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The creation of a reliable Chronology of Ancient Egypt is a task fraught with problems. While the overwhelming majority of Egyptologists agree on the outline and many of the details of a common chronology, disagreements either individually or in groups have resulted in a variety of dates offered for rulers and events. This variation begins with only a few years in the Late Period, gradually growing to a decade at the beginning of the New Kingdom, and eventually to as much as a century by the start of the Old Kingdom. The reader is advised to include this factor of uncertainty with any date offered either in Wikipedia or any history of Ancient Egypt.

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Counting regnal years

The first problem the student of Egyptian chronology faces is that they used no single system of dating: they had no concept of an Era similar to Anno Domini, Anno Hajirae — or even the concept of named years like limmu used in Mesopotamia. As a result, the chronologer is forced to compile a list of pharaohs, determine the length of their reigns, and adjust for any interregnums or coregencies. This leads to other problems:

  • All king lists are either comprehensive but have significant gaps in their text (for example, the Turin King List), or textually complete but fail to provide a complete list of rulers, even for a short period of Egyptian history.
  • There is conflicting information on the same regnal period from different versions of the same text; the Egyptian historian Manetho's history of Egypt is only known by extensive references to it made by subsequent writers, such as Eusebius and Sextus Julius Africanus. Unfortunately the dates for the same pharaoh often vary substantially depending on the referring source.
  • For almost all kings of Egypt, we lack an accurate count for the length of their reigns.
  • Religious bias due to the Bible. This was most pervasive before c. 1850s, when the figures preserved in Manetho conflicted with:
  1. The age of the Earth as believed at the time, and
  2. The date of the Biblical Flood.

Synchronisms

A useful way to work around these gaps in knowledge is to find chronological synchronisms. Over the past decades a number of these have been found, of varying degrees of usefulness and reliability.

  • Synchronisms with inscriptions relating to the burial of Apis bulls begin as early as the reign of Amenhotep III and continue into Ptolemaic times, but there is a significant gap in the record between Ramesses XI and the 23rd year of Osorkon II. The poor documentation of these finds in the Serapeum also compounds the difficulties in using these records.
  • Astronomical synchronisms. The best known of these is the Sothic cycle, and careful study of this led Richard A. Parker to argue that the dates of the Twelfth dynasty could be fixed with absolute precision.1 More recent research has eroded this confidence, questioning many of the assumptions used with the Sothic Cycle, and as a result experts have moved away from relying on this Cycle.2 For example, Donald B. Redford, in attempting to fix the date of the end of Eighteenth dynasty, almost completely ignores the Sothic evidence, relying on synchronicities between Egypt and Assyria (by way of the Hittites), and help from astronomical observations.3
(Add to here:
  • Kate Spence, "Ancient Egyptian chronology and the astronomical orientation of pyramids", Nature, 408 (2000), pp. 320-324. She offers, based on orientation of the Great Pyramid with circumpolar stars, for a date of that structure accurate within 5 years.
  • Calculated dates of eclipses, and possible mentions in Egyptian inscriptions that may fix the beginning of Akhenaten's new religion. URL for pdf mislaid.)
  • Carbon-14 dating. Evidence from excavations, Carbon-14 recalibrations due to demonstrated uneven absorption of radioactive carbon in living things.4

The attraction of alternative chronologies

Although Professor Heinrich Otten has called called the current scholarly consensus a "rubber chronology" that you can stretch or shrink anywhere, by arbitrarily established lengths of co-regencies between rulers and even overlapping dynasties, the outlines and dates have not fluctuated very much in the last 100 years, as can be seen by comparing the dates when Egypt's 30 dynasties began and ended from two different Egyptologists: the first writing in 1906, the second in 2000. (All dates are in BC).5

Egyptian dynasty J. H. Breasted's dates Ian Shaw's dates
1st & 2nd dynasties 3400 – 2980 c.3000 – 2686
3rd dynasty 2980 – 2900 2686 – 2613
4th dynasty 2900 – 2750 2613 – 2494
5th dynasty 2750 – 2625 2494 – 2345
6th dynasty 2623 – 2475 2345 – 2181
7th & 8th dynasties 2475 – 2445 2181 – 2160
9th & 10th dynasties 2445 – 2160 2160 – 2025
11th dynasty 2160 – 2000 2125 – 1985
12th dynasty 2000 – 1788 1985 – 1773
13th to 17th dynasties 1780 – 1580 1773 – 1550
18th dynasty 1580 – 1350 1550 – 1295
19th dynasty 1350 – 1205 1295 – 1186
20th dynasty 1200 – 1090 1186 – 1069
21th dynasty 1090 – 945 1069 – 945
22th dynasty 945 – 745 945 – 715
23th dynasty 745 – 718 818 – 715
24th dynasty 718 – 712 727 – 715
25th dynasty 712 – 663 747 – 656
26th dynasty 663 – 525 664 – 525

All of the differences can be explained as the result of increased knowledge and refined understanding of the material. For example, Breasted adds a ruler in the Twentieth dynasty that further research showed did not exist. Breasted also believed all of dynasties were sequential, whereas it is now known that several existed at the same time. And after all of these revisions, the most important difference is that dates in the Old Kingdom are now placed 300 years later.

New chronologies

Many 'revised' Egyptian chronologies have been suggested over the years, which are summarised by P John Crowe in his article "The Revision of Ancient History - A Perspective"1 as follows:

  • An Outline History of Revising Ancient History - Up to 1952
  • Donovan Courville, Eddie Schorr
  • SIS and the Pro-Ages in Chaos Era 1974-1982
  • Glasgow Conference and the 'Glasgow Chronology', John Dayton
  • 1982-1990. P. James, D. Rohl, and G. Heinsohn lead in New Directions.
  • The 1990's - Open Season for Revisionists
  • Mainstream: Martin Sieff, Tony Rees, Bob Porter, Geoffrey Barnard
  • Ages in Chaos Revisionists: Tony Chavasse, Michael Reade, Jan Sammer, Dale Murphie
  • More Radical Revisionists: Emmett Sweeney, Eric Aitchison, Jesse Lasken, H Illig and AT Fomenko
  • 'Significant Others': Phillip Clapham, Carl Olof Jonsson

Notes

  1. Set forth in "Excursus C: The Twelfth dynasty" in his The Calendars of ancient Egypt (Chicago: University Press, 1950).
  2. One example is Patrick O'Mara, "Censorinus, the Sothic Cycle, and calendar year one in ancient Egypt: the Epistological problem", Journal of Near Eastern studies, 62 (2003), pp. 17-26.
  3. Donald B. Redford, "The Dates of the End of the 18th Dynasty", History and Chronology of the Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt: Seven studies (Toronto: University Press, 1967), pp. 183-215.
  4. One discussion of recalibrating radiocarbon dates is Colin Renfrew, Before Civilization (Cambridge: University Press, 1979), pp. 69-83. ISBN 0521296439
  5. J. H. Breasted's dates are taken from his Ancient Records (first published in 1906), volume 1, sections 58-75; Shaw's are taken from his Oxford History of Ancient Egypt (published in 2000), pp. 479-483.

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