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Yakbim Sekhaenre

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Egyptian pharaoh
Yakbim Sekhaenre
Scarab seal of Sekhaenre, now likely in the Petrie Museum
Scarab seal of Sekhaenre, now likely in thePetrie Museum
Pharaoh
Reignc. 25 years, 1805-1780 BCE (Ryholt)[1]
Predecessornone (founder)[1]
SuccessorYa'ammu Nubwoserre[2]
Praenomen
Sekhaenre
He who appears throughRa[3]
N5O34N28
D36
n
Nomen
Yakbim[3]
iiV31D58n
n
n
Dynastylikely14th Dynasty[1]

Sekhaenre Yakbim orYakbmu[4] was a ruler during theSecond Intermediate Period of Egypt. Although his dynastic and temporal collocation is disputed, DanishEgyptologistKim Ryholt believes that he likely was the founder of theLevantine-bloodedFourteenth Dynasty,[1] while in older literature he was mainly considered a member of theSixteenth Dynasty.[3]

Identification

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His name never appears inside acartouche, which was a pharaonic prerogative; nevertheless, on his seals he is usually called "the good god, Sekhaenre" (or simply "Sekhaenre") and "the son of Ra, Yakbim".[3]

No evidence confirms that the prenomen Sekhaenre and nomen Yakbim belong together. This theory is based on stylistic features of theseals and was proposed byWilliam Ayres Ward[5] and later elaborated on by Ryholt;[6]Daphna Ben-Tor disputed this identification, pointing out that the seals of the several rulers living during this period are too similar to make such correlations on the basis of mere design features.[4] Thus, they should be studied as two independent rulers.

Assuming that Ward was right, Sekhaenre Yakbim is attested by a remarkable 123 seals, second only—for this period—to the 396 ofSheshi.[7] Based on that, Ryholt estimated for him a reign length of around 25 years, in the interval 1805–1780 BCE.[1]

Israeli EgyptologistRaphael Giveon identified Yakbim with another ruler of the same period,Ya'ammu Nubwoserre, whileJürgen von Beckerath equated Yakbim withSalitis, theManethonian founder of theFifteenth Dynasty.[3]

Attesstations

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Sekhaenre (prenomen)

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See Ryholt 1997:359 File 13/d

A scarab bearing the prenomen of this king was discovered inTell el-Ajjul,Gaza Strip byFlinders Petrie in 1933.[8]

  • EA30511 | At Saqqara(?), a scarab.[9]

At Deir el-Bahri are three limestone blocks BM EA 41130,[10] Cairo, Cairo JE 46197.

Seals

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Levant. At Tell el-Fara, scarab-seal with Prenomen.[11]At Tell el-Ajjul, three scarab seals with Prenomen.

Egypt. In the Delta, two scarab seals with Prenomen.At Tell el-Yahudieh, a scarab seal with Prenomen.At Saqqara (?), a scarab-seal with Prenomen.At Abydos, a scarab-seal with Prenomen.

Nubia. At Aniba (Nubia), a scarab seal with Prenomen.At Kerma (Nubia), a scarab seal with Prenomen.

Of Unknown Proevnance, scarab-seals with Prenomen (82).

Yakbim (nomen)

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ya-k-b-mu. See Ryholt 1997:359 File 14/1

Seals

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Levant. At Tell Kabri, scarab-seals with Nomen.At Tell Beit Mirsim, a scarab seal with Nomen.[12]

Nubia. At Buhen (Nubia), a scarab seal with Nomen.

Of Unknown Provenance, scarab-seals with Nomen (26)Of Unknown Provenance, a round seal with Nomen.Of Unknown Provenance, a cylinder seal with Nomen.

Yakbim (Eldest King's Son)

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There are seals referring to a King's Son and an Eldest King's Son Yakbim who apparently was not identical to King Yakbim.[13][14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdeRyholt (1997), p. 409.
  2. ^Ryholt (1997), p. 96.
  3. ^abcdeSekhaenre Yakbim on Egyphica.net.
  4. ^abBen-Tor (2010), pp. 99ff.
  5. ^Ward (1984), pp. 163ff.
  6. ^Ryholt (1997), pp. 41–47.
  7. ^Ryholt (1997), p. 199.
  8. ^Flinders, Petrie (1933).Ancient Gaza Chapter III: Scarabs Tell El Ajjul (London, 1933).
  9. ^"scarab | British Museum".
  10. ^"artefact | British Museum".
  11. ^BM L 670.
  12. ^Israel Museum 32.2704.
  13. ^Ryholt 1997:456.
  14. ^Martin, Seals, nos. 307-308.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Ben-Tor, D. (2010). "Sequences and chronology of Second Intermediate Period royal-name scarabs, based on excavated series from Egypt and the Levant". In Marcel Marée (ed.).The Second Intermediate Period (Thirteenth–Seventeenth Dynasties): Current Research, Future Prospects. Orientalia Lovaniensa Analecta. Vol. 192. Leuven: Peeters. pp. 91–108.ISBN 9789042922280.
  • Ryholt, K. S. B. (1997).The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, c. 1800-1550 BC. Copenhagen:Museum Tusculanum Press.ISBN 87-7289-421-0.
  • Ward, W. A. (1984). "Royal-name scarabs". In Olga Tufnell (ed.).Scarab Seals and their Contribution to History in the Early Second Millennium B.C. Studies on Scarab Seals. Vol. 2. Warminster: Aris & Phillips. pp. 151–192.ISBN 9780856681301.

External links

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toSekhaenre.
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