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Ramesses V

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pharaoh in the ancient Egypt
Ramesses V
Also written Ramses and Rameses
Drawing of a relief of pharaoh Ramesses V.
Drawing of a relief of pharaoh Ramesses V.
Pharaoh
Reign4 regnal years
1149–1145 BC
PredecessorRamesses IV
SuccessorRamesses VI
Horus name
Kanekhetmenmaat
K3-nḫt-mn-m3ˁt
Strong bull, whose Maat is permanent
G5
E2
D40
C10O25
Golden Horus
User-renput-mer-Atum
Wsr-rnpwt-mr-Jtm
Rich in years likeAtum
G8
wsrsM4M4M4W19it
U15
Aa13
A40
Praenomen
Usermaatre Sekheperenre
Wsr-m3ˁt-Rˁ-s-ḫpr-n-Rˁ
Ra is rich inMaat, he who Ra has raised
M23L2
N5wsrC10sL1N5n
Nomen
Ramesisu Imen(her)khepeschef
Rˁ msj sw Jmn (ḥr) ḫpš.f
Ra is the one who created him;Amun is his force
G39N5
N5C2C12N36
f
sF31M23
ConsortHenutwati andTawerettenru
FatherRamesses IV
MotherDuatentopet
Died1145 BC
BurialKV9; Mummy found in theKV35 royal cache (Theban Necropolis)
Dynasty20th Dynasty

Usermaatre Sekheperenre Ramesses V (also writtenRamses andRameses) was the fourthpharaoh of theTwentieth Dynasty of Egypt and was the son ofRamesses IV andDuatentopet. His mummy is now on display at theNational Museum of Egyptian Civilization inCairo.

Reign

[edit]
Obelisk of Ramesses V.Archaeological Museum of Bologna, KS 1884

Ramesses V's reign was characterized by the continued growth of the power of the priesthood ofAmun, which controlled much of thetemple land in the country and the state finances, at the expense of the ruling pharaohs. The Turin 1887papyrus records a financial scandal during Ramesses' reign that involved the priests ofElephantine.

Year 1

[edit]

A period of domestic instability also afflicted his reign, as evidenced by the fact that, according to the Turin Papyrus Cat. 2044, the workmen ofDeir el-Medina periodically stopped work on Ramesses V'sKV9 tomb in this king's first regnal year, out of fear of "the enemy", presumably Libyan raiding parties, who had reached the town ofPer-Nebyt and "burnt its people."[1] Another incursion by these raiders into Thebes is recorded a few days later.[2] This shows that the Egyptian state was having difficulties ensuring the security of its own elite tomb workers, let alone the general populace, during this troubled time.

Year 4

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TheWilbour Papyrus, believed to date to Year 4 of Ramesses V's reign, was a major land survey and tax assessment document which covered various lands "extending from nearCrocodilopolis (Medinet el-Fayyum) southwards to a little short of the modern town of El-Minya, a distance of some 90 miles."[3] It reveals most of Egypt's land was controlled by the Amun temples, which also directed the country's finances. The document highlights the increasing power of the High Priest of AmunRamessesnakht whose son, a certain Usimare'nakhte, held the office of chief tax master.

Death

[edit]

The circumstances of Ramesses V's death are unknown but it is known he had a reign of almost four full years.[4] He died in his 4th Regnal Year around the time interval between the first and second month ofPeret.[5]

Burial

[edit]

Anostracon records that this king was only buried in Year 2 ofRamesses VI, his successor, which was highly irregular since Egyptian tradition required a king to be mummified and buried precisely 70 days into the reign of his successor.[6]

Ramesses V's mummified head.

However, another reason for the much delayed burial of Ramesses V in Year 2, second month ofAkhet day 1 of Ramesses VI's reign (see KRI, VI, 343) may have been connected with Ramesses VI's need "to clear out any Libyans [invaders] from Thebes and to provide a temporary tomb for Ramesses V until plans for a double burial within tomb KV9 could be put into effect."[2] Moreover, a Theban work journal (P. Turin 1923) dated to Year 2 of Ramesses VI's reign shows that a period of normality had returned to the Theban West Bank by this time.[2]

Mummy

[edit]

Themummy of Ramesses V was recovered in 1898 by Victor Loret in KV35.[7] It was unwrapped and examined by G.E. Smith in 1905, and showed a body full of disease. Smith described him as a young man, Ikram and Dodson suggest he died in his early thirties.

Smallpox

[edit]

One theory is that he may have suffered and subsequently died fromsmallpox (VARV), due to lesions found on his face. If true, he is thought to be one of the earliest known victims of the disease.[8][9]

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While a 2016 discovery has found that the shared ancestral form of modern smallpox dates back to 1580 AD, this study merely indicates that the strains of smallpox circulating at the time of smallpox eradication had a common ancestor in the late 16th century, specifically that "the VARV lineages eradicated during the 20th century had only been in existence for ~200 years, at a time of rapidly expanding human movement and population size in the face of increasingly widespread inoculation and vaccination." Indeed, they say merely about ancient cases of smallpox that "if they were indeed due to smallpox, these early cases were caused by virus lineages that were no longer circulating at the point of eradication in the 1970s."[10] The advent of vaccination, or variolation in China and Japan during the middle ages, could have altered the relative presence of smallpox strains and diminished the presence of ancient strains.[11]

A 2015 review summarizing recent research into the question of smallpox evolution and divergence from its common ancestors suggests it is most likely that smallpox evolved 3000–4000 years ago in East Africa or India, which is not inherently contradicted by the study described[12] the latter of which contains descriptions of smallpox from before the first century AD at least. Finally, another genomic analysis places the evolution of smallpox at 16,000 years before present, and mentions Ramses V: "if the pustular eruption of Ramses V was from smallpox, it could represent a smallpox outbreak from imported cases... rather than regional endemic disease. This hypothesis is supported by the fact that only three mummies in that period had similar lesions."[13][14]

Bubonic Plague

[edit]

Another theory is bubons in his groin, usually associated with thebubonic plague.[15][16]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Peden, A.J., The Reign of Ramesses IV, (Aris & Phillips Ltd: 1994), Peden's source on these recorded disturbances is KRI, VI, 340-343.
  2. ^abcPeden, p. 21.
  3. ^Gardiner, Alan;Egypt of the Pharaohs, (1961).
  4. ^Clayton, Peter; Chronology of the Pharaohs, Thames & Hudson Ltd, (1994), p. 167.
  5. ^Jürgen von Beckerath, Chronologie des Pharaonischen Ägypten. Mainz: Philipp von Zabern, (1997), pp. 201-202.
  6. ^Clayton, p. 167.
  7. ^CG61085; JE34566.
  8. ^Hornung, Erik; "The Pharaoh"p. 292. inThe Egyptians (ed.)Sergio Donadoni and Robert Bianchi, University of Chicago Press, 1997.
  9. ^Hopkins, Donald R. (May 1980)."Ramses V: earliest know victim?"(PDF).World Health:22–26.
  10. ^Duggan, Ana T.; Perdomo, Maria F.; Piombino-Mascali, Dario; Marciniak, Stephanie; Poinar, Debi; Emery, Matthew V.; Buchmann, Jan P.; Duchêne, Sebastian; Jankauskas, Rimantas; Humphreys, Margaret; Golding, G. Brian; Southon, John; Devault, Alison; Rouillard, Jean-Marie; Sahl, Jason W.; Dutour, Olivier; Hedman, Klaus; Sajantila, Antti; Smith, Geoffrey L.; Holmes, Edward C.; Poinar, Hendrik N. (19 December 2016)."17th Century Variola Virus Reveals the Recent History of Smallpox".Current Biology.26 (24):3407–3412.doi:10.1016/j.cub.2016.10.061.PMC 5196022.PMID 27939314.
  11. ^"6".Early Efforts at Control: Variolation, Vaccination, and Isolation and Quarantine(PDF). 2006 [2004]. p. 245-275.
  12. ^Babkin, Igor; Babkina, Irina (10 March 2015)."The Origin of the Variola Virus".Viruses.7 (3):1100–1112.doi:10.3390/v7031100.PMC 4379562.PMID 25763864.
  13. ^Li, Y.; Carroll, D. S.; Gardner, S. N.; Walsh, M. C.; Vitalis, E. A.; Damon, I. K. (27 September 2007)."On the origin of smallpox: Correlating variola phylogenics with historical smallpox records".Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.104 (40):15787–15792.doi:10.1073/pnas.0609268104.PMC 2000395.PMID 17901212.
  14. ^Forni, Diego; Molteni, Cristian; Cagliani, Rachele; Clerici, Mario; Sironi, Manuela (2023)."Analysis of variola virus molecular evolution suggests an old origin of the virus consistent with historical records".Microbial Genomics.9 (1).doi:10.1099/mgen.0.000932.PMC 9973844.PMID 36748699.
  15. ^"Mummy Monday: Ramesses V". 26 July 2021. Archived fromthe original on 19 September 2021. Retrieved11 June 2024.
  16. ^XX'th Dynasty Gallery I Retrieved 28 October 2024.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Peden, A.J., Where did Ramesses VI bury his nephew?, GM 181 (2001), 83-88.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toRamses V.
Period
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