conscripts raided the lands and the natural resources of
much of southern Palestine.
During the First Intermediate Period (2134–2040
B.C.E.), Egyptians held onto limited powers until Middle
Kingdom (2040–1640 B.C.E.) pharaohs secured Egypt’s
borders again and established a firm rule. The Mon-
tuhoteps, Amenemhets, and Senwosrets were warrior
pharaohs who conquered entire city-states, establishing
vassals and trade partners while controlling the people of
Nubia. This relationship with other states lasted until the
Second Intermediate Period (1640–1550 B.C.E.), at which
time vast hordes of Asiatics entered the Nile region with
ease. In this era it appears as if no border existed on the
eastern side of the nation, and many peoples in southern
Palestine viewed themselves as Egyptians and lived under
the rule of the HYKSOSkings of the eastern Delta. The
Eighteenth Dynasty changed that condition abruptly.
’AHMOSE(r. 1550–1525 B.C.E.) chased the Asiatics from
Egypt and sealed its borders, reestablishing the series of
fortresses called the WALL OF THE PRINCEerected during
the Middle Kingdom period.
AMENHOTEP I(r. 1525–1504 B.C.E.) maintained this
firm rule, but it was his successor, TUTHMOSIS I (r.
1504–1492 B.C.E.), who defeated the MITANNIS, once
Egypt’s principal Asiatic enemies, and marched to the
Euphrates River with a large army. The Mitannis
remained firm allies of Egypt from that time onward, and
many treaties and pacts maintained the partitioning of
vast territories between them. Mitanni princesses also
entered Egypt as wives of the pharaohs. The Mitanni peo-
ple flowered as an empire, having started their invasion
of neighboring lands during Tuthmosis I’s era. In time
124 Egypt and the East
KH
AB
IR
’I
Ancient coastline
Egyptian Asiatic Empire
N
0 200 Kilometers
0 200 Miles
Egyptian Asiatic Empire under Tuthmosis III, 1450 B.C.E.
Washuka nni
Cap ita lofth e
ki ngdomofMitanni.
Destr oyedbyth e
Hi tt ite s,c. 1330 BCE
AMO
RITE
S
Caspian
Sea
Pe
rs
ia
n
Gu
lf
Mediterranean
Sea
R e d S e a
A S
I A
M I N O R E G Y P T
ARABIA
CA
NA
AN
AMO
RITE
S
KINGDOM OF THE HITTITES
Ur
Babylon
Major power in the
Amarna period
Carchemish
Washukanni
Capital of the
kingdom of Mitanni.
Destroyed by the
Hittites, c. 1330 B.C.E.
Ty r e
Megiddo
Kythera
Messenia
Mycenae
Kadesh
Memphis
Elephantine
Buhen
Nineveh
Assur
Kingdom of Assyria. Gained power
with the decline of Mitanni in
the 14th century B.C.E.
Thebes
Eu
ph
rate
sR
.
TigrisR
.
Ni
le
R.
UPPER
NUBIA
LOWER
NUBIA
Crete
(Keftiu) Cyprus