CRISTO RAUL.ORG |
READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF ANCIENT EGYPT |
B1-C1. THE PREDYNASTIC EGYPTIANSB1-C2. EGYPTIAN CHRONOLOGYB1C3.THE LEGENDARY PERIODB1C4. THE FIRST THREE DYNASTIES.
|
ARCHAIC MACES of Ancient Egypt (pdf) PREDYNASTIC POTTERY of Ancient Egypt (pdf) THE DAWN OF ASTRONOMY ; a study of the temple-worship and mythology of the ancient Egyptians (pdf) |
THE PYRAMID BUILDERSZOSER - (SNEFRU) - CHEOPS - Djedefre - CHEPHREN -MYCERINUS |
---|
HATSHEPSUT.1479-1457The close of the reign of Thutmose I is involved in deep obscurity, and there is no reconstruction without its difficulties. The traces left on temple walls by family dissensions are not likely to be sufficiently conclusive to enable us to follow the complicated struggle with entire certainty three thousand five hundred years later. The current verdict of historians has long been that Thutmose II, a feeble and diseased son of the old Pharaoh, followed at once upon his father's demise. His brief reign is of such slight consequence, however, that its exact place in the transition from Thutmose I to Hatshepsut and Thutmose III is not of great importance. Hatshepsut’s partisans were not able to crown their favorite without a difficult struggle with a third Thutmose. He was the son of an obscure concubine named. Isis, and there is some uncertainty whether the first or the second Thutmose was his father. It is probable that he married Hatshepsut, thus gaining a valid title to the throne. |
THUTMOSE III. 1457-1425THE peaceful and unmilitary Nile of Hatshepsut, falling as it did early in Egypt’s imperial career in Asia, was followed by serious consequences. Not having seen an Egyptian army for many years, the Syrian dynasts grew continually more restless. The king of Kadesh, once probably the suzerain of all Syria and Palestine, had stirred all the city-kings of northern Palestine and Syria to accept his leader ship in a great coalition, in which they at last felt themselves strong enough to begin open revolt. “Behold from Yeraza (in northern Judea) to the marshes of the earth (i.e. the upper Euphrates), they had begun to revolt against his majesty”. In these words the annals of Thutmose III |
AMENHOTEP III . 1390-1353He was but the great-grandson of Thutmose III, but with him the high tide of Egyptian power was already slowly on the ebb, and he was not the man to stem the tide. Nevertheless in the administration of his great empire Amenhotep III began well. Toward the close of ins fourth year trouble in Nubia called him south. After defeating the enemy decisively somewhere above the second cataract, Amenhotep marched southward for a month, taking captives and spoil as he went. It is difficult to determine the exact limit of his southern advance. In the land of Karoy, with which the reader is now acquainted as the region about Napata, he collected great quantities of gold for his Theban buildings, and at Kebehu-Hor, or the “Pool of Horus” he erected his tablet of victory, but we are unable to locate the place with certainty. It was certainly not much in advance of the frontier of his father. This was the last great invasion of Nubia by the Pharaohs. |
LIFE AND TIMES OF AKNATON. 1353-1338The reign of Akhnaton, for seventeen years Pharaoh of Egypt (from B.C. 1375 to 1358), stands out as the most interesting epoch in the long sequence of Egyptian history. We have watched the endless line of dim Pharaohs go by, each ht momentarily by the pale lamp of our present knowledge, and most of them have left httle impression upon the mind. They are so misty and far off, they have been dead and gone for such thousands of years, that they have almost entirely lost their individuality. We call out some royal name, and in response a vague figure passes into view, stiffly moves its arms, and passes again into the darkness. The Tomb of Queen Tiy, in which lay the mummy believed to be that of Akhnaton, was discovered in January, 1907, during the excavations which were being conducted by Mr. Theodore M. Davis in the Valley of the Tombs of the Kings at Thebes. |
RAMSES II. 1303-1212When Ramses II ascended the throne the Hittites had remained in undisputed possession of their Syrian conquests for probably more than twenty years since the attempt of Seti I to dislodge them. The long peace had given their king, Mutallu, an opportunity, of which he made good use, to render their position in Syria impregnable. Advancing southward, up the valley of the Orontes, he had seized Kadesh, the centre of the Syrian power in the days of Thutmose III, which, we remember, had given him more trouble and held out with more tenacious resistance than any other kingdom in Syria. We have already seen the strategic importance of the district, an importance which was quickly grasped by the Hittite king, who made the place the bulwark of his southern frontier. Ramses’s plan for the war was like that of his great ancestor, Thutmose III. He proposed first to gain the coast, that he might use one of its harbors as a base, enjoying quick and easy communication with Egypt by water. Our sources tell us nothing of his operations on the first campaign, when this purpose was accomplished. |
MERNEPTAH & RAMSES III (1213-1156)The death of Ramses II was not followed by any disturbance in the Asiatic dominions in so far as we can see. The northern border in Syria was as far north as the upper Orontes valley, including at least part of the Amorite country in which Merneptah had a royal city bearing his name, probably inherited from his father and renamed. With the Hittite kingdom he enjoyed undisturbed peace, doubtless under the terms of the old treaty, negotiated by his father forty-six years before. Indeed, Merneptah sent shiploads of grain to the Hittites to relieve them in time of famine. By the end of his second year, however, he had reason to rue the good-will shown his father's ancient enemy. Among the allies of the Hittites at the battle of Kadesh there were already maritime peoples like the Lycians and Dardanians. In some way Merneptah discovered that the Hittites were now involved in the incursions of these people in the western Delta in alliance with the Libyans. In the year three (about 1223 BC) the Pharaoh found widespread revolt against him in Asia: Askalon at the very gates of Egypt, the powerful city of Gezer at the lower end of the valley of Aijalon, leading up from the sea-plain to Jerusalem; Yenoam, given by Thutmose III to Amon two hundred and sixty years before; some of the tribes of Israel and all western Syria-Palestine as far as it was controlled by the Pharaoh all these rose against their Egyptian overlord. |
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF CLEOPATRA VII,QUEEN OF EGYPT |
A HISTORY OF EGYPT
|
|
EGYPT IN THE NEOLITHIC AND ARCHAIC PERIODS |
|
EGYPT UNDER THE GREAT PYRAMID BUILDERS |
|
EGYPT UNDER THE AMENEMHATS AND HYKSOS |
|
EGYPT AND HER ASIATIC EMPIRE |
|
EGYPT UNDER RAMESES THE GREAT |
|
EGYPT UNDER THE PRIEST-KINGS, TANITES, AND NUBIANS |
|
EGYPT UNDER THE SAITES, PERSIANS, AND PTOLEMIES |
|
EGYPT UNDER THE PTOLEMIES AND CLEOPATRA VII |
|
THE GODS OF THE EGYPTIANS OR STUDIES IN EGYPTIAN MYTHOLOGY V1 |
|
THE GODS OF THE EGYPTIANS OR STUDIES IN EGYPTIAN MYTHOLOGY V2 |
|
J. P. MAHAFFY |
THE EMPIRE OF THE PTOLEMIES |
Joseph Norman Lockyer |
THE DAWN OF ASTRONOMYa study of the temple-worship and mythology of the ancient Egyptians |
JOHN KENRICK |
|
ANCIENT EGYPT UNDER THE PHARAOHS. V1 |
|
ANCIENT EGYPT UNDER THE PHARAOHS. V2 |
JAMES HENRY BREASTED |
|
ANCIENT RECORDS OF EGYPT
|
E. A. WALLIS BUDGE |
THE GODS OF THE EGYPTIANS OR STUDIES IN EGYPTIAN MYTHOLOGY vol 1THE GODS OF THE EGYPTIANS OR STUDIES IN EGYPTIAN MYTHOLOGY vol2 |
MICHAEL ROSTOVTZEFF |
A LARGE ESTATE IN EGYPT IN THE THIRD CENTURY B. C. |
HENRY BRUGSCH-BEY |
A HISTORY OF EGYPT UNDER THE PHARAOHS DERIVED ENTIRELY FROM THE MONUMENTS TO WHICH IS ADDED
|
A. H. Sayce |
The Egypt of the Hebrews and Herodotos |
L. A. WADDELL |
EGYPTIAN CIVILIZATION ITS SUMERIAN ORIGIN |
GEORGE RAWLINSON |
HISTORY OF ANCIENT EGYPTVOLUME I .... VOLUME II |
CARL NIEBUHR |
THE |
SELIM HASSAN |
The Sphinx |
ANCIENT EGYPT : THE LAND
THE roots of modern civilization are planted deeply in the highly elaborate
life of those nations which rose into power over six thousand years ago, in the
basin of the eastern Mediterranean, and the adjacent regions on the east of it.
Had the Euphrates finally found its way into the Mediterranean, toward which,
indeed, it seems to have started, both the early civilizations, to which we
refer, might then have been included in the Mediterranean basin. As it is, the
scene of early oriental history does not fall entirely within that basin, but
must be designated as the eastern Mediterranean region. It lies in the midst of
the vast desert plateau, which, beginning at the Atlantic, extends eastward
across the entire northern end of Africa, and continuing beyond the depression
of the Red Sea, passes northeastward, with some interruptions, far into the
heart of Asia. Approaching it, the one from the south and the other from the
north, two great river valleys traverse this desert; in Asia, the Tigro-Euphrates valley; in Africa that of the Nile. It is
in these two valleys that the career of man may be traced from the rise of
European civilization back to a remoter age than anywhere else on earth; and it
is from these two cradles of the human race that the influences which emanated
from their highly developed but differing cultures, can now be more and more
clearly traced as we discern them converging upon the early civilization of
Asia Minor and southern Europe.
The Nile, which created the valley home of the early Egyptians, rises three
degrees south of the equator, and flowing into the Mediterranean at over thirty
one and a half degrees north latitude, it attains a length of some four
thousand miles, and vies with the greatest rivers of the world in length, if
not in volume. In its upper course the river, emerging from the lakes of
equatorial Africa, is known as the White Nile. Just south of north latitude
sixteen at Khartum, about thirteen hundred and fifty
miles from the sea, it receives from the east an affluent known as the Blue
Nile, which is a considerable mountain torrent, rising in the lofty highlands
of Abyssinia. One hundred and forty miles below the union of the two Niles the
stream is joined by its only other tributary, the Atbara, which is a freshet
not unlike the Blue Nile. It is at Khartum, or just
below it, that the river enters the table land of Nubian sandstone, underlying
the Great Sahara. Here it winds on its tortuous course between the desert hills,
where it returns upon itself, often flowing due south, until after it has
finally pushed through to the north, its course describes a vast S.
In six different places throughout this region the current has hitherto
failed to erode a perfect channel through the stubborn stone, and these
extended interruptions, where the rocks are piled in scattered and irregular
masses in the stream, are known as the cataracts of the Nile; although there is
no great and sudden fall such as that of our cataract at Niagara. These rocks
interfere with navigation most seriously in the region of the first, second and
fourth cataracts; otherwise the river is navigable almost throughout its entire
course. At Elephantine it passes the granite barrier which there thrusts up its
rough shoulder, forming the first cataract, and thence emerges upon an
unobstructed course to the sea.
It is the valley below the first cataract which constituted Egypt proper.
The reason for the change which here gives the river a free course is the
disappearance of the sandstone, sixty eight miles below the cataract, at Edfu, where the nummulitic limestone which forms the
northern desert plateau, offers the stream an easier task in the erosion of its
bed. It has thus produced a vast canon or trench, cut across the eastern end of
the Sahara to the northern sea. From cliff to cliff, the valley varies in width,
from ten or twelve, to some thirty one miles. The floor of the canon is covered
with black, alluvial deposits, through which the river winds northward. It cuts
a deep channel through the alluvium, flowing with a speed of about three miles
an hour; in width it only twice attains a maximum of eleven hundred yards. On
the west the Bahr Yusuf, a second, minor channel some two hundred miles long,
leaves the main stream near Siut and flows into the
Fayum. In antiquity it flowed thence into a canal known as the
"North", which passed northward west of Memphis and reached the sea
by the site of later Alexandria. A little over a hundred miles from the sea the
main stream enters the broad triangle, with apex at the south, which the Greeks
so graphically called the "Delta." This is of course a bay of
prehistoric ages, which has been gradually filled up by the river. The stream
once divided at this point and reached the sea through seven mouths, but in
modern times there are but two main branches, straggling through the Delta and
piercing the coast-line on either side of the middle. The western branch is
called the Rosetta mouth; the eastern that of Damietta.
The deposits which have formed the Delta, are very deep, and have slowly
risen over the sites of the many ancient cities which once flourished there.
The old swamps which must once have rendered the regions of the northern Delta
a vast morass, have been gradually filled up, and the fringe of marshes pushed
further out. They undoubtedly occupied in antiquity a much larger proportion of
the Delta than they do now. In the valley above the depth of the soil varies
from thirty three to thirty eight feet, and sometimes reaches a maximum of ten
miles in width. The cultivable area thus formed, between the cataract and the
sea, is less than ten thousand square miles in extent, being roughly equal to
the area of the state of Maryland, or about ten per cent less than that of
Belgium. The cliffs on either hand are usually but a few hundred feet in
height, but here and there they rise into almost mountains of a thousand feet.
They are of course flanked by the deserts through which the Nile has cut its
way. On the west the Libyan Desert or the Great Sahara rolls in illimitable,
desolate hills of sand, gravel and rock, from six hundred and fifty to a
thousand feet above the Nile. Its otherwise waterless expanse is broken only by
an irregular line of oases, or watered depressions, roughly parallel with the
river, and doubtless owing their springs and wells to infiltration of the Nile
waters. The largest of these depressions is situated so close to the valley
that the rock wall which once separated them has broken down, producing the
fertile Fayum, watered by the Bahr Yusuf. Otherwise the western desert held no
economic resources for the use of the early Nile-dwellers.
The eastern or Arabian Desert is somewhat less inhospitable, and capable of
yielding a scanty subsistence to wandering tribes of Ababdeh.
A range of granite mountains parallel with the coast of the Red Sea contains
gold-bearing quartz veins, and here and there other gold-producing mountains
lie between the Nile and the Red Sea. Deposits of alabaster and extensive
masses of various fine, hard igneous rocks led to the exploitation of quarries
here also, while the Red Sea harbors could of course be reached only by
traversing this desert, through which established routes thither were early
traced. Further north similar mineral resources led to an acquaintance with the
peninsula of Sinai and its desert regions, at a very remote date.
The situation afforded by this narrow valley was one of unusual isolation;
on either hand vast desert wastes, on the north the harbourless coast-line of the Delta, and on the south the rocky barriers of successive
cataracts, preventing fusion with the peoples of inner Africa. It was chiefly
at the two northern corners of the Delta, that outside influences and foreign
elements, which were always sifting into the Nile valley, gained access to the
country.
Through the eastern corner it was the prehistoric Semitic population of
neighboring Asia, who forced their way in across the dangerous intervening
deserts; while the Libyan races, of possibly European origin, found entrance at
the western corner.
The products of the south also, in spite of the cataracts, filtered in ever
increasing volume into the regions of the lower river and the lower end of the
first cataract became a trading post, ever after known as "Suan" (Assuan) or "market", where the negro traders of
the south met those of Egypt.
The upper Nile thus gradually became a regular avenue of commerce with the
Sudan. The natural boundaries of Egypt, however, always presented sufficiently
effective barriers to would-be invaders, to enable the natives slowly to
assimilate the new comers, without being displaced.
It will be evident that the remarkable shape of the country must powerfully
influence its political development. Except in the Delta it was but a narrow
line, some seven hundred and fifty miles long. Straggling its slender length
along the river, and sprawling out into the Delta, it totally lacked the
compactness necessary to stable political organization. A given locality has
neighbors on only two sides, north and south, and these their shortest
boundaries; local feeling was strong, local differences were persistent, and a
man of the Delta could hardly understand the speech of a man of the first
cataract region. It was only the ease of communication afforded by the river
which in any degree neutralized the effect of the country's remarkable length.
The wealth of commerce which the river served to carry, it was equally
instrumental in producing. While the climate of the country is not rainless,
yet the rare showers of the south, often separated by intervals of years, and
even the more frequent rains of the Delta, are totally insufficient to maintain
the processes of agriculture. The marvelous productivity of the Egyptian soil
is due to the annual inundation of the river, which is caused by the melting of
the snows, and by the spring rains at the sources of the Blue Nile. Freighted
with the rich loam of the Abyssinian highlands, the rushing waters of the
spring freshet hurry down the Nubian valley, and a slight rise is discernible
at the first cataract in the early part of June. The flood swells rapidly and
steadily, and although the increase is usually interrupted for nearly a month
from the end of September on, it is usually resumed again, and the maximum
level continues until the end of October or into November.
The waters in the region of the first cataract are then nearly fifty feet
higher than at low water; while at Cairo the rise is about half that at the
cataract. A vast and elaborate system of irrigation canals and reservoirs first
receives the flood, which is then allowed to escape into the fields as needed.
Here it rests long enough to deposit its burden of rich, black earth from the
upper reaches of the Blue Nile. At such times the appearance of the country is
picturesque in the extreme, the glistening surface of the waters being dotted
here and there by the vivid green of the waving palm groves, which mark the
villages, now accessible only along the dykes belonging to the irrigation
system.
Thus year by year, the soil which would otherwise become impoverished in
the elements necessary to the production of such prodigious harvests, is
invariably replenished with fresh resources. As the river sinks below the level
of the fields again, it is necessary to raise the water from the canals by
artificial means, in order to carry on the constant irrigation of the growing
crops in the outlying fields, which are too high to be longer refreshed by
absorption from the river. Thus a genial and generous, but exacting soil,
demanded for its cultivation the development of a high degree of skill in the
manipulation of the life-giving waters, and at a very early day the men of the
Nile valley had attained a surprising command of the complicated problems
involved in the proper utilization of the river.
If Egypt became the mother of the mechanical arts, the river will have been
one of the chief natural forces to which this fact was due. With such natural
assets as these, an ever replenished soil, and almost unfailing waters for its
refreshment, the wealth of Egypt could not but be chiefly agricultural, a fact
to which we shall often recur. Such opulent fertility of course supported a
large population—in Roman times some seven million souls—while in our own day
(early XXth Century) it maintains over nine million,
a density of population far surpassing that to be found anywhere in Europe. The
other natural resources of the valley we shall be better able to trace as we
follow their exploitation in the course of the historical development.
In climate Egypt is a veritable paradise, drawing to its shores at the
present day an ever increasing number of winter guests. The air of Egypt is
essentially that of the deserts within which it lies, and such is its purity
and dryness, that even an excessive degree of heat occasions but slight
discomfort, owing to the fact that the moisture of the body is dried up almost
as fast as it is exhaled. The mean temperature of the Delta in winter is 56°
Fahrenheit, and in the valley above it is ten degrees higher. In summer the
mean in the Delta is 83°; and although the summer temperature in the valley is
sometimes as high as 122°, the air is far from the oppressiveness accompanying
the same degree of heat in other lands.
The nights even in summer are always cool, and the vast expanses of
vegetation appreciably reduce the temperature. In winter just before dawn the
extreme cold is surprising, as contrasted with the genial warmth of midday at
the same season. To the absence of rain we have already adverted. The rare
showers of upper Egypt occur only when cyclonic disturbances in the southern
Mediterranean or northern Sahara force undischarged clouds into the Nile valley
from the west; from the east they cannot reach the valley, owing to the high
mountain ridge along the Red Sea, which forces them upward and discharges them.
The lower Delta, however, falls within the zone of the northern rainy season.
In spite of the wide extent of marshy ground, left stagnating by the inundation,
the dry airs of the desert, blowing constantly across the valley, quickly dry
the soil, and there is never any malarial infection in Upper Egypt. Even in the
vast morass of the Delta, malaria is practically unknown. Thus, lying just
outside of the tropics, Egypt enjoyed a mild climate of unsurpassed salubrity, devoid of the harshness of a northern winter,
but at the same time sufficiently cool to escape those enervating influences
inherent in tropical conditions.
The prospect of this contracted valley spread out before the Nile dweller,
was in antiquity, as it is today, somewhat monotonous. The level Nile bottoms,
the gift of the river, clad in rich green, shut in on either hand by the yellow
cliffs, are unrelieved by any elevations or by any forests, save the occasional
groves of graceful palms, which fringe the river banks or shade the villages of sombre mud huts, with now and then a sycamore, a
tamarisk or an acacia. A network of irrigation canals traverses the country in
every direction like a vast arterial system.
The sands of the desolate wastes which lie behind the canon walls, drift in
athwart the cliffs, and often invade the green fields so that one may stand
with one foot in the verdure of the valley, and the other in the desert sand.
Thus sharply defined was the Egyptian's world: a deep and narrow valley of
unparalleled fertility, winding between lifeless deserts, furnishing a
remarkable environment, not to be found elsewhere in all the world.
Such surroundings reacted powerfully upon the mind and thought of the
Egyptian, conditioning and determining his idea of the world and his notion of
the mysterious powers which ruled it. The river, the dominant feature of his
valley, determined his notion of direction: his words for north and south were
"down-stream" and "up-stream"; and when he broke through
the barriers which separated him from Asia, and reached the Euphrates, he
called it'' that inverted water which goes down stream in going up stream"
(southward). For him the world consisted of the "Black Land" and the
"Red Land," the black soil of the Nile valley and the reddish surface
of the desert; or again of the ''plain'' and the "highlands," meaning
the level Nile "bottoms" and the high desert plateau. ''Highlander''
was synonymous with foreigner, to "go up" was to leave the valley,
while to ''descend'' was the customary term for returning home from abroad. The
illimitable solitudes of the desert, which thrust itself thus insistently upon
his vision and his whole economy of life, and formed his horizon toward both
suns, tinctured with sombreness his views of the
great gods who ruled such a world.
Such was in brief the scene in which developed the people of the Nile,
whose culture dominated the basin of the eastern Mediterranean in the age when
Europe was emerging into the secondary stages of civilization, and coming into
intimate contact with the culture of the early east. Nowhere on earth have the
witnesses of a great, but now extinct civilization, been so plentifully
preserved as along the banks of the Nile. Even in the Delta, where the storms
of war beat more fiercely than in the valley above, and where the slow
accumulations from the yearly flood have gradually entombed them, the splendid
cities of the Pharaohs have left great stretches, cumbered with enormous blocks
of granite, limestone and sandstone, shattered obelisks, and massive pylon bases,
to proclaim the wealth and power of forgotten ages; while an ever growing
multitude of modern visitors are drawn to the upper valley by the colossal
ruins that greet the wondering traveler almost at every bend in the stream.
Nowhere else in the ancient world were such massive stone buildings
erected, and nowhere else has a dry atmosphere, coupled with an almost complete
absence of rain, permitted the survival of such a wealth of the best and
highest in the life of an ancient people, in so far as that life found
expression in material form. In the plenitude of its splendor, much of it thus
survived into the classic age of European civilization, and hence it was, that
as Egypt was gradually overpowered and absorbed by the western world, the
currents of life from west and east commingled here, as they have never done
elsewhere. Both in the Nile valley and beyond it, the west thus felt the full
impact of Egyptian civilization for many centuries, and gained from it all that
its manifold culture had to contribute. The career which made Egypt so rich a
heritage of alien peoples, and a legacy so valuable to all later ages, we shall
endeavor to trace in the ensuing chapters.
|
by
JAMES HENRY BREASTED--HISTORY OF EGYPT The CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE OF KINGS.
Introduction of calendar .........................................4241 BC First and Second Dynasties .............................3050-2980 BC Third Dynasty .......................................................2980-2900 BC Fourth Dynasty ....................................................2900-2750 BC Total 55 Fifth Dynasty ..........................................................2750-2625 BC Total 122 (+ 3x) years. Minimum 125 years. Sixth Dynasty..........................................................2625-2475 BC Total 116 (+ 3x) years. Known length 150 years. Seventh and Eighth Dynasties ........................... 2475-2445 BC known total 30 years. Ninth and Tenth Dynasties ..................................2445-2160 B. C. Eleventh Dynasty. Total 106 (+x) " Known total 160 years. Twelfth Dynasty ....................................................2000-1788 BC Total 228 years. Thirteenth to Seventeenth Dynasties ........................1788-1580 BC Including the Hyksos, 208 years. Eighteenth Dynasty ...............................................1580-1350 BC.
Thutmose III ...............54 years, May 3, 1501, to Mar. 17, 1447 BC (Including Thutmose II and Hatshepsut)
Total 227 (+ 4) Minimum, 230 years. Nineteenth Dynasty..................................................... 1350-1205 BC Total 142(4+6x) Minimum 145 years. Interim. Twentieth Dynasty ..............................................1200-1090 BC Total 104(+5x) Minimum 110 years. Twenty-first Dynasty.............................................1090-945 BC Total 134(4+6x) " Minimum 145 years. Twenty-second Dynasty............................................945-745 BC Total 230(4+x) Twenty Third Dynasty ..................................................745-718 BC Total 37(+3x) Twenty Fourth Dynasty ...............................................718-712 BC Minimum 6 years. Twenty Fifth Dynasty .................................................. 712-663 BC Total 50 years. Twenty Sixth Dynasty ...................................................663-525 BC Total 138 Conquest by the Persians (Twenty Seventh Dynasty), 525 BC Alexander the Great Seized Egypt 332 BC. Egypt Became a Roman Province 30 BC.
|
By