Pharaoh is a title used to refer to the kings (of godly status) in
ancient Egypt. See
History of Egypt. See also
monarch. The term derives from the words
pr-o, meaning Great House. It was not commonly used by the Egyptians themselves to refer to their monarchs, but is frequently used by modern historians due to its use in the
Bible, especially the Book of
Exodus.
Note well; the dates given must be regarded in most instances as approximate. Dating systems for Egyptian studies are quite various, depending on how they are constructed and what assumptions are used. What is presented below is one such interpretation, but it is assuredly not the only one.
Archaic Period[?]
OLD KINGDOM[?]
FIRST INTERMEDIATE PERIOD[?]
THE MIDDLE KINGDOM[?]
SECOND INTERMEDIATE PERIOD[?]
The source provides an additional 25 names, some fragmented, and no dates. None are attested to elsewhere, and all are of very dubious provenance.
Fifteenth (Hyksos) Dynasty
Desert Bedouins who emerged out of the Fertile Crescent to establish a short-lived governance over much of the Nile.
| Name |
Comments |
Dates |
| Sheshi[?] |
Ruled either 1 or 3 years |
1674- ? |
| Yakubher[?] |
- |
8 years |
| Khyan[?] |
- |
? |
| Apepi I[?] |
- |
40 years or more |
| Apepi II[?] |
- |
? |
| Khamudy[?] |
- |
? -1567 |
Sixteenth Dynasty (Pelusium)
A local group situated on Sinai's north coast
| Name |
Comments |
Dates |
| Anather[?] |
- |
1663- ? |
| Yakobaam[?] |
- |
? |
Some sources include as many as six more names (Semqen, Khauserre, Seket, Ahetepre, Amu, and Nebkhepeshre (Apepi III)) - none are attested to elsewhere. This group seems to have disappeared entirely by 1555 BC.
NEW KINGDOM[?]
THE LATE KINGDOM
Driven back into
Nubia, there to establish a kingdom at Napata (656-590), and then Meroë (590 BC-4th cent. AD).
Egypt annexed to the Persian Empire 525-404: The Achaemenid Shahs (Cambyses II[?] 529-522, Smerdis the Usurper 522, Darius I the Great 522-486, Xerxes I the Great 486-466, Artabanes 466-465, Artaxerxes I Longhand 465-425, Xerxes II 425-424, Sogdianos 424-423, and Darius II 423-404) were acknowledged as Pharaoh in this era, forming a "Twenty-Seventh" Dynasty.
Twenty-Eighth Dynasty
| Name |
Comments |
Dates |
| Amyrteos[?] |
- |
404-399 |
- Egypt once more under Persian rule (Artaxerxes III 343-338)
- A Nubian revolt in Upper Egypt under Khabbabash 338-335.
- A third Persian takeover (Darius III), 335-332.
- Macedon conquers Persia, and Egypt (Alexander the Great 332-323, Philip Arrhidaeus 323-317, Alexander (IV) 317-311)