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THE REIGN OF THUTMOSE III
By James Henry Breadsted
I. THE CONSOLIDATION OF THE EGYPTIAN EMPIRE
THE peaceful and unmilitary Nile of Hatshepsut, falling as it did early
in Egypt’s imperial career in Asia, was followed by serious consequences. Not
having seen an Egyptian army for many years, the Syrian dynasts grew
continually more restless. The king of Kadesh, once probably the suzerain of
all Syria and Palestine, had stirred all the city-kings of northern Palestine
and Syria to accept his leader ship in a great coalition, in which they at last
felt themselves strong enough to begin open revolt. “Behold from Yeraza (in northern Judea) to the marshes of the earth
(i.e. the upper Euphrates), they had begun to revolt against his majesty”. In
these words the annals of Thutmose III record the Asiatic situation. Only
southern Palestine was loth to take up arms against
the Pharaoh, for its people had witnessed the long siege of Sharuhen at the hands of Ahmose in Hycsos days, and they were too well aware of what to
expect, to assume thoughtlessly the offensive against Egypt. Not only were “all
the allied countries of Zahi” (Syria) in open
rebellion against the Pharaoh, but it is also evident that the powerful kingdom
of Mitanni, on the east of the Euphrates, had done all in her power to support
the rebellion. It was natural that Mitanni should view with distrust the
presence of a new empire on its western borders; and its king exerted himself
to the utmost to rehabilitate the once great kingdom of Kadesh, as a buffer
between himself and Egypt. The armies of the early Orient, at least those of
Egypt, were not large, and it is not probable that any Pharaoh ever invaded
Asia with more than twenty-five or thirty thousand men, while less than twenty
thousand is probably nearer the usual figure. Late in his twenty-second year we
find Thutmose with his army ready to take the field. He marched from Tharu, the
predecessor of modern Kantara, the last Egyptian city
on the north-eastern Delta frontier, about the 19th of April, 1479 BC. Nine
days first army we are able to follow as it enters that historic plain, which,
as Armageddon, has become the
proverbial battle-field of the ages from Thutmose III to Lord Allenby, Indeed
the pass through which Thutmose went was the same as that through which Allenby
flung his cavalry to positions in the rear of the fleeing Turks in 1918. By one
o’ clock Thutmose halted without opposition on the south of Megiddo, “on the
bank of the brook Kina”. The Asiatics had thus lost an inestimable opportunity
to destroy him in detail. They seem to have been posted too far south-eastward
toward Taanach to draw in quickly and concentrate against his thin line of
march as it defiled from the mountains. It is impossible to determine the exact
position of the Asiatics, but when the skirmishing in the mountains took place
their southern wing was at Taanach, doubtless in expectation that Thutmose
would cross the mountain by the Taanach road. Late in the afternoon of the same
day (the 14th), or during the ensuing night, Thutmose took advantage of his
enemy's position on the east and south-east of his own force to draw his line
around the west side of Megiddo and boldly threw out his left wing on the
north-west of the city. He thus secured, in case of necessity, a safe and easy
line of retreat westward along the Zefti road, while
at the same time his extreme left might cut off the enemy from flight northward.
To protect their stronghold the Asiatics drew in between the Egyptian
forces and the city. Early the next morning (May 15th) Thutmose led forth his
army in order of battle. In a shining chariot of electrum he took up his
position with the centre; his right or southern wing rested on a hill south of
the brook of Kina; while as we have seen, his left was north-west of Megiddo.
He immediately attacked, leading the onset himself at the head of his army. The
enemy gave way at the first charge. Thutmose’s Annals show evident
gratification at the humiliating flight of the Asiatics: “they flew headlong to
Megiddo in fear, abandoning their horses and their chariots of gold and silver,
and the people hauled them up, pulling them by their clothing into this city;
the people of this city having closed it against them and lowered clothing to
pull them up into this city. Now if only the army of his majesty had not given
their heart to plundering the things of the enemy they would have captured
Megiddo at this moment, when the wretched vanquished king of Kadesh and the
wretched vanquished king of this city (Megiddo) were hauled up in haste to
bring them into this city”. The discipline of the Egyptian host could not
resist the spoil of the combined armies of Syria. “Then were captured their
horses, their chariots of gold and silver were made spoil....Their champions
lay stretched out like fishes on the ground. The victorious army of his majesty
went round counting the spoils, their portions. Behold there was captured the
tent of that wretched vanquished foe (the king of Kadesh) in which was his
son....The whole army made jubilee, giving praise to Amon for the victory which
he had granted to his son (the Pharaoh.... they brought in the booty which they
had taken, consisting of hands (severed from the slain), living prisoners, of
horses, chariots, gold, and silver”. It is thus evident that in the disorganized
rout the camp of the king of Kadesh fell into the hands of the Egyptians.
Hereupon Thutmose gave orders for the investment of the city: they
measured this city, surrounding it with an enclosure, walled about with green
timber of all their pleasant trees. His majesty himself was upon the fortification
east of the city, inspecting what was done. Thutmose boasts after his return to
Egypt saying: “Amon gave to me all the allied countries of Zahi shut up in one city....I snared them in one city, I built around them with a
rampart of thick wall”. They called this wall of investment: “Thutmose is the
Ensnarer of the Asiatics”, according to the custom under the Empire of naming
every royal building after the king. As the siege went on, the dynasts who were
fortunate enough not to be shut up in the city hastened to make their peace
with the incensed Pharaoh: “The Asiatics of all countries came with bowed head,
doing obeisance to the fame of his majesty”.
The king of Kadesh was not among the prisoners; he had escaped before
the completion of the investment. To compensate for the failure to capture this
dangerous enemy, the Egyptians secured his family as hostages; for Thutmose
says: “Lo, my majesty carried off the wives of that vanquished one, together
with his children, and the wives of the chiefs who were there, together with
their children”. The catalogue of the spoils found in the fallen city, as given
in Thutmose’s Annals, is a surprising revelation of the wealth and splendor of
contemporary Syria. Nine hundred and twenty-four chariots, including those of
the kings of Kadesh and Megiddo, two thousand two hundred and thirty-eight
horses, two hundred suits of armour, again inducting
those of the same two kings, the gorgeous tent of the king of Kadesh, the magnificent
household furniture of the same king, and among it his royal scepter, a silver
statue, perhaps of his god, and an ebony statue of himself, wrought with gold
and lapis lazuli, besides immense quantities of gold and silver were taken from
the city.
In order to prevent another southward advance of the still unconquered
king of Kadesh and to hold command of the important road northward between the
Lebanons, Thutmose pushed northward and built a fortress at this point, which
he called “Thutmose-is-the-Binder-of-the-Barbarians”. He now began the
reorganization of the conquered territory, supplanting the old revolting
dynasts with others who might be expected to show loyalty to Egypt. These new
rulers were allowed to govern much as they pleased, if only they regularly and
promptly sent in the yearly tribute to Egypt. To hold them to their obligations
Thutmose carried off with him to Egypt their eldest sons, whom he placed in a
special quarter or building called “Castle in Thebes”. Here they were educated
and so treated as to engender feelings of friendliness toward Egypt. Later,
whenever a king of one of the Syrian cities died “his majesty would cause his
son to stand in his place”. Thutmose now controlled all Palestine as far north
as the southern end of Lebanon, and farther inland also Damascus. In so far as
they had rebelled, he stripped all the towns of their wealth, and returned to
Egypt with some four hundred and twenty-six pounds of gold and silver in
commercial rings, or wrought into magnificent vessels and other objects of art,
besides untold quantities of less valuable property and the spoil of Megiddo
already mentioned.
In less than six months, that is, within the limits of the dry season in
Palestine, he had marched from Tharu, gained a sweeping victory at Megiddo,
captured the city after a long and arduous investment, marched to the Lebanon
and taken three cities there, built and garrisoned a permanent fort near them,
begun reorganizing the government in northern Palestine and completed the
return journey to Thebes, which he reached early in October. With what
difficulties such an achievement was beset we may learn not only from
Napoleon's campaign from Egypt over the same route against Acre, which is
almost exactly as far from Egypt as Megiddo, but also by following Lord Allenby’s
brilliant campaign against the Turks through the same country. We may then
understand why it was that Thutmose immediately celebrated three “Feasts of
Victory” in his capital. These feasts were made permanent, and endowed with an
annual income of plentiful offerings. At the feast of Opet,
which was Amon's greatest annual feast and lasted eleven days, he presented to the
god the three towns which he had captured in Lebanon, besides a rich array of magnificent
vessels of gold, silver and costly stones from the prodigious spoils of Retenu. In order to furnish income to maintain the temple
on the sumptuous plan thus projected, he gave Amon not only the said three
towns, but also extensive lands in Upper and Lower Egypt, and supplied them
with plentiful herds and with hosts of serfs taken from among his Asiatic
prisoners. Thus was established the foundation of that vast fortune of Amon,
which now began to grow out of all proportion to the increased wealth of other
temples. Nevertheless, if we may judge from the small temple of Ptah by the
great Karnak sanctuary which Thutmose also rebuilt at his return from his
campaign, he probably showed like generosity to he two more ancient sanctuaries
at Heliopolis and Memphis, of which the former was still in a traditional sense
the temple of the State-god, in that Amon had long been identified with the
Sun-god of Heliopolis.
THUTMOSE'S CAMPAIGNS
Egyptian power in Asia during the long military inactivity of Hatshepsut’s
reign had been so thoroughly shaken that Thutmose III was far from ready, as a
result of the first campaign, to march immediately upon Kadesh, his most
dangerous enemy. Moreover, he desired properly to organize and render perfectly
secure the states already under the power of Egypt. In the twenty-fourth year,
therefore, on his second campaign, he marched in a wide curve through the
conquered territory of northern Palestine and southern Syria, while the dynasts
came to pay their tribute and do him homage in every place of his majesty's
circuit where the tent was pitched. The news of his great victory of the year
before had by this time reached Assyria, till then a small power far over on
the Upper Tigris. Her king naturally desired to be on good terms with the great
empire of the west, and the gifts of costly stone, chiefly lapis lazuli from
Babylon, and the horses which he sent to Thutmose, so that they reached him
while on this campaign, were, as usual, interpreted by the Egyptians as
tribute. In all probability no battles were fought on this expedition.
Thutmose's return to Thebes, which again fell in October, gave him
opportunity to plan for the enlargement of the Karnak temple, to suit the needs
of the empire of which he dreamed. As the west end, the real front of the
temple, was marred by Hatshepsut's obelisks, rising from his father's
dismantled hall, and he was unable or unwilling to build around his father’s
obelisks, which stood before the western entrance of the temple, Thutmose III
laid out his imposing colonnaded halls at the other, or east end, of the
temple, where they today form one of the great architectural beauties of Thebes.
The greatest hall is nearly one hundred and forty feet long and lies
transversely across the axis of the temple. Behind it is the sanctuary, or holy
of holies, while grouped about it are some half a hundred halls and chambers.
Among these, on the south side, was a hall for the mortuary service of his
ancestors. In the chamber to which this hall led he commanded to record the
names of his fathers, to increase their offerings and to fashion statues of all
these their bodies. These names formed an extensive list which was removed and
is now in the Bibliothèque Nationale at Paris. Though many of the statues of his fathers have perished, some have been
discovered in a court south of the temple, where they had been concealed for
safety presumably in time of war,
When Thutmose returned from his third campaing, chiefly an organizing expedition, his
building at Karnak was sufficiently far advanced to record upon the walls of
one of the chambers the plants and animals of Asia which he had found on his
march and brought home with him to beautify the garden of the temple of Amon,
the sacred lake of which he supplied with a masonry coping. No records of the fourth campaign have survived, but the
course of his subsequent operations were such that it must have been confined
like the others to the territory already regained, that is the southern half of
the future Asiatic empire.
It had now become evident to Thutmose that he could not march northward
between the Lebanons and operate against Kadesh, while leaving his left flank
exposed to the unsubdued Phoenician cities of the
coast. It was likewise impossible to strike Naharin and Mitanni without first
destroying Kadesh, which dominated the Orontes valley. He therefore organized a
fleet which would enable him to land an army on the north Syrian or Phoenician
coast. He conceived that he would then be able to use the coast as a base of
operations against Kadesh and the interior; and this being once disposed of, he
could again push in from the coast against Mitanni and the whole Naharin
region. No modern strategist could have conceived a series of operations better
suited to the conditions, nor have gone about putting them into execution with
more indomitable energy than Thutmose now displayed. In the year twenty-nine,
on his fifth campaign, he moved for
the first time against the northern coast cities, the wealthy commercial
kingdoms of Phoenicia. The name of the first city which Thutmose took is
unfortunately lost, but it was on the coast opposite Tunip, and must have been
a place of considerable importance, for it brought him rich spoils; and there
was in the town a temple of Amon, erected by one of Thutmose III’s predecessors
(either Thutmose I or possibly Amenhotep I). Tunip sent forces from the
interior to strengthen the garrison of this unknown city, the fall of which
would involve the ultimate capture of Tunip also. Thutmose now seized the fleet
of the city, and was able rapidly to move his army southward against the
powerful city of Arvad. A short siege, compelling the Pharaoh to cut down the
groves about the town, as at Megiddo, sufficed to bring the place to terms, and
with its surrender a vast quantity of the wealth of Phoenicia fell into the
hands of the Egyptians. Besides this, it being now autumn, the gardens and
groves “were filled with their fruit, their wines were found left in their
presses as water flows, their gram on the (hillside) terraces…; it was more
plentiful than the sand of the shore. The army were overwhelmed with their
portions”. Under these circumstances it was useless for Thutmose to attempt to
maintain discipline, and during the first days following the surrender, “behold
the army of his majesty was drunk and anointed with oil every day as at a feast
in Egypt”. The dynasts along the coast now came in with their tribute and
offered submission. Thutmose had thus gamed a secure footing on the northern
coast, easily accessible by water from Egypt, and forming an admirable base for
operations inland as he had foreseen. He then returned to Egypt, possibly not
for the first time, by water.
It had taken five expeditions to gain the south and the coast; the sixth campaign was at last directed
against Kadesh, his long invulnerable enemy. In the year thirty the close of
the spring rains found Thutmose disembarking his army from the fleet at Simyra,
by the mouth of the Eleutherus, up the valley of which he immediately marched
upon Kadesh. The city lay on the west side of the Orontes river at the north
end of the high valley between the two Lebanons. A small tributary of the
Orontes joined the larger stream from the west just below the city, so that it
lay on a point of land between the two. A canal was cut across the tongue of
land above the town, thus connecting the two streams and entirely surrounding
the place by water. Within the banks of the rivers an inner moat encircling the
high curtain-walls reenforced the natural water-defences,
so that, in spite of its location in a perfectly level plain, it was a place of
great strength, and probably the most formidable fortress in Syria. In its
relation to the surrounding country also the place was skillfully chosen; for,
besides commanding the Orontes valley, it also dominated the only road inland
from the coast for a long distance both north and south. This was the road up
the Eleutherus valley, along which we have followed Thutmose. The capture of
such a place by siege was an achievement of no slight difficulty, and indeed
the siege continued long enough to encourage the coast cities in the hope that
Thutmose had suffered if reverse. In spite of the chastisement inflicted upon
Arvad the year before, the opulent harbor town could not resist an attempt to
rid itself of the annual obligation to the Pharaoh. As soon as Kadesh fell,
however, Thutmose quickly returned to Simyra, embarked his army on his waiting
fleet and sailed to Arvad to inflict swift retribution.
This revolt showed Thutmose that he must devote another campaign to the
thorough subjugation of the coast before he could safely push inland beyond the
valley of the Orontes on the long planned advance into Naharin. He therefore
spent the summer of the year thirty-one, the seven campaign, in completely quenching any shouldering embers of
revolt in the coast cities. He skirted the coast with his fleets entering harbor
after harbor, displaying his force and thoroughly organizing the administration
of the cities. In particular he saw to it that every harbor-town should be
liberally supplied with provisions for his coming campaign in Naharin. On his
return to Egypt he found envoys from the extreme south, probably eastern Nubia,
bringing to the Pharaoh their tribute, which shows that he was maintaining an
aggressive policy in the far south while at the same time so active in the
north.
CAMPAIGN AGAINST MITANNI
It was not until the spring of the year thirty-three that Thutmose was
able to land his forces in the harbor of Simyra, on his eighth campaign. For the second time he marched inland along the
Kadesh road, this time with the Euphrates country as his objective. Continuing
the march northward down the Orontes he fought a battle at the city of Senzar, where he probably crossed and forsook the Orontes. He
now entered Naharin and, marching rapidly on, found no serious force
confronting him until he had arrived at the “Height of Wan, on the west of
Aleppo”, where a considerable battle was fought. Aleppo itself must have
fallen, for the Pharaoh could otherwise hardly have pushed on without delay, as
he evidently did. “Behold his majesty went north, capturing the towns and
laying waste the settlements of that foe of wretched Naharin”, who was, of
course, the king of Mitanni.
Egyptians troops were again plundering me Euphrates valley, a
license which they had not enjoyed since the days of their fathers under
Thutmose I, some fifty years before. A victorious battle at Carchemish at last
enabled Thutmose to do what he had been fighting ten years to attain, for he
now crossed the Euphrates into Mitanni and set up his boundary tablet on the
east side. Without wintering in Naharin however, it was impossible for Thutmose
to advance farther, and he was too wise a soldier to risk exposing to the
inclement northern winter the seasoned veterans of so many campaigns. He
therefore returned unmolested to the west shore, where it would seem he found
the tablet of his father, Thutmose I, and with the greatest satisfaction he set
up another of his own alongside it.
His troops had already harvested the fields of the Euphrates valley, and
it was now late in the season. Before he returned, however, one serious
enterprise still awaited him. The city of Niy, somewhere in the region between
Aleppo and the Euphrates, was still unconquered and all his work in Naharin
might be undone were this place left unscathed. In so far as we know, the
capture of Niy was an enterprise quickly achieved. Thutmose was then at liberty
to relax and we learn that he organized a great elephant hunt in the region of
Niy, where these animals have now been extinct for ages. He and his party
attacked the north Syrian herd of one hundred and twenty animals. In the course
of the hunt the king, having come to close quarters with one great beast, was
in some danger when his general, Amenemhab, rushed between and cut off the
animal's trunk, thus diverting the infuriated animal at the critical moment.
All western Asia was now apprehensively watching the expansion of the Pharaoh’s
power. The local princes and dynasts of Naharin appeared at his camp and
brought in their tribute as a token of their submission. Even far off Babylon
was now anxious to secure the goodwill of the Pharaoh, and its king sent him
gifts wrought of lapis lazuli. But what was still more important, the mighty people
of the Kheta, whose domain stretched far away into the unknown regions of Asia
Minor, sent him a rich gift. As he was on the march from Naharin to reach the
coast again the envoys from the king of Great Kheta met him. They bore eight
massive commercial rings of silver, weighing nearly ninety-eight pounds,
besides some unknown precious stone and costly wood. In Great Kheta we must
recognize the Hittite empire, thus emerging for the first time, as far as we
know, upon the stage of oriental history.
On Thutmose's arrival at the coast, he laid upon the chiefs of the
Lebanon the yearly obligation to keep the Phoenician harbors supplied with the
necessary provision for his campaigns. From any point in this line of harbors
which he could reach by ship from Egypt in a few days, he was then able to
strike inland without delay and bring delinquents to an immediate accounting. His
sea-power, the first that we can discern in history, was such that the king of Alashiya (? Cyprus) became practically a vassal of Egypt,
as later in Saitic times. Moreover, the Pharaoh’s fleet
made him so feared in the islands of the north that he was able to exert a
loose control over the eastern Mediterranean, as far as the islands of the Aegean.
Thus, his general, Thutiy, includes “the isles in the midst of the sea”, that
is, the Aegean Islands, as within his jurisdiction as “governor of the north countries”.
Egypt's maritime supremacy in the fifteenth century BC was thus an obvious
anticipation of the sea-power of the Ptolemies in the
Greek Age.
II.
THE EMPIRE OF THUTMOSE III
This expansion of Egyptian power in the north and north-west was
balanced by similar aggressiveness in the south and southwest. From Punt Thutmose's
expeditions, seemingly of more than merely mercantile power, brought back the
usual rich and varied cargoes of ivory, ebony, panther-skins, gold, and over
two hundred and twenty-three bushels of myrrh, besides male and female slaves
and many cattle. At some time during these wars Thutmose also gained possession
of the entire oasis-region on the west of Egypt. The oases thus became Pharaonic territory and were placed under the government of
Intef, Thutmose’s herald, who was a descendant of the old line of lords of Thinis-Abydos, whence the Great Oasis was most easily
reached. The oasis-region remained an appanage of the
lords of Thinis and became famous for its fine wines.
The kings of western Asia, whom Thutmose’s fathers had been able to
defeat singly and in succession, he had been obliged to meet united; and against
the combined military resources of Syria and northern Palestine under their old-time
Hycsos suzerain of Kadesh, he had forced his way through to the north. He might
pardonably permit himself some satisfaction in the contemplation of what he had
accomplished in ten years of campaigning in Asia. Nearly thirty-three years had
elapsed since the day when Amon called him to the throne. Already on his
thirtieth anniversary his architect, Puemre, had
erected the jubilee obelisks at Thebes; but on his return from the great campaign the date for the customary second jubilee-celebration was
approaching. A pair of enormous obelisks,
which had been in preparation for the event, were erected at the Karnak temple
and one of them bore the proud words, “Thutmose, who crossed the great Bend of
Naharin [the Euphrates] with might and with victory at the head of his army”.
The other obelisk of this pair has perished, but this one now stands in
Constantinople. Indeed, of the great king's obelisks in Egypt, all have either
perished or been removed, so that not a single one still stands in the land he
ruled so mightily, while the modern world possesses a line of them reaching
from Constantinople, through Rome and London to New York. The last two, which commemorate
his fourth jubilee-celebration, now rise on opposite shores of the Atlantic, on
the Thames Embankment and in Central Park, as they once stood on either side of
the approach to the Sun-temple at Heliopolis.
These stately shafts were not the only memorials of Thutmose’s achievements.
On the walls of the magnificent Karnak temple were recorded long annals of his
victories in Asia, extensive lists of the plunder he had taken, with splendid
reliefs picturing the rich portion which fell to Amon. A list of one hundred
and nineteen towns which he captured on his first campaigns was three times
displayed upon the pylons, while from his recent successes in the north the
same walls bore a record of no less than two hundred and forty-eight towns
which had submitted to him. Unfortunately these records are but excerpts from
the state-records, made by priests who wished to explain the source of the
gifts received by the temple, and to show how Thutmose was repaying his debt to
Amon for the many victories which the favoring god had vouchsafed him. Hence
they are but meagre sources from which to reconstruct
the campaigns of the first great strategist of whom we know anything in
history.
But the Thebans were not restricted to the monuments of Karnak for
evidence of the greatness of their king. In the gardens of Amon's temple, as we
have seen, grew the strange plants of Syria, while Asiatic animals unknown to
the hunter of the Nile Valley wandered among trees equally unfamiliar. Envoys
from the north and south were constantly appearing at the court. Levantine
galleys, such as the upper Nile had never seen before, delighted the eyes of
the curious crowd at the docks of Thebes; and from these landed sumptuous
cargoes of the finest stuffs of Phoenicia, gold and silver vessels of magnificent
workmanship from the cunning hand of the Tyrian artificer or the workshops of distant Asia Minor, Cyprus, Crete and the Aegean
Islands; exquisite furniture of carved ivory, delicately wrought ebony,
chariots mounted with gold and electrum, and bronze implements of war; besides
these, fine horses for the Pharaoh’s stables and untold quantities of the best
that the fields, gardens, vineyards, orchards and pastures of Asia produced.
Under heavy guard emerged from these ships, too, the annual tribute of gold and
silver in large commercial rings, some of which weighed as much as twelve
pounds each, while others for purposes of daily trade were of but a few grains
weight. Winding through the streets crowded with the wondering Theban
multitude, the strange-tongued Asiatics in long procession bore their tribute
to the Pharaoh's treasury. They were received by the vizier, Rekhmire, and when unusually rich tribute was presented, he
conducted them to Thutmose's presence, where, enthroned in splendor, the
Pharaoh reviewed them and praised the vizier and his officials for their zeal
in his behalf. It was such scenes as this that the vizier and the treasury
officials loved to perpetuate in gorgeous paintings on the walls of their tombs,
where they are still preserved at Thebes. The amount of wealth which thus came
into Egypt from Asia and Nubia must have been enormous for those times, and on
one occasion the treasury was able to weigh out some eight thousand nine hundred
and forty-three pounds of gold-silver alloy.
Similar sights diverted the multitudes of the once provincial Thebes
when every year, toward the close of September or the opening clays of October,
Thutmose’s war-galleys moored in the harbor of the town. But at this time not
merely the wealth of Asia was unloaded from the ships, the Asiatics themselves,
bound one to another in long lines, were led down the gang-planks to begin a
life of slave-labor for the Pharaoh. They wore long matted beards, an
abomination to the Egyptians; their hair hung in heavy black masses upon their
shoulders, and they were clad in gaily-colored woolen stuffs, such as the
Egyptian, spotless in his white linen robe, would never put on his body. Their
arms were pinioned behind them at the elbows or crossed over their heads and
lashed together, or, again, were thrust through odd pointed ovals of wood,
which served as hand-cuffs. The women carried their children slung in a fold of
the mantle over their shoulders. With their strange speech and uncouth postures
the poor wretches were the subject of jibe and merriment on the part of the
multitude, while the artists of the time could never forbear caricaturing them.
Many of them found their way into the houses of the Pharaoh's favorites, and
his generals were liberally rewarded with gifts of such slaves; but the larger
number were employed on the temple estates, the Pharaoh’s domains, or in the
construction of his great monuments and buildings, especially the last, a
custom which continued until Saladin built the cathedral at Cairo with the labor
of the Christian knights whom he captured from the ranks of the Crusaders. We
shall see later how this captive labor transformed Thebes.
With the next campaign but six months distant, the return of the king
every autumn, under such circumstances, began for him a winter in Egypt, if not
so arduous, at least as busily occupied as the campaigning season in Asia.
Shortly after his return in October, Thutmose made a tour of inspection
throughout Egypt, closely questioning the local authorities wherever he landed,
for the purpose of suppressing corruption in the local administration during
the collection of taxes. On these journeys, too, he had opportunity of
observing the progress of the noble temple buildings which he was either
erecting, restoring or adorning at over thirty different places of which we
know, and many more which have perished. He revived the Delta, neglected since Hycsos
times, and from there to the third cataract his buildings were rising, strung
like gems along the river. Returning to Thebes his interests were wide and his
power was felt in every avenue of administration. The increasing wealth of the
Amon temple demanded reorganization of its management, which the king
accomplished personally, giving the priests careful regulations for the conduct
of the state temple and its growing fortune. As the fruit of a moment's respite
from the cares of state, he even handed to his chief of artificers in the royal
workshops designs sketched by his own royal hand for vessels which he desired
for the temple service. Thutmose himself thought sufficiently well of this
accomplishment to have it noted over a relief depicting these vessels on the
temple walls at Karnak; while in the opinion of the official who received the
commission it was a fact so remarkable that he had the execution of these
vessels by his artificers shown in the paintings on the walls of his
tomb-chapel. Both these evidences of Thutmose's restless versatility still
survive at Thebes. The great state-temple received another pylon on the south,
and the whole mass of Karnak buildings, with the adjoining grove and garden,
was given unity by an enclosure wall, with which Thutmose surrounded them.
The spring of the thirty-fourth year found Thutmose again in Zahi on his ninth
campaign:; for the advancement of Egypt’s Asiatic frontier to the Euphrates
was, in the light of past experience, not an achievement from which he might
expect lasting results. Some disaffection, probably in the Lebanon region,
obliged him to take three towns in which considerable spoil was captured. This
year evidently saw the extension of his power in the south also; for he secured
the son of the chief of Irem, the neighbor of Punt,
as a hostage. But, on the other hand, it was now nearly two years since he had
seen Naharin and in so short a time its princes had ceased to fear his power.
They formed a powerful and far-reaching coalition, with a prince at its head,
whom Thutmose’s Annals call that wretched foe of Naharin, probably meaning the
king of Mitanni. Thutmose's continual state of preparation enabled him to
appear promptly on the plains of Naharin in the spring of the year thirty-five
on his tenth campaign. He engaged the
allies in battle at a place called Araina, which we
are unable to locate with certainty, but it was probably somewhere in the Lower
Orontes valley. “Then his majesty prevailed against these barbarians…they fled
headlong, falling one over another before his majesty”. The alliance of the Naharin
dynasts was completely shattered and its resources for future resistance destroyed
or carried off by the victorious Egyptians. Far as were these Syrian princes
from Egypt, they had learned the length and the might of the Pharaoh’s arm, and
it was seven years before they again revolted.
We know nothing of the objective of Thutmose’s eleventh and twelfth campaigns; but the year thirty-eight found him
again in the southern Lebanon region on his thirteenth
campaign, while the turbulent Bedouins of southern Palestine forced him to
march through their country the very next year. He then spent the rest of this fourteenth campaign in Syria, where it
became merely a tour of inspection; but in both years he kept the harbours supplied
as before, ready for every emergency. The tribute seems to have come in
regularly for the next two years (forty and forty-one), and again the king of
Kheta the great sent gifts, which Thutmose as before records among the tribute.
FRESH CAMPAIGNS IN NORTH SYRIA
Egyptian supremacy in Asia, however, was not to be accepted by the
princes of Syria without one more despairing effort to achieve independence.
Incited by Kadesh, Thutmose's inveterate enemy, they again rose in a final
united effort to shake off the Pharaoh's strong hand. All Naharin, especially
the king of Tunip, and also some of the northern coast cities, had been induced
to join the alliance. The great king was now an old man, probably over seventy
years of age, but with his accustomed promptitude he appeared with his fleet off
the coast of northern Syria, in the spring of the year forty-two. It was his
last campaign. Like his first it was directed against his arch-enemy, Kadesh.
Instead of approaching the place from the south, as before, Thutmose
determined, to isolate her from her northern support and to capture Tunip
first. He therefore landed at some point between the mouth of the Orontes and the
Eleutherus, whence he marched against Tunip. He was detained at Tunip until the
harvest season, but he captured the place after a short resistance. He then
accomplished the march up the Orontes to Kadesh without mishap and wasted the
towns of the region. The king of Kadesh engaged the Egyptians in battle before
the city, and in the effort to make headway against Thutmose’s seasoned troops
the Syrian king resorted to a stratagem. He sent forth a mare against the Egyptian
chariotry, hoping thus to excite the stallions and produce confusion, or even a
break in the Egyptian battle-line, of which he might take advantage. But
Thutmose’s veteran general, Amenemhab, leaped from his chariot, sword in hand,
pursued the mare on foot, ripped her up and cut off her tail, which he carried
in triumph to the king. After a short investment, the powerful city was taken
by assault. The Naharin auxiliaries who were aiding in the defence fell into Thutmose's hands, and it was not even necessary for him to march into
the north. With the fall of Kadesh disappeared the last vestige of the Hycsos
power which had once subdued Egypt, a catastrophe of such impressiveness that
it was long remembered. Even the tradition of late Greek days made Thutmose III
the conqueror of the Hycsos. Indeed Thutmose's name became proverbial in Asia,
and when, four generations later, his successors failed to shield their
faithful vassals in Naharin from the aggressions of the Kheta, the forsaken
unfortunates remembered Thutmose’s great name, and wrote pathetically to Egypt:
“Who formerly could have plundered Tunip without being plundered by Manakhbiria (Thutmose III)?”. But even now, at three score
and ten or more, the indomitable old warrior had the harbors equipped with the necessary
supplier and there is little doubt that if it had been necessary he would have
led his army into Syria again. Once more he received the envoys of the
tribute-paying princes in his tent, and then for the last time he returned to Egypt,
In concluding his wars in Asia Thutmose was relinquishing what had
become a seemingly permanent organization, for his campaigning was now as
thoroughly organized as the administration at Thebes. As soon as the spring
rains in Syria and Palestine had ceased, he had regularly disembarked his
troops in some Phoenician or north Syrian harbor. Here his permanent officials
had effected the collection of the necessary stores from the neighbouring dynasts, who were compelled to furnish them.
His palace-herald, or marshal, Intef, who was of the old princely line of Thinis, and still held his title as count of Thinis and lord of the entire oasis-region, had accompanied
him on all his marches; and as Thutmose advanced inland Intel preceded him
until the proximity of the enemy prevented. Whenever he reached a town in which
the king was expected to spend the night, he sought out the palace of the local
dynast and prepared it for Thutmose’s reception. One is reminded of the regular
and detailed preparation of Napoleon's tent, which he always found awaiting him
after his day's march, as he rode into the quarters each night. Had it been
preserved, the life of these warriors of Thutmose would form a stirring chapter
in the history of the Ancient East. The career of his general, Amenemhab, who
cut off the elephant's trunk and rescued the king, is but a hint of the life of
the Pharaoh’s followers in bivouac and on battlefield, crowded to the full with
perilous adventure and hard-won distinction. The fame of these tried veterans
of Thutmose, of course, found its way among the common people and many a
stirring adventure from the Syrian campaigns took form in folk-tales, told with
eager interest in the market-places and the streets of Thebes. A lucky chance
has rescued one of these tales on a page or two of papyrus. It concerns one
Thutiy, a great general of Thutmose, and his clever capture of the city of
Joppa by introducing his picked soldiers into the town, concealed in panniers,
borne by a train of donkeys, an incident long afterward reappearing in Ali Baba
and the Forty Thieves. But Thutiy was not a creation of fancy; his tomb, though
now unknown, must still exist somewhere in Thebes, for it was plundered many
years ago by the natives, who took from it some of the rich gifts which
Thutmose gave him as a reward for his valor. A splendid golden dish, which
found its way into the Louvre, bears the words; “Given as a distinction from
king Thutmose to the prince and priest who satisfies the king in every country,
and the isles in the midst of the sea, filling the treasury with lapis lazuli,
silver and gold, the governor of countries, commander of the army, favorite of
the king, the king's scribe, Thutiy”.
Had the great king’s Annals survived intact we could, have followed step
by step the entire course of his campaigns; for a record of every day’s happenings
was carefully kept by one Thaneni, a scribe
appointed for the purpose by Thutmose. Thaneni tells us of his duties with great pride, saying: “I
followed king Thutmose; I beheld the victories of the king which he won in
every country.... recorded the victories which he won in every land, putting
them into writing according to the facts”. These records of Thaneni were seemingly rolls of leather, but they have perished and we have upon the
walls at Karnak only the capricious extracts of a temple scribe, more anxious
to set forth the spoil and Amon’s share therein than to perpetuate the story of
his king’s great deeds. How much he has passed over, the biography of Amenemhab
shows only too well; and thus all that we have of the wars of Egypt’s greatest
commander has filtered through the shriveled soul of an ancient bureaucrat, who
little dreamed how hungrily future ages would ponder his meager excerpts.
EGYPTIAN SOVEREIGNTY IN SOUTH WEST ASIA
Having at last established the sovereignty of Egypt in Asia on a
permanent basis, Thutmose could now turn his attention to Nubia. It is evident
that Menkheperreseneb, the head of his gold and
silver treasury, was now receiving thence six to eight hundred pounds of gold
every year. The king also organized the neighboring gold country on the Coptos
road and put it under a “governor of the gold country of Coptos”. His viceroy, Nehi, had now been administering Kush for twenty years and
had placed the productivity of the country on a high plane; but it was the desire
of the great king to extend still farther his dominions in the south. In his
last years his buildings show that he was extremely active throughout the
province; as far as the third cataract we trace his temples at Kalabsheh, Amada, Wadi Halfa, Kummeh and Semneh, where he
restored the temple of his great ancestor Sesostris III, and at Soleb. We learn, through the clearance of
the canal at the first cataract in the fiftieth year, that an expedition of his
was then returning from a campaign against the Nubians. There must have been
earlier expeditions also in the same region, for Thutmose was able to record in
duplicate upon the pylons of his Karnak temple a list of one hundred and
fifteen places which he had conquered in Nubia and another containing some four
hundred such names. The geography of Nubia is too little known to enable us to
locate the territory represented, and it is uncertain exactly how far up the
Nile his new frontier may have been, but it was doubtless in the region of the
fourth cataract, where we find it under his son.
As he felt his strength failing, the great king made co-regent his son,
Amenhotep II, born to him by Hatshepsut-Meretre, a
queen of whose origin we know nothing, It was twelve years since he had
returned from his last campaign in Asia. When the co-regency had lasted for
about a year, in the spring of the year 1447 BC, when he was within five weeks
of the end of his forty-fourth year upon the throne, the greatest of the Egyptian
conquerors passed away. He was buried in his tomb in the Valley of the Kings by
his son, and his body still survives.
The character of Thutmose III stands forth with more of color and
individuality than that of any king of early Egypt, except Ikhnaton. We see the
man of a tireless energy unknown in any Pharaoh before or since; the man of
versatility, designing exquisite vases in a moment of leisure; the lynx-eyed administrator,
who launched his armies upon Asia with one hand and with the other crushed the
extortionate tax-gatherer. His vizier, Rekhmire, who
stood closest to his person, says of him: “Lo, his majesty was one who knew
what happened; there was nothing of which he was ignorant; he was Thoth (the
god of knowledge) in everything; there was no matter which he did not carry out”.
While he was proud to leave a record of his unparalleled achievements, Thutmose protests
more than once his deep respect for the truth in so doing. “I have not uttered
exaggeration” says he, “in order to boast of that which I did, saying, I have
done something, although my majesty had not done it. I have not done anything
...against which contradiction might be uttered, I have done this for my
father, Amon....because he knoweth heaven and he knoweth earth, he seeth the whole
earth hourly”.
It is quite evident, indeed, that the reign of Thutmose III marks an
epoch not only in Egypt but in the whole Near East as we know it in his age.
Never before in history had a single brain wielded the resources of so great a
nation and wrought them into such centralize, permanent, and at the same time
mobile efficiency, that for years they could be brought to bear with incessant
impact upon another continent as a skilled artisan manipulates a hundred-ton
forge hammer; although the figure is inadequate unless we remember that
Thutmose forged his own hammer. The genius which rose from an obscure priestly
office to accomplish this for the first time in history reminds us of a
Napoleon. He was the first to build an empire in any real sense; he was the
first world-hero. He made, not only a world-wide impression upon his age, but
an impression of a new order. His commanding figure, towering over the trivial
plots and schemes of the petty Syrian dynasts, must have clarified the
atmosphere of oriental politics as a strong wind drives away miasmic vapors. The
inevitable chastisement of his strong arm was held in awed remembrance by the
men of Naharin for three generations. His name was one to conjure with, and
centuries after his empire had crumbled to pieces it was placed on amulets as a
word of power. And today two of this king’s greatest monuments, his Heliopolitan obelisks, now rise on opposite shores of the
western ocean, memorials of the world’s first empire builder.
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