Online Encyclopedia

SAIS (Egyptian Sai)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 52 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SAIS (
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Egyptian Sai)
  , an ancient city of the
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Egyptian Delta, lying westward of the Thermuthiac or Sebennytic branch of the Nile . It was capital of the 5th
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nome of
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Lower
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Egypt and must have been important from remote times . In the 8th century B.C . Sais held the hegemony of the Western Delta, while Bubastite families ruled in the east and the kings of Ethiopia in Upper Egypt . The Ethiopians found their most vigorous opponents in the Saite princes Tefnachthus and his son Bocchoris " the Wise " of the XXIVth Dynasty . After reigning six years the latter is said to have been burnt alive by Sabacon, the founder of the Ethiopian XXVth Dynasty . At the time when invasions by the Assyrians drove out the Ethiopian Taracus again and again, the chief of the twenty princes to whom Esarhaddon and Assur-bani-pal successively entrusted the government was Niku, king of Sais and
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Memphis . His son Psammetichus (q.v.) was the founder of the XXVIth Dynasty . Although the main seat of government was at Memphis, Sais remained the royal residence throughout this flourishing dynasty .
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Neith, the goddess of Sais, was identified with Athena, and
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Osiris was worshipped there in a
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great festival . The brick enclosure wall of the temple is still plainly visible near the little
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village of Sa el hagar (Sa of stone) on the east
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bank of the Rosetta branch, but the royal tombs and other monuments of Sais, some of which were described by Herodotus, and its inscribed records, have all gone . Only crude brick ruins and rubbish heaps remain on the site, but a few relics conveyed to Alexandria and
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Europe in the
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Roman age have come down to our day, notably the inscribed statue of a priest of Neith who was high in favour with Psammetichus III., Carnbyses and Darius .

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Bronze figures of deities are now the most interesting
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objects to be found at Sa el hagar . (F . L1 ..

End of Article: SAIS (Egyptian Sai)
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