Banishment Stela Explained

Banishment Stela / Maunier Stela
Material:Diorite
Size:127cm (50inches) x 82cm (32inches)
Writing:Egyptian hieroglyphs
Discovered Place:Luxor
Discovered By:Henri Maunier
Location:Louvre
Id:C 256

The Banishment Stela or Maunier Stela (Louvre C 256[1]) is an ancient Egyptian stela issued in c.1050 BCE. It contains an amnesty decree of the 21st Dynasty High Priest of Amun Menkheperre.

History

The Banishment Stela was discovered in Luxor around 1860 by the then French Vice-Consul, Henri Maunier; it was carried to Paris in 1884 and exhibited at the Louvre where it still is.[2] The stela is made from diorite and measures 127cm (50inches) in height and 82cm (32inches) in width. The upper part is poorly preserved, and only a depiction of Menkheperre praying to the god Amun is still visible; the lower portion is in better condition and of the 23 lines of Egyptian hieroglyph text, only the first 4 are mostly lost.[2]

Content

The stela mentions three dates, although it is not entirely clear what happened on them, or even to which reign(s) they belonged. These dates are (in the order in which they appear in the text, which is not necessarily their correct chronological order):

According to Von Beckerath, with date C, for reasons of space, the regnal year could only have been relatively low. Acceptable solutions would be: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 11 or 20.[3]

The stela apparently reports that in the regnal Year 25 of an unknown pharaoh a revolt sparked in Thebes against the Priesthood of Amun. The revolt was suffocated in the same year, and the rebels were banished (date A) into the Kharga Oasis by decision of the oracle of Amun. Shortly after (date B) Menkheperre was installed as generalissimo and High Priest of Amun “by the god Amun himself”; in the early reign of another king (date C), Menkheperre again resorted to the oracle and obtained the recall and pardon of the exiles, just before issuing the stela to celebrate this act.[2] [4]

The king whose regnal Year 25 is reported on the stela (date A) could only have been the founder of the 21st Dynasty Smendes, who is generally assumed to have reigned for around 25–26 years. The king who was in charge when the stela was issued (date C) was one of his immediate successors, most likely the ephemeral and poorly known Amenemnisu, or alternatively but less likely, Psusennes I.[5]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. http://cartelen.louvre.fr/cartelen/visite?srv=car_not_frame&idNotice=19025&langue=fr Full picture of the stela from Louvre official website
  2. Sternberg-el Hotabi, Heike (1986). "Die Stele der Verbannten", in: Texte aus der Umwelt des Alten Testaments, II/1, pp. 112–7.
  3. Jürgen. von Beckerath. Jürgen von Beckerath. 1968. Die Stele der Verbannten im Museum des Louvre. Revue d'Égyptologie. 33, footnote 2. 20.
  4. Jürgen. von Beckerath. Jürgen von Beckerath. 1968. Die Stele der Verbannten im Museum des Louvre. Revue d'Égyptologie. 7–36. 20.
  5. Book: Kitchen, Kenneth A. . Kenneth Kitchen . 1996 . The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt (1100–650 BC) . Warminster . Aris & Phillips Limited . 608 . 0-85668-298-5., §§ 213, 217–8