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  2. Psamtik III - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psamtik_III

    Psamtik's daughter and the daughters of all the Egyptian noblemen were enslaved. Psamtik's son and two thousand other sons of noblemen were sentenced to death, in retaliation for the murder of the Persian ambassador and the two hundred crew of his boat. An "old man who had once been the king's friend" was reduced to beggary. [3]

  3. Psamtik I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psamtik_I

    Egyptian ruler Psamtik I during the fall of Ashdod in 635 BCE, illustration by Patrick Gray, 1900. 7th century statue found in Kale mentioning Psamtik I. The Ionian Greek inscription reads, "Amphimeos' son Pedon brought me from Egypt and gave as a votive; Psammetichos, the king of Egypt gave him a city for his virtue and a golden diadem for his ...

  4. Fall of Ashdod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_of_Ashdod

    The Fall of Ashdod was the successful Egyptian assault on the city of Ashdod, one of the five cities of the famed Philistine pentapolis, located in southwestern Canaan, about 655 BC. [3] According to the Greek historian Herodotus, pharaoh Psamtik I besieged Ashdod for 29 years. Ashdod had lost most of its inhabitants during those long years of ...

  5. Twenty-sixth Dynasty of Egypt family tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twenty-sixth_dynasty_of...

    The family tree of the 26th Dynasty is just as complex and unclear as earlier dynasties. This dynasty possibly traced its origins to the Saite 24th Dynasty, and scholars now start the dynasty with the reign of Psamtik I, sometimes referrings to the previous rulers – Ammeris to Necho I – as "proto-Saites".

  6. Amyrtaeus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amyrtaeus

    In 1st century BC, the Greek historian Diodorus Siculus wrote in his Bibliotheca historica (XIV, 35.3–5) that a King named Psamtik — which seems to be identified with Amyrtaeus, [1] perhaps being "Psamtik" his lost regnal name [7] — murdered the Greek admiral Tamos who had taken refuge in Egypt after the defeat of the rebel Cyrus. [11]

  7. Late Period of ancient Egypt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Late_Period_of_ancient_Egypt

    The Twenty-Sixth Dynasty, also known as the Saite Dynasty after its seat of power the city of Sais, reigned from 672 to 525 BC, and consisted of six pharaohs.It started with the unification of Egypt under Psamtik I c. 656 BC, itself a direct consequence of the Sack of Thebes by the Assyrians in 663 BC.

  8. Psammetichus IV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psammetichus_IV

    Finally, Diodorus Siculus mentions a Psammetichus (VI) as a king of Egypt in 400 BCE, saying that he was a “descendant of the famous Psammetichus”. However, the name of this Psammetichus VI is sometimes considered a mistake for Amyrtaeus , the pharaoh of the 28th Dynasty who ruled from 404 to 399 BCE.

  9. Psamtik II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psamtik_II

    Psamtik II (Ancient Egyptian: Nfr-jb-Rꜥ Psmṯk, pronounced Psamāṯăk [1]), known by the Graeco-Romans as Psammetichus or Psammeticus, was a king of the Saite-based Twenty-sixth Dynasty of Egypt (595 BC – 589 BC).