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Thebes
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
Thebes , city of ancient Egypt. Luxor and Karnak now occupy parts of its site. The city developed at a very early date from a number of small villages, particularly one around modern Luxor (then called Epet), but remained relatively obscure until the rise of the Theban family that established the XI dynasty (c.2134 BC). The city rapidly became prominent as the royal residence and as a seat of the worship of the god Amon . At Thebes, also, was the necropolis in the Valley of the Kings where the kings and nobles were entombed in great splendor in crypts cut into the cliffs on the Nile's west bank. The city's greatest period was that of the empire, when it served as a reservoir for the immense wealth that poured in from the conquered countries. As the empire began to decay and the locus of power to shift to the Nile delta, Thebes went into decline. For a time in the 11th cent. BC, it was a separate political entity under sacerdotal rule. Thebes was sacked by the Assyrians in 661 BC, an event referred to in the Bible (Nah. 3.8-10), where the city is called No Amon [Amon city]. The Romans sacked it in 29 BC, and by 20 BC a Greek visitor to the site reported only a few scattered villages. The temples and tombs that have survived, including the tombs of Tutankhamen and of Ramses II's sons, are among the most splendid in the world, and the site has been the scene of much important archaeological work.
Bibliography: See H. E. Winlock, The Rise and Fall of the Middle Kingdom in Thebes (1947); C. F. Nims, Thebes of the Pharaohs (1965); L. Manniche, City of the Dead: Thebes in Egypt (1987).
Author not available, THEBES.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
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Molly Lynde-Recchia, Prose, Verse and Truth-Telling in the Thirteenth Century: an Essay on Form and Function in Selected Texts, Accompanied by an Edition of the Prose 'Thebes' as Found in the 'Histoire ancienne jusqu'a Cesar'.(Book Review)
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Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
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Thebes
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... Greece. It was originally a Mycenaean city. Thebes is rich in associations with Greek legend and religion (see Oedipus ; the Seven against Thebes ; Epigoni ). Sometime before 1000 BC, Thebes was settled by Boeotians and rapidly replaced ...
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Seven against Thebes
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
... Parthenopaeus—who made war on Eteocles, king of Thebes. After the banishment of Oedipus, his ... expedition known as the Seven against Thebes. All were killed except Adrastus. When ... uncle and successor to the throne of Thebes, would not permit the burial of the slain ...
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Thebes
World Encyclopedia
Thebes City-state of ancient Greece, the dominant power in Boeotia. It allied with Persia during the Persian Wars , and during the 5th ...
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Oedipus
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
In Greek mythology , a king of Thebes who unwittingly killed his father and ... familiar version of the story, Laius, king of Thebes, was warned by an oracle that his son ... early manhood, as Oedipus traveled toward Thebes, he met Laius, who provoked a quarrel ...
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Pindar
Encyclopedia of World Biography
... Pindar was born at Cynoscephalae, near Thebes, in Boeotia of a very prominent aristocratic ... genealogy back to Aegeus and even to Cadmus of Thebes with connections in Sparta, Thera, and ... and was perfected and highly regarded at Thebes. Having received his elementary education ...
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