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Setnakhte

Userkhaure-setepenre Setnakhte (also called Setnakht or Sethnakht) was the first pharaoh (1189 BC1186 BC) of the Twentieth Dynasty of the New Kingdom of Egypt and the father of Ramesses III.

Setnakhte
Setnakht
Drawing of a relief of pharaoh Sethnakht.
Pharaoh
Reign1189–1186 BC (Twentieth Dynasty)
PredecessorTwosret
SuccessorRamesses III
ConsortTiy-Merenese
Died1186 BC
BurialKV14

Accession

Setnakhte was not the son, brother or a direct descendant of either Twosret or Merneptah Siptah—the immediately preceding two pharaohs—nor that of Siptah's predecessor Seti II, whom Setnakht formally considered the last legitimate ruler.[citation needed] It is possible that he was a usurper who seized the throne during a time of crisis and political unrest, or he could have been a member of a minor line of the Ramesside royal family who emerged as pharaoh. Senakhte married Tiy-Merenese, perhaps a daughter of Merneptah.

A connection between Setnakhte's successors and the preceding Nineteenth Dynasty is suggested by the fact that one of Ramesses II's children also bore this name[citation needed] and that similar names are shared by Setnakhte's descendants such as Ramesses, Amun-her-khepshef, Seth-her-khepshef and Monthu-her-khepshef.[2]

Reign length

Setnakhte was originally believed to have enjoyed a reign of only two years based upon his Year 2 Elephantine stela but his third regnal year is now attested in Inscription No. 271 on Mount Sinai.[3] If his theoretical accession date is assumed to be II Shemu 10, based on the date of his Elephantine stela, Setnakhte would have ruled Egypt for at least two years and 11 months before he died, or nearly three full years. This date is only three months removed from Twosret's highest known date of Year 8, III Peret 5, and is based upon a calculation of Ramesses III's known accession date of I Shemu 26.[4] Peter Clayton also assigned Setnakhte a reign of three years in his 1994 book on the Egyptian pharaohs.[5]

 
Year 4 quartzite stela of Bakenkhunsu

In a mid-January 2007 issue of the Egyptian weekly Al-Ahram, however, Egyptian antiquity officials announced that a recently discovered and well-preserved quartzite stela belonging to the High Priest of Amun Bakenkhunsu was explicitly dated to Year 4 of Setnakhte's reign. The Al-Ahram article notes that this data:

contradicts...the official record, which says Setnakhte ruled Egypt for only three years. According to the new information provided by the stela, Setnakhte's reign certainly lasted for four years, and may have continued for [a little] longer.[6]

Zahi Hawass, the former Secretary General of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities, declared the discovery to be one of the most important finds of 2006 because "it adjusts the history of the 20th Dynasty and reveals more about the life of Bakenkhunsu."[6] As Setnakhte's reign was short, he may have come to the throne fairly late in life.

However, the Al-Ahram figure does not change the fact that Setnakhte likely truly ruled Egypt for only three, rather than four, full years since there are no Year 1 dates attested for him, and his famous Year 2 Elephantine stela states that Setnakhte finally secured his kingship after defeating all his opponents and challengers to the throne in his second year. The date of the Elephantine stela in Year 2 II Shemu day 10 of Setnakhte's reign[7]—the date of which is mentioned only halfway in the stela rather than at its start—is immediately followed by this proclamation: "There were no opponents against His Majesty, l.p.h., in all the lands."[8]

This reference to the defeat of Setnakhte's enemies implies that this specific date marked the termination of a conflict—presumably Setnakhte's struggle for the throne—which extended partly into his second year and means that Setnakhte's first year would have overlapped with Twosret's final year, if Twosret was his opponent. Therefore, he likely did not even rule Egypt in his theoretical first year and could only properly administer the country from sometime during his second year. In any event, there was an interregnum lasting at least a year in which no ruler controlled all of Egypt and Setnakhte's effective reign length should be reduced by a year from 4 to 3 years.

Setnakhte's Elephantine stela touches on this chaotic period and refers explicitly to the expulsion of certain Asiatics, who fled Egypt, abandoning the gold which they had looted from Egyptian temples. It is uncertain the degree to which this inscription referred to contemporary events or rather repeated anti-Asiatic sentiment from the reign of Pharaoh Ahmose I. Setnakhte identified with the God Atum or Temu, and built a temple to this God at Per-Atum (Biblical Pithom).[citation needed]

 
The "mummy in the boat" from KV35, before its destruction

After his death, Setnakhte was buried in KV14 which was originally designed to be Twosret's royal tomb. His mummy has never been identified with certainty, although the so–called "mummy in the boat" found in KV35 was sometimes identified with him, an attribution rejected by Aidan Dodson who rather believes the body belonged to a royal family member of Amenhotep II of the 18th Dynasty. In any case the mummy was destroyed in a looting in 1901, thus preventing any analysis on it.[9]

Monuments

 
Reliefs of Horus and Geb from tomb KV14

While Setnakhte's reign was still comparatively brief, it was just long enough for him to stabilize the political situation in Egypt and establish his son, Rameses III, as his successor to the throne of Egypt. The Bakenkhunsu stela reveals that it was Setnakhte who began the construction of a Temple of Amun-Re in Karnak which was eventually completed by his son, Ramesses III. Setnakhte also started work on a tomb, KV11, in the Valley of the Kings, but stopped it when the tombcarvers accidentally broke into the tomb of the Nineteenth Dynasty Pharaoh Amenmesse. Setnakhte then appropriated the tomb of Queen Twosret (KV14), his predecessor, for his own use.

Papyrus Harris

The beginning of the Great Harris Papyrus or Papyrus Harris I, which documents the reign of Ramesses III, provides some details about Setnakhte's rise to power. An excerpt of James Henry Breasted's 1906 translation of this document is provided below:

The land of Egypt was overthrown from without, and every man was thrown out of his right; they had no "chief mouth" for many years formerly until other times. The land of Egypt was in the hands of chiefs and of rulers of towns; one slew his neighbour, great and small. Other times having come after it, with empty years, Irsu ('a self-made man'), a certain Syrian (Kharu) was with them as chief (wr). He set plundering their (i.e., the people's) possessions. They made gods like men, and no offerings were presented in the temples.
But when the gods inclined themselves to peace, to set the land in its rights according to its accustomed manner, they established their son, who came forth from their limbs, to be ruler, LPH, of every land, upon their great throne, Userkhaure-setepenre-meryamun, LPH, the son of Re, Setnakht-merire-meryamun, LPH. He was Khepri-Set, when he is enraged; he set in order the entire land which had been rebellious; he slew the rebels who were in the land of Egypt; he cleansed the great throne of Egypt; he was ruler of the Two Lands, on the throne of Atum. He gave ready faces to those who had been turned away. Every man knew his brother who had been walled in. He established the temples in possession of divine offerings, to offer to the gods according to their customary stipulations.[10]

Until 2000, Chancellor Bay was considered the only plausible candidate for this Irsu. However, an IFAO Ostracon no. 1864 found at Deir el-Medina dated to Year 5 records that 'Pharaoh (Siptah) LPH has killed the great enemy, Bay'.[11] Because Chancellor Bay died at least 3 years before this 'Irsu', he can no longer be considered a plausible candidate for this historical figure.

Genetics

In December 2012, a genetic study conducted by the same researchers who decoded King Tutankhamun's DNA found that Ramesses III, Setnakhte's son and second pharaoh of the Twentieth Dynasty of Egypt belonged to Y-DNA E-M2, alternatively known as haplogroup E1b1a1.[12]

References

  1. ^ Setnakht
  2. ^ Nos ancêtres de l'Antiquité 1991. Christian Settipani, p.153, 173 & 175
  3. ^ Von Beckerath, Chronologie des Pharaonischen Ägypten, 1997, p. 201-202
  4. ^ E.F. Wente & C.C. Van Siclen, "A Chronology of the New Kingdom" in Studies in Honor of George R. Hughes, (SAOC 39) 1976, pp.236-237
  5. ^ Peter Clayton, Chronicle of the Pharaohs, Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1994, p.160
  6. ^ a b El-Aref, Nevine (11–17 January 2007). . Al-Ahram Weekly (827). Archived from the original on 3 April 2011. Retrieved 2011-04-03.
  7. ^ Dino Bidoli, "Stadt und Temple von Elephantine. Dritter Grabungsbericht." MDAIK 28 (1972): 192 ff., pl. 49.
  8. ^ KRI V: 671, §251 (13)
  9. ^ Schneider, Thomas (2010). "Contributions to the Chronology of the New Kingdom and the Third Intermediate Period". Ägypten & Levante. 20., pp. 386–387
  10. ^ James H. Breasted, Ancient Records of Egypt, Vol No.4,(1906), pp.198-199
  11. ^ Pierre Grandet, "L'execution du chancelier Bay O. IFAO 1864," BIFAO 100 (2000), pp.339-356
  12. ^ Hawass, Z.; Ismail, S.; Selim, A.; Saleem, S. N.; Fathalla, D.; Wasef, S.; Gad, A. Z.; Saad, R.; Fares, S.; Amer, H.; Gostner, P.; Gad, Y. Z.; Pusch, C. M.; Zink, A. R. (17 December 2012). "Revisiting the harem conspiracy and death of Ramesses III: anthropological, forensic, radiological, and genetic study". BMJ. 345 (dec14 14): e8268. doi:10.1136/bmj.e8268. hdl:10072/62081. PMID 23247979. S2CID 206896841. Retrieved 6 July 2013.

Bibliography

  • James H. Breasted, Ancient Records of Egypt, Vol No.4,(1906)
  • Erik Hornung, Untersuchungen zur Chronologie und Geschichte des Neuen Reiches (1964)
  • J. Von Beckerath, Chronologie des Pharaonischen Ägypten, Philip Von Zabern, (Mainz: 1997), pp. 94–98 and pp. 201–202

setnakhte, userkhaure, setepenre, also, called, setnakht, sethnakht, first, pharaoh, 1189, 1186, twentieth, dynasty, kingdom, egypt, father, ramesses, setnakhtdrawing, relief, pharaoh, sethnakht, pharaohreign1189, 1186, twentieth, dynasty, predecessortwosretsu. Userkhaure setepenre Setnakhte also called Setnakht or Sethnakht was the first pharaoh 1189 BC 1186 BC of the Twentieth Dynasty of the New Kingdom of Egypt and the father of Ramesses III SetnakhteSetnakhtDrawing of a relief of pharaoh Sethnakht PharaohReign1189 1186 BC Twentieth Dynasty PredecessorTwosretSuccessorRamesses IIIRoyal titularyConsortTiy MereneseDied1186 BCBurialKV14Not to be confused with Sanakht Contents 1 Accession 2 Reign length 3 Monuments 4 Papyrus Harris 5 Genetics 6 References 7 BibliographyAccession EditSetnakhte was not the son brother or a direct descendant of either Twosret or Merneptah Siptah the immediately preceding two pharaohs nor that of Siptah s predecessor Seti II whom Setnakht formally considered the last legitimate ruler citation needed It is possible that he was a usurper who seized the throne during a time of crisis and political unrest or he could have been a member of a minor line of the Ramesside royal family who emerged as pharaoh Senakhte married Tiy Merenese perhaps a daughter of Merneptah A connection between Setnakhte s successors and the preceding Nineteenth Dynasty is suggested by the fact that one of Ramesses II s children also bore this name citation needed and that similar names are shared by Setnakhte s descendants such as Ramesses Amun her khepshef Seth her khepshef and Monthu her khepshef 2 Reign length EditSetnakhte was originally believed to have enjoyed a reign of only two years based upon his Year 2 Elephantine stela but his third regnal year is now attested in Inscription No 271 on Mount Sinai 3 If his theoretical accession date is assumed to be II Shemu 10 based on the date of his Elephantine stela Setnakhte would have ruled Egypt for at least two years and 11 months before he died or nearly three full years This date is only three months removed from Twosret s highest known date of Year 8 III Peret 5 and is based upon a calculation of Ramesses III s known accession date of I Shemu 26 4 Peter Clayton also assigned Setnakhte a reign of three years in his 1994 book on the Egyptian pharaohs 5 Year 4 quartzite stela of Bakenkhunsu In a mid January 2007 issue of the Egyptian weekly Al Ahram however Egyptian antiquity officials announced that a recently discovered and well preserved quartzite stela belonging to the High Priest of Amun Bakenkhunsu was explicitly dated to Year 4 of Setnakhte s reign The Al Ahram article notes that this data contradicts the official record which says Setnakhte ruled Egypt for only three years According to the new information provided by the stela Setnakhte s reign certainly lasted for four years and may have continued for a little longer 6 Zahi Hawass the former Secretary General of Egypt s Supreme Council of Antiquities declared the discovery to be one of the most important finds of 2006 because it adjusts the history of the 20th Dynasty and reveals more about the life of Bakenkhunsu 6 As Setnakhte s reign was short he may have come to the throne fairly late in life However the Al Ahram figure does not change the fact that Setnakhte likely truly ruled Egypt for only three rather than four full years since there are no Year 1 dates attested for him and his famous Year 2 Elephantine stela states that Setnakhte finally secured his kingship after defeating all his opponents and challengers to the throne in his second year The date of the Elephantine stela in Year 2 II Shemu day 10 of Setnakhte s reign 7 the date of which is mentioned only halfway in the stela rather than at its start is immediately followed by this proclamation There were no opponents against His Majesty l p h in all the lands 8 This reference to the defeat of Setnakhte s enemies implies that this specific date marked the termination of a conflict presumably Setnakhte s struggle for the throne which extended partly into his second year and means that Setnakhte s first year would have overlapped with Twosret s final year if Twosret was his opponent Therefore he likely did not even rule Egypt in his theoretical first year and could only properly administer the country from sometime during his second year In any event there was an interregnum lasting at least a year in which no ruler controlled all of Egypt and Setnakhte s effective reign length should be reduced by a year from 4 to 3 years Setnakhte s Elephantine stela touches on this chaotic period and refers explicitly to the expulsion of certain Asiatics who fled Egypt abandoning the gold which they had looted from Egyptian temples It is uncertain the degree to which this inscription referred to contemporary events or rather repeated anti Asiatic sentiment from the reign of Pharaoh Ahmose I Setnakhte identified with the God Atum or Temu and built a temple to this God at Per Atum Biblical Pithom citation needed The mummy in the boat from KV35 before its destruction After his death Setnakhte was buried in KV14 which was originally designed to be Twosret s royal tomb His mummy has never been identified with certainty although the so called mummy in the boat found in KV35 was sometimes identified with him an attribution rejected by Aidan Dodson who rather believes the body belonged to a royal family member of Amenhotep II of the 18th Dynasty In any case the mummy was destroyed in a looting in 1901 thus preventing any analysis on it 9 Monuments Edit Reliefs of Horus and Geb from tomb KV14 While Setnakhte s reign was still comparatively brief it was just long enough for him to stabilize the political situation in Egypt and establish his son Rameses III as his successor to the throne of Egypt The Bakenkhunsu stela reveals that it was Setnakhte who began the construction of a Temple of Amun Re in Karnak which was eventually completed by his son Ramesses III Setnakhte also started work on a tomb KV11 in the Valley of the Kings but stopped it when the tombcarvers accidentally broke into the tomb of the Nineteenth Dynasty Pharaoh Amenmesse Setnakhte then appropriated the tomb of Queen Twosret KV14 his predecessor for his own use Papyrus Harris EditThe beginning of the Great Harris Papyrus or Papyrus Harris I which documents the reign of Ramesses III provides some details about Setnakhte s rise to power An excerpt of James Henry Breasted s 1906 translation of this document is provided below The land of Egypt was overthrown from without and every man was thrown out of his right they had no chief mouth for many years formerly until other times The land of Egypt was in the hands of chiefs and of rulers of towns one slew his neighbour great and small Other times having come after it with empty years Irsu a self made man a certain Syrian Kharu was with them as chief wr He set plundering their i e the people s possessions They made gods like men and no offerings were presented in the temples But when the gods inclined themselves to peace to set the land in its rights according to its accustomed manner they established their son who came forth from their limbs to be ruler LPH of every land upon their great throne Userkhaure setepenre meryamun LPH the son of Re Setnakht merire meryamun LPH He was Khepri Set when he is enraged he set in order the entire land which had been rebellious he slew the rebels who were in the land of Egypt he cleansed the great throne of Egypt he was ruler of the Two Lands on the throne of Atum He gave ready faces to those who had been turned away Every man knew his brother who had been walled in He established the temples in possession of divine offerings to offer to the gods according to their customary stipulations 10 Until 2000 Chancellor Bay was considered the only plausible candidate for this Irsu However an IFAO Ostracon no 1864 found at Deir el Medina dated to Year 5 records that Pharaoh Siptah LPH has killed the great enemy Bay 11 Because Chancellor Bay died at least 3 years before this Irsu he can no longer be considered a plausible candidate for this historical figure Genetics EditIn December 2012 a genetic study conducted by the same researchers who decoded King Tutankhamun s DNA found that Ramesses III Setnakhte s son and second pharaoh of the Twentieth Dynasty of Egypt belonged to Y DNA E M2 alternatively known as haplogroup E1b1a1 12 References Edit Setnakht Nos ancetres de l Antiquite1991 Christian Settipani p 153 173 amp 175 Von Beckerath Chronologie des Pharaonischen Agypten 1997 p 201 202 E F Wente amp C C Van Siclen A Chronology of the New Kingdom in Studies in Honor of George R Hughes SAOC 39 1976 pp 236 237 Peter Clayton Chronicle of the Pharaohs Thames amp Hudson Ltd 1994 p 160 a b El Aref Nevine 11 17 January 2007 Dynasty revealed Al Ahram Weekly 827 Archived from the original on 3 April 2011 Retrieved 2011 04 03 Dino Bidoli Stadt und Temple von Elephantine Dritter Grabungsbericht MDAIK 28 1972 192 ff pl 49 KRI V 671 251 13 Schneider Thomas 2010 Contributions to the Chronology of the New Kingdom and the Third Intermediate Period Agypten amp Levante 20 pp 386 387 James H Breasted Ancient Records of Egypt Vol No 4 1906 pp 198 199 Pierre Grandet L execution du chancelier Bay O IFAO 1864 BIFAO 100 2000 pp 339 356 Hawass Z Ismail S Selim A Saleem S N Fathalla D Wasef S Gad A Z Saad R Fares S Amer H Gostner P Gad Y Z Pusch C M Zink A R 17 December 2012 Revisiting the harem conspiracy and death of Ramesses III anthropological forensic radiological and genetic study BMJ 345 dec14 14 e8268 doi 10 1136 bmj e8268 hdl 10072 62081 PMID 23247979 S2CID 206896841 Retrieved 6 July 2013 Bibliography Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sethnakht James H Breasted Ancient Records of Egypt Vol No 4 1906 Erik Hornung Untersuchungen zur Chronologie und Geschichte des Neuen Reiches 1964 J Von Beckerath Chronologie des Pharaonischen Agypten Philip Von Zabern Mainz 1997 pp 94 98 and pp 201 202 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Setnakhte amp oldid 1107731847, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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