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{{Short description|Asiatic rulers of Dynasty XV of ancient Egypt}} | |||
{{More footnotes|date=July 2010}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2022}} | |||
{{Infobox Hieroglyphen | |||
{{multiple image|perrow=2|total_width=270|caption_align=center | |||
|TITEL = Hykos / Hykussos | |||
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|NAME = <hiero>S38-N29:Z4-N25:X1*Z1</hiero> | |||
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|NAME2 = <hiero>S38-N29:Z4-Aa1-M12-S29-X1:N25</hiero> | |||
| header=Hyksos | |||
|NAME2-TRANSKRIPTION = Heka-chaset / Heka-chasut<small><ref name=H/></small><br /> ''{{Unicode|Ḥq3-ḫ3st}}'' / ''{{Unicode|Ḥq3-ḫ3swt}}'' <small><ref name=H/></small> | |||
| image1 = Painting of foreign delegation in the tomb of Khnumhotep II circa 1900 BCE (Detail mentioning "Abisha the Hyksos" in hieroglyphs).jpg | |||
|NAME2-ERKLÄRUNG = ''Ruler(s) of the foreigners''<small><ref name=H>Rainer Hannig: ''Großes Handwörterbuch Ägyptisch-Deutsch : (2800-950 v. Chr.)''. von Zabern, Mainz 2006, ISBN 3-8053-1771-9, p. 606 and 628–629.</ref></small> | |||
| caption1 = A man described as "Abisha the Hyksos"<br />('''<big><big>𓋾𓈎𓈉</big></big>''' ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt, ''Heqa-kasut'' for "Hyksos"), leading a group of '']''.<br />Tomb of ] (circa 1900 BC).{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=131}}{{sfn|Bard|2015|p=188}}<br />This is one of the earliest known uses of the term "Hyksos".{{sfn|Willems|2010|p=96}} | |||
|GRIECHISCH = Hykussos (Ύκουσσώς)<small><ref name=S111>Folker Siegert: ''Flavius Josephus: Über die Ursprünglichkeit des Judentums''. p. 111.</ref> | |||
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}} | }} | ||
{{Egyptian Dynasty list}} | {{Egyptian Dynasty list}} | ||
The '''Hyksos''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|h|ɪ|k|s|ɒ|s}}; ] '']-]'', ]: ''heqau khasut'',{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=174}} "ruler(s) of foreign lands"), in modern ], are the kings of the ]{{sfn|Bietak|2001|p=136}} (fl. c. 1650–1550 BC).{{efn|Approximate dates vary by source. Bietak gives c. 1640–1532 BC,{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=1}} Schneider gives c. 1639–1521 BC,{{sfn|Schneider|2006|p=196}} and Stiebing gives c. 1630–1530 BC.{{sfn|Stiebing|2009|p=197}}|name=|group=}} Their seat of power was the city of ] in the ], from where they ruled over ] and ] up to ]. | |||
In the ''Aegyptiaca'', a history of Egypt written by the Greco-Egyptian priest and historian ] in the 3rd century BC, the term Hyksos is used ethnically to designate people of probable West Semitic, ]ine origin.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=131}}{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=10}} While Manetho portrayed the Hyksos as invaders and oppressors, this interpretation is questioned in modern Egyptology.{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=5}} Instead, Hyksos rule might have been preceded by groups of ]ite peoples who gradually settled in the Nile Delta from the end of the ] onwards and who may have seceded from the crumbling and unstable Egyptian control at some point during the ].{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|pp=177–178}} | |||
The '''Hyksos''' or '''Hycsos''' ({{IPAc-en|icon|ˈ|h|ɪ|k|s|ɒ|s}}; ] ''heqa khasewet'', "foreign rulers"; ] {{lang|grc|Ὑκσώς}}, {{lang|grc|Ὑξώς}}, ] <span lang="ar">الملوك الرعاة</span>, shepherd kings) were an Asiatic people who took over the eastern ], ending the ], and initiating the ] of ].<ref>Redford D., ''Egypt, Canaan and Israel in ancient times'', 1992</ref> | |||
The Hyksos period marks the first in which foreign rulers ruled Egypt.{{sfn|Morenz|Popko|2010|p=104}} Many details of their rule, such as the true extent of their kingdom and even the names and order of their kings, remain uncertain. The Hyksos practiced many Levantine or Canaanite customs alongside Egyptian ones.{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=182}} They have been credited with introducing several technological innovations to Egypt, such as the ] and ], as well as the ] (sickle sword) and the ], a theory which is disputed.{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=12}} | |||
The Hyksos first appeared in Egypt c.1800 BC, during the ], began their climb to power in the ], and came out of the second intermediate period in control of ] and the Delta. By the ], they ruled ], and at the end of the ], they were expelled (c.1560 BC). The Hyksos may have introduced the horse-drawn chariot into Egypt.<ref>p5. 'The Encyclopedia of Military History' (4th edition 1993), Dupuy & Dupuy.</ref> | |||
The Hyksos did not control all of Egypt. They coexisted with the ] and ], which were based in ].{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=7}} Warfare between the Hyksos and the pharaohs of the late Seventeenth Dynasty eventually culminated in the defeat of the Hyksos by ], who founded the ].{{sfn|Morenz|Popko|2010|pp=108–109}} In the following centuries, the Egyptians would portray the Hyksos as bloodthirsty and oppressive foreign rulers. | |||
The historian Josephus maintains that the Hyksos were in fact the children of Jacob who joined his son Joseph to escape the famine in the land of Canaan. | |||
==Name== | |||
== Origins of the Hyksos == | |||
===Etymology=== | |||
{{Main|Origins of the Hyksos}} | |||
{{Infobox hieroglyphs | |||
There are various hypotheses as to the Hyksos ethnic identity. Most archeologists {{who|date=May 2011}} describe the Hyksos as multi-ethnic, to include all of the peoples who occupied the emporia of the delta. Some were warlords seeking employment by the Egyptians as mercenaries. Some were unemployed agricultural workers looking for work helping produce food and resorting to banditry, theft and other crimes when they did not get it. Some were skilled tradesmen, professionals, doctors, lawyers, scribes, priests, diplomats, accountants. Some were merchants importing raw materials: timber from Byblos, semi-precious stones from as far away as Afghanistan, tin, copper, bronze, medicines for the doctors, perfumes for the wigmakers, bitumen, natron, linen, frankincense and myrrh for the mummification industry at Karnak or exporting grain and beer to as far away as Greece. | |||
|title = Hyksos | |||
|width = 230px | |||
|name = {{center|<hiero>S38-N29:N25..S38-N29:N25:Z2</hiero>}} | |||
|name transcription = ''ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣsw'' / ''ḥqꜣw-ḫꜣswt'',{{sfn|Flammini|2015|p=240}}{{sfn|Ben-Tor|2007|p=1}}<br />"heqau khasut"{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=174}}{{efn|Spelling of the hieroglyphs in sources describing the archaeological record of the historical Hyksos: first set of characters is the singular, as appearing in ] in the tomb of ], c.1900 BC.{{sfn|Kamrin|2009}} The second set is in the plural, as appears in the inscriptions of known Hyksos rulers ], ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite web |title=The Sakir-Har door jamb inscription (slide 12) |work=The Second Intermediate Period: The Hyksos |url=https://www.brown.edu/Departments/Joukowsky_Institute/courses/historyofegyptone11/files/18876478.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190202021123/https://www.brown.edu/Departments/Joukowsky_Institute/courses/historyofegyptone11/files/18876478.pdf |archive-date=2019-02-02 |url-status=live}}</ref>}}<br />'''"Hyksos"''' | |||
|name explanation = ''Ruler(s) of the foreign countries''{{sfn|Flammini|2015|p=240}} | |||
|Greek = Hyksos (Ὑκσώς)<br />Hykussos (Ὑκουσσώς){{sfn|Schneider|2008|p=305}} | |||
|image1=Hyksos characters.jpg | |||
|image1 description=Standard characters for "Hyksos" in the label for "]" in the tomb of ], c. 1900 BC.{{sfn|Kamrin|2009|p=25}} The crook (<big>''']'''</big>, ''ḥqꜣ'') means "ruler", the hill (<big>''']'''</big>) is a phonetic complement q/ḳ to 𓋾 while <big>''']'''</big> stands for (foreign) "country", pronounced ''ḫꜣst'', ''plural ḫꜣswt''.<br />The sign ] marks the plural.{{sfn|Kamrin|2009|p=25}} | |||
|}} | |||
The term "Hyksos" is derived, via the Greek {{lang|grc|Ὑκσώς|italics=yes}} ({{lang|grc|Hyksôs|italics=yes}}), from the Egyptian expression <big>'''𓋾𓈎]'''</big> ({{lang|egy|ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt|italics=yes}} or {{lang|egy|ḥqꜣw-ḫꜣswt|italics=yes}}, "heqau khasut"), meaning "rulers foreign lands".{{sfn|Flammini|2015|p=240}}{{sfn|Ben-Tor|2007|p=1}} The Greek form is likely a textual corruption of an earlier {{lang|grc|Ὑκουσσώς|italics=yes}} ({{lang|grc|Hykoussôs|italics=yes}}).{{sfn|Schneider|2008|p=305}} | |||
The ] Jewish historian ] gives the name as meaning "shepherd kings" or "captive shepherds" in his '']'' (Against Apion), where he describes the Hyksos as Jews as they appeared in the Hellenistic Egyptian historian ].{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=9}}{{sfn|Loprieno|2003|p=144}} "Their race bore the generic name of Hycsos, which means 'king-shepherds'. For ''hyc'' in the sacred language denotes 'king' and ''sos'' in the common dialect means 'shepherd' or 'shepherds'; the combined words form Hycsos. Some say that they were Arabians."{{sfn|Josephus|1926|p=195}} | |||
The origin of the term "Hyksos" derives from the Egyptian expression '''heka khasewet''' ("rulers of foreign lands"), used in Egyptian texts such as the ] to describe the rulers of neighbouring lands. This expression begins to appear as early as the late ] in Egypt, referring to various ] chieftains, and as early as the ], referring to the ] chieftains of ] and ]. | |||
Josephus's rendition may arise from a later Egyptian pronunciation of {{lang|egy|ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt|italics=yes}} as {{lang|egy|ḥqꜣ-]|italics=yes}}, which was then understood to mean "lord of shepherds."{{sfn|Morenz|Popko|2010|pp=103–104}} It is unclear if this translation was found in Manetho; an ] translation of an epitome of Manetho given by the late antique historian ] gives the correct translation of "foreign kings".{{sfn|Verbrugghe|Wickersham|1996|p=99}} | |||
The German Egyptologist ] once argued that the Hyksos were part of massive and widespread ] and ] migrations into the ]. According to Helck, the Hyksos were ] and part of a Hurrian empire that, he claimed, extended over much of ] at this period. Most scholars have rejected this theory and Helck himself has now abandoned this hypothesis in a 1993 article.<ref>see W. Helck's ''Orientalia'' 62 (1993) "Das Hyksosproblem" pp.60–66 paper</ref> | |||
===Use=== | |||
Modern scholarship usually{{who|date=May 2011}} assumes that the Hyksos were likely ] who came from the ]. ], the last king of the Theban 17th Dynasty, refers to Apophis as a "Chieftain of Retjenu (i.e., Canaan)" in a stela that implies a Semitic ]ite background for this Hyksos king: this is the strongest evidence for a Canaanite background for the Hyksos. Khyan's name "has generally been interpreted as ] "Hayanu" (reading ''h-ya-a-n'') which the Egyptian form represents perfectly, and this is in all likelihood the correct interpretation."<ref>Ryholt, Kim S.B.. ''The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c.1800-1550 B.CE.'', Museum Tuscalanum Press (1997) p.128.</ref> Ryholt furthermore observes the name ] is recorded in the ]n king-lists for a "remote ancestor" of ] (c. 1813 BC) of ], which suggests that it had been used for centuries prior to Khyan's own reign.<ref>Ryholt, p.128</ref> | |||
"It is now commonly accepted in academic publications that the term {{lang|egy|Ḥqꜣ-Ḫꜣswt|italics=yes}} refers only to the individual foreign rulers of the late Second Intermediate Period,"{{sfn|Candelora|2018|p=53}} especially of the ], rather than a people. However, Josephus used it as an ethnic term.{{efn|"Two separate misconceptions persist, both in the scholarship and more popular works, surrounding the word "Hyksos." The first is that this term is the name of a defined and relatively large population group (see below), when in fact it is only a royal title held exclusively by individual rulers. Any standalone use of the word "Hyksos" in the following article refers specifically to the foreign kings of the 15th Dynasty."{{sfn|Candelora|2018|pp=46–47}} " also misrepresents the Hyksos as a population group (ethnos) as opposed to a dynasty."{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=1}} "Flavius Josephus used the designation "Hyksos" incorrectly as a kind of ethnic term for people of foreign origin who seized power in Egypt for a certain period. In this sense, for the sake of convenience, it is also used in the title and section headings of the present article. One should never forget, however, that, strictly spoken, the "Hyksos" were only the kings of the Fifteenth Dynasty, and of simultaneous minor dynasties, who took the title ḥqꜣw-ḫꜣswt."{{sfn|Bietak|2010|p=139}}}} Its use to refer to the population persists in some academic papers.{{sfn|Candelora|2018|p=65}} | |||
In Ancient Egypt, the term "Hyksos" ({{lang|egy|ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt|italics=yes}}) was also used to refer to various Nubian and especially Asiatic rulers both before and after the Fifteenth Dynasty.{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=174}}{{sfn|Candelora|2017|pp=208–209}}{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|pp=123–124}} It was used at least since the ] (c. 2345–2181 BC) to designate chieftains from the ]-] area.{{sfn|Kamrin|2009|p=25}} One of its earliest recorded uses is found c. 1900 BC in the tomb of ] of the ] to label a ] or ]ite ruler named "]" | |||
The issue of Sakir-Har's name, one of the three earliest 15th Dynasty kings, also leans towards a ] or Canaanite origin for the Hyksos rulers—if not the Hyksos peoples themselves. As Ryholt notes, the name '''Sakir-Har''': | |||
(using the standard <big>'''𓋾𓈎𓈉'''</big>, ''ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt'', "Heqa-kasut" for "Hyksos").{{sfn|Willems|2010|p=96}}{{sfn|Curry|2018}} | |||
{{cquote|is evidently a theophorous name compounded with ''hr'', Canaanite ''harru'', 'mountain.' This sacred or deified mountain is attested in at least two other names, which are both West Semitic (Ya'qub-Har and Anar-Har) and so there is reason to suspect that the present name also may be West Semitic. The element skr seems identical to śkr, 'to hire, to reward,' which occurs in several ] names. Assuming that śkr takes a nominal form as in the names ''sa-ki-ru-um'' and ''sa-ka-ŕu-um'', the name should be transliterated as either Sakir-Har or Sakar-Har. The former two names presumably mean 'the Reward.' Accordingly, the name here under consideration would mean 'Reward of Har.'<ref>Ryholt, pp.127–128</ref>}} | |||
{{multiple image|perrow=2|total_width=200|caption_align=center | |||
As to a Hyksos “conquest”, some archaeologists{{who|date=May 2011}} depict the Hyksos as “northern hordes . . . sweeping through ] and Egypt in swift chariots”. Yet, others refer to a ‘creeping conquest’, that is, a gradual infiltration of migrating nomads or seminomads who either slowly took over control of the country piecemeal or by a swift coup d’etat put themselves at the head of the existing government. In <cite>''The World of the Past''</cite> (1963, p. 444), archeologist ] states: “It is no longer thought that the Hyksos rulers... represent the invasion of a conquering horde of Asiatics... they were wandering groups of Semites who had long come to Egypt for trade and other peaceful purposes.” However, this view still makes it difficult to explain how “wandering groups” could have gained control of Egypt, especially since the twelfth dynasty, prior to this period, is considered to have brought the country to a peak of power. | |||
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| header=Scarabs of Hyksos kings | |||
| image1 = Hyksos on the seal of king Semqen.jpg | |||
| caption1 = "] the Hyksos" | |||
| image2 = Khyan the Hyksos (Hyksos highlighted).jpg | |||
| caption2 = "] the Hyksos" | |||
| footer= Scarabs of Hyksos kings, with "Hyksos" highlighted.{{sfn|Candelora|2017|p=211}} | |||
| footer_align = center | |||
}} | |||
Based on the use of the name in a Hyksos inscription of ] from Avaris, the name was used by the Hyksos as a title for themselves.{{sfn|Candelora|2017|p=204}} However, ] argues that "Hyksos" was not an official title of the rulers of the Fifteenth Dynasty, and is never encountered together with ], only appearing as the title in the case of Sakir-Har. According to Ryholt, "Hyksos" was a generic term encountered separately from royal titulary, and in regnal lists after the end of the Fifteenth Dynasty itself.{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=123–125}} However, Vera Müller writes: "Considering that S-k-r-h-r is also mentioned with three names of the traditional Egyptian titulary (Horus name, Golden Falcon name and Two Ladies name) on the same monument, this argument is somehow strange."{{sfn|Müller|2018|p=211}} Danielle Candelora and Manfred Bietak also argue that the Hyksos used the title officially.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=1}}{{sfn|Candelora|2017|p=216}} All other texts in the Egyptian language do not call the Hyksos by this name, instead referring to them as Asiatics (]), with the possible exception of the ] in a hypothetical reconstruction from a fragment.{{sfn|Candelora|2017|pp=206–208}} The title is not attested for the Hyksos king ], possibly indicating an "increased adoption of Egyptian decorum".{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=2}} The names of Hyksos rulers in the Turin list are without the royal cartouche and have the ] "foreigners" determinative.{{sfn|Ryholt|2004}} | |||
] | |||
] also attest the use of this title for pharaohs usually assigned to the ] or Sixteenth Dynasty of Egypt, who are sometimes called "'lesser' Hyksos."{{sfn|Müller|2018|p=211}} The Theban Seventeenth Dynasty of Egypt is also given the title in some versions of Manetho, a fact which Bietak attributes to textual corruption.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=2}} In the ] and during the ], the term Hyksos was adopted as a personal title and epithet by several pharaohs or high Egyptian officials, including the Theban official ], ],{{sfn|Hölbl|2001|p=79}}{{sfn|Candelora|2017|p=209}} and ].{{sfn|Candelora|2017|p=209}} It was also used on the tomb of Egyptian grand priest ] at ] in 300 BC to designate the ] ruler ], although it is unknown if Artaxerxes adopted this title for himself.{{sfn|Candelora|2017|p=209}} | |||
== |
==Origins== | ||
===Ancient historians=== | |||
In his '']'', the 1st-century CE historian ] debates the synchronism between the Biblical account of the ] of the ] from Egypt, and two Exodus-like events that the Egyptian historian ] apparently mentions. It is difficult to distinguish between what Manetho himself recounted, and how Josephus or Apion interpret him. Josephus identifies the Israelite Exodus with the first exodus mentioned by Manetho, when some 480,000 Hyksos "shepherd kings" (also referred to as just 'shepherds', as 'kings' and as 'captive shepherds' in his discussion of Manetho) left Egypt for Jerusalem.<ref name = "AA1:86–90">Josephus, Flavius, <cite>''Against Apion''</cite>, 1:86–90.</ref> The mention of "Hyksos" identifies this first exodus with the Hyksos period (16th century BC). | |||
]: <hiero>N5:G39-<-x-i-i-A-n->-S34-I10:t:N17</hiero> - "Son of Ra, Khyan, living forever!"]] | |||
In his epitome of ], Josephus connected the Hyksos with the Jews,{{sfn|Assmann|2003|p=198}} but he also calls them Arabs.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=9}} In their own epitomes of Manetho, the ] historians ] and ] say that the Hyksos came from ].{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=9}} Until the excavation and discovery of ] (the site of the Hyksos capital ]) in 1966, historians relied on these accounts for the Hyksos period.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=10}}{{sfn|Flammini|2015|p=236}} | |||
===Modern historians=== | |||
Josephus records the earliest account of the false but understandable etymology that the Greek phrase ''Hyksos'' stood for the Egyptian phrase ''Hekw ]'' meaning the ]-like ''Shepherd Kings'', which scholars have only recently shown means "rulers of foreign lands."<ref>Finkelstein, Israel and Silberman, Neil Asher, '']: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts'', 2001, The Free Press, New York City, ISBN 0-684-86912-8 p. 54</ref> | |||
Material finds at Tell El-Dab'a indicate that the Hyksos originated in the ].{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=10}} The Hyksos' personal names indicate that they spoke a ] language and "may be called for convenience sake ]."{{sfn|Bietak|2016|pp=267–268}} | |||
]'', associated with the Hyksos in some Egyptian inscriptions.{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=128}}]] | |||
=== Biblical association === | |||
], the last king of the Theban Seventeenth Dynasty, refers to ] as a "Chieftain of ]" in a stela that implies a Levantine background for this Hyksos king.{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=128}} According to Anna-Latifa Mourad, the Egyptian application of the term {{lang|egy|ꜥꜣmw|italics=yes}} to the Hyksos could indicate a range of backgrounds, including newly arrived Levantines or people of mixed Levantine-Egyptian origin.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=216}} | |||
Due to the work of Manfred Bietak, which found similarities in architecture, ceramics and burial practices, scholars currently favor a northern Levantine origin of the Hyksos.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=11}} Based particularly on temple architecture, Bietak argues for strong parallels between the religious practices of the Hyksos at Avaris with those of the area around ], ], ] and ], defining the "spiritual home" of the Hyksos as "in northernmost ] and northern ]".{{sfn|Bietak|2019|p=61}} The connection of the Hyksos to Retjenu also suggests a northern Levantine origin: "Theoretically, it is feasible to deduce that the early Hyksos, as the later Apophis, were of elite ancestry from ], a toponym cautiously linked with the Northern Levant and the northern region of the Southern Levant."{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=216}} | |||
The Bible (Genesis) portrays the arrival of Jacob's family and their statement to Pharaoh of their intent to function as shepherds, whereby Pharoh allotted them the land of goshen (])<ref>J.D. Eizentstien's Passover Hagadah (New York, 1921)</ref>, with the Hebrew chronological work ] detailing the initial entry of Joseph's extended family into Egypt as being welcomed by the Egyptian masses.<ref>Seder Hadoroth, year 2236 (Hebrew Calendar)</ref> | |||
Earlier arguments that the Hyksos names might be ] have been rejected,{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=6}} while early-twentieth-century proposals that the Hyksos were Indo-Europeans "fitted European dreams of Indo-European supremacy, now discredited."{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=166}} Some have suggested that Hyksos or a part of them was of ] origins as evident by their use and introduction of chariots and horses into Egypt.{{sfn|Woudhuizen|2006|p=30}}{{sfn|Glassman|2017|p=479–480}} However, this theory has been too rejected by modern scholarship. | |||
== Hyksos 15th dynasty == | |||
Traditionally,{{who|date=May 2011}} only the Fifteenth Dynasty rulers are called ''Hyksos''. The Greek name "Hyksos" was coined by Manetho to identify the Fifteenth Dynasty of Asiatic rulers of northern Egypt. In Egyptian Hyksos means "ruler(s) of foreign countries", however, Manetho mistranslated Hyksos as "Shepherd Kings".<ref>{{cite book}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Lloyd|first=A.B.|title=Herodotus, Book II: Commentary, 99-182 v. 3|year=1993|publisher=Brill|isbn=978-90-04-07737-9|url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=8DiTX_EsWasC&pg=PA76&dq=Manetho+mistranslated+Hyksos&hl=en&sa=X&ei=LXf0TuSOD4mc8gP4yfCzAQ&ved=0CDMQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Manetho%20mistranslated%20Hyksos&f=false|accessdate=23 December 2011|page=76}}</ref> | |||
A study of dental traits by Nina Maaranen and Sonia Zakrzewski in 2021 on 90 people of Avaris indicated that individuals defined as locals and non-locals were not ancestrally different from one another. The results were in line with the archaeological evidence, suggesting Avaris was an important hub in the Middle Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean trade network, welcoming people from beyond its borders.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Stantis |first1=Chris |last2=Maaranen |first2=Nina |date=2021-01-01 |title=The people of Avaris: Intra-regional biodistance analysis using dental non-metric traits |url=https://www.academia.edu/66925960 |journal=Bioarchaeology of the Near East}}</ref> | |||
The Hyksos had ]ite names, as seen in those with names of Semitic deities such as ] or ]. They introduced new tools of warfare into Egypt, most notably the ] and the horse-drawn ]. | |||
== History == | |||
The known rulers for the Hyksos ] are: | |||
===Early contacts between Egypt and the Levant=== | |||
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| Named as an early Hyksos king on a door jamb found at ]. </br>Regnal order uncertain. | |||
| header = ''Procession of the Aamu'' | |||
| image1 = Procession of the Aamu, Tomb of Khnumhotep II (composite).jpg | |||
| image2 = Drawing of the procession of the Aamu group tomb of Khnumhotep II at Beni Hassan.jpg | |||
| footer = A group of West Asiatic foreigners, possibly ]ites, labelled as '']'' ({{lang|egy|ꜥꜣmw|italics=yes}}), including the leading man with a ] labelled as ''Abisha the Hyksos'' ('''<big><big>𓋾𓈎𓈉</big></big>''' ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣsw, ''Heqa-kasut'' for "Hyksos"). Tomb of ] official ], at ] (c. 1890 BC).{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=131}}{{sfn|Bard|2015|p=188}}{{sfn|Kamrin|2009|p=25}}{{sfn|Curry|2018}} | |||
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}} | |||
Historical records suggest that Semitic people and Egyptians had contacts at all periods of Egypt's history.{{sfn|Bright|2000|p=97}} The ], an early Egyptian tablet dating to 3000 BC records "The first occasion of striking the East", with the picture of Pharaoh ] smiting a Western Asiatic enemy.{{sfn|Russmann|James|2001|pp=67–68}} | |||
During the reign of ], c. 1890 BC, ] are recorded, as in the tomb paintings of ] official ]. These foreigners, possibly ]ites or ], are labelled as '']'' ({{lang|egy|ꜥꜣmw|italics=yes}}), including the leading man with a ] labelled as ''Abisha the Hyksos'' ('''𓋾𓈎𓈉''' ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣsw, ''Heqa-kasut'' for "Hyksos"), the first known instance of the name "Hyksos".{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=131}}{{sfn|Bard|2015|p=188}}{{sfn|Kamrin|2009|p=25}}{{sfn|Curry|2018}} | |||
Soon after, the ], dated to the reign of ] (reign: 1878–1839 BC), records the earliest known Egyptian military campaign in the Levant. The text reads "His Majesty proceeded northward to overthrow the Asiatics. His Majesty reached a foreign country of which the name was Sekmem (...) Then Sekmem fell, together with the wretched ]", where Sekmem (s-k-m-m) is thought to be ] and "Retenu" or "]" are associated with ancient ].{{sfn|Pritchard|2016|p=230}}{{sfn|Steiner|Killebrew|2014|p=73}} | |||
===Background and arrival in Egypt=== | |||
The only ancient account of the whole Hyksos period is by the Hellenistic Egyptian historian ], who exists only as quoted by others.{{sfn|Raspe|1998|p=126–128}} As recorded by Josephus, Manetho describes the beginning of Hyksos rule thus: | |||
{{blockquote|A people of ignoble origin from the east, whose coming was unforeseen, had the audacity to invade the country, which they mastered by main force without difficulty or even battle. Having overpowered the chiefs, they then savagely burnt the cities, razed the temples of the gods to the ground, and treated the whole native population with the utmost cruelty, massacring some, and carrying off the wives and children of others into slavery ('']'' I.75-77).{{sfn|Josephus|1926|p=196}}}} | |||
] dagger handle of a soldier of Hyksos pharaoh ], illustrating the soldier hunting with a short bow and sword. Inscriptions: "The perfect god, the lord of the two lands, Nebkhepeshre ]" and "Follower of his lord Nehemen", found at a burial at ].{{sfn|O'Connor|2009|pp=116–117}} Now at the ].{{sfn |Wilkinson |2013a |p=}}{{sfn |Daressy |1906 |pp=115–120}}]] | |||
Manetho's invasion narrative is "nowadays rejected by most scholars."{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=5}} It is likely that more recent foreign invasions of Egypt influenced him.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=1}} Instead, it appears that the establishment of Hyksos rule was mostly peaceful and did not involve an invasion of an entirely foreign population.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=130}} Archaeology shows a continuous Asiatic presence at Avaris for over 150 years before the beginning of Hyksos rule,{{sfn|Bietak|2006|p=285}} with gradual Canaanite settlement beginning there {{circa|1800 BC}} during the ].{{sfn|Ben-Tor|2007|p=1}} Strontium isotope analysis of the inhabitants of Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period Avaris also dismissed the invasion model in favor of a migration one. Contrary to the model of a foreign invasion, the study didn't find more males moving into the region, but instead found a sex bias towards females, with a high proportion of 77% of females being non-locals.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Stantis|first1=Chris|last2=Kharobi|first2=Arwa|last3=Maaranen|first3=Nina|last4=Nowell|first4=Geoff M.|last5=Bietak|first5=Manfred|last6=Prell|first6=Silvia|last7=Schutkowski|first7=Holger|date=2020-07-15|title=Who were the Hyksos? Challenging traditional narratives using strontium isotope (87Sr/86Sr) analysis of human remains from ancient Egypt|journal=PLOS ONE|language=en|volume=15|issue=7|pages=e0235414|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0235414|issn=1932-6203|pmc=7363063|pmid=32667937|bibcode=2020PLoSO..1535414S |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Stantis|first1=Chris|last2=Kharobi|first2=Arwa|last3=Maaranen|first3=Nina|last4=Macpherson|first4=Colin|last5=Bietak|first5=Manfred|last6=Prell|first6=Silvia|last7=Schutkowski|first7=Holger|date=2021-06-01|title=Multi-isotopic study of diet and mobility in the northeastern Nile Delta|journal=Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences|language=en|volume=13|issue=6|pages=105|doi=10.1007/s12520-021-01344-x|s2cid=235271929 |issn=1866-9565|doi-access=free|bibcode=2021ArAnS..13..105S }}</ref> | |||
] argues that Hyksos "should be understood within a repetitive pattern of the attraction of Egypt for western Asiatic population groups that came in search of a living in the country, especially the Delta, since prehistoric times."{{sfn|Bietak|2006|p=285}} He notes that Egypt had long depended on the Levant for expertise in areas of shipbuilding and seafaring, with possible depictions of Asiatic shipbuilders being found from reliefs from the ] ruler ]. The Twelfth Dynasty of Egypt is known to have had many Asiatic immigrants serving as soldiers, household or temple serfs, and various other jobs. ] in the Nile Delta attracted many Asiatic immigrants in its role as a hub of international trade and seafaring.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=4}} | |||
The final powerful pharaoh of the Egyptian ] was ], who died around 1725 BC, after which Egypt appears to have splintered into various kingdoms, including one based at Avaris ruled by the ].{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|pp=177–178}} Based on their names, this dynasty was already primarily of West Asian origin.{{sfn|Bietak|2019|p=47}} After an event in which their palace was burned,{{sfn|Bietak|2019|p=47}} the Fourteenth Dynasty would be replaced by the Hyksos ], which would establish "loose control over northern Egypt by intimidation or force,"{{sfn|Bietak|1999|p=377}} thus greatly expanding the area under Avaris's control.{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=180}} | |||
] argues that the Fifteenth Dynasty invaded and displaced the Fourteenth. However, Alexander Ilin-Tomich argues that this is "not sufficiently substantiated."{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=6}} Bietak interprets a stela of ] to indicate that Egypt was overrun by roving mercenaries around the time of the Hyksos ascension to power.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=5}} | |||
===Kingdom=== | |||
{{main|Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt}} | |||
{{Location map+|Northern Egypt|caption=Key Sites of the Second Intermediate Period, in Northern Egypt. West Semitic in red; Egyptian in blue.{{citation needed|date=July 2020}}|relief=yes|width=300|places= | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=''']'''|position=top|mark=Red pog.svg|lat_deg=30.787417 |lon_deg=31.821361|link=Avaris|label_size=80}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=]|position=left|mark=Red pog.svg|lat_deg=30.8572 |lon_deg=32.3506|link=Tjaru|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=Tell el‑Yahudiyeh|position=left|mark=Red pog.svg|lat_deg=30.4925 |lon_deg=31.554444|link=Tell el-Yahudiyeh|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=]|position=left|mark=Red pog.svg|lat_deg=30.129333 |lon_deg=31.307528|link=Heliopolis, Egypt|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=]|position=left|mark=Red pog.svg|lat_deg=30.57165881|lon_deg=31.51312613|link=]|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=Tell Farasha|position=left|mark=Red pog.svg|lat_deg=30.68|lon_deg=31.72|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=]|position=left|mark=Red pog.svg|lat_deg=30.35|lon_deg=31.45|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=Tell el‑Maskhuta|position=right|mark=Red pog.svg|lat_deg=30.551944 |lon_deg=32.098611|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=Tell er‑Retabeh|position=top|mark=Red pog.svg|lat_deg=30.54828705 |lon_deg=31.96386495|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=Tell es‑Sahaba|position=bottom|mark=Red pog.svg|lat_deg=30.53 |lon_deg=32.06|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=]|position=left|mark=Blue pog.svg|lat_deg=29.85057823 |lon_deg=31.25253784|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=]|position=left|mark=Blue pog.svg|lat_deg=29.5700184|lon_deg=31.2290955|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=]|position=right|mark=Blue pog.svg|lat_deg=29.78039307|lon_deg=31.21742016|label_size=50}} | |||
{{Location map~ |Northern Egypt|label=]|position=right|mark=Blue pog.svg|lat_deg=27.933333|lon_deg=30.883333|label_size=50}} | |||
}} | |||
The length of time the Hyksos ruled is unclear. The fragmentary ] says that there were six Hyksos kings who collectively ruled 108 years,{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=186}} however in 2018 Kim Ryholt proposed a new reading of as many as 149 years, while Thomas Schneider proposed a length between 160 and 180 years.{{sfn|Aston|2018|pp=31–32}} The rule of the Hyksos overlaps with that of the native Egyptian pharaohs of the ] and ] Dynasties, better known as the ]. | |||
The area under direct control of the Hyksos was probably limited to the eastern ].{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=7}} Their capital city was ] at a fork on the now-dry Pelusiac branch of the Nile. ] may have also been an important administrative center,{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=183}} although the nature of any Hyksos presence there remains unclear.{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=7}} | |||
According to Anna-Latifa Mourad, other sites with likely Levantine populations or strong Levantine connections in the Delta include Tell Farasha and Tell el-Maghud, located between Tell Basta and Avaris,{{sfn|Mourad|2015|pp=43–44}} El-Khata'na, southwest of Avaris, and ].{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=48}} The increased prosperity of Avaris may have attracted more Levantines to settle in the eastern Delta.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=130}} Kom el-Hisn, at the edge of the Western Delta, shows Near Eastern goods but individuals mostly buried in an Egyptian style, which Mourad takes to mean that they were most likely Egyptians heavily influenced by Levantine traditions or, more likely, Egyptianized Levantines.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=49–50}} The site of ] (Bubastis), at the confluence of the Pelusiac and Tanitic branches of the Nile, contains monuments to the Hyksos kings Khyan and Apepi, but little other evidence of Levantine habitation.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=21}} Tell el-Habwa (]), located on a branch of the Nile near the Sinai, also shows evidence of non-Egyptian presence. However, most of the population appears to have been Egyptian or Egyptianized Levantines.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|pp=44–48}} Tell El-Habwa would have provided Avaris with grain and trade goods.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|pp=129–130}} | |||
] (Avaris) dating from the late Hyksos period (1648–1540 BC).{{sfn|O'Connor|2009|pp=115–116}}{{sfn|Kopetzky|Bietak|2016|p=362}} Now at the ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Hyksos headband |url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/544073 |website=www.metmuseum.org}}</ref>]] | |||
In the ], ] shows a great deal of Levantine pottery and an occupation history closely correlated to the Fifteenth Dynasty,{{sfn|Mourad|2015|pp=51–55}} nearby Tell el-Rataba and Tell el-Sahaba show possible Hyksos-style burials and occupation,{{sfn|Mourad|2015|pp=56–57}} Tell el-Yahudiyah, located between Memphis and the Wadi Tumilat, contains a large earthwork that the Hyksos may have built, as well as evidence of Levantine burials from as early as the Thirteenth Dynasty,{{sfn|Mourad|2015|pp=57–61}} as well as characteristic Hyksos-era pottery known as ] The Hyksos settlements in the Wadi Tumilat would have provided access to Sinai, the southern Levant, and possibly the ].{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=130}} | |||
The sites Tell el-Kabir, Tell Yehud, Tell Fawziya, and Tell Geziret el-Faras are noted by scholars other than Mourad to contain "elements of 'Hyksos culture'", but there is no published archaeological material for them.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=19}} | |||
The Hyksos claimed to be rulers of both ] and ]; however, their southern border was marked at ] and ].{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=182}} Some objects might suggest a Hyksos presence in Upper Egypt, but they may have been Theban war booty or attest simply to short-term raids, trade, or diplomatic contact.{{sfn|Popko|2013|p=3}} The nature of Hyksos control over the region of ] remains unclear.{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=7}} Most likely Hyksos rule covered the area from ] to southern ].{{sfn|Popko|2013|p=2}} Older scholarship believed, due to the distribution of Hyksos goods with the names of Hyksos rulers in places such as ] and ], that Hyksos had ruled a vast empire, but it seems more likely to have been the result of diplomatic gift exchange and far-flung trade networks.{{sfn|Morenz|Popko|2010|p=105}}{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=7}} | |||
===Wars with the Seventeenth Dynasty=== | |||
The conflict between Thebes and the Hyksos is known exclusively from pro-Theban sources, and it is not easy to construct a chronology.{{sfn|Morenz|Popko|2010|pp=108–109}} These sources propagandistically portray the conflict as a war of national liberation. This perspective was formerly taken by scholars as well but is no longer thought to be accurate.{{sfn|Morenz|Popko|2010|p=109}}{{sfn|Popko|2013|pp=1–2}} | |||
Hostilities between the Hyksos and the Theban Seventeenth Dynasty appear to have begun during the reign of Theban king ]. Seqenenra Taa's mummy shows that he was killed by several blows of an axe to the head, apparently in battle with the Hyksos.{{sfn|Popko|2013|p=4}} It is unclear why hostilities may have started. The much later fragmentary ] tale '']'' blames the Hyksos ruler ] for initiating the conflict by demanding that ] remove a pool of ]es near Thebes.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=160}} However, this is a satire on the Egyptian story-telling genre of the "king's novel" rather than a historical text.{{sfn|Popko|2013|p=4}} A contemporary inscription at Wadi el Hôl may also refer to hostilities between Seqenenra and Apepi.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=5}} | |||
], bearing axe wounds. The common theory is that he died in a battle against the Hyksos.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=160}}]] | |||
Three years later, c. 1542 BC,{{sfn|Stiebing|2009|p=200}} Seqenenre Tao's successor ] initiated a campaign against several cities loyal to the Hyksos, the account of which is preserved on three monumental stelae set up at ].{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=161}}{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=5}}{{sfn|Wilkinson|2013|p=547}} The first of the three, ] includes a complaint by Kamose about the divided and occupied state of Egypt: | |||
{{blockquote|To what effect do I perceive it, my might, while a ruler is in Avaris and another in Kush, I sitting joined with an Asiatic and a Nubian, each man having his (own) portion of this Egypt, sharing the land with me. There is no passing him as far as Memphis, the water of Egypt. He has possession of Hermopolis, and no man can rest, being deprived by the levies of the Setiu. I shall engage in battle with him and I shall slit his body, for my intention is to save Egypt, striking the Asiatics.{{sfn|Ritner|Simpson|Tobin|Wente|2003|p=346}}}} | |||
Following a common literary device, Kamose's advisors are portrayed as trying to dissuade the king, who attacks anyway.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=161}} He recounts his destruction of the city of ] as well as several other cities loyal to the Hyksos. On a second stele, Kamose claims to have captured Avaris, but returned to Thebes after capturing a messenger between Apepi and the ].{{sfn|Popko|2013|p=4}} Kamose appears to have died soon afterward (c. 1540 BC).{{sfn|Stiebing|2009|p=200}} | |||
] continued the war against the Hyksos, most likely conquering Memphis, ], and ] early in his reign, the latter two of which are mentioned in an entry of the ].{{sfn|Popko|2013|p=4}} Knowledge of Ahmose I's campaigns against the Hyksos mostly comes from the tomb of ], who gives a first-person account claiming that Ahmose I sacked Avaris:{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=177}} "Then there was fighting in Egypt to the south of this town , and I carried off a man as a living captive. I went down into the water—for he was captured on the city side—and crossed the water carrying him. Then Avaris was despoiled, and I brought spoil from there.{{sfn|Lichthelm|2019|p=321}} | |||
{{multiple image | |||
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| image1 = Ceremonial axe of Ahmose I (front and back).jpg | |||
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| footer = Pharaoh ] (ruled c. 1549–1524 BC) slaying a probable Hyksos. Detail of a ceremonial axe in the name of Ahmose I, treasure of Queen ]. Inscription "Ahmose, beloved of (the War God) ]". ]{{sfn|Daressy|1906|p=117}}<ref>{{harvnb|Montet|1968|p=80|ps=. "Others were later added to them, things which came from the pharaoh Ahmose, like the axe decorated with a griffin and a likeness of the king slaying a Hyksos, with other axes and daggers."}}</ref>{{sfn|Morgan|2010|p=308|ps=. A color photograph.}}{{sfn|Baker|Baker|2001|p=86}} | |||
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Thomas Schneider places the conquest in year 18 of Ahmose's reign.{{sfn|Schneider|2006|p=195}} However, excavations of ] (Avaris) show no widespread destruction of the city, which instead seems to have been abandoned by the Hyksos.{{sfn|Popko|2013|p=4}} Manetho, as recorded in Josephus, states that the Hyksos were allowed to leave after concluding a treaty:{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|pp=201–202}} | |||
{{blockquote|Thoumosis ... invested the walls with an army of 480,000 men, and endeavoured to reduce to submission by siege. Despairing of achieving his object, he concluded a treaty, under which were all to evacuate Egypt and go whither they would unmolested. Upon these terms no fewer than two hundred and forty thousand, entire households with their possessions, left Egypt and traversed the desert to Syria. (''Contra Apion'' I.88-89){{sfn|Josephus|1926|pp=197–199}}}} | |||
Although Manetho indicates that the Hyksos population was expelled to the Levant, there is no archaeological evidence for this, and Manfred Bietak argues based on archaeological finds throughout Egypt that it is likely that numerous Asiatics were resettled in other locations in Egypt as artisans and craftsmen.{{sfn|Bietak|2010|pp=170–171}} Many may have remained at Avaris, as pottery and scarabs with typical "Hyksos" forms continued to be produced uninterrupted throughout the Eastern Delta.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=5}} Canaanite cults also continued to be worshiped at Avaris.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=6}} | |||
Following the capture of Avaris, Ahmose, son of Ebana, records that Ahmose I captured ] (possibly ]), which some scholars argue was a city in Canaan under Hyksos control.{{sfn|Stiebing|2009|p=168}} | |||
==Rule and administration== | |||
], at ]. Excavated in ], the Hyksos capital. Dated to 1802–1640 BC. ].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Candelora |first1=Danielle |title=The Hyksos |url=https://www.arce.org/resource/hyksos |website=www.arce.org |publisher=American Research Center in Egypt}}</ref>{{sfn|Roy|2011|pp=291–292}}<ref>{{harvnb|Curry|2018|p= |ps=. "A head from a statue of an official dating to the 12th or 13th Dynasty (1802–1640 B.C.) sports the mushroom-shaped hairstyle commonly worn by non-Egyptian immigrants from western Asia such as the Hyksos."}}</ref>{{sfn|Potts|2012|p=841}}]] | |||
===Administration=== | |||
The Hyksos show a mix of Egyptian and Levantine cultural traits.{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=182}} Their rulers adopted the full ] and employed Egyptian scribes and officials.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=3}} They also used Near-Eastern forms of administration, such as employing a chancellor ({{lang|egy|imy-r khetemet|italics=yes}}) as the head of their administration.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|pp=3–4}} | |||
===Rulers=== | |||
The names, the order, length of rule, and even the number of Fifteenth Dynasty rulers are not known with complete certainty. After the end of their rule, the Hyksos kings were not considered legitimate rulers of Egypt and were omitted from most king lists.{{sfn|Ben-Tor|2007|p=2}} The fragmentary ] included six Hyksos kings, however only the name of the last, ], is preserved.{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=118}} Six names are also preserved in the various epitomes of Manetho, however, it is difficult to reconcile the Turin King List and other sources with names known from Manetho,{{sfn|Bietak|1999|p=378}} mainly due to the "corrupted name forms" in Manetho.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=1}} The name ] appears in multiple sources, however.{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|pp=7–8}} | |||
Various other archaeological sources also provide names of rulers with the Hyksos title,{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=179}} however, the majority of kings from the second intermediate period are attested once on a single object, with only three exceptions.{{sfn|Ryholt|2018|p=235}} Ryholt associates two other rulers known from inscriptions with the dynasty, ] and ].{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|pp=119–120}} The name of Khyan's son, ], is also preserved from Tell El-Dab'a.{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=180}} The two best attested kings are Khyan and Apepi.{{sfn|Aston|2018|p=18}} Scholars generally agree that Apepi and Khamudi are the last two kings of the dynasty,{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|pp=6–7}} and Apepi is attested as a contemporary of Seventeenth-Dynasty pharaohs ] and ].{{sfn|Aston|2018|p=16}} Ryholt has proposed that Yanassi did not rule and that Khyan directly preceded Apepi,{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=256}} but most scholars agree that the order of kings is: Khyan, Yanassi, Apepi, Khamudi.{{sfn|Aston|2018|pp=15–17}} There is less agreement on the early rulers. Sakir-Har is proposed by Schneider, Ryholt, and Bietak to have been the first king.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=4}}{{sfn|Schneider|2006|p=194}}{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=201}} | |||
Recently, archaeological finds have suggested that Khyan may have been a contemporary of the Thirteenth Dynasty pharaoh ], potentially making him an early rather than a late Hyksos ruler.{{sfn|Aston|2018|p=15}} This has prompted attempts to reconsider the entire chronology of the Hyksos period, which as of 2018 had not yet reached any consensus.{{sfn|Polz|2018|p=217}} | |||
Some kings are attested from either fragments of the Turin King List or from other sources who may have been Hyksos rulers. According to Ryholt, kings ] and ], known from the Turin King List, may have been early Hyksos rulers,{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|pp=121–122}} however ] assigns these kings to the ].{{sfn|von Beckerath|1999|pp=120–121}} Another king known from ], ],{{sfn|Bietak|1999|p=378}} is believed by many scholars to be a Hyksos king,{{sfn|Müller|2018|p=210}} however Ryholt assigns this king to the Fourteenth Dynasty of Egypt.{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=409}} Manfred Bietak proposes that a king recorded as ] may also have been a Hyksos king of the Fifteenth Dynasty.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=2}} Bietak suggests that many of the other kings attested on ] may have been vassal kings of the Hyksos.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|pp=2–3}} | |||
{| class="wikitable" width="90%" | |||
|+Hyksos rulers in various sources{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=4}}{{sfn|Schneider|2006|p=194}}{{sfn|Aston|2018|p=17}} | |||
! Manetho{{sfn|Redford|1992|p=107}} | |||
! Turin King List | |||
! ] | |||
! Identification by Redford (1992){{sfn|Redford|1992|p=110}} | |||
! Identification by Ryholt (1997){{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=125}} | |||
! Identification by Bietak (2012){{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=4}} | |||
! Identification by Schneider (2006) (reconstructed Semitic name in parentheses){{sfn|Aston|2018|p=17}}{{sfn|Schneider|2006|pp=193–194}}{{efn|While Schneider identifies each of the names in Menatho with a pharaoh, he does not hold to Manetho's order of the reigns. So, for instance, he identifies Sakir-Har with Archles/Assis, the sixth king in Manetho, but proposes he reigned first.{{sfn|Schneider|2006|p=–194}}}} | |||
|- | |||
| Salitis/Saites (19 years) | |||
| X 15 | |||
| ]{{efn|Identified with Salitis by Bietak.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=4}}}} | |||
| Sheshi | |||
| ?Semqen (Šamuqēnu)? | |||
| ?Sakir-Har? | |||
| ? (Šarā-Dagan ]) | |||
|- | |||
| Bnon (44 years) | |||
| X 16.... 3 years | |||
| | |||
| Yaqub-Har | |||
| ?Aper-Anat ('Aper-'Anati)? | |||
|?Meruserre Yaqub-Har? | |||
| ? (*Bin-ʿAnu) | |||
|- | |||
| Apachnan/Pachnan (36/61 years) | |||
| X 17... 8 years 3 months | |||
| | |||
| Khyan | |||
| Sakir-Har | |||
| Seuserenre Khyan | |||
| Khyan (Hajran) | |||
|- | |||
| Iannas/Staan (50 years) | |||
| X 18... 10 (20, 30) years | |||
| | |||
| Yanassi (Yansas-X) | |||
| Khyan | |||
| Yanassi (Yansas-idn) | |||
| Yanassi (Jinaśśi’-Ad) | |||
|- | |||
| Apophis (61/14 years) | |||
| X 19... 40 + x years | |||
| Apepi (?'A-ken?){{efn|This name appears as a separate individual preceding Apepi, but it appears to mean "brave ass" and may be a disparaging reference to Apepi.{{sfn|Redford|1992|p=108}}}} | |||
| Apepi | |||
| Apepi | |||
| A-user-Re Apepi | |||
| Apepi (Apapi) | |||
|- | |- | ||
|- | |||
| ] | |||
| rowspan="2" | Archles/Assis (40/30 years){{efn|In Eusebius and Africanus's epitomes of Manetho, "Apopis" appears in final position, while Archles appears as the fifth ruler. In Josephus, Assis is the final ruler and Apophis the fifth ruler. The association of the names Archles and Assis with one another is a modern reconstruction.{{sfn|Redford|1992|p=107}}}} | |||
| c. ] | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| ''identifies with ?Khamudi?'' | |||
| ''identifies with Khamudi'' | |||
| ''Identifies with Khamudi'' | |||
| Sakir-Har (Sikru-Haddu) | |||
|- | |- | ||
|X 20 Khamudi | |||
| ] | |||
| | |||
| c. ] to ] | |||
| ?Khamudi?{{efn|Redford argues that the name "suits neither Assis nor Apophis".{{sfn|Redford|1992|p=108}}}} | |||
| Khamudi | |||
| Khamudi | |||
| ''not in Manetho'' (Halmu'di) | |||
|- | |- | ||
|Sum: 259 years{{efn|In the epitome of Manetho by ], the total instead comes to 284 years.{{sfn|Schneider|2006|p=194}}}} | |||
| ] | |||
|Sum: 108 years{{efn|This reading is based on a partially damaged section of the papyrus. Reconstructions of the damaged Turin King List proposed in 2018 would change the reading of years to up to 149 years (Ryholt) or between 160 and 180 years (Schneider).{{sfn|Aston|2018|pp=31–32}}}} | |||
| c. ] to ]? | |||
|||||||||| | |||
|} | |} | ||
None of the proposed identifications besides of Apepi and Apophis is considered certain.{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=11}} | |||
The Hyksos kingdom was centered in the eastern ] and ] and was limited in size, never extending south into ], which was under the control of ]-based rulers. Hyksos relations with the south seem,{{citation needed|date=May 2011}} to have been mainly of a commercial nature, although Theban princes appear to have recognized the Hyksos rulers and may possibly have provided them with ] for a period. The Hyksos Fifteenth Dynasty rulers established their capital and seat of government at ]. | |||
] at ]. The glyphs above are above the head of the first animal]] The rule of these kings overlaps with that of the native Egyptian pharaohs of the ] and ] of Egypt, better known as the ]. The first pharaoh of the ], ], finally expelled the Hyksos from their last holdout at ] in ] by the 16th year of his reign.<ref>Grimal, Nicolas. ''A History of Ancient Egypt'', p.193. Librairie Arthéme Fayard, 1988.</ref><ref>Redford, Donald B. ''History and Chronology of the 18th Dynasty of Egypt: Seven Studies'', pp.46–49. University of Toronto Press, 1967.</ref> Scholars have taken the increasing use of scarabs and the adoption of some Egyptian forms of art by the Fifteenth Dynasty Hyksos kings and their wide distribution as an indication of their becoming progressively Egyptianized.<ref>Booth, Charlotte. <cite>''The Hyksos Period in Egypt''</cite>. p.15-18. Shire Egyptology. 2005. ISBN 0-7478-0638-1</ref> The Hyksos used Egyptian titles associated with traditional Egyptian kingship, and took the Egyptian god ] to represent their own titulary deity.<ref>Booth, Charlotte. <cite>''The Hyksos Period in Egypt''</cite>. p.29-31. Shire Egyptology. 2005. ISBN 0-7478-0638-1</ref> It appears,{{citation needed|date=May 2011}} that Hyksos administration was accepted in most quarters, if not actually supported by many of their northern Egyptian subjects. In spite of the prosperity that the stable political situation brought to the land, the native ] continued to view the Hyksos as non-Egyptian "invaders.",{{citation needed|date=May 2011}} When they were eventually driven out of Egypt, all traces of their occupation were erased. No accounts survive recording the history of the period from the Hyksos perspective, only that of the native Egyptians who evicted the occupiers, in this case the rulers of the Eighteenth Dynasty who were the direct successor of the Theban Seventeenth Dynasty.<ref>cf. ''The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt'', editor Ian Shaw, p. 186, Oxford University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-19-280293-3</ref> It was the latter who started and led a sustained war against the Hyksos. Some{{who|date=May 2011}} think that the native kings from Thebes had an incentive to demonize the Asiatic rulers in the North, thus accounting for the destruction of their monuments. From this viewpoint the Hyksos dynasties represent superficially Egyptianized foreigners who were tolerated, but not truly accepted, by their Egyptian subjects. In contrast scholars such as ] found that the description of the Hyksos as overpowering, irreligious foreign rulers had support from other sources.<ref>''The Culture of Ancient Egypt'', John Albert Wilson, p. 160, University of Chicago Press, org. pub 1956 -still in print 2009,ISBN 0-226-90152-1</ref> | |||
In ]'s epitome of Manetho, the rulers of ] are also identified as "shepherds" (i.e. Hyksos) rulers.{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=179}} Following the work of Ryholt in 1997, most but not all scholars now identify the Sixteenth Dynasty as a native Egyptian dynasty based in ], following ]'s epitome of Manetho; this dynasty would be contemporary to the Hyksos.{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=3}} | |||
The independent native rulers in Thebes do seem,{{citation needed|date=May 2011}} however, to have reached a practical '']'' with the later Hyksos rulers. This included transit rights through Hyksos-controlled Middle and ] and pasturage rights in the fertile Delta. One text, the ''Carnarvon Tablet I'', relates the misgivings of the Theban ruler’s council of advisors when ] proposed moving against the Hyksos, whom he claimed were a humiliating stain upon the holy land of Egypt. The councilors clearly did not wish to disturb the status quo: | |||
===Diplomacy=== | |||
{{cquote|… we are at ease in our (part of) Egypt. Elephantine (at the First Cataract) is strong, and the middle (of the land) is with us as far as Cusae . The sleekest of their fields are plowed for us, and our cattle are pastured in the Delta. Emmer is sent for our pigs. Our cattle have not been taken away… He holds the land of the Asiatics; we hold Egypt…"<ref name = "Pritchard 232">Pritchard (ed.), ''Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament'' (ANET), pp 232f.</ref>}} | |||
], found in ], suggesting ]. The prenomen of Khyan and epithet appear on the breast. ], EA 987.{{sfn|Weigall|2016|p=188}}<ref name="Statue British Museum">{{cite web |title=Statue |id=EA987 |url=https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/Y_EA987 |website=The British Museum}}</ref>]] | |||
The Hyksos engagement in long-distance diplomacy is confirmed by a ] letter discovered in the ruins of Avaris. Hyksos diplomacy with ] and ] is also confirmed by the presence of gifts from the Hyksos court in those places.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=4}} ], one of the Hyksos rulers, is known for his wide-ranging contacts, as objects in his name have been found at ] and ] indicating diplomatic contacts with Crete and the ], and a sphinx with his name was bought on the art market at ] and might demonstrate ], possibly with the first ] ruler ].{{sfn|Weigall|2016|p=188}}<ref name="Statue British Museum"/> | |||
The Theban rulers of the Seventeenth Dynasty are known to have imitated the Hyksos both in their architecture and regnal names.{{sfn|Morenz|Popko|2010|p=108}} There is evidence of friendly relations between the Hyksos and Thebes, including possibly a marriage alliance, before the reign of the Theban pharaoh Seqenenra Tao.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=160}} | |||
==Was there a Hyksos invasion?== | |||
]'s account, as recorded by Josephus, of the appearance of the Hyksos in Egypt describes it as an armed invasion by a horde of foreign barbarians who met little resistance and who subdued the country by military force. He records that the Hyksos burnt their cities, destroyed temples and led women and children into slavery.<ref>''History of Egypt from the Earliest Time to the Persian Conquest'', ], p. 216, republished 2003, ISBN 0-7661-7720-3</ref> | |||
An intercepted letter between Apepi and the King of ], also called Kush, to the south of Egypt recorded on the Carnarvon Tablet has been interpreted as evidence of an alliance between the Hyksos and Kermans.{{sfn|Stiebing|2009|p=168}} Intensive contacts between Kerma and the Hyksos are further attested by seals with the names of Asiatic rulers or with designs known from Avaris at Kerma.{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=9}} The troops of Kerma are known to have raided as far north as ] according to an inscription of ].{{sfn|Popko|2013|p=4}} According to his second stele, Kamose was effectively caught between the campaign for the siege of Avaris in the north and the offensive of Kerma in the south; it is unknown whether or not the Kermans and Hyksos were able to combine forces against him.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=161}} Kamose reports returning "in triumph" to Thebes. Lutz Popko suggests that this "was perhaps a mere tactical retreat to prevent a war on two fronts".{{sfn|Popko|2013|p=4}} Ahmose I was also forced to confront a threat from the Nubians during his siege of Avaris: he was able to stop the forces of Kerma by sending a strong fleet, killing their ruler named A'ata.{{sfn|Bunson|2014|pp=}}{{sfn|Bunson|2014|p=}} Ahmose I boasts about these successes on his tomb at Thebes.{{sfn|Bunson|2014|pp=}} The Kermans also appear to have provided mercenaries to the Hyksos.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=4}} | |||
It has been claimed,<ref name = "Winlock">Winlock, Herbert E., ''The Rise and Fall of the Middle Kingdom in Thebes''.</ref> that new revolutionary methods of warfare ensured the Hyksos the ascendancy in their influx into the new emporia being established in Egypt's delta and at Thebes in support of the Red Sea trade. ] describes new military hardware, such as the ], as well as the improved ] and most importantly the horse-drawn war ], as well as improved arrowheads, various kinds of swords and daggers, a new type of shield, ], and the metal helmet.<ref name = "Winlock" /> | |||
===Vassalage=== | |||
In the last decades the idea of a simple migration, with little or no violence involved, has gained support.<ref>Booth, Charlotte. <cite>''The Hyksos Period in Egypt''</cite>. p.10. Shire Egyptology, 2005. ISBN 0-7478-0638-1</ref> Under this theory, the Egyptian rulers of ] were too weak to stop these new migrants from travelling to Egypt from Asia and were preoccupied by struggling to cope with domestic famine and plague. Even before that, ] carried out extensive building works and mining and Gae Callender notes that "the large intake of Asiatics, which seems to have occurred partly in order to subsidize the extensive building work, may have encouraged the so-called Hyksos to settle in the Delta, thus leading eventually to the collapse of native Egyptian rule."<ref>Callender, Gae, "The Middle Kingdom Renaissance," in Ian Shaw, ed. ''The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt'', Oxford University Press, 2003 ISBN 978-0-19-280458-7 p. 157</ref> | |||
Many scholars have described the Egyptian dynasties contemporary to the Hyksos as "vassal" dynasties, an idea partially derived from the ] literary text '']'',{{sfn|Flammini|2015|pp=236–237}} in which it is said "the entire land paid tribute to him , delivering their taxes in full as well as bringing all good produce of Egypt."{{sfn|Ritner|Simpson|Tobin|Wente|2003|p=70}} The belief in Hyksos vassalage was challenged by Ryholt as "a baseless assumption."{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=323}} Roxana Flammini suggests instead that Hyksos exerted influence through (sometimes imposed) personal relationships and gift-giving.{{sfn|Flammini|2015|pp=239–243}} Manfred Bietak continues to refer to Hyksos vassals, including minor dynasties of West Semitic rulers in Egypt.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|pp=1–4}} | |||
==Society and culture== | |||
By around 1700 BC (just over a hundred years later), Egypt was fragmenting politically with local kingdoms springing up in the northeastern Delta area. One of these was that of King Nehesy, whose capital was at Avaris and he ruled over a population consisting largely of Syro-Palestinians who had settled in the area during the 12th Dynasty and who were probably mainly soldiers, sailors, shipbuilders and workmen. His dynasty was probably replaced by a West-Semitic speaking Syro-Palestinian dynasty that formed the basis of the later Hyksos kingdom, which was able to spread southwards because of the unstable political situation, aided by "an army, ships, and foreign connections."<ref name="Bietak p57">Bietak, Manfred "Second Intermediate Period, overview" in Kathryn Bard, ed., ''Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt'' Routledge 1999 ISBN 0-415-18589-0 p57</ref> | |||
===Royal construction and patronage=== | |||
{{multiple image|perrow=2|total_width=420|caption_align=center | |||
| align = right | |||
| direction =horizontal | |||
| header=The so-called "Hyksos Sphinxes" | |||
| image1 = Hyksos Sphinxes.jpg | |||
| image2 = Sphinx Amenemhat3 Budge.jpg | |||
| footer=The so-called "Hyksos Sphinxes" are peculiar sphinxes of ] which were reinscribed by several Hyksos rulers, including ]. Earlier Egyptologists thought these were the faces of actual Hyksos rulers.{{sfn|el-Shahawy|2005|p=160}} | |||
}} | |||
] reappropriated by Hyksos ruler "]", with his name inscribed on the sides over an erasure.{{sfn|Griffith|1891|p=28|ps=. "The name of Khyan on the statue from Bubastis is written over an erasure, that the statue is of the XIIth Dynasty, and that Khyan was a Hyksôs king."}}]] | |||
The Hyksos do not appear to have produced any court art,{{sfn|Bietak|1999|p=379}} instead appropriating monuments from earlier dynasties by writing their names on them. Many of these are inscribed with the name of King ].{{sfn|Müller|2018|p=212}} A large palace at Avaris has been uncovered, built in the Levantine rather than the Egyptian style, most likely by Khyan.{{sfn|Bard|2015|p=213}} King ] is known to have patronized Egyptian scribal culture, commissioning the copying of the ].{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|pp=151–153}} The stories preserved in the ] may also date from his reign.{{sfn|Redford|1992|p=122}} | |||
The so-called "]" or "Tanite sphinxes" are a group of royal sphinxes depicting the earlier pharaoh ] (Twelfth Dynasty) with some unusual traits compared to conventional statuary, for example prominent cheekbones and the thick mane of a lion, instead of the traditional ] headcloth. The name "Hyksos sphinxes" was given due to the fact that these were later reinscribed by several of the Hyksos kings, and were initially thought to represent the Hyksos kings themselves. Nineteenth-century scholars attempted to use the statues' features to assign a racial origin to the Hyksos.{{sfn|Candelora|2018|p=54}} These Sphinxes were seized by the Hyksos from cities of the ] and then transported to their capital ] where they were reinscribed with the names of their new owners and adorned their palace.{{sfn|el-Shahawy|2005|p=160}} Seven of those sphinxes are known, all from ], and now mostly located in the ].{{sfn|el-Shahawy|2005|p=160}}{{sfn|Sayce|1895|p=17}} ] were found in Tanis and are associated with the Hyksos in the same manner. | |||
Josephus, quoting from the work of the historian Manetho, described more of an Egyptian assimilation to the corrupt ways of the emporia, followed by rebellion of those who wished to continue to live the life in Ma'at, than any kind of military struggle. {{cquote|By main force they easily seized it without striking a blow; and having overpowered the rulers of the land, they then burned our cities ruthlessly, razed to the ground the temples of gods… Finally, they appointed as king one of their number whose name was Salitis. He had his seat at Memphis, levying tribute from Upper and Lower Egypt and always leaving garrisons behind in the most advantageous positions}} | |||
===Burial practices=== | |||
The ceramic evidence in the Memphis-Fayum region of Lower Egypt argues against the presence of new invading foreigners. Janine Bourriau's excavation in Memphis of ceramic material retrieved from Lisht and ] during the Second Intermediate Period shows a continuity of Middle Kingdom ceramic type wares throughout this era. She finds in them no evidence of intrusion of Hyksos-style wares.<ref>''The Hyksos: New Historical and Archaeological Perspectives'', ed. Eliezer Oren, University of Pennsylvania 1997. cf. Janine Bourriau's chapter of the archaeological evidence covers pages 159-182</ref> Bourriau's evidence strongly suggests that the traditional Egyptian view, long espoused by Manetho, that the Hyksos invaded and sacked the Memphite region and imposed their authority there, is fictitious. | |||
Evidence for distinct Hyksos burial practices in the archaeological record include burying their dead within settlements rather than outside them like the Egyptians.{{sfn|Bietak|2016|p=268}} While some of the tombs include Egyptian-style chapels, they also include burials of young females, probably sacrifices, placed in front of the tomb chamber.{{sfn|Bard|2015|p=213}} There are also no surviving Hyksos funeral monuments in the desert in the Egyptian style, though these may have been destroyed.{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=183}} The Hyksos also interred infants who died in imported Canaanite amphorae.{{sfn|Wilkinson|2013|p=191}} The Hyksos also practiced ] and other ]s, likely a composite custom of the Egyptian association of the god ] with the ] and near-eastern notions of equids as representing status.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=15}} | |||
===Technology=== | |||
Not until the beginning of the Theban wars of liberation during the 17th Dynasty are Theban wares again found in the Fayum-Memphis region. Some texts indicate that while the Hyksos controlled the Delta region administratively the Thebans were too busy mining gold and making money off the Red Sea trade to care. Lower Egypt and Thebes functioned autonomously and shared limited contact with each other.<ref>James K. Hoffmeier, Book Review of ''The Hyksos: New Historical and Archaeological Perspectives'', ed. Eliezer Oren, University of Pennsylvania 1997. in JEA 90 (2004), p.27</ref> | |||
] was copied for the Hyksos king ].]] | |||
The Hyksos use of horse burials suggest that the Hyksos introduced both the ] and the ] to Egypt,{{sfn|Hernández|2014|p=112}} however no archaeological, pictorial, or textual evidence exists that the Hyksos possessed chariots, which are first mentioned as ridden by the Egyptians in warfare against them by ], at the close of Hyksos rule.{{sfn|Herslund|2018|p=151}} In any case, it does not appear that chariots played any large role in the Hyksos rise to power or their expulsion.{{sfn|Stiebing|2009|p=166}} Josef Wegner further argues that ] may have been present in Egypt as early as the late Middle Kingdom, prior to the adoption of chariot technology.{{sfn|Wegner|2015|p=76}} | |||
Traditionally, the Hyksos have also been credited with introducing a number of other military innovations, such as the ] and ]; however, "o what extent the kingdom of Avaris should be credited for these innovations is debatable," with scholarly opinion currently divided.{{sfn|Ilin-Tomich|2016|p=12}} It is also possible that the Hyksos introduced more advanced bronze working techniques, though this is inconclusive. They may have worn full-body armor,{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=149}} whereas the Egyptians did not wear armor or helmets until the New Kingdom.<ref name="Hyksos axe">{{cite web |title=Hyksos axe |url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/545716 |website=www.metmuseum.org}}</ref> | |||
Bourriau argues that Manetho's description of Hyksos rule is confirmed by the evidence in the Kamose texts that Kamose rejected vassal status, the strict control of the border at Cusae, the imposition of taxes on all Nile traffic and the existence of garrisons of Asiatics led by Egyptian commanders.<ref>''The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt'', editor Ian Shaw, p. 195, Oxford University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-19-280293-3</ref> | |||
The Hyksos also introduced better weaving techniques and new musical instruments to Egypt.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=149}} They introduced improvements in ] as well.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=5}} | |||
By the ], the foreign warlords had taken the name of Pharaoh for themselves and then began to fight over it. Some argued there was no need to pay tribute homage or obedience to a weak king, and that began to cause problems. | |||
<gallery widths="200" heights="160"> | |||
Supporters of the peaceful takeover of Egypt claim that there is little evidence of battles or wars in general in this period.<ref>Booth, Charlotte. <cite>''The Hyksos Period in Egypt''</cite>. p.10. Shire Egyptology. 2005. ISBN 0-7478-0638-1</ref> They also maintain that the chariot didn't play any relevant role, e.g. no traces of chariots have been found at the Hyksos capital of Avaris despite extensive excavation.<ref>{{cite book | last = Bard | first = Kathryn | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt | publisher = Routledge | year = 1999 | location = | pages = 225 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=PG6HffPwmuMC&pg=PA225&dq=chariots+Hyksos&ei=e5VWSJeiK4SgiwHyyJWJDA&client=firefox-a&sig=flo-c4bmqFigrBkxn8F02f8J5eM#PPA225,M1 | doi = | id = | isbn = 978-0-415-18589-9 }}</ref> | |||
File:Egyptian duckbill-shaped axe blade of Syro-Palestinian type 1981-1550 BCE.jpg|Egyptian duckbill-shaped axe blade of Syro-Palestinian type, a lethal technology probably introduced by the Hyksos (1981–1550 BC).<ref name="Hyksos axe"/> | |||
File:Hyksos spearhead (1780-1580 BCE).jpg|A bronze Hyksos-period spearhead, found in ] (1780–1580 BC).<ref>{{cite web |title=Spearhead |url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/323111 |website=www.metmuseum.org}}</ref> | |||
File:Whip Handle in the Shape of a Horse 1390-1353 BCE.jpg|The horse was probably introduced to Egypt by the Hyksos, and became a favourite subject of Egyptian art, as in this whip handle from the reign of ] (1390–1353 BC).<ref>{{cite web |title=Whip handle |url=https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/544853 |website=www.metmuseum.org}}</ref> | |||
File:Chariot of Tutankhamun.jpg|The two-wheeled horse chariot, here found in the tomb of ], may have been introduced to Egypt by the Hyksos.{{sfn|Hernández|2014|p=112}} | |||
</gallery> | |||
===Trade and economy=== | |||
As the chariot became an important weapon of the nobles and kings of that period, it became a symbol of power throughout ], ], ], ], ] and ]. Kings were portrayed on chariots, went to war in chariots and were buried in chariots. Skill in the use of mathematics {{citation needed|date=January 2012}}and well organized competent administration, the real power of the Hyksos, was less quickly appreciated by their rivals. | |||
], a Levantine-influenced style.]] | |||
The early period of Hyksos presence established their capital of Avaris "as the commercial capital of the Delta".{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=129}} The trading relations of the Hyksos were mainly with ] and ].{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=182}}{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|pp=138–139, 142}} Trade with Canaan is said to have been "intensive", especially with many imports of Canaanite wares, and may have reflected the Canaanite origins of the dynasty.{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|pp=138–139}} Trade was mostly with the cities of the northern Levant, but connections with the southern Levant also developed.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=216}} Additionally, trade was conducted with ], ], oases in Egypt, ], and ].{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=129}} Trade relations with Cyprus were also very important, particularly at the end of the Hyksos period.{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=182}}{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|p=141}} Aaron Burke has interpreted the equid burials in Avaris of evidence that the people buried with them were involved in the caravan trade.{{sfn|Burke|2019|p=80}} Anna-Latifa Mourad argues that "Hyksos were particularly interested in opening new avenues of trade, securing strategic posts in the eastern Delta that could give access to land-based and sea-based trade routes."{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=129}} These include the apparent Hyksos settlements of Tell el-Habwa I and ] in the eastern Delta.{{sfn|Mourad|2015|pp=129–130}} | |||
According to the ] stelae, the Hyksos imported "chariots and horses, ships, timber, gold, lapis lazuli, silver, turquoise, bronze, axes without number, oil, incense, fat and honey".{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=182}} The Hyksos also exported large quantities of material looted from southern Egypt, especially Egyptian sculptures, to the areas of Canaan and ].{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|pp=138–139}} These transfers of Egyptian artifacts to the Near East may especially be attributed to king ].{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|pp=138–139}} The Hyksos also produced local, Levantine-influenced industries, such as ].{{sfn|Mourad|2015|p=129}} | |||
== Theban offensive == | |||
===Under Seqenenre Tao=== | |||
], bearing axe-blade wounds. The common theory is that he died in a battle against the Hyksos]] | |||
The revolt which drove the Hyksos from Upper Egypt began in the closing years of the Seventeenth Dynasty at Thebes. Later New Kingdom literary tradition has brought one of these Theban kings, ], into contact with his Hyksos contemporary in the north, ] (also known as Apepi or Apophis). The tradition took the form of a tale in which the Hyksos king Apopi sent a messenger to Seqenenre in Thebes to demand that the Theban sport of harpooning hippopotami be done away with; his excuse was that the noise of these beasts was such that he was unable to sleep in far-away ]. The real reason was probably that their main god was ], who was represented as part man, part hippopotamus. ] argues that because the Ancient Egyptians could never conceive of a "lonely" god lacking personality, Seth the desert god, who was worshipped exclusively according to the tale, represented a manifestation of evil.<ref>''Of God and Gods'', Jan Assmann, p47-48, University of Wisconsin Press, 2008, ISBN 0-299-22550-X</ref> Perhaps the only historical information that can be gleaned from the tale is that Egypt was a divided land, the area of direct Hyksos control being in the north, but the whole of Egypt possibly paying tribute to the Hyksos kings. | |||
There is little evidence of trade between ] and ] during the Hyksos period, and Manfred Bietak proposes that there was "a mutual trade boycott". Bietak proposes that this decreased the Hyksos ability to trade with the Mediterranean and weakened their economy.{{sfn|Bietak|2012|p=5}} | |||
Seqenenre participated in active diplomatic posturing, which probably consisted of more than simply exchanging insults with the Asiatic ruler in the North. He seems,{{citation needed|date=May 2011}} to have led military skirmishes against the Hyksos, and judging by the vicious head wounds on his ] in the ], he may have died during one of them. His son and successor, ], the last ruler of the ] at ], is credited with the first significant victories in the Theban-led war against the Hyksos. | |||
=== |
===Religion=== | ||
] depicting the pharaoh as the Near-Eastern weather god (]) or vice versa.{{sfn|Keel|1996|pp=125–126}} The aim appears to be to present the Hyksos ruler as a divine figure.{{sfn|Morenz|Popko|2010|p=104}} Original privately owned, kept at the ].{{sfn|Keel|1996|p=126}}]] | |||
]]] | |||
Temples in Avaris existed both in Egyptian and Levantine style, the latter presumably for Levantine gods.{{sfn|O'Connor|2009|p=109}} The Hyksos are known to have worshiped the Canaanite storm god ], who was associated with the Egyptian god ].{{sfn|Bietak|1999|pp=377–378}} Set appears to have been the patron god of Avaris as early as the ].{{sfn|Bourriau|2000|p=177}} Hyksos iconography of their kings on some ]s shows a mixture of Egyptian pharaonic dress with a raised club, the iconography of Baal.{{sfn|Morenz|Popko|2010|p=104}} Despite later sources claiming the Hyksos were opposed to the worship of other gods, votive objects given by Hyksos rulers to gods such as ], ], ], and ] have also survived.{{sfn|Ryholt|1997|pp=148–149}} | |||
Kamose sailed north from Thebes at the head of his army in his third regnal year. He surprised and overran the southernmost garrison of the Hyksos at Nefrusy, just north of Cusae , and Kamose then led his army as far north as the neighborhood of ] itself. Though the city was not taken, the fields around it were devastated by the Thebans. A second stele discovered at Thebes continues the account of the war broken off on the Carnarvon Tablet I, and mentions the interception and capture of a courier bearing a message from the Hyksos king Aawoserra Apophis at Avaris to his ally the ruler of ] (modern Sudan), requesting the latter's urgent support against the threat posed by Kamose's activities against both their kingdoms. Kamose promptly ordered a detachment of his troops to occupy the Bahriya Oasis in the Western Desert to control and block the desert route to the south. Kamose, called "the Strong," then sailed back up the Nile to Thebes for a joyous victory celebration, after what was probably not much more than a surprise spoiling raid in force that caught the Hyksos off guard.{{Citation needed|date=July 2011}} His Year 3 is the only date attested for Kamose and he may have died shortly after the battle from wounds.<ref name="Bietak p57"/> | |||
==Potential biblical connections== | |||
By the end of the reign of ], perhaps the second last Hyksos kings of the Fifteenth Dynasty, the Hyksos had been routed from Middle Egypt and had retreated northward and regrouped in the vicinity of the entrance of the ] at Atfih. This great Hyksos king had outlived his first Egyptian contemporary, Seqenenra Tao II, and was still on the throne (albeit of a much reduced kingdom) at the end of Kamose's reign. The last Hyksos ruler of the Fifteenth Dynasty, Khamudi, undoubtedly had a relatively short reign that fell within the first half of the reign of ], Kamose's successor and the founder of the Eighteenth Dynasty.{{citation needed|date=May 2011}} | |||
===In the Manethonian–Josephus tradition=== | |||
], and most of the writers of antiquity, associated the Hyksos with the Jews.{{sfn|Assmann|2003|p=197}} Quoting from ]'s '']'', Josephus states that when the Hyksos were expelled from Egypt, they founded ] (''Contra Apion'' I.90).{{sfn|Josephus|1926|p=199}} It is unclear if this is original to Manetho or Josephus's own addition, as Manetho does not mention "Jews" or "Hebrews" in his preserved account of the expulsion.{{sfn|Assmann|2018|p=39}} Josephus's account of Manetho connects the expulsion of the Hyksos to another event two hundred years later, in which a group of lepers led by the priest ] were expelled from Egypt to the abandoned Avaris. There they ally with the Hyksos and rule over Egypt for thirteen years before being driven out, during which time they oppress the Egyptians and destroy their temples. After the expulsion, Osarseph changes his name to ] (''Contra Apion'' I.227-250).{{sfn|Josephus|1926|pp=255–265}} Assmann argues that this second account is largely a mixture of the experiences of the later ] with the Hyksos invasion, with Osarseph likely standing in for ].{{sfn|Assmann|2003|pp=227–228}}{{sfn|Assmann|2018|p=40}} The final mention of Osarseph, in which he changes his name to Moses, may be a later interpolation.{{sfn|Raspe|1998|p=132}} The second account is sometimes held not to have been written by Manetho at all.{{sfn|Gruen|2016|p=214}} | |||
=== |
===In modern scholarship=== | ||
{{see also|The Exodus|Sources and parallels of the Exodus}} | |||
].]] | |||
The majority of modern scholars do not believe that the Egyptian story elements in the Bible can be demonstrated with historical methods. However, some scholars have attempted to tie the narratives of the Hyksos period to the exodus period.{{sfn|Moore|Kelle|2011|pp=91}} | |||
Ahmose, who is regarded as the first king of the ] may have been on the Theban throne for some time before he resumed the war against the Hyksos. | |||
Scholars such as ] and ], for instance, have suggested that the story of the biblical exodus may have been wholly or partially inspired by the expulsion of the Hyksos.{{sfn|Redford|1992|p=412–413}}{{sfn|Assmann|2014|pp=26–27}}{{sfn|Faust|2015|p=477}} Archaeologists ] and ] argue that the exodus narrative perhaps evolved from vague memories of the Hyksos expulsion, spun to encourage resistance to the 7th century domination of Judah by Egypt.<ref>''The Bible Unearthed'', p. 69.</ref> An identification with the Hyksos would only depart minimally from accepted biblical chronology, and their expulsion is the only known large-scale expulsion of Asiatics from Egypt.{{sfn|Redmount|2001|p=78}} Other scholars, such with ], have pointed out several problems with such theories, including the conflict between the portrayal of the Hyksos as a ruling elite with a background in trade and seafaring and the biblical portrayal of the ] as oppressed in Egypt.{{sfn|Bietak|2015|p=32}} | |||
The details of his military campaigns are taken from the account on the walls of the tomb of another ], a soldier from ], a town in southern Upper Egypt, whose father had served under ], and whose family had long been ]s of the districts. It seems,{{citation needed|date=May 2011}} that several campaigns against the stronghold at ] were needed before the Hyksos were finally dislodged and driven from Lower Egypt. When this occurred is not known with certainty. Some authorities{{who|date=May 2011}} place the expulsion as early as Ahmose's fourth year, while ], whose chronological structure has been adopted here, places it as late as the king's fifteenth year. The Ahmose who left the inscription states that he followed on foot as his King Ahmose rode to war in his chariot (the first mention of the use of the horse and chariot by the Egyptians); in the fighting around Avaris he captured prisoners and carried off several hands (as proof of slain enemies), which when reported to the royal herald resulted in his being awarded the "Gold of Valor" on three separate occasions. The actual fall of Avaris is only briefly mentioned: | |||
], c. 1900 BC]] | |||
: "Then Avaris was despoiled. Then I carried off spoil from there: one man, three women, a total of four persons. Then his majesty gave them to me to be slaves."<ref>ANET, p.233f</ref> | |||
] states that Egyptian and Biblical records both suggest that Semitic people maintained access to Egypt at all periods of Egypt's history, and he suggested that it is tempting to suppose that Joseph who, according to the ] (Genesis 39:50), was in favour at the Egyptian court and held high administrative positions next to the ruler of the land, was associated to the Hyksos rule in Egypt during the Fifteenth Dynasty. Such a connection might have been facilitated by their shared Semitic ethnicity. He also wrote that there is no proof for these events.{{sfn|Bright|2000|p=97}} Howard Vos has suggested that the "]" said to have been worn by Joseph could be similar to the colorful garments seen in ] in the tomb of ].{{sfn|Vos|1999|p=75}} | |||
Ronald B. Geobey notes a number of problems with identifying the narrative of Joseph with events either prior to or during the Hyksos' rule, such as the detail that the Egyptians abhorred Joseph's people ("shepherds"; Gen. 46:31) and numerous anachronisms.{{sfn|Geobey|2017|pp=27–30|ps=. Notes that the Hebrew word is completely unrelated to the term "Hyksos."}} Manfred Bietak suggests that the story fits better with the ambience of the later ], in particular with the xenophobic policy of pharaoh ] (1189–1186 BC).{{sfn|Bietak|2015|p=20}} And ] argues that "to read as history is quite wrongheaded,"{{sfn|Redford|1992|p=429}} while Megan Bishop Moore and Brad E. Kelle note the lack of any extra-biblical evidence for the events of Genesis, including the Joseph story, or Exodus.{{sfn|Moore|Kelle|2011|p=93}} | |||
After the fall of Avaris, the fleeing Hyksos were pursued by the Egyptian army across northern ] and into southern ]. Here, in the ] desert between ] and ], the fortified town of ] was reduced after, according to the soldier from El-Kab, a long three-year siege operation. How soon after the sack of Avaris this Asiatic campaign took place is uncertain. One can reasonably conclude that the thrust into southern Canaan probably followed the Hyksos’ eviction from Avaris fairly closely, but, given a period of protracted struggle before Avaris fell and possibly more than one season of campaigning before the Hyksos were shut up in ], the chronological sequence must remain uncertain.{{citation needed|date=May 2011}} | |||
A number of scholars do not believe that the exodus has any historical basis at all, while only scholars "on the fundamentalist fringe" accept the entire biblical account "unless can be absolutely disproved".{{sfn|Grabbe|2017|p=36}} The current consensus among archaeologists is that, if an Israelite exodus from Egypt occurred, it must have happened instead in the ] (13th century BC), given the first appearance of a distinctive Israelite culture in the archaeological record.{{sfn|Geraty|2015|p=58}} The potential connection of the Hyksos to the exodus is no longer a central focus of scholarly study of the Hyksos,{{sfn|Flammini|2015|p=236}} but this supposed connection to the Exodus has continued to inspire popular interest.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=166}} | |||
==Later times== | |||
The Hyksos continued to play a role in Egyptian literature as a synonym for "Asiatic" down to Hellenistic times. The term was frequently evoked,{{citation needed|date=May 2011}} against such groups as the Semites settled in Aswan or the Delta, and this may have led the Egyptian priest and historian ] to identify the coming of the Hyksos with the sojourn in Egypt of Joseph and his brothers, and led to some authors identifying the expulsion of the Hyksos with ]. It may also indicate that the "expulsion" of the Hyksos reported in the Egyptian records mainly refers to the expulsion of the Semitic rulers and military/political elite and does not indicate a mass expulsion of the lower classes who, in the Ancient World, were traditionally exploited by their conquerors rather than expelled or massacred.{{Citation needed|date=November 2010}} | |||
==Legacy== | |||
With the chaos at the end of the 19th Dynasty, the first pharaohs of the 20th Dynasty in the Elephantine Stele and the ] re-invigorated an anti-Hyksos stance to strengthen their nativist reaction towards the Asiatic settlers of the north, who may,{{citation needed|date=May 2011}} again have been expelled from the country. ], the founder of the 20th Dynasty, records in a Year 2 stela from Elephantine that he defeated and expelled a large force of Asiatics who had invaded Egypt during the chaos between the end of ]'s reign and the beginning of the 20th dynasty and captured much of their stolen gold and silver booty. | |||
] (Metropolitan Museum of Art, MET DT10871). Ca. 1479–1458 BC]] | |||
], Eighteenth Dynasty, c. 1427–1400 BC.]] | |||
The Hyksos' rule continued to be condemned by ] pharaohs such as ], who, 80 years after their defeat, claimed to rebuild many shrines and temples which they had neglected.{{sfn|Bietak|1999|p=379}} | |||
] moved Egypt's capital to the Delta, building ] on the site of Avaris,{{sfn|Morenz|Popko|2010|p=102}} where he set up ]. Scholars used to suggest that this marked 400 years since the Hyksos had established their rule, however the lists of Ramesses' ancestors continued to omit the Hyksos and there is no evidence that they were honored during his reign.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|pp=162–163}} The Turin King List, which includes the Hyksos and all other disputed or disgraced former rulers of Egypt, appears to date from the reign of Ramesses or one of his successors.{{sfn|Ryholt|2004|p=138}} The Hyksos are marked as foreign kings via a throw-stick determinative rather than a divine determinative after their names, and the use of the title {{lang|egy|ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt|italics=yes}} rather than the usual royal title.{{sfn|Ryholt|2004|pp=142–143}} ] notes that these measures are unique to the Hyksos rulers and "may therefore have been a direct result of what seems to have been deliberate attempt to obliterate the memory of their kingship after their defeat."{{sfn|Ryholt|2004|p=143}} | |||
The story of the Hyksos was known to the Greeks,{{who|date=May 2011}} who attempted to identify it within their own mythology with the expulsion of Belus (]?) and the daughters of ], associated with the origin of the Argive dynasty. | |||
===Egyptian presence in the Levant=== | |||
It is "often accepted" that Egypt established an empire in Canaan at the end of the wars against the Hyksos.{{sfn|Höflmayer|2015|p=191}} Campaigns against locations in Canaan and Syria were conducted by ] and ] at the beginning of the ], as recorded in the tombs of ] and ]; Thutmose I is also mentioned as having hunted elephants in Syria in inscriptions at the temple of ] at ].{{sfn|Höflmayer|2015|pp=195–196}} ] is known to have campaigned widely, conquering the ''"]"'' ] of northern ], and the land of ], as far as ] and ] in numerous military campaigns circa 1450 BC.{{sfn|Gabriel|2009|p=204}}{{sfn|Allen|2000|page=299}} However, Felix Höflmayer argues that there is little evidence of other campaigns and that "there is no evidence that would suggest such a scenario" as an Egyptian empire during the Eighteenth Dynasty.{{sfn|Höflmayer|2015|p=202}} As regards claims that the campaigns in the Near East were spurred on by Hyksos rule, Thomas Schneider argues that "the empire building started with a delay of two generations and seeing a direct nexus may be as much a historical fallacy as it would be to link the fall of the Soviet Union in 1989 to the end of the Second World War in 1945, two generations earlier."{{sfn|Schneider|2018|p=78}} | |||
{{multiple image | |||
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| image1 = Syrians bringing presents in the tomb of Rekhmire (actual).jpg | |||
| image2 = Syrians bringing presents in the tomb of Rekhmire.jpg | |||
| footer = ''"]"'' Syrians bringing tribute to ], in the tomb of ], c. 1450 BC (actual painting and interpretive drawing). They are labeled "Chiefs of Retjenu".<ref>{{harvnb |Hawass|Vannini |2009|p=120|ps=. "The foreigners of the fourth register, with long hairstyles and calf-length fringed robes, are labeled Chiefs of Retjenu, the ancient name tor the Syrian region. Like the Nubians, they come with animals, in this case horses, an elephant, and a bear; they also offer weapons and vessels most likely filled with precious substance."}}</ref>{{sfn|Zakrzewski|Shortland|Rowland|2015|p=268}} | |||
| caption1 = | |||
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}} | |||
===Later accounts=== | |||
] from ] showing him capturing enemies: a Nubian, a Libyan and a Syrian, c. 1250 BC. ].{{sfn|Richardson|2013|p=14}}]] | |||
The Nineteenth-Dynasty story ''The Quarrel of Apophis and Seqenenre'' claimed that the Hyksos worshiped no god but ], making the conflict into one between ], the patron of Thebes, and Set as patron of Avaris.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=163}} Furthermore, the battle with the Hyksos was interpreted in light of the mythical battle between the gods ] and Set, transforming Set into an Asiatic deity while also allowing for the integration of Asiatics into Egyptian society.{{sfn|Assmann|2003|pp=199–200}} | |||
Manetho's portrayal of the Hyksos, written nearly 1300 years after the end of Hyksos rule and found in Josephus, is even more negative than the New Kingdom sources.{{sfn|Bietak|1999|p=379}} This account portrayed the Hyksos "as violent conquerors and oppressors of Egypt" has been highly influential for perceptions of the Hyksos until modern times.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|p=164}} ] argues that Josephus's portrayal of the initial Hyksos invasion is no more trustworthy than his later claims that they were related to ], supposedly portrayed in Manetho as performed by a band of lepers.{{sfn|Van de Mieroop|2011|pp=164–165}} | |||
===Early modern depictions=== | |||
The discovery of the Hyksos in the 19th century, and their study following the ], led to various theories about their history, origin, ethnicity and appearance, often illustrated with picturesque and imaginative details. | |||
<gallery widths="200" heights="200" perrow="4"> | |||
File:Hyksos invasion as imagined in the 19th century by Hermann Vogel.jpg|Hyksos invasion as imagined in the 19th century by Hermann Vogel (19th century) | |||
File:Egypt - The Expulsion of the Hyksos.png|''The Expulsion of the Hyksos'' (1906) | |||
</gallery> | |||
==See also== | |||
{{Portal|Asia}} | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*{{section link|Sino-Babylonianism|Later theories}} | |||
*] | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{ |
{{notelist}} | ||
==Citations== | |||
{{Reflist|20em}} | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
{{Refbegin|30em|indent=yes}} | |||
* Bietak M., ''Avaris, the Capital of the Hyksos. Recent Excavations at Tell el-Dab'a'', 1996 | |||
* {{cite book |last=Allen |first=James P. |title=Middle Egyptian: An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs |date=2000 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-77483-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gMxfheT1XQIC&pg=PA299}} | |||
* Redford D., ''Egypt, Canaan and Israel in ancient times'', 1992 | |||
* {{cite book| last=Assmann| first=Jan|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XEMadfTi_U4C&q=Osarsiph&pg=PA227|year=2003|publisher=Harvard University Press|isbn=9780674012110 |title=The mind of Egypt: history and meaning in the time of the Pharaohs|author-link=Jan Assmann}} | |||
* Redford D., "The Hyksos in history and tradition," ''Orientalia'', 39, 1997, 1-52 | |||
* {{cite book|first=Jan |last=Assmann |author-link=Jan Assmann|title=From Akhenaten to Moses: Ancient Egypt and Religious Change|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VsjmCwAAQBAJ|year=2014|publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-977-416-631-0}} | |||
*]: ''The Hyksos period in Egypt''. Princes Risborough, Shire 2005. ISBN 0-7478-0638-1 | |||
* {{cite book| last=Assmann| first=Jan |author-link=Jan Assmann| title=The Invention of Religion: Faith and Covenant in the Book of Exodus| publisher=Princeton University Press| year=2018| isbn=9781400889235| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K7s7DwAAQBAJ}} | |||
*Eliezer D. Oren (Hrsg.): ''The Hyksos, new historical and archaeological perspectives''. Kongressbericht. University Museum Philadelphia. University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 1997. ISBN 0-924171-46-4 | |||
* {{harvc|last=Aston|first=David A. |c=How Early (and How Late) Can Khyan Really Be: An Essay Based on ›Conventional Archaeological Methods< |in1=Forstner-Müller |in2=Moeller |year=2018 |pages=15–56}} | |||
* Aharoni, Yohanan and Michael Avi-Yonah, ''The MacMillan Bible Atlas'', Revised Edition, pp. 30–31 (1968 & 1977 by Carta Ltd.). | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Baker |first1=Rosalie F. |last2=Baker |first2=Charles F. |title=Ancient Egyptians: People of the Pyramids |date=2001 |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=USA |isbn=978-0-19-512221-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gw5prEJQq10C&pg=PA86}} | |||
* Bimson, John J. ''Redating the Exodus''. Sheffield, England: Sheffield Academic Press, 1981. ISBN 0-907459-04-8 | |||
* {{cite book |last=Bard |first=Kathryn A. |author-link=Kathryn A. Bard |title=An Introduction to the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt |edition=2nd |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |year=2015|isbn=9780470673362 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lFscBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA188}} | |||
*]. ''Untersuchungen zur politischen Geschichte der zweiten Zwischenzeit in Ägypten'' (1965) . Basic to any study of this period. | |||
* {{cite book|last=von Beckerath |first=Jürgen |author-link=Jürgen von Beckerath|title= Handbuch der ägyptischen Königsnamen|publisher=von Zabern |year=1999 |isbn= 3-8053-2591-6 }} | |||
*Gardiner, Sir Alan. ''Egypt of the Pharaohs'' (1964, 1961). Still the classic work in English. See pp. 61–71 for his examination of chronology. | |||
* {{cite book |last=Ben-Tor |first=Daphne |title=Scarabs, Chronology, and Connections: Egypt and Palestine in the Second Intermediate Period |publisher=Vandenhoeck and Ruprecht |year=2007 |url=https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/137119/1/Ben-Tor_2007_Scarabs_Chronology_and_Interconnections.pdf }} | |||
*Gibson, David J., ''Whence Came the Hyksos, Kings of Egypt?'', 1962 | |||
* {{cite book |last=Bietak |first=Manfred |author-link=Manfred Bietak |chapter=The Spiritual Roots of the Hyksos Elite: An Analysis of Their Sacred Architecture, Part I |title=The Enigma of the Hyksos |editor-last1=Bietak |editor-first1=Manfred |editor-last2=Prell |editor-first2=Silvia |publisher=Harrassowitz |year=2019 |pages=47–67 |isbn=9783447113328 }} | |||
*Hayes, William C. "Chronology: Egypt—To End of Twentieth Dynasty," in Chapter 6, Volume 1 of ''The Cambridge Ancient History'', Revised Edition. Cambridge, 1964. With excellent bibliography up to 1964. This is CAH’s chronology volume: A basic work. | |||
* {{cite book|last=Bietak |first=Manfred |author-link=Manfred Bietak |chapter=On the Historicity of the Exodus: What Egyptology Today Can Contribute to Assessing the Biblical Account of the Sojourn in Egypt |title=Israel's Exodus in Transdisciplinary Perspective: Text, Archaeology, Culture, and Geoscience|editor1=Thomas E. Levy|editor2=Thomas Schneider|editor3=William H.C. Propp|chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/11769454|date=2015|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-3-319-04768-3 |pages=17–37}} | |||
*Hayes, William C. "Egypt: From the Death of Ammenemes III to Seqenenre II," in Chapter 2, Volume 2 of ''The Cambridge Ancient History'', Revised Edition (1965) (Fascicle 6). | |||
* {{cite book|last=Bietak|first=Manfred|editor-last=Redford|chapter=Hyksos|location=Oxford|editor-first=Donald B.|editor-link=Donald B. Redford|date=2001|title=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, Volume 2|publisher=Oxford University Press|pages=136–143|isbn=978-0-19-510234-5}} | |||
*Helck, Wolfgang. ''Die Beziehungen Ägyptens zu Vorderasien im 3. und 2. Jahrtausend v. Chr.'' (1962) . An important review article that should be consulted is by William A. Ward, in ''Orientalia'' 33 (1964), pp. 135–140. | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|last=Bietak |first=Manfred |author-link=Manfred Bietak |article=Hyksos |encyclopedia=The Encyclopedia of Ancient History |year=2012 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |doi=10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah15207 |isbn=9781444338386 |editor-last1=Bagnell |editor-first1=Roger S. |display-editors=etal }} | |||
*Hornung, Erik. ''Untersuchungen zur Chronologie und Geschichte des Neuen Reiches'' (1964) . With an excellent fold-out comparative chronological table at the back with 18th, 19th, and 20th Dynasty dates. | |||
* {{Cite book |last=Woudhuizen |first=Frederik Christiaan |author-link=Frederik Christiaan Woudhuizen |url= |title=The Ethnicity of the Sea Peoples |date=2006 |publisher=] |language=en|oclc=69663674}} | |||
*James, T.G.H. "Egypt: From the Expulsion of the Hyksos to Amenophis I," in Chapter 2, Volume 2 of ''The Cambridge Ancient History'', Revised Edition (1965) (Fascicle 34). | |||
* {{Citation |last=Glassman |first=Ronald M. |title=From Canaanites to Phoenicians |date=2017 |work=The Origins of Democracy in Tribes, City-States and Nation-States |pages=479–494 |editor-last=Glassman |editor-first=Ronald M. |url=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51695-0_50 |access-date= |place=Cham |publisher=Springer International Publishing |language=en |doi=10.1007/978-3-319-51695-0_50 |isbn=978-3-319-51695-0}} | |||
*Montet, Pierre. ''Eternal Egypt'' (1964). Translated by Doreen Weightman. | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Bietak |first=Manfred |author-link=Manfred Bietak |title=The Egyptian community in Avaris during the Hyksos period |journal=Ägypten und Levante / Egypt and the Levant |volume=26 |year=2016 |pages=263–274 |doi=10.1553/AEundL26s263 |jstor=44243953 |url=http://epub.oeaw.ac.at/?arp=0x0034aea0 }} | |||
*Pritchard, James B. (Editor). ''Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament''(ANET), 3rd edition. (1969). This edition has an extensive supplement at the back containing additional translations. The standard collection of excellent English translations of ancient Near Eastern texts. | |||
* {{cite book|last=Bietak |first=Manfred |author-link=Manfred Bietak |chapter=FROM WHERE CAME THE HYKSOS AND WHERE DID THEY GO? |title=THE SECOND INTERMEDIATE PERIOD (THIRTEENTH–SEVENTEENTH DYNASTIES): Current Research, Future Prospects |url=https://www.academia.edu/10074987| editor-last1=Maréee |editor-first1=Marcel |year=2010|publisher=Peeters |pages=139–181 }} | |||
*Redford, Donald B. ''History and Chronology of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt: Seven Studies''. (1967). | |||
* {{cite book| last=Bietak |first=Manfred |author-link=Manfred Bietak |chapter=The predecessors of the Hyksos |title=Confronting the Past: Archaeological and Historical Essays on Ancient Israel in Honor of William G. Dever |year=2006 |editor-last1=Gitin |editor-first1=Seymour |editor-last2=Wright |editor-first2=Edward J. |editor-last3=Dessel |editor-first3=J. P. |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oYearm8YobQC&q=Hyksos+invasion&pg=PA285 |publisher=Eisenbrauns |isbn=9781575061177 }} | |||
*Redford, Donald B. "The Hyksos Invasion in History and Tradition," ''Orientalia'' 39 (1970). | |||
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Bietak |first=Manfred |author-link=Manfred Bietak |year=1999 |chapter=Hyksos |title=Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt |editor-last=Bard |editor-first=Kathryn A. |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AWSGAgAAQBAJ&q=Hyksos |pages=377–379 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781134665259 }} | |||
*Ryholt, Kim SB. ''The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c.1800-1550 B.C.'' (1997) by Museum Tuscalanum Press. | |||
* {{cite book|last=Bourriau |first=Janine |year=2000 |chapter=The Second Intermediate Period (c. 1650-1550 BC) |title=The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt |editor-last1=Shaw |editor-first1=Ian |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-280458-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yugRDAAAQBAJ&q=%22The+Middle+Kingdom+Renaissance%22}} | |||
*Van Seters, John. ''The Hyksos: A New Investigation'' (1967). Two reviews of this volume should be consulted: Kitchen, Kenneth A. "Further Notes on New Kingdom Chronology and History," in ''Chronique d’Égypte'' XLIII, No. 86, 1968, pp. 313–324; and Simpson, William J. Review, in ''Journal of the American Oriental Society'' 90 (1970), pp. 314–315. | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Bright |first1=John |author-link=John Bright (biblical scholar) |edition=4th |title=A History of Israel |date=2000 |publisher=Westminster John Knox Press |isbn=978-0-664-22068-6 |page=97 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0VG67yLs-LAC&pg=PA87}} | |||
*Säve-Söderbergh, T. "The Hyksos Rule in Egypt," ''Journal of Egyptian Archaeology'' 37 (1951), pp. 53–71. | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Bunson |first1=Margaret |title=Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt |date=2014 |publisher=Infobase Publishing |isbn=978-1-4381-0997-8 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-6EJ0G-4jyoC}} | |||
* ] ''The Rise and Fall of the Middle Kingdom in Thebes'' (1947). Still a classic with much important information. | |||
* {{cite book|last=Burke |first=Aaron A. |chapter=Amorites in the Eastern Nile Delta: The Identity of Asiatics at Avaris during the Early Middle Kingdom |title=The Enigma of the Hyksos |editor-last1=Bietak |editor-first1=Manfred |editor-last2=Prell |editor-first2=Silvia |publisher=Harrassowitz |year=2019 |pages=67–91 |chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/40770694 |isbn=9783447113328}} | |||
{{Semitic topics}} | |||
*{{cite journal |last=Candelora |first=Danielle |title=Entangled in Orientalism: How the Hyksos Became a Race |journal=Journal of Egyptian History |volume=11 |year=2018 |issue=1–2 |pages=45–72 |doi=10.1163/18741665-12340042|s2cid=216703371 }} | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Candelora |first=Danielle |title=Defining the Hyksos: A Reevaluation of the Title ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt and Its Implications for Hyksos Identity |url=https://www.academia.edu/35623418 |journal=Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt |year=2017 |volume=53 |pages=203–221 |doi=10.5913/jarce.53.2017.a010}} | |||
* {{cite magazine|last=Curry |first=Andrew |title=The Rulers of Foreign Lands |magazine=Archaeology Magazine |date=September–October 2018 |url=https://www.archaeology.org/issues/309-1809/features/6855-egypt-hyksos-foreign-dynasty}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Daressy |first=Georges |title=Un poignard du temps des Rois Pasteurs |journal=Annales du Service des Antiquités de l'Égypte |year=1906|volume=7 |url=https://archive.org/stream/annalesduservice78egyp/annalesduservice78egyp#page/n124/mode/1up |pages=115–120 }} | |||
* {{cite book |author-last=el-Shahawy |author-first=Abeer |title=The Egyptian Museum in Cairo: A Walk Through the Alleys of Ancient Egypt |year=2005 |publisher=Farid Atiya Press |isbn=977-17-2183-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cAyjwKyoHiEC&pg=PA160 }} | |||
* {{cite journal| last=Flammini |first=Roxana |title=Building the Hyksos' Vassals: Some Thoughts on the Definition of the Hyksos Subordination Practices |journal=Ägypten und Levante / Egypt and the Levant |volume=25 |year=2015 |pages=233–245 |doi=10.1553/AEundL25s233 |jstor=43795213 |hdl=11336/4290 |hdl-access=free }} | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Faust|first1=Avraham|chapter=The Emergence of Iron Age Israel: On Origins and Habitus |title=Israel's Exodus in Transdisciplinary Perspective: Text, Archaeology, Culture, and Geoscience|editor1=Thomas E. Levy|editor2=Thomas Schneider|editor3=William H.C. Propp|chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/11906343|date=2015|publisher=Springer |pages=467–482|isbn=978-3-319-04768-3}} | |||
* {{cite book|editor-last1=Forstner-Müller|editor-first1=Irene|editor-last2=Moeller|editor-first2=Nadine |title=THE HYKSOS RULER KHYAN AND THE EARLY SECOND INTERMEDIATE PERIOD IN EGYPT: PROBLEMS AND PRIORITIES OF CURRENT RESEARCH. Proceedings of the Workshop of the Austrian Archaeological Institute and the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, Vienna, July 4 – 5, 2014 |publisher=Holzhausen |year=2018 |isbn=978-3-902976-83-3}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Gabriel |first=Richard A. |title=Thutmose III: The Military Biography of Egypt's Greatest Warrior King |date=2009 |publisher=Potomac Books |isbn=978-1-59797-373-1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jCKU6fA8nZIC&pg=PT204}} | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Geobey |first=Ronald A. |title=Joseph the Infiltrator, Jacob the Conqueror?: Reexamining the Hyksos–Hebrew Correlation |journal=Journal of Biblical Literature |volume=136 |issue=1 |year=2017 |pages=23–37 |doi=10.1353/jbl.2017.0001 |s2cid=164637479 |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/article/652356/ }} | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Geraty|first1=L. T. |chapter=Exodus Dates and Theories |title=Israel's Exodus in Transdisciplinary Perspective: Text, Archaeology, Culture, and Geoscience|editor1=Thomas E. Levy|editor2=Thomas Schneider |editor3=William H.C. Propp|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xpe1BwAAQBAJ&pg=PA58|date=2015 |pages=55–64|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-3-319-04768-3}} | |||
* {{cite book| last1=Grabbe| first1=Lester| title=Ancient Israel: What Do We Know and How Do We Know It?| year=2017| publisher=Bloomsbury| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4lzyDQAAQBAJ| isbn=9780567670434}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Griffith |first=F. Ll |title=Archaeological Report 1890/91 - 1911/12: Comprising the Recent Work of the Egypt Exploration Fund and the Progress of Egyptology During the Year 1890/91-1911/12 |year=1891 |publisher=Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nxxGAQAAMAAJ}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Gruen |first=Erich S. |title=The Construct of Identity in Hellenistic Judaism: Essays on Early Jewish Literature and History |chapter=The Use and Abuse of the Exodus Story |publisher=de Gruyter |year=2016 |pages=197–228 |jstor=j.ctvbkjxph.14 }} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Hawass |first1=Zahi A. |last2=Vannini |first2=Sandro |title=The lost tombs of Thebes: life in paradise |date=2009 |publisher=Thames & Hudson |isbn=9780500051597 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YjZZAAAAYAAJ}} | |||
* {{cite journal| last=Hernández |first=Roberto A. Díaz |title=The Role of the War Chariot in the Formation of the Egyptian Empire in the Early 18th Dynasty |journal=Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur |volume=43 |year=2014 |pages=109–122 |jstor=44160271 }} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Herslund |first=Ole |chapter=Chronicling Chariots: Texts, Writing and Language of New Kingdom Egypt |title=Chariots in Ancient Egypt: The Tano Chariot, A Case Study |editor-last1=Veldmeijer |editor-first1=André J |editor-last2=Ikram |editor-first2= Salima |publisher=Sidestone Press |year=2018 |isbn=9789088904684 }} | |||
*{{cite book|author-last1=Höflmayer |author-first1=Felix |chapter=Egypt’s “Empire” in the Southern Levant during the Early 18th Dynasty |title=Policies of Exchange Political Systems and Modes of Interaction in the Aegean and the Near East in the 2nd Millenium B.C.E: Proceedings of the International Symposium at the University of Freiburg Institute for Archaeological Studies, 30th May - 2nd June 2012 |editor-last1=Eder |editor-first1=Birgitta |editor-last2=Pruzsinszky |editor-first2=Regine |publisher=Austrian Academy of Sciences Press |year=2015 |volume=2 |pages=191–206 |jstor=j.ctt1bkm4rg.15 |isbn=9783700176619 }} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Hölbl |first=Günther |title=A History of the Ptolemaic Empire |date=2001 |publisher=Psychology Press |isbn=978-0-415-23489-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dEiydV7c3w4C&pg=PA79}} | |||
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Ilin-Tomich |first=Alexander |chapter=Second Intermediate Period |editor-last1=Wendrich |editor-first1=Willeke |display-editors=etal |encyclopedia=UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology |year=2016 |chapter-url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/72q561r2 }} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Josephus |first=Flavius |title=Josephus in Eight Volumes, 1: The Life; Against Apion |translator-last=Thackeray |translator-first=H. St. J. |year=1926 |url=https://archive.org/details/L186JosephusILifeAgainstApion/page/n5/mode/2up}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Kamrin |first=Janice |title=The Aamu of Shu in the Tomb of Khnumhotep II at Beni Hassan |journal=Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections |date=2009 |volume=1 |pages=22–36 |s2cid=199601200 }} | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Keel |first=Othmar |title=Ein weiterer Skarabäus mit einer Nilpferdjagd, die Ikonographie der sogenannten Beamtenskarabäen und der ägyptische König auf Skarabäen vor dem Neuen Reich |journal=Ägypten und Levante / Egypt and the Levant |volume=6 |year=1996 |pages=119–136 |jstor=23788869 }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Kopetzky |first1=Karin |last2=Bietak |first2=Manfred |title=A Seal Impression of the Green Jasper Workshop from Tell El-Dabʿa |journal=Ägypten und Levante / Egypt and the Levant |date=2016 |volume=26 |pages=357–375 |doi=10.1553/AEundL26s357 |jstor=44243958|url=http://hw.oeaw.ac.at/?arp=0x0034aeaa }} | |||
* {{cite book |editor-last=Lichthelm |editor-first=Miriam |year=2019 |title=Ancient Egyptian Literature |publisher=University of California Press |doi=10.2307/j.ctvqc6j1s |jstor=j.ctvqc6j1s |isbn=9780520973619|s2cid=63441582 }} | |||
* {{Cite book|last1=Loprieno |first1=Antonio |chapter=Views of the Past in Egypt During the First Millennium BC |title='Never Had the Like Occurred': Egypt's View of its Past |editor-last1=Tait |editor-first1=John |year=2003}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Montet |first=Pierre |title=Lives of the pharaohs |date=1968 |publisher=Weidenfeld and Nicolson |isbn=9780600354529 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rLZxAAAAMAAJ}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1 = Moore|first1 = Megan Bishop|last2 = Kelle|first2 = Brad E|title = Biblical History and Israel's Past: The Changing Study of the Bible and History|publisher = Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing|year = 2011|isbn = 978-0-8028-6260-0|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=Qjkz_8EMoaUC&pg=PA91}} | |||
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* {{cite journal |last=Morgan |first=Lyvia |title=An Aegean Griffin in Egypt: The Hunt Frieze at Tell el-Dab´a |journal=Ägypten und Levante / Egypt and the Levant |date=2010 |volume=20 |pages=303–323 |doi=10.1553/AEundL20s303 |jstor=23789943}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Mourad |first=Anna-Latifa |title=Rise of the Hyksos: Egypt and the Levant from the Middle Kingdom to the early Second Intermediate Period |publisher=Oxford Archaeopress|year=2015 |doi=10.2307/j.ctvr43jbk |jstor=j.ctvr43jbk |isbn=9781784911348 }} | |||
* {{harvc|last=Müller|first=Vera |c=Chronological Concepts for the Second Intermediate Period and Their Implications for the Evaluation of Its Material Culture |in1=Forstner-Müller |in2=Moeller |year=2018 |pages=199–216}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=O'Connor |first=David |chapter=Egypt, the Levant, and the Aegean: From the Hyksos Period to the Rise of the New Kingdom |pages=108–122 |title=Beyond Babylon: art, trade, and diplomacy in the second millennium B.C. |editor-last1=Aruz |editor-first1=Joan |editor-last2=Benzel |editor-first2=Kim |editor-last3=Evans |editor-first3=Jean M. |publisher=Yale University Press |year=2009|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gr5BgOwEJicC&q=Hyksos+15th+Dynasty&pg=PA108 |isbn=9780300141436 }} | |||
* {{harvc|last=Polz|first=Daniel |c=The Territorial Claim and the Political Role of the Theban State at the End of the Second Intermediate Period: A Case Study |in1=Forstner-Müller |in2=Moeller |year=2018 |pages=217–233}} | |||
* {{cite encyclopedia |last=Popko |first=Lutz |title=Late Second Intermediate Period to Early New Kingdom |chapter=Late Second Intermediate Period |encyclopedia=UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology |year=2013 |chapter-url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7qf6v8wr |editor-last1=Wendrich |editor-first1=Willeke |display-editors=etal }} | |||
* {{cite book|last1=Potts|first1=Daniel T.|title=A Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East |year=2012 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |isbn=978-1-4443-6077-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P5q7DDqMbF0C&pg=PA841}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Pritchard |first=James B. |title=Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament with Supplement |date=2016 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-1-4008-8276-2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UEWWCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA230}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Raspe |first=Lucia |title=Manetho on the Exodus: A Reappraisal |journal=Jewish Studies Quarterly |volume=5 |year=1998 |issue=2 |pages=124–155 |jstor=40753208 }} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Redford|first=Donald B. |author-link=Donald B. Redford|title=Egypt, Canaan, and Israel in Ancient Times|year=1992|publisher=Princeton University Press|isbn=978-0-691-03606-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hTXfDwAAQBAJ&q=Egypt,+Canaan,+and+Israel+in+Ancient+Times}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Redmount| first=Carol A.| title=The Oxford History of the Biblical World| chapter=Bitter Lives: Israel In And Out of Egypt| editor-last=Coogan| editor-first=Michael D.| year=2001| orig-year=1998 |publisher=Oxford University Press| isbn=9780199881482| chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=4DVHJRFW3mYC&q=%22The+exodus+saga+in+the+bible%22&pg=PA59|pages=58–89}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Richardson |first=Dan |title=Cairo and the Pyramids (Rough Guides Snapshot Egypt) |date=2013 |publisher=Rough Guides UK |isbn=978-1-4093-3544-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VgtCeNKcs-IC&pg=PT14}} | |||
* {{Cite book|last1=Ritner |first1=Robert K. |last2=Simpson |first2=William Kelly |last3=Tobin |first3=Vincent A. |last4=Wente |first4=Edward F. |editor-last1=Simpson |editor-first1=William Kelly |title=The Literature of Ancient Egypt: An Anthology of Stories, Instructions, and Poetry |year=2003 |publisher=Yale University Press |jstor=j.ctt5vm2m5 |isbn=9780300099201}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Roy |first=Jane |title=The Politics of Trade: Egypt and Lower Nubia in the 4th Millennium BC |year=2011 |publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-04-19610-0 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=9En6tzUJCXkC }} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Russmann |first1=Edna R. |last2=James |first2=Thomas Garnet Henry |title=Eternal Egypt: Masterworks of Ancient Art from the British Museum |date=2001 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-23086-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xNmoKfdeJ1sC&pg=PA67}} | |||
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* {{cite journal |author-last=Ryholt|author-first=Kim |title=The Turin King-List |author-link=Kim Ryholt |journal=Ägypten und Levante / Egypt and the Levant |year=2004 |volume=14 |pages=135–155 |jstor=23788139 }} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Ryholt|first=Kim |author-link=Kim Ryholt |title=The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c.1800-1550 B.C. |year=1997 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ANRi7cM5ZwsC |publisher=Museum Tuscalanum Press |isbn=9788772894218}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Sayce |first=A. H. |title=The Egypt of the Hebrews and Herodotos |date=1895 |publisher=Books on Demand |isbn=978-3-7347-3964-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EWeNDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT17}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Schneider |first=Thomas |chapter=The Relative Chronology of the Middle Kingdom and the Hyksos Period |title=Ancient Egyptian Chronology |editor-last1=Hornung |editor-first1=Erik |editor-last2=Krauss |editor-first2=Rolf |editor-last3=Warburton |editor-first3=David A. |year=2006 |publisher=Brill |isbn=9004113851 |pages=168–196 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Gux5DwAAQBAJ&dq=Schneider+Relative+chronology+middle+kingdom&pg=PA168}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Schneider |first=Thomas |title=Das Ende der Kurzen Chronologie: Eine Kritische Bilanz der Debatte zur Absoluten Datierung des Mittleren Reiches und der Zweiten Zwischenzeit |journal=Ägypten und Levante / Egypt and the Levant |year=2008 |volume=18 |pages=275–313 |doi=10.1553/AEundL18s275 |jstor=23788616 |url=http://epub.oeaw.ac.at/?arp=6618-4inhalt/AuL-18_13-Schneider_s275-314.pdf }} | |||
*{{cite journal|last=Schneider|first=Thomas |title=Hyksos Research in Egyptology and Egypt's Public Imagination: A Brief Assessment of Fifty Years of Assessments |journal=Journal of Egyptian History |volume=11 |year=2018 |issue=1–2 |pages=73–86 |doi=10.1163/18741665-12340043 |s2cid=240039656 }} | |||
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* {{cite book|last1=Verbrugghe |first1=Gerald P. |last2=Wickersham |first2=John M. |title=Berossos and Manetho, introduced and translated: native traditions in ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt |year=1996 |isbn=0472107224 |publisher=University of Michigan Press }} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Vos |first=Howard |title=Nelson's New Illustrated Bible Manners and Customs: How the People of the Bible Really Lived |date=1999 |publisher=Thomas Nelson |isbn=978-1-4185-8569-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Py9Y_HejORQC&pg=PP75}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Wegner |first=Josef |title=A ROYAL NECROPOLIS AT SOUTH ABYDOS: New Light on Egypt's Second Intermediate Period |journal=Near Eastern Archaeology |volume=78 |issue=2 |year=2015 |pages=68–78 |doi=10.5615/neareastarch.78.2.0068 |jstor=10.5615/neareastarch.78.2.0068 |s2cid=163519900 }} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Weigall |first1=Arthur E. P. Brome |title=A History of the Pharaohs |date=2016 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-108-08291-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TGKcCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA188}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Wilkinson |first=Toby |title=The Rise and Fall of Ancient Egypt |publisher=Random House |year=2013 |isbn=9780553384901 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P07rgiJjsk4C&q=The+Rise+and+Fall+of+Ancient+Egypt }} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Wilkinson |first1=Toby |title=Lives of the Ancient Egyptians |publisher=Thames and Hudson |year=2013a |isbn=978-0-500-77162-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wVbGDwAAQBAJ}} | |||
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* {{cite book |last1=Zakrzewski |first1=Sonia |last2=Shortland |first2=Andrew |last3=Rowland |first3=Joanne |title=Science in the Study of Ancient Egypt |date=2015 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-317-39195-1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=w6pACwAAQBAJ&pg=PA268}} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* {{Citation |last=Forstner-Müller |first=Irene |title=The Hyksos State |date=2022 |work=The Oxford History of the Ancient Near East |volume=III |pages=1–47 |url=https://academic.oup.com/book/41909/chapter/354771682 |access-date= |publisher=] |language=en |doi=10.1093/oso/9780190687601.003.0023 |isbn=978-0-19-068760-1 |doi-access=}} | |||
== External links == | == External links == | ||
{{Commons category}} | {{Commons category}} | ||
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Latest revision as of 16:31, 28 November 2024
Asiatic rulers of Dynasty XV of ancient EgyptHyksosA man described as "Abisha the Hyksos"
(𓋾𓈎𓈉 ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt, Heqa-kasut for "Hyksos"), leading a group of Aamu.
Tomb of Khnumhotep II (circa 1900 BC).
This is one of the earliest known uses of the term "Hyksos".
The Hyksos (/ˈhɪksɒs/; Egyptian ḥqꜣ(w)-ḫꜣswt, Egyptological pronunciation: heqau khasut, "ruler(s) of foreign lands"), in modern Egyptology, are the kings of the Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt (fl. c. 1650–1550 BC). Their seat of power was the city of Avaris in the Nile Delta, from where they ruled over Lower Egypt and Middle Egypt up to Cusae.
In the Aegyptiaca, a history of Egypt written by the Greco-Egyptian priest and historian Manetho in the 3rd century BC, the term Hyksos is used ethnically to designate people of probable West Semitic, Levantine origin. While Manetho portrayed the Hyksos as invaders and oppressors, this interpretation is questioned in modern Egyptology. Instead, Hyksos rule might have been preceded by groups of Canaanite peoples who gradually settled in the Nile Delta from the end of the Twelfth Dynasty onwards and who may have seceded from the crumbling and unstable Egyptian control at some point during the Thirteenth Dynasty.
The Hyksos period marks the first in which foreign rulers ruled Egypt. Many details of their rule, such as the true extent of their kingdom and even the names and order of their kings, remain uncertain. The Hyksos practiced many Levantine or Canaanite customs alongside Egyptian ones. They have been credited with introducing several technological innovations to Egypt, such as the horse and chariot, as well as the khopesh (sickle sword) and the composite bow, a theory which is disputed.
The Hyksos did not control all of Egypt. They coexisted with the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Dynasties, which were based in Thebes. Warfare between the Hyksos and the pharaohs of the late Seventeenth Dynasty eventually culminated in the defeat of the Hyksos by Ahmose I, who founded the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt. In the following centuries, the Egyptians would portray the Hyksos as bloodthirsty and oppressive foreign rulers.
Name
Etymology
Hyksos in hieroglyphs | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣsw / ḥqꜣw-ḫꜣswt, "heqau khasut" "Hyksos" Ruler(s) of the foreign countries | ||||||||
Greek | Hyksos (Ὑκσώς) Hykussos (Ὑκουσσώς) | |||||||
Standard characters for "Hyksos" in the label for "Abisha the Hyksos" in the tomb of Khnumhotep II, c. 1900 BC. The crook (𓋾, ḥqꜣ) means "ruler", the hill (𓈎) is a phonetic complement q/ḳ to 𓋾 while 𓈉 stands for (foreign) "country", pronounced ḫꜣst, plural ḫꜣswt. The sign 𓏥 marks the plural. |
The term "Hyksos" is derived, via the Greek Ὑκσώς (Hyksôs), from the Egyptian expression 𓋾𓈎𓈉 (ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt or ḥqꜣw-ḫꜣswt, "heqau khasut"), meaning "rulers foreign lands". The Greek form is likely a textual corruption of an earlier Ὑκουσσώς (Hykoussôs).
The first century Jewish historian Josephus gives the name as meaning "shepherd kings" or "captive shepherds" in his Contra Apion (Against Apion), where he describes the Hyksos as Jews as they appeared in the Hellenistic Egyptian historian Manetho. "Their race bore the generic name of Hycsos, which means 'king-shepherds'. For hyc in the sacred language denotes 'king' and sos in the common dialect means 'shepherd' or 'shepherds'; the combined words form Hycsos. Some say that they were Arabians."
Josephus's rendition may arise from a later Egyptian pronunciation of ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt as ḥqꜣ-šꜣsw, which was then understood to mean "lord of shepherds." It is unclear if this translation was found in Manetho; an Armenian translation of an epitome of Manetho given by the late antique historian Eusebius gives the correct translation of "foreign kings".
Use
"It is now commonly accepted in academic publications that the term Ḥqꜣ-Ḫꜣswt refers only to the individual foreign rulers of the late Second Intermediate Period," especially of the Fifteenth Dynasty, rather than a people. However, Josephus used it as an ethnic term. Its use to refer to the population persists in some academic papers.
In Ancient Egypt, the term "Hyksos" (ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt) was also used to refer to various Nubian and especially Asiatic rulers both before and after the Fifteenth Dynasty. It was used at least since the Sixth Dynasty of Egypt (c. 2345–2181 BC) to designate chieftains from the Syro-Palestine area. One of its earliest recorded uses is found c. 1900 BC in the tomb of Khnumhotep II of the Twelfth Dynasty to label a nomad or Canaanite ruler named "Abisha the Hyksos" (using the standard 𓋾𓈎𓈉, ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt, "Heqa-kasut" for "Hyksos").
Scarabs of Hyksos kings"Semqen the Hyksos""Khyan the Hyksos"Scarabs of Hyksos kings, with "Hyksos" highlighted.Based on the use of the name in a Hyksos inscription of Sakir-Har from Avaris, the name was used by the Hyksos as a title for themselves. However, Kim Ryholt argues that "Hyksos" was not an official title of the rulers of the Fifteenth Dynasty, and is never encountered together with royal titulary, only appearing as the title in the case of Sakir-Har. According to Ryholt, "Hyksos" was a generic term encountered separately from royal titulary, and in regnal lists after the end of the Fifteenth Dynasty itself. However, Vera Müller writes: "Considering that S-k-r-h-r is also mentioned with three names of the traditional Egyptian titulary (Horus name, Golden Falcon name and Two Ladies name) on the same monument, this argument is somehow strange." Danielle Candelora and Manfred Bietak also argue that the Hyksos used the title officially. All other texts in the Egyptian language do not call the Hyksos by this name, instead referring to them as Asiatics (ꜥꜣmw), with the possible exception of the Turin King List in a hypothetical reconstruction from a fragment. The title is not attested for the Hyksos king Apepi, possibly indicating an "increased adoption of Egyptian decorum". The names of Hyksos rulers in the Turin list are without the royal cartouche and have the throwstick "foreigners" determinative.
Scarabs also attest the use of this title for pharaohs usually assigned to the Fourteenth or Sixteenth Dynasty of Egypt, who are sometimes called "'lesser' Hyksos." The Theban Seventeenth Dynasty of Egypt is also given the title in some versions of Manetho, a fact which Bietak attributes to textual corruption. In the Twenty-fifth Dynasty of Egypt and during the Ptolemaic Period, the term Hyksos was adopted as a personal title and epithet by several pharaohs or high Egyptian officials, including the Theban official Mentuemhat, Philip III of Macedon, and Ptolemy XIII. It was also used on the tomb of Egyptian grand priest Petosiris at Tuna el-Gebel in 300 BC to designate the Persian ruler Artaxerxes III, although it is unknown if Artaxerxes adopted this title for himself.
Origins
Ancient historians
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In his epitome of Manetho, Josephus connected the Hyksos with the Jews, but he also calls them Arabs. In their own epitomes of Manetho, the Late antique historians Sextus Julius Africanus and Eusebius say that the Hyksos came from Phoenicia. Until the excavation and discovery of Tell El-Dab'a (the site of the Hyksos capital Avaris) in 1966, historians relied on these accounts for the Hyksos period.
Modern historians
Material finds at Tell El-Dab'a indicate that the Hyksos originated in the Levant. The Hyksos' personal names indicate that they spoke a Western Semitic language and "may be called for convenience sake Canaanites."
Kamose, the last king of the Theban Seventeenth Dynasty, refers to Apepi as a "Chieftain of Retjenu" in a stela that implies a Levantine background for this Hyksos king. According to Anna-Latifa Mourad, the Egyptian application of the term ꜥꜣmw to the Hyksos could indicate a range of backgrounds, including newly arrived Levantines or people of mixed Levantine-Egyptian origin.
Due to the work of Manfred Bietak, which found similarities in architecture, ceramics and burial practices, scholars currently favor a northern Levantine origin of the Hyksos. Based particularly on temple architecture, Bietak argues for strong parallels between the religious practices of the Hyksos at Avaris with those of the area around Byblos, Ugarit, Alalakh and Tell Brak, defining the "spiritual home" of the Hyksos as "in northernmost Syria and northern Mesopotamia". The connection of the Hyksos to Retjenu also suggests a northern Levantine origin: "Theoretically, it is feasible to deduce that the early Hyksos, as the later Apophis, were of elite ancestry from Rṯnw, a toponym cautiously linked with the Northern Levant and the northern region of the Southern Levant."
Earlier arguments that the Hyksos names might be Hurrian have been rejected, while early-twentieth-century proposals that the Hyksos were Indo-Europeans "fitted European dreams of Indo-European supremacy, now discredited." Some have suggested that Hyksos or a part of them was of Maryannu origins as evident by their use and introduction of chariots and horses into Egypt. However, this theory has been too rejected by modern scholarship.
A study of dental traits by Nina Maaranen and Sonia Zakrzewski in 2021 on 90 people of Avaris indicated that individuals defined as locals and non-locals were not ancestrally different from one another. The results were in line with the archaeological evidence, suggesting Avaris was an important hub in the Middle Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean trade network, welcoming people from beyond its borders.
History
Early contacts between Egypt and the Levant
Procession of the AamuA group of West Asiatic foreigners, possibly Canaanites, labelled as Aamu (ꜥꜣmw), including the leading man with a Nubian ibex labelled as Abisha the Hyksos (𓋾𓈎𓈉 ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣsw, Heqa-kasut for "Hyksos"). Tomb of 12th-dynasty official Khnumhotep II, at Beni Hasan (c. 1890 BC).Historical records suggest that Semitic people and Egyptians had contacts at all periods of Egypt's history. The MacGregor plaque, an early Egyptian tablet dating to 3000 BC records "The first occasion of striking the East", with the picture of Pharaoh Den smiting a Western Asiatic enemy.
During the reign of Senusret II, c. 1890 BC, parties of Western Asiatic foreigners visiting the Pharaoh with gifts are recorded, as in the tomb paintings of 12th-dynasty official Khnumhotep II. These foreigners, possibly Canaanites or nomads, are labelled as Aamu (ꜥꜣmw), including the leading man with a Nubian ibex labelled as Abisha the Hyksos (𓋾𓈎𓈉 ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣsw, Heqa-kasut for "Hyksos"), the first known instance of the name "Hyksos".
Soon after, the Sebek-khu Stele, dated to the reign of Senusret III (reign: 1878–1839 BC), records the earliest known Egyptian military campaign in the Levant. The text reads "His Majesty proceeded northward to overthrow the Asiatics. His Majesty reached a foreign country of which the name was Sekmem (...) Then Sekmem fell, together with the wretched Retenu", where Sekmem (s-k-m-m) is thought to be Shechem and "Retenu" or "Retjenu" are associated with ancient Syria.
Background and arrival in Egypt
The only ancient account of the whole Hyksos period is by the Hellenistic Egyptian historian Manetho, who exists only as quoted by others. As recorded by Josephus, Manetho describes the beginning of Hyksos rule thus:
A people of ignoble origin from the east, whose coming was unforeseen, had the audacity to invade the country, which they mastered by main force without difficulty or even battle. Having overpowered the chiefs, they then savagely burnt the cities, razed the temples of the gods to the ground, and treated the whole native population with the utmost cruelty, massacring some, and carrying off the wives and children of others into slavery (Contra Apion I.75-77).
Manetho's invasion narrative is "nowadays rejected by most scholars." It is likely that more recent foreign invasions of Egypt influenced him. Instead, it appears that the establishment of Hyksos rule was mostly peaceful and did not involve an invasion of an entirely foreign population. Archaeology shows a continuous Asiatic presence at Avaris for over 150 years before the beginning of Hyksos rule, with gradual Canaanite settlement beginning there c. 1800 BC during the Twelfth Dynasty. Strontium isotope analysis of the inhabitants of Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period Avaris also dismissed the invasion model in favor of a migration one. Contrary to the model of a foreign invasion, the study didn't find more males moving into the region, but instead found a sex bias towards females, with a high proportion of 77% of females being non-locals.
Manfred Bietak argues that Hyksos "should be understood within a repetitive pattern of the attraction of Egypt for western Asiatic population groups that came in search of a living in the country, especially the Delta, since prehistoric times." He notes that Egypt had long depended on the Levant for expertise in areas of shipbuilding and seafaring, with possible depictions of Asiatic shipbuilders being found from reliefs from the Sixth Dynasty ruler Sahure. The Twelfth Dynasty of Egypt is known to have had many Asiatic immigrants serving as soldiers, household or temple serfs, and various other jobs. Avaris in the Nile Delta attracted many Asiatic immigrants in its role as a hub of international trade and seafaring.
The final powerful pharaoh of the Egyptian Thirteenth Dynasty was Sobekhotep IV, who died around 1725 BC, after which Egypt appears to have splintered into various kingdoms, including one based at Avaris ruled by the Fourteenth Dynasty. Based on their names, this dynasty was already primarily of West Asian origin. After an event in which their palace was burned, the Fourteenth Dynasty would be replaced by the Hyksos Fifteenth Dynasty, which would establish "loose control over northern Egypt by intimidation or force," thus greatly expanding the area under Avaris's control.
Kim Ryholt argues that the Fifteenth Dynasty invaded and displaced the Fourteenth. However, Alexander Ilin-Tomich argues that this is "not sufficiently substantiated." Bietak interprets a stela of Neferhotep III to indicate that Egypt was overrun by roving mercenaries around the time of the Hyksos ascension to power.
Kingdom
Main article: Fifteenth Dynasty of Egypt AvarisTjaruTell el‑YahudiyehHeliopolisTell BastaTell FarashaInshasTell el‑MaskhutaTell er‑RetabehTell es‑SahabaMemphisLishtDahshurBeni Hasanclass=notpageimage| Key Sites of the Second Intermediate Period, in Northern Egypt. West Semitic in red; Egyptian in blue.The length of time the Hyksos ruled is unclear. The fragmentary Turin King List says that there were six Hyksos kings who collectively ruled 108 years, however in 2018 Kim Ryholt proposed a new reading of as many as 149 years, while Thomas Schneider proposed a length between 160 and 180 years. The rule of the Hyksos overlaps with that of the native Egyptian pharaohs of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Dynasties, better known as the Second Intermediate Period.
The area under direct control of the Hyksos was probably limited to the eastern Nile delta. Their capital city was Avaris at a fork on the now-dry Pelusiac branch of the Nile. Memphis may have also been an important administrative center, although the nature of any Hyksos presence there remains unclear.
According to Anna-Latifa Mourad, other sites with likely Levantine populations or strong Levantine connections in the Delta include Tell Farasha and Tell el-Maghud, located between Tell Basta and Avaris, El-Khata'na, southwest of Avaris, and Inshas. The increased prosperity of Avaris may have attracted more Levantines to settle in the eastern Delta. Kom el-Hisn, at the edge of the Western Delta, shows Near Eastern goods but individuals mostly buried in an Egyptian style, which Mourad takes to mean that they were most likely Egyptians heavily influenced by Levantine traditions or, more likely, Egyptianized Levantines. The site of Tell Basta (Bubastis), at the confluence of the Pelusiac and Tanitic branches of the Nile, contains monuments to the Hyksos kings Khyan and Apepi, but little other evidence of Levantine habitation. Tell el-Habwa (Tjaru), located on a branch of the Nile near the Sinai, also shows evidence of non-Egyptian presence. However, most of the population appears to have been Egyptian or Egyptianized Levantines. Tell El-Habwa would have provided Avaris with grain and trade goods.
In the Wadi Tumilat, Tell el-Maskhuta shows a great deal of Levantine pottery and an occupation history closely correlated to the Fifteenth Dynasty, nearby Tell el-Rataba and Tell el-Sahaba show possible Hyksos-style burials and occupation, Tell el-Yahudiyah, located between Memphis and the Wadi Tumilat, contains a large earthwork that the Hyksos may have built, as well as evidence of Levantine burials from as early as the Thirteenth Dynasty, as well as characteristic Hyksos-era pottery known as Tell el-Yahudiyeh Ware The Hyksos settlements in the Wadi Tumilat would have provided access to Sinai, the southern Levant, and possibly the Red Sea.
The sites Tell el-Kabir, Tell Yehud, Tell Fawziya, and Tell Geziret el-Faras are noted by scholars other than Mourad to contain "elements of 'Hyksos culture'", but there is no published archaeological material for them.
The Hyksos claimed to be rulers of both Lower and Upper Egypt; however, their southern border was marked at Hermopolis and Cusae. Some objects might suggest a Hyksos presence in Upper Egypt, but they may have been Theban war booty or attest simply to short-term raids, trade, or diplomatic contact. The nature of Hyksos control over the region of Thebes remains unclear. Most likely Hyksos rule covered the area from Middle Egypt to southern Palestine. Older scholarship believed, due to the distribution of Hyksos goods with the names of Hyksos rulers in places such as Baghdad and Knossos, that Hyksos had ruled a vast empire, but it seems more likely to have been the result of diplomatic gift exchange and far-flung trade networks.
Wars with the Seventeenth Dynasty
The conflict between Thebes and the Hyksos is known exclusively from pro-Theban sources, and it is not easy to construct a chronology. These sources propagandistically portray the conflict as a war of national liberation. This perspective was formerly taken by scholars as well but is no longer thought to be accurate.
Hostilities between the Hyksos and the Theban Seventeenth Dynasty appear to have begun during the reign of Theban king Seqenenra Taa. Seqenenra Taa's mummy shows that he was killed by several blows of an axe to the head, apparently in battle with the Hyksos. It is unclear why hostilities may have started. The much later fragmentary New Kingdom tale The Quarrel of Apophis and Seqenenre blames the Hyksos ruler Apepi/Apophis for initiating the conflict by demanding that Seqenenre Tao remove a pool of hippopotamuses near Thebes. However, this is a satire on the Egyptian story-telling genre of the "king's novel" rather than a historical text. A contemporary inscription at Wadi el Hôl may also refer to hostilities between Seqenenra and Apepi.
Three years later, c. 1542 BC, Seqenenre Tao's successor Kamose initiated a campaign against several cities loyal to the Hyksos, the account of which is preserved on three monumental stelae set up at Karnak. The first of the three, Carnarvon Tablet includes a complaint by Kamose about the divided and occupied state of Egypt:
To what effect do I perceive it, my might, while a ruler is in Avaris and another in Kush, I sitting joined with an Asiatic and a Nubian, each man having his (own) portion of this Egypt, sharing the land with me. There is no passing him as far as Memphis, the water of Egypt. He has possession of Hermopolis, and no man can rest, being deprived by the levies of the Setiu. I shall engage in battle with him and I shall slit his body, for my intention is to save Egypt, striking the Asiatics.
Following a common literary device, Kamose's advisors are portrayed as trying to dissuade the king, who attacks anyway. He recounts his destruction of the city of Nefrusy as well as several other cities loyal to the Hyksos. On a second stele, Kamose claims to have captured Avaris, but returned to Thebes after capturing a messenger between Apepi and the king of Kush. Kamose appears to have died soon afterward (c. 1540 BC).
Ahmose I continued the war against the Hyksos, most likely conquering Memphis, Tjaru, and Heliopolis early in his reign, the latter two of which are mentioned in an entry of the Rhind mathematical papyrus. Knowledge of Ahmose I's campaigns against the Hyksos mostly comes from the tomb of Ahmose, son of Ebana, who gives a first-person account claiming that Ahmose I sacked Avaris: "Then there was fighting in Egypt to the south of this town , and I carried off a man as a living captive. I went down into the water—for he was captured on the city side—and crossed the water carrying him. Then Avaris was despoiled, and I brought spoil from there.
Pharaoh Ahmose I (ruled c. 1549–1524 BC) slaying a probable Hyksos. Detail of a ceremonial axe in the name of Ahmose I, treasure of Queen Ahhotep II. Inscription "Ahmose, beloved of (the War God) Montu". Luxor MuseumThomas Schneider places the conquest in year 18 of Ahmose's reign. However, excavations of Tell El-Dab'a (Avaris) show no widespread destruction of the city, which instead seems to have been abandoned by the Hyksos. Manetho, as recorded in Josephus, states that the Hyksos were allowed to leave after concluding a treaty:
Thoumosis ... invested the walls with an army of 480,000 men, and endeavoured to reduce to submission by siege. Despairing of achieving his object, he concluded a treaty, under which were all to evacuate Egypt and go whither they would unmolested. Upon these terms no fewer than two hundred and forty thousand, entire households with their possessions, left Egypt and traversed the desert to Syria. (Contra Apion I.88-89)
Although Manetho indicates that the Hyksos population was expelled to the Levant, there is no archaeological evidence for this, and Manfred Bietak argues based on archaeological finds throughout Egypt that it is likely that numerous Asiatics were resettled in other locations in Egypt as artisans and craftsmen. Many may have remained at Avaris, as pottery and scarabs with typical "Hyksos" forms continued to be produced uninterrupted throughout the Eastern Delta. Canaanite cults also continued to be worshiped at Avaris.
Following the capture of Avaris, Ahmose, son of Ebana, records that Ahmose I captured Sharuhen (possibly Tell el-Ajjul), which some scholars argue was a city in Canaan under Hyksos control.
Rule and administration
Administration
The Hyksos show a mix of Egyptian and Levantine cultural traits. Their rulers adopted the full ancient Egyptian royal titulary and employed Egyptian scribes and officials. They also used Near-Eastern forms of administration, such as employing a chancellor (imy-r khetemet) as the head of their administration.
Rulers
The names, the order, length of rule, and even the number of Fifteenth Dynasty rulers are not known with complete certainty. After the end of their rule, the Hyksos kings were not considered legitimate rulers of Egypt and were omitted from most king lists. The fragmentary Turin King List included six Hyksos kings, however only the name of the last, Khamudi, is preserved. Six names are also preserved in the various epitomes of Manetho, however, it is difficult to reconcile the Turin King List and other sources with names known from Manetho, mainly due to the "corrupted name forms" in Manetho. The name Apepi/Apophis appears in multiple sources, however.
Various other archaeological sources also provide names of rulers with the Hyksos title, however, the majority of kings from the second intermediate period are attested once on a single object, with only three exceptions. Ryholt associates two other rulers known from inscriptions with the dynasty, Khyan and Sakir-Har. The name of Khyan's son, Yanassi, is also preserved from Tell El-Dab'a. The two best attested kings are Khyan and Apepi. Scholars generally agree that Apepi and Khamudi are the last two kings of the dynasty, and Apepi is attested as a contemporary of Seventeenth-Dynasty pharaohs Kamose and Ahmose I. Ryholt has proposed that Yanassi did not rule and that Khyan directly preceded Apepi, but most scholars agree that the order of kings is: Khyan, Yanassi, Apepi, Khamudi. There is less agreement on the early rulers. Sakir-Har is proposed by Schneider, Ryholt, and Bietak to have been the first king.
Recently, archaeological finds have suggested that Khyan may have been a contemporary of the Thirteenth Dynasty pharaoh Sobekhotep IV, potentially making him an early rather than a late Hyksos ruler. This has prompted attempts to reconsider the entire chronology of the Hyksos period, which as of 2018 had not yet reached any consensus.
Some kings are attested from either fragments of the Turin King List or from other sources who may have been Hyksos rulers. According to Ryholt, kings Semqen and Aperanat, known from the Turin King List, may have been early Hyksos rulers, however Jürgen von Beckerath assigns these kings to the Sixteenth Dynasty of Egypt. Another king known from scarabs, Sheshi, is believed by many scholars to be a Hyksos king, however Ryholt assigns this king to the Fourteenth Dynasty of Egypt. Manfred Bietak proposes that a king recorded as Yaqub-Har may also have been a Hyksos king of the Fifteenth Dynasty. Bietak suggests that many of the other kings attested on scarabs may have been vassal kings of the Hyksos.
Manetho | Turin King List | Genealogy of Ankhefensekhmet | Identification by Redford (1992) | Identification by Ryholt (1997) | Identification by Bietak (2012) | Identification by Schneider (2006) (reconstructed Semitic name in parentheses) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Salitis/Saites (19 years) | X 15 | Schalek | Sheshi | ?Semqen (Šamuqēnu)? | ?Sakir-Har? | ? (Šarā-Dagan ]) |
Bnon (44 years) | X 16.... 3 years | Yaqub-Har | ?Aper-Anat ('Aper-'Anati)? | ?Meruserre Yaqub-Har? | ? (*Bin-ʿAnu) | |
Apachnan/Pachnan (36/61 years) | X 17... 8 years 3 months | Khyan | Sakir-Har | Seuserenre Khyan | Khyan (Hajran) | |
Iannas/Staan (50 years) | X 18... 10 (20, 30) years | Yanassi (Yansas-X) | Khyan | Yanassi (Yansas-idn) | Yanassi (Jinaśśi’-Ad) | |
Apophis (61/14 years) | X 19... 40 + x years | Apepi (?'A-ken?) | Apepi | Apepi | A-user-Re Apepi | Apepi (Apapi) |
Archles/Assis (40/30 years) | identifies with ?Khamudi? | identifies with Khamudi | Identifies with Khamudi | Sakir-Har (Sikru-Haddu) | ||
X 20 Khamudi | ?Khamudi? | Khamudi | Khamudi | not in Manetho (Halmu'di) | ||
Sum: 259 years | Sum: 108 years |
None of the proposed identifications besides of Apepi and Apophis is considered certain.
In Sextus Julius Africanus's epitome of Manetho, the rulers of Sixteenth Dynasty are also identified as "shepherds" (i.e. Hyksos) rulers. Following the work of Ryholt in 1997, most but not all scholars now identify the Sixteenth Dynasty as a native Egyptian dynasty based in Thebes, following Eusebius's epitome of Manetho; this dynasty would be contemporary to the Hyksos.
Diplomacy
The Hyksos engagement in long-distance diplomacy is confirmed by a cuneiform letter discovered in the ruins of Avaris. Hyksos diplomacy with Crete and ancient Near East is also confirmed by the presence of gifts from the Hyksos court in those places. Khyan, one of the Hyksos rulers, is known for his wide-ranging contacts, as objects in his name have been found at Knossos and Hattusha indicating diplomatic contacts with Crete and the Hittites, and a sphinx with his name was bought on the art market at Baghdad and might demonstrate diplomatic contacts with Babylon, possibly with the first Kassites ruler Gandash.
The Theban rulers of the Seventeenth Dynasty are known to have imitated the Hyksos both in their architecture and regnal names. There is evidence of friendly relations between the Hyksos and Thebes, including possibly a marriage alliance, before the reign of the Theban pharaoh Seqenenra Tao.
An intercepted letter between Apepi and the King of Kingdom of Kerma, also called Kush, to the south of Egypt recorded on the Carnarvon Tablet has been interpreted as evidence of an alliance between the Hyksos and Kermans. Intensive contacts between Kerma and the Hyksos are further attested by seals with the names of Asiatic rulers or with designs known from Avaris at Kerma. The troops of Kerma are known to have raided as far north as Elkab according to an inscription of Sobeknakht II. According to his second stele, Kamose was effectively caught between the campaign for the siege of Avaris in the north and the offensive of Kerma in the south; it is unknown whether or not the Kermans and Hyksos were able to combine forces against him. Kamose reports returning "in triumph" to Thebes. Lutz Popko suggests that this "was perhaps a mere tactical retreat to prevent a war on two fronts". Ahmose I was also forced to confront a threat from the Nubians during his siege of Avaris: he was able to stop the forces of Kerma by sending a strong fleet, killing their ruler named A'ata. Ahmose I boasts about these successes on his tomb at Thebes. The Kermans also appear to have provided mercenaries to the Hyksos.
Vassalage
Many scholars have described the Egyptian dynasties contemporary to the Hyksos as "vassal" dynasties, an idea partially derived from the Nineteenth-Dynasty literary text The Quarrel of Apophis and Seqenenre, in which it is said "the entire land paid tribute to him , delivering their taxes in full as well as bringing all good produce of Egypt." The belief in Hyksos vassalage was challenged by Ryholt as "a baseless assumption." Roxana Flammini suggests instead that Hyksos exerted influence through (sometimes imposed) personal relationships and gift-giving. Manfred Bietak continues to refer to Hyksos vassals, including minor dynasties of West Semitic rulers in Egypt.
Society and culture
Royal construction and patronage
The so-called "Hyksos Sphinxes"The so-called "Hyksos Sphinxes" are peculiar sphinxes of Amenemhat III which were reinscribed by several Hyksos rulers, including Apepi. Earlier Egyptologists thought these were the faces of actual Hyksos rulers.The Hyksos do not appear to have produced any court art, instead appropriating monuments from earlier dynasties by writing their names on them. Many of these are inscribed with the name of King Khyan. A large palace at Avaris has been uncovered, built in the Levantine rather than the Egyptian style, most likely by Khyan. King Apepi is known to have patronized Egyptian scribal culture, commissioning the copying of the Rhind Mathematical Papyrus. The stories preserved in the Westcar Papyrus may also date from his reign.
The so-called "Hyksos sphinxes" or "Tanite sphinxes" are a group of royal sphinxes depicting the earlier pharaoh Amenemhat III (Twelfth Dynasty) with some unusual traits compared to conventional statuary, for example prominent cheekbones and the thick mane of a lion, instead of the traditional nemes headcloth. The name "Hyksos sphinxes" was given due to the fact that these were later reinscribed by several of the Hyksos kings, and were initially thought to represent the Hyksos kings themselves. Nineteenth-century scholars attempted to use the statues' features to assign a racial origin to the Hyksos. These Sphinxes were seized by the Hyksos from cities of the Middle Kingdom and then transported to their capital Avaris where they were reinscribed with the names of their new owners and adorned their palace. Seven of those sphinxes are known, all from Tanis, and now mostly located in the Cairo Museum. Other statues of Amenehat III were found in Tanis and are associated with the Hyksos in the same manner.
Burial practices
Evidence for distinct Hyksos burial practices in the archaeological record include burying their dead within settlements rather than outside them like the Egyptians. While some of the tombs include Egyptian-style chapels, they also include burials of young females, probably sacrifices, placed in front of the tomb chamber. There are also no surviving Hyksos funeral monuments in the desert in the Egyptian style, though these may have been destroyed. The Hyksos also interred infants who died in imported Canaanite amphorae. The Hyksos also practiced the burial of horses and other equids, likely a composite custom of the Egyptian association of the god Set with the donkey and near-eastern notions of equids as representing status.
Technology
The Hyksos use of horse burials suggest that the Hyksos introduced both the horse and the chariot to Egypt, however no archaeological, pictorial, or textual evidence exists that the Hyksos possessed chariots, which are first mentioned as ridden by the Egyptians in warfare against them by Ahmose, son of Ebana, at the close of Hyksos rule. In any case, it does not appear that chariots played any large role in the Hyksos rise to power or their expulsion. Josef Wegner further argues that horse-riding may have been present in Egypt as early as the late Middle Kingdom, prior to the adoption of chariot technology.
Traditionally, the Hyksos have also been credited with introducing a number of other military innovations, such as the sickle-sword and composite bow; however, "o what extent the kingdom of Avaris should be credited for these innovations is debatable," with scholarly opinion currently divided. It is also possible that the Hyksos introduced more advanced bronze working techniques, though this is inconclusive. They may have worn full-body armor, whereas the Egyptians did not wear armor or helmets until the New Kingdom.
The Hyksos also introduced better weaving techniques and new musical instruments to Egypt. They introduced improvements in viniculture as well.
- Egyptian duckbill-shaped axe blade of Syro-Palestinian type, a lethal technology probably introduced by the Hyksos (1981–1550 BC).
- A bronze Hyksos-period spearhead, found in Lachish (1780–1580 BC).
- The horse was probably introduced to Egypt by the Hyksos, and became a favourite subject of Egyptian art, as in this whip handle from the reign of Amenhotep III (1390–1353 BC).
- The two-wheeled horse chariot, here found in the tomb of Tutankhamun, may have been introduced to Egypt by the Hyksos.
Trade and economy
The early period of Hyksos presence established their capital of Avaris "as the commercial capital of the Delta". The trading relations of the Hyksos were mainly with Canaan and Cyprus. Trade with Canaan is said to have been "intensive", especially with many imports of Canaanite wares, and may have reflected the Canaanite origins of the dynasty. Trade was mostly with the cities of the northern Levant, but connections with the southern Levant also developed. Additionally, trade was conducted with Faiyum, Memphis, oases in Egypt, Nubia, and Mesopotamia. Trade relations with Cyprus were also very important, particularly at the end of the Hyksos period. Aaron Burke has interpreted the equid burials in Avaris of evidence that the people buried with them were involved in the caravan trade. Anna-Latifa Mourad argues that "Hyksos were particularly interested in opening new avenues of trade, securing strategic posts in the eastern Delta that could give access to land-based and sea-based trade routes." These include the apparent Hyksos settlements of Tell el-Habwa I and Tell el-Maskhuta in the eastern Delta.
According to the Kamose stelae, the Hyksos imported "chariots and horses, ships, timber, gold, lapis lazuli, silver, turquoise, bronze, axes without number, oil, incense, fat and honey". The Hyksos also exported large quantities of material looted from southern Egypt, especially Egyptian sculptures, to the areas of Canaan and Syria. These transfers of Egyptian artifacts to the Near East may especially be attributed to king Apepi. The Hyksos also produced local, Levantine-influenced industries, such as Tell el-Yahudiyeh Ware.
There is little evidence of trade between Upper and Lower Egypt during the Hyksos period, and Manfred Bietak proposes that there was "a mutual trade boycott". Bietak proposes that this decreased the Hyksos ability to trade with the Mediterranean and weakened their economy.
Religion
Temples in Avaris existed both in Egyptian and Levantine style, the latter presumably for Levantine gods. The Hyksos are known to have worshiped the Canaanite storm god Baal, who was associated with the Egyptian god Set. Set appears to have been the patron god of Avaris as early as the Fourteenth Dynasty. Hyksos iconography of their kings on some scarabs shows a mixture of Egyptian pharaonic dress with a raised club, the iconography of Baal. Despite later sources claiming the Hyksos were opposed to the worship of other gods, votive objects given by Hyksos rulers to gods such as Ra, Hathor, Sobek, and Wadjet have also survived.
Potential biblical connections
In the Manethonian–Josephus tradition
Josephus, and most of the writers of antiquity, associated the Hyksos with the Jews. Quoting from Manetho's Aegyptiaca, Josephus states that when the Hyksos were expelled from Egypt, they founded Jerusalem (Contra Apion I.90). It is unclear if this is original to Manetho or Josephus's own addition, as Manetho does not mention "Jews" or "Hebrews" in his preserved account of the expulsion. Josephus's account of Manetho connects the expulsion of the Hyksos to another event two hundred years later, in which a group of lepers led by the priest Osarseph were expelled from Egypt to the abandoned Avaris. There they ally with the Hyksos and rule over Egypt for thirteen years before being driven out, during which time they oppress the Egyptians and destroy their temples. After the expulsion, Osarseph changes his name to Moses (Contra Apion I.227-250). Assmann argues that this second account is largely a mixture of the experiences of the later Amarna period with the Hyksos invasion, with Osarseph likely standing in for Akhenaten. The final mention of Osarseph, in which he changes his name to Moses, may be a later interpolation. The second account is sometimes held not to have been written by Manetho at all.
In modern scholarship
See also: The Exodus and Sources and parallels of the ExodusThe majority of modern scholars do not believe that the Egyptian story elements in the Bible can be demonstrated with historical methods. However, some scholars have attempted to tie the narratives of the Hyksos period to the exodus period.
Scholars such as Jan Assmann and Donald Redford, for instance, have suggested that the story of the biblical exodus may have been wholly or partially inspired by the expulsion of the Hyksos. Archaeologists Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher Silberman argue that the exodus narrative perhaps evolved from vague memories of the Hyksos expulsion, spun to encourage resistance to the 7th century domination of Judah by Egypt. An identification with the Hyksos would only depart minimally from accepted biblical chronology, and their expulsion is the only known large-scale expulsion of Asiatics from Egypt. Other scholars, such with Manfred Bietak, have pointed out several problems with such theories, including the conflict between the portrayal of the Hyksos as a ruling elite with a background in trade and seafaring and the biblical portrayal of the Israelites as oppressed in Egypt.
John Bright states that Egyptian and Biblical records both suggest that Semitic people maintained access to Egypt at all periods of Egypt's history, and he suggested that it is tempting to suppose that Joseph who, according to the Old Testament (Genesis 39:50), was in favour at the Egyptian court and held high administrative positions next to the ruler of the land, was associated to the Hyksos rule in Egypt during the Fifteenth Dynasty. Such a connection might have been facilitated by their shared Semitic ethnicity. He also wrote that there is no proof for these events. Howard Vos has suggested that the "coat of many colors" said to have been worn by Joseph could be similar to the colorful garments seen in the painting of foreigners in the tomb of Khnumhotep II.
Ronald B. Geobey notes a number of problems with identifying the narrative of Joseph with events either prior to or during the Hyksos' rule, such as the detail that the Egyptians abhorred Joseph's people ("shepherds"; Gen. 46:31) and numerous anachronisms. Manfred Bietak suggests that the story fits better with the ambience of the later Twentieth Dynasty of Egypt, in particular with the xenophobic policy of pharaoh Setnakhte (1189–1186 BC). And Donald Redford argues that "to read as history is quite wrongheaded," while Megan Bishop Moore and Brad E. Kelle note the lack of any extra-biblical evidence for the events of Genesis, including the Joseph story, or Exodus.
A number of scholars do not believe that the exodus has any historical basis at all, while only scholars "on the fundamentalist fringe" accept the entire biblical account "unless can be absolutely disproved". The current consensus among archaeologists is that, if an Israelite exodus from Egypt occurred, it must have happened instead in the Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt (13th century BC), given the first appearance of a distinctive Israelite culture in the archaeological record. The potential connection of the Hyksos to the exodus is no longer a central focus of scholarly study of the Hyksos, but this supposed connection to the Exodus has continued to inspire popular interest.
Legacy
The Hyksos' rule continued to be condemned by New Kingdom pharaohs such as Hatshepsut, who, 80 years after their defeat, claimed to rebuild many shrines and temples which they had neglected.
Ramses II moved Egypt's capital to the Delta, building Pi-Ramesses on the site of Avaris, where he set up a stela marking the 400th anniversary of the cult of Set. Scholars used to suggest that this marked 400 years since the Hyksos had established their rule, however the lists of Ramesses' ancestors continued to omit the Hyksos and there is no evidence that they were honored during his reign. The Turin King List, which includes the Hyksos and all other disputed or disgraced former rulers of Egypt, appears to date from the reign of Ramesses or one of his successors. The Hyksos are marked as foreign kings via a throw-stick determinative rather than a divine determinative after their names, and the use of the title ḥqꜣ-ḫꜣswt rather than the usual royal title. Kim Ryholt notes that these measures are unique to the Hyksos rulers and "may therefore have been a direct result of what seems to have been deliberate attempt to obliterate the memory of their kingship after their defeat."
Egyptian presence in the Levant
It is "often accepted" that Egypt established an empire in Canaan at the end of the wars against the Hyksos. Campaigns against locations in Canaan and Syria were conducted by Ahmose I and Thutmose I at the beginning of the Eighteenth Dynasty, as recorded in the tombs of Ahmose, son of Ebana and Ahmose pen-Nekhebet; Thutmose I is also mentioned as having hunted elephants in Syria in inscriptions at the temple of Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahari. Thutmose III is known to have campaigned widely, conquering the "Shasu" Bedouins of northern Canaan, and the land of Retjenu, as far as Syria and Mittani in numerous military campaigns circa 1450 BC. However, Felix Höflmayer argues that there is little evidence of other campaigns and that "there is no evidence that would suggest such a scenario" as an Egyptian empire during the Eighteenth Dynasty. As regards claims that the campaigns in the Near East were spurred on by Hyksos rule, Thomas Schneider argues that "the empire building started with a delay of two generations and seeing a direct nexus may be as much a historical fallacy as it would be to link the fall of the Soviet Union in 1989 to the end of the Second World War in 1945, two generations earlier."
"Retjenu" Syrians bringing tribute to Tuthmosis III, in the tomb of Rekhmire, c. 1450 BC (actual painting and interpretive drawing). They are labeled "Chiefs of Retjenu".Later accounts
The Nineteenth-Dynasty story The Quarrel of Apophis and Seqenenre claimed that the Hyksos worshiped no god but Set, making the conflict into one between Ra, the patron of Thebes, and Set as patron of Avaris. Furthermore, the battle with the Hyksos was interpreted in light of the mythical battle between the gods Horus and Set, transforming Set into an Asiatic deity while also allowing for the integration of Asiatics into Egyptian society.
Manetho's portrayal of the Hyksos, written nearly 1300 years after the end of Hyksos rule and found in Josephus, is even more negative than the New Kingdom sources. This account portrayed the Hyksos "as violent conquerors and oppressors of Egypt" has been highly influential for perceptions of the Hyksos until modern times. Marc van de Mieroop argues that Josephus's portrayal of the initial Hyksos invasion is no more trustworthy than his later claims that they were related to the Exodus, supposedly portrayed in Manetho as performed by a band of lepers.
Early modern depictions
The discovery of the Hyksos in the 19th century, and their study following the decipherment of ancient Egyptian scripts, led to various theories about their history, origin, ethnicity and appearance, often illustrated with picturesque and imaginative details.
- Hyksos invasion as imagined in the 19th century by Hermann Vogel (19th century)
- The Expulsion of the Hyksos (1906)
See also
- Mitanni
- Kassites
- Sea peoples
- Philistines
- Maryannu
- Sino-Babylonianism § Later theories
- Anra scarab (artifact)
Notes
- Approximate dates vary by source. Bietak gives c. 1640–1532 BC, Schneider gives c. 1639–1521 BC, and Stiebing gives c. 1630–1530 BC.
- Spelling of the hieroglyphs in sources describing the archaeological record of the historical Hyksos: first set of characters is the singular, as appearing in Abisha the Hyksos in the tomb of Khnumhotep II, c.1900 BC. The second set is in the plural, as appears in the inscriptions of known Hyksos rulers Sakir-Har, Semqen, Khyan and Aperanat.
- "Two separate misconceptions persist, both in the scholarship and more popular works, surrounding the word "Hyksos." The first is that this term is the name of a defined and relatively large population group (see below), when in fact it is only a royal title held exclusively by individual rulers. Any standalone use of the word "Hyksos" in the following article refers specifically to the foreign kings of the 15th Dynasty." " also misrepresents the Hyksos as a population group (ethnos) as opposed to a dynasty." "Flavius Josephus used the designation "Hyksos" incorrectly as a kind of ethnic term for people of foreign origin who seized power in Egypt for a certain period. In this sense, for the sake of convenience, it is also used in the title and section headings of the present article. One should never forget, however, that, strictly spoken, the "Hyksos" were only the kings of the Fifteenth Dynasty, and of simultaneous minor dynasties, who took the title ḥqꜣw-ḫꜣswt."
- While Schneider identifies each of the names in Menatho with a pharaoh, he does not hold to Manetho's order of the reigns. So, for instance, he identifies Sakir-Har with Archles/Assis, the sixth king in Manetho, but proposes he reigned first.
- Identified with Salitis by Bietak.
- This name appears as a separate individual preceding Apepi, but it appears to mean "brave ass" and may be a disparaging reference to Apepi.
- In Eusebius and Africanus's epitomes of Manetho, "Apopis" appears in final position, while Archles appears as the fifth ruler. In Josephus, Assis is the final ruler and Apophis the fifth ruler. The association of the names Archles and Assis with one another is a modern reconstruction.
- Redford argues that the name "suits neither Assis nor Apophis".
- In the epitome of Manetho by Eusebius, the total instead comes to 284 years.
- This reading is based on a partially damaged section of the papyrus. Reconstructions of the damaged Turin King List proposed in 2018 would change the reading of years to up to 149 years (Ryholt) or between 160 and 180 years (Schneider).
Citations
- ^ Van de Mieroop 2011, p. 131.
- ^ Bard 2015, p. 188.
- ^ Willems 2010, p. 96.
- ^ Bourriau 2000, p. 174.
- Bietak 2001, p. 136.
- ^ Bietak 2012, p. 1.
- Schneider 2006, p. 196.
- Stiebing 2009, p. 197.
- ^ Mourad 2015, p. 10.
- ^ Ilin-Tomich 2016, p. 5.
- ^ Bourriau 2000, pp. 177–178.
- ^ Morenz & Popko 2010, p. 104.
- ^ Bourriau 2000, p. 182.
- ^ Ilin-Tomich 2016, p. 12.
- ^ Ilin-Tomich 2016, p. 7.
- ^ Morenz & Popko 2010, pp. 108–109.
- ^ Flammini 2015, p. 240.
- ^ Ben-Tor 2007, p. 1.
- Kamrin 2009.
- "The Sakir-Har door jamb inscription (slide 12)" (PDF). The Second Intermediate Period: The Hyksos. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 February 2019.
- ^ Schneider 2008, p. 305.
- ^ Kamrin 2009, p. 25.
- ^ Mourad 2015, p. 9.
- Loprieno 2003, p. 144.
- Josephus 1926, p. 195.
- Morenz & Popko 2010, pp. 103–104.
- Verbrugghe & Wickersham 1996, p. 99.
- Candelora 2018, p. 53.
- Candelora 2018, pp. 46–47.
- Bietak 2010, p. 139.
- Candelora 2018, p. 65.
- Candelora 2017, pp. 208–209.
- Ryholt 1997, pp. 123–124.
- ^ Curry 2018.
- Candelora 2017, p. 211.
- Candelora 2017, p. 204.
- Ryholt 1997, p. 123–125.
- ^ Müller 2018, p. 211.
- Candelora 2017, p. 216.
- Candelora 2017, pp. 206–208.
- ^ Bietak 2012, p. 2.
- Ryholt 2004.
- Hölbl 2001, p. 79.
- ^ Candelora 2017, p. 209.
- Assmann 2003, p. 198.
- ^ Flammini 2015, p. 236.
- Bietak 2016, pp. 267–268.
- ^ Ryholt 1997, p. 128.
- ^ Mourad 2015, p. 216.
- Mourad 2015, p. 11.
- Bietak 2019, p. 61.
- ^ Ilin-Tomich 2016, p. 6.
- ^ Van de Mieroop 2011, p. 166.
- Woudhuizen 2006, p. 30.
- Glassman 2017, p. 479–480.
- Stantis, Chris; Maaranen, Nina (1 January 2021). "The people of Avaris: Intra-regional biodistance analysis using dental non-metric traits". Bioarchaeology of the Near East.
- ^ Bright 2000, p. 97.
- Russmann & James 2001, pp. 67–68.
- Pritchard 2016, p. 230.
- Steiner & Killebrew 2014, p. 73.
- Raspe 1998, p. 126–128.
- Josephus 1926, p. 196.
- O'Connor 2009, pp. 116–117.
- Wilkinson 2013a, p. 96.
- Daressy 1906, pp. 115–120.
- ^ Mourad 2015, p. 130.
- ^ Bietak 2006, p. 285.
- Stantis, Chris; Kharobi, Arwa; Maaranen, Nina; Nowell, Geoff M.; Bietak, Manfred; Prell, Silvia; Schutkowski, Holger (15 July 2020). "Who were the Hyksos? Challenging traditional narratives using strontium isotope (87Sr/86Sr) analysis of human remains from ancient Egypt". PLOS ONE. 15 (7): e0235414. Bibcode:2020PLoSO..1535414S. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0235414. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 7363063. PMID 32667937.
- Stantis, Chris; Kharobi, Arwa; Maaranen, Nina; Macpherson, Colin; Bietak, Manfred; Prell, Silvia; Schutkowski, Holger (1 June 2021). "Multi-isotopic study of diet and mobility in the northeastern Nile Delta". Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences. 13 (6): 105. Bibcode:2021ArAnS..13..105S. doi:10.1007/s12520-021-01344-x. ISSN 1866-9565. S2CID 235271929.
- ^ Bietak 2012, p. 4.
- ^ Bietak 2019, p. 47.
- Bietak 1999, p. 377.
- ^ Bourriau 2000, p. 180.
- ^ Bietak 2012, p. 5.
- Ryholt 1997, p. 186.
- ^ Aston 2018, pp. 31–32.
- ^ Bourriau 2000, p. 183.
- Mourad 2015, pp. 43–44.
- Mourad 2015, p. 48.
- Mourad 2015, p. 49–50.
- Mourad 2015, p. 21.
- Mourad 2015, pp. 44–48.
- ^ Mourad 2015, pp. 129–130.
- O'Connor 2009, pp. 115–116.
- Kopetzky & Bietak 2016, p. 362.
- "Hyksos headband". www.metmuseum.org.
- Mourad 2015, pp. 51–55.
- Mourad 2015, pp. 56–57.
- Mourad 2015, pp. 57–61.
- Mourad 2015, p. 19.
- Popko 2013, p. 3.
- Popko 2013, p. 2.
- Morenz & Popko 2010, p. 105.
- Morenz & Popko 2010, p. 109.
- Popko 2013, pp. 1–2.
- ^ Popko 2013, p. 4.
- ^ Van de Mieroop 2011, p. 160.
- ^ Stiebing 2009, p. 200.
- ^ Van de Mieroop 2011, p. 161.
- Wilkinson 2013, p. 547.
- Ritner et al. 2003, p. 346.
- Van de Mieroop 2011, p. 177.
- Lichthelm 2019, p. 321.
- Daressy 1906, p. 117.
- Montet 1968, p. 80. "Others were later added to them, things which came from the pharaoh Ahmose, like the axe decorated with a griffin and a likeness of the king slaying a Hyksos, with other axes and daggers."
- Morgan 2010, p. 308. A color photograph.
- Baker & Baker 2001, p. 86.
- Schneider 2006, p. 195.
- Bourriau 2000, pp. 201–202.
- Josephus 1926, pp. 197–199.
- Bietak 2010, pp. 170–171.
- Bietak 2012, p. 6.
- ^ Stiebing 2009, p. 168.
- Candelora, Danielle. "The Hyksos". www.arce.org. American Research Center in Egypt.
- Roy 2011, pp. 291–292.
- Curry 2018, p. 3. "A head from a statue of an official dating to the 12th or 13th Dynasty (1802–1640 B.C.) sports the mushroom-shaped hairstyle commonly worn by non-Egyptian immigrants from western Asia such as the Hyksos."
- Potts 2012, p. 841.
- Bietak 2012, p. 3.
- Bietak 2012, pp. 3–4.
- Ben-Tor 2007, p. 2.
- Ryholt 1997, p. 118.
- ^ Bietak 1999, p. 378.
- Ilin-Tomich 2016, pp. 7–8.
- ^ Bourriau 2000, p. 179.
- Ryholt 2018, p. 235.
- Ryholt 1997, pp. 119–120.
- Aston 2018, p. 18.
- Ilin-Tomich 2016, pp. 6–7.
- Aston 2018, p. 16.
- Ryholt 1997, p. 256.
- Aston 2018, pp. 15–17.
- ^ Schneider 2006, p. 194.
- Ryholt 1997, p. 201.
- Aston 2018, p. 15.
- Polz 2018, p. 217.
- Ryholt 1997, pp. 121–122.
- von Beckerath 1999, pp. 120–121.
- Müller 2018, p. 210.
- Ryholt 1997, p. 409.
- Bietak 2012, pp. 2–3.
- ^ Aston 2018, p. 17.
- ^ Redford 1992, p. 107.
- Redford 1992, p. 110.
- Ryholt 1997, p. 125.
- Schneider 2006, pp. 193–194.
- Schneider 2006, p. –194.
- ^ Redford 1992, p. 108.
- Ilin-Tomich 2016, p. 11.
- Ilin-Tomich 2016, p. 3.
- ^ Weigall 2016, p. 188.
- ^ "Statue". The British Museum. EA987.
- Morenz & Popko 2010, p. 108.
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- ^ Bunson 2014, pp. 2–3.
- Bunson 2014, p. 197.
- Flammini 2015, pp. 236–237.
- Ritner et al. 2003, p. 70.
- Ryholt 1997, p. 323.
- Flammini 2015, pp. 239–243.
- Bietak 2012, pp. 1–4.
- ^ el-Shahawy 2005, p. 160.
- Griffith 1891, p. 28. "The name of Khyan on the statue from Bubastis is written over an erasure, that the statue is of the XIIth Dynasty, and that Khyan was a Hyksôs king."
- ^ Bietak 1999, p. 379.
- Müller 2018, p. 212.
- ^ Bard 2015, p. 213.
- Van de Mieroop 2011, pp. 151–153.
- Redford 1992, p. 122.
- Candelora 2018, p. 54.
- Sayce 1895, p. 17.
- Bietak 2016, p. 268.
- Wilkinson 2013, p. 191.
- Mourad 2015, p. 15.
- ^ Hernández 2014, p. 112.
- Herslund 2018, p. 151.
- Stiebing 2009, p. 166.
- Wegner 2015, p. 76.
- ^ Van de Mieroop 2011, p. 149.
- ^ "Hyksos axe". www.metmuseum.org.
- "Spearhead". www.metmuseum.org.
- "Whip handle". www.metmuseum.org.
- ^ Mourad 2015, p. 129.
- Ryholt 1997, pp. 138–139, 142.
- ^ Ryholt 1997, pp. 138–139.
- Ryholt 1997, p. 141.
- Burke 2019, p. 80.
- Keel 1996, pp. 125–126.
- Keel 1996, p. 126.
- O'Connor 2009, p. 109.
- Bietak 1999, pp. 377–378.
- Bourriau 2000, p. 177.
- Ryholt 1997, pp. 148–149.
- Assmann 2003, p. 197.
- Josephus 1926, p. 199.
- Assmann 2018, p. 39.
- Josephus 1926, pp. 255–265.
- Assmann 2003, pp. 227–228.
- Assmann 2018, p. 40.
- Raspe 1998, p. 132.
- Gruen 2016, p. 214.
- Moore & Kelle 2011, pp. 91.
- Redford 1992, p. 412–413.
- Assmann 2014, pp. 26–27.
- Faust 2015, p. 477.
- The Bible Unearthed, p. 69.
- Redmount 2001, p. 78.
- Bietak 2015, p. 32.
- Vos 1999, p. 75.
- Geobey 2017, pp. 27–30. Notes that the Hebrew word is completely unrelated to the term "Hyksos."
- Bietak 2015, p. 20.
- Redford 1992, p. 429.
- Moore & Kelle 2011, p. 93.
- Grabbe 2017, p. 36.
- Geraty 2015, p. 58.
- Morenz & Popko 2010, p. 102.
- Van de Mieroop 2011, pp. 162–163.
- Ryholt 2004, p. 138.
- Ryholt 2004, pp. 142–143.
- Ryholt 2004, p. 143.
- Höflmayer 2015, p. 191.
- Höflmayer 2015, pp. 195–196.
- Gabriel 2009, p. 204.
- Allen 2000, p. 299.
- Höflmayer 2015, p. 202.
- Schneider 2018, p. 78.
- Hawass & Vannini 2009, p. 120. "The foreigners of the fourth register, with long hairstyles and calf-length fringed robes, are labeled Chiefs of Retjenu, the ancient name tor the Syrian region. Like the Nubians, they come with animals, in this case horses, an elephant, and a bear; they also offer weapons and vessels most likely filled with precious substance."
- Zakrzewski, Shortland & Rowland 2015, p. 268.
- Richardson 2013, p. 14.
- Van de Mieroop 2011, p. 163.
- Assmann 2003, pp. 199–200.
- Van de Mieroop 2011, p. 164.
- Van de Mieroop 2011, pp. 164–165.
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Further reading
- Forstner-Müller, Irene (2022), "The Hyksos State", The Oxford History of the Ancient Near East, vol. III, Oxford University Press, pp. 1–47, doi:10.1093/oso/9780190687601.003.0023, ISBN 978-0-19-068760-1
External links
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