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Imuthes
(205 words)
[German version] [1] see Petobastis IV see Petobastis IV Seidlmayer, Stephan Johannes (Berlin) [German version] [2] Official of Heliopolis (Imhotep; Egyptian
Jj-m-Ḥtp; Greek Ἰμούθης/
Imoúthēs). Documented in contemporary inscriptions and papyri at the beginning of the 3rd Dynasty (around 2650 BC) under Djoser and Sechemchet as the highest ranking official, senior demesne administrator and high priest of Heliopolis, perhaps also in the (cult?) role of senior sculptor and site manager. In light of later tradition, he …
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Brill’s New Pauly
Hyksos
(373 words)
[German version] (Egyptian
Ḥq.w-ḫs.wt, ‘Rulers of foreign lands’; Greek Ὑκσώς/
Hyksṓs) Rulers of foreign peoples are sporadically named H. from the late Old Kingdom onwards: the Turin Royal Canon assigns this term to a dynasty of six kings of foreign origin (15th Dynasty,
c. 1650-1540 BC) in the 2nd intermediate period, whose first representatives bore this title themselves before fully adopting the Egyptian royal titulature later on. Josephus (Ap. 1,14,82ff.), based on Manetho, incorrectly applies the term, and with an inexact etymol…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Abydus
(516 words)
(Ἄβυδος;
Ábydos). [German version] [1] City at the narrowest part of the Dardanelles This item can be found on the following maps: Colonization | Peloponnesian War | Pergamum | Persian Wars | Delian League | Education / Culture Miletus founded A. as a polis in the 1st half of the 7th cent. BC, by permission of the Lydian king Gyges (Str. 13,1,22). It is situated at the narrowest part of the Dardanelles, on the Asian shore, 5 km east of Çanakkale on the promontory of Cape Nagara and already known to Homer (Il.…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Nubia
(1,560 words)
[German version] A. Name A country on the middle reaches of the Nile; more precisely, the area today settled by a Nubian-speaking population: Lower Nubia from the 1st to the 2nd Nile cataract (Aswān to Wadi Halfa, Republic of Egypt) and Upper Nubia from the 2nd to the 4th cataract (Wadi Halfa to Meroe, northern Sudan). In a culturally and historically understood sense, Nubia also includes the land as far as the 6th cataract and around Khartoum (central Sudan). Besides the general term
t-stj for the country, recorded from the Early Dynastic Period (c. 3000 BC), the Egyptian la…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Harmachis
(225 words)
(Egyptian
Ḥrw-m-ḫ.t, ‘Horus in the horizon’). [German version] [1] Name of the great Sphinx Name under which the great Sphinx of Gizeh was venerated as the embodiment of the sun god since the beginning of the New Kingdom (
c. 1500 BC). Many votive steles document the popularity of the cult amongst private people as well as kings. Seidlmayer, Stephan Johannes (Berlin) Bibliography J. Assmann, s.v. H., LÄ2, 992-996. [German version] [2] Priest of Ptah of Memphis, about 200 BC Son of Anemhor, father of Nesysti III; high priest of Ptah of Memphis (
c. 260 ─ after 194-193 BC); sometimes i…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Chous
(328 words)
(χοῦς, χοεύς;
choûs,
choeús). [German version] [1] Jug or decanter Jug or decanter (height a little over 20 cm); used on the second day of the Anthesteria during the wine-drinking competition. Probably used as a measure of volume for the prescribed quantity of wine. On Choes Day the three-year-old children receive a small choes decanter (H 6-8 cm) as a symbol of their entry into life. [2, 50f.; 1, 96ff.]. As a measure of volume for liquids the
chous is divided into 12
kotylai and 72
kyathoi and amounts to 1/12 of the
metretes. Depending on the region, the
chous contained 4.56 l (Laconia), 3.…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Amenophis
(491 words)
(Jmn-ḥtp ‘Amun is satisfied’). Name of four Egyptian kings of the 18th Dynasty. [German version] [1] 1525-1504 BC 1525-1504 BC. Continuing the policy of his father Ahmose, A. pursued the re-conquering of Nubia and prepared the final blow to the empire of Kush. Recorded in many places in Egypt as the instigator of works of construction. In the time of Rameses, he was worshipped together with his mother Ahmes-Nefertari as the tutelary god of the Theban necropolis. Seidlmayer, Stephan Johannes (Berlin) [German version] [2] 1428-1402 BC 1428-1402 BC. During the course of several camp…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Menes
(431 words)
[German version] [1] Egyptian ruler of the 1st Dynasty From the 19th Dynasty on (13th cent. BC), the Egyptian king lists mention a king M. (Egyptuan
Mnj; Manetho: Μήνης/
Mḗnēs) as the first ruler of the 1st Dynasty, and the authors of classical antiquity simply shaped his image into that of the founder par excellence. The construction of the residential city of Memphis and its temple (Hdt. 2,99; Jos. Ant. Iud. 8,155), the invention of writing (Plin. HN 7,56), the laying down of laws in writing (Diod. 1,94) and generally the…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Egypt
(3,211 words)
[German version] A. Introduction The country on the Nile from the 1st Cataract to the Mediterranean, Egyptian
km.t, ‘the Black (Land)’, Greek Αἴγυπτος (
Aígyptos). The division of Egyptian history into ‘kingdoms’, ‘intermediate periods’ (periods of unified and divided states) and ‘dynasties’ essentially derives via Manetho from Egyptian annalists. The absolute chronology, which is based on contemporary information on dates, lists of kings and astronomical calculations, is only (more or less) firm for the late period an…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Sphinx
(1,195 words)
(Σφίγξ/
Sphínx, also ἀνδροσφίγξ/
androsphínx: Hdt. 2,175; Boeotian: φίξ/
phíx; pl. Σφίγγες/
Sphínges). [German version] I. Egypt Depiction of the Egyptian king with the body of a lion and a human head Greek designation for the depictions which were originally only of the Egyptian king with the body of a lion and a human head; there is no known Egyptian designation for this type of image. Three-dimensional sculptural representations of recumbent sphinxes have been documented since the 4th Dynasty. (Djedefre, 2570-2450 BC). The great sphinx of Gizeh, worshipped…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Temple
(5,554 words)
[German version] I. Mesopotamia The Sumerian term é and the Akkadian term
bītu, meaning 'temple' or 'house (of the deity)', were not restricted to 'dwellings' of deities of a particular size or importance. They applied to sanctuaries from small neighbourhood shrines in residential areas to large, freestanding, tall buildings, from one-room cult sites to temple complexes with extensive auxiliary buildings, and they could be used for temples where one or many deities were worshipped. Prehistoric structures are often classified as temples only because apparently they nei…
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Brill’s New Pauly
Funerary architecture
(5,482 words)
[German version] I. Definition Funerary architecture (FA) refers to architectonically designed structures built above the contemporary ground level for the purpose of burial, as opposed to underground hypogea, which have rooms for the cult of the dead and hero cult. Columbaria can combine both types. Hypogea with a ground level cult room influenced the early Christian martyria above the graves. Regarding further aspects of FA, cf. Hypogaeum; Maussolleum; Necropoleis. Kammerer-Grothaus, Helke (Bremen) II. Egypt and the Near East [German version] A. Egypt The Egyptian buria…
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Brill’s New Pauly