Takelot II
Encyclopedia : T : TA : TAK : Takelot II
Hedjkheperre Setepenre Takelot II Si-Ese Meryamun was a Twenty-Third Dynasty pharaoh of Ancient Egypt in Middle and Upper Egypt (840 - 815 BC). He was the High Priest of Amun Takelot F, son of the High Priest of Amun Nimlot C at Thebes and, thus, the grandson of Osorkon II according to the latest academic research. (Jansen-Winkeln, JEA 81, p.129 & 138) Most Egyptologists today including Aidan Dodson, Gerard Broekman, Jürgen von Beckerath, M.A. Leahy and Jansen-Winkeln (see references below) accept that Shoshenq III was Osorkon II's actual successor at Tanis, rather than Takelot II. Takelot II instead ruled a separate kingdom — Dynasty 23 — in Middle and Upper Egypt which was distinct from the Tanite 22nd Dynasty which controlled Lower Egypt. Takelot F, the son and successor of the High Priest of Amun Nimlot C, served for a period of time under Osorkon II before he proclaimed himself as king Takelot II in the final 3 Years of Osorkon II's reign. This situation is attested by the relief scenes on the walls of Temple J at Karnak which was dedicated by Takelot F--in his position as High Priest--to Osorkon II, who is depicted as the celebrant and king. (Aston, JEA 75, p.147) All the documents which mention Takelot II Si-Ese and his son, Osorkon B, originate from either Middle or Upper Egypt(none from Lower Egypt) and a royal tomb at Tanis which named a Hedjkheperre Setepenre Takelot along with a Year 9 stela from Bubastis are now recognised as belonging exclusively to Takelot I instead. While both Takelot I and II used the same prenomen, Takelot II added the epithet Si-Ese (or Son of Isis) to his royal titulary both to affiliate himself with Thebes and to distinguish his name from Takelot I.
The Crown Prince Osorkon
Takelot II controlled Middle and Upper Egypt during the final 3 Years of Osorkon II and the first 2 decades of Shoshenq III. The majority of Egyptologists today concede that king Osorkon III was the illustrious Crown Prince and High Priest Osorkon B, son of Takelot II. A misunderstanding arose over his identity because in the Crown Prince's famous chronicle, Osorkon dates events by both his father's Regnal Years and then by those of the Tanite king, Shoshenq III. While Kenneth Kitchen has taken this to mean that Shoshenq III succeeded Takelot II, in fact Takelot II and Shoshenq III were likely close contemporaries because, immediately after the death of his father in Year 25 of Takelot II, Osorkon B started dating his activities from Year 22 of Sheshonq III onwards. Consequently, there was never a 22 year break in Osorkon B's struggle to regain control of Thebes (from Year 1 to Year 22 of Sheshonq III) as Kitchen's TIPE Chronology implies because Year 25 of Takelot II is equivalent to Year 22 of Sheshonq III. (Aston, JEA 75, pp.143 & 148-149) Osorkon B did not immediately ascend to his father's throne presumably because he was involved in a prolonged civil war with his rival Pedubast I, and later Shoshenq VI, for control of Thebes. Instead, he merely dated his activities to the serving Dynasty 22 Pharaoh at Tanis: Shoshenq III. The Crown Prince Osorkon B was not outmaneuvered to the throne of Tanis by Shoshenq III as was previously thought because both individuals ruled over separate kingdoms with the 22nd Dynasty controlling Lower Egypt, and Takelot II/Osorkon B ruling most of Middle and Upper Egypt from Herakleopolis to Thebes, where they are monumentally attested. In 1983, a donation stela was discovered by Japanese excavators (Heian Museum 1983) at Tehna which reveals that Osorkon III was once a High Priest of Amun himself. This person can only be the well-known High Priest Osorkon B. There are no other Theban High Priests named Osorkon until the reign of Takelot III half a century later when Osorkon F served in this office. (Kitchen, TIPE 1996, pp.565 & 581)Theban Uprising and Conflict
In Year 11 of Takelot II, an insurrection began under Pedubast I whose followers challenged this king's authority at Thebes. Takelot reacted by dispatching his son, Osorkon B, to sail southwards to Thebes and quell the uprising. Osorkon B succeeded in retaining control of the city and then proclaimed himself as the new High Priest of Amun. Some of the rebel's bodies were deliberately burned by Osorkon to permanently deny their souls any hope of an afterlife. However, just four years later, in Year 15 of Takelot II, a second major revolt broke out and this time Osorkon B's forces were expelled from Thebes by Pedubast I. This caused a prolonged period of turmoil and instability in Upper Egypt as a prolonged struggle broke out between the competing factions of Takelot II/Osorkon B and Pedubast I/Shoshenq VI for control of Thebes. This conflict would last for 27 long years--from Year 15 to Year 25 of Takelot II and then from Year 22 to Year 39 of Shoshenq III when Osorkon B finally defeated his enemies and conquered this great city. Osorkon B proclaimed himself as king Osorkon III sometime after his victory. On other matters, the Chronicle of Prince Osorkon B, which is carved on the Bubastis Portal at Karnak, records Osorkon's activities between Year 11 to Year 24 of his father and then from Year 22 to 29 of Shoshenq III. However, Takelot II's brief 25th Year is attested by a donation stela made by his son in his position as High Priest at Thebes shortly before Takelot died. No tomb or final resting place has been found for this ruler.References
- David Aston, "Takeloth II: A King of the Twenty Third Dynasty?," JEA 75(1989) pp.139-153
- Aidan Dodson, "A new King Shoshenq confirmed?" GM 137(1993), p.58
- Jürgen von Beckerath, Chronologie des Pharaonischen Ägypten, MÄS 46 (Philipp von Zabern, Mainz: 1997)
- Gerard Broekman, "The Reign of Takeloth II: a Controversial Matter," GM 205(2005), pp.21-33[1]
- Karl Jansen-Winkeln, "Historische Probleme Der 3. Zwischenzeit," JEA 81(1995) pp.129-49
| Preceded by: Osorkon II | Pharaoh of Egypt Twenty-third dynasty of Egypt | Succeeded by: Pedubast I |
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
