
An image representing the Egyptian pharaoh
Ahmose I defeating the Hyksos in battle.
The 'Hyksos' (
Egyptian ''heqa khasewet'', "foreign rulers";
Greek , ) were an Asiatic people, likely
Semitic or
Indo-Aryans, who invaded the eastern
Nile Delta, initiating the
Second Intermediate Period of
Ancient Egypt. They rose to power in the
17th century BC, (according to the traditional chronology) and ruled Lower and Middle Egypt for over 100 years, forming the
Fifteenth and possibly the
Sixteenth Dynasties of
Egypt, (''c.'' 1648–1540 BC).
[1] This 108-year period follows the
Turin Canon, which gives the six kings of the Hyksos 15th Dynasty a total reign length of 108 years.
[ Second Intermediate Period (SIP) by Ottar Vendel.]
Traditionally, only the six Fifteenth Dynasty rulers are called "Hyksos". The Hyksos had
Canaanite names, as seen in those which contain the names of Semitic deities such as
Anath or
Ba'al. They introduced new tools of warfare into Egypt, most notably the
composite bow and the horse-drawn
chariot.
Some scholars, as early as
Josephus, have associated the Semitic Hyksos with the ancient
Hebrews, seeing their departure from Egypt as the story retold in
the Exodus. Notably, Canaanite/Hebrew names occur among the Hyksos.
Hyksos rule in Egypt
The Hyksos kingdom was centered in the eastern
Nile Delta and
Middle Egypt and was limited in size, never extending south into
Upper Egypt, which was under control by
Theban-based rulers. Hyksos relations with the south seem to have been mainly of a commercial nature, although Theban princes appear to have recognized the Hyksos rulers and may possibly have provided them with
tribute for a period. The Hyksos Fifteenth Dynasty rulers established their capital and seat of government at
Memphis and their summer residence at
Avaris.
The known rulers for the Hyksos
15th dynasty are:
The rule of these kings overlaps with that of the native-Egyptian pharaohs of the
16th and
17th dynasties of Egypt, better known as the
Second Intermediate Period. The first pharaoh of the
18th dynasty,
Ahmose I, finally expelled the Hyksos from their last holdout at
Sharuhen in
Gaza by the 16th year of his reign.
[2][3]
Scholars have taken the increasing use of scarabs and the adoption of some Egyptian forms of art by the Fifteenth Dynasty Hyksos kings and their wide distribution as an indication of their becoming progressively Egyptianized.
[4] The Hyksos used Egyptian titles associated with traditional Egyptian kingship, and took Egyptian god
Seth to represent their own titulary deity.
[5] It would appear as though Hyksos administration was accepted in most quarters, if not actually supported by many of their northern-Egyptian subjects. The flip side is that in spite of the prosperity that the stable political situation brought to the land, the native
Egyptians continued to view the Hyksos as non-Egyptian "invaders". When they eventually were driven out of Egypt all traces of their occupation were erased. History is written by the victors, and in this case the victors were the rulers of the Egyptian-native Eighteenth Dynasty, the direct successor of the Theban Seventeenth Dynasty. It was the latter which started and led a sustained war against the Hyksos. These native kings from Thebes had an incentive to demonize the Asiatic rulers in the North, thus accounting for the ruthless destruction of their monuments. This note of warning tells us that the historical situation most probably lay somewhere between these two extreme positions: the Hyksos dynasties represented superficially Egyptianized foreigners who were tolerated, but not truly accepted, by their Egyptian subjects.
The independent native rulers in Thebes do seem, however, to have reached a practical ''modus vivendi'' with the later Hyksos rulers. This included transit rights through Hyksos-controlled Middle and
Lower Egypt and pasturage rights in the fertile Delta. One text, the ''Carnarvon Tablet I'', relates the misgivings of the Theban ruler’s council of advisors when
Kamose proposed moving against the Hyksos, who he claimed were a humiliating stain upon the holy land of Egypt. The councillors clearly did not wish to disturb the status quo:
Was there a Hyksos invasion?
Manetho's account of the appearance of the Hyksos in Egypt describes it as an armed invasion by a horde of foreign barbarians who met little resistance and who subdued the country by military force. It has been claimed that new revolutionary methods of warfare ensured the Hyksos the ascendancy in their invasion.
Herbert E. Winlock describes new military hardware, such as the
composite bow, as well as the improved
recurve bow and most importantly the horse-drawn war
chariot, as well as improved arrowheads, various kinds of swords and daggers, a new type of shield,
mailed shirts, and the metal helmet.
[Winlock, Herbert E. ''The Rise and Fall of the Middle Kingdom in Thebes''.]
The traditional explanation is there was an invasion; one that took several years and that wasn't a coordinated effort of some foreign kingdom, but mostly a migration of particular groups, tribes or federated tribes, which had access to new and superior weapons developed further away in Asia that helped them conquer a rich piece of land to live in, and were possibly being routed from their own areas.
In the last decades, however, the idea of a simple migration, with little or no violence involved, has gained some support
[6]. Under this theory, the Egyptian rulers of
13th Dynasty were unable to stop these new migrants from travelling to Egypt from Asia because they were weak kings who were struggling to cope with various domestic problems including possibly famine. At some point in time, the foreigners, whose elite might have already been local rulers in the name of the Pharaoh, realized there was no need to pay tribute and obedience to a weak king, and took the title of Pharaoh for themselves (in the north of the country — the Hyksos never penetrated the south).
Josephus, quoting from the work of the historian Manetho, described the invasion:
Supporters of the peaceful takeover of Egypt claim that there is little evidence of battles or wars in general in this period
[6]. They also maintain that the chariot didn't play any relevant role, so there was no real technological superiority on the Hyksos side. The case for the invasion, on the other side, is based mostly on: (a) the traditional Manetho's explanation; (b) the fact that the chariot was a new technology spreading from
Central Asia and that there are other theories of invasions by nomadic or semi-nomadic tribes mounted on chariots in 1700–1300 BC, most notably
Hurrians in the
Near East (Helck) and
Aryans in
India (the
Vedas), with the Hurrians in particular being active quite near where the Hyksos appeared; and (c) the fact that the chariot became the master weapon of that period, the weapon of nobles and kings, and one of the most important symbols of power in
Eurasia, because in
Mycenaean Greece,
India,
Mesopotamia,
Eastern Europe and
China, kings and gods started to be portrayed on chariots, buried in chariots and always went to war in chariots. With such an important new weapon, the advocates of the invasion theory say, it seems strange to consider that the Hyksos just entered peacefully in the north of Egypt from Asia, with no knowledge of the chariot, or knowing it but choosing not to use it.
Theban offensive
Under Seqenenre Tao (II)

Drawing of the mummified head of Tao II, bearing axe-blade wounds. The common theory is that he died in a battle against the Hyksos
The war against the Hyksos began in the closing years of the Seventeenth Dynasty at Thebes. Later New Kingdom literary tradition has brought one of these Theban kings,
Seqenenre Tao (II), into contact with his Hyksos contemporary in the north,
Auserra Apophis (also known as Apepi or Apophis). The tradition took the form of a tale in which the Hyksos king Apopi sent a messenger to Seqenenre in Thebes to demand that the Theban sport of harpooning hippopotami be done away with, his excuse was that the noise of these beasts was such that he was unable to sleep in far-away
Avaris. The real reason was probably that their main god was
Seth, who was represented as part man part hippopotamus. Perhaps the only historical information that can be gleaned from the tale is that Egypt was a divided land, the area of direct Hyksos control being in the north, but the whole of Egypt possibly paying tribute to the Hyksos kings.
Seqenenre participated in active diplomatic posturing, which probably consisted of more than simply exchanging insults with the Asiatic ruler in the North. He seems to have led military skirmishes against the Hyksos, and judging by the vicious head wound on his
mummy in the
Cairo Museum, he may have died during one of them. His son and successor,
Wadjkheperra Kamose, the last ruler of the
Seventeenth Dynasty at
Thebes, is credited with the first significant defeats in the Theban-led war against the Hyksos.
Under Kamose
There is little evidence to support
Pierre Montet's assertion in his 1964 book ''Eternal Egypt'' that Kamose's war of liberation was sponsored by the
priesthood of Amun as an attack against the Seth-worshipers in the north (i.e. a religious motive). The Carnarvon Tablet I, does state that Kamose travelled north to attack the Asiatics by the command of Amun, the titulary deity of his dynasty, but this is simple hyperbole common to virtually all Egyptian royal inscriptions at all periods of time and should not be understood as the god’s having specifically commanded the attack itself for religious reasons. Kamose's reason for launching his attack on the Hyksos was nationalistic pride, for in this same text he complains that he is sandwiched at Thebes between the Asiatics in the north and the Nubians (Sudanese) in the south, each holding "his slice of Egypt, dividing up the land with me… My wish is to save Egypt and to smite the Asiatics!" Hence, it was native Egyptian nationalism that prompted Kamose to embark and sailed north from Thebes at the head of his army in his third regnal year.
He surprised and overran the southernmost garrison of the Hyksos at Nefrusy, just north of Cusae [near modern Asyut], and Kamose then led his army as far north as the neighborhood of
Avaris itself. Though the city was not taken, the fields around it were devastated by the Thebans. A second stele discovered at Thebes continues the account of the war broken off on the Carnarvon Tablet I, and mentions the interception and capture of a courier bearing a message from the Hyksos king Aawoserra Apophis at Avaris to his ally the ruler of
Kush (modern Sudan), requesting the latter's urgent support against the threat posed by Kamose's activities against both their kingdoms. Kamose promptly ordered a detachment of his troops to occupy the Bahriya Oasis in the Western Desert to control and block the desert route to the south. Kamose, called "the Strong", then sailed back up the Nile to Thebes for a joyous victory celebration after what was probably not much more than a surprise spoiling raid in force which caught the Hyksos off guard. His Year 3 is the only date attested for Kamose.
By the end of the reign of
Apepi I/Apophis, perhaps the second last Hyksos kings of the Fifteenth Dynasty, the Hyksos had been routed from Middle Egypt and had retreated northward and regrouped in the vicinity of the entrance of the
Fayyum at Atfih. This great Hyksos king had outlived his first Egyptian contemporary, Seqenenra Tao II, and was still on the throne (albeit of a much reduced kingdom) at the end of Kamose's reign. The last Hyksos ruler of the Fifteenth Dynasty, Khamudi, undoubtedly had a relatively short reign which fell some time within the first half of the reign of
Ahmose, Kamose's successor and the founder of the Eighteenth Dynasty.
Under Ahmose

Close-up of a drawing of axe blade depicting Ahmose I striking down a Hyksos soldier, part of the burial equipment of
Queen Ahhotep.
Ahmose, who is regarded as the first king of the
Eighteenth Dynasty may have been on the Theban throne for some time before he resumed the war against the Hyksos.
The details of his military campaigns are taken from the account on the walls of the tomb of another
Ahmose, a soldier from
El-Kab, a town in southern Upper Egypt, whose father had served under
Seqenenra Tao II, and whose family had long been
nomarchs of the district. It seems that several campaigns against the stronghold at
Avaris were needed before the Hyksos were finally dislodged and driven from Lower Egypt. When this occurred is not known with certainty. Some authorities place the expulsion as early as Ahmose's fourth year, while
Donald Redford, whose chronological structure has been adopted here, places it as late as the king's fifteenth year. A soldier (named Ahmose) specifically states that he followed on foot as his King Ahmose rode to war in his chariot. This is the first mention of the use of the horse and chariot by the Egyptians. In the repeated fighting around Avaris, the soldier captured prisoners and carried off several hands, which when reported to the royal herald resulted in his being awarded the "Gold of Valor" on three separate occasions. The actual fall of Avaris is only briefly mentioned: "Then Avaris was despoiled. Then I carried off spoil from there: one man, three women, a total of four persons. Then his majesty gave them to me to be slaves" (ANET, pp.233f).
After the fall of Avaris, the fleeing Hyksos were pursued by the Egyptian army across northern
Sinai and into southern
Canaan. Here, in the
Negev desert between
Rafah and
Gaza, the fortified town of
Sharuhen was reduced after, according to the soldier from El-Kab, a long three-year siege operation. How soon after the sack of Avaris this Asiatic campaign took place is uncertain. One can reasonably conclude that the thrust into southern Canaan probably followed the Hyksos’ eviction from Avaris fairly closely, but, given a period of protracted struggle before Avaris fell and possibly more than one season of campaigning before the Hyksos were shut up in
Sharuhen, the chronological sequence must remain uncertain.
Later times
The Hyksos continued to play a role in Egyptian literature as a synonym for "Asiatic" down to Hellenistic times. The term was frequently evoked against such groups as the Semites settled in Aswan or the Delta, and this may have led the Egyptian priest and historian
Manetho to identify the coming of the Hyksos with the sojourn in Egypt of Joseph and his brothers, and helped modern historians identify the expulsion of the Hyksos with
the Exodus. It may also indicate that the "expulsion" of the Hyksos reported in the Egyptian records mainly refers to the expulsion of the Semitic rulers and military/political elite and does not indicate a mass expulsion of the lower classes who, in the Ancient World, were traditionally exploited by their conquerors rather than expelled or massacred.
There seems to be slight evidence that the Kings of the
19th Egyptian Dynasty may have had some Hyksos connections:
★
Ramesses I had hereditary estates in the vicinity of Avaris.
★
Ramesses II:
★
★ Celebrated the 400th anniversary of the worship of
Sutekh, in honor of his father, Seti I (
Seth was identified by the Hyksos with
Baal),
★
★ Adopted a Semitic name for one of his favourite daughters (
Bintanath meaning "the daughter of the goddess
Anath"),
★
★ Dedicated several of his favourite chariot horses to Anath (naming them accordingly), and
★
★ Pharaoh Ramesses II moved his capital city back to Avaris — and named it after himself (Pi Rameses).
★ The early
Ramesside kings promoted Asiatics to positions of prominence in the civil administration.
★ The anti-Hyksos invectives found during the first part of the 18th dynasty are almost wholly lacking.
With the chaos at the end of the 19th Dynasty, the first pharaohs of the 20th Dynasty in the
Elephantine Stele and the
Harris Papyrus re-invigorated an anti-Hyksos stance to strengthen their nativist reaction towards the Asiatic settlers of the north, who may again have been expelled from the country.
Setnakht, the founder of the 20th Dynasty, records in a Year 2 stela from Elephantine that he defeated and expelled a large force of Asiatics who had invaded Egypt during the chaos between the end
Twosret's reign and the beginning of the 20th dynasty and captured much of their stolen gold and silver booty.
The story of the Hyksos was known to the Greeks, who attempted to identify it within their own mythology with the expulsion of Belus (
Baal?) and the daughters of
Danaos, associated with the origin of the Argive dynasty.
Who were the Hyksos?
The term "Hyksos" derives from the Egyptian expression ''heka khasewet'' ("rulers of foreign lands"), used in Egyptian texts such as the
Turin King List to describe the rulers of neighbouring lands. This expression begins to appear as early as the late
Old Kingdom in Egypt, referring to various
Nubian chieftains; and as early as the
Middle Kingdom, referring to the Semitic chieftains of
Syria and
Canaan. It is generally accepted that only the six kings of the Fifteenth Dynasty are properly to be called "Hyksos", because not only do they bear Egyptian royal titles, but they are specifically called Hyksos by
Manetho. The Turin Canon king list also states there were 6 Hyksos or 'heka khasewet' rulers but only 4 of them are known with any certainty:
Sakir-Har,
Khyan,
Apophis and
Khamudy. Khyan and Apophis are by far the best attested kings of this dynasty whereas Sakir-Har is attested by only a single door jamb from Avaris which bears his royal titulary.
The names, the order, and even the total number of the Fifteenth Dynasty rulers are not known with any certainty. The names appear in
hieroglyphs on
monuments and small objects such as jar lids and
scarabs. In those instances in which
Prenomen and
Nomen do not occur together on the same object, there is no certainty that the names belong together as the two names of a single person.
Manetho's history of Egypt is known only through the works of others, such as ''
Against Apion'' by
Flavius Josephus. These sources do not list the names of the six rulers in the same order. To complicate matters further, the spellings are so distorted that they are useless for chronological purposes; there is no close or obvious connection between the bulk of these names — Salitis, Beon or Bnon, Apachnan or Pachnan, Annas or Staan, Apophis, Assis or Archles — and the Egyptian names that appear on scarabs and other objects.
Three otherwise unknown Hyksos pharaohs are mentioned in archaeological remains. The hieroglyphic names of these Fifteenth Dynasty rulers exist on monuments, scarabs, and other objects.
# Sa-kha-en-ra Shalik (Each name is only found separately.)
# Mer-woser-ra Yaqub-har (Both names are found together on one scarab.) The element ''Yaqub'' is the same Hebrew/Canaanite name as Biblical
Jacob.
# The "Heka-khasewet
Sakir-Har"
Identification as Hurrians or Semites
The German Egyptologist
Wolfgang Helck once argued that the Hyksos were part of massive and widespread
Hurrian and
Indo-Aryan migrations into the
Near East. According to Helck, the Hyksos were
Hurrians and part of a Hurrian empire that, he claimed, extended over much of
Western Asia at this period. While most scholars have rejected this theory and Helck has himself recently abandoned them
[8], it is generally thought that the Hyksos were likely Semites who came from either Canaan or Mesopotamia although this has not been proven beyond all doubt.
[9][10] The Danish Egyptologist
Kim Ryholt sums up the complex situation by stating that "there are only vague indications of the origin of the Fifteenth Dynasty" and concurring that the small number of surviving names of the Fifteenth Dynasty are "too few to allow for general conclusions" about the Hyksos true background in his 1997 study of the Second Intermediate Period.
[11] Furthermore Ryholt stresses that "we also lack positive indications that any of the rulers of the Fifteenth Dynasty were related by blood, and, accordingly we could be dealing with a dynasty of mixed ethnic origin."
[12]
Kamose's explicit statement about the Asiatic origins of Apophis is the strongest evidence for a Canaanite background for the majority of the Hyksos.
Kamose, the last king of the Theban 17th Dynasty, refers to Apophis as a "Chieftain of Retjenu (i.e., Canaan)" in a stela which implies a Canaanite background for this Hyksos king. The issue of Sakir-Har's name, one of the three earliest 15th Dynasty kings, also leans towards a West Semitic or Canaanite origin for the Hyksos rulers--if not the Hyksos peoples themselves. As Ryholt notes, the name Sakir Har:
Khyan's name "has generally been interpreted as Amorite Hayanu (reading h-ya-a-n) which the Egyptian form represents perfectly, and this is in all likelihood the correct interpretation."
[13] Ryholt furthermore observes the name Hayanu is recorded in the Assyrian king-lists for a remote ancestor of
Shamshi-Adad I (c.1800 BC) of Assyria which suggests that it had been used for centuries prior to Khyan's own reign.
[13] Since the names of at least two of the 6 Hyksos kings contain Canaanite elements, this may suggest a Canaanite or West Semitic origin for this dynasty.
The Georgian and Russian professors,
T. V. Gamkrelidze and
V. V. Ivanov mention the
Armenian leader
Hayk combined with
Hayasa, strongly resembling the Hyksos.
[15]
Identification as Hebrews
Josephus and Apion
In his ''
Against Apion'', the 1st-century AD historian
Josephus Flavius debates the synchronism between the Biblical account of the
Exodus of the Israelites from Egypt, and two Exodus-like events that the Egyptian historian
Manetho apparently mentions. It is difficult to distinguish between what Manetho himself recounted, and how Josephus or Apion interpret him.
Josephus identifies the Israelite Exodus with the first exodus mentioned by Manetho, when some 480,000 Hyksos "shepherds" left Egypt for Jerusalem.
[Josephus, Flavius, Against Apion, 1:86–90.] The mention of "Hyksos" identifies this first exodus with the Hyksos period (16th century BC). If Manetho mentioned "Jerusalem", it may correspond with the Biblical account when Israelites under Joshua defeated the army of Jerusalem's city-king (Joshua 10:23).
Apion, with anti-Jewish bias, identifies a second exodus mentioned by Manetho when a renegade Egyptian priest called
Osarseph led 80,000 "
lepers" to rebel against Egypt. Apparently Manetho conflates events of the
Amarna period (in the 14th century) and the events at the end of the 19th Dynasty (12th century). Then Apion additionally conflates these with the Biblical
Exodus, and contrary to Manetho, even alleges that this heretic priest changed his name to
Moses.
[Josephus, Flavius, Against Apion, 1:234–250.] Many scholars
[16][17][18][19][20] interpret "lepers" and "leprous priests" non-literally: not as a disease but rather as a strange and unwelcome new belief system.
Josephus records the earliest account of the false but understandable etymology that the Greek phrase ''Hyksos'' stood for the Egyptian phrase ''Hekw
Shasu'' meaning the
Bedouin-like "Shepherd Kings", which scholars have only recently shown means "foreign rulers".
Some scholars, while continuing to promulgate the idea of a Hyksos conquest of Egypt, assert that Josephus inaccurately associated the Hyksos with the ancient Israelites. This is primarily due to the fact that there is little or no information from ancient Egyptian sources to fill in the records of the period covering the thirteenth through the seventeenth dynasties. Based on random bits of information, Egyptian folk lore, and much conjecture, some historians conclude that during the fifteenth and sixteenth dynasties Egypt was under the domination of the Hyksos, and assume that a waning of native Egyptian power was limited to only the thirteenth and fourteenth dynasties.
As to a Hyksos “conquest,†some archaeologists depict the Hyksos as “northern hordes . . . sweeping through Palestine and Egypt in swift chariots.†Yet, others refer to a ‘creeping conquest,’ that is, a gradual infiltration of migrating nomads or seminomads who either slowly took over control of the country piecemeal or by a swift coup d’etat put themselves at the head of the existing government. In
The World of the Past (1963, p. 444), archaeologist
Jaquetta Hawkes states: “It is no longer thought that the Hyksos rulers... represent the invasion of a conquering horde of Asiatics... they were wandering groups of Semites who had long come to Egypt for trade and other peaceful purposes.†However, this view, still makes it difficult to explain how “wandering groups†could have gained control of Egypt, especially since the twelfth dynasty, prior to this period, is considered to have brought the country to a peak of power.
From the foregoing it is evident that there is considerable confusion, not only in ancient Egyptian history, but also among its modern interpreters concerning the Hyksos Period. Consequently, no concrete conclusion about the validity of this period can be reached.
However, it may be that Manetho’s account, as quoted by Josephus, is simply a garbled Egyptian tradition. It should never be forgotten that the recording of history in Egypt, as in many Near Eastern lands, was inseparably linked with its priesthood, under whose tutelage the scribes were trained. So it would not be unusual if, in an effort to rewrite history, the scribes and priests invented some propagandistic explanation to account for the utter failure of the Egyptian gods to prevent the disaster that the Hebrew god brought upon Egypt and its people. In the pages of history, even recent history, there are many examples of such gross misrepresentation—the oppressed are depicted as the oppressors, and innocent victims as dangerous and cruel aggressors.
Therefore, if preserved with some accuracy by Josephus, Manetho’s account (written over one thousand years after Israel’s exodus from Egypt) perhaps represented the distorted traditions handed down by succeeding generations of Egyptians to explain away the truth about Israel’s residence in their land. Should this be the case, the Hyksos would be none other than the Israelites, though portrayed in a distorted manner.
Jacobovici's ''Exodus Decoded''
A
2006 documentary created by
Jewish Canadian filmmaker Simcha Jacobovici (and fellow producer James Cameron), which explores new evidence in favor of the account of the ''
Book of Exodus'', "
Exodus Decoded" (
The History Channel, aired Sunday, 20 August, 2006), investigates Egyptian records concerning the departure of the mysterious Semitic Hyksos.
Jacobovici identifies the Hyksos as the Biblical
Hebrews (whom he calls "Amo Israel", meaning, "His" - ie, God's - "people Israel"). He supports this thesis with Egyptian-style
signet rings uncovered in the Hyksos capital of
Avaris. These signets read ''Yaqob'', similar to Hebrew/Canaanite name of the Biblical patriarch Jacob (יעקב
Ya'aqov). Also, Jacobovici suggests the name of the city itself,
Avaris, may derive from the Hebrew/Canaanite word ''ivri'' (עברי), meaning "Hebrew", which is often identified with the
Habiru/
Apiru. Today, the ruins of the ancient city is
Tell el-Yahudiyeh, which is Arabic for "city-mound of the Jews". The archaeological site is known for its distinctive black-and-white ceramic pottery.
Thus, the Biblical Pharaoh whom
Moses confronts would be Pharaoh
Ahmose I who expelled the Hyksos and founded the 18th Dynasty of Egypt in his view.
Jacobovici endorses the theory that the cataclysmic eruption of the
volcano at the island of
Thera/
Santorini, which apparently ended Minoan civilization, may also be identified with the Biblical account of the plagues against Egypt. Currently Minoan
radiocarbon dating for this eruption at roughly around
1623 BC ±25 contradicts the
Egyptian chronology at roughly around
1550 BC. Controversially, Jacobivici redates this eruption later to around
1500 BC, and while not impossible, it is difficult because it requires the redating of Egyptian chronology and the synchronous East Mediterranean events (which may need redating anyway because of the conflicting dates of the eruption).
Jacobovici suggests some of the Hyksos who fled Egypt (understood as "Hebrews") were
Mycenaean Greeks who returned to Greece. Thus, images on certain Mycenaean tombs may depict the volcanic and seismic disasters that occurred in Egypt, including a tidal wave corresponding to Moses' "parting the Sea of Reeds". Even more daring is the claim that certain Mycenaean images in gold foil depict the
Ark of the Covenant and the sacrificial altar that Israelites used in their religious ceremonies.
Earlier,
Ralph Ellis, in his book ''Tempest & Exodus'' (2002) made many of these arguments linking the Biblical Exodus with Pharaoh Ahmose I and the volcanic eruption of Santorini.
The academic response to the documentary is sceptical (eg
[1]), noting that while at least some of the documentary's claims are plausible, they are weakly-supported and require rigorous scholarship to deal with serious problems that the archaeological evidence poses. Redating the established
Egyptian chronology is especially disruptive as it underpins the chronologies of many surrounding ancient cultures. The Jewish historian Israel Finkelstein from Tel Aviv University (and former director of Institute of Archaeology at Tel Aviv University) explains that one can appropriately speak of Jewish people as a distinct population of Canaan, only from the final decades of XIIIth century ("The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts"), fact that is contradicting the biblical (and Jacobovici) chronology of the event (Exodus).
Other suggested identifications
In his controversial book ''
Ages in Chaos'' that redates the end of the Hyksos' 15th Dynasty (usually around the 16th century) to drastically earlier (around the 11th century),
Immanuel Velikovsky identifies the Hyksos as the
Amalekites.
Summary
The Hyksos were Asiatics who filtered into the eastern Egyptian Delta around the middle of the Thirteenth Dynasty taking advantage of a period of internal Egyptian weakness, probably bringing with them and using to their own advantage, the chariot. The Thirteenth Dynasty rulers had moved the capital of the country north to a centrally located town called
Itjtawy near Memphis, near the apex of the Delta. Seizing the kingship, the Hyksos went on to rule Egypt for over one hundred years under the Fifteenth Dynasty. The heterogeneous Sixteenth Dynasty was partly Hyksos, but also composed of local Egyptian rulers who had no choice but to go along with their new overlords. This general period of Egyptian weakness and foreign occupation is called the Second Intermediate Period, or more popularly, the Hyksos Period. The local princes of Thebes in the south formed the Seventeenth Dynasty when the Hyksos overran Itjtawy and ended the ephemeral 13th Dynasty. These vigorous Theban rulers kept the flame of Egyptian independence alive and were finally were able to lead a war of liberation that expelled the Asiatics. The Hyksos rulers and their military forces were driven from Egypt. Egypt was free, and Ahmose and his successors of the Eighteenth Dynasty could henceforth turn to the task of reconstruction.
Some historians have linked various biblical stories to the beginning or the end of the Hyksos regime, but no consensus has emerged around any of the identifications.
Hyksos in popular culture
The invasion and subsequent expulsion of the Hyksos form an integral part in the fictional 'Egypt' novels by
Wilbur Smith, notably
River God,
The Seventh Scroll and
Warlock ("Egyptian Series"), in the ''Lords of the Two Lands'' trilogy by
Pauline Gedge which chronicles the campaigns of Sequenenre, Kamose and Ahmose against them, and in Andre Norton's novel "Shadow Hawk".
Notes
1. Egyptian chronology.
2. Grimal, Nicolas. ''A History of Ancient Egypt.'' p. 193. Librairie Arthéme Fayard, 1988.
3. Redford, Donald B. ''History and Chronology of the 18th Dynasty of Egypt: Seven Studies'', pp. 46–49. University of Toronto Press, 1967.
4. Booth, Charlotte. The Hyksos Period in Egypt. p.15-18. Shire Egyptology. 2005. ISBN 0-7478-0638-1
5. Booth, Charlotte. The Hyksos Period in Egypt. p.29-31. Shire Egyptology. 2005. ISBN 0-7478-0638-1
6. Booth, Charlotte. The Hyksos Period in Egypt. p.10. Shire Egyptology. 2005. ISBN 0-7478-0638-1
7. Booth, Charlotte. The Hyksos Period in Egypt. p.10. Shire Egyptology. 2005. ISBN 0-7478-0638-1
8. see Helck's Orientalia 62 (1993) ''Das Hyksosproblem'' pp.60-66 paper
9. http://lexicorient.com/e.o/hyksos.htm
10. http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9041769/Hyksos
11. Kim Ryholt, The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c.1800-1550 B.C., Museum Tuscalanum Press, 1997. p.126
12. Ryholt, Ibid., p.126 An example given by Ryholt "is the family of kings Warad-Sin and Rim-Sin of Larsa. Their father had been the ruler of two Amorite tribes, but both he and their grandfather had Elamite names, while they themselves had Akkadian names, and a sister of theirs had a Sumerian name.
13. Ryholt, Ibid., p.128
14. Ryholt, Ibid., p.128
15. T. V. Gamkrelidze and V. V. Ivanov, ''The Early History of Indo-European (aka Aryan) Languages'', 1990
16. http://www.utoronto.ca/wjudaism/contemporary/articles/a_sheresblau.html
17. http://skeptically.org/oldtestament/id4.html
18. http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0021-6682(197310)2%3A64%3A2%3C123%3AMATHB%3E2.0.CO%3B2-O
19. http://www.gutenberg.org/files/12745/12745.txt
20. http://www.preteristarchive.com/Books/1913_anstey_romance.html
References
★ Aharoni, Yohanan and Michael Avi-Yonah, ''The MacMillan Bible Atlas'', Revised Edition, pp. 30-31 (1968 & 1977 by Carta Ltd.).
★ Bimson, John J. ''Redating the Exodus''. Sheffield, England: Sheffield Academic Press, 1981. ISBN 0-907459-04-8
★
von Beckerath, Jürgen. ''Untersuchungen zur politischen Geschichte der zweiten Zwischenzeit in Ägypten'' (1965) [''Ägyptologische Forschungen'', Heft 23]. Basic to any study of this period.
★ Ellis, Ralph. (2001) ''Tempest & Exodus: the biblical exodus inscribed on an ancient Egyptian stele.'' Edfu: Cheshire ISBN 0953191389
★ Ellis, Ralph. ''Jesus, Last of the Pharaohs''
★ Gardiner, Sir Alan. ''Egypt of the Pharaohs'' (1964, 1961). Still the classic work in English. See pp. 61–71 for his examination of chronology.
★ Gibson, David J., ''Whence Came the Hyksos, Kings of Egypt'', 1962
★ Hayes, William C. "Chronology: Egypt—To End of Twentieth Dynasty." Chapter 6, Volume 1 of ''The Cambridge Ancient History'', Revised Edition. Cambridge, 1964. With excellent bibliography up to 1964. This is CAH’s chronology volume: A basic work.
★ Hayes, William C. "Egypt: From the Death of Ammenemes III to Seqenenre II", in Chapter 2, Volume 2 of ''The Cambridge Ancient History'', Revised Edition (1965) (Fascicle 6).
★ Helck, Wolfgang. ''Die Beziehungen Ägyptens zu Vorderasien im 3. und 2. Jahrtausend v. Chr.'' (1962) [''Ägyptologische Abhandlungen'', Band 5]. An important review article that should be consulted is by William A. Ward, in ''Orientalia'' 33 (1964), pp. 135–140.
★ Hornung, Erik. ''Untersuchungen zur Chronologie und Geschichte des Neuen Reiches'' (1964) [''Ägyptologische Abhandlungen'', Band 11]. With an excellent fold-out comparative chronological table at the back with 18th, 19th, and 20th Dynasty dates.
★ James, T.G.H. "Egypt: From the Expulsion of the Hyksos to Amenophis I", in Chapter 2, Volume 2 of ''The Cambridge Ancient History'', Revised Edition (1965) (Fascicle 34).
★ Montet, Pierre. ''Eternal Egypt'' (1964). Translated by Doreen Weightman.
★ Pritchard, James B. (Editor). ''Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament'', 3rd Edition. (1969). This edition has an extensive Supplement at the back containing additional translations. The standard collection of excellent English translations of ancient Near Eastern texts.
★ Redford, Donald B. ''History and Chronology of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt: Seven Studies''. (1967).
★ Redford, Donald B. "The Hyksos Invasion in History and Tradition" ''Orientalia'' 39 (1970).
★ Ryholt, Kim SB. ''The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c.1800-1550 B.C.'' (1997) by Museum Tuscalanum Press.
★ Van Seters, John. ''The Hyksos: A New Investigation'' (1967). Two reviews of this volume should be consulted: Kitchen, Kenneth A. "Further Notes on New Kingdom Chronology and History", in ''Chronique d’Égypte'' XLIII, No. 86, 1968, pp. 313–324; and Simpson, William J. Review, in ''Journal of the American Oriental Society'' 90 (1970), pp. 314–315.
★ Säve-Söderbergh, T. "The Hyksos Rule in Egypt", ''Journal of Egyptian Archaeology'' 37 (1951), pp. 53–71.
★
Winlock, H. E. ''The Rise and Fall of the Middle Kingdom in Thebes'' (1947). Still a classic with much important information.
External links
★
The Hyksos, Kings of Egypt and the land of Edom based on the 1962 book by David J. Gibson