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Elephantine

Elephantine (/ˌɛlɪfænˈtn, -ˈt-/ EL-if-an-TY-nee, -⁠TEE-;[2] Ancient Egyptian: ꜣbw; Egyptian Arabic: جزيرة الفنتين; Greek: Ἐλεφαντίνη Elephantíne; Coptic: (Ⲉ)ⲓⲏⲃ (e)iēb, Late Coptic [jæb]) is an island on the Nile, forming part of the city of Aswan in Upper Egypt. The archaeological sites on the island were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1979 along with other examples of Upper Egyptian architecture, as part of the "Nubian Monuments from Abu Simbel to Philae" (despite Elephantine being neither Nubian, nor between Abu Simbel and Philae).[3]

Elephantine
Native name:
جزيرة فيلة
(Ⲉ)ⲓⲏⲃ
West bank of Elephantine Island on the Nile
Elephantine
Location in the Nile at Aswan, Upper Egypt
Geography
Coordinates24°05′N 32°53′E / 24.09°N 32.89°E / 24.09; 32.89Coordinates: 24°05′N 32°53′E / 24.09°N 32.89°E / 24.09; 32.89
Adjacent toNile
Length1,200 m (3900 ft)
Width400 m (1300 ft)
Administration
Egypt

3bw
"Elephantine"[1]
Egyptian hieroglyphs
View south (upstream) of Elephantine Island and Nile, from a hotel tower.

Geography

Elephantine is 1,200 metres (3,900 ft) from north to south, and is 400 metres (1,300 ft) across at its widest point. The layout of this and other nearby islands in Aswan can be seen from west bank hillsides along the Nile. The island is located just downstream of the First Cataract, at the southern border of Upper Egypt with Lower Nubia. This region above is referred to as Upper Egypt because it is further up the Nile.

The island may have received its name after its shape, which in aerial views is similar to that of an elephant tusk, or from the rounded rocks along the banks resembling elephants.

Ancient Egypt

Known to the ancient Egyptians as ꜣbw "Elephant" (Middle Egyptian: /ˈʀuːbaw/ → Medio-Late Egyptian: /ˈjuːbəʔ/ → Coptic: (Ⲉ)ⲓⲏⲃ /ˈjeβ/, preserved in its Hebrew name, יֵב 'yev'), the island of Elephantine stood at the border between Egypt and Nubia. It was an excellent defensive site for a city and its location made it a natural cargo transfer point for river trade. This border is near the Tropic of Cancer, the most northerly latitude at which the sun can appear directly overhead at noon and from which it appears to reverse direction or "turn back" at the solstices.

Elephantine was a fort that stood just before the First Cataract of the Nile. During the Second Intermediate Period (1650–1550 BC), the fort marked the southern border of Egypt.[4]

Historical texts from the Middle Kingdom of Egypt mention the mother of Amenemhat I, founder of the Twelfth Dynasty, being from[5] the Elephantine Egyptian nome Ta-Seti.[6][7][8] Many scholars have argued that Amenemhat I's mother was of Nubian origin.[9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16]

According to the ancient Egyptian religion, Elephantine was the dwelling place of Khnum, the ram-headed god of the cataracts, who guarded and controlled the waters of the Nile from caves beneath the island. He was worshipped here as part of a late triad of Egyptian deities. This "Elephantine Triad" included Satis and Anuket. Satis was worshipped from very early times as a war goddess and protector of this strategic region of Egypt. When seen as a fertility goddess, she personified the bountiful annual flooding of the Nile, which was identified as her daughter, Anuket. The cult of Satis originated in the ancient city of Aswan. Later, when the triad was formed, Khnum became identified as her consort and, thereby, was thought of as the father of Anuket. His role in myths changed later and another deity was assigned his duties with the river. At that time his role as a potter enabled him to be assigned a duty in the creation of human bodies.

 
Small Kalabsha Temple Reconstruction, south of the island.

Archaeological sites

Ongoing excavations by the German Archaeological Institute at the town have uncovered many findings, on display in the Aswan Museum located on the island, including a mummified ram of Khnum. Artifacts dating back to prehistoric Egypt have been found on Elephantine. A rare calendar, known as the Elephantine Calendar of Things, which dates to the reign of Thutmose III during the Eighteenth Dynasty, was found in fragments on the island.

In ancient times the island was also an important stone quarry, providing granite for monuments and buildings all over Egypt.

Temples

 
Elephantine, as published in the 1809 Description de l'Égypte.

Prior to 1822, there were temples to Thutmose III and Amenhotep III[17] on the island. In 1822, they were destroyed during the campaign of Muhammad Ali, who had taken power in Egypt, to conquer Sudan. Both temples were relatively intact prior to the deliberate demolition.[citation needed]

The first temple was the Temple of Satet, it was founded around 3000 BC and enlarged and renovated over the next 3,000 years. There are records of an Egyptian temple to Khnum on the island as early as the Third Dynasty. This temple was completely rebuilt in the Late Period, during the Thirtieth Dynasty of Egypt, just before the foreign rule that followed in the Graeco-Roman Period. The Greeks formed the Ptolemaic dynasty during their three-hundred-year rule over Egypt (305–30 BC) and maintained the ancient religious customs and traditions, while often associating the Egyptian deities with their own.

Most of the present day southern tip of the island is taken up by the ruins of the Temple of Khnum. These, the oldest ruins still standing on the island, are composed of a granite step pyramid from the Third Dynasty and a small temple built for the local Sixth Dynasty nomarch, Heqaib. In the Middle Kingdom, many officials, such as the local governors Sarenput I or Heqaib III, dedicated statues and shrines into the temple.

 
Khnum temple at Elephantine island, New kingdom, Reconstruction
 
The Aswan Museum, and a nilometer (lower left)

Nilometers

A nilometer was a structure for measuring the Nile River's clarity and the water level during the annual flood season. There are two nilometers at Elephantine Island. The more famous is a corridor nilometer associated with the Temple of Satis, with a stone staircase that descends the corridor. It is one of the oldest nilometers in Egypt, last reconstructed in Roman times and still in use as late as the nineteenth century AD. Ninety steps that lead down to the river are marked with Arabic, Roman, and hieroglyphic numerals. Visible at the water's edge are inscriptions carved deeply into the rock during the Seventeenth Dynasty.

The other Nilometer is a rectangular basin located at the island's southern tip, near the Temple of Khnum and opposite the Old Cataract Hotel. It is probably the older of the two. One of the nilometers, though it is not certain which, is mentioned by the Greek historian Strabo.

Many sources claim that the fabled "Well of Eratosthenes", famous in connection with Eratosthenes' presumed calculation of the Earth's circumference, was located on the island. Strabo mentions a well that was used to observe that Aswan lies on the Tropic of Cancer, but the reference is to a well at Aswan, not at Elephantine. Neither nilometer at Elephantine is suitable for the purpose, while the well at Aswan is apparently lost. [18]

Jewish presence

The Elephantine papyri are caches of legal documents and letters written in Aramaic dating to sometime in the fifth century BC.[19][20] These papyri document the presence of a community of Judean mercenaries and their families on Elephantine, starting in the seventh century BCE. The mercenaries guarded the frontier between Egypt and Nubia to the south.[21] Following the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem in the sixth century BCE, some Judean refugees traveled south and, in what may be called an “exodus in reverse,” settled on Elephantine. They maintained their own temple (also see House of Yahweh), in which sacrifices were offered, evincing polytheistic beliefs, which functioned alongside that of Khnum.[22] The temple was destroyed in 410 BC at the instigation of the priests of Khnum.

The temple may have been built in reaction to Manasseh's reinstitution of pagan worship or simply to serve the needs of the Jewish community.[19]

Other features

The Aswan Museum is located at the southern end of the island. Ongoing excavations by the German Archaeological Institute at the island's ancient town site have uncovered many findings that are now on display in the museum, including a mummified ram of Khnum. A sizable population of Nubians live in three villages in the island's middle section. A large luxury hotel is at the island's northern end.

The Aswan Botanical Garden is adjacent to the west on el Nabatat Island.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ "3bw" in Faulkner, Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian cf. http://projetrosette.info/popup.php?Id=1012&idObjet=423
  2. ^ Merriam-Webster's Geographical Dictionary, Third Edition (Merriam-Webster, 1997; ISBN 0877795460), p. 351.
  3. ^ "Nubian Monuments from Abu Simbel to Philae". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
  4. ^ Ian Shaw, Ed, Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, New York, 2000, page 206
  5. ^ "Then a king will come from the South, Ameny, the justified, by name, son of a woman of Ta-seti, child of Upper Egypt""The Beginning of the Twelfth Dynasty". Kingship, Power, and Legitimacy in Ancient Egypt: From the Old Kingdom to the Middle Kingdom. Cambridge University Press: 138–160. 2020.
  6. ^ "Ammenemes himself was not a Theban but the son of a woman from Elephantine called Nofret and a priest called Sesostris (‘The man of the Great Goddess’).",Grimal, Nicolas (1994). A History of Ancient Egypt. Wiley-Blackwell (July 19, 1994). p. 159.
  7. ^ "Senusret, a commoner as the father of Amenemhet, his mother, Nefert, came from the area Elephantine."A. Clayton, Peter (2006). Chronicle of the Pharaohs: The Reign-by-Reign Record of the Rulers and Dynasties of Ancient Egypt. Thames & Hudson. p. 78.
  8. ^ "Amenemhet I was a commoner, the son of one Sen-wosret and a woman named NEFRET, listed as prominent members of a family from ELEPHANTINE Island."Bunson, Margaret (2002). Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt (Facts on File Library of World History). Facts on File. p. 25.
  9. ^ "The XIIth Dynasty (1991–1786 B.C.E.) originated from the Aswan region. As expected, strong Nubian features and dark coloring are seen in their sculpture and relief work. This dynasty ranks as among the greatest, whose fame far outlived its actual tenure on the throne. Especially interesting, it was a member of this dynasty – that decreed that no Nehsy (riverine Nubian of the principality of Kush), except such as came for trade or diplomatic reasons, should pass by the Egyptian fortress at the southern end of the Second Nile Cataract. Why would this royal family of Nubian ancestry ban other Nubians from coming into Egyptian territory? Because the Egyptian rulers of Nubian ancestry had become Egyptians culturally; as pharaohs, they exhibited typical Egyptian attitudes and adopted typical Egyptian policies."F. J. Yurco. "'Were the ancient Egyptians black or white?'". Biblical Archaeology Review. (Vol 15, no. 5, 1989): 24–9, 58.
  10. ^ General History of Africa Volume II – Ancient civilizations of Africa (ed. G Moktar). UNESCO. p. 152.
  11. ^ Crawford, Keith W. (1 December 2021). "Critique of the "Black Pharaohs" Theme: Racist Perspectives of Egyptian and Kushite/Nubian Interactions in Popular Media". African Archaeological Review. 38 (4): 695–712. doi:10.1007/s10437-021-09453-7. ISSN 1572-9842. S2CID 238718279.
  12. ^ Lobban, Richard A. Jr (10 April 2021). Historical Dictionary of Ancient Nubia. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781538133392.
  13. ^ Morris, Ellen (6 August 2018). Ancient Egyptian Imperialism. John Wiley & Sons. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-4051-3677-8.
  14. ^ Van de Mieroop, Marc (2021). A history of ancient Egypt (Second ed.). Chichester, West Sussex. p. 99. ISBN 978-1119620877.
  15. ^ Fletcher, Joann (2017). The story of Egypt : the civilization that shaped the world (First Pegasus books paperback ed.). New York. pp. Chapter 12. ISBN 978-1681774565.
  16. ^ Smith, Stuart Tyson (8 October 2018). "Ethnicity: Constructions of Self and Other in Ancient Egypt". Journal of Egyptian History. 11 (1–2): 113–146. doi:10.1163/18741665-12340045. ISSN 1874-1665. S2CID 203315839.
  17. ^ de Morgan 1894. J. De Morgan . Catalogue des monuments et inscriptions de l'�gypte antique.1.De la fronti�re de Nubie � Kom Ombos. Vienne
  18. ^ Meyboom, P. G. P. (1995). The Nile Mosaic of Palestrina: Early Evidence of Egyptian Religion in Italy. BRILL. p. 52. ISBN 90-04-10137-3.
  19. ^ a b Botta, Alejandro (2009). The Aramaic and Egyptian Legal Traditions at Elephantine: An Egyptological Approach. T&T Clark. pp. 15–116. ISBN 978-0567045331.
  20. ^ Grabbe, Lester L. (2011). A History of the Jews and Judaism in the Second Temple Period (vol. 2). Bloomsbury T&T Clark. p. 103. ISBN 978-0567541192.
  21. ^ Schama, Simon (September 2013). "In the Beginning". The Story of the Jews. PBS.
  22. ^ A. van Hoonacker, Une Communauté Judéo-Araméenne à Éléphantine, en Egypte, aux vi et v siècles avant J.-C, London 1915 cited, Arnold Toynbee, A Study of History, vol.5, (1939) 1964 p125 n.1

Further reading

  • Bresciani, Edda (1998). "ELEPHANTINE". Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. VIII, Fasc. 4. pp. 360–362.

elephantine, confused, with, elephanta, island, elephant, jason, island, elephant, island, elephant, island, vanuatu, ancient, egyptian, ꜣbw, egyptian, arabic, جزيرة, الفنتين, greek, Ἐλεφαντίνη, elephantíne, coptic, ⲓⲏⲃ, iēb, late, coptic, jæb, island, nile, f. Not to be confused with Elephanta Island Elephant Jason Island Elephant Island or Elephant Island Vanuatu Elephantine ˌ ɛ l ɪ f ae n ˈ t aɪ n iː ˈ t iː EL if an TY nee TEE 2 Ancient Egyptian ꜣbw Egyptian Arabic جزيرة الفنتين Greek Ἐlefantinh Elephantine Coptic Ⲉ ⲓⲏⲃ e ieb Late Coptic jaeb is an island on the Nile forming part of the city of Aswan in Upper Egypt The archaeological sites on the island were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1979 along with other examples of Upper Egyptian architecture as part of the Nubian Monuments from Abu Simbel to Philae despite Elephantine being neither Nubian nor between Abu Simbel and Philae 3 ElephantineNative name جزيرة فيلة Ⲉ ⲓⲏⲃWest bank of Elephantine Island on the NileElephantineLocation in the Nile at Aswan Upper EgyptGeographyCoordinates24 05 N 32 53 E 24 09 N 32 89 E 24 09 32 89 Coordinates 24 05 N 32 53 E 24 09 N 32 89 E 24 09 32 89Adjacent toNileLength1 200 m 3900 ft Width400 m 1300 ft AdministrationEgypt3bw Elephantine 1 Egyptian hieroglyphsView south upstream of Elephantine Island and Nile from a hotel tower Contents 1 Geography 2 Ancient Egypt 2 1 Archaeological sites 2 1 1 Temples 2 1 2 Nilometers 3 Jewish presence 4 Other features 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingGeography EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Elephantine is 1 200 metres 3 900 ft from north to south and is 400 metres 1 300 ft across at its widest point The layout of this and other nearby islands in Aswan can be seen from west bank hillsides along the Nile The island is located just downstream of the First Cataract at the southern border of Upper Egypt with Lower Nubia This region above is referred to as Upper Egypt because it is further up the Nile The island may have received its name after its shape which in aerial views is similar to that of an elephant tusk or from the rounded rocks along the banks resembling elephants Ancient Egypt EditKnown to the ancient Egyptians as ꜣbw Elephant Middle Egyptian ˈʀuːbaw Medio Late Egyptian ˈjuːbeʔ Coptic Ⲉ ⲓⲏⲃ ˈjeb preserved in its Hebrew name י ב yev the island of Elephantine stood at the border between Egypt and Nubia It was an excellent defensive site for a city and its location made it a natural cargo transfer point for river trade This border is near the Tropic of Cancer the most northerly latitude at which the sun can appear directly overhead at noon and from which it appears to reverse direction or turn back at the solstices Elephantine was a fort that stood just before the First Cataract of the Nile During the Second Intermediate Period 1650 1550 BC the fort marked the southern border of Egypt 4 Historical texts from the Middle Kingdom of Egypt mention the mother of Amenemhat I founder of the Twelfth Dynasty being from 5 the Elephantine Egyptian nome Ta Seti 6 7 8 Many scholars have argued that Amenemhat I s mother was of Nubian origin 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 According to the ancient Egyptian religion Elephantine was the dwelling place of Khnum the ram headed god of the cataracts who guarded and controlled the waters of the Nile from caves beneath the island He was worshipped here as part of a late triad of Egyptian deities This Elephantine Triad included Satis and Anuket Satis was worshipped from very early times as a war goddess and protector of this strategic region of Egypt When seen as a fertility goddess she personified the bountiful annual flooding of the Nile which was identified as her daughter Anuket The cult of Satis originated in the ancient city of Aswan Later when the triad was formed Khnum became identified as her consort and thereby was thought of as the father of Anuket His role in myths changed later and another deity was assigned his duties with the river At that time his role as a potter enabled him to be assigned a duty in the creation of human bodies Small Kalabsha Temple Reconstruction south of the island Archaeological sites Edit Ongoing excavations by the German Archaeological Institute at the town have uncovered many findings on display in the Aswan Museum located on the island including a mummified ram of Khnum Artifacts dating back to prehistoric Egypt have been found on Elephantine A rare calendar known as the Elephantine Calendar of Things which dates to the reign of Thutmose III during the Eighteenth Dynasty was found in fragments on the island In ancient times the island was also an important stone quarry providing granite for monuments and buildings all over Egypt Temples Edit Elephantine as published in the 1809 Description de l Egypte Prior to 1822 there were temples to Thutmose III and Amenhotep III 17 on the island In 1822 they were destroyed during the campaign of Muhammad Ali who had taken power in Egypt to conquer Sudan Both temples were relatively intact prior to the deliberate demolition citation needed The first temple was the Temple of Satet it was founded around 3000 BC and enlarged and renovated over the next 3 000 years There are records of an Egyptian temple to Khnum on the island as early as the Third Dynasty This temple was completely rebuilt in the Late Period during the Thirtieth Dynasty of Egypt just before the foreign rule that followed in the Graeco Roman Period The Greeks formed the Ptolemaic dynasty during their three hundred year rule over Egypt 305 30 BC and maintained the ancient religious customs and traditions while often associating the Egyptian deities with their own Most of the present day southern tip of the island is taken up by the ruins of the Temple of Khnum These the oldest ruins still standing on the island are composed of a granite step pyramid from the Third Dynasty and a small temple built for the local Sixth Dynasty nomarch Heqaib In the Middle Kingdom many officials such as the local governors Sarenput I or Heqaib III dedicated statues and shrines into the temple Khnum temple at Elephantine island New kingdom Reconstruction The Aswan Museum and a nilometer lower left Nilometers Edit A nilometer was a structure for measuring the Nile River s clarity and the water level during the annual flood season There are two nilometers at Elephantine Island The more famous is a corridor nilometer associated with the Temple of Satis with a stone staircase that descends the corridor It is one of the oldest nilometers in Egypt last reconstructed in Roman times and still in use as late as the nineteenth century AD Ninety steps that lead down to the river are marked with Arabic Roman and hieroglyphic numerals Visible at the water s edge are inscriptions carved deeply into the rock during the Seventeenth Dynasty The other Nilometer is a rectangular basin located at the island s southern tip near the Temple of Khnum and opposite the Old Cataract Hotel It is probably the older of the two One of the nilometers though it is not certain which is mentioned by the Greek historian Strabo Many sources claim that the fabled Well of Eratosthenes famous in connection with Eratosthenes presumed calculation of the Earth s circumference was located on the island Strabo mentions a well that was used to observe that Aswan lies on the Tropic of Cancer but the reference is to a well at Aswan not at Elephantine Neither nilometer at Elephantine is suitable for the purpose while the well at Aswan is apparently lost 18 Jewish presence EditThe Elephantine papyri are caches of legal documents and letters written in Aramaic dating to sometime in the fifth century BC 19 20 These papyri document the presence of a community of Judean mercenaries and their families on Elephantine starting in the seventh century BCE The mercenaries guarded the frontier between Egypt and Nubia to the south 21 Following the Babylonian destruction of Jerusalem in the sixth century BCE some Judean refugees traveled south and in what may be called an exodus in reverse settled on Elephantine They maintained their own temple also see House of Yahweh in which sacrifices were offered evincing polytheistic beliefs which functioned alongside that of Khnum 22 The temple was destroyed in 410 BC at the instigation of the priests of Khnum The temple may have been built in reaction to Manasseh s reinstitution of pagan worship or simply to serve the needs of the Jewish community 19 Other features EditThe Aswan Museum is located at the southern end of the island Ongoing excavations by the German Archaeological Institute at the island s ancient town site have uncovered many findings that are now on display in the museum including a mummified ram of Khnum A sizable population of Nubians live in three villages in the island s middle section A large luxury hotel is at the island s northern end The Aswan Botanical Garden is adjacent to the west on el Nabatat Island Gallery Edit Nubian houses on central Elephantine Island Verdant Elephantine Island opposite Assuan Egypt 1908 Lantern slide Brooklyn Museum Island of Elephantine by Edwin Howland Blashfield Brooklyn Museum Ruins on Elephantine Island in 2000See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elephantine Sehel Island Temple of SatetReferences Edit 3bw in Faulkner Concise Dictionary of Middle Egyptian cf http projetrosette info popup php Id 1012 amp idObjet 423 Merriam Webster s Geographical Dictionary Third Edition Merriam Webster 1997 ISBN 0877795460 p 351 Nubian Monuments from Abu Simbel to Philae UNESCO World Heritage Centre United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 7 September 2021 Ian Shaw Ed Oxford History of Ancient Egypt New York 2000 page 206 Then a king will come from the South Ameny the justified by name son of a woman of Ta seti child of Upper Egypt The Beginning of the Twelfth Dynasty Kingship Power and Legitimacy in Ancient Egypt From the Old Kingdom to the Middle Kingdom Cambridge University Press 138 160 2020 Ammenemes himself was not a Theban but the son of a woman from Elephantine called Nofret and a priest called Sesostris The man of the Great Goddess Grimal Nicolas 1994 A History of Ancient Egypt Wiley Blackwell July 19 1994 p 159 Senusret a commoner as the father of Amenemhet his mother Nefert came from the area Elephantine A Clayton Peter 2006 Chronicle of the Pharaohs The Reign by Reign Record of the Rulers and Dynasties of Ancient Egypt Thames amp Hudson p 78 Amenemhet I was a commoner the son of one Sen wosret and a woman named NEFRET listed as prominent members of a family from ELEPHANTINE Island Bunson Margaret 2002 Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Facts on File Library of World History Facts on File p 25 The XIIth Dynasty 1991 1786 B C E originated from the Aswan region As expected strong Nubian features and dark coloring are seen in their sculpture and relief work This dynasty ranks as among the greatest whose fame far outlived its actual tenure on the throne Especially interesting it was a member of this dynasty that decreed that no Nehsy riverine Nubian of the principality of Kush except such as came for trade or diplomatic reasons should pass by the Egyptian fortress at the southern end of the Second Nile Cataract Why would this royal family of Nubian ancestry ban other Nubians from coming into Egyptian territory Because the Egyptian rulers of Nubian ancestry had become Egyptians culturally as pharaohs they exhibited typical Egyptian attitudes and adopted typical Egyptian policies F J Yurco Were the ancient Egyptians black or white Biblical Archaeology Review Vol 15 no 5 1989 24 9 58 General History of Africa Volume II Ancient civilizations of Africa ed G Moktar UNESCO p 152 Crawford Keith W 1 December 2021 Critique of the Black Pharaohs Theme Racist Perspectives of Egyptian and Kushite Nubian Interactions in Popular Media African Archaeological Review 38 4 695 712 doi 10 1007 s10437 021 09453 7 ISSN 1572 9842 S2CID 238718279 Lobban Richard A Jr 10 April 2021 Historical Dictionary of Ancient Nubia Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781538133392 Morris Ellen 6 August 2018 Ancient Egyptian Imperialism John Wiley amp Sons p 72 ISBN 978 1 4051 3677 8 Van de Mieroop Marc 2021 A history of ancient Egypt Second ed Chichester West Sussex p 99 ISBN 978 1119620877 Fletcher Joann 2017 The story of Egypt the civilization that shaped the world First Pegasus books paperback ed New York pp Chapter 12 ISBN 978 1681774565 Smith Stuart Tyson 8 October 2018 Ethnicity Constructions of Self and Other in Ancient Egypt Journal of Egyptian History 11 1 2 113 146 doi 10 1163 18741665 12340045 ISSN 1874 1665 S2CID 203315839 de Morgan 1894 J De Morgan Catalogue des monuments et inscriptions de l gypte antique 1 De la fronti re de Nubie Kom Ombos Vienne Meyboom P G P 1995 The Nile Mosaic of Palestrina Early Evidence of Egyptian Religion in Italy BRILL p 52 ISBN 90 04 10137 3 a b Botta Alejandro 2009 The Aramaic and Egyptian Legal Traditions at Elephantine An Egyptological Approach T amp T Clark pp 15 116 ISBN 978 0567045331 Grabbe Lester L 2011 A History of the Jews and Judaism in the Second Temple Period vol 2 Bloomsbury T amp T Clark p 103 ISBN 978 0567541192 Schama Simon September 2013 In the Beginning The Story of the Jews PBS A van Hoonacker Une Communaute Judeo Arameenne a Elephantine en Egypte aux vi et v siecles avant J C London 1915 cited Arnold Toynbee A Study of History vol 5 1939 1964 p125 n 1Further reading EditBresciani Edda 1998 ELEPHANTINE Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol VIII Fasc 4 pp 360 362 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elephantine amp oldid 1127880626, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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