The Essential Works of George Rawlinson: Egypt, The Kings of Israel and Judah, Phoenicia, Parthia, Chaldea, Assyria, Media, Babylon, Persia, Sasanian Empire & Herodotus' Histories. George Rawlinson

The Essential Works of George Rawlinson: Egypt, The Kings of Israel and Judah, Phoenicia, Parthia, Chaldea, Assyria, Media, Babylon, Persia, Sasanian Empire & Herodotus' Histories - George Rawlinson


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owing to the judicious system which Thothmes had established among them, whereby each chief was forced to give a son or brother as hostage for his good behaviour, and if the hostage died to send another in his place. It was certainly not because the tribute was light, since it consisted of a number of slaves, silver vases of the weight of 762 pounds, nineteen chariots, 276 head of cattle, 1,622 goats, several hundredweight of iron and lead, a number of suits of armour, and "all kinds of good plants." The Rutennu had also to supply the stations along the military road, whereby Thothmes kept up the communications between Egypt and Mesopopotamia, with bread, wine, dates, incense, honey, and figs.

      Besides his army, Thothmes also maintained a naval force, and used it largely in his expeditions. According to one writer, he placed a fleet on the Euphrates, and in an action which took place with the Assyrians, defeated and chased the enemy for a distance of between seven and eight miles. He certainly upon some occasions made his attacks on Syria and Phœnicia from the sea; nor is it improbable that his maritime forces reduced Cyprus (which was conquered and held in a much less flourishing period by Amasis) and plundered the coast of Cilicia; but a judicious criticism will scarcely extend the voyages of his fleet, as has been done by another writer, to Crete, and the islands of the Ægean, the sea-boards of Greece and Asia Minor, the southern coast of Italy, Algeria, and the waters of the Euxine! There is no evidence in the historical inscriptions of Thothmes of any such far-reaching expeditions. The supposed evidence for them is in a song of victory, put into the mouth of the god, Ammon, and inscribed on one of the walls of the great temple of Karnak. The song is interesting, but it scarcely bears out the deductions that have been drawn from it, as will appear from the subjoined translation.

      (AMMON loquitur.)

      I came, and thou smotest the princes of Zahi;

       I scattered them under thy feet over all their lands;

       I made them regard thy Holiness as the blazing sun;

       Thou shinest in sight of them in my form.

      I came, and thou smotest them that dwell in Asia;

       Thou tookest captive the goat-herds of Ruten;

       I made them behold thy Holiness in thy royal adornments,

       As thou graspest thy weapons in the war-chariot.

      I came, and thou smotest the land of the East;

       Thou marchedst against the dwellers in the Holy Land;

       I made them behold thy Holiness as the star Canopus,

       Which sends forth its heat and disperses the dew.

      I came, and thou smotest the land of the West;

       Kefa and Asebi (i.e. Phœnicia and Cyprus) held thee in fear; I made them look upon thy Holiness as a young bull, Courageous, with sharp horns, which none can approach.

      I came, and thou smotest the subjects of their lords;

       The land of Mathen trembled for fear of thee;

       I made them look upon thy Holiness as upon a crocodile,

       Terrible in the waters, not to be encountered.

      I came, and thou smotest them that dwelt in the Great Sea;

       The inhabitants of the isles were afraid of thy war-cry;

       I made them behold thy Holiness as the Avenger,

       Who shews himself at the back of his victim.

      I came, and thou smotest the land of the Tahennu;

       The people of Uten submitted themselves to thy power;

       I made them see thy Holiness as a lion, fierce of eye,

       Who leaves his den and stalks through the valleys.

      I came, and thou smotest the hinder (i.e. northern) lands; The circuit of the Great Sea is bound in thy grasp; I made them behold thy Holiness as the hovering hawk. Which seizes with his glance whatever pleases him.

      I came, and thou smotest the lands in front:

       Those that sat upon the sand thou carriedst away captive;

       I made them behold thy Holiness like the jackal of the South,

       Which passes through the lands as a hidden wanderer.

      I came, and thou smotest the nomad tribes of Nubia,

       Even to the land of Shut, which thou holdest in thy grasp;

       I made them behold thy Holiness like thy pair of brothers,

      It is impossible to conclude this sketch of Thothmes III. without some notice of his buildings. He was the greatest of Egyptian conquerors, but he was also one of the greatest of Egyptian builders and patrons of art. The grand temple of Ammon at Thebes was the especial object of his fostering care; and he began his career of builder and restorer by repairs and restorations, which much improved and beautified that edifice. Before the southern propylæa he re-erected, in the first year of his independent reign, colossal statues of his father, Thothmes I., and his grandfather, Amenhotep, which had been thrown down in the troublous time succeeding Thothmes the First's death. He then proceeded to rebuild the central sanctuary, the work of Usurtasen I., which had probably begun to decay, and, recognizing its importance as the very penetrale of the temple, he resolved to reconstruct it in granite, instead of common stone, that he might render it, practically, imperishable. With a reverence and a self-restraint that it might be wished restorers possessed more commonly, he preserved all the lines and dimensions of the ancient building, merely reproducing in a better material the work of his great predecessor. Having accomplished this pious task, he gave a vent to his constructive ambition by a grand addition to the temple on its eastern side. Behind the cell, at the distance of about a hundred and fifty feet, he erected a magnificent hall, or pillared chamber, of dimensions previously unknown in Egypt, or


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