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Inaros II

Inaros (II), also known as Inarus, (fl. ca. 460 BC) was an Egyptian rebel ruler who was the son of an Egyptian prince named Psamtik, presumably of the old Saite line, and grandson of Psamtik III. In 460 BC, he revolted against the Persians with the help of his Athenian allies under Admiral Charitimides, and defeated the Persian army commanded by satrap Achaemenes. The Persians retreated to Memphis, but the Athenians were finally defeated in 454 BC by the Persian army led by Megabyzus, satrap of Syria, and Artabazus, satrap of Phrygia, after a two-year siege. Inaros was captured and carried away to Susa where he was reportedly crucified in 454 BC.

Inaros II
Egyptian ruler
Reignc. 460 BC
PredecessorPsammetichus IV
Diedc. 454 BC
Susa, Persia
HouseSaite Dynasty
FatherPsammetichus IV
Inaros II fought with the Athenians against the Persian troops in Egypt, and later against Achaemenid satraps Megabyzus and Artabazus, who defeated him.

Revolt and aftermath edit

He held a kingship over the Libyans from Mareia (above Pharos) and the part of the Nile Delta around Sais. With help from Amyrtaeus, also from Sais, who took the northern marshes, Inarus drove out the tax-collectors while collecting mercenaries. These actions started a revolt in Egypt at the beginning of the reign of King Artaxerxes I of Persia, following the assassination of king Xerxes I. The Athenian allies from whom he was paid 100 triers, sent troops and an army of more than 200 ships led by Charitimides to aid him in 460 BC.[2][3]

Battle of Papremis (460 BC) edit

 
Libyan soldier, circa 470 BC. Xerxes I tomb relief.

Diodorus tells us that once the Athenians had arrived, they and the Egyptians accepted battle from the Persians. The rebel army confronted the Persian army of around 400,000 infantry and eighty ships led by the brother of Artaxerxes, the satrap Achaemenes. At first the Persians' superior numbers gave them the advantage, but eventually the Athenians broke through the Persian line, whereupon the Persian army was routed and fled. However, a portion of the Persian army found refuge in the citadel of Memphis (called the 'White Castle') and could not be dislodged.[4] Thucydides's rather compressed version of these events is: "and making themselves masters of the river and two-thirds of Memphis, addressed themselves to the attack of the remaining third, which is called White Castle".[5] The satrap Achaemenes, together with 100,000 of his 400,000 men was defeated and killed at Papremis and the Persians retreated to Memphis. The commanders of the Athenian fleet, Charitimides and Cimon fought a naval battle with the Persians, in which forty Greek ships engaged fifty Persians ships, of which twenty of the Persian ships were captured with their crews, and the remaining thirty sunk. To show that their victory was complete, the rebels sent the dead body of satrap Achaemenes to the Persian king.

Siege of Memphis (459-455 BC) edit

 
Egyptian soldier, circa 470 BCE. Xerxes I tomb relief.

The Athenians and Egyptians thus settled down to besiege the White Castle. The siege evidently did not progress well, and probably lasted for at least four years, since Thucydides says that their whole expedition lasted 6 years,[6] and of this time the final 18 months was occupied with the Siege of Prosoptis.[7]

According to Thucydides, at first Artaxerxes sent Megabazus to try and bribe the Spartans into invading Attica, to draw off the Athenian forces from Egypt. When this failed, he instead assembled a large army under (confusingly) Megabyzus, and dispatched it to Egypt.[7] Diodorus has more or less the same story, with more detail; after the attempt at bribery failed, Artaxerxes put Megabyzus and Artabazus in charge of 300,000 men, with instructions to quell the revolt. They went first from Persia to Cilicia and gathered a fleet of 300 triremes from the Cilicians, Phoenicians and Cypriots, and spent a year training their men. Then they finally headed to Egypt.[8] Modern estimates, however, place the number of Persian troops at the considerably lower figure of 25,000 men given that it would have been highly impractical to deprive the already strained satrapies of any more man power than that.[9] Thucydides does not mention Artabazus, who is reported by Herodotus to have taken part in the second Persian invasion; Diodorus may be mistaken about his presence in this campaign.[10] It is clearly possible that the Persian forces did spend some prolonged time in training, since it took four years for them to respond to the Egyptian victory at Papremis. Although neither author gives many details, it is clear that when Megabyzus finally arrived in Egypt, he was able to quickly lift the Siege of Memphis, defeating the Egyptians in battle, and driving the Athenians from Memphis.[7][11]

Siege of Prosopitis (455 BCE) edit

 
Portrait of Inarus with his Pharaoh crown (detail).

The Athenians now fell back to the island of Prosopitis in the Nile delta, where their ships were moored.[7][11] There, Megabyzus laid siege to them for 18 months, until finally he was able to drain the river from around the island by digging canals, thus "joining the island to the mainland".[7] In Thucydides's account the Persians then crossed over to the former island, and captured it.[7] Only a few of the Athenian force, marching through Libya to Cyrene survived to return to Athens.[6] In Diodorus's version, however, the draining of the river prompted the Egyptians (whom Thucydides does not mention) to defect and surrender to the Persians. The Persians, not wanting to sustain heavy casualties in attacking the Athenians, instead allowed them to depart freely to Cyrene, whence they returned to Athens.[11] Since the defeat of the Egyptian expedition caused a genuine panic in Athens, including the relocation of the Delian treasury to Athens, Thucydides's version is probably more likely to be correct.[12]

Battle of Mendesium edit

As a final disastrous coda to the expedition, Thucydides mentions the fate of a squadron of fifty triremes sent to relieve the Siege of Prosopitis. Unaware that the Athenians had finally succumbed, the fleet put in at the Mendesian mouth of the Nile, where it was promptly attacked from the land, and from the sea by the Phoenician navy. Most of the ships were destroyed, with only a handful managing to escape and return to Athens.[6] Total Athenian casualties of the expedition totaled some 50,000 men and 250 ships.[13][14]

Retreat to Byblos and capture edit

 
Inarus and possible Greek generals as prisoners, seized by Artaxerxes I.[1]

Charitimides was killed in battle and Inarus was wounded in the thigh by the Persian force and retreated to Byblos, his stronghold and the only Egyptian city that did not submit to Megabyzus.[15] After fighting for a year and a half in the marshes, Inaros was defeated by Megabyzus. Together with the remaining Greeks, he was taken captive away to Susa.

Execution edit

Megabyzus promised Inaros and his rebel Greeks that they would not be executed once they arrived at Susa. The Queen wanted them punished and killed because they were responsible for the death of her son, the satrap Achaemenes, and asked for his death. Artaxerxes I initially kept this promise, but after five years of pleading handed Inaros and fifty Greeks to Queen Mother Amestris.

There are two versions of his death. According to the first he was crucified, and according to the other, impaled. A fragment of Ctesias preserved by Photios I of Constantinople reports that "Inaros was executed on three stakes, fifty of the Greeks, all that she could lay hands on, were decapitated."[16] The Greek word anestaurothe, used to describe and name the method of his execution in the texts could either mean impalement or crucifixion on a single stake, or crucifixion on a true cross, but there is not enough evidence and information in the historical records to give a definitive answer.

Thucydides reports a slightly different story. He records no truces and Professor J M Bigwood argues that Thucydides should be interpreted as saying that Inaros was both captured and executed in the same year, 454 BC.[17]

Legacy edit

His revolt, although unsuccessful in the end, left a big mark in Egyptian history. Herodotus also reports that Inaros did more damage to the Persians than any man before him.[18]

Inaros I and II edit

Inaros II is often confused in both ancient and modern literature with his namesake, the Libyan prince Inaros I of Athribis, who rebelled against the Assyrians about two centuries earlier.[19]

See also edit

  • Petubastis III – an earlier Egyptian prince who rebelled against the Achaemenid rule.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Ancient Seals of the Near East. 1940. p. Plaque 17.
  2. ^ Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War. Richard Crawley (trans.). 1.104. Retrieved 10 September 2010.
  3. ^ Diodorus Siculus (1946). Library of History. Vol. 4. C. H. Oldfather (trans.). Loeb Classical Library. 11.71.3-6. ISBN 978-0-674-99413-3. Retrieved 10 September 2010.
  4. ^ Diodorus XI, 74
  5. ^ Thucydides I, 104
  6. ^ a b c Thucydides I, 110
  7. ^ a b c d e f Thucydides I, 109
  8. ^ Diodorus XI, 74–75
  9. ^ Ray, Fred (1949). Land Battles in 5th Century BC Greece: A History and Analysis of 173 Engagements. McFarland & Company, Inc. pp. 109–110.
  10. ^ Herodotus VIII, 126
  11. ^ a b c Diodorus XI, 77
  12. ^ Holland, p. 363.
  13. ^ Fuller, John (1954). From the Earliest Times to the Battle of Lepanto. Da Capo Press. p. 56.
  14. ^ Seltman, Charles (1974). The Cambridge Ancient History. Cambridge University Press. p. 84.
  15. ^ Fornara, Charles W.; Badian, E.; Sherk, Robert K. (1983). Archaic Times to the End of the Peloponnesian War. Cambridge University Press. p. 74. ISBN 9780521299466.
  16. ^ Photius' excerpt of Ctesias' Persica (§ 14.37-39) https://www.livius.org/ct-cz/ctesias/photius_persica2.html 9 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ Bigwood, J.M. (Spring 1976). "Ctesias' Account of the Revolt of Inarus". Phoenix (Classical Association of Canada). Classical Association of Canada. 30 (1): 1–25. doi:10.2307/1088018. JSTOR 1088018.
  18. ^ Herodotus. ""BOOK III. THE THIRD BOOK OF THE HISTORIES, CALLED THALEIA.". The Histories Vol 1. Of this, namely that it is their established rule to act so, one may judge by many instances besides and especially by the case of Thannyras the son of Inaros, who received back the power which his father had, and by that of Pausiris the son of Amyrtaios, for he too received back the power of his father: yet it is certain that no men ever up to this time did more evil to the Persians than Inaros and Amyrtaios.
  19. ^ Ryholt, K. 'The Assyrian Invasion of Egypt in Egyptian Literary Tradition', Assyria and Beyond: Studies Presented to Mogens Trolle Larsen, edited by J.G. Dercksen, Leiden, Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten, 2004, pp. 384–511.

Further reading edit

  • Chauveau, Michel (2003). "The demotic ostraca of Ayn Manawir". Egyptian Archaeology. 22: 38–40.
  • Kahn, Dan'el (2008). "Inaros' rebellion against Artaxerxes I and the Athenian Disaster in Egypt". Classical Quarterly. 58 (2): 424–440. doi:10.1017/S0009838808000529. S2CID 170177032.

inaros, inaros, also, known, inarus, egyptian, rebel, ruler, egyptian, prince, named, psamtik, presumably, saite, line, grandson, psamtik, revolted, against, persians, with, help, athenian, allies, under, admiral, charitimides, defeated, persian, army, command. Inaros II also known as Inarus fl ca 460 BC was an Egyptian rebel ruler who was the son of an Egyptian prince named Psamtik presumably of the old Saite line and grandson of Psamtik III In 460 BC he revolted against the Persians with the help of his Athenian allies under Admiral Charitimides and defeated the Persian army commanded by satrap Achaemenes The Persians retreated to Memphis but the Athenians were finally defeated in 454 BC by the Persian army led by Megabyzus satrap of Syria and Artabazus satrap of Phrygia after a two year siege Inaros was captured and carried away to Susa where he was reportedly crucified in 454 BC Inaros IIEgyptian rulerInarus seized by Artaxerxes I in a seal Persian king and the defeated enemies 1 Reignc 460 BCPredecessorPsammetichus IVDiedc 454 BCSusa PersiaHouseSaite DynastyFatherPsammetichus IVInaros II fought with the Athenians against the Persian troops in Egypt and later against Achaemenid satraps Megabyzus and Artabazus who defeated him Contents 1 Revolt and aftermath 1 1 Battle of Papremis 460 BC 1 2 Siege of Memphis 459 455 BC 1 3 Siege of Prosopitis 455 BCE 1 4 Battle of Mendesium 1 5 Retreat to Byblos and capture 2 Execution 3 Legacy 4 Inaros I and II 5 See also 6 References 7 Further readingRevolt and aftermath editMain article Wars of the Delian League He held a kingship over the Libyans from Mareia above Pharos and the part of the Nile Delta around Sais With help from Amyrtaeus also from Sais who took the northern marshes Inarus drove out the tax collectors while collecting mercenaries These actions started a revolt in Egypt at the beginning of the reign of King Artaxerxes I of Persia following the assassination of king Xerxes I The Athenian allies from whom he was paid 100 triers sent troops and an army of more than 200 ships led by Charitimides to aid him in 460 BC 2 3 Battle of Papremis 460 BC edit nbsp Libyan soldier circa 470 BC Xerxes I tomb relief Diodorus tells us that once the Athenians had arrived they and the Egyptians accepted battle from the Persians The rebel army confronted the Persian army of around 400 000 infantry and eighty ships led by the brother of Artaxerxes the satrap Achaemenes At first the Persians superior numbers gave them the advantage but eventually the Athenians broke through the Persian line whereupon the Persian army was routed and fled However a portion of the Persian army found refuge in the citadel of Memphis called the White Castle and could not be dislodged 4 Thucydides s rather compressed version of these events is and making themselves masters of the river and two thirds of Memphis addressed themselves to the attack of the remaining third which is called White Castle 5 The satrap Achaemenes together with 100 000 of his 400 000 men was defeated and killed at Papremis and the Persians retreated to Memphis The commanders of the Athenian fleet Charitimides and Cimon fought a naval battle with the Persians in which forty Greek ships engaged fifty Persians ships of which twenty of the Persian ships were captured with their crews and the remaining thirty sunk To show that their victory was complete the rebels sent the dead body of satrap Achaemenes to the Persian king Siege of Memphis 459 455 BC edit nbsp Egyptian soldier circa 470 BCE Xerxes I tomb relief The Athenians and Egyptians thus settled down to besiege the White Castle The siege evidently did not progress well and probably lasted for at least four years since Thucydides says that their whole expedition lasted 6 years 6 and of this time the final 18 months was occupied with the Siege of Prosoptis 7 According to Thucydides at first Artaxerxes sent Megabazus to try and bribe the Spartans into invading Attica to draw off the Athenian forces from Egypt When this failed he instead assembled a large army under confusingly Megabyzus and dispatched it to Egypt 7 Diodorus has more or less the same story with more detail after the attempt at bribery failed Artaxerxes put Megabyzus and Artabazus in charge of 300 000 men with instructions to quell the revolt They went first from Persia to Cilicia and gathered a fleet of 300 triremes from the Cilicians Phoenicians and Cypriots and spent a year training their men Then they finally headed to Egypt 8 Modern estimates however place the number of Persian troops at the considerably lower figure of 25 000 men given that it would have been highly impractical to deprive the already strained satrapies of any more man power than that 9 Thucydides does not mention Artabazus who is reported by Herodotus to have taken part in the second Persian invasion Diodorus may be mistaken about his presence in this campaign 10 It is clearly possible that the Persian forces did spend some prolonged time in training since it took four years for them to respond to the Egyptian victory at Papremis Although neither author gives many details it is clear that when Megabyzus finally arrived in Egypt he was able to quickly lift the Siege of Memphis defeating the Egyptians in battle and driving the Athenians from Memphis 7 11 Siege of Prosopitis 455 BCE edit nbsp Portrait of Inarus with his Pharaoh crown detail The Athenians now fell back to the island of Prosopitis in the Nile delta where their ships were moored 7 11 There Megabyzus laid siege to them for 18 months until finally he was able to drain the river from around the island by digging canals thus joining the island to the mainland 7 In Thucydides s account the Persians then crossed over to the former island and captured it 7 Only a few of the Athenian force marching through Libya to Cyrene survived to return to Athens 6 In Diodorus s version however the draining of the river prompted the Egyptians whom Thucydides does not mention to defect and surrender to the Persians The Persians not wanting to sustain heavy casualties in attacking the Athenians instead allowed them to depart freely to Cyrene whence they returned to Athens 11 Since the defeat of the Egyptian expedition caused a genuine panic in Athens including the relocation of the Delian treasury to Athens Thucydides s version is probably more likely to be correct 12 Battle of Mendesium edit As a final disastrous coda to the expedition Thucydides mentions the fate of a squadron of fifty triremes sent to relieve the Siege of Prosopitis Unaware that the Athenians had finally succumbed the fleet put in at the Mendesian mouth of the Nile where it was promptly attacked from the land and from the sea by the Phoenician navy Most of the ships were destroyed with only a handful managing to escape and return to Athens 6 Total Athenian casualties of the expedition totaled some 50 000 men and 250 ships 13 14 Retreat to Byblos and capture edit nbsp Inarus and possible Greek generals as prisoners seized by Artaxerxes I 1 Charitimides was killed in battle and Inarus was wounded in the thigh by the Persian force and retreated to Byblos his stronghold and the only Egyptian city that did not submit to Megabyzus 15 After fighting for a year and a half in the marshes Inaros was defeated by Megabyzus Together with the remaining Greeks he was taken captive away to Susa Execution editMegabyzus promised Inaros and his rebel Greeks that they would not be executed once they arrived at Susa The Queen wanted them punished and killed because they were responsible for the death of her son the satrap Achaemenes and asked for his death Artaxerxes I initially kept this promise but after five years of pleading handed Inaros and fifty Greeks to Queen Mother Amestris There are two versions of his death According to the first he was crucified and according to the other impaled A fragment of Ctesias preserved by Photios I of Constantinople reports that Inaros was executed on three stakes fifty of the Greeks all that she could lay hands on were decapitated 16 The Greek word anestaurothe used to describe and name the method of his execution in the texts could either mean impalement or crucifixion on a single stake or crucifixion on a true cross but there is not enough evidence and information in the historical records to give a definitive answer Thucydides reports a slightly different story He records no truces and Professor J M Bigwood argues that Thucydides should be interpreted as saying that Inaros was both captured and executed in the same year 454 BC 17 Legacy editHis revolt although unsuccessful in the end left a big mark in Egyptian history Herodotus also reports that Inaros did more damage to the Persians than any man before him 18 Inaros I and II editInaros II is often confused in both ancient and modern literature with his namesake the Libyan prince Inaros I of Athribis who rebelled against the Assyrians about two centuries earlier 19 See also editPetubastis III an earlier Egyptian prince who rebelled against the Achaemenid rule References edit a b Ancient Seals of the Near East 1940 p Plaque 17 Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian War Richard Crawley trans 1 104 Retrieved 10 September 2010 Diodorus Siculus 1946 Library of History Vol 4 C H Oldfather trans Loeb Classical Library 11 71 3 6 ISBN 978 0 674 99413 3 Retrieved 10 September 2010 Diodorus XI 74 Thucydides I 104 a b c Thucydides I 110 a b c d e f Thucydides I 109 Diodorus XI 74 75 Ray Fred 1949 Land Battles in 5th Century BC Greece A History and Analysis of 173 Engagements McFarland amp Company Inc pp 109 110 Herodotus VIII 126 a b c Diodorus XI 77 Holland p 363 Fuller John 1954 From the Earliest Times to the Battle of Lepanto Da Capo Press p 56 Seltman Charles 1974 The Cambridge Ancient History Cambridge University Press p 84 Fornara Charles W Badian E Sherk Robert K 1983 Archaic Times to the End of the Peloponnesian War Cambridge University Press p 74 ISBN 9780521299466 Photius excerpt of Ctesias Persica 14 37 39 https www livius org ct cz ctesias photius persica2 html Archived 9 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine Bigwood J M Spring 1976 Ctesias Account of the Revolt of Inarus Phoenix Classical Association of Canada Classical Association of Canada 30 1 1 25 doi 10 2307 1088018 JSTOR 1088018 Herodotus BOOK III THE THIRD BOOK OF THE HISTORIES CALLED THALEIA The Histories Vol 1 Of this namely that it is their established rule to act so one may judge by many instances besides and especially by the case of Thannyras the son of Inaros who received back the power which his father had and by that of Pausiris the son of Amyrtaios for he too received back the power of his father yet it is certain that no men ever up to this time did more evil to the Persians than Inaros and Amyrtaios Ryholt K The Assyrian Invasion of Egypt in Egyptian Literary Tradition Assyria and Beyond Studies Presented to Mogens Trolle Larsen edited by J G Dercksen Leiden Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten 2004 pp 384 511 Further reading editChauveau Michel 2003 The demotic ostraca of Ayn Manawir Egyptian Archaeology 22 38 40 Kahn Dan el 2008 Inaros rebellion against Artaxerxes I and the Athenian Disaster in Egypt Classical Quarterly 58 2 424 440 doi 10 1017 S0009838808000529 S2CID 170177032 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Inaros II amp oldid 1193006349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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