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Sobekhotep IV

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Egyptian king
Sobekhotep IV
Statue of Sobekhotep IV (Louvre)
Statue of Sobekhotep IV (Louvre)
Pharaoh
Reign8-9 regnal years
Year 9 (highest att.)
Year 8 (clear evidence)
PredecessorNeferhotep I and his coregentSihathor
SuccessorMerhotepre Sobekhotep
Horus name
Ankhibtawy
ˁnḫ-jb-tȝ.wj
Horus, may the heart of the two lands live
G5
S34F34
N19
Nebty name
Wadjkhaw
Wȝḏ-ḫˁw
He whose apparitions are flourishing
G16
M13N28
D36
G43Y1
Z2
Golden Horus
Weserbaw
Wsr-bȝw
He whoseBas are powerful
G8F12G30

Turin King List: Khaneferre Sobekhotep
Ḫˁ-nfr-Rˁ sbk-ḥtp
The perfect apparition of Ra, Sobek is satisfied
<
N5N28
D36
Y1F35I3R4
X1
Q3
>
Praenomen
Khaneferre
Ḫˁ-nfr-Rˁ
The perfect apparition ofRa
M23
t
L2
t
<
N5N28
D36
F35
>
Nomen
Sobekhotep
Sbk-ḥtp
Sobek is satisfied
G39N5<
I4R4
tp
>
ConsortTjan
ChildrenSobekhotep-Miw, Sobekhotep-Dja-Dja, Haankhef-Iykherneferet, Amenhotep, Nebetiunet[1]
FatherHaankhef
MotherKemi
BurialPossiblytomb S10 atAbydos, seetext
Dynasty13th Dynasty

Khaneferre Sobekhotep IV was one of the more powerful Egyptian kings of the13th Dynasty (c. 1803 BC to c. 1649 BC), who reigned at least eight years. His brothers,Neferhotep I andSihathor, were his predecessors on the throne, the latter having only ruled as coregent for a few months.

Sobekhotep states on a stela found in theAmun temple atKarnak that he was born in Thebes. The king is believed to have reigned for around 10 years. He is known by a relatively high number of monuments, including stelae, statues, many seals and other minor objects. There are attestations for building works atAbydos and Karnak.

Family

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Parentage and Siblings

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Sobekhotep was the son of the 'god's father'Haankhef and of the 'king's mother' Kemi. His paternal grandparents weresoldier of the town's regiment Nehy and his wife Senebtysy. We know nothing about his maternal grandparents.

NehySenebtisi
HaankhefKemi
Neferhotep ISihathorSobekhotep IV

Khaneferre Sobekhotep was the youngest brother of Khasekhemre Neferhotep and Sihathor. He succeeded as coregent to Neferhotep I after Sihathor died shortly into his coregency.

Marriage and children

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Sobekhotep might have had several wives, only one of which is known for certain.

Tjan | He married "king's wife"Tjan. She is not known to have held the title "Great King's Wife" indicating the primary wife when the king had several wives. Children born to Tjan included Amenhotep and Nebetiunet.

There are three further king's sons: Sobekhotep Miu, Sobekhotep Djadja and Haankhef Iykhernofret. Their mother is not recorded in extant sources.[2]

Reign

[edit]
Cartouche of Sobekhotep IV.

While Sobekhotep IV was one of the most powerful 13th dynasty rulers and his control over Memphis, Middle Egypt and Thebes is well attested by historical records, it is believed that he did not rule over a united Egypt. According to the egyptologistKim Ryholt, the14th Dynasty was already in control of the eastern Nile Delta at the time.[3]

Coregency

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During the reign of king Neferhotep I, turmoil and the lack of heirs made the king appoint his brother Sihathor as junior coregent. However, Sihathor died within a year and Neferhotep I had to appoint his second brother Khaneferre Sobekhotep IV as junior coregent.

Sole reign

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A stela of the king found at Karnak reports donations to the Amun-Ra temple.[4] A pair of door jambs with the name of the king was found at Karnak, attesting some building work. There is also a restoration inscription on a statue of kingMentuhotep II, also coming from Karnak. From Abydos are known several inscribed blocks attesting some building activities at the local temple[5] The vizier Neferkare Iymeru reports on one of his statues found at Karnak (Paris, Louvre A 125) that he built a canal and ahouse of millions of years for the king. The statue of the vizier was found at Karnak and might indicate that these buildings were erected there.[6]

ForYear 6is attested an expedition to the amethyst mines at Wadi el-Hudi in southernmost Egypt. The expedition is attested via four stelae set up at Wadi el-Hudi.[7] At Edfu, a stela is dated toYear 8.[8] From theWadi Hammamat comes a stela dated to theYear 9 of the king.[9]

Edfu

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Alternatively, N. Moeller and G. Marouard argue that the eastern Delta was ruled by the15th Dynasty Hyksos kingKhyan at the time of Sobekhotep IV. Their argument, presented in a recently published article,[10]relies on the discovery of an important early 12th dynasty (Middle Kingdom) administrative building inTell Edfu, Upper Egypt, which was continuously in use from the early Second Intermediate Period until it fell out of use during the 17th dynasty, when its remains were sealed up by a large silo court. Fieldwork by Egyptologists in 2010 and 2011 into the remains of the former 12th Dynasty building, which was still in use at the time of the 13th dynasty, led to the discovery of a large adjoining hall which proved to contain 41 sealings showing the cartouche of the Hyksos ruler Khyan together with nine sealings naming the 13th dynasty king Sobekhotep IV.[11]As Moeller, Marouard and Ayers write: "These finds come from a secure and sealed archaeological context and open up new questions about the cultural and chronological evolution of the late Middle Kingdom and early Second Intermediate Period."[12] They conclude, first, that Khyan was actually one of the earlier Hyksos kings and may not have been succeeded by Apophis—who was the second last king of the Hyksos kingdom—and, second, that the 15th (Hyksos) Dynasty was already in existence by the mid-13th Dynasty period since Khyan controlled a part of northern Egypt at the same time as Sobekhotep IV ruled the rest of Egypt as a pharaoh of the 13th dynasty.

This analysis and the conclusions drawn from it are questioned by Robert Porter, however, who argues that Khyan ruled much later than Sobekhotep IV. Porter notes that the seals of a pharaoh were used even long after his death, but also wonders whether Sobekhotep IV reigned much later and whether the early Thirteenth Dynasty was much longer than previously thought.[13] In Ryholt's chronology of the Second Intermediate Period, Khyan and Sobekhotep IV are separated by c. 100 years.[3] A similar figure is obtained byNicolas Grimal.[14] Alexander Ilin-Tomich had a further close look at the pottery associated with the finds of seal impressions and draws parallels to Elephantine where one of the pottery forms of the find appears in a rather late Second Intermediate Period context. Ilin-Tomich concludes that there is no reason to believe that Khyan and Sobekhotep IV reigned at the same time. The level in which the seal impressions were found is later than Sobekhotep IV.[15]

Regardless of which theory is true, either the 14th dynasty or the 15th dynasty already controlled the Delta by the time of Sobekhotep IV.[16]

Royal court

[edit]

The royal court is known from sources contemporaneous with Neferhotep I, providing evidence that Sobekhotep IV continued the politics of his brother in the administration. TheVizier wasNeferkare Iymeru. The treasurer wasSenebi and the high steward a certainNebankh. At Edfu, the Elder of the Portal, Hor-aa.[17]

Tomb

[edit]
Main article:S 10 (Abydos)

The Tomb of Khaneferre Sobekhotep IV has not been located with certainty. He was perhaps buried atAbydos, where a huge tomb (compare:S10) naming a pharaoh Sobekhotep was found byJosef W. Wegner of theUniversity of Pennsylvania just next to the funerary complex ofSenusret III of the12th Dynasty. Although initially attributed to pharaohSekhemre Khutawy Sobekhotep I, the style of the burial suggests a date of the tomb under Sobekhotep IV.[18]

Attestations

[edit]
  • BM EA 1060 | A stela with the royal name of Sobekhotep IV thought to describe military activity in Wawat.[19][20]
  • Cairo JE 51911 | At Karnak, a stela by Sobekhotep IV who had two sets of doors erected in the Temple of Amun made of good cedar tree from Lebanon (‘s nfr n hnt-s).[21][22]
  • Alliot, Edfou, pl. XVII.2 | At Edfu, the stela of [ḥr-ꜥꜣ] (PD 428[17]) dated to Year 8.[23]

References

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  1. ^Julien Siesse: An unpublished Scarab of Queen Tjan (Thirteenth Dynasty) from the Louvre Museum (AF 6755), in: Gianluca Miniaci, Wolfram Grajetzki (eds.): The World of Middle Kingdom Egypt (2000-1550 BC), Vol. ii, London 2016,ISBN 9781906137489, p. 247
  2. ^K.S.B. Ryholt:The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, c.1800-1550 BC, Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications, vol. 20. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 1997, 231
  3. ^abK.S.B. Ryholt:The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, c.1800-1550 BC, Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications, vol. 20. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 1997.
  4. ^Wolfgang Helck:Eine Stele Sebekhoteps IV. aus Karnak, inMDAIK 24 (1969), 194-200
  5. ^Ryholt:The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, c.1800-1550 BC, Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications, vol. 20. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 1997, 349
  6. ^Elisabeth Delange:Catalogue des statues égyptinnes du Moyen Empire, 2060-1560 avant j.-c., Paris 1987ISBN 2-7118-2-161-7, 66-68
  7. ^Ashraf I. Sadek:The Amethyst Mining Inscriptions of Wadi el-Hudi, Part I: Text, Warminster 1980,ISBN 0-85668-162-8, 46-52, nos. 22-25; Ashraf I. Sadek:The Amethyst Mining Inscriptions of Wadi el-Hudi, Part II: Additional Texts, Plates, Warminster 1980,ISBN 0-85668-264-0, 5-7, no. 155
  8. ^Alliot, Edfou, pl. XVII.2
  9. ^Ryholt 1997:349 File 13/29 no. 18; the stela is also dated to Year 7/8 by others
  10. ^Nadine Moeller, Gregory Marouard & N. Ayers,Discussion of Late Middle Kingdom and Early Second Intermediate Period History and Chronology in Relation to the Khayan Sealings from Tell Edfu, in:Egypt and the Levant 21 (2011), pp.87-121online PDF
  11. ^Moeller, Marouard & Ayers, Egypt and the Levant 21, (2011), pp.87-108
  12. ^Moeller, Marouard & Ayers, Egypt and the Levant 21, (2011), p.87
  13. ^Robert M. Porter:The Second Intermediate Period according to Edfu, Goettinger Mizsellen 239 (2013), p. 75-80
  14. ^N. Grimal:Histoire de l'Égypte ancienne, 1988
  15. ^Alexander Ilin-Tomich:The Theban Kingdom of Dynasty 16: Its Rise, Administration and Politics, in:Journal of Egyptian History 7 (2014), 149-150
  16. ^Thomas Schneider,Ausländer in Ägypten während des Mittleren Reiches und der Hyksoszeit I, 1998, pp.158-59
  17. ^ab"Person PD 428 | Persons and Names of the Middle Kingdom and early New Kingdom".
  18. ^J. Wegner:A Royal Necropolis at Abydos, in:Near Eastern Archaeology, 78 (2), 2015, p. 70; J. Wegner, K. Cahail:Royal Funerary Equipment of a King Sobekhotep at South Abydos: Evidence for the Tombs of Sobekhotep IV and Neferhotep I?, inJARCE 15 (2015), 123-146
  19. ^"stela | British Museum".
  20. ^Ryholt 1997:90 Footnote 132 for a different opinion
  21. ^"Cairo JE 51911 | Persons and Names of the Middle Kingdom and early New Kingdom".
  22. ^Ryholt 1997:89 Footnote 287
  23. ^"Alliot, Edfou, pl. XVII.2 | Persons and Names of the Middle Kingdom and early New Kingdom".

Bibliography

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  • K.S.B. Ryholt,The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, c.1800-1550 BC, (Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications, vol. 20. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 1997).

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toSebekhotep Khaneferre.
Preceded byPharaoh of Egypt
Thirteenth Dynasty
Succeeded by
Period
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  • Pharaohs
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  • uncertain
Protodynastic
(pre-3150 BC)
Lower
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Early Dynastic
(3150–2686 BC)
I
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Old Kingdom
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VII/VIII
IX
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Period
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Middle Kingdom
(2040–1802 BC)
XI
Nubia
XII
2nd Intermediate
(1802–1550 BC)
XIII
XIV
XV
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Abydos
XVII
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New Kingdom
(1550–1070 BC)
XVIII
XIX
XX
3rd Intermediate
(1069–664 BC)
XXI
High Priests of Amun
XXII
Lines of XXII/XXIII
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Late toRoman Period(664 BC–313 AD)
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