Map of the Roman Empire - Sais
Sais
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Ancient Sais - A famous city of the eastern Nile Delta, capital of the 26th Dynasty. Modern name is San el-Hagar.
Sais - (Σάϊς). Now Sa-el-Hajjar; a great city of Egypt, in the Delta, on the eastern side of the Canopic branch of the Nile. It was the ancient capital of Lower Egypt, and contained the palace and burial-place of the Pharaohs as well as the tomb of Osiris. The city gave its name to the Sa�tes Nomos. Here was the chief seat of the worship of Nit, who had a great temple, where every year a �Feast of Lamps� was celebrated by multitudes from all parts of Egypt. The place was also a famous centre of Egyptian learning, and to it many Greeks resorted for instruction. The story of the mysterious veiled statue at Sa�s, of which Schiller has written a ballad, and which is the subject of a romance by Novalis, appears to be only a creation of Greek fancy. - Harry Thurston Peck. Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. New York. Harper and Brothers. 1898.
Sais (Ancient Greek: Σάϊς) or Sa el-Hagar was an ancient Egyptian town in the Western Nile Delta on the Canopic branch of the Nile. It was the provincial capital of Sap-Meh, the fifth nome of Lower Egypt and became the seat of power during the Twenty-fourth dynasty of Egypt (c. 732-720 BC) and the Saite Twenty-sixth dynasty of Egypt (664-525 BC) during the Late Period. Its Ancient Egyptian name was Zau. Herodotus wrote that Sais is where the grave of Osiris was located and that the sufferings of the god were displayed as a mystery by night on an adjacent lake. The city's patron goddess was Neith, whose cult is attested as early as the 1st Dynasty, ca. 3100- 3050 BCE. The Greeks, such as Herodotus, Plato and Diodorus Siculus, identified her with Athena and hence postulated a primordial link to Athens. Diodorus recounts that Athena built Sais before the deluge that supposedly destroyed Athens and Atlantis. While all Greek cities were destroyed during that cataclysm, the Egyptian cities including Sais survived. In Plato's Timaeus and Critias (around 395 B.C., 200 years after the visit by the Greek Legislator Solon) , Sais is the city in which Solon (Solon visited Egypt in 590 B.C.) receives the story of Atlantis, its military aggression against Greece and Egypt, its eventual defeat and destruction by natural catastrophe, from an Egyptian priest. Plato also notes the city as the birthplace of the pharaoh Amasis II. Plutarch said that the shrine of Athena, which he identifies with Isis, in Sais carried the inscription "I am all that hath been, and is, and shall be; and my veil no mortal has hitherto raised." There are today no surviving traces of this town prior to the Late New Kingdom (c.1100 BC) due to the extensive destruction of the city by the Sebakhin (farmers removing mud brick deposits for use as fertilizer) leaving only a few relief blocks in situ. - Wikipedia
Sais, the early capital of Lower Egypt, on Buticus lacus, s., bet. Butos (2 geog. m.) and Cabasa, at the Saitic mouth of the Nile, R. Neith (Minerva) was worshipped here. Sa. - Classical Geography
Sais SAIS (Σάϊς, Hdt. 2.28, 59, 152, 169; Strab. xvii. p.802; Steph.
B. sub voce Mela, 1.9.9; Plin. Nat. 5.10. s. 11: Eth. Sa?t??, Sa�?t??), the
capital of the Saitic Nome in the Delta, and occasionally of Lower Aegypt also,
stood, in lat. 31� 4' N., on the right bank of the Canopic arm of the Nile. The
site of the ancient city is determined not only by the appellation of the modern
town of Sa-el-Hadjar, which occupies a portion of its area, but also by mounds
of ruin corresponding in extent to the importance of Sais at least under the
later Pharaohs. The city was artificially raised high above the level of the
Delta to be out of the reach of the inundations of the Nile, and served as a
landmark to all who ascended the arms of the river from the Mediterranean to
Memphis. Its ruins have been very imperfectly explored, yet traces have been
found of the lake on wh ch the mysteries of Isis were performed. as well as of
the temple of Neith (Athen�) and the necropolis of the Saite kings. The wall of
[2.875] unburnt brick which surrounded the principal buildings of the city was
70 feet thick, and probably therefore at least 100 feet high. It enclosed an
area 2325 feet in length by 1960 in breadth. Beyond this enclosure were also two
large cemeteries, one for the citizens generally, and the other reserved for the
nobles and priests of the higher orders. In one respect the Saites differed from
the other Aegyptians in their practice of interment. They buried their kings
within the precincts of their temples. The tomb of Amasis attracted the
attention of Herodotus (2.169), and Psammitichus, the conqueror and successor of
that monarch, was also buried within the walls of the temple of Neith.
Sais was one of the sacred cities of Aegypt: its principal deities were Neith,
who gave oracles there, and lsis. The mysteries of the latter were celebrated
annually with unusual pomp on the evening of the Feast of Lamps. Herodotus terms
this festival (2.59) the third of the great feasts in the Aegyptian calendar. It
was held by night; and every one intending to be present at the sacriflces was
required to light a number of lamps in the open air around his house. The lamps
were small saucers filled with salt and oil, on which a wick floated, and which
continued to burn all night. At what season of the year the feast of burning
lamps was celebrated Herodotus knew, but deemed it wrong to tell (2.62); it was,
however, probably at either the vernal or autumnal equinox, since it apparently
had reference to one of the capital revolutions in the solar course. An
inscription in the temple of Neith declared her to be the Mother of the Sun.
(Plutarch, Is. et Osir. p. 354, ed. Wyttenbach; Proclus, in Timaeum, p. 30.) It
ran thus: �I am the things that have been, and that are, and that will be; no
one has uncovered my skirts; the fruit which I brought forth became the Sun.� It
is probable, accordingly, that the kindling of the lamps referred to Neith as
the author of light. On the same night apparently were performed what the
Aegyptians designated the �Mysteries of Isis.� Sais was one of the supposed
places of the interment of Osiris, for that is evidently the deity whom
Herodotus will not name (2.171) when he says that there is a burial-place of him
at Sais in the temple of Athene. The mysteries were symbolical representations
of the sufferings of Osiris, especially his dismemberment by Typhon. They were
exhibited on the lake behind the temple of Neith. Portions of the lake may be
still discerned near the hamlet of Sa-el-Hadjar.
Sais was alternately a provincial city of the first order and the capital of
Lower Aegypt. These changes in its rank were probably the result of political
revolutions in the Delat. The nome and city are said by Manetho to have derived
their appellation from Saites, a king of the xviith dynasty. The xxivth dynasty
was that of Bocchoris of Sais. The xxvith dynasty contained nine Saite kings;
and of the xxviiith Amyrtaeus the Saite is the only monarch: with him expired
the Saite dynasty, B.C. 408.
Bocchoris the Wise, the son of Tnephactus (Diod. 1.45.2, 79.1), the Technatis of
Plutarch (Is. et Osir. p. 354; comp. Athen. 10.418; Aelian, Ael. NA 11.11), and
the Aegyptian Pehor, was remarkable as a judge and legislator, and introduced,
according to Diodorus, some important amendments into the commercial laws of
Sais. He was put to death by burning after revolting from Sabaco the Aethiopian.
During the Aethiopian dynasty Sais seems to have retained its independence. The
period of its greatest prosperity was between B.C. 697--524, under its nine
native kings. The strength of Aegypt generally had been transferred from its
southern to its northern provinces. Of the Saite monarchs of Aegypt Psammitichus
and Amasis were the most powerful. Psammitichus maintained himself on the throne
by his Greek mercenaries. He established at Sais the class of interpreters,
caused his own sons to be educated in Greek learning, and encouraged the resort
of Greeks to his capital. The intercourse between Sais and Athens especially was
promoted by their worshipping the same deity--Neith-Athene; and hence there
sprung up, although in a much later age, the opinion that Cecrops the Saite led
a colony to Athens. The establishment of the Greeks at Cyrene was indirectly
fatal to the Saitic dynasty. Uaphris, Apries, or Hophra, was defeated by the
Cyrenians, B.C. 569; and his discontented troops raised their commander Amasis
of Siouph to the throne. He adorned Sais with many stately buildings, and
enlarged or decorated the temple of Neith; for he erected in front of it
propylaea, which for their height and magnitude, and the quality of the stones
employed, surpassed all similar structures in Aegypt. The stones were
transported from the quarries of El-Mokattam near Memphis, and thence were
brought also the colossal figures and androsphinxes that adorned the Dromos. To
Sais Amasis transported from Elephantine a monolithal shrine of granite, which
Herodotus especially admired (2.175). Though the ordinary passage from
Elephantine to Sais was performed in twenty days, three years were employed in
conveying this colossal mass. It was, however, never erected, and when Herodotus
visited Aegypt was still lying on the ground in front of the temple. It
measured, according to the historian, 30 feet in height, 12 feet in depth from
front to back, and in breadth 21 feet. After the death of Amasis, Sais sank into
comparative obscurity, and does not seem to have enjoyed the favour of the
Persian, Macedonian, or Roman masters of Aegypt.
Sais indeed was more conspicuous as a seat of commerce and learning, and of
Greek culture generally, than as the seat of government. Nechepsus, one of its
kings, has left a name for his learning (Auson. Epigram, 409), and his writings
on astronomy are cited by Pliny (2.23. s. 21). Pythagoras of Samos visited Sais
in the reign of Amasis (comp. Plin. Nat. 36.9. s. 14); and Solon the Athenian
conversed with Sonchis, a Saite priest, about the same time (Plut. Sol. 26; Hdt.
2.177; Clinton, Fast. Hellen. vol. ii. p. 9). At Sais, if we may credit Plato (Timaeus,
iii. p. 25), Solon heard the legend of Atlantis, and of the ancient glories of
Athens some thousand years prior to Phoroneus and Niobe and Deucalion's flood.
The priests of Sais appear indeed to have been anxious to ingratiate themselves
with the Athenians by discovering resemblances between Attic and Aegyptian
institutions. Thus Diodorus (1.28), copying from earlier narratives, says that
the citizens of Sais, like those of Athens were divided into eupatrids, or
priest-nobles; geomori, land-owners liable to military service; and craftsmen or
retail traders. He adds that in each city the upper town was called Astu. The
Greek population of Sais was governed, according to Manetho, by their own laws
and magistrates, and had a separate qurter of the city assigned to them. So
strong indeed was the Hellenic element in Sais that [2.876] it was doubted
whether the Saites colonised Attica, or the Athenians Sais; and Diodorus says
inconsistently, in one passage, that Sais sent a colony to Athens (1.28.3), and
in another (5.57.45) that it was itself founded by Athenians. The principal
value of these statements consists in their establishing the Graeco-Aegyptian
character of the Saite people.
The ruins of Sais consist of vast heaps of brick, mingled with fragments of
granite and Syenite marble. Of its numerous structures the position of one only
can be surmised. The lake of Sa-el-Hadjar, which is still traceable, was at the
back of the temple of Neith: but it remains for future travellers to determine
the sites of the other sacred or civil structures of Sais. (Champollion,
I�Egypte, vol. ii. p. 219; Id. Lettres, 50--53; Wilkinson, Mod. Egypt and
Thebes.)
- Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Geography (1854) William Smith, LLD, Ed.
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