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Salitis


In the Manethonian tradition, Salitis (Greek Σάλιτις, also Salatis or Saites) was the first Hyksos king, the one who subdued and ruled Lower Egypt and founded the 15th Dynasty.

Salitis is mainly known from few passages of Flavius Josephus' work Contra Apionem; for these passages, Josephus claimed to have reported Manetho's original words. It seems that during the reign of an Egyptian pharaoh called Tutimaios or Timaios, an army of foreigners suddenly came from the Near East and took over the Nile Delta without a fight. After conquering Memphis and likely deposing Tutimaios, the invaders committed several atrocities such as destroying cities and temples and killing or capturing the native Egyptians. After that, they

It seems that Salitis' main concern was the defense of his new realm from the possibility of an Assyrian attack. For this reason he fortified the eastern borders, and sought a strategic position to establish an imposing stronghold. Having found it in the city of Avaris on the east bank of the Bubastite branch of the Nile,

Salitis died after 19 years of reign and his throne passed to another asiatic called Bnon or Beon.

Several attempts were made to identify Salitis with an archaeologically attested ruler. He was sometimes associated with a ruler named Sharek or Shalek – who is mentioned in a genealogical priestly document from Memphis – and also with the much more attested king Sheshi. German Egyptologist Jürgen von Beckerath believed that Salitis could be associated with Yakbim, another second intermediate period ruler. At the current state of knowledge, Salitis remains unidentified.
Even for his name there are no clues of what it could have originally meant in Egyptian, though the variant Saites used by Sextus Julius Africanus in his epitome of Manetho, might contain a reference to the deltaic city of Sais. It has been suggested that the name might be linked to shallit, a title borne by the biblical patriarch Joseph during his stay in Egypt (Genesis 42:6) with the meaning of "keeper of the power"; however, this is also considered a very weak assumption.


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