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[dramatic Arabic music]
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Isotope Data On the Hyksos.
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From the article at journal.plos.org,
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"Who were the Hyksos?
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"Challenging traditional narratives
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"using strontium isotope analysis
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of human remains from ancient Egypt."
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Introduction.
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A foreign dynasty, known as the "Hyksos,"
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ruled parts of Egypt
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between circa 1638 to 1530 BCE.
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Their origins are thought
to be rooted in the Near East,
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which is supported
by architectural features
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and grave accouterments of Tell el-Dab'a.
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In this former Hyksos capital
in the eastern Nile Delta,
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burial culture is characterized
by a blend of Egyptian
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and Near Eastern elements.
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However, investigations are still ongoing
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as to where the Hyksos came from
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and how they rose to power.
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The narrative of how the Hyksos,
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15th Dynasty of ancient Egypt,
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rose to rule, is apocryphal.
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The Ptolemaic priest Manetho
was for centuries the only account
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of their rise, rule, and fall.
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Living approximately 12 centuries
after the Hyksos dynasty,
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Manetho described the Hyksos rulers
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as leading an invading force,
sweeping in from the northeast
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and conquering
the northeastern Nile Delta
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during the Second Intermediate Period,
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in a time when Egypt as a country
was vulnerable.
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Manetho's account
only survived in the works
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of later historians
such as Flavius Josephus,
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and, however biased and unreliable,
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was the solitary known source
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of the Hyksos for centuries.
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Even after the decipherment
of hieroglyphs,
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sources for the Hyksos rulers
remained scarce and unreliable
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due to the ancient Egyptian
stately customs
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of censorship and propaganda.
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Hyksos became a part of the "topoi"
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depicting disorder and chaos,
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whose ritual killing
was the Pharaohs' way to maintain order
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and legitimize power.
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Western scholars further
entangled the origins of the Hyksos
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with race-based science
mired in imperialism
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and Orientalism,
conflating the Hyksos rulers
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to represent an entire ethnic group
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that further confused pursuits
to investigate the origins
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of the 15th-Dynasty rulers.
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During this paper, we only refer
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to the dynastic rulers as the "Hyksos,"
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not the elite attendant to the rulers,
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nor that ethnic group
with which they are associated.
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With the discovery
of the ancient Hyksos capital
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at the archeological site of Tell el-Dab'a
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and five decades of excavation,
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including several cemetery sites,
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an opportunity arises
to investigate the circumstances
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in which the Hyksos rose to rule.
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The last decades of research
have produced evidence
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clearly pointing toward a Near Eastern
origin of the ruling class
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known as the "Hyksos," notably borne out
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by shared, non-Egyptian features
of ceramic types,
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burial customs,
adornment, weapons,
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as well as domestic
and cultic architecture,
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though not the foreign elite
arriving directly
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from foreign lands as Manetha recounted,
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but people of non-Egyptian ethnicity
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who were born and raised in the Delta.
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To date, no tomb known
to belong to a Hyksos ruler
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has been excavated,
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but this wealth of new material
and insights
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allows direct comparison
with the Levant
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and the wider Near East
in a significant step forward
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towards explaining cultural trends
and geographic provenance
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of people associated with the Hyksos
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and the background of their migration
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into the northeastern Nile Delta.
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The archeological evidence
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also does not support Manetho's narrative
of the Hyksos
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as leading an invading force
sweeping in from the northeast
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to rule as Egypt's first foreign dynasty.
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Instead, it is suggested that those
who became Hyksos rulers
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were descended from Asiatics
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who had been living in Egypt
for generations.
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The site of Tell el-Dab'a.
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The examination of individuals
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buried in the cemeteries of Tell el-Dab'a
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offers the opportunity
to directly assess the origins
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of these residents
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and assess questions relating to timing
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and mechanisms
of the Hyksos's rise to rule.
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The site, located
in the northeastern Nile Delta,
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has revealed a stratigraphy
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extending over a 500 year period.
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This settlement was founded
in the 12th dynasty,
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and was known from the 13th dynasty
onwards as "Hutwaret."
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During the Middle Kingdom,
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this city was an administrative center
and a harbor city
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that grew in power
to finally become the capital
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of the regional Hyksos kingdom,
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then known as "Avaris."