CHAPTER
VI
EGYPT
TO THE COMING OF ALEXANDER
I.
THE
ACHAEMENID RULE
THE
re-establishment of Persian authority in Egypt, probably meant a more intensive
control of the country; and for the first time we hear of Persian officials
even in subordinate positions, such as the desert-guard Atyuhi son of Artames,
who inscribed his name on the rocks of the Wadi Hamamat, the much used caravan
route from Koptos to Kuseir on the Red Sea. Military commanders were always
Persians, and so apparently were the chief judges. There is little doubt that a
host of Persian tax-gatherers, many of them probably Egyptians, but many also
Syrians, Babylonians, and Persians, now descended upon the country, and
extorted as much from it as they could to fill the coffers of the Great King at
Susa. The obstinacy with which the Persians continued to exert their authority
over Egypt whenever they could down to the fall of the Achaemenian empire was
no doubt due to its value as a milch-cow. The country had become enormously
rich, as wealth went then, under the Saites, and continued to be so under the
Persians, in spite of repeated invasions, massacres and oppression. The large
number of demotic contracts and other (including Aramaic) documents of the
reign of Darius show what a volume of internal trade and other business then
existed, but they cease for the time after the revolt of Khababesha and the
imposition of the hard yoke of Xerxes. In the second half of the fifth century
Aramaic contracts rather than demotic are found, often bearing Jewish, Syrian
or even Babylonian names, which show that a crowd of small oriental traders had
followed the Persians and their tax-gatherers into Egypt. The Persians were
always friendly to the Jews, as they had been since the days of Cyrus. No doubt
the Jewish trade when not mere bazaarchaffering was chiefly connected with the
East. As a consequence of the long war with Athens and her allies, trade with
Greece must almost have ceased, and Naucratis been hard hit. But we cannot
doubt the great extent of the foreign trade by land and sea with Arabia, Syria,
Phoenicia, Ionia, and Greece, chiefly conducted by foreign caravaneers and
shipmen, of which we have indications, as in the time of Amasis. The bilingual
Stele of Hor, inscribed in Egyptian and Aramaic, in the Berlin Museum, dated in
Xerxes’ fourth year, is a relic of some Syro-Egyptian merchant, probably: and
the Minaean stele already mentioned testifies to trade with southern Arabia. By
this time the Arab tribe of the Nabataeans, who had occupied Edom after the
Babylonish captivity of the Jews a century before had enabled the Edomites to
move westward into the Negeb of Judaea, were established at Petra, where they
controlled the two crossing trade-routes from the Gulf of Akaba to Syria and
from Egypt to Babylonia.
Xerxes made
no attempt to popularize himself with his Egyptian subjects as his father did;
no monuments bear his name, and his Egyptian inscription as ‘Khshayarsha,
Pharaoh the Great’ (sic) on the well-known trilingually inscribed alabaster
vases found at Halicarnassus and elsewhere, hardly looks as if it had been devised
by an Egyptian at all. Later on the priests of Buto refer to him plainly as
‘that scoundrel Xerxes’.
No Egyptian
fought at the Eurymedon (467 or 466 BC), when Cimon attacked the Persians
nearer home, and freed temporarily the last Greek cities that had been
tributary to the Great King, who now died (465) at the hands of Artabanus, and
was eventually succeeded by his son Artakhshastra or Artaxerxes. The death of
Xerxes was the signal for another revolt in the Delta, under a certain
Ienharou, the Inaros of the Greeks, son of Psammetichus, ‘king of the Libyans’,
no doubt a scion of the Saite royal house. The Persian tax-gatherers and
receivers were expelled, and Achaemenes the viceroy with them; while the
remnant of his troops was driven into Memphis. As always, the commanding
strategic position of Memphis, with its vice-like grip on the throat of Egypt,
cutting off the Delta, then as now the most populous part of Egypt, from the
Upper Country, prevented the South from giving any aid to Inaros. He seemed unable
to make any further headway, and the Persians were probably gathering strength,
Achaemenes having returned with an army, when a deus ex machina appeared
in the shape of the Athenian generals who were now with two hundred galleys
carrying on Cimon’s war off the coast of Cyprus. This fleet was able and ready
to aid any enemy of the Persians and at the same time restore the trade of
Athens and her confederates with Egypt, which had probably suffered much from
Persian hostility. The appearance on the Nile of the triremes and the hoplites
of their inveterate little enemy Athens can hardly have been of good cheer to
the Persian leaders. Achaemenes probably fought badly, and he was killed and
his army defeated by the Egyptians at Papremis, where Herodotus, years later,
saw the skulls and bones of the combatants still covering the ground. The
remnant fled to Memphis, where they surrendered to the Athenian fleet, which
had now appeared on the scene. The body of Achaemenes was sent to Artaxerxes as
an intimation of his defeat, but troubles at home prevented the King from
moving at once.
‘The
Athenians remained in Egypt,’ says Thucydides, ‘and they experienced varied
fortunes of war’. At first they were masters of the country. So the King
(Artaxerxes) sent a Persian named Megabazus to Sparta with money, in order that
he might persuade the Peloponnesians to invade Attica and so draw the Athenians
away from Egypt. But when he had no success in his mission, and the money was
being spent in vain, Megabazus was recalled to Asia with what was left of it,
and the King sent Megabyxus son of Zopyrus with a great army to Egypt. When he
arrived he defeated the Egyptians and their allies, and expelled the Greeks
from Memphis, finally shutting them up in the island of Prosopis. There he
besieged them for a year and six months, until in the end, having drained the
canal and diverted its waters elsewhere, their ships were left high and dry,
most of the island was joined to the surrounding land, and crossing with his
foot-soldiers he captured it. Thus then the cause of the Greeks in Egypt was
lost, after six years of war. A few of them, out of so many, managed to escape
through Libya to Cyrene, but the majority perished. Egypt again passed into the
possession of the King, with the exception of Amyrtaeus, the king in the fens,
whom the Persians could not catch on account of the great extent of the fens:
also the fenmen are the most warlike of the Egyptians. Inaros the king of the
Libyans, who had caused all this trouble in Egypt, was betrayed and captured,
and impaled. Fifty triremes, which had been sent by the Athenians and their
allies to relieve the forces already in Egypt, sailed into the Mendesian mouth
of the Nile in ignorance of what had happened. But they were attacked both by land
and sea, and the greater part destroyed by the Phoenician fleet, a few ships
only escaping. Thus ended the great Egyptian expedition of the Athenians and
their allies (455—4 BC).
Inaros is
called a Libyan by Thucydides on account of the Libyan origin of his family and
the position of his fief; he was no doubt a Saite. According to Herodotus
Thannyras his son was permitted by Artaxerxes to succeed to his father’s
princedom, as also was Pausiris, son of Amyrtaeus, to that of his father.
Inaros and Amyrtaeus were apparently forgotten by Manetho, in spite of the
vogue of Inaros in legend as a popular hero, and not included in his dynastic
list; possibly Amyrtaeus was confused by him or his copyists with the other
king of the same name a little later. In 449 Amyrtaeus was still king ‘in the
fens’ and sent to Cimon, now besieging Citium in Cyprus, for help. The sixty
ships he sent returned after Cimon’s death, and Amyrtaeus was probably killed
by the Persians or died soon after. There are no monuments of either king; they
had no time for any.
Artaxerxes I
never visited Egypt himself and erected no monuments there. For us his reign
there is (or rather those of his satraps are) interesting only as the period of
the visit of Herodotus, which is to be dated most probably at some time between
the years 448, when peace was made with Persia, and 445, when he was at Athens
before his visit to Thurii, where he took part in the colonization in 443.
Before 448 a man of such strong Athenian sympathies as Herodotus would hardly
be able to visit a part of the Persian Empire. Egypt was then at profound
peace, but it was a peace of exhaustion and sullen resignation. The death of
Cimon, followed by the fruitless victory off the Cyprian Salamis, the
reconciliation of the revolted satrap of Syria, Megabyxus, with his master, and
the so-called Peace of Callias (448) signified the end of Athenian efforts
against Persia and in aid of Egypt: the Persian power now had a respite, which
was confirmed by the Peloponnesian War.
The Egyptians
simply waited. The Persian kings had not fulfilled the promise of Darius or
even of Cambyses: they came not to Egypt, which knew nothing of her self-styled
pharaohs, and would not be reconciled to rulers far away in Asia. It was not
till the Ptolemies ruled in and from Egypt as Egyptian kings that the nation
was more or less reconciled to a foreign dynasty. But Herodotus did not know
what was at the back of the Egyptian mind; he saw only the surface prosperity
of the country, which however was certainly less than it had been in the days
of Amasis, to which he refers. It is in some ways a pity that he was not there
at a more interesting period, but he gives an extraordinarily vivid description
of the land and people as it was in the middle of the fifth century. Everything
was going on as it always had; the festivals and services of the gods were
celebrated openly and without fear of interruption (the Persians never
interfered with the religion of their subjects), commerce and manufactures
flourished in spite of heavy imposts often unjustly enforced or increased. The
land stood open to foreign travellers, who could inspect the temples and all
the ‘sights’ of the country without difficulty or apparently the risk of
fanatical objections. ‘But for the bleaching bones of the fallen in the fight
that had taken place, nothing in Egypt seems to have recalled the struggles of
a few years before.’ The recuperative power of the Egyptians after disaster has
always been extraordinary. It has been pointed out that the struggles of
Persian and Egyptian were practically confined to the Delta and the
neighbourhood of Memphis, so that naturally no sign of devastation would be
visible to the traveller in Upper Egypt. But then as now the Delta was the
really important portion of Egypt, and was visited in detail by Herodotus; had
many signs of ruin and depopulation been visible there he would assuredly have
mentioned them.
His
description of the religious observances and the life of the people generally
has always been of fascinating interest from his own day (when the Greeks, as
at a much later period Heliodorus in his Aethiopica says, were always
eager to hear queer tales about Egypt) to ours. It is the more interesting
because but for the alteration of religion it might almost have been written
today. Egypt was much the same then as she had been two thousand years before
and as she is now. His vivid picture of the festival at Bubastis is repeated
now in little by the describer of any great molid or festival of a
Moslem saint. The tourist and his dragoman existed then as they do now:
Herodotus himself was a tourist and was often the victim of his ignorant and
pretentious dragoman, the type that still flourishes today. But at the same
time Herodotus picked up a good deal of perfectly good information, and there
is no reason to doubt that he actually conversed with and derived historical
knowledge from priests. They may not have been and probably were not of the
highest rank in the hierarchy, but Herodotus after all was an educated Greek
gentleman of means and leisure, and would not forgather with priests of any but
the educated type, of historical and antiquarian tastes, though he may not have
met many. Hence his history does not depend exclusively on Greek information
and imagination, and the stories of ignorant dragomans. He derived it largely
from the Egyptians themselves and the testimony of his own eyes. It certainly
is by no means so useless as it has been made out to be. It is true that he makes
the Saites immediately succeed the pyramidbuilders, but we can see that for
this (which was possibly his own idea) he had a reason, as to an outside
observer the Saite type of art would seem remarkably like that of the
pyramidtime. We have no notion who his blind king ‘Anysis’ was, except that
his name undoubtedly represents the Libyan princes of Ma at Heracleopolis
(Hanes), but we see that his history of the Saites is quite good history, and
his tales of Rhampsinitus (Ramses III) are interesting examples of folk-tales
about kings who lived in the popular memory. His inaccuracies, major or minor,
do not matter now that we have the actual records to study, and are more than
atoned for by the interest of the general narrative; so that in spite of detraction,
which we now see to be unnecessary, Herodotus’s description of Egypt will
always remain one of the greatest of our classics.
The Thirty
Years Peace, which was concluded between Athens and Sparta in 445, lasted less
than half its intended duration, being followed by the outbreak of the
Peloponnesian War in 431. But both states were at peace with Persia, and it
mattered little to the Egyptians whether Athens or Sparta were at peace or war
with each other if they were both at peace with the Great King. In 445—4 a
great gift of corn from Egypt reached the Piraeus, sent, it was said, by a
‘king’ named Psammetichus, in response to a request from Athens. Peace with
both Persia and Sparta enabled the Athenians to import corn from Egypt without
difficulty. The ‘king’ was some Saite dynast (possibly Thannyras or his
successor, who may well have been called Psammetichus).
In the midst
of the Peloponnesian War Artaxerxes of the Long Hand died (424), and its
continuance kept Egypt impotently still till the end of the century, throughout
the undistinguished reigns of his successors, who left no record in Egypt with
the exception of Darius Nothus (and he but a slight one). From his reign (407 BC)
dates the important Aramaic papyrus found at Aswan (Syene) which contains the
complaint of the priests of the local Jewish colony at Yeb (Elephantine) to
Begvahi or Bagohi (Bagoas) the Persian governor of Judah, and the sons of
Sanballat, against Waidrang (or perhaps better Vidarnag ? Hydarnes) the
Persian general at Syene, for having allowed the Egyptian priests of Khnum to
destroy and pillage the temple of Yahu and his contemplar goddesses, Ashima and
Anath, at Yeb. This Jewish colony is first mentioned under Darius I in 494 BC.
It was founded as a military colony under the XXVIth Dynasty, when as we have
seen Jewish mercenaries were often hired and stationed in Egypt. Later it
became a regular settlement, the men of which were organized in degels or detachments, each under a Persian commander. Its members owned lands and
held slaves. It was remarkable for its possession of a fully-equipped temple
for sacrifice instead of the orthodox synagogue, and for its polytheism.
The fall of
Athens after Aegospotami and the destruction of her Long Walls by the
Peloponnesians ‘to the sound of flutes’ (for Sparta’s allies indeed thought
‘that that day was to be the beginning of freedom for Hellas’) in 404 gave to
Sparta the hegemony of Greece. And it was not long before the new leader of the
Hellenes found herself at loggerheads with the old enemy Persia, and the chance
of Egypt, which had revolted in 404 after the death of Darius Nothus and had
preserved a precarious independence during those years owing to the quarrel of
Artaxerxes and Cyrus, came again. For after the defeat of Cyrus at Cunaxa
Persia and Sparta made war upon each other. But when it appeared that the
thalassocracy of Sparta had only been destroyed to rehabilitate that of Athens,
the old enemy of Persia, there was reaction. Conon the Athenian admiral of the
Great King was disgraced, and Persia moved steadily towards the inevitable
reconciliation with Sparta which would set free the King’s fleets and armies
to re-assert his authority in Egypt.
II.
THE
LAST NATIVE MONARCHY
The leader of
the revolt in 404, Amyrtaeus II (Amonirdisu), probably a grandson of the older
Amyrtaeus, had made himself king. He is recorded by Manetho as having reigned
six years (XXVIIIth Dynasty). The Demotic Chronicle commemorates him as ‘the
first after the Medes.’ His royalty was but precarious till Sparta went to war,
and only survived on account of the preoccupation of Artaxerxes with the
treason of his brother Cyrus. After Cunaxa and shortly before his assassination
the Greek general of the Ten Thousand, Clearchus, offered the satrap
Tissaphernes the services of his men to put down the Egyptian revolt.
Next year, in
400, the Egyptian Tamos, whom Cyrus had made ruler of Ionia, fled to Egypt
before the coming of Tissaphernes, and was there murdered with his family by
another ‘king Psammetichus,’ who may be another local Saite, but was more
probably Amyrtaeus, who no doubt hoped in this way to ingratiate himself with
the victorious Artaxerxes. But his action was not in accordance with the
feeling of the time, which, evidently, was strongly anti-Persian. In 398
probably, when Sparta was at full war with Persia, and the coast was clear, an
Egyptian leader of soldiery, Naifaurud, gave the signal for a revolt that
immediately was successful. He was apparently the prince of Bindid (or Mendes,
as the Greeks called it), in the Delta. The Greeks called him Nepherites
(Manetho) or Nephereus (Diodorus). Amyrtaeus was no doubt killed. No monuments
of him exist and we have only one contemporary reference to his reign, in one
of the papyri from Elephantine. Nepherites was crowned king, and was the first
of Manetho’s XXIXth Dynasty.
In 396 a
great armament of 300 ships was assembled in the ports of Phoenicia, in all
probability in preparation for an attempt to recover Egypt for the Great King,
though it was to be expected that Conon the Athenian admiral and his friend
Evagoras the Cypriote king would endeavour to divert the armada to the Aegean
in order to challenge the new thalassocracy of Sparta. The Spartans at any rate
thought this probable themselves. In this year they opened negotiations with
Nepherites for an alliance with Egypt, whose complete independence of Persia
was now generally realized. Nepherites eagerly seized the chance of securing
Greek succours in case of Persian attack, and on his part is said to have
offered Sparta wood for building 100 triremes and 500,000 bushels of corn. The
latter is a possible offer, but where in Egypt he was to find wood good enough
to build a single trireme with, much less a hundred, is not apparent. It is to
be noted however that he could offer no actual ships and would not offer any
men. When the corn-ships reached Rhodes they were captured by Conon, and Sparta
never got them.
About four
years later Nepherites was succeeded by Muthes, who is unknown to the
monuments, and he by Psammouthis or Pse(re)mut, who is said to have been an
impious person, but nevertheless has left inscriptions in a temple or two, in
spite of his reign having lasted, like that of his predecessor, hardly more
than a year. Psammouthis was followed on the throne by his enemy the foreign
(?) prince Hakori, whom the Greeks called Achoris (390). According to a
tradition in the strange Ptolemaic jumble of prophecies, which are found in the
so-called ‘Demotic Chronicle’ at Paris, Hakori was not really the rightful
heir, any more than Psammouthis whom he probably killed or Muthes whom we know
nothing about, since Naifaurud had left a young son who afterwards reigned as
Nakhtenebef. But Hakori justified his reign by his acts; ‘he was allowed to
fulfil the time of his rule as prince, because he had been generous to the
temples’.
Evagoras, who
since the battle of Cnidus (where he fought in person) and the partial
rehabilitation of his Athenian friends, had become suspect at Susa as too
philhellenic in sympathy and harbouring designs against Persia, had apparently
given no active help to his suzerain. Instead, he had made himself master of
the other Greek and Phoenician towns in Cyprus. Now (in 389), emboldened by the
Persian inaction, he determined to revolt against Artaxerxes, and so forestall
the enmity of the King, who was bent on the ruin of so powerful a vassal.
Hakori naturally hastened to support him. This alliance of Evagoras with Egypt
determined the Persians to listen to the peace overtures of Sparta, who was
weary of the unsuccessful campaign in Asia, and had opened negotiations through
her admiral Antalcidas and the satrap Tiribazus. These two were so certain that
the Great King also was disposed towards peace that in 388 they joined their
fleets against the fleets of Athens, which was now as suspect to Persia as
Conon and Evagoras and had concluded an alliance with Persia’s Egyptian enemy,
Hakori. Athens sent Chabrias with reinforcements to Cyprus, but for a moment
Sparta was again supreme at sea, owing only to Persian help to which she did
not desire to be indebted. The Peace of Antalcidas followed (386), in which all
the warring states of Greece made peace with one another and with Persia, and
Sparta cynically abandoned to the barbarian the mainland cities of Ionia which
Athens had rescued for Hellenism. Evagoras, who had no formal alliance with but
only the sympathy of Athens, was tacitly abandoned to the wrath of Artaxerxes.
Egypt, which nine years before had been sought as an ally by Sparta and two
years before had alliance with Athens, was not mentioned.
Artaxerxes
was now free to strike at either Evagoras or Hakori or both, if he could. He
chose first the land-attack on Egypt, which was delivered by the satraps
Pharnabazus, Tithraustes, and Abrocomas between 385 and 383, but apparently
without energy and decision, and certainly without success. The Athenian
publicist Isocrates contemptuously refers to this war in his Panegyricus (140) as showing how little the barbarians could now do without Greek aid.
Hakori had probably very few Greeks with him, and none of importance, or we
should have heard more of this war: the Persians none. Other than that of Greek
soldiers of fortune, the only help that the Cypriote and the Egyptian could
invoke was one another’s: Athens could only timidly and occasionally do
something to help her old friend and admirer, Evagoras, who now fought in a way
to compel admiration not only from Athens but from all Greece. With unspecified
help from Hakori he carried war into the enemy’s camp, took Tyre and held
Phoenician towns and raised revolt in Cilicia. The Athenians twice sent a fleet
under the admiral Chabrias to the assistance of the allies. Hecatomnus the
prince of Caria sent his subsidies. Hakori concluded a treaty with the Pisidian
cities, probably arranging the hire of mercenaries. For ten years Evagoras
defied the Persians, thus defending Egypt as well as himself, but was at last
brought to bay, defeated at sea, and blockaded in his own island. The Persian
generals were constrained to conclude peace (380) on condition that no further
harm should be done to Evagoras, who was to pay tribute henceforth to
Artaxerxes not as a slave to his master, but as one king might to another. Not
long afterwards he fell a victim, with his son, Pnytagoras, to a conspiracy;
and was succeeded by another son, Nicocles, who was as philhellenic as his
father.
The whole
episode of Evagoras I is a most interesting one, though it can only interest us
here incidentally. The Greek element in Cyprus was always the predominant
element in the island, as it is now. The Phoenician settlements were few in
number, but made up for their numerical weakness by their importance: Citium
was always an important place. But Assyrian and Babylonian control had
never resulted in an increase of the Semitic element. The
Cypriote Greeks, though cut off from their fellow-countrymen by a long
sea-road, and exposed to strong Semitic and Anatolian influences
from the mainland as well as the leaven of the indigenous
peasant population (of Anatolian affinities), continued Greeks, albeit
old-fashioned Greeks: in classical days their kings still went to war in
chariots, which in Greece had been relegated to the games centuries before. The
thirty-five years of Egyptian domination (c. 560—25 BC) under Amasis had
introduced a strong Egyptian element in art, and possibly had some effect on
the Cyprian culture. Then came the Persian domination and the rescue of the Cyprian
Andromeda from the barbarian dragon by that gallant Perseus, Cimon, only to be
followed by her abandonment to her fate by the Peace of Callias. Then followed
after half-a-century the stirring episode of Evagoras. The prince of Salamis
regarded himself as a Teucrid, and so of Attic blood; he was as civilized a
Hellene as any other, certainly more civilized than a Macedonian prince, for
instance; he aspired to make Cyprus a free Hellenic state. Unsupported by
Hellas, and with none but Athenian sympathy and none but Egyptian help, he went
down in the struggle against Persian numbers, but with honour. He had helped
Hakori by staving off renewed Persian attack for at least another ten years.
At this
juncture Hakori died (378) and was succeeded by Nepherites II, who reigned only
four months and left no monuments. The throne was now seized by the prince of
Thebnute (Sebennytos), Nakhtenbof or Nakhtenebef (Nektanebos or Nectanebo I),
who was said to have been a son of Nepherites I, the Mendesian, passed over in
favour of Hakori fifteen years before, but as a matter of fact was the son of a
certain general named Zedhor (Tachos). His predecessor Nepherites II was slain,
and his son after him, according to tradition, no doubt by Nakhtenebef. The new
king and his two successors, Zedhor (Tachos) and Nakhthorehbe (Nectanebo II),
formed the XXXth Dynasty, the last dynasty of native Egyptian kings to rule the
whole land.
Artaxerxes
was not able to attack Egypt at once on account of disaffection in the fleet.
First revolted the admiral at Citium, Glos, son of that Egyptian Tamos who had
escaped from Ionia to Egypt twenty years before, and therefore an Egyptian or
half-Egyptian himself. Then, after he was suppressed and fled to Egypt, his
successor, also, oddly enough, an Egyptian, named Tachos (Zedhor) himself
revolted. Probably this was the result of Egyptian machinations. When the
king’s armament was at last got together and had been placed under the command
of the now elderly satrap Pharnabazus, a new complication arose. Nakhtenebef
invited to his aid the Athenian admiral Chabrias with his fleet (377), and
Chabrias, nothing loth, went to his assistance, without leave from the Athenian
people. Pharnabazus immediately protested loudly at Athens in the name of the
Great King, asking whether the Athenians deemed it prudent to provoke the
resentment of Persia. The alarmed demos at once recalled Chabrias and
furthermore, at the request of Pharnabazus, lent him the services of the famous
officer Iphicrates, who in 390 had created such a sensation in Greece by his
destruction by means of peltasts (light-armed troops whose use he developed and
advocated) of a whole Spartan mora or battalion of hoplites outside the walls
of Corinth.
The Athenian
general accordingly repaired to Asia, and joined the army of Pharnabazus, which
now advanced through Palestine and in 374 delivered its attack. It is said to
have comprised 200,000 Persians and other barbarians, 12,000 (or 20,000) Greeks
under Iphicrates, 300 warships: all figures which cannot be checked and may be
quite erroneous. The Mendesian mouth of the Nile was forced by the fleet on
board which were Iphicrates and many of his men, and the way lay open southward
to Memphis. Iphicrates wished naturally to press on and finish the campaign at
a blow, but Pharnabazus, deeply distrustful of the Greeks, and suspecting them
of a design to seize Egypt themselves in the manner of the Athenians eighty
years before, refused to allow him to do anything until the arrival of the gros of the Persian army overland from Asia, when both forces would advance
simultaneously on Memphis. Accordingly they waited, but the opportunity was
lost, Memphis was fortified and garrisoned, and then towards summer the
inundation covered the Delta with a sheet of water, and the invaders had
hurriedly to decamp. Iphicrates, throwing up his command, departed secretly to
Athens, and Pharnabazus had to make the best of his way to Asia and explain
matters to his master as best he might.
Egypt was
undisturbed during the rest of the reign of Nakhtenebef, which lasted eighteen
years, till 361. A record of his relations with Greece exists in the Stele of
Naucratis, erected in his first year, which records the gift to Neith of Sais
of a tithe of all imports from Greece and of all products of Naucratis. The
king took the opportunity, rare since the days of the Saites, of leaving some
mark of his reign on the temples. In his sixteenth year, in consequence of a
dream, he commanded the priest Petisi to restore the temple of Sebennytos. The
deity Sopd, guardian of the eastern marches, was specially propitiated in order
to secure his aid against the Persian danger, and his shrine at Saft el-hennah
in the Wadi Tumilat, excavated by Naville in 1884, is a remarkable example of
the use of great masses of stone that is characteristic of the
temple-architecture of this period, and also well exhibits their meticulous
decoration, equally characteristic of the age. The cutting of the hieroglyphs
and other figures is carried out in a precise and delicate style like the Saite
yet differing from it sensibly in details. He built not only in the Delta, but
also at Abydos, Thebes and at Philae, where a graceful little temple
commemorates his reign. The work of his architects is not untasteful. The green
breccia sarcophagus of the king is at Cairo. His successor was his son
Ze(d)ho(r), or Tachos as the Greeks called him, the Teos of Manetho: the name,
meaning ‘Saith Horus,’ the symbol representing the human face being now used
for the name of Horus (usually represented by the symbol of the falcon), was
pronounced something like ‘Zaho’ or rather ‘Tjaho,’ and was a very common name
at this time.
The accession
of the new king was marked by a rude termination to the peace of the past
twelve years. As before, the course of events was dependent on the
kaleidoscopic changes of politics in Greece. The previous peaceful years had
been contemporaneous with the dramatic contest between Sparta and Boeotian
Thebes, immortalized by the names of Pelopidas and Epaminondas, which had ended
the previous year in the battle of Mantinea and the death of Epaminondas.
‘After the battle,’ says Xenophon, ‘there was even more uncertainty and
confusion in Greece than there had been before.’ The attempt of Pelopidas to
bring the Greeks to a general peace and agreement under the aegis of the Great
King as universal mediator failed, and the Greek delegates came back from Susa
profoundly disillusioned as to the wealth of Susa and the King: ‘the famous
golden plane-tree would not give enough shade for a lizard.’ And now all Asia
broke into revolt under various dynasts and satraps; Mausolus of Caria, whose
person we know from his tomb-statue in the British Museum, Datames, Orontes of
Mysia, Autophradates of Lydia, Ariobarzanes of the Hellespontine region, and
others. The king’s only weapon against them seems to be assassination. And then
Tachos must needs join in the dance. He prepared an army to invade Syria, and
as the modern Greeks get a French officer to reorganize their army and a
British seaman to put their navy in order, so the Egyptian hired a Spartan to
look after his army and an Athenian to take charge of his navy. They were
respectively the old king Agesilaus and the admiral Chabrias, who, we are told,
was always a lover of Egypt. Agesilaus came with the full consent of the
Spartans, who were angered with Persia because Artaxerxes had approved at the
conference at Susa of the freeing of Messenia by Epaminondas, and brought with
him 1000 Spartans, a formidable reinforcement for Egypt in spite of its small
numbers. Chabrias came at his own charges, and used his knowledge of Egypt to
advise Tachos to confiscate much of the temple-revenues to pay his troops, an
act which, if it was carried out, was not calculated to enhance the popularity
of the Egyptian king with his subjects. Agesilaus’s appearance and his familiar
camp-manners with his Spartans earned him only contempt from Tachos, but the
Spartan king, though he was over eighty, had lost none of his vigour, and when
after the arrival of the army in Phoenicia he found that he was utterly unable
to agree with Tachos (who also was not loved by the Egyptians, who had revolted
against him at home), he deposed him in favour of his relation the young prince
Nakhthorehbe (359). Tachos fled to Susa. ‘One changes left for right’;
said the oracle of Heracleopolis in the ‘Demotic Chroniclep. ‘ To the right is
Egypt, to the left is Phoenicia. That is to say they exchanged him who went to
Phoenicia, which is left, for him who stayed in Egypt, which is right’; says
the commentary.
The new king
immediately abandoned the Asiatic expedition (a consequence that can hardly
have been expected by Agesilaus) in order to secure his power at home, which he
only did after severe fighting, in which Agesilaus acted, as before, as
chief-of-staff, and guaranteed him victory. The native troops on either side,
Egyptian or Persian, hardly count for anything now: all the real fighting is
done by the Greek mercenaries on both sides, and no sensible king would go to
war without employing the best Greek military specialist he could. Agesilaus,
when peace was restored in Egypt, received great gifts and a fee of 230 talents
to Sparta (which he distributed among his soldiers), and went home, only to die
on the way. Chabrias followed him. These Greek military specialists remind us,
not so much of medieval condottieri, with whom they have been compared,
as of the German and other professional generals of the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries, men like Montecuculi, the von der Schulemberg who
commanded the Venetians at Corfu, Marshal Schomberg, and the famous Maréchal de
Saxe.
Two other
experts had soon to be engaged by Nakhthorehbe to command his forces. In 359
the Persian prince Ochus, now associated with his father as king, had attempted
to follow Nakhthorehbe and Agesilaus into Egypt, but had retired, probably
owing to the death of his father (358), whom he now succeeded as king
Artaxerxes III, Ochus. The confederacy of Anatolian satraps broke up partly
owing to the defection of Egypt, and partly owing to treachery among their
number. His position being assured, Ochus, hearkening to the prayers of the
exiled Tachos, determined to reinstate the Egyptian as his tributary. In the
resulting attack, which was defeated probably about 357 or 356, the Egyptian
defending forces (mostly no doubt Greeks) were ably commanded by the Athenian
Diophantus and the Spartans Lamius and Gastron. We hear no more of Tachos. Like
Nakhtenebef, Nakhthorehbe (Nectanebo II) reigned for some years now in peace,
and also erected monuments like him at Thebes and elsewhere, notably at Edfu
and at Hibis in the oasis of al-Khargah. Of Tachos there is little trace in
Egypt. He does not appear to have been a person of much distinction. Both
Nectanebos, however, come before us as kings of a certain nobility and dignity,
and we hear no ill of them. They were both distinguished patrons of the arts,
and the later Saite renascence that marks the second half of the short sixty years
of independence, and is so important as the prelude and incentive to the fine
efforts of early Ptolemaic art and architecture, must have been due to their
direct patronage as well as to the inspiration which renewed independence and
even power had given to the development of the arts.
Artaxerxes
Ochus was a man of proud and energetic nature, who could not brook the
continual independence of a people which he regarded as subject to his
ancestors and so rightfully subject to him. Persian policy too was obstinate in
endeavouring to regain its hold over a country so wealthy as Egypt. The Greeks
after all could contribute nothing to Susa’s treasury: they had nothing to
export but their philosophy and art and no ware that Persia wished to buy but
their military science. They were really not worth troubling about except on
the point of honour. But the Egyptians meant flesh-pots, corn, and gold to
their ruler. Accordingly prematurely aged Persia must put forward her
half-palsied arm again to try to coerce decrepit Egypt into submission to her.
And this time Ochus, or his advisers, acted with some skill while Nakhthorehbe
did not. For the Persian at last realized that without expert Greek aid his
expedition must fail, while the Egyptian, whether because he would not or could
not pay properly for the best advice, or because he thought himself a general,
did not trouble to secure his professionals as he should have done, and was
betrayed by them.
The immediate
cause of the war was a revolt in Phoenicia and Cyprus led by the king Tennes of
Sidon, to whom Nakhthorehbe in an evil hour promised help (344). He sent him
4000 Greek mercenaries under Mentor the Rhodian, who, when he heard of the
approach of Ochus in person with his army, opened communication with the Persians
in collusion with Tennes. Ochus nevertheless besieged Sidon, whose citizens
knew nothing of the treachery of their king. When the Persians were admitted
into the city by Mentor and Tennes, the Sidonians burnt themselves, their fleet
and their houses in one great pyre. Forty thousand are said to have perished.
Tennes was cynically executed by Ochus, and Mentor with equal cynicism taken
into his service. Cyprus was reduced for him by Idrieus, prince of Caria, the
successor of Mausolus, helped by the Athenian admiral Phocion and the
Salaminian king Evagoras II, who had been expelled from Cyprus and now
returned.
In 343,
strengthened by Mentor and his men, well acquainted with the eastern border of
Egypt, and by Lacrates the Theban and Nicostratus the Argive, whom Ochus had
specially engaged with their men from Thebes and Argos on payment of a subsidy
to the two states, and 6000 Ionians besides, the Persian king moved southwards
on Egypt. Nakhthorehbe defended the line of the isthmus of Suez with a
considerable army, which is said to have included 20,000 Greeks, though this
seems improbable. He had at least two Greek generals, Philophron and Cleinias
of Cos, but they were not of the first rank; Lacrates and Nicostratus easily
outclassed them, and Mentor’s local knowledge stood the two chief commanders in
good stead. Nicostratus forced the passage of the canals at Pelusium and beat
Cleinias in the field and killed him; whereupon Nakhthorehbe, who had
apparently no other Greek commander on whom he could rely, retreated to
Memphis, leaving his Greeks to continue the fighting. After his disappearance
from the scene they soon surrendered, and now the cities of the Delta had to
open their gates to their conquerors. Bagoas the eunuch, the chief Persian
commander, received their submission, and advanced with Mentor on Memphis, from
which Nakhthorehbe fled with his treasure, as Taharka had done before him, to
Ethiopia. The finely wrought sarcophagus which had been prepared for his tomb,
probably at Sais, in his lifetime, and was never occupied by him, is in the
British Museum, after having acted for long as a bath in some Alexandrian
palace.
Ochus now
arrived in Egypt, and, if we are to believe the chroniclers, celebrated his
arrival in a way that outdid the outrages of Cambyses, stabling an ass in the
temple of Ptah and having Apis slain to be roast for a banquet. This Persian
king was no doubt very much of a savage, but we may doubt whether these are not
a mere réchauffé of the tales against Cambyses, unless, of course, he
purposely imitated the sacrileges of his predecessor, which is not impossible.
The archives of the temples, which had been carried off, had to be redeemed by
the priests from Bagoas for large sums.
Pherendates
(Franadata) was appointed satrap, and Egypt sank into an uneasy torpor of dazed
submission to the ‘Great Kings’ who now ruled by the favour of Bagoas, and to
their new satraps, until, only ten years later, she was awakened by the
trumpet-call of Alexander. One can almost smile at the succession of unexpected
shocks which the Greeks gave to the Egyptians during this catastrophic fourth
century, but the last was certainly the most startling of all, though it turned
out well for Egypt.
III.
THE
COMING OF ALEXANDER
The rumour of
the coming of the Macedonian conqueror had preceded him, and the sieges of Tyre
and Gaza had given the Persians in Egypt and the Egyptians plenty of time in
which to make up their minds how to receive him. The Persians, cut off from all
help, could do nothing; and the feeling of the Egyptians would certainly be in
his favour; they would prefer a Greek, or soi-disant Greek, conqueror to
a Persian. To them Alexander was a Greek as others before him. And though he
might punish individuals, he would not oppress the whole nation or contemn its
gods. Mazaces the satrap submitted, and, amid the acclamations of the
Egyptians, Alexander sacrificed to the Egyptian gods and was hailed by the
priests as the Son of Amon-Re, the Sun-god, and king of Egypt (332). He had no
time to visit Thebes, so went to the more romantic oasis-oracle of Ammon at
Siwah instead, where his divinity as king of Egypt was fully recognized and
proclaimed. If he was king of Egypt he could not avoid being the son of the
sun-god, and indeed ‘the good god’ himself, even if he wished. His Macedonians
could not understand the fiction and resented the assumption, while the Greeks
mocked when they dared. The divinity of Alexander was due to no mad arrogance
nor can it be proved that he believed it in the least himself, but it was a
‘legal’ necessity, so far as Egypt was concerned; it could be justified to the
Greeks as the divinity of a ‘founder-god’, or at any rate the semidivinity of
a ‘founder-hero’, as the founder of Alexandria. And Iskander dhu’l-qarnein,
‘two-horned Alexander’, with the ram’s horns of Ammon springing from his head
as on the coinage of Lysimachus, he has remained in oriental tradition till
this day. Popular legend in Egypt soon busied itself with him after his death,
and we have that marvellous tale, the ‘Alexander Romance’ of the
Pseudo-Callisthenes: how Nectanebo, who was a great sorcerer, fled, not to
Ethiopia, but to Macedonia, where he visited the queen Olympias in the guise of
the ram-headed Ammon, and so he, not Philip, was the real father of Alexander,
who was thus doubly the rightful pharaoh of Egypt. The Heracleopolite oracular
description of the Greeks as ‘the dogs’ and of Alexander himself as ‘the Big
Dog’ who finds something still to devour, is not necessarily derogatory,
although the nationalist priests of Heracleopolis cannot really have loved the
‘dogs’, though they drove out the Persian oppressors: the idea is rather a
neutral one, describing Alexander and his soldiers rather appropriately under
the guise of their own Molossian hounds, chasing away the Medes and seeking
everywhere for more to devour.
Alexander
attempted to enlist the Egyptians themselves in the government of their country
by appointing a noble, Petisis, as satrap, though solely with the power of a
Minister of the Interior carefully checked both from the financial as well as
the military side, the taxation of the country being entrusted to a Naucratite
Greek, Cleomenes, with his colleague Apollonius, its military security to the
Macedonian officers Peucestas and Balacrus and the Greek admiral Polemon. The
Egyptian, however, declined his post and a certain Doloaspis, who had been
associated with him, was appointed as sole satrap. This Doloaspis, judging by
his name, was not an Egyptian, but a Persian, or possibly an Anatolian.
Cleomenes got the last ounce of tribute out of Egypt for his master, and the
reason for Alexander’s diversion to Egypt after the fall of Tyre is evident. He
had to secure the wealth of Egypt before pursuing his attack on Persia. He
could trust the treachery, ineptitude, and incapacity of the Persians to leave
his Anatolian conquest unattacked, his land line of communications uncut. Not,
too, that he needed that much now. The possession of Phoenicia and her fleets gave
him an invulnerable line of communication by sea, if he were cut off by land,
and that of Egypt rendered the sea line absolutely safe from land attack, since
it could be transferred at a moment’s notice from Tyre and Sidon to Naucratis
and to the new port and city of Alexandria-Rhacotis, which the conqueror
established in the neighbourhood of Naucratis at the west end of the Delta
coast. Here alone there was no fear of a silted-up harbour, since the
Nile-flood drives its silt eastward up the coast from the mouths in the
direction of the Serbonian bog, not westward towards Libya.
With the
foundation of Alexandria the ancient history of Egypt ends, and that of the new
Hellenistic Egypt, ruled by Greek pharaohs from the Greek sea-city and in
continuous connection with the Mediterranean world, begins. Had Alexander lived
on as Great King at Babylon or Susa, and founded a dynasty there, it is
doubtful whether his experiment in Egypt would have survived. It was owing to
the fate that confined Ptolemy Soter to Egypt as his share of the empire of
Alexander that his Macedonian dynasty, circumscribed to Egypt and wholly
identified with it, survived, and Alexandria with it. The Ptolemies were in all
respects for their subjects Egyptian kings, residing in Egypt and representing
Egypt only, as the Persians had never been, and as Alexander’s dynasty, had it
existed, would not have been. Therefore, on the whole, they kept the loyalty
of their subjects.
The last
native régime, which had made such valiant struggles against the Medes, was, it
is true, looked back to in Ptolemaic days with regret. We read in the prophetic
oracles of Heracleopolis (preserved in the ‘Demotic Chronicle’), of the
Mendesian and Sebennytic kings: of Amyrtaeus ‘the first after the Medes,’ of
Naifaurud ‘the second after the Medes,’ and so on to the seventh, Nakhtenebef,
son of Naifaurud, the eighth Zedhor (Tachos) and then the tragic figure of
Nakhtljorehbe. ‘(The chief who came after Zedhor, eighteen years shall he
reign. . . .) They have opened the gates of the veil (?), they will open the
doors of the curtained place (?); (they who came after him, the Madai
[Medes].. . .) Our lakes and our isles are full of tears; (the dwellings
of the men of Egypt have none in them at this time: that is to say, at the time
named it is meant that the Medes had taken their dwellings in order to live in
them).. I love the first day of the
month more than the last: (by which he would say: better is the first year
than the last in the times which they bring, namely the Medes)... I have arrayed myself from head to foot (by this thou wouldst say: I appear with the basilisk of gold which none shall
take from my head! He said this of king Nakhtenebef.) My royal vestment is
upon my back: (that is to say, my royal vestments shine upon my back: none
shall take them from me.) The scimitar is in my hand: (that is to say:
the kingly office is in my hands, none
shall take it from me. . .the scimitar of victory!) ’. But Nakhtenebef’s pride
and splendour, the glory of the renewed kingdom, were cast down into dust: ‘the
herds of the people of the deserts have entered Egypt (that is to say: the
nations of the west and east have entered Egypt. And they are the Medes!).... O
Gardener, do thy work! (that is: Pharaoh, do thy work: by whom he meant
king Nakhtenebef) O Gardener, may thy planting remain!' Such, according
to the latest version, is the style of this curious book of prophecies
with their commentary or interpretation (in brackets), which often seems to be
a double interpretation: a commentary on a commentary on the original text.
We seem also
to read vague and veiled aspirations after the coming of a saviour-king, who
should come to Hermopolis from Ethiopia, like Piankhi long before, under the
auspices of the god Harshafi of Heracleopolis and his priests, and end the
Ptolemaic domination: ‘(for the Ionians who come to Egypt, they rule Egypt for
long) The dogs, may they long live: the Big Dog, he finds somewhat to eat'.
But no Ethiopian deliverer ever came; intelligent Ethiopian princes like
Ergamenes realized too well the power of the Ptolemies and the civilization
they represented to think of trying to conquer Egypt. And though patriotic
antiquaries and litterati might sometimes sigh, in the characteristic
old Egyptian fashion in times of internal war or foreign domination, for a
Messianic deliverer, and though prophecy-mongering priests might do their best
to keep up the hope of a native monarchy in the minds of the people, it never
revived. Local dynasts in Upper Egypt, like Harmachis and Anchmachis in the
reign of Epiphanes at the beginning of the second century, might arrogate royal
regnal years to themselves as long as they dared. But the nation as a whole
desired no change. The regime of the Ptolemies was a very different thing from
that of the Persians, and though Greeks might settle everywhere in the country
and penetrate into the life and being of the native race to a remarkable
extent, they did so as fellow-subjects of kings who wore the Double Crown of
Egypt and no other.
IV.
RETROSPECT
When we look
back over the eight hundred years of Egyptian history since the days of the
priest-kings, we shall perhaps be struck by the great sameness that runs
through the whole story. The history of Egypt in many respects resembles that
of China. Both countries were and are inhabited by a sturdy peasant-folk of
intensely conservative instincts, which for thousands of years has altered but
little. Barbarians from outside, Scyths, Turks and Huns (Yueh-chi, Til-chi, and
Hiungnu), Khingans, Mongols, and Manchus in the case of China, Libyans,
Ethiopians, Assyrians in the case of Egypt during this period, Hyksos and
Philistines before it, have always flowed in, or tried to flow in from the
surrounding bad lands into the desirable cultivation and amenity of the
river-countries: they have in both China and Egypt conquered the native folk
and given them an aristocracy and a royal house. We may very well compare the
Libyans of the Twenty-second Dynasty not only with the Kassites in Babylonia
but also with the Manchus in China. The conquerors have however always become
absorbed in all essentials into the native race, while often retaining the mere
insignia (in the way of names and so forth) of their alien origin. This
phenomenon repeats itself in Egypt: we may compare the ‘Great Chiefs of Ma’
with the Manchu ‘banner-men’ in China. The pharaohs of the Nineteenth Dynasty
may more than be suspected of being of Semitic origin, descended from some
Hyksos princely family that remained behind in the Delta after the exodus of
the Shepherds. Here we have the Arab-Canaanite filtering in from the east. In
the case of the Ptolemies we have strangers from the sea (albeit Alexander came
by land like the others) coming in to rule the patient race that made the
wealth for them. But of all the foreign dominations that of the Libyan families
was the most persistent. Under the Twenty-first Dynasty they began to dominate
Egypt, under the Twenty-second they gave a royal house not only to Egypt but
also to Ethiopia, and seven hundred years after the time of the Meneptah the
princes of Sais still bear the apparently Libyan name Psamatik. The Egyptian
military class was then largely of Libyan origin, the descendants of the
followers of the Great Chiefs of Ma. It was the appearance of the Greek
mercenaries and the Persian conquest that together wrecked the ‘Hermotybies and
Kalasiries,’ and caused the final disappearance of the Libyan element, which
under the Mendesians and Sebennytites no longer exists and has left hardly any
trace except the popular proper name Sheshenk, which occurs in Ptolemaic and
even in Roman days (as Sesonchosis).
We must now
cease to think of the Ethiopian kings as very radically opposed to the Libyans
of the north. It has been shown that the Ethiopian royal house was of Bubastite
origin and bore Libyan names. Yet there is no doubt that Nubian names occur
among their queens, and there can be little doubt that the Ethiopian kings
themselves soon became half Nubian. Taharka is represented by the Assyrians as
having the visage of a negro: and, after all, Egyptian representations of him
are negroid in appearance. He may in fact have had not a Nubian, but a negress,
for his mother. The Saites of the Twenty-sixth Dynasty show no Ethiopian, much
less negroid, traces in their portraits, so that there was probably no
intermarriage with the Ethiopian royal house. We have an excellent portrait of
Psamatik I on an intercolumnar slab probably from Sais, in the British Museum,
which is obviously faithful; it represents him as remarkably like the famous
Lord Chancellor Brougham, with an almost equally characteristic nose. One would
say that the features were those of a west-European. The nearest Egyptian
approach to his type is that of a Fourth Dynasty grandee from Gizeh, whose
‘reserve head’ for the tomb was found by Reisner. The ancient head is the
nobler of the two. But the persistence of this ‘European’ type is interesting.
There is certainly nothing of the Ethiopian about it, or Semite. Something of
the same type, but more conventionally Egyptian in character, is the portrait
of Nakhtenebef, also on an intercolumnar slab in the British Museum. Character
in a Sebennytite portrait is not unexpected: it was not till the Ptolemaic
period that the faces of royal statues again became characterless and
conventional. Apries, on a slab also in the British Museum, has marked features
though without the character of Psamatik I.
The Libyan
admixture, apart from the royalties, was chiefly apparent in the upper class.
We find it already under the priest-kings in the burly Masaherti, who bore a
Libyan name. It was probably on the whole a healthy admixture. The Semitic and
Anatolian admixture, however, which (apart from Semitic peasants in the eastern
Delta) was probably now apparent chiefly in the cities, was by no means of the
best, consisting probably (as it does now) of the riff-raff of Phoenicia and
the Levantine coasts generally. This cannot have been any but a degenerate
component in the new Egyptian race, to which Ethiopian and negro elements contributed
nothing good except (like the Libyans) a certain amount of energy, without
which the Egyptians would have been an even feebler folk at this period than
they actually were. The effect of these doubtful foreign strains on the
national type is perhaps seen in a particularly villainous cast of countenance
that appears in certain portrait-heads of the Saite period, which are almost
too faithful representations of their subjects. The negro and Nubian
(‘Berberine’) elements in the population were probably more apparent than they
are now; many of both races belonging to the armies of the Ethiopian kings
would settle in Egypt in the eighth century, and Ethiopian types, often mixed
with negro, would be seen then also among the upper classes, and most apparently
at Thebes, owing to the long domination there of the southern kings. Yet
Mentumehet appears before us as in his portrait as a typical Egyptian of the
old- fashioned broad-faced type which we know under the Fourth Dynasty. Fellah
blood after all was but little contaminated, and the country gentleman would be
fellah then as he is now. The degeneration was in the towns and among the
ruling classes at the capital cities.
We have
spoken of the Egyptians of this time as being a feeble folk. The fellah stock
of the nation was not in itself feeble, but it was, as it always has been,
pacific, except in regard to local quarrels between villages or parties, when
the use of the nabut or heavy staff was as common as now and as is the lathi among those other very simple peasants, the Jats of the Punjab. The
stronger stick prevailed then as now, and when it was in the hand of a resolute
pharaoh or a foreign conqueror, the fellah submitted to his master in either
case. It was only a strong pharaoh and a strong incentive that could get the
fellahin forth of Egypt and away from their beloved fields to fight abroad;
weak government and poverty meant that Egypt became indeed a broken reed, able
to stave off conquest by a resolute aggressor only by means of the weapons of
intrigue and chicane. The centuries of manoeuvres of this kind must have had as
bad an effect on the minds of the Egyptian ruling classes as it had on those of
the similarly situated Byzantines. Then, in Saite times, the eclipse of the
military class by the foreign mercenaries, with the result that in the fourth
century the Egyptian armies were largely composed of foreigners, reduced the
manliness of the nation to a very low ebb. It cannot be said that in classical
times the Egyptian had a very savoury reputation. At Rome he was usually the
professor of religious humbug and ‘occult’ quackery. But for a temporary
revival, the result of Islam, during the Middle Ages, the Egyptians have
continued to be an unwarlike, albeit quarrelsome, race from Saite days to our own.
And yet the nation had and has, like the Chinese again, the solid virtues of
its main stock, the sons of the soil. This race is as fecund as ever it was.
Its misfortune always has been that it has so rarely been ruled by men of real
light and leading, of true credit and renown.
Of the
condition of the farmer and the peasant class we hear little that is new during
the period. The common warriors that were settled among them soon mixed with
the native population. The conditions of life were not altered for anybody: in
Egypt they are unchanging. Only a very high or low Nile makes any difference.
We have documents from which something of the petty details of the land and tax
organization can be learned, but they are marvellously dull reading, and of no
interest to anybody but specialists in law or language. All that need be said
in a general history is that traditional system was preserved with necessary
modifications, and that the complicated system of Ptolemaic and Roman days was,
so far as we can tell, already in existence in a somewhat less elaborate form.
The many trading documents of the time of Darius I have already been mentioned.
Trade with Asia always flourished except in time of actual war; and nothing
shows the resilience of the Egyptians so well as the astounding speed with
which the traces of constantly recurring wars and invasions disappeared from
the daily life of the people.
Of other
documents we possess letters of the Twenty-first Dynasty in the shape of the
correspondence of certain Theban officials, the scribes Zaroiye and Thutmosis,
the commander of the guard Piankhi, the scribe Buteha-Amon, the priestess or
singer of Amon Shedumedua, and others, that give a tantalizing impression of
the life of educated but not noble persons of that time, an impression
tantalizing because so much space in each letter is taken up by compliments
that there is little room left for information which might be to us of
priceless value. Here again we see a parallel with old China. Both countries
were in much the same state of civilization, with a despotic ruler, a
cultivated, literary, and over-elaborate upper class, stupid and bad soldiers,
and a long-suffering and silent peasantry.
It is
difficult to judge from these letters whether the peasants are regarded as serfs
or slaves or not. The letters are full of injunctions to be kind to the
workmen, but, at the same time, ‘Look after the people sharply every day,’
writes Thutmosis to Buteha-Amon and Shedumedua, whose relations were probably
conjugal; they appear to have stood in some subordinate relation to Thutmosis.
‘Direct your attention to the people who are in the fields; make them do their
irrigation work, make them do their irrigation work! and don’t let the boys at
school throw their books on one side! Look after the people in my house: make
them dig ditches, but not too much!’. It is much the same relation as that in
India today between a zamindar and his rayats. The fellahin were not slaves
any more than they are now: far less slaves indeed than most of other oriental
peoples: the true slave was the negro and the war-captive, male or female. We
possess interesting documents of a later period, the Saite, relating to
slavery, in the demotic papyri from el-Hibeh preserved in the Rylands Library
at Manchester. From them we see that in the reign of Amasis Egyptians also
could be held and sold as slaves, a practice that had probably grown up during
the wars of the Dodekarchy. Under the Persians foreign mercenaries, like the
Jews at Syene, could own Egyptian slaves. After legal formalities a man could
mortgage his own body for debt, and could also, if he willed, sell himself into
slavery. Legal contracts, properly witnessed, were necessary for these
proceedings.
The
correspondence of Thutmosis and Buteha-Amon gives rise to the surmise whether
these letters are not really model pieces of writing, intended for scholastic
use? The reference to the bad boys casting aside their books looks very like
it: one can hardly imagine Thutmosis troubling about the matter in real life,
though perhaps the litteratus, Egyptian or Chinese, would be capable of
mixing this matter up with irrigation. Such scholastic models were however
common, and most of our copies of Egyptian literature are of this character:
they are school exercises. But the letters, whether they are genuine or not,
and whether Thutmosis and his friends were real persons or not, give some idea
of the life of the time. The language is the altered common speech of the day,
with many neologisms and foreign importations, which in the course of our
period became the tongue of Ptolemaic days, practically identical with the
later Coptic.
Under the
Twenty-first Dynasty letters and all other documents were of course still
written in hieratic and the same may be said of the Twenty-second. But in the
time of the Ethiopians they begin to be, and from that of the Twenty-sixth
Dynasty onwards they are always written in demotic, the new short-hand script
that was evolved from hieratic and became popular somewhere about the beginning
of the seventh century; after which time hieratic, written in a peculiar small,
neat style, was used only for religious papyri. In fact our period might almost
be called the ‘Demotic Age’ of Egyptian history, so characteristic of the
period is the use of the older type of demotic writing, when hieratic had
disappeared from ordinary use and Greek was not yet employed. Like the business
documents and letters of all kinds now, the romances and prophecies which have
been mentioned as written down in Ptolemaic and Roman times were written in
demotic.
We have
little literature in demotic script before Ptolemaic days. The stories were
there, of course, in the mouths of the people, but had not yet been written.
Notable among such tales that have not a direct historical bearing, and so have
not yet been mentioned, are the stories of Setme Khamuas, the great sorcerer,
who is none other than an actual historical personage of old time, the prince
Khamuas, son of Rameses II, of whom there is a statue in the British Museum. He
seems in his lifetime to have been a student of occult arts, and was
high-priest of Ptah at Memphis; whence his later title of Setme, the name of
the Setme-priest. In the story, which was written down at the end of the
Ptolemaic period, Setme Kha'muas has marvellous adventures with ghosts in a
tomb into which he penetrates in order to obtain a book of magic deposited in
it. Kha'muas plays draughts with the ghosts, the stake being the precious book.
He goes down too into Hades and sees wonders there, and his son Si-Osirei,
being still a child, but a reincarnation of a former sorcerer, defeats the
sorceries of some Ethiopian magicians, who have the audacity to transport
pharaoh himself by magic from Memphis to Ethiopia, there beat him in the
presence of the ‘Viceroy,’ and bring him back to Memphis, all in the space of
six hours. We hear of contests between Egyptian and Ethiopian magicians exactly
parallel to those between Moses and the Egyptian sorcerers in the Book of
Exodus, and finally Si-Osirei disappears, having done the work for which he was
reincarnated, the rescue of Egypt from Ethiopian magic. The whole story is
curiously weird, and though occasionally it may read like a tale from the
Arabian Nights, there is in it a macabre element that is very Egyptian and
could only belong to the land of tombs and mummies in its old age.
It may be
that the nation was becoming depressed by continued foreign rule and gloomier
than it was in olden days. Certainly in late Roman times all joyousness seems
to have departed from Egypt, when we seem to have reached an age of humourless,
semi-idiotic religious delirium and fanaticism, and the dirtier, the stupider
and the more delirious a man was the holier he was deemed to be by the
murderers of Hypatia. That desperate time was however not yet, though perhaps
we see premonitions of it already. In religion during our period we are greatly
struck by the increase of the element of magic and obscure occultism. This
element had of course always existed from the days of the predynastic
medicine-men and of Dedi the magician of king Khufu. But now we find it very
much to the fore, and manifesting itself in odd pantheistic figures and
objects like the famous ‘Metternich-stele,’ which is of the time of
Nakhthorehbe. In the Egyptian religion the idea of sin and responsibility had
but a small place: in fact consciousness of sin hardly appears till the
Ramessid period, and is then no doubt a Semitic importation. Later we find
religion sinking beneath the weight of formalism and mere superstitious
observance of magical rites. Under the Saites a religious revival (if it may be
so termed) among the priests, connected with the archaistic movement, led to a
new recension and edition of the ‘Book of Coming Forth by Day,’ the ‘Book of
the Dead,’ as we call it, which resulted in the fixing of the order of its
‘mouths’ or chapters. The primitive, barbarous and unintelligible Pyramid-texts
of the beginnings of Egyptian civilization were revived in an even more
unintelligible form, and their childish gabble, that of the ‘Book of the Dead’, was much prefferred to the splendid Eighteenth Dynasty hymns written when
Egypt was really civilized in honour of Amon-Re, the great god of the imperial
period. The whole religion was becoming funerary in character, in accordance
with the exaltation of Osiris at the expense of Amon.
We see the
gradual retirement of Amon from his ancient pride of place as the chief deity
of the realm, though in the Saite days he is still Amonrasonther, ‘the king of
the gods.’ Under the Twenty-first Dynasty he is of course still all powerful,
with his wife Mut and his son the moon-god Khons, whose worship had developed
so greatly under the Twentieth Dynasty. Under the Twenty-second Amon is still
the chief god and war-lord. But alongside him in royal and popular estimation
is now a form of Hathor, the cat-goddess Ubastet or Baste, the deity of
Bubastis, the city of the court. The magnificent temple which the Bubastite
kings built at Bubastis on the ruins of one that went back to the days of Khufu
is well known in its formless ruin. But Baste was eclipsed with the Bubastite
dynasty. Of course she still continued to be venerated, especially at Bubastis,
but she is no longer to the fore. As the special patroness of dynasty and
people she was succeeded by the war-goddess Neith, who was Libyan, but Libyan
of a very early day, and had been naturalized as an Egyptian goddess long ago,
in the days of the First Dynasty at least. Her position as the local deity of
Sai’s made her the special protectress of the Saite kings, and names compounded
with hers were common under the Twenty-sixth Dynasty. Probably the later
Libyans of the days of the Ma identified their gods with those of Egypt wholly:
Harshafi of Heracleopolis may have owed his popularity among them to
identification with some Libyan Heracles, some Antaeus of the desert-caves.
Amon was soon
to follow Baste, but to a more definite limbo of discarded gods, at any rate
for a few centuries. The destruction of Thebes in 663 was probably the
turning-point in his divine career. Osiris, the god of the dead, took his place
in the popular mind as the universal lord whom all revered, and in Ptolemaic
days Amon and Osiris were more or less confused with one another and with the
deified sage Amenothes or Amenophis, son of Paapis, the historical Amenhotep,
son of Hapu, vizier of Amenhotep III, who was now regarded as a god, like
Imhotep, the vizier of king Zoser, also now deified as the son of Ptah and
patron of learning, the Imouthes of the Greeks. Officially Amon reappears under
the Ptolemies as a royal god, owing to Alexander’s special devotion to him, the
ram-headed god whom he claimed as father. Alexander had to be son of Re‘, but
in the assumption of his pharaonic filial dignity it would appear that he was
advised to become, or by chance became, son of Amon-Re of Siwah rather than of
Re of Heliopolis only. The imposing panache of the pre-Saite Amon-Re
suited the ideas of the Ptolemaic period, when men were inclined to revive the
imperialistic spirit under the influence of the grandeur and foreign empire of
such kings as Philadelphus. But to the common people Amon was no more than
Amenophis or Osiris. The welding together, so far as it could be accomplished,
of the Greek and Egyptian religions produced the curious phenomenon that we
know well in classical days of Alexandrian religion with its worship of Sarapis
(Osor-hapi, Osiris-Apis the funerary deity of Sinopion [Sinhapi], the
necropolis of Sakkara near Memphis), who was naturally identified with Hades,
and with its Graeco-Egyptian ‘fake’ mysteries, which brought hierophants of Isis
to Delos and to Rome, and made the great mother-goddess of a great and ancient
people become one of the attractions of a second-rate Roman seaside resort like
Pompeii. So Egypt perished, but qualis artifex! On her death-bed she was
a sham and a poseuse: but what had she not been in her young days: the
mother of the arts?
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