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Shoshenq I

Hedjkheperre Setepenre Shoshenq I (Egyptian ššnq; reigned c. 943–922 BC)—also known as Shashank or Sheshonk or Sheshonq I[note 1]—was a pharaoh of ancient Egypt and the founder of the Twenty-second Dynasty of Egypt. Of Meshwesh ancestry,[2] Shoshenq I was the son of Nimlot A, Great Chief of the Ma, and his wife Tentshepeh A, a daughter of a Great Chief of the Ma herself; Shoshenq was thus the nephew of Osorkon the Elder, a Meshwesh king of the 21st Dynasty. He is generally presumed to be the Shishak mentioned in the Hebrew Bible, and his exploits are carved on the Bubastite Portal at Karnak.

Shoshenq I
Sesonkhosis, Sesonkhis (Σέσωγχις)
Shoshenq I (middle) gives offering to Amun (left), accompanied by his son Iuput (right), drawn by Ippolito Rosellini at the Bubastite Portal.
Pharaoh
Reign943–922 BC[1]
PredecessorPsusennes II
SuccessorOsorkon I
Horus name
Kanakht Meryre Sekhafemnisuterzematawy
kȝ nḫt mrj-Rˁ sḫˁj.f-m-nsw-r-zm3-t3wj
Strong bull, beloved of Ra, he who causes the king to unite the two lands






Nebty name
Khaemsekhemtimihorsaaset Sehotepnetjeruemmaat
ḫˁj-m-sḫmtj-mj-Ḥr-z3-3st sḥtp-nṯrw-m-M3ˁt
The double crown appears as Horus son of Isis, he who satisfies the gods in Maat






Golden Horus
Sekhempehti Huipedjut-9 Wernekhtutaunebu
sḫm-pḥtj ḥwj-pḏt-psḏt wr-nḫtw-(m)-t3w-nbw
He whose mighty power vanquishes the nine bows (enemies of Egypt), he who is great of victories in all countries










Prenomen  (Praenomen)
Hedjkheperre Setepenre
ḥḏ-ḫpr-Rˁ stp.n-Rˁ
Radiant is the manifestation of Ra, the chosen one of Ra



Nomen
Shoshenq Meriamun
Ššnq mrj Jmn
Shoshenq, beloved of Amun





Variant:
Shoshenq Meriamun Netjerheqaiunu
Ššnq mrj Jmn nṯr hq3 Iwnw
Shoshenq, beloved of Amun, divine ruler of Iunu




ConsortPatareshnes, Karomama A
ChildrenOsorkon I, Iuput A, Nimlot B
FatherNimlot A
MotherTentsepeh A
Died922 BC
Dynasty22nd Dynasty

Chronology edit

 
A scarab of Hedjkheperre Shoshenq I and Sekhemkheperre Osorkon I.[3]
 
Birth and throne names of Shoshenq I

The conventional dates for his reign, as established by Kenneth Kitchen, are 945–924 BC but his time-line has recently been revised upwards by a few years to 943–922 BC, since he may well have lived for up to two to three years after his successful campaign in Israel and Judah, conventionally dated to 925 BC. As Edward Wente of the University of Chicago noted (1976) on page 276 of his JNES 35 Book Review of Kitchen's study of the Third Intermediate Period, there is "no certainty" that Shoshenq's 925 BC campaign terminated just prior to this king's death a year later in 924 BC. Egyptologist Morris Bierbrier also dated Shoshenq I's accession "between 945–940 BC" in his 1975 book concerning the genealogies of Egyptian officials, who served during the late New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Period.[4] Bierbrier based his opinion on Biblical evidence collated by W. Albright in a BASOR 130 paper. This development would also account for the mostly unfinished state of decorations of Shoshenq's building projects at the Great Temple of Karnak where only scenes of the king's Palestinian military campaign are fully carved. Building materials would first have had to be extracted and architectural planning performed for his great monumental projects here. Such activities usually took up to a year to complete before work was even begun. This would imply that Shoshenq I likely lived for a period in excess of one year after his 925 BC campaign. On the other hand, if the Karnak inscription was concurrent with Shoshenq's campaign into Canaan, the fact that it was left unfinished would suggest this campaign occurred in the last year of Shoshenq's reign. This possibility would also permit his 945 BC accession date to be slightly lowered to 943 BC.

A 2005 study by Rolf Krauss of ancient Egyptian chronology suggests that Shoshenq I came to power in 943 BC rather than 945 BC as is conventionally assumed based on epigraphic evidence from the Great Dakhla stela, which dates to Year 5 of his reign.[5] Krauss and David Warburton write in the 2006 book Ancient Egyptian Chronology:

The chronology of early Dyn. 22 depends on dead reckoning. The sum of the highest attested regnal dates for Osorkon II, Takelot I, Osorkon I, and Shoshenq I, added to 841 BC as year 1 of Shoshenq III, yields 938 BC at the latest for year 1 of Shoshenq I...[However] The large Dakhla stela provides a lunar date in the form of a wrš feast in year 5 of Shoshenq [I], yielding 943 BC as his year 1.[6]

The Year 5 wrš feast is recorded to have been celebrated at Dakhla oasis on IV Peret day 25 and Krauss' exploration of the astronomical data leads him to conclude that the only 'fit' within the period of 950 to 930 BC places the accession of Shoshenq I between December 944 and November 943 BC—or 943 BC for the most part.[7] However, Dr. Anthony Leahy has suggested that "the identification of the wrš-festival of Seth as [a] lunar [festival] is hypothetical, and [thus] its occurrence on the first day of a lunar month an assumption. Neither has been proven incontrovertibly."[8] Thus far, however, only Dr. Kenneth Kitchen is on record as sharing the same academic view.[9]

A 2010 study by Thomas Schneider argued that Shoshenq reigned from 962 to 941 BCE.[10][11] Ido Koch in his 2021 book considered Schneider's chronology of Egyptian kings as a valuable integrative study.[12] However, recent archaeomagnetic dating at Beth-Shean, one of three early sites that could have been destroyed by Shoshenq I, shows 68.2% probability the destruction occurred between 935 and 900 BC, and 95.4% probability it occurred between 940 and 879 BC.[13]

Biblical Shishak edit

Shoshenq I is conventionally identified with the Egyptian king Shishak (שׁישׁק Šîšaq, transliterated),[14] referred to in the Hebrew Bible at 1 Kings 11:40, 14:25 and 2 Chronicles 12:2–9.[15] According to these passages, Jeroboam fled from Solomon and stayed with Shishaq until Solomon died, and Shishaq invaded Judah, mostly the area of Benjamin, during the fifth year of the reign of Rehoboam, taking with him most of the treasures of the temple built by Solomon. The egyptologist Kenneth Kitchen proposes that Shoshenq's successor, Osorkon I, lavished 383 tons of gold and silver on Egyptian temples during the first four years of his reign and correlate it directly to the looting,[16] while the archaeologist Israel Finkelstein claims that the looting narrative in question "should probably be seen as a theological construct rather than as historical references".[17]

Shishak/Sousakim was also related to Jeroboam: "the wife of Jeroboam" is a character in the Hebrew Bible. She is unnamed in the Masoretic Text, but according to the Septuagint, she was an Egyptian princess called Ano:

And Sousakim gave to Jeroboam Ano the eldest sister of Thekemina his wife, to him as wife; she was great among the king's daughters...[18][19]

Archaeologists at Tel Gezer recently concluded that correlation of Stratum 7, (927–885 BC, 68.3% hpd), "with Shishak/Sheshonq I's [e]nd boundary, [included in] the biblical date for Shishak’s campaign [d]oes not fit well with [their] current 14C-based estimates for Sheshonq I," which they considered to be (c. 969-940 BC with 68.3% hpd, and 991-930 BC with 95.4% hpd) in Stratum 8.[20]

Origins and family edit

 
The Bubastite Portal at Karnak, depicting Shoshenq I and his second son, the High Priest Iuput A

Shoshenq I was the son of Nimlot A and Tentsepeh A. His paternal grandparents were the Chief of the Ma Shoshenq A and his wife Mehytenweskhet A.[21] Prior to his reign, Shoshenq I had been the Commander-in-Chief of the Egyptian Army, and chief advisor to his predecessor Psusennes II, as well as the father-in-law of Psusennes' daughter Maatkare. He also held his father's title of Great Chief of the Ma or Meshwesh, which is an Egyptian word for Ancient Libyans. His ancestors had settled in Egypt during the late New Kingdom, probably at Herakleopolis Magna,[22] though Manetho claims Shoshenq himself came from Bubastis, a claim for which no supporting physical evidence has yet been discovered. Significantly, his uncle Osorkon the Elder had already served on the throne for at least six years in the preceding 21st Dynasty; hence, Shoshenq I's rise to power was not wholly unexpected. As king, Shoshenq chose his eldest son, Osorkon I, as his successor and consolidated his authority over Egypt through marriage alliances and appointments. He assigned his second son, Iuput A, the prominent position of High Priest of Amun at Thebes as well as the title of Governor of Upper Egypt and Commander of the Army to consolidate his authority over the Thebaid.[23] Finally, Shoshenq I designated his third son, Nimlot B, as the "Leader of the Army" at Herakleopolis in Middle Egypt.[24]

Foreign policy edit

 
The Triumphal Relief of Shoshenq I near the Bubastite Portal at Karnak, depicting the god Amun-Re receiving a list of cities and villages conquered by the king in his Near Eastern military campaigns.

He pursued an aggressive foreign policy in the adjacent territories of the Middle East, towards the end of his reign. This is attested, in part, by the discovery of a statue base bearing his name from the Lebanese city of Byblos, part of a monumental stela from Megiddo bearing his name, and a list of cities in the region comprising Syria, Philistia, Phoenicia, the Negev, and the Kingdom of Israel, among various topographical lists inscribed on the walls of temples of Amun at al-Hibah and Karnak. The fragment of a stela bearing his cartouche from Megiddo has been interpreted as a monument Shoshenq erected there to commemorate his victory.[25] Some of these conquered cities include ancient Israelite fortresses such as Megiddo, Taanach and Shechem.

There are other problems with Shoshenq being the same as the biblical Shishak: Shoshenq's Karnak list does not include Jerusalem—his biggest prize according to the Bible. His list focuses on places either north or south of Judah, as if he did not raid the center. The fundamental problem facing historians is establishing the aims of the two accounts and linking up the information in them.[26]

There have been some possible suggestions and proposals from scholars regarding this issue. Some argue that the mention of Jerusalem was erased from the list over time. Others believe that Rehoboam's tribute to Shoshenq saved the city from destruction and therefore from the Bubastite Portal's lists. Some scholars even propose that Shoshenq claimed a conquest that he did not enact and copied the list of conquered territories from an old Pharaoh's conquest list.[27]

As an addendum to his foreign policy, Shoshenq I carved a report of campaigns in Nubia and Israel, with a detailed list of conquests in Israel. This is the first military action outside Egypt formally commemorated for several centuries.[26] This report of conquests is the only surviving late Iron Age text concerning Canaan.[28] as far as Damascus[29]

Domestic policy edit

Libyan concepts of rule allowed for the parallel existence of leaders who were related by marriage and blood. Shoshenq and his immediate successors used that practice to consolidate their grasp on all of Egypt. Shoshenq terminated the hereditary succession of the high priesthood of Amun. Instead he and his successors appointed men to the position, most often their own sons, a practice that lasted for a century.[26]

Burial edit

 
Canopic chest and lid of Shoshenq I at the Neues Museum, Berlin

Shoshenq I was succeeded by his son Osorkon I after a reign of 21 years. According to the British Egyptologist Aidan Dodson, no trace has yet been found of the tomb of Shoshenq I. The sole funerary object linked to Shoshenq I is a canopic chest of unknown provenance that was donated to the Egyptian Museum of Berlin (ÄMB 11000) by Julius Isaac in 1891.[30] This may indicate his tomb was looted in antiquity, but this hypothesis is unproven. Egyptologists differ over the location of Shoshenq I's burial and speculate that he may have been buried somewhere in Tanis—perhaps in one of the anonymous royal tombs here—or in Bubastis. However, Troy Sagrillo in a GM 205 (2005) paper observes that "there are only a bare handful of inscribed blocks from Tanis that might name the king (i.e. Shoshenq I) and none of these come from an in situ building complex contemporary with his reign."[31] Hence, it is more probable that Shoshenq was buried in another city in the Egyptian Delta. Sagrillo offers a specific location for Shoshenq's burial—the Ptah temple enclosure of Memphis—and notes that this king built:

fairly widely in the area, undoubtedly including a pylon and forecourt at the Ptah temple (Kitchen, TIPE 1996, pp. 149–150) ...It is, therefore, not completely improbable that he (i.e., Shoshenq I) built his tomb in the region. The funerary cult surrounding his "House of Millions of Years of Shoshenq, Beloved of Amun" was functioning several generations after its establishment at the temple (Ibrahem Aly Sayed 1996, p. 14). The "House of Millions of Years of Shoshenq, Beloved of Amun" was probably the forecourt and pylon of the Ptah temple, which, if the royal necropoleis at Tanis, Saïs, and Mendes are taken as models, could very well have contained a royal burial within it or the temenos.[32]

Sagrillo concludes by observing that if Shoshenq I's burial place was located at Memphis, "it would go far in explaining why this king's funerary cult lasted for some time at the site after his death."[32]

While Shoshenq's tomb is currently unknown, the burial of one of his prominent state officials at Thebes, the Third Prophet of Amun Djedptahiufankh, was discovered intact in tomb DB320 in the 19th Century. Inscriptions on Djedptahiufankh's Mummy bandages show that he died in or after Year 11 of this king. His mummy was discovered to contain various gold bracelets, amulets and precious carnelian objects, and give a small hint of the vast treasures that would have adorned Shoshenq I's tomb.

Notes edit

  1. ^ for discussion of the spelling, see Shoshenq

References edit

  1. ^ R. Krauss & D.A. Warburton "Chronological Table for the Dynastic Period" in Erik Hornung, Rolf Krauss & David Warburton (editors), Ancient Egyptian Chronology (Handbook of Oriental Studies), Brill, 2006. p. 493
  2. ^ "He came from a line of princes or sheikhs of Libyan tribal descent", The New Encyclopædia Britannica, 2002, v.7, p.733. An updated on-line version of the same article, containing the same quote and last updated as of 2014, can be found online at Encyclopædia Britannica.
  3. ^ Flinders Petrie: Scarabs and cylinders with names (1917), pl. XLIX
  4. ^ M. Bierbrier, The Late New Kingdom in Egypt (c. 1300–664 BC), Aris & Philips Ltd (1975), p. 111
  5. ^ Rolf Krauss, Das wrŝ-Datum aus Jahr 5 von Shoshenq [I], Discussions in Egyptology 62 (2005), pp.43-48
  6. ^ Erik Hornung, Rolf Krauss & David Warburton (editors), Ancient Egyptian Chronology (Handbook of Oriental Studies), Brill: 2006, p.474
  7. ^ Anthony Leahy, The date of the 'larger' Dakhleh stela (Oxford, Ashmolean Museum 1894.107a), GM 226 (2010), p.47
  8. ^ Leahy, GM 226 p.52
  9. ^ see 'The Libyan Period in Egypt.' Historical and Cultural Studies into the 21st-24th Dynasties: Proceedings of a Conference at Leiden University 25–27 October 2007, G. Broekman, RJ Demaree & O.E. Kaper (eds), Peeters Leuven 2009, p.167 where Kitchen states that there is 'no evidence whatsoever' that the wrš festival was a lunar one
  10. ^ Schneider, Thomas, (2010). "Contributions to the Chronology of the New Kingdom and the Third Intermediate Period", in AeL 20, pp. 373-403.
  11. ^ Finkelstein, Israel, (2020). "Saul and Highlands of Benjamin Update: The Role of Jerusalem", in Joachim J. Krause, Omer Sergi, and Kristin Weingart (eds.), Saul, Benjamin, and the Emergence of Monarchy in Israel: Biblical and Archaeological Perspectives, SBL Press, p. 49.
  12. ^ Koch, Ido, (2021). "Appendix: Chronology of Egyptian Kings", in Colonial Encounters in Southwest Canaan during the Late Bronze Age and the Early Iron Age, Series: Culture and History of the Ancient Near East, Volume 119, Brill, pp. 131-132.
  13. ^ Vakmin, Yoav, et al., (2022). "Reconstructing biblical military campaigns using geomagnetic field data", in: PNAS, Vol. 119, No. 44.
  14. ^ Troy Leiland Sagrillo, 2015, Shoshenq I and biblical Šîšaq: A philological defense of their traditional equation in Solomon and Shishak: Current perspectives from archaeology, epigraphy, history and chronology; proceedings of the third BICANE colloquium held at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge 26–27 March 2011, edited by Peter J. James, Peter G. van der Veen, and Robert M. Porter. British Archaeological Reports (International Series) 2732. Oxford: Archaeopress. 61–81
  15. ^ E.g. Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 1 King 11, accessed 4 June 2017
  16. ^ K.A. Kitchen, On the Reliability of the Old Testament, William Eerdmans & Co, 2003. p. 134
  17. ^ Finkelstein, Israel (2006). "The Last Labayu: King Saul and the Expansion of the First North Israelite Territorial Entity". In Amit, Yairah; Ben Zvi, Ehud; Finkelstein, Israel; et al. (eds.). Essays on Ancient Israel in Its Near Eastern Context: A Tribute to Nadav Naʼaman. Eisenbrauns. pp. 171 ff. ISBN 9781575061283.
  18. ^ 1 Kings 12:24e, New English Translation of the Septuagint
  19. ^ Brenton Septuagint (English Translation) 1 Kings 12:24e.
  20. ^ Webster, Lyndelle C.; et al. (15 November 2023). "The chronology of Gezer from the end of the late bronze age to iron age II: A meeting point for radiocarbon, archaeology egyptology and the Bible". PLOS ONE. 18 (11): e0293119. Bibcode:2023PLoSO..1893119W. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0293119. PMC 10651010. PMID 37967047.
  21. ^ Kitchen, Kenneth Anderson (1986). The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt, 1100-650 B.C. Aris & Phillips. p. 112. ISBN 9780856682988.
  22. ^ Troy Leiland Sagrillo, 'The Geographic Origins of the "Bubastite" Dynasty and Possible Locations for the Royal Residence and Burial Place of Shoshenq I.' In The Libyan period in Egypt: Historical and cultural studies into the 21st–24th Dynasties, edited by G.P.F. Broekman, R.J. Demarée, and O. Kaper. Egyptologische Uitgaven 23, Leuven: Uitgeverij Peeters. 2009:341–359.
  23. ^ K.A. Kitchen, "The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt (c.1100-650 BC)," Aris & Phillips Ltd. third edition. 1996. p.289
  24. ^ Kitchen, "The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt" p.290
  25. ^ K.A. Kitchen, On the Reliability of the Old Testament, William Erdsman & Co, 2003. pp.10, 32-34 & p.607 Page 607 of Kitchen's book depicts the surviving fragment of Shoshenq I's Megiddo stela
  26. ^ a b c de Mieroop, Marc Van (2021). A History of Ancient Egypt (2nd ed.). Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. p. 261. ISBN 9781119620891.
  27. ^ Biblical Archaeology Society Staff (27 March 2017). "Did Pharaoh Sheshonq Attack Jerusalem". Biblical History Daily. Biblical Archaeology Society. Retrieved 3 September 2017.
  28. ^ Finkelstein, Israel (2006). "The Last Labayu: King Saul and the Expansion of the First North Israelite Territorial Entity". In Amit, Yairah; Ben Zvi, Ehud; Finkelstein, Israel; et al. (eds.). Essays on Ancient Israel in Its Near Eastern Context: A Tribute to Nadav Naʼaman. Eisenbrauns. p. 171. ISBN 9781575061283. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
  29. ^ Daniel pioske (12 October 2023). The Bible among Ruins. Cambridge University Press. p. 221. ISBN 978-1-009-41257-5.
  30. ^ Aidan Dodson, The Canopic Equipment of the Kings of Egypt, Kegan Paul Intl, (1994), pp.83-84
  31. ^ Troy Leiland Sagrillo, "The Mummy of Shoshenq I Re-discovered?," Göttinger Miszellen 205 (2005), p.99
  32. ^ a b Sagrillo, p. 100

Bibliography edit

  • M. Bierbrier, The Late New Kingdom in Egypt (c.1300-664 BC), Aris & Philips Ltd, (1975)
  • Ricardo A. Caminos, Gebel Es-Silsilah No. 100, JEA 38 (1952), pp. 46–61
  • Rupert L. Chapman III, Putting Shoshenq I in his Place, Palestine Exploration Quarterly 141, 1 (2009), pp. 4–17
  • M. Georges Daressy, Les Parents de Chéchanq Ier, ASAE 16 (1916), 3
  • Aidan Dodson, The Canopic Equipment of the Kings of Egypt, Kegan Paul Intl, (1994)
  • Erika Feucht, Zwei Reliefs Scheschonqs I. aus El Hibeh, SAK 6 (1978), 69-77
  • Alan H. Gardiner, The Dakhleh Stela, JEA 19 (1933), 19-30
  • Rolf Krauss, Das wrš-Datum aus Jahr 5 von Shoshenq [I], Discussions in Egyptology 62 (2005), pp. 43–48
  • Yigal Levin, 'Sheshonq I and the Negev Haserim', Maarav 17 (2010), pp. 189-215.
  • Yigal Levin, "Sheshonq’s Levantine Conquest and Biblical History". In: Jonathan S. Greer, John W. Hilber, & John H. Walton (eds.), Behind the Scenes of the Old Testament: Cultural, Social, and Historical Contexts, Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2018.
  • Thomas E. Levy, Stefan Münger, and Mohammad Najjar, “A Newly Discovered Scarab of Sheshonq I: Recent Iron Age Explorations in Southern Jordan”, Antiquity 88, 341 (September 2014).
  • Troy Leiland Sagrillo, 'The Mummy of Shoshenq I Re-discovered?,' GM 205 (2005), pp. 95–102
  • Troy Leiland Sagrillo, 'The Geographic Origins of the "Bubastite" Dynasty and Possible Locations for the Royal Residence and Burial Place of Shoshenq I.' In The Libyan period in Egypt: Historical and cultural studies into the 21st–24th Dynasties, edited by G.P.F. Broekman, R.J. Demarée, and O. Kaper. Egyptologische Uitgaven 23, Leuven: Uitgeverij Peeters. 2009: pp. 341–359
  • Troy Leiland Sagrillo, 'Šîšaq’s army: 2 Chronicles 12:2–3 from an Egyptological perspective' In The ancient Near East in the 12th–10th Centuries BCE: Culture and history; proceedings of the international conference held at the University of Haifa, 2–5 May 2010, edited by Gershon Galil, Ayelet Gilboa, Aren M. Maeir, and Dan’el Kahn. Alter Orient und Altes Testament: Veröffentlichungen zur Kultur und Geschichte des Alten Orients und des Alten Testaments 392. Münster: Ugarit-Verlag. 2012: pp. 425–450.
  • Troy Leiland Sagrillo. 2015. "Shoshenq I and biblical Šîšaq: A philological defense of their traditional equation." In Solomon and Shishak: Current perspectives from archaeology, epigraphy, history and chronology; proceedings of the third BICANE colloquium held at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge 26–27 March 2011, edited by Peter J. James, Peter G. van der Veen, and Robert M. Porter. British Archaeological Reports (International Series) 2732. Oxford: Archaeopress. 61–81.

External links edit

  • The Campaign of Pharaoh Shoshenq I in Palestine, by Kevin A. Wilson. 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • The Palestine Campaign of Sheshonq I

shoshenq, hedjkheperre, setepenre, egyptian, ššnq, reigned, also, known, shashank, sheshonk, sheshonq, note, pharaoh, ancient, egypt, founder, twenty, second, dynasty, egypt, meshwesh, ancestry, nimlot, great, chief, wife, tentshepeh, daughter, great, chief, h. Hedjkheperre Setepenre Shoshenq I Egyptian ssnq reigned c 943 922 BC also known as Shashank or Sheshonk or Sheshonq I note 1 was a pharaoh of ancient Egypt and the founder of the Twenty second Dynasty of Egypt Of Meshwesh ancestry 2 Shoshenq I was the son of Nimlot A Great Chief of the Ma and his wife Tentshepeh A a daughter of a Great Chief of the Ma herself Shoshenq was thus the nephew of Osorkon the Elder a Meshwesh king of the 21st Dynasty He is generally presumed to be the Shishak mentioned in the Hebrew Bible and his exploits are carved on the Bubastite Portal at Karnak Shoshenq ISesonkhosis Sesonkhis Seswgxis Shoshenq I middle gives offering to Amun left accompanied by his son Iuput right drawn by Ippolito Rosellini at the Bubastite Portal PharaohReign943 922 BC 1 PredecessorPsusennes IISuccessorOsorkon IRoyal titularyHorus nameKanakht Meryre Sekhafemnisuterzematawykȝ nḫt mrj Rˁ sḫˁj f m nsw r zm3 t3wjStrong bull beloved of Ra he who causes the king to unite the two landsNebty nameKhaemsekhemtimihorsaaset Sehotepnetjeruemmaatḫˁj m sḫmtj mj Ḥr z3 3st sḥtp nṯrw m M3ˁtThe double crown appears as Horus son of Isis he who satisfies the gods in MaatGolden HorusSekhempehti Huipedjut 9 Wernekhtutaunebu sḫm pḥtj ḥwj pḏt psḏt wr nḫtw m t3w nbwHe whose mighty power vanquishes the nine bows enemies of Egypt he who is great of victories in all countriesPrenomen Praenomen Hedjkheperre Setepenreḥḏ ḫpr Rˁ stp n RˁRadiant is the manifestation of Ra the chosen one of RaNomenShoshenq MeriamunSsnq mrj JmnShoshenq beloved of AmunVariant Shoshenq Meriamun NetjerheqaiunuSsnq mrj Jmn nṯr hq3 IwnwShoshenq beloved of Amun divine ruler of IunuConsortPatareshnes Karomama AChildrenOsorkon I Iuput A Nimlot BFatherNimlot AMotherTentsepeh ADied922 BCDynasty22nd Dynasty Contents 1 Chronology 2 Biblical Shishak 3 Origins and family 4 Foreign policy 5 Domestic policy 6 Burial 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksChronology edit nbsp A scarab of Hedjkheperre Shoshenq I and Sekhemkheperre Osorkon I 3 nbsp Birth and throne names of Shoshenq IThe conventional dates for his reign as established by Kenneth Kitchen are 945 924 BC but his time line has recently been revised upwards by a few years to 943 922 BC since he may well have lived for up to two to three years after his successful campaign in Israel and Judah conventionally dated to 925 BC As Edward Wente of the University of Chicago noted 1976 on page 276 of his JNES 35 Book Review of Kitchen s study of the Third Intermediate Period there is no certainty that Shoshenq s 925 BC campaign terminated just prior to this king s death a year later in 924 BC Egyptologist Morris Bierbrier also dated Shoshenq I s accession between 945 940 BC in his 1975 book concerning the genealogies of Egyptian officials who served during the late New Kingdom and Third Intermediate Period 4 Bierbrier based his opinion on Biblical evidence collated by W Albright in a BASOR 130 paper This development would also account for the mostly unfinished state of decorations of Shoshenq s building projects at the Great Temple of Karnak where only scenes of the king s Palestinian military campaign are fully carved Building materials would first have had to be extracted and architectural planning performed for his great monumental projects here Such activities usually took up to a year to complete before work was even begun This would imply that Shoshenq I likely lived for a period in excess of one year after his 925 BC campaign On the other hand if the Karnak inscription was concurrent with Shoshenq s campaign into Canaan the fact that it was left unfinished would suggest this campaign occurred in the last year of Shoshenq s reign This possibility would also permit his 945 BC accession date to be slightly lowered to 943 BC A 2005 study by Rolf Krauss of ancient Egyptian chronology suggests that Shoshenq I came to power in 943 BC rather than 945 BC as is conventionally assumed based on epigraphic evidence from the Great Dakhla stela which dates to Year 5 of his reign 5 Krauss and David Warburton write in the 2006 book Ancient Egyptian Chronology The chronology of early Dyn 22 depends on dead reckoning The sum of the highest attested regnal dates for Osorkon II Takelot I Osorkon I and Shoshenq I added to 841 BC as year 1 of Shoshenq III yields 938 BC at the latest for year 1 of Shoshenq I However The large Dakhla stela provides a lunar date in the form of a wrs feast in year 5 of Shoshenq I yielding 943 BC as his year 1 6 The Year 5 wrs feast is recorded to have been celebrated at Dakhla oasis on IV Peret day 25 and Krauss exploration of the astronomical data leads him to conclude that the only fit within the period of 950 to 930 BC places the accession of Shoshenq I between December 944 and November 943 BC or 943 BC for the most part 7 However Dr Anthony Leahy has suggested that the identification of the wrs festival of Seth as a lunar festival is hypothetical and thus its occurrence on the first day of a lunar month an assumption Neither has been proven incontrovertibly 8 Thus far however only Dr Kenneth Kitchen is on record as sharing the same academic view 9 A 2010 study by Thomas Schneider argued that Shoshenq reigned from 962 to 941 BCE 10 11 Ido Koch in his 2021 book considered Schneider s chronology of Egyptian kings as a valuable integrative study 12 However recent archaeomagnetic dating at Beth Shean one of three early sites that could have been destroyed by Shoshenq I shows 68 2 probability the destruction occurred between 935 and 900 BC and 95 4 probability it occurred between 940 and 879 BC 13 Biblical Shishak editMain article Shishak Shoshenq I is conventionally identified with the Egyptian king Shishak ש יש ק Sisaq transliterated 14 referred to in the Hebrew Bible at 1 Kings 11 40 14 25 and 2 Chronicles 12 2 9 15 According to these passages Jeroboam fled from Solomon and stayed with Shishaq until Solomon died and Shishaq invaded Judah mostly the area of Benjamin during the fifth year of the reign of Rehoboam taking with him most of the treasures of the temple built by Solomon The egyptologist Kenneth Kitchen proposes that Shoshenq s successor Osorkon I lavished 383 tons of gold and silver on Egyptian temples during the first four years of his reign and correlate it directly to the looting 16 while the archaeologist Israel Finkelstein claims that the looting narrative in question should probably be seen as a theological construct rather than as historical references 17 Shishak Sousakim was also related to Jeroboam the wife of Jeroboam is a character in the Hebrew Bible She is unnamed in the Masoretic Text but according to the Septuagint she was an Egyptian princess called Ano And Sousakim gave to Jeroboam Ano the eldest sister of Thekemina his wife to him as wife she was great among the king s daughters 18 19 Archaeologists at Tel Gezer recently concluded that correlation of Stratum 7 927 885 BC 68 3 hpd with Shishak Sheshonq I s e nd boundary included in the biblical date for Shishak s campaign d oes not fit well with their current 14C based estimates for Sheshonq I which they considered to be c 969 940 BC with 68 3 hpd and 991 930 BC with 95 4 hpd in Stratum 8 20 Origins and family edit nbsp The Bubastite Portal at Karnak depicting Shoshenq I and his second son the High Priest Iuput AShoshenq I was the son of Nimlot A and Tentsepeh A His paternal grandparents were the Chief of the Ma Shoshenq A and his wife Mehytenweskhet A 21 Prior to his reign Shoshenq I had been the Commander in Chief of the Egyptian Army and chief advisor to his predecessor Psusennes II as well as the father in law of Psusennes daughter Maatkare He also held his father s title of Great Chief of the Ma or Meshwesh which is an Egyptian word for Ancient Libyans His ancestors had settled in Egypt during the late New Kingdom probably at Herakleopolis Magna 22 though Manetho claims Shoshenq himself came from Bubastis a claim for which no supporting physical evidence has yet been discovered Significantly his uncle Osorkon the Elder had already served on the throne for at least six years in the preceding 21st Dynasty hence Shoshenq I s rise to power was not wholly unexpected As king Shoshenq chose his eldest son Osorkon I as his successor and consolidated his authority over Egypt through marriage alliances and appointments He assigned his second son Iuput A the prominent position of High Priest of Amun at Thebes as well as the title of Governor of Upper Egypt and Commander of the Army to consolidate his authority over the Thebaid 23 Finally Shoshenq I designated his third son Nimlot B as the Leader of the Army at Herakleopolis in Middle Egypt 24 Foreign policy edit nbsp The Triumphal Relief of Shoshenq I near the Bubastite Portal at Karnak depicting the god Amun Re receiving a list of cities and villages conquered by the king in his Near Eastern military campaigns He pursued an aggressive foreign policy in the adjacent territories of the Middle East towards the end of his reign This is attested in part by the discovery of a statue base bearing his name from the Lebanese city of Byblos part of a monumental stela from Megiddo bearing his name and a list of cities in the region comprising Syria Philistia Phoenicia the Negev and the Kingdom of Israel among various topographical lists inscribed on the walls of temples of Amun at al Hibah and Karnak The fragment of a stela bearing his cartouche from Megiddo has been interpreted as a monument Shoshenq erected there to commemorate his victory 25 Some of these conquered cities include ancient Israelite fortresses such as Megiddo Taanach and Shechem There are other problems with Shoshenq being the same as the biblical Shishak Shoshenq s Karnak list does not include Jerusalem his biggest prize according to the Bible His list focuses on places either north or south of Judah as if he did not raid the center The fundamental problem facing historians is establishing the aims of the two accounts and linking up the information in them 26 There have been some possible suggestions and proposals from scholars regarding this issue Some argue that the mention of Jerusalem was erased from the list over time Others believe that Rehoboam s tribute to Shoshenq saved the city from destruction and therefore from the Bubastite Portal s lists Some scholars even propose that Shoshenq claimed a conquest that he did not enact and copied the list of conquered territories from an old Pharaoh s conquest list 27 As an addendum to his foreign policy Shoshenq I carved a report of campaigns in Nubia and Israel with a detailed list of conquests in Israel This is the first military action outside Egypt formally commemorated for several centuries 26 This report of conquests is the only surviving late Iron Age text concerning Canaan 28 as far as Damascus 29 Domestic policy editLibyan concepts of rule allowed for the parallel existence of leaders who were related by marriage and blood Shoshenq and his immediate successors used that practice to consolidate their grasp on all of Egypt Shoshenq terminated the hereditary succession of the high priesthood of Amun Instead he and his successors appointed men to the position most often their own sons a practice that lasted for a century 26 Burial edit nbsp Canopic chest and lid of Shoshenq I at the Neues Museum BerlinShoshenq I was succeeded by his son Osorkon I after a reign of 21 years According to the British Egyptologist Aidan Dodson no trace has yet been found of the tomb of Shoshenq I The sole funerary object linked to Shoshenq I is a canopic chest of unknown provenance that was donated to the Egyptian Museum of Berlin AMB 11000 by Julius Isaac in 1891 30 This may indicate his tomb was looted in antiquity but this hypothesis is unproven Egyptologists differ over the location of Shoshenq I s burial and speculate that he may have been buried somewhere in Tanis perhaps in one of the anonymous royal tombs here or in Bubastis However Troy Sagrillo in a GM 205 2005 paper observes that there are only a bare handful of inscribed blocks from Tanis that might name the king i e Shoshenq I and none of these come from an in situ building complex contemporary with his reign 31 Hence it is more probable that Shoshenq was buried in another city in the Egyptian Delta Sagrillo offers a specific location for Shoshenq s burial the Ptah temple enclosure of Memphis and notes that this king built fairly widely in the area undoubtedly including a pylon and forecourt at the Ptah temple Kitchen TIPE 1996 pp 149 150 It is therefore not completely improbable that he i e Shoshenq I built his tomb in the region The funerary cult surrounding his House of Millions of Years of Shoshenq Beloved of Amun was functioning several generations after its establishment at the temple Ibrahem Aly Sayed 1996 p 14 The House of Millions of Years of Shoshenq Beloved of Amun was probably the forecourt and pylon of the Ptah temple which if the royal necropoleis at Tanis Sais and Mendes are taken as models could very well have contained a royal burial within it or the temenos 32 Sagrillo concludes by observing that if Shoshenq I s burial place was located at Memphis it would go far in explaining why this king s funerary cult lasted for some time at the site after his death 32 While Shoshenq s tomb is currently unknown the burial of one of his prominent state officials at Thebes the Third Prophet of Amun Djedptahiufankh was discovered intact in tomb DB320 in the 19th Century Inscriptions on Djedptahiufankh s Mummy bandages show that he died in or after Year 11 of this king His mummy was discovered to contain various gold bracelets amulets and precious carnelian objects and give a small hint of the vast treasures that would have adorned Shoshenq I s tomb Notes edit for discussion of the spelling see ShoshenqReferences edit R Krauss amp D A Warburton Chronological Table for the Dynastic Period in Erik Hornung Rolf Krauss amp David Warburton editors Ancient Egyptian Chronology Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill 2006 p 493 He came from a line of princes or sheikhs of Libyan tribal descent The New Encyclopaedia Britannica 2002 v 7 p 733 An updated on line version of the same article containing the same quote and last updated as of 2014 can be found online at Encyclopaedia Britannica Flinders Petrie Scarabs and cylinders with names 1917 pl XLIX M Bierbrier The Late New Kingdom in Egypt c 1300 664 BC Aris amp Philips Ltd 1975 p 111 Rolf Krauss Das wrŝ Datum aus Jahr 5 von Shoshenq I Discussions in Egyptology 62 2005 pp 43 48 Erik Hornung Rolf Krauss amp David Warburton editors Ancient Egyptian Chronology Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill 2006 p 474 Anthony Leahy The date of the larger Dakhleh stela Oxford Ashmolean Museum 1894 107a GM 226 2010 p 47 Leahy GM 226 p 52 see The Libyan Period in Egypt Historical and Cultural Studies into the 21st 24th Dynasties Proceedings of a Conference at Leiden University 25 27 October 2007 G Broekman RJ Demaree amp O E Kaper eds Peeters Leuven 2009 p 167 where Kitchen states that there is no evidence whatsoever that the wrs festival was a lunar one Schneider Thomas 2010 Contributions to the Chronology of the New Kingdom and the Third Intermediate Period in AeL 20 pp 373 403 Finkelstein Israel 2020 Saul and Highlands of Benjamin Update The Role of Jerusalem in Joachim J Krause Omer Sergi and Kristin Weingart eds Saul Benjamin and the Emergence of Monarchy in Israel Biblical and Archaeological Perspectives SBL Press p 49 Koch Ido 2021 Appendix Chronology of Egyptian Kings in Colonial Encounters in Southwest Canaan during the Late Bronze Age and the Early Iron Age Series Culture and History of the Ancient Near East Volume 119 Brill pp 131 132 Vakmin Yoav et al 2022 Reconstructing biblical military campaigns using geomagnetic field data in PNAS Vol 119 No 44 Troy Leiland Sagrillo 2015 Shoshenq I and biblical Sisaq A philological defense of their traditional equation in Solomon and Shishak Current perspectives from archaeology epigraphy history and chronology proceedings of the third BICANE colloquium held at Sidney Sussex College Cambridge 26 27 March 2011 edited by Peter J James Peter G van der Veen and Robert M Porter British Archaeological Reports International Series 2732 Oxford Archaeopress 61 81 E g Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 1 King 11 accessed 4 June 2017 K A Kitchen On the Reliability of the Old Testament William Eerdmans amp Co 2003 p 134 Finkelstein Israel 2006 The Last Labayu King Saul and the Expansion of the First North Israelite Territorial Entity In Amit Yairah Ben Zvi Ehud Finkelstein Israel et al eds Essays on Ancient Israel in Its Near Eastern Context A Tribute to Nadav Naʼaman Eisenbrauns pp 171 ff ISBN 9781575061283 1 Kings 12 24e New English Translation of the Septuagint Brenton Septuagint English Translation 1 Kings 12 24e Webster Lyndelle C et al 15 November 2023 The chronology of Gezer from the end of the late bronze age to iron age II A meeting point for radiocarbon archaeology egyptology and the Bible PLOS ONE 18 11 e0293119 Bibcode 2023PLoSO 1893119W doi 10 1371 journal pone 0293119 PMC 10651010 PMID 37967047 Kitchen Kenneth Anderson 1986 The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt 1100 650 B C Aris amp Phillips p 112 ISBN 9780856682988 Troy Leiland Sagrillo The Geographic Origins of the Bubastite Dynasty and Possible Locations for the Royal Residence and Burial Place of Shoshenq I In The Libyan period in Egypt Historical and cultural studies into the 21st 24th Dynasties edited by G P F Broekman R J Demaree and O Kaper Egyptologische Uitgaven 23 Leuven Uitgeverij Peeters 2009 341 359 K A Kitchen The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt c 1100 650 BC Aris amp Phillips Ltd third edition 1996 p 289 Kitchen The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt p 290 K A Kitchen On the Reliability of the Old Testament William Erdsman amp Co 2003 pp 10 32 34 amp p 607 Page 607 of Kitchen s book depicts the surviving fragment of Shoshenq I s Megiddo stela a b c de Mieroop Marc Van 2021 A History of Ancient Egypt 2nd ed Malden MA Blackwell Publishing p 261 ISBN 9781119620891 Biblical Archaeology Society Staff 27 March 2017 Did Pharaoh Sheshonq Attack Jerusalem Biblical History Daily Biblical Archaeology Society Retrieved 3 September 2017 Finkelstein Israel 2006 The Last Labayu King Saul and the Expansion of the First North Israelite Territorial Entity In Amit Yairah Ben Zvi Ehud Finkelstein Israel et al eds Essays on Ancient Israel in Its Near Eastern Context A Tribute to Nadav Naʼaman Eisenbrauns p 171 ISBN 9781575061283 Retrieved 5 April 2017 Daniel pioske 12 October 2023 The Bible among Ruins Cambridge University Press p 221 ISBN 978 1 009 41257 5 Aidan Dodson The Canopic Equipment of the Kings of Egypt Kegan Paul Intl 1994 pp 83 84 Troy Leiland Sagrillo The Mummy of Shoshenq I Re discovered Gottinger Miszellen 205 2005 p 99 a b Sagrillo p 100Bibliography editM Bierbrier The Late New Kingdom in Egypt c 1300 664 BC Aris amp Philips Ltd 1975 Ricardo A Caminos Gebel Es Silsilah No 100 JEA 38 1952 pp 46 61 Rupert L Chapman III Putting Shoshenq I in his Place Palestine Exploration Quarterly 141 1 2009 pp 4 17 M Georges Daressy Les Parents de Chechanq Ier ASAE 16 1916 3 Aidan Dodson The Canopic Equipment of the Kings of Egypt Kegan Paul Intl 1994 Erika Feucht Zwei Reliefs Scheschonqs I aus El Hibeh SAK 6 1978 69 77 Alan H Gardiner The Dakhleh Stela JEA 19 1933 19 30 Rolf Krauss Das wrs Datum aus Jahr 5 von Shoshenq I Discussions in Egyptology 62 2005 pp 43 48 Yigal Levin Sheshonq I and the Negev Haserim Maarav 17 2010 pp 189 215 Yigal Levin Sheshonq s Levantine Conquest and Biblical History In Jonathan S Greer John W Hilber amp John H Walton eds Behind the Scenes of the Old Testament Cultural Social and Historical Contexts Grand Rapids Baker Academic 2018 Thomas E Levy Stefan Munger and Mohammad Najjar A Newly Discovered Scarab of Sheshonq I Recent Iron Age Explorations in Southern Jordan Antiquity 88 341 September 2014 Troy Leiland Sagrillo The Mummy of Shoshenq I Re discovered GM 205 2005 pp 95 102 Troy Leiland Sagrillo The Geographic Origins of the Bubastite Dynasty and Possible Locations for the Royal Residence and Burial Place of Shoshenq I In The Libyan period in Egypt Historical and cultural studies into the 21st 24th Dynasties edited by G P F Broekman R J Demaree and O Kaper Egyptologische Uitgaven 23 Leuven Uitgeverij Peeters 2009 pp 341 359 Troy Leiland Sagrillo Sisaq s army 2 Chronicles 12 2 3 from an Egyptological perspective In The ancient Near East in the 12th 10th Centuries BCE Culture and history proceedings of the international conference held at the University of Haifa 2 5 May 2010 edited by Gershon Galil Ayelet Gilboa Aren M Maeir and Dan el Kahn Alter Orient und Altes Testament Veroffentlichungen zur Kultur und Geschichte des Alten Orients und des Alten Testaments 392 Munster Ugarit Verlag 2012 pp 425 450 Troy Leiland Sagrillo 2015 Shoshenq I and biblical Sisaq A philological defense of their traditional equation In Solomon and Shishak Current perspectives from archaeology epigraphy history and chronology proceedings of the third BICANE colloquium held at Sidney Sussex College Cambridge 26 27 March 2011 edited by Peter J James Peter G van der Veen and Robert M Porter British Archaeological Reports International Series 2732 Oxford Archaeopress 61 81 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shoshenq I The Campaign of Pharaoh Shoshenq I in Palestine by Kevin A Wilson Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine The Palestine Campaign of Sheshonq I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shoshenq I amp oldid 1199934611, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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