Siptah
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Persondata | |
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NAME | Siptah |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | {{{Alt}}} |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Pharaoh of Egypt |
DATE OF BIRTH | {{{Birth}}} |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Ancient Egypt |
DATE OF DEATH | {{{Death}}} |
PLACE OF DEATH | Ancient Egypt |
Preceded by: Seti II |
Pharaoh of Egypt 19th Dynasty |
Succeeded by: Twosret |
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Siptah | ||||||||||||||||
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Reign | 1194 BC – 1188 BC | |||||||||||||||
Praenomen | Sekhaenre-meryamun (early form)
Akhenre-setepenre (late form) |
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Nomen |
Siptah ('Son of Ptah')[1] |
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Horus name | Kanakht Meryhapi Sankhtanebemkafraneb | |||||||||||||||
Nebty name | Saaiunu | |||||||||||||||
Golden Horus | Unclear | |||||||||||||||
Died | 1188 BC | |||||||||||||||
Burial | KV47, in the Valley of the Kings |
Akhenre Setepenre Siptah or Merneptah Siptah was the penultimate ruler of the 19th Dynasty and the son of an obscure Queen named Sutailja. His father's identity is currently unknown. He was not the crown prince, but succeeded to the throne as a child after the death of Seti II. His accession date occurred on II Peret day 2 around the month of December.[2]
Contents |
[edit] Origins
Historically, it was believed that Queen Tiaa, a wife of Seti II, was the mother of Siptah.[3] This view persisted until it was eventually realized that a relief in the Louvre Museum (E 26901) "pairs Siptah's name together with the name of his mother" a certain Sutailja or Shoteraja.[4] Sutailja was a Canaanite rather than a native Egyptian name which means that she was almost certainly a king's concubine from Canaan.[5] The identity of his father is currently unknown; some Egyptologists speculate it may have been Amenmesse rather than Seti II. Siptah may have been a son of Amenmesse since both rulers spent their youth in Chemmis[6] and both are specifically excluded from Ramesses III's Medinet Habu procession of statues of ancestral kings unlike Merneptah or Seti II which suggest that Amenmesse and Siptah were inter-related in such a way that they were "regarded as illegitimate rulers and that therefore they were probably father and son"[7].
A headless statue of Siptah now in Munich also shows him seated on the lap of another Pharaoh, presumably his father. The British Egyptologist Aidan Dodson states
- "The only ruler of the period who could have promoted such destruction was Amenmesse, and likewise he was the only king whose offspring would have required such explicit promotion. The demolition of this figure is likely to have closely followed the fall of Bay or the death of Siptah himself, when any shortlived rehabilitation of Amenmesse would have ended"[8].
If Siptah was a son of Seti II, it is unlikely that he would have been considered to be an illegitimate king by later New Kingdom pharaohs. Due to his young age and perhaps his problematic parentage--he was placed under the guidance of his step-mother, the queen regent, Twosret.[9]
Siptah ruled Egypt for 6 years from 1194 to 1188 BC as a young man. His step-mother and Seti II's Chief Queen, Twosret, became the Queen Regent at the Royal Court because of his relative youth. Siptah was only a child of ten or eleven years when he assumed power since a medical examination of his mummy reveals the king to have been a teenager of about 16 years old at death.[10] He was tall at 1.6 metres and had curly reddish brown hair while his left foot was severely deformed presumably from polio[11]
[edit] Reign
Chancellor Bay publicly boasts that he was instrumental in installing Siptah on the throne in several inscriptions including an Aswan stela set up by Seti, the Viceroy of Kush[12] and at Gebel el-Silsila.[13][14] Bay, however, later fell out of favour at Court and last appears in public in a dated Year 4 inscription from Siptah's reign. He was executed in the fifth Year of Siptah's reign, on orders of the king himself. News of his execution was passed to the Workmen of Deir el-Medina in Ostraca IFAO 1254. This ostraca was translated and published in 2000 by Pierre Grandet in a French Egyptological journal[15]. Callendar notes that the reason for the king's message to the workmen was to notify them to cease all work on decorating Bay's tomb since Bay had now been deemed a traitor to the state.[16]
Siptah himself died soon after in his 7th, rather than his 6th Regnal Year, as previously thought.[17] After his death, Twosret simply assumed his Regnal Years and ruled Egypt as a Queen for almost 2 full years. Siptah was buried in the Valley of the Kings, in tomb KV47[18], but his mummy was not found there. In 1898, it was discovered along with 18 others in a mummy cache within the (KV35) tomb of Amenhotep II. An examination of Siptah's mummy reveals that he died around the age of 16 and likely suffered from polio with a severely deformed and crippled left foot.[19] The study of his tomb shows that it was conceived and planned in the same style as those of Twosret and Bay, clearly part of the same architectural design.
[edit] Trivia
Siptah's tomb figures in L. Sprague de Camp's historical novel The Dragon of the Ishtar Gate where the novel's heroes, Bessas the Persian and Myron of Miletos, have to obtain the king's ear for Xerxes II of Persia.
[edit] References
- ^ Peter Clayton, Chronicle of the Pharaohs, Thames & Hudson Ltd, 1994. p.158
- ^ Jürgen von Beckerath, Chronologie des Pharaonischen Ägypten, MAS:Philipp von Zabern, (1997), p.201
- ^ Cyril Aldred, The parentage of King Siptah, JEA 49 (1963), pp.41-48
- ^ Gae Callender, The Cripple, the Queen & the Man from the North, KMT Volume 17, No.1 (Spring 2006), p.52; Callender's source comes from page 140 of Thomas Schneider's ZAS 130 (2003) paper titled Siptah und Beja
- ^ Gae Callender, The Cripple, the Queen & the Man from the North, KMT, 2006, p.52
- ^ Cyril Aldred, The Parentage of King Siptah, JEA 49 (1963), pp.41-60
- ^ J.E. Harris & E.F. Wente, An X-Ray Atlas of the Royal Mummies (Chicago, 1980), p.147
- ^ Dodson, Aidan, (2004), The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, (Egyptian University of Cairo Press) p.181
- ^ Callender, op. cit., p.52
- ^ G.E. Smith, The Royal Mummies (Cairo 1912), pp.70-73
- ^ Smith, op. cit., pp.70-73
- ^ LD III, 202c
- ^ LD III, 202a
- ^ Callender, op. cit., p.63
- ^ Pierre Grandet, "L'execution du chancelier Bay O. IFAO 1864," BIFAO 100(2000) pp.339-345
- ^ Callender, op. cit., p.54
- ^ Beckerath, op. cit., p.201
- ^ KV47 Siptah
- ^ Callendar, op. cit., p.52