Over the some three thousand years of Egyptian
history during the Pharaonic Period only a handful of
the several
hundred who ruled Egypt (or part of Egypt) can be
considered truly great kings. Of these, Ramesses III, who was
the second ruler of Egypt's 20th
Dynasty, was the last of great pharaohs on the throne. His
reign was a time of considerable turmoil throughout the
Mediterranean that saw the Trojan War, the fall of Mycenae and
a great surge of displaced people from all over the region
that was to reek havoc; even toppling some empires.
Ramesses was this king's birth name, as it was for most of
the 20th Dynasty rulers who appear to have wished to emulate
the great Ramesses II of the 19th
Dynasty. Ramesses means, "Re has fashioned him"
A second (epithet) part of his birth name was heqaiunu, which
means "Ruler of Heliopolis"
There are any number of ways that Egyptologists spell his birth
name, such as "Ramses". His throne name was
Usermaatre Meryamun, which means "Powerful is the Justice
of Re, Beloved of Amun.
The Family of Ramesses III
Ramesses III's father was his immediate predecessor, a
relatively unknown king named Setnakhte.
However, though the originator of what Egyptologists refer to as
the 20th Dynasty, he may actually have been a grandson of the
famous Ramesses
II. Ramesses III probably served a short co-regency with
him, we believe, because of a rock-chapel near Deir
el-Medina that was dedicated to both his father and
Ramesses III. Ramesses III's mother was Queen Tiy-merenese. He
had a number of wives, including Isis, Titi and Tiy, as
well as a number of sons including the next three rulers of
Egypt, Ramesses
IV, V
and VI. We
only know of one possible daughter named Titi. However,
despite his apparently long reign lasting some 31 years and 41
days according to the Great Harris Papyrus, little is known
about the royal family.
We know that the mother of his wife, Isis, named,
Habadjilat, was probably a foreigner, most likely of Asiatic
extraction. She was buried in tomb QV51 in the Valley
of the Queens, though here name was omitted from the
cartouches in the Medinet
Habu temple where the queen's name would normally have
appeared. However, one of her sons would eventually rule Egypt
as Ramesses VI.
Another possible queen of Ramesses III was Queen Titi, who
was buried in QV52 in the Valley of the Queens. Though this
tomb is large, it lacks any proper indication of her exact
royal status. However, her titles suggest that she was
possibly a daughter, and later a wife of Ramesses III who
probably outlived him. Her title as "Mistress of the Two
Lands" appears some 43 times within this tomb, and she is
listed as "Chief Royal Wife" 33 times. Other titles
include "King's Daughter, "King's Beloved Daughter
of his Body", "His Beloved Daughter" and
"King's Sister". She is also called "King's
Mother" eight times and her son might have been Ramesses
IV.
Ramesses III had as many if not more than ten sons, many of
whom predeceased him. A number of them were buried in the
Valley of the Queens. These include the tombs of
Amenhirkhopshef (QV55),
Khaemwaset (QV44),
Parahirenemef (QV42) and Sethirkhopshef (QV43). Each of these
sons held high positions, as might be expected, prior to their
deaths. Apparently devoted to Ramesses II, Ramesses III gave his
sons names that followed those of the earlier king's sons. An
especially noteworthy example was his son, Khaemwaset C, named
for Ramesses II's famous
child. Like the earlier Khaemwaset, he took the same
office as sem-priest
of Ptah
at Memphis.
However, Khaemwasret C. never achieved the glory of Ramesses
II's son, who rose to the position of High Priest. We also
know that Amenhirkhopshef, named for Ramesses II's oldest
son, and Sethirkhopshef held the office of Master of
Horse.
A number of other tombs in the Valley of the Queens, which
appear to date from the reign of Ramesses III, appear to
belong to unnamed princes and princesses, though we have
virtually no information on these individuals.
The Conspiracy
Another of Ramesses III's queens was Tiy, but in a several
noteworthy papyrus from his reign, particularly one known
today as the Harem Conspiracy Papyrus, we learn of an assassination
attempt upon the king in which she was at least a part of the
plot. Her name is provided in the text, but the other
conspirators are called by names that indicate the great evil
of their crime, such as Mesedsure, meaning "Re hates
him".
Tiy apparently wished for her son, called in this papyrus,
Pentewere, to ascend to the throne of Egypt.
At some point during the latter part of Ramesses III's
reign, there were economic problems that became most visible
when the Deir el-Medina workmen failed to be paid, leading to
a general strike, the first in recorded history, in the 29th
year of the king's reign. Against this background was hatched
a plot against the king's life.
This was no simple conspiracy, considering that at least 40
people were implicated and tried as a group. Amongst their
numbers were harem officials many of whom were close to the
king. Not only had they intended to kill the king, but also to
incite a revolt outside of the palace in order to facilitate
their coup.
The plot was seemingly hatched in Piramesses
where one of the conspirators had a house. The plan called for
the murder of the king during the annual Opet
Festival at Thebes.
Preparations for this included magical spells and wax
figurines which were smuggled into the harem.
This conspiracy is thought to have failed, and the guilty
were charged and brought before a court consisting of a panel
of fourteen officials including seven royal butlers (a
respectably high office), two treasury overseers, two army
standard bearers, two scribes and a herald. Ramesses III
himself most likely commissioned the prosecution, but
according to the language of the papyrus, probably died during
the trial, though not necessarily from the effects of the
plot. Curiously, this court was given authority to deliver and
carry out whatever penalty they deemed fair, including the
death penalty, which normally only the king could inflict. It
should be noted, however, that scholars are in disagreement
over the events of this conspiracy. Some maintain that
Ramesses III was in fact killed by the conspirators, and that
his son, Ramesses IV, set up the tribunal, but others maintain
that the mummy of the king shows no acts of violence.
All of those involved in the plot were apparently condemned
to death, as was certainly the fate of Queen Tiy herself.
Though the record of the actual trial is lost, there were
apparently three different prosecutions. The first consisted
of twenty eight people, who included the major ringleaders,
who were found guilty and (almost certainly) put to death. In
the next prosecution six people were condemned and forced to
commit suicide within the court itself. In the final trial,
four additional individuals, including the son of Queen Tiy,
were likewise condemned to suicide, though they were
presumably allowed to carry out the act in their prison.
Interestingly, there was also a fourth trial, but this one
did not involve the actual conspirators, but instead three of
the judges and two officers. It would seem that the curious
affair resulted from accusations that, after their appointment
to the conspiracy commission, they knowingly entertained
several of the women involved in the plot, as well as
consorted with a general referred to as Peyes. Though one of
the judges was found innocent, the remainder of the group was
condemned to have their ears and noses amputated. One of the
judges called Pebes committed suicide before the sentence
could be carried out.
The Military Affairs
Ramesses III's reign began quietly enough as he attempted
to consolidate his empire begun by his father after problems
arose in the late 19th Dynasty. Nubia seems at this time to
have been nothing more than a subdued colony to the south.
However, in his fifth year as ruler, Egypt was attacked by Libyans
for apparently the first time since Merenptah
had to deal with them in the 19th Dynasty. The Libyan invasion
forces included two other groups of people known as the
Mshwesh and the Seped. Ramesses III easily dealt with this
threat, annihilating many, and making slaves of the rest.
Though the Libyan population of the western Delta continued to
increase by peaceful infiltration (as they had actually done
before the invasion), and would later form the basis for a
line of kings that would ultimately rule Egypt, for a time at
least, this firm action kept other enemies at bay.
By his eighth year as ruler, Ramesses III had to contend
with a force of such great magnitude, that it destroyed at
least the Hittite
empire, and devastated the entire region, though we really do
not know of its source. We read that:
"The foreign countries conspired in their
islands, and the lands were dislodged and scattered in
battle together; no land could stand before their arms: the
land of the Hittites, Qode, Carchemesh, Arzawa and Cyprus
were wasted, and they set up a camp in southern Syria. They
desolated its people and made its land as if non-existent.
They bore fore before them as they came forward towards
Egypt."
Indeed, Cyprus had been overwhelmed and its capital, Enkomi,
ransacked. They destroyed the Hittite capital, Hattusas, as well
as many other empires. They conquered Tarsus and then settled
on the plains of Cilicia in northern Syria, razing Alalakh and
Ugarit to the ground.
This upheaval was caused by a group of people collectively
known as the Sea
People, who were displaced from their homes by events that
are as of yet unknown to us. However, this apparently took
place over an extended period of time, and involved massive
numbers of humans, consisting of the Peleset (Philistines),
Tjeker, Shekelesh (possibly Sikels from Sicily), Weshesh and
the Denyen or Dardany, who could have been the Danaoi of
Homer's Iliad. The invasion of these people into various
regions of the Middle East apparently came in waves, as a
number of Ramesses III's predecessors (perhaps most notably
Merenptah) had to deal with similar bands of people.
Ramesses III had his fight against the Sea People
documented on the outer wall of the Second Pylon, north side,
of his mortuary temple at Medinet
Habu. It is the longest hieroglyphic inscription known to
us. On the outer north wall of the temple proper he had carved
the illustrations of the battle. After having stayed for a
time in Syria, the Sea People apparently traveled over land to
the Egyptian border. This was not simply a military campaign.
The Sea People had with them their women and children,
together with their possessions piled high on ox-carts. They
also employed a sea fleet that apparently stayed in tract with
those on land. Their intention was to settle in Egypt.
Ramesses reacted swiftly to this threat, and in doing so,
saved Egypt from the fate that would befall other empires, at
least for a while. He dispatched squads of soldiers at once to
the eastern Egyptian frontier at Djahy (southern Palestine,
perhaps the Egyptian garrison in the Gaza strip) with orders
to stand firm at any cost until the main Egyptian army
arrived. Once deployed, the Egyptian army then had little
problem in slaying these enemies, as was depicted in the
reliefs at Medinet Habu. However, there was still the sea
fleet to consider.
Egypt was never particularly known for their navy,
which was made up principally of infantry, including archers,
who were given special marine training. Yet they hated the
sea, known as wdj wr, the "Great Green", as they called
the Mediterranean. However, as the Sea Peoples' fleet headed
for the mouth of one of the eastern arms of the Nile, they
were indeed met by the Egyptian fleet. In an inspired tactical
maneuver, the Egyptian fleet worked the Sea Peoples' boats
towards shore, where land based Egyptian
archers were waiting to pour volley after volley of arrows
into the enemy ships, while the Egyptian marine archers, calmly standing on the decks of their ships, fired in
unison. As the Egyptian ships threw grappling hooks into the
Sea People's vessels, by the grace of the god Amun,
the enemies fell dead into the water from the onslaught of the
combined Egyptian forces. In fact, this victory provided
considerable respect for the priesthood of Amun at Thebes. We
have no documentation of any pursuit of the fleeing Sea People
as they returned to the Levant, but it is reasonable that
there was such a campaign.
Hence, for some three years, all was well and Egypt was for
the most part at peace. Then, after a gradual infiltration by
immigrants into the area west of the Canopic arm of the Nile
from Egypt's western border, the Libyans, together with the
Meshwesh and five other tribes, launched another full scale
invasion during Ramesses III's eleventh year as ruler. Once
again, Ramesses III countered the attack, crushing these
opponents as well. Apparently some 2,000 of the enemy dead
were left on the killing fields, while the captured leaders
were executed. The booty of the enemy captured during the
battle, consisting of cattle and other possession's were
sent south to the treasury of Amun. The details of this battle
are found on the inner, north wall of the First Pylon at
Medinet Habu.
There were apparently other campaigns during the reign of
Ramesses III, as recorded on the walls of his mortuary temple,
though some of these scenes are questionable. Many of these
depictions record events that probably took place in bygone
years, a common practice of many kings in order to elevate
their reputations. In fact, some of these scenes from Medinet
Habu clearly seem to be copies of earlier battles fought by
his illustrious predecessor, Ramesses II.
However, it does seem that there were some other minor
conflicts, particularly from the desert around the latitude of
Thebes, but these were rather minor in nature.
Non-Military Actions
Ramesses III established a number of foreign contacts for
trade, most notably with its old trading partner, Punt.
This may have been Egypt's first contact with that land since
the famous ventures in the days of Hatshepsut
of the 18th
Dynasty. He also seems to have sent an expedition to Atika,
where the copper mines of Timna were located.
The king is well known for his domestic building program, a
consolidation of law and order (as well as a tree-planting
program). The end of the 19th Dynasty saw considerable
corruption and various abuses, and Ramesses III was forced to
inspect and reorganize the various temples throughout the
country. The Great Harris Papyrus provides that Ramesses III
made huge donations of land to the most important temples in
Thebes, Memphis and Heliopolis. In fact, by the end of his
reign, a third of the cultivatable land belonged to the
temples and of this, three quarters belonged to the temple
of Amun at Thebes. Though Ramesses III's foremost
construct was his mortuary temple at Medinet Habu, which was
finished in about the 12th year of his reign, at Karnak
he provided numerous relief decorations and two new, small
temples including one dedicated to Khonsu,
the moon god. Additional building work was carried out in a
number of centers, including Piramesses
(or Pi-Ramesses, modern Qantir), Athribis
(Tell Atrib), Heliopolis,
Memphis, Hermopolis
(Ashmunein), Syut
(Greek Lycopolis, modern Asyut), Abydos
and Edfu.
For many generations, Egypt had two viziers, one governing
Upper Egypt and anther official who oversaw Lower Egypt.
Apparently there was a problem; perhaps even a rebellion
involving the unnamed Lower Egyptian vizier and so Ramesses
III unified this high office under a single person named To (Ta).
The Death of Ramesses III
While we know that Ramesses III likely died during the
trial of the harem conspirators, we really do not know how he
died, though some scholars believe it was at the hands of the
conspirators while others believe it was not related to the
plot. Irregardless, his death signaled the coming end of the New
Kingdom, and even the lofty position that Egypt held on
the world stage. He was buried in a large tomb (KV11)
in the Valley
of the Kings on the West
Bank at ancient Thebes
(modern Luxor). His
is most famous for having some secular scenes that were
unusual among royal tombs, including a painting of two blind
male harpists. Hence, though sometimes called "Bruce's
Tomb after its discoverer, James Bruce in 1769, in literature
it is more well known as "The Tomb of the Harper".
Presumably, he was succeeded by his son, Ramesses IV in about
the year 1151 BC.
References:
| Title |
Author |
Date |
Publisher |
Reference
Number |
| Chronicle of the Pharaohs
(The Reign-By-Reign Record of the Rulers and Dynasties
of Ancient Egypt) |
Clayton, Peter A. |
1994 |
Thames and Hudson Ltd |
ISBN 0-500-05074-0 |
| Complete Valley of the
Kings, The (Tombs and Treasures of Egypt's Greatest
Pharaohs) |
Reeves, Nicholas; Wilkinson,
Richard H. |
1966 |
Thames and Hudson Ltd |
IBSN 0-500-05080-5 |
| History of Ancient Egypt, A |
Grimal, Nicolas |
1988 |
Blackwell |
None Stated |
| Monarchs of the Nile |
Dodson, Aidan |
1995 |
Rubicon Press |
ISBN 0-948695-20-x |
| Oxford History of Ancient
Egypt, The |
Shaw, Ian |
2000 |
Oxford University Press |
ISBN 0-19-815034-2 |
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