30. The Chosen One of Ra
The King of Upper and Lower Egypt Setepenra, the Son of Ra, Philip, Great King of all Foreign Lands, at command of the Gods His Majesty came to Egypt. Through his might he drove out the usurpers and restored ma’at, it was he who pacified the Two Lands. His Majesty proceeded to Memphis, he restored the priests to their temples and went to the House of Ptah South-of-his-Wall. His Majesty was purified and he made an offering of oxen, myrrh and all good things to his father Ptah. Upon hearing of His Majesty’s piety all the districts of Lower Egypt opened their gates to him, as did the districts of Upper Egypt. Amun-Ra, King of the Gods, placed His Majesty on the Throne of Horus to rule the Two Lands forever like Ra.
- Coronation inscription of Philip III at Ipet-Mehu
As he deplored what had happened in the land, he evoked the state of the East, with Asiatics roaming in their strength, frightening those about to harvest and seizing cattle from the plough, he said:
Stir, my heart,
Bewail this land, from which you have sprung!
When there is silence before evil,
And when what should be chided is feared,
Then the great man is overthrown in the land of your birth.
Tire not while this is before you,
Rise against what is before you!
Lo, the great no longer rule the land,
What was made has been unmade,
Ra should begin to recreate!
The land is quite perished, no remnant is left,
Not the black of a nail is spared from its fate.
Yet while the land suffers, none care for it,
None speak, none shed tears: ‘’How fares this land!”
The sun-disk, covered, shines not for people to see,
One cannot live when clouds conceal,
All are numb from lack of it.
- Prophecy of Neferti, lines 17 – 26 [1]
When Philip III and his army crossed the Sinai, seized the great fortresses that guarded the Delta and sacked the city of Per-Bast the shock paralyzed the Egyptians. A desperate attempt at repelling the Argead advance ended in disaster at Iunu, when Philip led his hetairoi into the Egyptian flanks all resistance melted away, after which the Great Temple of Ra was ransacked. The death of Nakhthorheb III in Memphis was the final nail in the coffin for the Thirtieth Dynasty. Had he lived perhaps he could have continued resisting the Argeads from Upper Egypt, but alas it was not to be.
When Philip appeared outside of Memphis he had already triumphed, and with the news of the brutal sack of the Temple of Ra and of Per-Bast in their mind the citizens of Egypt’s capital wisely chose not to resist. The entrance of the ‘Great King of all Foreign Lands’ into the ancient city was a triumphant one, he marched in at the head of his army, although it is doubtful that he was awaited by jubilant crowds. There must have been some curious onlookers though, and he was met by a group of high-ranking officials of the city and it’s temples. The new pharaoh then proceeded to the temple of Ptah, where in the manner of the pharaohs he made offerings to the god of craftsmen. He also paid homage to the Apis-bull, earthly manifestation of Ptah, and contrary to later Egyptian sources the sacred bull did not end up on the royal dinner table. It seems that Philip understood that if he wanted to make Egypt part of his empire he needed to act as a true pharaoh. In some respects this seems to have worked; there certainly wasn’t a shortage of Egyptians who had no qualms about working for the new ruler. Even the vizier of Lower Egypt, Senedjemibranakht, remained in place, although he now would serve underneath a royal-appointed Macedonian satrap.
Philip and the Apis-bull
As Philip remained in Memphis, preparing for his forthcoming coronation at the Ipet-Mehu, his army fanned out over the Valley of the Nile. Troops went north into the Delta, where the home of the Thirtieth Dynasty, the city of Tjebnetjer, was looted, as was the palace at Hebyt. This was because of their association with the former rulers of the land for other Delta cities did not share it’s fate. The fall of the Thirtieth Dynasty also was the end of relevance for the city of Tjebnetjer, which no longer could profit from dynastic preference, and afterwards it became an unassuming provincial town, although the large temple of Anhur-Shu remained important. The towns and cities of the Delta quickly surrendered, with the Egyptian army mostly destroyed at Gezer or encamped at the fortresses in distant Nubia there was little reason to resist. It perhaps would have been different if Bakenanhur had not waged his campaigns against the Delta aristocracy, who had been pivotal in the resistance against the Achaemenids, but their power had been all but destroyed.
It was thus in Upper Egypt that resistance to the Argead takeover was at its strongest. Philip had sent Amyntor, the son of Hephaistion and Cynane (and thus Philip’s cousin), upstream to subjugate the lands between Memphis and the First Cataract. The regions close to Memphis, with cities such as Shedyt (Crocodilopolis) and Henen-nesut (Herakleopolis) capitulated without a fight, when the army went further upstream however they found cities less willing to comply. The city of Khent-Min for example had barred its gates and manned its walls, and it took Amyntor several weeks to reduce its walls, after which the town was mercilessly sacked. It was not long afterwards that ominous news reached Amyntor from Waset, Upper Egypt’s largest city and home of the Cult of Amun-Ra. The fall of the Thirtieth Dynasty had great repercussions for the Egyptian possessions in Nubia, where many of the garrisons were understrength due to the recent civil war. The Kushite client ruler, Aryamani, took this opportunity to declare his independence and to drive the Egyptians back beyond the cataracts. Napata was quickly reclaimed, and not long afterwards all Egyptian forces retreated from Nubia. At the Temple of Amun at Napata Aryamani set up a victory stela, claiming to have defeated the Egyptians, although the inscription is lacking in detail. It seems Aryamani struck a deal with the remaining Egyptian troops, allowing them to leave unharmed and even seems to have send troops along, as Amyntor mentions the presence of many Nubian mercenaries among the Egyptian army.
The Egyptian forces encamped at Waset, enabling the southern city to resist Amyntor’s advance. Several riverine battles are mentioned, and Amyntor’s advance halted to a crawl. It was one of Nakhthorheb III’s generals, a certain Pahory, who led the Egyptian troops. Pahory was an ambitious man, after defeating Amyntor in September 295 in a battle near Iunet (Dendera) he ordered the construction of a small shrine at Ipetsut, in thanksgiving for the victory over the invaders. There his name inscribed inside a royal cartouche, thus proclaiming Pahory’s kingship. Amyntor temporarily retreated to Sauty, but he had left behind several garrisons in Upper Egypt that Pahory ended up unable to dislodge. The would-be pharaoh was frustrated by this, but he decided to ignore the garrisons for the time being. He gathered his army and sailed north, leaving behind only a small force in Waset, bypassing the Argead garrisons and hoping to confront Amyntor in battle. For Pahory and those who desired to see an independent Egypt it was perhaps their best hope, driving away the Macedonians and Persians before they could settle their regime. It was near Hardai (Cynopolis) that Amyntor gave battle late in October, having received reinforcements from further downriver. While on the river the Egyptians managed to hold their own and even repel an Argead assault on land things went awry. Once again the Egyptian army was outclassed by the Argead cavalry, who wreaked havoc on the Egyptian flanks. Pahory was captured and executed, and with him died the hope of a quick liberation for Egypt.
By the time of the battle of Hardai Philip III had already left Egypt again. He had been crowned at the Ipet-Mehu late in August 295, coinciding with the Egyptian new year. He was crowned with the sekhemty [2] and proclaimed the rightful King of Upper and Lower Egypt, his throne name being Setepenra [3]. Philip did not linger in Egypt for long afterwards, the Great King was a busy man after all. He did tour several sites in the Delta, including the Temple of Neith at Sau, where he made an attempt at looking pious by making offerings and giving gifts. He also visited a site in the northwest where on the shores of the Mediterranean a new city was to arise, acting as a crucial link between the Mediterranean and the land of the Nile. Philip ordered that this new city was to be named after his father, it would be known as Alexandria. While travelling through Lower Egypt part of the Great King’s entourage was a group of scribes, who took account of local estates and reported those to the king. Many lands were confiscated by Philip, who divided them into royal estates and lands that were to be distributed to his veterans. Aiming to prevent further damage to his reputation in Egypt he mostly left the temple estates intact, and he also donated generously for the restoration of the Temple of Ra at Iunu, although the Egyptians would never forgive him for that sacrilege. One of Philip’s final acts in Egypt was finding a city named after his wife Arsinoe on the shores of the Red Sea, near the point where the Canal of the Pharaohs once flowed. Darius’ canal had long since been neglected, it’s restoration had not been a priority of the later Achaemenids or any of the 29th or 30th Dynasty rulers. Philip however saw possibilities for the canal, especially considering the target of his next campaign.
It was thus early in October 295 BCE that Philip III left Egypt. Considering the impact he had on the country it is surprisingly short, Cambyses for example spend much more time in his newly won satrapy. He appointed his father’s old companion Ptolemaios as satrap of Egypt, a job he could only leave up to someone he could trust absolutely. Ptolemaios would indeed end up an able ruler, who managed to avoid offending the population and made sure the country was run well. In January 294 Amyntor had reached Abu (Elephantine), the traditional southern boundary of Egypt, completing the conquest of the land. For now Nubia would be left alone. After the defeat at Hardai the cities of Upper-Egypt, including Waset, gave up their resistance. Amyntor’s troops were disciplined professionals, and it seems the occupation went rather smoothly. Some wealth was confiscated and send north, but no temples or tombs were plundered. That doesn’t mean that there weren’t any large changes to Upper-Egypt, for indeed there were quite some. Garrisons were installed at several cities, sometimes consisting of such distant peoples as Thracians, Medes and Bactrians. Most dramatic was the dismissal of the God’s Wife of Amun, Udjashu, from her post at Waset. She was a daughter of Nakhtnebef II and thus unacceptable to the Macedonians as head of the powerful cult. As one ancient office was removed, another one was revived, for Philip III ordered the reinstatement of the High Priesthood of Amun to serve as the head of the Cult of Amun-Ra. The aptly-named Amunnakht was appointed as High Priest, whose living quarters at Ipetsut were across the road from a newly-built riverside fortress which would house the garrison of Waset, ensuring his and his Cult’s loyalty.
For Egypt the Argead conquest was a great shock, for it’s people it must have seemed as a great disaster. Texts from the era lament the fate of their country, some openly declaring that the gods had abandoned them. To those who had lost everything in the invasion it must have seemed as some kind of divine punishment, temples had been looted and cities had been burned; isfet had seemingly triumphed over ma’at. And yet the new king attempted to appear authentically Egyptian, while at the same time divvying up their land and settling it with Greeks and Macedonians. Egyptian confidence was at a low, for a century they had kept the Asiatics at bay, but it seems by allowing the Greeks to take over Asia they had signed their own death warrant. And perhaps it could have happened, Greeks had settled in Egypt before any of them even thought of living besides the Euphrates, and if Argead rule lasted centuries instead of decades perhaps a truly hybridised culture would have emerged, changing Egypt forever. Yet that is not what happened. Egyptian culture, by virtue of both its antiquity and a sometimes surprising flexibility, managed to endure and prosper. Argead rule, like that of the Hyksos, the Assyrians, the Nubians and the Persians, would turn out to only be temporary.
Footnotes
- The translation I’ve used can be found in Miriam Lichtheim’s Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume I: The Old and Middle Kingdoms on page 141. The Prophecy of Neferti is a story set during the Fourth Dynasty at the court of Sneferu (father of Khufu, builder of the Great Pyramid) wherein a wise man named Neferti prophesizes a coming period of disaster and disunity, but also the eventual reunification and new prosperity for Egypt. It was written during the early Twelfth Dynasty, and thus the prophesized chaos represents the First Intermediate Period. Neferti prophesizes that a king from the south named Ameny saves Egypt, likely a reference to Amenemhat I, the pharaoh who established the Twelfth Dynasty. It is thus quite possible that the prophecy is a propaganda piece on part of the ruling dynasty, retroactively legitimizing their rule.
- ‘The Two Powerful Ones’, the red-white dual crown of the pharaohs, also known as the pschent.
- Setepenra means ‘Chosen One of Ra’ and OTL it was the throne name of Alexander as pharaoh.