Product Code Database
Example Keywords: tablet computers -take $90
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Tanis
Tag Wiki 'Tanis'.
Tag

Tanis ( ; ; ) or San al-Hagar (; ; ; or ϫⲁⲁⲛⲉ or ϫⲁⲛⲏ;Vycichl, W. (1983). Dictionnaire Étymologique de la Langue Copte, p. 328. ) is the Greek name for ancient Egyptian ḏꜥn.t, an important archaeological site in the northeastern of , and the location of a city of the same name. Tanis was the capital of the Egyptian Kingdom in its 21st and 22nd Dynasties. It is located on the Tanitic branch of the , which has long since silted up.


History
Tanis is unattested before the 19th Dynasty of Egypt, when it was the capital of the 14th nome of .
(2025). 9780500772409, Thames & Hudson.
A temple inscription datable to the reign of mentions a "Field of Tanis", while the city in se is securely attested in two 20th Dynasty documents: the Onomasticon of Amenope and the Story of Wenamun, as the home place of the pharaoh-to-be .
(1999). 9780203982839, Routledge.

The earliest known Tanite buildings are datable to the 21st Dynasty. Although some monuments found at Tanis are datable earlier than the 21st Dynasty, most of these were in fact brought there from nearby cities, mainly from the previous capital of , for reuse.

(1997). 9780714109886, British Museum Press.
Indeed, at the end of the New Kingdom the royal residence of Pi-Ramesses was abandoned because the Pelusiac branch of the Nile in the Delta became silted up and its harbour consequently became unusable.

After Pi-Ramesses' abandonment, Tanis became the seat of power of the pharaohs of the 21st Dynasty, and later of the 22nd Dynasty (along with ). The rulers of these two dynasties supported their legitimacy as rulers of and with traditional titles and building works, although they pale compared to those at the height of the New Kingdom.

(2025). 9781405160711, Blackwell Publishing.
A remarkable achievement of these kings was the building and subsequent expansions of the Great temple of at Tanis (at the time, Amun-Ra replaced Seth as the main deity of the eastern Delta), while minor temples were dedicated to and whom, along with Amun-Ra, formed the . The intentional emulation towards Thebes is further stressed by the fact that these gods bore their original Theban epithets, leading to Thebes being more commonly mentioned than Tanis itself. Furthermore, the new royal necropolis at Tanis successfully replaced the one in the Theban Valley of the Kings.

After the 22nd Dynasty Tanis lost its status of royal residence, but became in turn the capital of the 19th nome of Lower Egypt. Starting from the 30th Dynasty, Tanis experienced a new phase of building development which endured during the . It remained populated until its abandonment in Roman times.
In , it was the seat of the bishops of Tanis, who adhered to the Coptic Orthodox Church.Siméon Vailhé, "Tanis", in The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 14. (Robert Appleton Company, 1912).

By the time of John of Nikiû in the 7th century, Tanis appears to have already declined significantly, as it was grouped together with four other towns under a single prefect.

The 1885 Census of Egypt recorded San el-Hagar as a in the district of in Sharqia Governorate; at that time, the population of the city was 1,569 (794 men and 775 women).


Studies and excavations
The first study of Tanis dates to 1798 during the French invasion of Egypt and Syria. , a French engineer, drew up a map of the site in the Description de l'Égypte. It was first excavated in 1825 by Jean-Jacques Rifaud, who discovered the two pink granite sphinxes now in the Musée du Louvre. He was followed by François Auguste Ferdinand Mariette who excavated between 1860 and 1864. William Matthew Flinders Petrie oversaw excavation from 1883 to 1886. The work was taken over by from 1929 to 1956, who discovered the royal necropolis dating to the Third Intermediate Period in 1939. The Mission française des fouilles de Tanis (MFFT) has been studying the site since 1965 under the direction of and Philippe Brissaud, and François Leclère since 2013.

There has been much debate over whether or not Tanis could be the biblical city of in which the would have suffered pharaonic slavery. Pierre Montet, in inaugurating his great excavation campaigns in the 1930s, began from the same premise. He was hoping to discover traces that would confirm the accounts of the . His own excavations gradually overturned this , even if he was defending this biblical connection until the end of his life. It was not until the discovery of / and the resumption of excavations under Jean Yoyotte that the place of Tanis was finally restored in the long chronology of the sites of the delta.


Ruins
Though Tanis was briefly explored in the early 19th century, the first large-scale archaeological excavations there were made by in the 1860s. In 1866, Karl Richard Lepsius discovered a copy of the , an inscription in both Greek and Egyptian, at Tanis. Unlike the , discovered 67 years earlier, this inscription included a full hieroglyphic text, thus allowing a direct comparison of the Greek text to the hieroglyphs and confirming the accuracy of Jean-François Champollion's approach to deciphering hieroglyphs.

During the subsequent century the French carried out several excavation campaigns directed by , then by and subsequently by Philippe Brissaud. For some time the overwhelming amount of monuments bearing the cartouches of Ramesses II or led archaeologists to believe that Tanis and Pi-Ramesses were in fact the same. Furthermore, the discovery of the Year 400 Stela at Tanis led to the speculation that Tanis should also be identified with the older, former capital, . The later re-discovery of the actual, neighbouring archaeological sites of Pi-Ramesses () and Avaris (Tell el-Dab'a) made clear that the earlier identifications were incorrect, and that all the Ramesside and pre-Ramesside monuments at Tanis were in fact brought here from Pi-Ramesses or other cities.

There are ruins of a number of temples, including the chief temple dedicated to , and a very important royal of the Third Intermediate Period (which contains the only known intact royal pharaonic burials, the tomb of having been entered in antiquity). The burials of three pharaohs of the 21st and 22nd Dynasties – , Amenemope and – survived the depredations of tomb robbers throughout antiquity. They were discovered intact in 1939 and 1940 by and proved to contain a large catalogue of gold, jewelry, and other precious stones, as well as the funerary masks of these kings.

(2025). 9781118896112, John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated.

Today, the main parts of the temple dedicated to can still be distinguished by the presence of large obelisks that marked the various pylons as in other Egyptian temples. Now fallen to the ground and lying in a single direction, they may have been knocked down by a violent earthquake during the Byzantine era. They form one of the most notable aspects of the Tanis site. Archaeologists have counted more than twenty.

The chief deities of Tanis were Amun; his consort, Mut; and their child Khonsu, forming the Tanite triad. This triad was, however, identical to that of Thebes, leading many scholars to speak of Tanis as the northern Thebes.

In 2009, the Egyptian Culture Ministry reported archaeologists had discovered a in the temple of Mut at Tanis. The lake, built out of limestone blocks, had been 15 meters long and 5 meters deep. It was discovered 12 meters below ground in good condition. The lake could have been built during the late 25th–early 26th Dynasty. Bossone, Andrew. Sacred Lake found in Delta. Egypt Independent, October 15, 2009.

In 2011, analysis of high-resolution satellite imagery, led by archaeologist of the University of Alabama at Birmingham, found numerous related mud-brick walls, streets, and large residences, amounting to an entire city plan, in an area that appears blank under normal images. A French archeological team selected a site from the imagery and confirmed mud-brick structures approximately 30 cm below the surface. Pringle, Heather Satellite Imagery Uncovers Up to 17 Lost Egyptian Pyramids 27 May 2011 However, the assertion that the technology showed 17 pyramids was denounced as "completely wrong" by the Minister of State for Antiquities at the time, .


Notable finds and artifacts
In Montet and other later archaeologists excavations of Tanis, many important and unique artifacts were found. When the sealed tombs of kings , Amenemope, and , were opened by Montet, all three were discovered with their tombs completely intact with all of the original funerary offerings. All three kings were still adorned with their golden and gilded funerary masks - a rarity.

Another artifact is the Pectoral of King Amenemope, a piece of jewelry he would have worn hung around his neck on his chest. The icon depicts the godesses and holding a lapis lazuli scarab with the of Amenemope.

In the tomb of General , the High Priest of Khonsu at Tanis, a series of bowls and cups made of gold were found by Montet. One of the golden bowls has a polychrome glass rosette of a flower at the center. The rosette is "is thought... to the Unification of the Two Lands by combining the emblems of papyrus and lotus that are the two symbols of Upper and Lower Egypt."


Cultural references
The story of being found in the marshes of the Nile River (Book of Exodus, ) is often set at Tanis, (2013). "Musing on Agri-History". Asian Agri-History 17(2), p. 184. which is often identified with ( Ṣōʕan).

In the 1981 film Raiders of the Lost Ark, Tanis is fictitiously portrayed as a which was buried in antiquity by a massive , before being looking for the Ark of the Covenant.

The Tanis fossil site, which may preserve unique remains from the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, is named after the city. The paleontologist Robert de Palma chose the name based on the significance of Tanis in the decipherment of hieroglyphs, as well as its role in Raiders of the Lost Ark as the hiding place of the Ark of the Covenant.

==Gallery==

's funerary mask]]
's tomb at Tanis]]
]]
]]
's funerary pectoral]]
son of king ]]
's gold mask]]
's gold pectoral]]


See also
  • List of ancient Egyptian towns and cities
  • List of ancient Egyptian sites, including sites of temples
  • List of historical capitals of Egypt


Notes

Bibliography
  • Association française d’Action artistique. 1987. Tanis: L’Or des pharaons. (Paris): Ministère des Affaires Étrangères and Association française d’Action artistique.
  • Brissaud, Phillipe. 1996. "Tanis: The Golden Cemetery". In Royal Cities of the Biblical World, edited by Joan Goodnick Westenholz. Jerusalem: Bible Lands Museum. 110–149.
  • . 1996. The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt (1100–650 BC). 3rd ed. Warminster: Aris & Phillips Limited.
  • Loth, Marc, 2014. "Tanis – 'Thebes of the North’“. In "Egyptian Antiquities from the Eastern Nile Delta", Museums in the Nile Delta, Vol. 2, ser. ed. by Mohamed I. Bakr, Helmut Brandl, and Faye Kalloniatis. Cairo/Berlin: Opaion.
  • . 1947. La nécropole royale de Tanis. Volume 1: Les constructions et le tombeau d’Osorkon II à Tanis. Fouilles de Tanis, ser. ed. Jean Pierre Marie Montet. Paris: .
  • ———. 1951. La nécropole royale de Tanis. Volume 2: Les constructions et le tombeau de Psousennès à Tanis. Fouilles de Tanis, ser. ed. Jean Pierre Marie Montet. Paris: .
  • ———. 1960. La nécropole royale de Tanis. Volume 3: Les constructions et le tombeau de Chechanq III à Tanis. Fouilles de Tanis, ser. ed. Jean Pierre Marie Montet. Paris.
  • Stierlin, Henri, and Christiane Ziegler. 1987. Tanis: Trésors des Pharaons. (Fribourg): Seuil.
  • Yoyotte, Jean. 1999. "The Treasures of Tanis". In The Treasures of the Egyptian Museum, edited by Francesco Tiradritti. Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press. 302–333.


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
2s Time