Back to
Ancient History Sourcebook |
Ancient
History Sourcebook:
Pen-ta-ur:
The
Victory of Ramses II Over the Khita, 1326 BCE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Tappan
Introduction] By order of Rameses, this poem was inscribed upon the walls of
five temples, one of which was at Karnak. On these walls were also engraved
enormous illustrations of the scenes of the poem, commemorating especially the
exploits of the king [in defeating the Hittites.].
THEN
the king of Khita-land,
With
his warriors made a stand,
But he
durst not risk his hand
In
battle with our Pharaoh;
So his
chariots drew away,
Unnumbered as the sand,
And
they stood, three men of war
On each
car;
And
gathered all in force
Was the
flower of his army,
for the
fight in full array,
But
advance, he did not dare,
Foot or
horse.
So in
ambush there they lay,
Northwest of Kadesh town;
And
while these were in their lair,
Others
went forth south of Kadesh,
on our
midst, their charge was thrown
With
such weight, our men went down,
For
they took us unaware,
And the
legion of Pra-Hormakhu gave way.
But at
the western side
Of
Arunatha's tide,
Near
the city's northern wall,
our
Pharaoh had his place.
And
they came unto the king,
And
they told him our disgrace;
Then
Rameses uprose,
like
his father, Montu in might,
All his
weapons took in hand,
And his
armor did he don,
Just
like Baal, fit for fight;
And the
noble pair of horses that carried Pharaoh on,
Lo!
"Victory of Thebes" was their name,
And
from out the royal stables of great Miamun they came.
Then
the king he lashed each horse,
And
they quickened up their course,
And he
dashed into the middle of the hostile, Hittite host,
All
alone, none other with him, for he counted not the cost.
Then he
looked behind, and found
That
the foe were all around,
Two
thousand and five hundred of their chariots of war;
And the
flower of the Hittites, and their helpers, in a ring---
Men of
Masu, Keshkesh, Pidasa, Malunna, Arathu,
Qazauadana, Kadesh, Akerith, Leka
and Khilibu---
Cut off
the way behind,
Retreat
he could not find;
There
were three men on each car,
And
they gathered all together, and closed upon the king.
"Yea,
and not one of my princes, of my chief men and my great,
Was
with me, not a captain, not a knight;
For my
warriors and chariots had left me to my fate,
Not one
was there to take his part in fight."
Then
spake Pharaoh, and he cried:
"Father
Ammon, where are you?
Shall a
sire forget his son?
Is
there anything without your knowledge I have done?
From
the judgments of your mouth when have I gone?
Have I
e'er transgressed your word?
Disobeyed, or broke a vow?
Is it
right, who rules in Egypt, Egypt's lord,
Should
e'er before the foreign peoples bow,
Or own
their rod?
Whate'er may be the mind of this
Hittite herdsman horde,
Sure
Ammon at should stand higher
than
the wretch who knows no God?
Father
Ammon, is it nought
That to
you I dedicated noble monuments, and filled
Your
temples with the prisoners of war?
That
for you a thousand years shall stand the shrines
I dared
to build?
The
king, probably, is here identifying himself with Ammon.
That to
you my palace-substance I have brought,
That
tribute unto you from afar
A whole
land comes to pay,
That to
you ten thousand oxen for sacrifice I fell,
And
burn upon your altars the sweetest woods that smell;
That
all your heart required, my hand did ne'er gainsay?
I have
built for you tall gates and wondrous works beside the Nile,
I have
raised you mast on mast,
For
eternity to last,
From
Elephantin's isle
The
obelisks for you I have conveyed,
It is I
who brought alone
The
everlasting stone,
It is I
who sent for you,
The
ships upon the sea,
To pour
into your coffers the wealth of foreign trade;
Is it
told that such a thing
By any
other king,
At any
other time, was done at all?
Let the
wretch be put to shame
Who
refuses your commands,
But
honor to his name
Who to
Ammon lifts his hands.
To the
full of my endeavor,
With a
willing heart forever,
I have
acted unto you,
And to
you, great God, I call;
For
behold! now, Ammon, I,
In the
midst of many peoples, all unknown,
Unnumbered as the sand,
Here I
stand,
All
alone;
There
is no one at my side,
My
warriors and chariots afeared,
Have
deserted me, none heard
My
voice, when to the cravens I, their king, for succor, cried.
But I
find that Ammon's grace
Is
better far to me
Than a
million fighting men and ten thousand chariots be.
Yea,
better than ten thousand, be they brother, be they son,
When
with hearts that beat like one,
Together for to help me they are
gathered in one place.
The
might of men is nothing, it is Ammon who is lord,
What
has happened here to me is according to your word,
And I
will not now trangress your command;
But
alone, as here I stand,
To you
my cry I send,
Unto
earth's extremest end,
Saying,
'Help me, father Ammon, against the Hittite horde."'
Then my
voice it found an echo in Hermonthis' temple-hall,
Ammon
heard it, and he came unto my call;
And for
joy I gave a shout,
From
behind, his voice cried out,
"I have
hastened to you, Ramses Miamun,
Behold!
I stand with you,
Behold!
'tis I am he,
Own
father thine, the great god Ra, the sun.
Lo!
mine hand with thine shall fight,
And
mine arm is strong above
The
hundreds of ten thousands, who against you do unite,
Of
victory am I lord, and the brave heart do I love,
I have
found in you a spirit that is right,
And my
soul it does rejoice in your valor and your might."
Then
all this came to pass, I was changed in my heart
Like
Monthu, god of war, was I made,
With my
left hand hurled the dart,
With my
right I swung the blade,
Fierce
as Baal in his time, before their sight.
Two
thousand and five hundred pairs of horses were around,
And I
flew into the middle of their ring,
By my
horse-hoofs they were dashed all in pieces to the ground,
None
raised his hand in fight,
For the
courage in their breasts had sunken quite;
And
their limbs were loosed for fear,
And
they could not hurl the dart,
And
they had not any heart
To use
the spear;
And I
cast them to the water,
Just as
crocodiles fall in from the bank,
So they
sank.
And
they tumbled on their faces, one by one.
At my
pleasure I made slaughter,
So that
none
E'er
had time to look behind, or backward fled;
Where
he fell, did each one lay
On that
day,
From
the dust none ever lifted up his head.
Then
the wretched king of Khita, he stood still,
With
his warriors and his chariots all about him in a ring,
Just to
gaze upon the valor of our king
In the
fray.
And the
king was all alone,
Of his
men and chariots none
To help
him; but the Hittite of his gazing soon had fill,
For he
turned his face in flight, and sped away.
Then
his princes forth he sent,
To
battle with our lord,
Well
equipped with bow and sword
And all
goodly armament,
Chiefs
of Leka, Masa, Kings of Malunna, Arathu,
Qar-qa-mash, of the Dardani, of
Keshkesh, Khilibu.
And the
brothers of the king were all gathered in on place,
Two
thousand and five hundred pairs of horse---
And
they came right on in force,
The
fury of their faces to the flaming of my face.
Then,
like Monthu in his might,
I
rushed on them apace,
And I
let them taste my hand
In a
twinkling moment's space.
Then
cried one unto his mate,
"This
is no man, this is he,
This is
Sutek, god of hate,
With
Baal in his blood;
Let us
hasten, let us flee,
Let us
save our souls from death,
Let us
take to heel and try our lungs and breath."
And
before the king's attack,
Lands
fell, and limbs were slack,
They
could neither aim the bow, nor thrust the spear,
But
just looked at him who came
Charging on them, like a flame,
And the
King was as a griffin in the rear.
Behold
thus speaks the Pharaoh, let all know,
I
struck them down, and there escaped me none
Then I
lifted up my voice, and I spake,
Ho! my
warriors, charioteers,
Away
with craven fears,
Halt,
stand, and courage take,
Behold
I am alone,
Yet
Ammon is my helper, and his hand is with me now."
When my
Menna, charioteer, beheld in his dismay,
How the
horses swarmed around us, lo! his courage fled away,
And
terror and affright
Took
possession of him quite;
And
straightway he cried out to me, and said,
"Gracious lord and bravest king,
savior-guard
Of
Egypt in the battle, be our ward;
Behold
we stand alone, in the hostile Hittite ring,
Save
for us the breath of life,
Give
deliverance from the strife,
Oh!
protect us, Ramses Miamun!
Oh!
save us, mighty King!"
Then
the King spake to his squire,
"Halt!
take courage, charioteer,
As a
sparrow-hawk swoops down upon his prey,
So I
swoop upon the foe, and I will slay,
I will
hew them into pieces, I will dash them into dust;
Have no
fear,
Cast
such evil thought away,
These
godless men are wretches that in Ammon put no trust."
Then
the king, he hurried forward, on the Hittite host he flew,
"For
the sixth time that I charged them," says the king---and listen well,
"Like
Baal in his strength, on their rearward, lo! I fell,
And I
killed them, none escaped me, and I slew, and slew, and slew."
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source:
From:
Eva March Tappan, ed., The World's Story: A History of the World in Story, Song
and Art, (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1914), Vol. III: Egypt, Africa, and Arabia,
trans. W. K. Flinders Petrie, pp. 154-162.
Scanned
by: J. S. Arkenberg, Dept. of History, Cal. State Fullerton. Prof. Arkenberg has
modernized the text.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This
text is part of the Internet Ancient History Sourcebook. The Sourcebook is a
collection of public domain and copy-permitted texts related to medieval and
Byzantine history.
Unless
otherwise indicated the specific electronic form of the document is copyright.
Permission is granted for electronic copying, distribution in print form for
educational purposes and personal use. No representation is made about texts
which are linked off-site, although in most cases these are also public domain.
If you do reduplicate the document, indicate the source. No permission is
granted for commercial use.
© Paul
Halsall, October 1998
halsall@murray.fordham.edu