- Order:
- Duration: 3:43
- Published: 2010-08-06
- Uploaded: 2011-01-04
- Author: UltraHindi
- http://wn.com/Jawaniya_Ye_Mast_Mast_Bin_Piye__Md_Rafi,_Shammi_Kapoor,_Tumsa_Nahin_Dekha_Song
- Email this video
- Sms this video
these configurations will be saved for each time you visit this page using this browser
Name | Piye |
---|---|
Nomenhiero | |
Nomen | Piy |
Prenomen | Usimare |
Golden | Sasha-qenu |
Nebty | Mes-hemut |
Horus | Zematawy |
Reign | 752–721 BC |
Predecessor | Kashta |
Successor | Shabaka |
Spouse | Tabiry, Abar, Khensa, Peksater |
Dynasty | 25th Dynasty |
Burial | el-Kurru |
Monuments | Stelae at Gebel Barkal |
Alt | Piankhi |
Piye, () (whose name was once transliterated as Piankhi the Nubian) (d. 721 BC) was a Kushite king and founder of the Twenty-fifth dynasty of Egypt who ruled Egypt from the city of Napata, located deep in Nubia, Sudan. His predecessor as king of Kush, Kashta, almost certainly exercised a strong degree of influence over Thebes prior to Piye's accession because Kashta managed to have his daughter, Amenirdis I, adopted as the Heiress to the serving God's Wife of Amun, Shepenupet I, before the end of his reign.
Piye was the father of King Taharqa and the God's Wife of Amun Shepenwepet II. A daughter named Qalhata would later marry King Shabaka, she was the mother of king Tanutamun and probably of King Shabataka as well.
Three of his daughters - Tabekenamun, Naparaye and Takahatenamun - married their brother Taharqa. Another daughter, Arty, married king Shabataka.
Piye had two further sons named Har and Khaliut.
Piye viewed his campaign as a Holy War, commanding his soldiers to cleanse themselves ritually before beginning battle. He himself offered sacrifices to the great god Amun.
Piye then marched north and achieved complete victory at Herakleopolis, conquering the cities of Hermopolis and Memphis among others, and received the submission of the kings of the Nile Delta including Iuput II of Leontopolis, Osorkon IV of Tanis and his former ally Nimlot at Hermopolis. Hermopolis fell to the Nubian king after a siege lasting five months. Tefnakht took refuge in an island in the Delta and formally conceded defeat in a letter to the Nubian king but refused to personally pay homage to the Kushite ruler. Satisfied with his triumph, Piye proceeded to sail south to Thebes and returned to his homeland in Nubia never to return to Egypt. Despite Piye's successful campaign into the Delta, his authority only extended northward from Thebes up to the western desert oases and Herakleopolis where Peftjaubastet ruled as a Nubian vassal king. The local kings of Lower Egypt especially Tefnakht were essentially free to do what they wanted without Piye's oversight. It was Shabaka, Piye's successor, who later rectified this unsatisfactory situation by attacking Sais and defeating Tefnakht's successor Bakenranef at Sais, in his second regnal year.
Szafrański further notes that the Mummy cartonnage (a cover in which the mummy is placed) found in Padiamonet's burial chamber featured "beautiful, ornate, colourful pictures [in which] you can read in hieroglyphs the name of the Vizier. It is also visible on the fragments of the [mummy] bandages."; however, no archaeological source gives Piye a reign of more than 31 years at present.
Piye was buried in a pyramid (the first pharaoh to receive such an entombment in more than 500 years) alongside his four favorite horses at el-Kurru near Gebel Barkal in what is now Northern Sudan. This site would be also occupied by the tombs of several later members of the dynasty.
The Sudanese people consider Piye and Taharqa as historical figures and regarded more than the other pharaohs from the Twenty-fifth dynasty of Egypt.
Category:721 BC deaths Category:Kush Category:Pharaohs of the Twenty-fifth dynasty of Egypt Category:Year of birth unknown
This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.