Wahkare Khety was an pharaoh of the 9th or 10th Dynasty during the First Intermediate Period.
The first of these kings, Achthoês, behaving more cruel than his predecessors, wrought woes for the people of all of Egypt, but afterwards he was smitten with madness and killed by a Nile crocodile.William Gillian Waddell: Manetho (= The Loeb classical library. Bd. 350). Harvard University Press, Cambridge (Mass.) 2004 (Reprint), , p. 61.Margaret Bunson, op. cit., p. 355.If this hypothesis is correct, Wahkare Khety may have been a Herakleopolitan prince who profited from the weakness of the Memphite rulers of the Eighth Dynasty to seize the throne of Middle and Lower Egypt around 2150 BC. This hypothesis is supported by contemporary inscriptions referring to the northern, Herakleopolitan kingdom as the House of Khety,Stephan Seidlmayer, Ian Shaw, The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, , p. 128. although that only proves that the founder of the 9th Dynasty was a Khety, but not necessarily Wahkare Khety.
From the Instructions, it is known that Wahkare Khety, in alliance with the of Lower Egypt, managed to repel the nomad "Asiatics" who for generations roamed in the Nile Delta. Those nomarchs, although recognizing Wahkare's authority, ruled de facto more or less independently. The expulsion of the "Asiatics" allowed the establishment of new settlements and defense structures on the northeastern borders, as well as the reprise of trades with the coast.William C. Hayes, op. cit., p. 466. Wahkare, however, warned Merikare not to neglect guarding these borders, as the "Asiatics" still were considered a danger.William C. Hayes, op. cit., p. 237.
In the south, Wahkare and the faithful nomarch of Asyut Tefibi retook the city of Thinis, previously captured by the Thebans led by Intef II; however, the troops of Herakleopolis sacked the sacred necropolis of Thinis, a serious crime which was reported by Wahkare himself. This crime caused the immediate reaction of the Thebans, who later finally captured the Thinite nomos. After those events Wahkare Khety decided to abandon this bellicose policy and begin a phase of peaceful coexistence with the southern kingdom, which endured until part of the reign of his successor Merikare, who succeeded the long reign – five decades – of Wahkare.William C. Hayes, op. cit., pp. 466–67.
|
|