Friday, June 19, 2026

Refresh button may need hitting for Shishak king of Egypt




by

Damien F. Mackey

  

Recently, I have seen proposed for candidates of the biblical “Shishak”:

Seti I; Ramses II; Ramses III; and Merenptah.

 Whatever happened to Thutmose III?

 

The most recent effort that I have read is Fred Harding’s 2020 article (book):

 

Shishak Mystery Solved

 

(6) Shishak Mystery Solved

 

Shishak Mystery Solved!: The Evidence is Beyond Doubt : Harding, Fred: Amazon.com.au: Books

 

"In the fifth year of King Rehoboam, King Shishak of Egypt marched against Jerusalem." (1 Kings 14:25) Nearly all Egyptologists identify Shishak with Shoshenq I of the 22nd dynasty (943 BC -716 BC) and this is still the majority position. However, it is a position which is based on old-school chronology that stems way back to 1828 when Jean-François Champollion (1790-1832) identified the person called Shishak in the Bible as the pharaoh known to history as Shoshenq I. As the two names sounded similar, 'Shishak' was identified by Champollion as Pharaoh Shoshenq I.  Shoshenq's identification was also based on Champollion's interpretation of reliefs he viewed on a wall of the Bubastite Portal at Karnak in that year. If you recall, it was Champollion, who only six years before, succeeded in deciphering the hieroglyphs on the Rossetta Stone in 1822. When Champollion travelled to Egypt, the only time he did so, he visited the temple complex at Karnak which consists of a vast mix of decayed temples, chapels, pylons, and other buildings near Luxor, in Egypt. However, it was the scenes inscribed on the walls of the Bubastite Portal in hieroglyphs which captured Champollion's attention. Among the 150 hieroglyphic name-rings on the Bubastite Portal, each represented as a bound and tethered Asiatic captive and representing the names of the towns conquered by Sheshonq during his northern campaign, one of them caught Champollion's eye. This was name ring 29. To him it appeared to say, "Ioudahamalek", which Champollion interpreted to mean "Judah the Kingdom". As far as Champollion was concerned, what other proof was needed. Here it was in black and white, so to speak, that Shoshenq I had fought against Judah and therefore must have captured Jerusalem. The identity that Shoshenq and Shishak of the Bible had therefore been confirmed in the most satisfactory manner. "From henceforth, anybody who was anybody in Egyptology agreed with Champollion, that is until William Max-Muller (1862-1919) who was one of the last students of the famous Egyptologist Georg Ebers (1837-1898), took a closer look.

 

In 1888 Max-Muller pointed out that ring 29 should be read as "Yad-ha-Melek" which, when translated, means "Hand of the King." Suddenly, the "proof" that Judah was listed on the Bubastite Portal had become untenable. Yet despite this error, which modern scholars like Peter James, David Rohl and Kevin A. Wilson have made known through their books, the status quo that Shoshenq I and Shishak are one and the same has been maintained to the present day. So who was Shishak? The answer to this mystery is not as difficult as it appears to be. I can say this with self-assurance because if one simply looks for the clues that are in plain sight in the Biblical text and put them together, the solution becomes inescapable. Nobody, as far as I am aware has used the methodology presented herein, at least not in the way I am about to show you. I therefore would like to invite you to join me in solving this mystery by using a methodology hitherto not tried before and one which truly identifies who Shishak was, and I can tell you without a shadow of doubt, he was not Shoshenq I.

 

Fred Harding will identify “Shishak” as pharaoh Ramses, so-called III, of Egypt’s so-called Twentieth Dynasty.

 

His article/book is generally well written and, like various other attempts to identify “Shishak”, does manage to raise some compelling points in its favour.

 

One huge problem with it, though, is that there is no evidence that this particular pharaoh ever conquered Jerusalem, which must be key to any “Shishak” attempt.

 

Moreover I, personally, believe that Ramses III is not properly known at all - that he was, in fact, the same pharaoh as Ramses II ‘the Great’:

 

Ramses so-called III more than just a resemblance of Ramses II ‘the Great’

 

(6) Ramses so-called III more than just a resemblance of Ramses II ‘the Great’

 

Obviously, this, if so, would change a lot of things.

 

And I also think that the Nineteenth/Twentieth dynasties of Egypt really need to be considered within the context of the so-called Twenty-Fifth Dynasty:

 

Intrinsic relationship of Seti and Ramses ‘the Great’ to the Twenty-Fifth Dynasty

 

(6) Intrinsic relationship of Seti and Ramses 'the Great' to the Twenty-Fifth Dynasty

 

Whatever one may think of Fred Harding’s hopeful reconstruction, one could never accuse him of a lack of conviction. In this regard, Fred Harding reminds me of Fr. Dwight Longenecker, who is absolutely convinced that he has accurately identified the biblical Magi, as Nabateans.

 

I don’t mind this sort of infectious enthusiasm.

In neither case, though, Fr. Longenecker’s or Fred Harding’s, do I think that the author’s utter certainty will ultimately manifest itself in conclusion validity. 

 

In my revised system, with King Solomon locked in chronologically and historically as Senenmut (Senmut) of Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty, during the reign of the female, Hatshepsut, the only plausible candidate for the biblical “Shishak king of Egypt”, who looted the Temple of Yahweh about five years after Solomon’s death, is Thutmose III, who co-reigned with, and who succeeded, Hatshepsut.

 

Ever since reading Dr. I. Velikovsky’s Ages in Chaos (I, 1952) in the early 1980’s, I have embraced at least that part of his thesis therein (Chapter 4, “The Temple in Jerusalem”) that identifies pharaoh Thutmose III as the biblical “Shishak king of Egypt” (I Kings 14:25-28):

 

In the fifth year of King Rehoboam, Shishak king of Egypt attacked Jerusalem. He carried off the treasures of the temple of the Lord and the treasures of the royal palace.

 

He took everything, including all the gold shields Solomon had made. So King Rehoboam made bronze shields to replace them and assigned these to the commanders of the guard on duty at the entrance to the royal palace. Whenever the king went to the Lord’s Temple, the guards bore the shields, and afterward they returned them to the guardroom.

 

At first I had simply accepted Dr. Velikovsky’s entire reconstruction uncritically, but then later, I - after having read various searching critiques of it - came to the conclusion that Dr. Velikovsky’s thesis stood in need of some fairly extensive modification.

 

My constant, or anchor, throughout all of this, though, is that Queen Hatshepsut was “the Queen of Sheba” and that Thutmose III was “Shishak king of Egypt” - all as according to Dr. Velikovsky.

 

However, I have also come to believe that Thutmose III himself - just like I have said above about Ramses II/III - has been seriously short-changed by the Egyptologists, and that he needs to incorporate also Thutmose so-called IV:

 

Enlarging ‘Shishak’?

 

(6) Enlarging ‘Shishak’?

 

Thutmose IV may be Thutmose III procrusteanised, cut off really short

 

(6) Thutmose IV may be Thutmose III procrusteanised, cut off really short

 

Revisionists who have looked to test the worth of Dr. Velikovsky’s “Shishak” thesis have focussed upon, probably, three aspects of it: (i) the name; (ii) the geography; and (ii) the booty.

 

As well, there is the ever present issue of (iv) the chronology, with a requisite archaeology.

 

As regards (iv) chronology (and the archaeology is also a matter for serious consideration), I fully accept that only Thutmose III - interwoven with Hatshepsut and Senenmut (Solomon) – can be the biblical “Shishak”. 

 

The (i) name may, I think, have a simple explanation, as I have previously noted:

 

More than likely … the name “Shishak” was the name by which young Thutmose III was known to king Solomon and his court in his close relationship with his relative, Hatshepsut-Sheba. Solomon had officials, secretaries, whose father was named “Shisha” (I Kings 4:1-3):

 

So King Solomon ruled over all Israel.

 

And these were his chief officials:

 

Azariah son of Zadok—the priest;

 

Elihoreph and Ahijah, sons of Shisha—secretaries ….

 

[End of quotes]

 

 In this same article I had pointed to the fact that the Bible, when actually naming a pharaoh, was wont to use either the ruler’s nomen or praenomen, so that any efforts to identify a biblical pharaoh through that ruler’s, say, suten bat name, or a nebty name, may be barking up the wrong tree. One may search high and low, unsuccessfully (I suggest), to find a “Shishak”-like pharaonic nomen or praenomen.

 

Dr. Velikovsky may thus have been basically correct regarding (i) the name by his not actually attempting to connect “Shishak” to any of the Egyptian names of pharaoh Thutmose III.

He merely alluded to Flavius Josephus’s information that the Egyptian conqueror’s name was “Isakos”, or “Susakos”, and also to the Jewish tradition that ‘the name “Shishak” was from Shuk, “desire”, because the pharaoh had wanted to attack Solomon, but had feared him’.

 

So far, then, I am in accord with Dr. Velikovsky regarding the pharaoh’s name, and, essentially, too, in the case of his revised chronology.

My revised chronology, in fact, will fully support, and augment, his.

 

“It is thought that after the death of Neferure, which perhaps occurred in

the eleventh year of Hatshepsut’s reign, [Senenmut] may have embarked upon an alliance with Tuthmosis III which led Hatshepsut to discard him in

the nineteenth year of her reign, three years before the disappearance

of the queen herself”.

 

Nicolas Grimal

 

With his (a) Hatshepsut as the biblical Queen of Sheba; and his (b) Thutmose III as the biblical pharaoh Shishak king of Egypt, Dr. Velikovsky had gone for the jackpot. He had looked to identify Hatshepsut’s famous Punt expedition with the Queen of Sheba’s visit to King Solomon.

And he had looked to identify Thutmose III’s most detailed and famous military campaign, his First (in Year 22-23), with Shishak’s assault upon Jerusalem.

 

But big is not always the best – though I think that Dr. Velikovsky basically got it right with that First Year campaign of Thutmose III.

 

Byzantine Christians in search of an appropriate Mount Sinai had hit upon the impressive mountain, Jebel Musa, and had likewise, for the mountain of the Ark’s landing, opted for the tall, snow-capped Mount Ararat in Turkey.

 

Both pursuits, so I now think, sorely missed the mark. 

 

In retrospect, Dr. Velikovsky, too, was clearly wrong about Hatshepsut’s Punt expedition. By then, her Year 9 as Pharaoh, Hatshepsut was no longer a queen. 

Moreover, Hatshepsut did not even personally accompany the Punt expedition. And the miserable token gifts that Egypt gave to the Punt-ites could hardly be likened to the lavish gifts that the Queen of Sheba had brought to King Solomon.

 

Chronologically, therefore, Dr. Velikovsky was out by a fair bit on this one. (Though still ‘light years’ closer than are the conventionalists).

 

Now, what I shall be proposing here is that Dr. Velikovsky was perfectly correct, chronologically, but wrong geographically and topographically, by identifying Thutmose III’s First Year campaign as the Shishak event.

 

Chronologically I have - with my identification of Senenmut as King Solomon - locked in Thutmose III’s First Year campaign as being very close to the 5th year of Solomon’s son, Rehoboam (when Shishak had attacked), with my acceptance of P. Dorman’s view that Senenmut had faded from the Egyptian scene (hence died?) in Hatshepsut’s (also Thutmose III’s) Year 16.

 

{Peter F. Dorman, The Monuments of Senenmut: Problems in Historical Methodology, London: Kegan Paul Ltd., 1988}

 

However, whilst various historians do indeed favour Year 16 as being the last for Senenmut, others would extend this, even as far as Year 19. Thus Nicolas Grimal, for instance, who has written (A History of Ancient Egypt, Blackwell, 1994. My emphasis):

 

It is thought that after the death of Neferure, which perhaps occurred in the eleventh year of Hatshepsut’s reign, [Senenmut] may have embarked upon an alliance with Tuthmosis III which led Hatshepsut to discard him in the nineteenth year of her reign, three years before the disappearance of the queen herself.

 

The First Year campaign, that I have long held to have been the Shishak event, unfortunately does not appear, in Dr. Velikovsky’s context, to match up with it geographically and topographically.

I am hopeful that I have now sorted out this problem in e.g. my articles:

 

The Shishak Redemption

 

(57) (DOC) The Shishak Redemption | Damien Mackey - Academia.edu

 

Yehem near Aruna - Thutmose III’s march on Jerusalem

 

(6) Yehem near Aruna - Thutmose III's march on Jerusalem

 

And what about the impressive booty? For that, see last section.

 

Regarding the four (i-iv) key Shishak issues that we identified previously:

 

1.       Name;

2.      Geography;

3.      Booty;

4.      Chronology (archaeology)

 

I would estimate that Dr. Velikovsky was well on the right track with (1), and also with (4). Later revisionists, like Dr. John Bimson (“Can There be a Revised Chronology Without a Revised Stratigraphy?”, SIS Review VoI.VII-3, 1978), had endeavoured to add an appropriate (4) archaeology (Late Bronze Age) to the Velikovskian chronology:

 

Although an exhaustive study of the LBA contexts of all scarabs commemorating Hatshepsut and Thutmose III would be required to establish this point, a preliminary survey suggests that objects from the joint reign of these two rulers do not occur until the transition from LB I to LB II, and that scarabs of Thutmose III occur regularly from the start of LB II onwards, and perhaps no earlier ….

Velikovsky’s chronology makes Hatshepsut (with Thutmose III as co-ruler) a contemporary of Solomon, and Thutmose III’s sole reign contemporary with that of Rehoboam in Judah ….

Therefore, if the revised chronology is correct, these scarabs would suggest that Solomon’s reign saw the transition from LB I to LB II, rather than that from LB I A to LB I B. ….

[End of quote]

 

 

Dr. Velikovsky’s hopeful attempt to identify the Karnak pieces with items

from the reign of King Solomon (Temple and palace) has been seriously

compromised by misidentifications.

 

 

Credit is due to Dr. Immanuel Velikovsky for his having identified (in Ages in Chaos, I, 1952) the biblical “Shishak king of Egypt” with the mighty Thutmose III of Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty. Had he not done this, we would still be like those poor souls in Plato’s Cave groping about in conventional darkness, being unable to find access to clarifying light.

 

As a pioneer, though, it was probably inevitable that Dr. Velikovsky would provide solutions that would later need some modification.

 

Now, the Karnak bas-reliefs that tend to be coupled with that First Year campaign were eagerly embraced by Dr. Velikovsky as illustrating the magnificent treasures plundered from Solomonic Jerusalem. But Dr. Velikovsky’s hopeful attempt to identify the Karnak pieces with items from the reign of King Solomon (Temple and palace) has been seriously compromised by misidentifications. Most unfortunate of all, perhaps, was his misidentification of one of the Karnak objects with the Ark of the Covenant itself.

 

This has been exposed by Creationist Patrick Clarke in his article: “Was Thutmose III the biblical Shishak?— Claims for the ‘Jerusalem’ bas-relief at Karnak investigated”: https://creation.com/images/pdfs/tj/j25_1/j25_1_48-56.pdf

Clarke takes several objects identified by Velikovsky and shows that they cannot be what Velikovsky claimed them to have been. I have checked each one of these using A. Gardiner’s Egyptian Grammar: Being an Introduction to the Study of Hieroglyphs, and have found them to be exactly as Patrick Clarke has written.

 

However, it should be noted that Patrick Clarke has examined only a very few items: the supposed Ark of the Covenant; some priestly garments; a fire altar; lamps; showbread, and found Dr. Velikovsky to be wanting in each of these cases. That does not discount some of the many other articles that appear on the bas-relief from pertaining to Solomonic Jerusalem.

 

Serious revisionists ought to make a (re-)fresh start on investigating this.