Demotic Chronicle

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The Demotic Chronicle is an

prophetic
text. The work is intended to provide a
Ptolemies, and prophesies the coming of a native hero who will ascend to the throne and restore an era of order and justice upon Egypt.[2][3]

The anti-Achaemenid themes within the Demotic Chronicle especially focus on Cambyses II, Xerxes I and Artaxerxes III.[2]

The manuscript consists in a papyrus written in

Napoleonic campaign in Egypt and now stored at the Bibliothèque nationale de France (Pap. 215). The work claims to date back to the time of pharaoh Teos of the 30th Dynasty, although in fact it is a later work datable to the 3rd century BCE, likely composed under the reign of Ptolemy III Euergetes.[1]

Despite its cryptic text, analysis of the Demotic Chronicle have allowed, among other things, to integrate the order of succession of the treated pharaohs with the informations provided by Manetho's epitomes.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Bresciani, op. cit., p. 551
  2. ^ .
  3. ^ Toby Wilkinson, The Rise and Fall of Ancient Egypt, Bloomsbury, London, 2010, p. 481
  • Edda Bresciani, Letteratura e poesia dell'antico Egitto, Einaudi, Torino, 1969, pp. 551–60.

Further reading

  • Joachim Friedrich Quack: “As he Disregarded the Law, he was Replaced During his Own Lifetime”. On Criticism of Egyptian Rulers in the So-Called Demotic Chronicle. In: Henning Börm (ed.): Antimonarchic Discourse in Antiquity. Steiner, Stuttgart 2015, 25–43.

External links