SESOSTRIS I


Meaning of SESOSTRIS I in English

flourished 20th century BC king of Egypt (reigned 19081875 BC) who succeeded his father after a 10-year coregency and brought Egypt to a peak of prosperity. Sesostris became coregent in 1918 BC with his aging father, Amenemhet I, who had founded the 12th dynasty. While his father completed his domestic reforms, Sesostris undertook the conquest of Nubia, to the south of Egypt, and in the year 30 of his father's reign he led an expedition against the Libyans in the Western Desert. While returning victorious from Libya, Sesostris learned of his father's assassination. Leaving the army, he hurried to the capital to seize his inheritance. He undertook a political consolidation by disseminating his father's testament, The Instructions of Amenemhet, a document that stressed his father's good deeds and the conspirators' baseness and reaffirmed Sesostris' right to the throne. Once securely in power, Sesostris continued the conquest of Nubia. Establishing an operational base at Elephantine (modern Aswan), in the year 18 of his reign, he thoroughly subjugated Nubia and established forts with garrisons at strategic points. The governor of Elephantine, the king's own appointee, became responsible for the new territory. After the war the exploitation of Nubia's resources began. Gold, copper, amethysts, and diorite were extracted at several sites, and inscriptions by the leaders of expeditions and inspectors attest much activity. Within Egypt, Sesostris worked the granite quarries at Aswan and gold mines and quarries in the W adi Hammamat, east of Coptos in Upper Egypt, while he pursued an active building program. In the year 3 of his reign he rebuilt a major sanctuary at Heliopolis, near Cairo. At Thebes he built in the temple complex of Karnak, where the cult and temple of Amon began to flourish. Sesostris also brought several of the western oases under his jurisdiction, as is shown by messengers and police officials who traveled there. Sesostris maintained peaceful relations with Palestine and Syria. As shown by The Story of Sinuhe, the fictional biography of a court official, the king did not profess a desire to acquire territory in Asia, although his emissaries traversed its lands and sought to exert diplomatic pressures. In reality, he seems to have conducted campaigns there. Sesostris built his pyramid and funerary temple near his father's, at Lisht, near the capital, north of the Fayyum. In its architecture, the king fostered a revival of Old Kingdom traditions, imitating the pyramid complex of Pepi II, a 6th dynasty king. About the 42nd year of his reign, Sesostris associated his son Amenemhet as coregent and passed some of the more strenuous duties to him. Two years later, the king died after a long and prosperous reign.

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