The Hyksos and the Stag
Although the Hellenistic Egyptian historian Manetho portrayed the Hyksos invasion of Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period as violent and brutal, archaeology points to an Asiatic presence at Avaris, which would become the center of Hyksos activity for over 150 years before the beginning of Hyksos rule. Evidence indicates a gradual Canaanite settlement beginning during the 12th Dynasty around 1800 BCE. Egyptologist Manfred Bietak points out 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.
When the last pharaoh of the Egyptian 13th Dynasty, Sobekhotep IV died around 1725 BCE, Egypt appears to have splintered into several kingdoms, with one based at Avaris and ruled officially by the 14th Dynasty whose names indicate West Asian origins. After the palace there was burned, the 14th Dynasty was replaced by the Hyksos Fifteenth Dynasty. Although some scholars interpret the activity was a Hyksos invasion, Bietak notes that a stela of Neferhotep III indicates Egypt was overrun by roving mercenaries around the time of the Hyksos ascension to power.
Archaeology has revealed trading relations of the Hyksos were primarily with Canaan and Cyprus, especially with many imports of Canaanite wares, and may have reflected the Canaanite origins of the dynasty. 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". Trade relations with Cyprus were also very important, particularly at the end of the Hyksos period .
Hyksos period art reflected a blend of Egyptian and Levantine motifs. A gold diadem found in an elite female's tomb in Avaris is decorated with gazelles but with a stag, possibly representing the "Stag God" of Indo-European origin on the brow. We see the stag motif used in Cypriot pottery during this time.
This blending of cultures extended to Hyksos bural practices as well. Hyksos tombs often included Egyptian-style chapels, but they also included burials of young females, probably sacrifices, placed in front of the tomb chamber. Human sacrifice was rare in Egypt after the First Dynasty although it was sanctioned in cases of rebellion or other serious transgressions. See my article "Cannibalism in Roman Egypt"
https://ancientimes.blogspot.com/2017/08/cannibalism-in-roman-egypt.html
The Hyksos also interred infants who died in imported Canaanite amphorae and practiced the burial of horses and other equids, likely a composite custom of the Egyptian association of the god Seth with the donkey and near-eastern notions of equids as representing status.
Terracotta zoomorphic askos (vessel) with antlers, Cypriot, ca. 1725–1600 B.C.E. at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. |
A man described as "Abisha the Hyksos" leading a group of Aamu, Tomb of Khnumhotep II (circa 1900 BCE.) Courtesy of Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia |
Comments
Post a Comment