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Pami II

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Egyptian Pharaoh
Pami II
Pharaoh
Reignc. 712 BC
PredecessorOsorkon IV
SuccessorBakenranef orShabataka
Horus name
Netjerikha
nṯrj-ḫʿ
Divine of appearance[1]
G5
R8D21
N28
Prenomen
Neferkare
nfr-kȝ-rˁ
The perfect one is the Ka or Ra[2]
M23
X1
L2
X1
N5nfrD28
Nomen
Pami
pȝ-my
Pamy ("the Tomcat")[3]
G39N5
pW19ii
ChildrenGemenefkhonsbak ?
FatherOsorkon IV ?
DynastyTanite23rd Dynasty

Neferkare Pami orPami II (Egyptiannfr-kȝ-rʿ p-my orpȝ-my, variant writings ofpȝ-mjw) was an obscurepharaoh of theTanite23rd Dynasty, who was fully identified only in 2018. He reigned in the late 8th century BC.[4]

Evidence and interpretation

[edit]

The existence of a Tanite king with the throne name Neferkare and a birth name beginning P[…] was first noted on the basis of blocs discovered during the exploration of the sacred lake ofAmun at Tanis byPierre Montet, who identified the king as the Horus "Neterti-Khâ, Neferkarê Pe[pi]."[5] In one instance, the royal throne name seems to have been purposefully erased from within its cartouche.[6] Montet also noted the archaizing quality of both the relief style and of the royal titulary, and that the throne name Neferkare was also borne by the roughly contemporary kingsNeferkare Peftjauawybast ofHerakleopolis andShabaka of theKushite25th Dynasty.[7] The blocs discovered by Montet constituted an upper portion of a scene that depicted the king followed by a representation of his Ka.[8]

Kenneth Kitchen was uncertain whether this was an attestation of a king from theThird Intermediate Period or a reference toNeferkare Pepi II of the6th Dynasty.[9] He nevertheless tentatively associated this royal name with that of Neferkare, which appeared alternating with that of Wahibre in a cornice from Athribis,[10] and proposed that Neferkare P[…] was a local king of Tanis who was a contemporary and ally ofWahibre Psamtik I of the26th Dynasty.[11] Marie-Ange Bonhême duly recorded the fragmentary evidence uncovered by Montet among her coverage of other obscure or doubtful monarchs.[12]Jürgen von Beckerath accepted the identification, but read the presumed beginning of the birth name asj instead ofp.[13] David Aston accepted King Neferkare P[…] as a member of the Tanite 23rd Dynasty and dated him to c. 664 BC as a contemporary of Psamtik I.[14]

Further exploration of the remains of Tanis, more specifically the temple precinct and sacred lake ofMut, yielded additional decorated and inscribed stone blocs, which allowed the more complete identification of Neferkare P[…] as Neferkare Pami II by Raphaëlle Meffre and Frédéric Payraudeau.[15] The blocs depicted the king engaged in the pious act of offering to various gods and goddesses and made reference to the construction or extension of temples.[16] In two instances, the royal name was found erased.[17] Some blocs that Montet had attributed to the only King Pami known to him,Usermaatre Pami I-sibaste, are now reattributed to Pami II.[18] Judging from the archaizing style of his monuments, Meffre and Payraudeau concluded that he was most probably contemporary with or close in date to the 25th Dynasty and should be dated to the end of the 8th century BC.[19] They also dissociated the newly identified king Neferkare Pami II from the royal name Neferkare alternating with Wahibre on the cornice from Athribis, indicating that the latter instance belonged to a hitherto unrecognized King Neferkare Wahibre who reigned at a much later date.[20]

Both the Horus name (Netjerikha) and throne name (Neferkare) of Pami II appear to reference the titulary of the long-lived Pepi II in the 6th Dynasty (who was the Horus Netjerikhau and had the throne name Neferkare).[21] Although the choice and simplicity of the names is consistent with the archaism of the period, at least two attestations of the throne name seem to have included an epithet, probably Meryamun (mrj-jmn, "Beloved of Amun").[22] The king's birth name Pami ("the Tomcat"), found in two variant spellings (p-my andpȝ-my), neither including the actual hieroglyphic sign for a cat (Gardiner E13), was nevertheless shared with King Usermaatre Pami I-sibaste and with the Chief of MaPami, a son of KingAkheperre Shoshenq V.[23]

On the basis of the advanced archaizing style of his monuments, Meffre and Payraudeau placed King Pami II generally betweenUsermaatre Osorkon IV and the King Pedubast of Tanis mentioned by the Assyrians in c. 670 BC.[24] Since Tanis appears to have been seized by KingBakenranef of theSaite24th Dynasty sometime before his own fall to the Kushites in 712 BC, and since neither of the Kushite kingsShabataka andShabaka is attested at Tanis, the authors tentatively placed Pami II between 712 and c. 670 BC, preferring an earlier date, given the stylistic similarity to the works of Osorkon IV and the parallel instances of the erasure of a local king's name by the Kushites.[25] The authors also noted the possibility that Pami II would correspond to King Psammous, recorded as the successor of Osorkhō in the 23rd Dynasty by the epitomes ofManetho, suggesting that the name Psammous was a distortion of an original Pamous or Pemous, attested Greek renditions of Egyptianpȝ-mjw.[26] If Manetho could be trusted, this might give Pami II a reign of 10 years and make him the heir of Osorkon IV.[27]

The precise dating of Pami II remains a little uncertain, as is his connection to his predecessor Osorkon IV and to his eventual successors at Tanis,Shepseskare Gemenefkhonsbak and Sekhemkare and (=?) Pedubast III.[28]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Montet 1966: pl. 32; Leprohon 2013: 207.
  2. ^Leprohon 2013: 206.
  3. ^Leprohon 2013: 200.
  4. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2018.
  5. ^Montet 1966: 73-76, pl. 33, 82-83.
  6. ^Montet 1966: 73, pl. 32, 83.
  7. ^Montet 1966: 74-75.
  8. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 147.
  9. ^Kitchen 1995: 97-98.
  10. ^On this see Payraudeau 2015: 852.
  11. ^Kitchen 1995: 98, 398-399, n. 904.
  12. ^Bonhême 1987: 224-225
  13. ^Beckerath 1999: 212-213.
  14. ^Aston 2009a: 22-23, 27; Aston 2009b: 28-29, 34-35.
  15. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2018: 136-140; Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 147-148.
  16. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2018: 137-140.
  17. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 149.
  18. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 148.
  19. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2018: 136-137; Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 148.
  20. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 148; Payraudeau 2020: 286, makes Neferkare Wahibre a rebel against Persian rule in c. 522–520 BC.
  21. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 151.
  22. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 151; this partly vindicates the reading of the royal name by Beckerath 1999: 212-213, except that the initial signj belonged to this epithet, not to the birth name of the king.
  23. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 152.
  24. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 154.
  25. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 154-155; Payraudeau 2020: 155.
  26. ^Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 155.
  27. ^Waddell 1940: 160-163; Meffre & Payraudeau 2019: 155-156.
  28. ^Payraudeau 2020: 36, 155, 210, 556.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Aston, David 2009a, "Takeloth II, A King of the Herakleopolitan/Theban Twenty-Third Dynasty Revisited," in: G. P. F. Broekman, R. J. Demarée and O. E. Kaper (eds.),The Libyan Period in Egypt: Historical and Cultural Studies into the 21st–24th Dynasties, Leiden: 1-28.online
  • Aston, David A. 2009b,Burial Assemblages of Dynasty 21-25: Chronology—Typology—Developments, Vienna: Österreichische Akademie der Wissenchaften.
  • Beckerath, Jürgen von 1999,Handbuch der ägyptischen Königsnamen, Mainz am Rhein: Philipp von Zabern.
  • Bonhême, Marie-Ange 1987,Les noms royaux dans l’Égypte de la troisième période intermédiaire, Cairo.
  • Kitchen, Kenneth A. 1995,The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt (1100–650 BC), 3rd ed., Warminster: Aris & Phillips.
  • Leprohon, Ronald J. 2013,The Great Name: Ancient Egyptian Royal Titulary, Society of Biblical Literature: Atlanta.
  • Meffre, Raphaëlle, and Frédéric Payraudeau 2018, "Enquête épigraphique, stylistique et historique sur les blocs du lac sacré de Mout à Tanis,"Bulletin de la société française d'Égyptologie 199: 128-143.
  • Meffre, Raphaëlle, and Frédéric Payraudeau 2019, "Un nouveau roi à la fin de l’époque libyenne: Pami II,"Revue d'égyptologie 69: 147-158.
  • Montet, Pierre 1966,Le lac sacré de Tanis, Paris.
  • Payraudeau, Frédéric 2015, "La situation politique de Tanis sous la XXVeme Dynastie," in: P. Kousoulis, N. Lazaridis (eds.),Proceedings of the Tenth International Congress of Egyptologists, University of the Aegean, Rhodes, 22-29 May 2008, OLA 241, Louvain: 849-860.
  • Payraudeau, Frédéric 2020,L'Égypte et la vallée du Nil Tome 3: Les époques tardives (1069–332 av. J.-C.), Paris: Presses universitaires de France.
  • Waddell, W. G. (transl.) 1940,Manetho, Cambridge, MA: Loeb Classical Library.
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs
    • male
    • female
  • uncertain
Protodynastic
(pre-3150 BC)
Lower
Upper
Early Dynastic
(3150–2686 BC)
I
II
Old Kingdom
(2686–2181 BC)
III
IV
V
VI
1st Intermediate
(2181–2040 BC)
VII/VIII
IX
X
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs
    • male
    • female
  • uncertain
Middle Kingdom
(2040–1802 BC)
XI
Nubia
XII
2nd Intermediate
(1802–1550 BC)
XIII
XIV
XV
XVI
Abydos
XVII
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs  (male
  • female)
  • uncertain
New Kingdom
(1550–1070 BC)
XVIII
XIX
XX
3rd Intermediate
(1069–664 BC)
XXI
High Priest of Amun
XXII
Lines of XXII/XXIII
XXIII
XXIV
XXV
Late toRoman Period(664 BC–313 AD)
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs
    • male
    • female
  • uncertain
Late
(664–332 BC)
XXVI
XXVII
XXVIII
XXIX
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XXXI
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(332–30 BC)
Argead
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Roman
(30 BC–313 AD)
XXXIV
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