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THE EGYPTIANS (C. 1468- 1200 BC)
History of Palestine
Considerable insight into the status of Palestine after Armageddon was
gained through the discovery of the ' Amarna Tablets', a large
collection of tablets found at El- Amarna in middle Egypt. These
tablets are mostly letters from the royal archives of the
pharaohs.
Many of them are written directly from or Palestine, in the period
between 1450 and 1350 BC. Some similar documents have also been
discovered in Palestine. In short, the tablets show that the
Egyptians had left the Canaanite princely houses in control of
their own territories, but under the supervision of Egyptian and
Canaanite commissioners. Inspectors were appointed to estimate
the yield of the harvest in Canaan and overseers collected
the revenue. This tribute became the test of Canaanite loyalty
to pharaoh.
But what really interested Egypt was the prosperous trade business of
the Canaanite seaports of Gaza, Jaffa, Acca, Tyre, Sidon, Byblos
and Ugarite, who traded their goods far and wide. The Amarna
tablets show that the Canaanites were mostly concentrated in
the Coastal cities; the hinterland was but sparsely settled with
concentrations around well-water centres as in Megiddo, Shechem,
Jerusalem and Hebron. There are some seven letters written from
the rulers of Jerusalem- then called Ursalim, or the City of
Salam or Peace-beseeching help from pharaoh against marauding
bedouin.
When Pharoah Seti I succeeded to the Egyptian throne in 1318 BC, many
of the Canaanite city-states ere hostile to Egypt, and even
engaged in warlike operations against towns which were still
loyal to Egypt. Apparently, the Hitties were behind this
uprising. The Hitties had built up a powerful army of
charioteers in Asia Minor, and Palestine loomed as a gold coast.
The campaigns of Seti I into Palestine are recorded in a series of
scenes carved on the east and north walls of the temple of Amun
at Karnak; with reliefs showing action in the field, submission
of defeated rulers, and prisoners-of-war being presented to Amun,
the national god. Despite Seti's apparent successful military
campaigns in Palestine, the Hitties continued pushing and
inciting the Canaanite kings against the Egyptians. When Seti's
son, Ramses II, succeeded to the throne, he decide on a showdown
with the Hitties.
Heading four divisions, each named after an Egyptian god, Ramses
crossed the Sinai into Palestine and then into Syria, where the
clash of the two superpowers took place in an area called
Kadesh. The Hitties unleashed some 3,500 chariots against the
Egyptian army. Both sides were so badly beaten that when, on the
next day, the Hittie king asked for an armistice, Ramses was
only too gald to accept.
The battle of Kadesh undermined Egypt's prestige among the Canaanites
and many of the Canaanite sities rebelled; compelling Ramses to
return to Palestine to storm its cities. In order to secure
Palestine, in 1280 BC Ramses signed with the Hitties history's
first international peace treaty; in which Syria was recognized
as part of the Hittie Empire, and Palestine part of Egypt's
sphere of influence. And to improve relations with his
former adversary, Ramses married the daughter of the Hittie
king; adding her to his large circle of wives, who allegedly
exceeded one hundred.
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