Map of the Roman Empire - Memphis
Memphis
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Ancient Memphis (Noph). The Bible mentions Memphis as "Noph", it was the capital of Lower Egypt; some Judeans who escaped the Babylonian invasion settled at Memphis in 586 B.C. The modern name for Memphis is Mit Rahneh.
Isa. 19:13 - The princes of Zoan are become fools, the princes of Noph are deceived; they have also seduced Egypt, [even they that are] the stay of the tribes thereof.
Jer. 2:16 - Also the children of Noph and Tahapanes have broken the crown of thy head.
Jer. 44:1 - he word that came to Jeremiah concerning all the Jews which dwell in the land of Egypt, which dwell at Migdol, and at Tahpanhes, and at Noph, and in the country of Pathros, saying,
Jer. 46:14 - Declare ye in Egypt, and publish in Migdol, and publish in Noph and in Tahpanhes: say ye, Stand fast, and prepare thee; for the sword shall devour round about thee.
Ezek. 30:13 - Thus saith the Lord GOD; I will also destroy the idols, and I will cause [their] images to cease out of Noph; and there shall be no more a prince of the land of Egypt: and I will put a fear in the land of Egypt.
Memphis (Noph in the Old Testament). A great city of Egypt, second in importance only to Thebes, after the fall of which it became the capital of the whole country, a position which it had previously shared with Thebes. It is said to have been founded by Menes. It stood on the left bank of the Nile, about ten miles above the Pyramids. - Harry Thurston Peck. Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. New York. Harper and Brothers. 1898.
Memphis (Arabic: ممفس; Egyptian Arabic: ممفيس; Greek: Μέμφις) was the ancient capital of Aneb-Hetch, the first nome of Lower Egypt. Its ruins are located near the town of Helwan, south of Cairo.According to legend related by Manetho, the city was founded by the pharaoh Menes around 3000 BC. Capital of Egypt during the Old Kingdom, it remained an important city throughout ancient Mediterranean history.[1][2][3] It occupied a strategic position at the mouth of the Nile delta, and was home to feverish activity. Its principal port, Peru-nefer, harboured a high density of workshops, factories, and warehouses that distributed food and merchandise throughout the ancient kingdom. During its golden age, Memphis thrived as a regional centre for commerce, trade, and religion.
Memphis was believed to be under the protection of the god Ptah, the patron of craftsmen. Its great temple, Hout-ka-Ptah (meaning "Castle of the ka of Ptah"), was one of the most prominent structures in the city. The name of this temple, rendered in Greek as Aί γυ πτoς (Ai-gy-ptos) by the historian Manetho, is believed to be the etymological origin of the modern English name Egypt.
The history of Memphis is closely linked to that of the country itself. Its eventual downfall is believed to be due to the loss of its economical significance in late antiquity, following the rise of coastal Alexandria. Its religious significance also diminished after the abandonment of the ancient religion following the Edict of Thessalonica.
The ruins of the former capital today offer fragmented evidence of its magnificent past. They have been preserved, along with the pyramid complex at Giza, as a World Heritage Site since 1979. The site is open to the public as an open-air museum.
Ancient History
Memphis became the capital of Ancient Egypt for over eight consecutive dynasties during the Old Kingdom. The city reached a peak of prestige under the 6th dynasty as a centre for the worship of Ptah, the god of creation and artworks. The alabaster sphinx that guards the Temple of Ptah serves as a memorial of the city's former power and prestige.[12][13] The Memphis triad, consisting of the creator god Ptah, his consort Sekhmet, and their son Nefertem, formed the main focus of worship in the city.
Memphis declined briefly after the 18th dynasty with the rise of Thebes and
the New Kingdom, and was revived under the Persians before falling firmly into
second place following the foundation of Alexandria. Under the Roman Empire,
Alexandria remained the most important city. Memphis remained the second city of
Egypt until the establishment of Fustat (or Fostat) in 641 CE. It was then
largely abandoned and became a source of stone for the surrounding settlements.
It was still an imposing set of ruins in the 12th century but soon became little
more than an expanse of low ruins and scattered stone.
Roman Empire
With the arrival of the Romans, like Thebes, the city lost its place permanently
in favour of Alexandria, which opened onto the empire. The rise of the cult of
Serapis, a syncretic deity most suited to the mentality of the new rulers of
Egypt, and the emergence of Christianity taking root deep into the country,
spelled the complete ruin of the ancient cults of Memphis. Gradually, the city
dropped out of existence during the Byzantine and Coptic periods. The city then
became a quarry to build new settlements nearby, including a new capital founded
by the Arabs who took possession in the 7th century. -
Wikipedia
Memphis MEMPHIS
MEMPHIS (??�f??, Herod.2.99,114,136, 154; Plb. 5.61; Diod. 1.50, seq.; Steph. B.
sub voce: Eth. ?e�f?t??), the NOPH of the Old Testament (Isaiah, 19.13; Jerem.
2.16, 44.1), was the first capital of the entire kingdom of Aegypt, after the
Deltaic monarchy at Heliopolis was united to the Thebaid capital at This or
Abydos. It stood on the western bank of the Nile, 15 miles S. of Cercasorus, in
lat. 30� 6' N.
The foundation of Memphis belongs to the very earliest age of Aegyptian history.
It is ascribed (1) to Menes, the first mortal king; (2) to Uchoreus, a monarch
of a later dynasty; and (3) to Apis or Epaphus. (Hyg. Fab. 149.) But the two
latter may be dismissed as resting on very doubtful authority. (Diod.1.51.) The
only certainty is that Memphis was of remote antiquity, as indeed is implied in
the ascription of its origin to Menes, and that it was the first capital of the
united kingdom of Upper and Lower Aegypt. The motives which induced its founder
to select such a site for his capital are obvious. Not far removed from the
bifurcation of the Nile at Cercasorus, it commanded the S. entrance to the
Delta, while it was nearer to the Thebaid than any of the Deltaic provincial
cities of importance, Heliopolis, Bubastis, and Sais. It is also clear why he
placed it on the western bank of the Nile. His kingdom had little to apprehend
from the tribes of the Libyan desert; whereas the eastern frontier of Aegypt was
always exposed to attack from Arabia, Assyria, and Persia, nor indeed was it
beyond the reach of the Scythians. (Herod, 1.105.) It was important, therefore,
to make the Nile a barrier of the city; and this was effected by placing Memphis
W. of it. Before, however, Menes could lay the foundations of his capital, an
artificial area was to be provided for them. The Nile, at that remote period,
seems to have had a double bifurcation; one at the head of the Delta, the other
above the site of Memphis, and parallel with the Arsinoite Nome. Of the branches
of its southern fork, the western and the wider of the two ran at the foot of
the Libyan hills; the eastern and lower was the present main stream. Between
them the plain, though resting on a limestone basis, was covered with marshes,
caused by their periodical overflow. This plain Menes chose for the area of
Memphis. He began by constructing an embankment about 100 stadia S. of its site,
that diverted the main body of the water into the eastern arm; and the marshes
he drained off into two principal lakes, one to N., the other to W. of Memphis,
which thus, on every side but S., was defended by water.
The area of Memphis, according to Diodorus (1.50), occupied a circuit of 150
stadia, or at least 15 miles. This space, doubtless, included much open ground,
laid out in gardens, as well as the courts required for the barracks of the
garrison, in the quarter denominated �the White Castle,� and which was
successively occupied, under the Pharaohs, by the native militia; in the reign
of Psammetichus (B.C. 658--614), by Phoenician and Greek mercenaries; by the
Persians, after the invasion of Cambyses (B.C. 524); and finally by the
Macedonian and Roman troops. For although Memphis was not always a royal
residence, it retained always two features of a metropolis: (1) it was the seat
of the central garrison, at least until Alexandreia was founded ; and (2) its
necropolis--the pyramids--was the tomb of the kings of every native dynasty.
The mound which curbed the inundations of the Nile was so essential to the very
existence of Memphis, that even the Persians, who ravaged or neglected all other
great works of the country, annually repaired it. (Hdt. 2.99.) The climate was
of remarkable salubrity; the soil extremely productive; and the prospect from
its walls attracted the notice of the Greeks and Romans, who seldom cared much
for the picturesque. Diodorus (1.96) mentions its bright green meadows,
intersected by canals, paven with the lotus-flower. Pliny (13.10, 16.21) speaks
of trees of such girth that three men with extended arms could not span them.
Martial (6.80) says that the �navita Memphiticus� brought roses in winter to
Rome (comp. Lucan, Pharsal. 4.135); and Athenaeus (1.20. p. 11) celebrates its
teeming soil and its wine. (Comp. J. AJ 2.14.4; Horace, Od. 3.26. 10.) And these
natural advantages were seconded by its [2.325] position in the �narrows� of
Aegypt, at a point where the Arabian and Libyan hills converge for the last time
as they approach the Delta, and whence Memphis commanded the whole inland trade,
whether ascending or descending the Nile. On the coins of Hadrian the wealth and
fertility of Memphis are expressed by a figure of the Nile on their reverse,
holding in his left hand a cornucopia. (Mionnet, Suppl. ix. No. 42.)
The position of Memphis, again, as regarded the civilisation which Aegypt
imparted or received, was most favourable. A capital in the Thebaid would have
been too remote for communication with the East or Greece: a capital in the
Delta would have been too remote from the Upper Kingdom, which would then have
pertained rather to Aethiopia than to Aegypt; while the Delta itself,
unsupported by the Thebaid, must in all probability have become an Assyrian
province.. But the intermediate situation of Memphis connected it both with the
southern portions of the Nile valley, as far as its keys at Philae and
Elephantina, and also through the isthmus of Suez and the coast, with the most
civilised races of Asia and Europe. After the foundation of Alexandreia, indeed,
Memphis sunk into a provincial city. But the Saracen invaders in the seventh
century confirmed the wisdom of Menes's choice, for they built both Old and New
Cairo in the neighbourhood of Memphis, only changing the site from the western
to the eastern bank of the river, because their natural alliances, unlike those
of the Pharaohs, were with the Arabians and the Syrian Khalifates.
The history of Memphis is in some measure that of Aegypt also. The great works
of Menes were probably accomplished by successive monarchs, if not indeed by
several dynasties. In the 1st. period of the monarchy we find that the 3rd, 4th,
6th, 7th, and 8th dynasties consisted of Memphite kings. Athotis, who is styled
a son of Menes, is said to have built the palace, and thus stamped the new city
as a royal residence. In the reign of Kaiechos, in the 2nd dynasty, the worship
of Apis was established at Memphis, which was equivalent to rendering it a
cathedral city. In the 7th dynasty we have a record of seventy Memphite kings,
each reigning for one day: this probably denotes an interregnum, and perhaps a
foregone revolution; for, as Herodotus remarks (2.147), the Aegyptians could not
exist without a monarchy. After the 8th dynasty no series of Memphite kings
occurs; and the royal families pass to Heracleopolis, in the first place; next,
after the expulsion of the Shepherds, to Thebes; afterwards to the Deltaic
cities of Tanis, Bubastis, and Sais.
The shepherd kings, though they formed their great camp at Abaris, retained
Memphis as the seat of civil government (Manetho, ap. Joseph. cont. Apion,
1.14); and although, after they withdrew into Syria, Thebes became the capital,
yet we have a proof that the 18th dynasty--the house of Rameses--held their
northern metropolis in high esteem. For Sesostris, or Rameses III. (Herod. ii,
108), on his return from his Asiatic wars, set up in front of the temple of Ptah
at Memphis a colossal statue of himself 45 feet high; and this is probably the
colossal figure still lying among the mounds of ruin at Mitranieh. Under the
25th dynasty, while the Aethiopians occupied Aegypt, Memphis was again the seat
of a native government,--apparently the result of a revolution, which set Sethos,
a priest, upon the throne. A victory obtained by this monarch over the Assyrians
was commemorated by a statue in the temple of Ptah--Sethos holding in his hand a
mouse, the symbol of destruction. (Horapol. Hieroglyph. 1.50; comp. Aelian, H.
Anim. 6.41; Strab. xiii. p.604; Hdt. 2.141.) Under Psammetichus (B.C. 670) the
Phoenician soldiers, who had aided him in gaining the crown, were established by
him in �the Tyrian camp,� --at least this seems to be the meaning of Herodotus
(2.112),--but were removed by his successor Amasis into the capital itself, and
into that quarter of it called the �White Castle.�
Of all the Aegyptian cities, Memphis suffered the most severely from the cruelty
and fanaticism of the Persians. Its populace, excited by the defeat of the
Aegyptian army at Pelusium, put to. death the Persian herald who summoned the
Memphians to surrender. The vengeance of the conqueror is related by. Herodotus.
Memphis became the head-quarters of a Persian garrison; and Cambyses, on his
return from his unfortunate expedition against Aethiopia, was more than ever
incensed against the vanquished. Psammenitus, the last of the Pharaohs, was
compelled to put himself to death (Hdt. 3.15); Cambyses slew the god Apis with
his own hand, and massacred his priests; he profaned the Temple of Ptah and
burned the images of the Cabeiri (id. ib. 32). Under Darius Aegypt was mildly
governed, and his moderation was shown by his acquiescence in the high-priest's
refusal to permit the erection of a statue to him at Memphis. (Hdt. 2.110; Diod.
1.58.) The next important notice of this city is in the reign of Artaxerxes I.
Inaros, son of Psammetichus, had revolted from Persia, and called in the aid of
the Athenians. (Diod. 11.71.) The Persians were defeated at Papremis in the
Delta (ib. 74; comp. Mannert, Geogr. x. p. 591), fled to Memphis, and were
besieged in the �White Castle.� (Thuc. 1.108-109.) The siege lasted for more
than a year (Diod. 2.75), and was at length raised (Ctesias, 100.33), and the
authority of the king of Persia restored. Under Nectanebus I., the first monarch
of the Sebennytic dynasty, Memphis expelled its Persian garrison, nor did it
return to its allegiance, until Nectanebus II., the last representative of
thirty dynasties, was driven into Aethiopia. (Athenaeus, iv. p. 150.) From this
period Memphis loses its metropolitan importance, tend sinks to the level of the
chief provincial city of Aegypt.
If, as Diodorus remarks (1.51), Thebes surpassed Memphis in the grandeur of its
temples, the latter city was more remarkable for the number of its deities and
sacred buildings, and for its secular and commercial edifices. It might, indeed,
as regards its shrines, be not improperly termed the Pantheon of the land of
Misraim. The following were its principal religious structures, and they seem to
include nearly all the capital objects of Aegyptian worship except the goat and
the crocodile:--
1. The temple of Isis, was commenced at a very early period, but only completed
by Amasis, B.C. 564. It is described! as spacious and beautiful (Hdt. 2.176;
Heliodor. Aethiop. 7.2, 8, 11), but inferior to the Iseium at Busiris (Hdt.
2.59, 61).
2. The temple of Proteus, founded probably by, Phoenicians, who had a
commercial establishment at Memphis. It was of so early date as to be ascribed
to the era of the Trojan War. (Plutarch, de Gen. Socrat. 100.7.)
3. The temple of Apis, completed in the reign of [2.326] Psammetichus (Hdt.
2.153; Aelian, Ael. NA 11.10; Clemens Alexand. Paedag. 3.2; Strab. xvii. p.807),
stood opposite the southern portal of the great temple of Ptah or Hephaestos,
and was celebrated for its colonnades, through which the processions of Apis
were conducted. Here was also an oracle of Apis, in connection with one of
Osiris and Isis (Plin. Nat. 8.46; Paus. 7.22.) This temple was the cathedral of
Aegypt, and not only established there a numerous, opulent, and learned college
of priests, but also attracted thither innumerable worshippers, who combined
commercial with religious purposes.
4. The temple of Serapis, in the western quarter of Memphis. This Serapis was
of earlier date than the Alexandrian deity of similar name. To the Memphian
Serapeium was attached a Nilo-meter, for gauging and recording the periodical
overflows of the river. It was removed by Constantine as a relic of paganism,
but replaced by his successor Julian. (Socrat. Hist. Eccles. 1.18; Sozomen, 5.2
; comp. Diod. 1.50, 57; Senec. Quaest. Nat. 4.2 ; Plin. Nat. 8.46.) 5. A temple
of Phre, or the Sun, mentioned only in the Rosetta inscription (Letronne,
Recueil des Inscr. Grecques et Lat. de l'Egypte; Brugsch, Inscript. Rosettan.)
6. The temple of the Cabeiri, (Hdt. 3.37) into which none but the high-priest
might lawfully enter. The statues of the pigmy gods were burned by Cambyses, and
the temple mutilated,
7. The temple of Ptah or Hephaestos, the elemental principle of fire,
worshipped under the form of a Pygmy. This was the most ancient shrine in
Memphis, being coeval with its foundation. (Diod. 1.45; Hdt. 2.99, 3.37; Strab.
17.807 ; Ammian. 17.4.) It was enlarged and beautified by several successive
monarchs, apparently through a spirit of rivalry with the great buildings at
Thebes. (1.) Moeris erected the great northern court (Hdt. 2.101 ; Diod. 1.51).
(2.) Rameses the Great raised in this court six colossal figures of
stone,--portrait-statues of himself, his queen, and their four sons. (Hdt.
2.108-110; Strab. xvii. p.807.) (3.) Rhampsinitus built the western court, and
erected two colossal figures of summer and winter. (Hdt. 2.121; Diod. 1.62 ;
Wilkinson, M. and C. i. p. 121.) (4.) As�chis added the eastern court. (Hdt.
2.136.) It was, in the opinion of Herodotus, by far the noblest and most
beautiful of the four quadrangles. (5.) Psammetichus, the Saite king, added the
south court, in commemoration of his victory over the Dodecarchy (Polyaen.
Stratag. 7.3; Hdt. 2.163; Diod. 1.67); and Amasis (Hdt. 2.176) erected or
restored to its basis the colossal statue of Ptah, in front of the southern
portico. Prom the priests of the Memphian temples, the Greeks derived their
knowledge of Aegyptian annals, and the rudiments also of their philosophical
systems. It was at Memphis that Herodotus made his longest sojourn, and gained
most of his information respecting Lower Aegypt. Democritus also resided five
years at Memphis, and won the favour of the priests by his addiction to
astrological and hieroglyphical studies. (Diog. Laert. Democrit. 9.34.) Memphis
reckoned among its illustrious visitors, in early times, the legislator Solon,
the historian Hecataeus, the philosophers Thales and Cleobulus of Lindus; and in
a later age, Strabo the geographer, and Diodorus the Sicilian.
The village of Mitra-nieh, half concealed in a grove of palm-trees, about 10
miles S. of Gizeh, marks the site of the ancient Memphis. The successive
conquerors of the land, indeed, have used its ruins as a stone-quarry, so that
its exact situation has been a subject of dispute. Major Rennell (Geography of
Herodotus, vol. ii. p. 121, seq.), however, brings incontestable evidence of the
correspondence of Mitranieh with Memphis. Its remains extend over many hundred
acres of ground, which are covered with blocks of granite, broken obelisks,
columns and colossal statues. The principal mound corresponds probably with the
area of the great temple of Ptah.
There are several accounts of the appearance of Memphis at different eras.
Strabo saw the Hephaesteium entire, although much of the city was then in ruins.
In the twelfth century A.D. it was visited by the Arabian traveller Ab-dallatif,
who was deeply impressed with the spectacle of grandeur and desolation. �Its
ruins offer,� he says, �to the spectator a union of things which confound him,
and which the most eloquent man in the world would in vain attempt to describe.�
He seems to have seen at least one of the colossal statues of the group of
Rameses in the northern court of the Hephaesteium. Among innumerable �idols,� as
he terms them, he �measured one which, without its pedestal, was more than 30
cubits long. This statue was formed of a single piece of red granite, and was
covered with a red varnish.� (Ab-dallatif, De Sacy's Translation, 4to. p. 184.)
Sir William Hamilton (Aegyptiaca, 4to. p. 303) visited the spot, and says, that
�high mounds enclose a square of 1800 yards from N. to S., and 400 from E. to W.
The entrance in the centre of each side is still visible. The two principal
entrances faced the desert and the river� (that is W. and E.). He entered by the
latter, and found immediately �thirty or forty large blocks of very fine red
granite, lying on the ground, evidently forming parts of some colossal statues,
the chief ornaments of the temple.�
The district in which these remains are found is still termed Memf by the Coptic
population, and thus helps to confirm the identity of the village of Mitranieh
with the ancient capital of Aegypt. - Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Geography (1854) William Smith, LLD, Ed.
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albendazole tablet uses for Worm Infections, Benefits, Safety and Natural Support
IntroductionA few months ago, while helping a family member navigate recurring stomach discomfort and unexplained tiredness, I started reading deeply ...