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Menes

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Menes (/ˈmnz/; Template:Lang-egy, probably pronounced */maˈnij/;[5] Template:Lang-grc;[4] Template:Lang-ar) was a pharaoh of the Early Dynastic Period of ancient Egypt credited by classical tradition with having united Upper and Lower Egypt and as the founder of the First Dynasty.[6]

The identity of Menes is the subject of ongoing debate, although mainstream Egyptological consensus identifies Menes with the Naqada III ruler Narmer[1][2][3] (most likely) or First Dynasty pharaoh Hor-Aha.[7] Both pharaohs are credited with the unification of Egypt to different degrees by various authorities.

Name and identity

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Menes
in hieroglyphs

The Egyptian form, mnj, is taken from the Turin and Abydos King Lists, which are dated to the Nineteenth Dynasty, whose pronunciation has been reconstructed as */maˈnij/. By the early New Kingdom, changes in the Egyptian language meant his name was already pronounced */maˈneʔ/.[8]

The commonly-used name Menes derives from Manetho, an Egyptian historian and priest who lived during the pre-Coptic period of the Ptolemaic Kingdom. Manetho noted the name in Greek as Μήνης (transliterated: Mênês).[4][9]

An alternative Greek form, Μιν (transliterated: Min), was cited by the fifth century BCE historian Herodotus,[10] is a variant no longer accepted; it appears to have been the result of contamination from the name of the god Min.[11]

The name mnj means "He who endures", which, I. E. S. Edwards (1971) suggests, may have been coined as "a mere descriptive epithet denoting a semi-legendary hero [...] whose name had been lost".[4] Rather than a particular person, the name may conceal collectively the Naqada III rulers: Ka, Scorpion II and Narmer.[4]

Narmer and Menes

The ivory label mentioning Hor-Aha along with the mn sign.

The almost complete absence of any mention of Menes in the archaeological record[4] and the comparative wealth of evidence of Narmer, a protodynastic figure credited by posterity and in the archaeological record with a firm claim[2] to the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt, has given rise to a theory identifying Menes with Narmer.

The chief archaeological reference to Menes is an ivory label from Nagada which shows the royal Horus-name Aha (the pharaoh Hor-Aha) next to a building, within which is the royal nebty-name mn,[12] generally taken to be Menes.[4][a] From this, various theories on the nature of the building (a funerary booth or a shrine), the meaning of the word mn (a name or the verb endures) and the relationship between Hor-Aha and Menes (as one person or as successive pharaohs) have arisen.[1]

The Turin and Abydos king lists, generally accepted to be correct,[1] list the nesu-bit-names of the pharaohs, not their Horus-names,[2] and are vital to the potential reconciliation of the various records: the nesu-bit-names of the king lists, the Horus-names of the archaeological record and the number of pharaohs in Dynasty I according to Manetho and other historical sources.[2]

Flinders Petrie first attempted this task,[2] associating Iti with Djer as the third pharaoh of Dynasty I, Teti (Turin) (or another Iti (Abydos)) with Hor-Aha as second pharaoh, and Menes (a nebty-name) with Narmer (a Horus-name) as first pharaoh of Dynasty I.[1][2] Lloyd (1994) finds this succession "extremely probable",[2] and Cervelló-Autuori (2003) categorically states that "Menes is Narmer and the First Dynasty begins with him".[3] However, Seidlmayer (2004) states that it is "a fairly safe inference" that Menes was Hor-Aha.[7]

Dates

Egyptologists, archaeologists and scholars from the 19th century have proposed different dates for the era of Menes, or the date of the first dynasty:[13][b]

Modern consensus dates the era of Menes or the start of the first dynasty between c. 3100–3050 BC; some academic literature uses c. 3000 BC.[14]

History

By 500 BCE, mythical and exaggerated claims had made Menes a culture hero, and most of what is known of him comes from a much later time.[15]

Ancient tradition ascribed to Menes the honor of having united Upper and Lower Egypt into a single kingdom[16] and becoming the first pharaoh of the First Dynasty.[17] However, his name does not appear on extant pieces of the Royal Annals (Cairo Stone and Palermo Stone), which is a now-fragmentary king's list that was carved onto a stela during the Fifth Dynasty. He typically appears in later sources as the first human ruler of Egypt, directly inheriting the throne from the god Horus.[18] He also appears in other, much later, king's lists, always as the first human pharaoh of Egypt. Menes also appears in demotic novels of the Hellenistic period, demonstrating that, even that late, he was regarded as important figure.[19]

Menes was seen as a founding figure for much of the history of ancient Egypt, similar to Romulus in ancient Rome.[20] Manetho records that Menes "led the army across the frontier and won great glory".[9][17]

Capital

Manetho associates the city of Thinis with the Early Dynastic Period and, in particular, Menes, a "Thinite" or native of Thinis.[9][17] Herodotus contradicts Manetho in stating that Menes founded the city of Memphis as his capital[21] after diverting the course of the Nile through the construction of a levee.[22] Manetho ascribes the building of Memphis to Menes' son, Athothis,[17] and calls no pharaohs earlier than Third Dynasty "Memphite".[23]

Herodotus and Manetho's stories of the foundation of Memphis are probably later inventions: in 2012 a relief mentioning the visit of Memphis by Iry-Hor—a predynastic ruler of Upper Egypt reigning before Namer—was discovered in the Sinai Peninsula, indicating that the city was already in existence in the early 32nd century BC.[24]

Cultural influence

Diodorus Siculus stated that Menes had introduced the worship of the gods and the practice of sacrifice[25] as well as a more elegant and luxurious style of living.[25] For this latter invention, Menes' memory was dishonoured by the Twenty-fourth Dynasty pharaoh Tefnakht and Plutarch mentions a pillar at Thebes on which was inscribed an imprecation against Menes as the introducer of luxury.[25]

In Pliny's account, Menes was credited with being the inventor of writing in Egypt.

Crocodile episode

Diodorus Siculus recorded a story of Menes related by the priests of the crocodile god Sobek at Crocodilopolis, in which the pharaoh Menes, attacked by his own dogs while out hunting,[26] fled across Lake Moeris on the back of a crocodile and, in thanks, founded the city of Crocodilopolis.[26][27][28]

George Stanley Faber (1816), taking the word campsa to mean either crocodile or ark and preferring the latter, identifies Menes with Noah and the entire story as a flood myth.[29]

Edwards (1974) states that "the legend, which is obviously filled with anachronisms, is patently devoid of historical value",[27] but Gaston Maspero (1910), while acknowledging the possibility that traditions relating to other kings may have become mixed up with this story, dismisses the suggestions of some commentators[25] that the story should be transferred to the Twelfth Dynasty pharaoh Amenemhat III and sees no reason to doubt that Diodorus did not correctly record a tradition of Menes.[26]

Death

According to Manetho, Menes reigned for 62 years and was killed by a hippopotamus.[9][17]

Alexander Dow (1735/6–79), a Scottish orientalist and playwright, wrote the tragedy Sethona, set in ancient Egypt. The lead part of Menes is described in the dramatis personæ as "next male-heir to the crown" now worn by Seraphis, and was played by Samuel Reddish in a 1774 production by David Garrick at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.[30]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Originally, the full royal title of a pharaoh was Horus name x nebty name y Golden-Horus name z nesu-bit name a Son-of-Ra name b. For brevity's sake, only one element might be used, but the choice varied between circumstances and period. Starting with Dynasty V, the nesu-bit name was the one regularly used in all official documents. In Dynasty I, the Horus-name was used for a living pharaoh, the nebty-name for the dead.[2]
  2. ^ Other dates typical of the era are found cited in Capart, Jean, Primitive Art in Egypt, pp. 17–18.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Edwards 1971, p. 13.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Lloyd 1994, p. 7.
  3. ^ a b c Cervelló-Autuori 2003, p. 174.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Edwards 1971, p. 11.
  5. ^ Loprieno, Antonio (1995). Ancient Egyptian: A linguistic introduction. Cambridge University press. ISBN 0-521-44384-9. {{cite book}}: Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  6. ^ Beck et al. 1999.
  7. ^ a b Seidlmayer 2010.
  8. ^ Loprieno 1995, p. 38.
  9. ^ a b c d Manetho, Fr. 6, 7a, 7b. Text and translation in Manetho, translated by W.G. Waddell (Cambridge: Harvard University, 1940), pp.26-35
  10. ^ Herodotus: 2.4.1, 2.99.1ff.
  11. ^ Lloyd 1994, p. 6.
  12. ^ Gardiner 1961, p. 405.
  13. ^ Budge, EA Wallis (1885), The Dwellers on the Nile: Chapters on the Life, Literature, History and Customs of the Ancient Egyptians, p. 54, Many dates have been fixed by scholars for the reign of this king: Champollion-Figeac thought about BC 5867, Bunsen 3623, Lepsius 3892, Brugsch 4455, and Wilkinson 2320.
  14. ^ Kitchen, KA (1991). "The Chronology of Ancient Egypt". World Archaeology. 23 (2): 201–8. doi:10.1080/00438243.1991.9980172.
  15. ^ Frank Northen Magill; Alison Aves (1998). Dictionary of World Biography. Taylor & Francis. pp. 726–. ISBN 978-1-57958-040-7.
  16. ^ Maspero 1903, p. 331.
  17. ^ a b c d e Verbrugghe & Wickersham 2001, p. 131.
  18. ^ Shaw & Nicholson 1995, p. 218.
  19. ^ Ryholt 2009.
  20. ^ Manley 1997, p. 22.
  21. ^ Herodotus: 2.99.4.
  22. ^ Herodotus: 2.109
  23. ^ Verbrugghe & Wickersham 2001, p. 133.
  24. ^ P. Tallet, D. Laisnay: Iry-Hor et Narmer au Sud-Sinaï (Ouadi 'Ameyra), un complément à la chronologie des expéditios minière égyptiene, in: BIFAO 112 (2012), 381-395, available online
  25. ^ a b c d Elder 1849, p. 1040. Cite error: The named reference "FOOTNOTEElder18491040" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  26. ^ a b c Maspero 1910, p. 235.
  27. ^ a b Edwards 1974, p. 22.
  28. ^ Diodorus: 45
  29. ^ Faber 1816, p. 195.
  30. ^ Dow 1774.

Bibliography