken stele, all of which are written in the proper style for the early 18th dynasty.[69] The last stele said that Amenhotep was "given life eternally", which is an Egyptian idiom meaning that a king is alive, but the name of Ahmose does not have the usual epithet "true of voice" which is given to dead kings.[69] Since praenomen are only assumed upon taking the throne, and assuming that both were in fact alive at the same time, it is indicated that both were reigning at the same time. There is, however, the possibility that Amenhotep I merely wished to associate himself with his beloved father, who reunited Egypt.[citation needed]

Second, Amenhotep I appears to have nearly finished preparations for a sed festival, or even begun celebrating it; but Amenhotep I's reign is usually given only 21 years and a sed festival traditionally cannot be celebrated any earlier than a ruler's 30th year. If Amenhotep I had a significant co-regency with his father, some have argued that he planned to celebrate his Sed Festival on the date he was first crowned instead of the date that he began ruling alone. This would better explain the degree of completion of his Sed Festival preparations at Karnak.[84] There are two contemporary New Kingdom examples of the breaking of this tradition; Hatshepsut celebrated her Heb Sed Festival in her 16th year and Akhenaten celebrated a Sed Festival near the beginning of his 17-year reign.[85]

Third, Ahmose's wife, Ahmose Nefertari, was called both "King's Great Wife" and "King's Mother" in two stelae which were set up at the limestone quarries of Ma`sara in Ahmose's 22nd year. For her to literally be a "King's Mother," Amenhotep would already have to be a king. It is possible that the title was only honorific, as Ahhotep II assumed the title without being the mother of any known king;[86] though there is a possibility that her son Amenemhat was made Amenhotep I's co-regent, but preceded him in death.[32]

Because of this uncertainty, a co-regency is currently impossible to prove or disprove. Both Redford's and Murnane's works on the subject are undecided on the grounds that there is too little conclusive evidence either for or against a coregency. Even if there was one, it would have made no difference to the chronology of the period because in this kind of institution Amenhotep would have begun counting his regnal dates from his first year as sole ruler.[87][88] However, co-regency supporters note that since at least one rebellion had been led against Ahmose during his reign, it would certainly have been logical to crown a successor before one's death to prevent a struggle for the crown.[89]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Proposed dates for Ahmose I's reign: 1570–1546 BC,[3][4] starting 1569 BC,[5] 1569–1545 BC,[6][7] 1552–1526 BC,[8] 1550–1525 BC,[9][10][11][12][13][14][15] starting 1549 BC,[16] 1549–1524 BC,[17] 1539–1515 BC.[18] Radiocarbon studies have yielded the following intervals for Ahmose's date of accession to the throne: 1566–1552 BC with 68% probability, 1570–1544 BC with 95% probability.[19][20] These studies are based archaeological samples to measure fluctuations in radiocarbon activity, specific information on radiocarbon activity in the region of the Nile Valley (anchored by dendrochronology to absolute dates), direct linkages between the dated samples and historical chronology and relative dating information. Samples dated to specific reigns were collected from museum collections and excavation material while certain types of material (notably charcoal and mummified remains) were avoided owing to their susceptibility to contamination.[21]
  2. ^ Pierre Montet, discoverer of the treasure relates that: "Others [objects] were later added to them, things which came from the pharaoh Ahmose, like the axe decorated with a griffin and a likeness of the king slaying a Hyksos, with other axes and daggers".[64]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Gardiner (1964) p. 168.
  2. ^ The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition (2008)
  3. ^ a b c Clayton 2006, p. 100.
  4. ^ Woodward 1996, p. 46.
  5. ^ Murnane 2001, p. 519.
  6. ^ Romanosky 2001, p. 46.
  7. ^ Troy 2001, p. 525.
  8. ^ Grimal 1992, p. 392.
  9. ^ von Beckerath 1997, p. 189.
  10. ^ von Beckerath 1999, p. 286.
  11. ^ Bryan 2000, p. 207.
  12. ^ a b Rice 2001, p. 3.
  13. ^ Hayes 1978, p. 499.
  14. ^ Lehner 2008, p. 9.
  15. ^ Shaw & Nicholson 2008, p. 17.
  16. ^ Ryholt 1997, p. 410.
  17. ^ Dodson & Hilton 2004, p. 290.
  18. ^ Hornung 2012, p. 492.
  19. ^ Ramsey et al. 2010, p. 1556.
  20. ^ Ritner & Moeller 2014, p. 17.
  21. ^ Ramsey et al. 2010, p. 1554.
  22. ^ a b c Leprohon 2013, p. 95.
  23. ^ a b c Wiener and Allen (1998) p. 3.
  24. ^ Ranke, Hermann (1935) Die ägyptischen Personennamen, Glückstadt: Verlag von J. J. Augustin, volume 1, page 12.19
  25. ^ Leprohon 2013, p. 96.
  26. ^ a b Shaw. (2000) p. 199.
  27. ^ a b Grimal 1992, p. 192.
  28. ^ a b Grimal 1992, p. 194.
  29. ^ a b Grimal 1992, p. 190.
  30. ^ Dodson. (1990) p. 91.
  31. ^ Dodson, Aidan; Hilton, Dyan. The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, p. 126. Thames & Hudson, 2004.
  32. ^ a b c Wente (1975) p. 271.
  33. ^ Gordon, Andrew H. A Glass Bead of Ahmose and Amenhotep I. pp. 296–297. Journal of Near Eastern Studies, vol. 41, no. 4, October 1982.
  34. ^ Redford. (1965) p. 28.
  35. ^ a b c d Grimal 1992, p. 193.
  36. ^ Helk, Wolfgang. Schwachstellen der Chronologie-Diskussion pp. 47–49. Göttinger Miszellen, Göttingen, 1983.
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External links

  • Ahmose accessed July 19, 2006.
  • Egyptian Pharaohs: Ahmose I accessed July 19, 2006.
  • accessed July 28, 2006.

ahmose, ancient, egyptian, jꜥḥ, reconstructed, ʔaʕaħ, maːsjə, egyptological, pronunciation, ahmose, sometimes, written, amosis, aahmes, meaning, moon, born, pharaoh, founder, eighteenth, dynasty, egypt, classified, first, dynasty, kingdom, egypt, which, ancien. Ahmose I Ancient Egyptian jꜥḥ ms j w reconstructed ʔaʕaħ maːsje MK Egyptological pronunciation Ahmose sometimes written as Amosis or Aahmes meaning Iah the Moon is born 24 25 was a pharaoh and founder of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt classified as the first dynasty of the New Kingdom of Egypt the era in which ancient Egypt achieved the peak of its power He was a member of the Theban royal house the son of pharaoh Seqenenre Tao and nephew of the last pharaoh of the Seventeenth dynasty Kamose During the reign of his father or grandfather Thebes rebelled against the Hyksos the rulers of Lower Egypt When he was seven years old his father was killed 26 and he was about ten when his brother died of unknown causes after reigning only three years Ahmose I assumed the throne after the death of his brother 27 and upon coronation became known as nb pḥtj rꜥ The Lord of Strength is Ra Ahmose IAmosis according to Manetho 1 also Amasis 2 A fragmentary statue of Ahmose I Metropolitan Museum of Art PharaohReignc 25 years in the mid 16th century BC note 1 Egyptian chronology disputed 25 years and 4 months in ManethoPredecessorKamose Upper Egypt Khamudi Lower Egypt SuccessorAmenhotep IRoyal titularyConsortAhmose Nefertari God s Wife of Amun Ahmose Sitkamose Ahmose Henuttamehu Kasmut ThenthapiChildrenAhmose MeritamunAhmose Sitamun SiamunAhmose ankh Amenhotep IRamoseMutnofretFatherSeqenenre TaoMotherAhhotep IDiedc 1525 BCBurialMummy found in Deir el Bahri cache but was likely originally buried in AbydosMonumentsPalace at Avaris Temple of Amun at Karnak Temple of Montu at HermonthisDynasty18th DynastyDuring his reign Ahmose completed the conquest and expulsion of the Hyksos from the Nile Delta restored Theban rule over the whole of Egypt and successfully reasserted Egyptian power in its formerly subject territories of Nubia and Canaan 27 He then reorganized the administration of the country reopened quarries mines and trade routes and began massive construction projects of a type that had not been undertaken since the time of the Middle Kingdom This building program culminated in the construction of the last pyramid built by native Egyptian rulers Ahmose s reign laid the foundations for the New Kingdom under which Egyptian power reached its peak His reign is usually dated to the mid 16th century BC Contents 1 Family 2 Dates and length of reign 3 Campaigns 3 1 Conquest of the Hyksos 3 2 Foreign campaigns 4 Art and monumental constructions 4 1 Pyramid 5 Mummy 6 Succession 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Bibliography 10 Sources 11 External linksFamily EditFurther information Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt family tree Ahmose descended from the Theban Seventeenth Dynasty His grandfather and grandmother Senakhtenre Ahmose and Tetisheri had at least twelve children including Seqenenre Tao and Ahhotep I The brother and sister according to the tradition of Egyptian queens married and had sons Kamose and Ahmose I as well as several daughters 28 Ahmose I followed in the tradition of his father and married several of his sisters making Ahmose Nefertari his chief wife 29 They had several children including daughters Meritamun B Sitamun A and sons Siamun A Ahmose ankh 30 Amenhotep I and Ramose A 31 the A and B designations after the names are a convention used by Egyptologists to distinguish between royal children and wives that otherwise have the same name They may also have been the parents of Mutnofret who would become the wife of later successor Thutmose I Ahmose ankh was Ahmose s heir apparent but he preceded his father in death sometime between Ahmose s 17th and 22nd regnal year 32 Ahmose was succeeded instead by his eldest surviving son Amenhotep I with whom he might have shared a short coregency 33 There was no distinct break in the line of the royal family between the 17th and 18th dynasties The historian Manetho writing much later during the Ptolemaic Kingdom considered the final expulsion of the Hyksos after nearly a century and the restoration of native Egyptian rule over the whole country a significant enough event to warrant the start of a new dynasty 34 Dates and length of reign EditAhmose s reign can be fairly accurately dated using the Heliacal rise of Sirius in his successor s reign but because of disputes over from where the observation was made he has been assigned a reign from 1570 1546 BC 1560 1537 BC 1551 1527 BC and 1539 1514 BC by various sources 35 36 37 Manetho supposedly gives Ahmose a reign of 25 years and 4 months 35 but as Manetho called the first ruler of his dynasty Tethmosis he probably intended someone else This figure is seemingly supported by a Year 22 inscription from his reign at the stone quarries of Tura 38 A medical examination of his mummy indicates that he died when he was about thirty five supporting a 25 year reign if he came to the throne at the age of 10 35 The radiocarbon date range for the start of his reign is 1570 1544 BC the mean point of which is 1557 BC 39 Alternative dates for his reign 1194 to 1170 BC were suggested by David Rohl 40 but these were rejected by the majority of Egyptologists 41 A radiocarbon study published in 2010 suggested minor revisions in the traditional chronology but did not support Rohl s theory 39 Campaigns Edit Dagger bearing the name Ahmose I on display at the Royal Ontario Museum Toronto Cartouche of Ahmose I on the dagger pommel Royal Ontario Museum Toronto The conflict between the local kings of Thebes and the Hyksos king Apepi had started during the reign of Ahmose s father Seqenenre Tao and would be concluded after almost 30 years of intermittent conflict and war during his own reign Seqenenre Tao was possibly killed in a battle against the Hyksos as his much wounded mummy gruesomely suggests and his successor Kamose likely Ahmose s elder brother is known to have attacked and raided the lands around the Hyksos capital Avaris modern Tell el Dab a 26 Kamose evidently had a short reign as his highest attested regnal year is year 3 and was succeeded by Ahmose I 42 Apepi died around a decade later 43 Ahmose ascended the throne when he was still a child so his mother Ahhotep reigned as regent until he was of age Judging by some of the descriptions of her regal roles while in power including the general honorific carer for Egypt she effectively consolidated the Theban power base in the years before Ahmose assumed full control If in fact Apepi II was a successor to Apepi I then he is thought to have remained bottled up in the delta during Ahhotep s regency because his name does not appear on any monuments or objects south of Bubastis 28 Conquest of the Hyksos Edit Ahmose began the conquest of Lower Egypt held by the Hyksos starting around the 11th year of Khamudi s reign but the sequence of events is not universally agreed upon 44 Analyzing the events of the conquest prior to the siege of the Hyksos capital of Avaris is extremely difficult Almost everything known comes from a brief but invaluable military commentary on the back of the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus consisting of brief diary entries 45 one of which reads 46 Regnal year 11 second month of shomu Heliopolis was entered First month of akhet day 23 this southern prince broke into Tjaru 46 While in the past this regnal year date was assumed to refer to Ahmose it is today believed instead to refer to Ahmose s Hyksos opponent Khamudi since the Rhind papyrus document refers to Ahmose by the inferior title of Prince of the South rather than king or pharaoh as a Theban supporter of Ahmose surely would have called him 47 Anthony Spalinger in a JNES 60 2001 book review of Kim Ryholt s 1997 book The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c 1800 1550 BC notes that Ryholt s translation of the middle portion of the Rhind text chronicling Ahmose s invasion of the Delta reads instead as the 1st month of Akhet 23rd day He of the South i e Ahmose strikes against Sile 48 Spalinger stresses in his review that he does not question Ryholt s translation of the Rhind text but instead asks whether Copper axe blade inscribed with the titulary of pharaoh Ahmose I Ashmolean Museum it is reasonable to expect a Theban oriented text to describe its Pharaoh in this manner For if the date refers to Ahmose then the scribe must have been an adherent of that ruler To me the very indirect reference to Ahmose it must be Ahmose ought to indicate a supporter of the Hyksos dynasty hence the regnal years should refer to this monarch and not the Theban 49 The Rhind Papyrus illustrates some of Ahmose s military strategy when attacking the Delta Entering Heliopolis in July he moved down the eastern delta to take Tjaru the major border fortification on the Horus Road the road from Egypt to Canaan in October totally avoiding Avaris In taking Tjaru 46 he cut off all traffic between Canaan and Avaris This indicates he was planning a blockade of Avaris isolating the Hyksos capital from help or supplies coming from Canaan 50 Records of the latter part of the campaign were discovered on the tomb walls of a participating soldier Ahmose son of Ebana These records indicate that Ahmose I led three attacks against Avaris the Hyksos capital but also had to quell a small rebellion further south in Egypt After this in the fourth attack he conquered the city 51 He completed his victory over the Hyksos by conquering their stronghold Sharuhen near Gaza after a three year siege 35 52 Ahmose would have conquered Avaris by the 18th or 19th year of his reign at the very latest This is suggested by a graffito in the quarry at Tura whereby oxen from Canaan were used at the opening of the quarry in Ahmose s regnal year 22 53 Since the cattle would probably have been imported after Ahmose s siege of the town of Sharuhen which followed the fall of Avaris this means that the reign of Khamudi must have terminated by Year 18 or 19 of Ahmose s 25 year reign at the very latest 53 Foreign campaigns Edit After defeating the Hyksos Ahmose began campaigning in Syria and Nubia A campaign during his 22nd year reached Djahy in the Levant and perhaps as far as the Euphrates although the later Pharaoh Thutmose I is usually credited with being the first to campaign that far Ahmose did however reach at least as far as Kedem thought to be near Byblos according to an ostracon in the tomb of his wife Ahmose Nefertari 54 Details on this particular campaign are scarce as the source of most of the information Ahmose son of Ebana served in the Egyptian navy and did not take part in this land expedition However it can be inferred from archaeological surveys of southern Canaan that during the late 16th century BC Ahmose and his immediate successors intended only to break the power of the Hyksos by destroying their cities and not to conquer Canaan Many sites there were completely laid waste and not rebuilt during this period something a Pharaoh bent on conquest and tribute would not be likely to do 55 Ahmose I s campaigns in Nubia are better documented Soon after the first Nubian campaign a Nubian named Aata rebelled against Ahmose but was crushed After this attempt an anti Theban Egyptian named Tetian gathered many rebels in Nubia but he too was defeated Ahmose restored Egyptian rule over Nubia which was controlled from a new administrative center established at Buhen 29 When re establishing the national government Ahmose appears to have rewarded various local princes who supported his cause and that of his dynastic predecessors 56 Art and monumental constructions Edit Fragments of an armband of Ahmose I Musee du Louvre With the re unification of Upper and Lower Egypt under Ahmose a renewal of royal support for the arts and monumental construction occurred Ahmose reportedly devoted a tenth of all the productive output towards the service of the traditional gods 57 reviving massive monumental constructions as well as the arts However as the defeat of the Hyksos occurred relatively late in Ahmose s reign his subsequent building program likely lasted no more than seven years 58 and much of what was started was probably finished by his son and successor Amenhotep I 59 Work from Ahmose s reign is made of much finer material than anything from the Second Intermediate Period though the craftsmanship from his reign does not always match the best work from either the Old or Middle Kingdoms 12 With the Delta and Nubia under Egyptian control once more access was gained to resources not available in Upper Egypt Gold and silver were received from Nubia Lapis Lazuli from distant parts of central Asia cedar from Byblos 60 and in the Sinai the Serabit el Khadim turquoise mines were reopened 61 Although the exact nature of the relationship between Egypt and Crete is uncertain at least some Minoan designs have been found on objects from this period and Egypt considered the Aegean to be part of its empire 60 Ahmose reopened the Tura limestone quarries to provide stone for monuments and used Asiatic cattle from Phoenicia to haul the stone according to his quarry inscription 62 Pharaoh Ahmose I slaying a probable Hyksos Detail of a ceremonial axe in the name of Ahmose I treasure of Queen Ahhotep II Luxor Museum 63 note 2 65 The art during Ahmose I s reign was similar to the Middle Kingdom royal Theban style 66 and stelae from this period were once more of the same quality 61 This reflects a possibly natural conservative tendency to revive fashions from the pre Hyksos era Despite this only three positively identified statuary images of Ahmose I survive a single shabti kept at the British Museum presumably from his tomb which has never been positively located and two life size statues one of which resides in the New York Metropolitan Museum the other in the Khartoum Museum 66 All display slightly bulging eyes a feature also present on selected stelae depicting the pharaoh Based on style a small limestone sphinx that resides at the National Museum of Scotland Edinburgh has also been tentatively identified as representing Ahmose I 67 The art of glass making is thought to have developed during Ahmose s reign The oldest samples of glass appear to have been defective pieces of faience but intentional crafting of glass did not occur until the beginning of the 18th dynasty 68 One of the earliest glass beads found contains the names of both Ahmose and Amenhotep I written in a style dated to about the time of their reigns 69 If glassmaking was developed no earlier than Ahmose s reign and the first objects are dated to no later than his successor s reign it is quite likely that it was one of his subjects who developed the craft 69 The jewels and ceremonial weaponry found in the burial of Queen Ahhotep including an axe whose blade depicts Ahmose I striking down a Hyksos soldier and the golden flies awarded to the Queen for her supportive role against the Hyksos Ahmose resumed large construction projects like those before the Second Intermediate Period In the south of the country he began constructing temples mostly built of brick one of them in the Nubian town of Buhen In Upper Egypt he made additions to the existing temple of Amun at Karnak and to the temple of Montu at Armant 61 According to an inscription at Tura 62 he used white limestone to build a temple to Ptah and the southern harem of Amun but did not finish either project 61 He built a cenotaph for his grandmother Queen Tetisheri at Abydos 61 Excavations at the site of Avaris by Manfred Bietak have shown that Ahmose had a palace constructed on the site of the former Hyksos capital city s fortifications Bietak found fragmentary Minoan style remains of the frescoes that once covered the walls of the palace there has subsequently been much speculation as to what role this Aegean civilization may have played in terms of trade and in the arts 70 Under Ahmose s reign the city of Thebes became the capital for the whole of Egypt as it had been under the 11th Dynasty in the early Middle Kingdom It also became the center for a newly established professional civil service where there was a greater demand for scribes and the literate as the royal archives began to fill with accounts and reports 71 Having Thebes as the capital was probably a strategic choice as it was located at the center of the country the logical conclusion from having had to fight the Hyksos in the north as well as the Nubians to the south Any future opposition at either border could be met easily 57 Perhaps the most important shift was a religious one Thebes effectively became the religious as well as the political center of the country its local god Amun credited with inspiring Ahmose in his victories over the Hyksos The importance of the temple complex at Karnak on the east bank of the Nile north of Thebes grew and the importance of the previous cult of Ra based in Heliopolis diminished 72 Several stelae detailing the work done by Ahmose were found at Karnak two of which depict him as a benefactor to the temple In one of these stelae known as the Tempest Stele he claims to have rebuilt the pyramids of his predecessors at Thebes that had been destroyed by a major storm 73 The Thera eruption in the Aegean has been implicated by some scholars as the source of the damages described in the Tempest Stele 74 Pyramid Edit Main article Pyramid of Ahmose The ruins of the Pyramid of Ahmose The remains of Ahmose s pyramid in Abydos were discovered in 1899 and identified as his in 1902 75 Most of its outer casing stones had been robbed for use in other building projects over the years and the mound of rubble upon which it was built has collapsed However two rows of intact casing stones were found by Arthur Mace who estimated its steep slope as about 60 degrees based on the evidence of the limestone casing compare to the less acute 51 degrees of the Great Pyramid of Giza 76 Adjacent to the main pyramid temple and to its east Harvey has identified two temples constructed by Ahmose s queen Ahmose Nefertary One of these structures also bears bricks stamped with the name of Chief Treasurer Neferperet the official responsible for re opening the stone quarries at el Ma asara Tura in Ahmose s year 22 A third larger temple Temple C is similar to the pyramid temple in form and scale but its stamped bricks and details of decoration reinforce that it was a cult place for Ahmose Nefertary citation needed The axis of the pyramid complex may be associated with a series of monuments strung out along a kilometer of desert Along this axis are several key structures 1 a large pyramid dedicated to his grandmother Tetisheri which contained a stele depicting Ahmose providing offerings to her 2 a rockcut underground complex which may either have served as a token representation of an Osirian underworld or as an actual royal tomb 77 and 3 a terraced temple built against the high cliffs featuring massive stone and brick terraces These elements reflect in general a similar plan undertaken for the cenotaph of Senwosret III and in general its construction contains elements which reflect the style of both Old and Middle Kingdom pyramid complexes 77 Dagger of Ahmose I Luxor Museum There is some dispute as to if this pyramid was Ahmose s burial place or if it was a cenotaph Although earlier explorers Mace and Currelly were unable to locate any internal chambers it is unlikely that a burial chamber would have been located in the midst of the pyramid s rubble core In the absence of any mention of a tomb of King Ahmose in the tomb robbery accounts of the Abbott Papyrus and in the absence of any likely candidate for the king s tomb at Thebes it is possible that the king was interred at Abydos as suggested by Harvey Certainly the great number of cult structures located at the base of the pyramid located in recent years as well as the presence at the base of the pyramid of a cemetery used by priests of Ahmose s cult argue for the importance of the king s Abydos cult However other Egyptologists believe that the pyramid was constructed like Tetisheri s pyramid at Abydos as a cenotaph and that Ahmose may have originally been buried in the southern part of Dra Abu el Naga with the rest of the late 17th and early 18th Dynasties 61 This pyramid was the last pyramid ever built as part of a mortuary complex in Egypt The pyramid would be abandoned by subsequent pharaohs of the New Kingdom for both practical and religious reasons The Giza plateau offered plenty of room for building pyramids but this was not the case with the confined cliff bound geography of Thebes and any burials in the surrounding desert were vulnerable to flooding The pyramid form was associated with the sun god Re who had been overshadowed by Amun in importance One of the meanings of Amun s name was the hidden one which meant that it was now theologically permissible to hide the Pharaoh s tomb by fully separating the mortuary template from the actual burial place This provided the added advantage that the resting place of the pharaoh could be kept hidden from necropolis robbers All subsequent pharaohs of the New Kingdom would be buried in rock cut shaft tombs in the Valley of the Kings 78 Mummy Edit The mummified head of Ahmose I at the Luxor Museum Ahmose I s mummy was discovered in 1881 within the Deir el Bahri Cache located in the hills directly above the Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut He was interred along with the mummies of other 18th and 19th dynasty leaders Amenhotep I Thutmose I Thutmose II Thutmose III Ramesses I Seti I Ramesses II and Ramesses IX as well as the 21st dynasty pharaohs Pinedjem I Pinedjem II and Siamun 79 Ahmose I s mummy was unwrapped by Gaston Maspero on June 9 1886 It was found within a coffin that bore his name in hieroglyphs and on his bandages his name was again written in hieratic script While the cedarwood coffin s style dates it squarely to the time of the 18th dynasty it was neither of royal style nor craftsmanship and any gilding or inlays may have been stripped in antiquity 80 He had evidently been moved from his original burial place re wrapped and placed within the cache at Deir el Bahri during the reign of the 21st dynasty priest king Pinedjem II whose name also appeared on the mummy s wrappings Around his neck a garland of Delphinium flowers had been placed The body bore signs of having been plundered by ancient grave robbers his head having been broken off from his body and his nose smashed 81 The body was 1 63 m 64 17 in in height The mummy had a small face with no defining features though he had slightly prominent front teeth this may have been an inherited family trait as this feature can be seen in some female mummies of the same family as well as the mummy of his descendant Thutmose II citation needed Ceremonial Axe in the name of Ahmose I found in the tomb of queen Ahhotep II This axe celebrates the victories of Ahmose It bears the king s titulary along with images of the king smiting an Asiatic enemy and prayers for many years of rule 18th dynasty from Dra Abu el Naga CG 52645 JE4673 Luxor Museum A short description of the mummy by Gaston Maspero sheds further light on familial resemblances he was of medium height as his body when mummified measured only 5 feet 6 inches 1 68 m in length but the development of the neck and chest indicates extraordinary strength The head is small in proportion to the bust the forehead low and narrow the cheek bones project and the hair is thick and wavy The face exactly resembles that of Tiuacrai Seqenenre Tao and the likeness alone would proclaim the affinity even if we were ignorant of the close relationship which united these two Pharaohs 57 Initial studies of the mummy were first thought to reveal a man in his 50s 57 but subsequent examinations have shown that he was instead likely to have been in his mid 30s when he died 56 The identity of this mummy Cairo Museum catalog n 61057 was called into question in 1980 by the published results of Dr James Harris a professor of orthodontics and Egyptologist Edward Wente Harris had been allowed to take x rays of all of the supposed royal mummies at the Cairo Museum While history records Ahmose I as being the son or possibly the grandson of Seqenenre Tao the craniofacial morphology of the two mummies are quite different It is also different from that of the female mummy identified as Ahmes Nefertari thought to be his sister These inconsistencies and the fact that this mummy was not posed with arms crossed over chest as was the fashion of the period for male royal mummies led them to conclude that this was likely not a royal mummy leaving the identity of Ahmose I unknown 82 The mummy is now in the Luxor Museum alongside the purported one of Ramesses I as part of a permanent exhibition called The Golden Age of the Egyptian Military 83 Succession Edit Osiride statue of Amenhotep I currently housed in the British Museum Ahmose I was succeeded by his son Amenhotep I A minority of scholars have argued that Ahmose had a short co regency with Amenhotep potentially lasting up to six years If there was a co regency Amenhotep could not have been made king before Ahmose s 18th regnal year the earliest year in which Ahmose ankh the heir apparent could have died 32 There is circumstantial evidence indicating a co regency may have occurred although definitive evidence is lacking citation needed The first piece of evidence consists of three small objects which contain both of their praenomen next to one another the aforementioned small glass bead a small feldspar amulet and a broken stele all of which are written in the proper style for the early 18th dynasty 69 The last stele said that Amenhotep was given life eternally which is an Egyptian idiom meaning that a king is alive but the name of Ahmose does not have the usual epithet true of voice which is given to dead kings 69 Since praenomen are only assumed upon taking the throne and assuming that both were in fact alive at the same time it is indicated that both were reigning at the same time There is however the possibility that Amenhotep I merely wished to associate himself with his beloved father who reunited Egypt citation needed Second Amenhotep I appears to have nearly finished preparations for a sed festival or even begun celebrating it but Amenhotep I s reign is usually given only 21 years and a sed festival traditionally cannot be celebrated any earlier than a ruler s 30th year If Amenhotep I had a significant co regency with his father some have argued that he planned to celebrate his Sed Festival on the date he was first crowned instead of the date that he began ruling alone This would better explain the degree of completion of his Sed Festival preparations at Karnak 84 There are two contemporary New Kingdom examples of the breaking of this tradition Hatshepsut celebrated her Heb Sed Festival in her 16th year and Akhenaten celebrated a Sed Festival near the beginning of his 17 year reign 85 Third Ahmose s wife Ahmose Nefertari was called both King s Great Wife and King s Mother in two stelae which were set up at the limestone quarries of Ma sara in Ahmose s 22nd year For her to literally be a King s Mother Amenhotep would already have to be a king It is possible that the title was only honorific as Ahhotep II assumed the title without being the mother of any known king 86 though there is a possibility that her son Amenemhat was made Amenhotep I s co regent but preceded him in death 32 Because of this uncertainty a co regency is currently impossible to prove or disprove Both Redford s and Murnane s works on the subject are undecided on the grounds that there is too little conclusive evidence either for or against a coregency Even if there was one it would have made no difference to the chronology of the period because in this kind of institution Amenhotep would have begun counting his regnal dates from his first year as sole ruler 87 88 However co regency supporters note that since at least one rebellion had been led against Ahmose during his reign it would certainly have been logical to crown a successor before one s death to prevent a struggle for the crown 89 See also EditList of PharaohsNotes Edit Proposed dates for Ahmose I s reign 1570 1546 BC 3 4 starting 1569 BC 5 1569 1545 BC 6 7 1552 1526 BC 8 1550 1525 BC 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 starting 1549 BC 16 1549 1524 BC 17 1539 1515 BC 18 Radiocarbon studies have yielded the following intervals for Ahmose s date of accession to the throne 1566 1552 BC with 68 probability 1570 1544 BC with 95 probability 19 20 These studies are based archaeological samples to measure fluctuations in radiocarbon activity specific information on radiocarbon activity in the region of the Nile Valley anchored by dendrochronology to absolute dates direct linkages between the dated samples and historical chronology and relative dating information Samples dated to specific reigns were collected from museum collections and excavation material while certain types of material notably charcoal and mummified remains were avoided owing to their susceptibility to contamination 21 Pierre Montet discoverer of the treasure relates that Others objects were later added to them things which came from the pharaoh Ahmose like the axe decorated with a griffin and a likeness of the king slaying a Hyksos with other axes and daggers 64 References EditCitations Edit Gardiner 1964 p 168 The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition 2008 a b c Clayton 2006 p 100 Woodward 1996 p 46 Murnane 2001 p 519 Romanosky 2001 p 46 Troy 2001 p 525 Grimal 1992 p 392 von Beckerath 1997 p 189 von Beckerath 1999 p 286 Bryan 2000 p 207 a b Rice 2001 p 3 Hayes 1978 p 499 Lehner 2008 p 9 Shaw amp Nicholson 2008 p 17 Ryholt 1997 p 410 Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 290 Hornung 2012 p 492 Ramsey et al 2010 p 1556 Ritner amp Moeller 2014 p 17 Ramsey et al 2010 p 1554 a b c Leprohon 2013 p 95 a b c Wiener and Allen 1998 p 3 Ranke Hermann 1935 Die agyptischen Personennamen Gluckstadt Verlag von J J Augustin volume 1 page 12 19 Leprohon 2013 p 96 a b Shaw 2000 p 199 a b Grimal 1992 p 192 a b Grimal 1992 p 194 a b Grimal 1992 p 190 Dodson 1990 p 91 Dodson Aidan Hilton Dyan The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt p 126 Thames amp Hudson 2004 a b c Wente 1975 p 271 Gordon Andrew H A Glass Bead of Ahmose and Amenhotep I pp 296 297 Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 41 no 4 October 1982 Redford 1965 p 28 a b c d Grimal 1992 p 193 Helk Wolfgang Schwachstellen der Chronologie Diskussion pp 47 49 Gottinger Miszellen Gottingen 1983 Encyclopaedia Britannica Ahmose I Accomplishments amp Facts Britannica com Archived July 7 2015 at the Wayback Machine Breasted James Henry Ancient Records of Egypt Vol II p 12 University of Chicago Press Chicago 1906 a b Christopher Bronk Ramsey et al Radiocarbon Based Chronology for Dynastic Egypt Archived January 26 2021 at the Wayback Machine Science June 18 2010 Vol 328 no 5985 pp 1554 1557 David Rohl Pharaohs and Kings 1995 ISBN 0 609 80130 9 Bennett Chris Temporal Fugues Journal of Ancient and Medieval Studies vol 13 1996 Dodson Aidan Kamose Wiley Online Library 2012 Grimal 1992 p 189 Shaw 2000 p 203 Spalinger Anthony J War in Ancient Egypt The New Kingdom p 23 Blackwell Publishing 2005 a b c Redford 1992 p 71 Thomas Schneider The Relative Chronology of the Middle Kingdom and the Hyksos Period Dyns 12 17 in Erik Hornung Rolf Krauss amp David Warburton editors Ancient Egyptian Chronology Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill 2006 p 195 Anthony Spalinger book review Vol 60 No 4 October 2001 p 299 Spalinger JNES 60 op cit p 299 Ahram 2005 Accessed August 23 2006 Breasted James Henry Ancient Records of Egypt Vol II pp 7 8 University of Chicago Press Chicago 1906 Redford 1967 pp 46 49 a b Redford 1992 p 195 Weinstein James M The Egyptian Empire in Palestine A Reassessment p 6 Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research n 241 Winter 1981 Weinstein James M The Egyptian Empire in Palestine A Reassessment p 7 Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research n 241 Winter 1981 a b Shaw and Nicholson 1995 a b c d Maspero Gaston History Of Egypt Chaldaea Syria Babylonia and Assyria Archived September 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Volume 4 of 12 Project Gutenberg EBook Release Date December 16 2005 EBook 17324 Shaw 2000 p 209 Shaw 2000 p 213 a b Catalogue General 34001 Egyptian Museum Cairo a b c d e f Grimal 1992 p 200 a b Quarry Inauguration Archived June 5 2010 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 28 2006 Daressy George 1906 Annales du Service des antiquites de l Egypte Le Caire Impr de l Institut francais d archeologie orientale p 117 Montet 1968 p 80 Morgan Lyvia 2010 AN AEGEAN GRIFFIN IN EGYPT THE HUNT FRIEZE AT TELL EL DABcA Agypten und Levante Egypt and the Levant 20 308 ISSN 1015 5104 JSTOR 23789943 a b Edna R Russman et al Eternal Egypt Masterworks of Ancient Art from the British Museum pp 210 211 Russman Edna A Art in Transition The Rise of the Eighteenth Dynasty and the Emergence of the Thutmoside Style in Sculpture and Relief Hatshepsut From Queen to Pharaoh p 24 25 The Metropolitan Museum of Art 2005 ISBN 1 58839 173 6 Cooney J D Glass Sculpture in Ancient Egypt Journal of Glass Studies 2 1960 11 a b c d Gordon Andrew H A Glass Bead of Ahmose and Amenhotep I p 296 Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 41 no 4 October 1982 Shaw 2000 p 208 Tyldesley Joyce Egypt s Golden Empire The Age of the New Kingdom pp 18 19 Headline Book Publishing Ltd 2001 Tyldesley Joyce The Private Lives of the Pharaohs p 100 Channel 4 Books 2004 Shaw 2000 p 210 Ritner amp Moeller 2014 pp 1 19 Egyptian Pharaohs Ahmose I Archived September 7 2006 at the Wayback Machine accessed July 19 2006 Lehner Mark The Complete Pyramids p 190 Thames amp Hudson Ltd 1997 a b Lehner Mark The Complete Pyramids p 191 Thames amp Hudson Ltd 1997 Tyldesley Joyce The Private Lives of the Pharaohs p 101 Channel 4 Books 2004 Aston David TT 358 TT 320 and KV 39 Three early Eighteenth Dynasty Queen s tombs in the vicinity of Deir el Bahari p 24 Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean 2015 Forbes Dennis C Tombs Treasures Mummies Seven Great Discoveries of Egyptian Archaeology p 614 KMT Communications Inc 1998 Smith G Elliot The Royal Mummies pp 15 17 Duckworth 2000 reprint Forbes Dennis C Tombs Treasures Mummies Seven Great Discoveries of Egyptian Archaeology p 699 KMT Communications Inc 1998 Bickerstaff Dylan Examining the Mystery of the Niagara Falls Mummy KMT p 31 Vol 17 Number 4 Winter 2006 07 Wente 1975 p 272 Ancient Egypt Archived November 12 2019 at the Wayback Machine Gordon Andrew H A Glass Bead of Ahmose and Amenhotep I p 297 Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 41 no 4 October 1982 Redford 1967 p 51 Murnane William J Ancient Egyptian Coregencies Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization N 40 p 114 The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago 1977 Gordon Andrew H A Glass Bead of Ahmose and Amenhotep I JNES 41 no 4 October 1982 p 297 Bibliography Edit Amasis I The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition 2008 Archived from the original on October 6 2010 Retrieved August 13 2010 Bryan Betsy M 2000 The New Kingdom c 1550 1352 BC In Shaw Ian ed The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt Oxford University Press pp 207 264 ISBN 978 0 19 815034 3 Clayton Peter 2006 Chronicle of the Pharaohs New York Thames and Hudson Ltd ISBN 978 0 500 28628 9 Dodson Aidan 1990 Crown Prince Djhutmose and the Royal Sons of the Eighteenth Dynasty The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 76 87 96 doi 10 2307 3822009 JSTOR 3822009 Dodson Aidan Hilton Dyan 2004 The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05128 3 El Aref Nevine King of the Wild Frontier Al Ahram Archived from the original on July 31 2010 Retrieved August 13 2010 Gardiner Alan 1964 Egypt of the Pharaohs Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 500267 6 Grimal Nicolas 1992 A History of Ancient Egypt Translated by Ian Shaw Oxford Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 631 19396 8 Hayes William 1978 The Scepter of Egypt A Background for the Study of the Egyptian Antiquities in The Metropolitan Museum of Art Vol 2 The Hyksos Period and the New Kingdom 1675 1080 B C New York Metropolitan Museum of Art OCLC 7427345 Hornung Erik Krauss Rolf Warburton David eds 2012 Ancient Egyptian Chronology Handbook of Oriental Studies Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 11385 5 ISSN 0169 9423 Lehner Mark 2008 The Complete Pyramids London Thames amp Hudson Ltd ISBN 978 0 500 05084 2 Leprohon Ronald J 2013 The Great Name Ancient Egyptian Royal Titulary SBL Press ISBN 978 1 58983 736 2 Retrieved October 18 2022 Montet Pierre 1968 Lives of the pharaohs London Spring Books ISBN 978 0 60 035452 9 Murnane William J 2001 New Kingdom In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 519 525 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Ramsey Christopher Bronk Dee Michael W Rowland Joanne M Higham Thomas F G Harris Stephen A Brock Fiona Quiles Anita Wild Eva M Marcus Ezra S Shortland Andrew J 2010 Radiocarbon Based Chronology for Dynastic Egypt Science New Series American Association for the Advancement of Science 328 5985 1554 1557 Bibcode 2010Sci 328 1554R doi 10 1126 science 1189395 JSTOR 40656429 PMID 20558717 S2CID 206526496 Redford Donald 1992 Egypt Canaan and Israel in Ancient Times Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00086 2 Redford Donald 1967 History and Chronology of the 18th Dynasty of Egypt Seven Studies University of Toronto Press Rice Michael 2001 Who s Who in Ancient Egypt London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 15449 9 Ritner Robert K Moeller Nadine 2014 The Ahmose Tempest Stela Thera and Comparative Chronology Journal of Near Eastern Studies 73 1 1 19 JSTOR 675069 Romanosky Eugene 2001 Ahmose In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 1 Oxford Oxford University Press p 46 ISBN 978 0 19 513821 4 Ryholt Kim 1997 The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c 1800 1550 B C CNI publications 20 Carsten Niebuhr Institute of Near Eastern Studies University of Copenhagen Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 978 87 7289 421 8 Shaw Ian 2000 The Oxford history of ancient Egypt Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 280458 7 Shaw Ian Nicholson Paul T 2008 The Bristish Museum dictionary of ancient Egypt London British Museum Press ISBN 978 0 71 411980 9 Troy Lana 2001 New Kingdom In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 525 531 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 von Beckerath Jurgen 1997 Chronologie des pharaonischen Agypten die Zeitbestimmung der agyptischen Geschichte von der Vorzeit bis 332 v Chr Munchner agyptologische Studien in German Vol 46 Mainz am Rhein Philipp von Zabern ISBN 978 3 8053 2310 9 von Beckerath Jurgen 1999 Handbuch der agyptischen Konigsnamen Munchner agyptologische Studien in German Mainz Philip von Zabern ISBN 978 3 8053 2591 2 Wente Edward F 1975 Thutmose III s Accession and the Beginning of the New Kingdom Journal of Near Eastern Studies 57 1 265 272 doi 10 1086 372429 S2CID 161597223 Wiener Malcolm H Allen James P 1998 Separate Lives The Ahmose Tempest Stela and the Thera Eruption Journal of Near Eastern Studies 57 1 1 28 doi 10 1086 468596 S2CID 162153296 Woodward Scott 1996 Genealogy of New Kingdom Pharaohs and Queens Archaeology Archaeological Institute of America 49 5 45 47 JSTOR 41771185 Sources EditAston David TT 358 TT 320 and KV 39 Three early Eighteenth Dynasty Queen s tombs in the vicinity of Deir el Bahari Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean 2015 Bennett Chris Temporal Fugues Journal of Ancient and Medieval Studies vol 13 1996 Breasted James Henry Ancient Records of Egypt Vol II University of Chicago Press Chicago 1906 ISBN 90 04 12989 8 Catalogue General 34001 Egyptian Museum Cairo Clayton Peter Chronicle of the Pharaohs Thames and Hudson Ltd paperback 2006 Cooney J D Glass Sculpture in Ancient Egypt Journal of Glass Studies 2 vol 11 1960 Dodson Aidan Crown Prince Djhutmose and the Royal Sons of the Eighteenth Dynasty The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology vol 76 1990 Dodson Aidan Dyan Hilton The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt Thames amp Hudson 2004 ISBN 0 500 05128 3 Dodson Aidan Kamose Wiley Online Library 2012 Edna R Russman et al Eternal Egypt Masterworks of Ancient Art from the British Museum 2001 ISBN 0 520 23086 8 Gardiner Alan Sir Egypt of the Pharaohs Oxford University Press 1964 ISBN 0 19 500267 9 Gordon Andrew H A Glass Bead of Ahmose and Amenhotep I Journal of Near Eastern Studies vol 41 no 4 October 1982 Grimal Nicolas A History of Ancient Egypt Librairie Artheme Fayard 1988 ISBN 90 04 12989 8 Helk Wolfgang Schwachstellen der Chronologie Diskussion Gottinger Miszellen Gottingen 1983 Lehner Mark The Complete Pyramids Thames amp Hudson Ltd 1997 ISBN 0 500 05084 8 Maspero Gaston History Of Egypt Chaldaea Syria Babylonia and Assyria Volume 4 of 12 Project Gutenberg EBook Release Date December 16 2005 EBook 17324 1 Archived September 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Murnane William J Ancient Egyptian Coregencies Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization No 40 The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago 1977 Redford Donald B Egypt Canaan and Israel in Ancient Times Princeton University Press Princeton NJ 1992 ISBN 0 691 00086 7 Redford Donald B History and Chronology of the 18th Dynasty of Egypt Seven Studies University of Toronto Press 1967 Shaw Ian The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 0 19 815034 2 Smith G Elliot The Royal Mummies Gerald Duckworth amp Co Ltd 2000 ISBN 0 7156 2959 X Spalinger Anthony J War in Ancient Egypt The New Kingdom Blackwell Publishing 2005 ISBN 1 4051 1372 3 Tyldesley Joyce Egypt s Golden Empire The Age of the New Kingdom Headline Book Publishing Ltd 2001 ISBN 0 7472 5160 6 Tyldesley Joyce The Private Lives of the Pharaohs Channel 4 Books 2004 ISBN 0 7522 1903 0 Weinstein James M The Egyptian Empire in Palestine A Reassessment Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research No 241 Winter 1981 Wente Edward F Thutmose III s Accession and the Beginning of the New Kingdom Journal of Near Eastern Studies University of Chicago Press 1975 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ahmose I Ahmose accessed July 19 2006 Egyptian Pharaohs Ahmose I accessed July 19 2006 Quarry Inauguration accessed July 28 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ahmose I amp oldid 1149603443, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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