Thutmose III: The battle of Megiddo
Canaanite charioteer hit by an arrow (detail from a picture on a chariot belonging to Thutmose IV)
Source: Carta's Atlas of the Bible by Yohanan Aharoni, Jerusalem, 1964
|
|
Thutmose III: The Battle of Megiddo ca. 1482 BCE
An alliance of Canaanite cities was headed by the king of Kadesh on the Orontes and the king
of Megiddo. In order to suppress them Thutmose III marched his army in ten days from his border fortress of Sileh to Ghaza, the main Egyptian stronghold in Canaan.
After another eleven days they reached Yaham, where they held a war council.
It was known that the Canaanites
had concentrated their forces near Megiddo to which there were three access routes: The
northern and southern routes were longer than the central route through Aruna, but were
less easily defendable. The generals had, as it turned out wrong, intelligence about the
Aruna route being blocked by Canaanite forces and counselled the pharaoh to take the Yokneam
or Taanakh route.
'Now two (other) roads are here. One of the roads ( behold, it is [to the east of] us,
so that it comes out at Taanakh. The other ( behold, it is to the north side of Djefti,
and we will come out to the north of Megiddo. Let our victorious lord proceed on the one
of [them] which is [satisfactory to] his heart, (but) do not make us go on that difficult
road!'
Inscription from the Amen Temple at Karnak.
J. B. Pritchard Ancient Near Eastern Texts, 1969: p. 234.
Thutmose rejected the arguments of his generals, set out on the Aruna route and
reached the river Qinah south of Megiddo without encountering any opposition.
It was then that the disposition of the Canaanite forces became clear. A contingent
of footsoldiers guarded the southern road from Taanakh, while the northern approaches of Megiddo were
held by more infantry. The chariots were concentrated around Megiddo itself, waiting for
the Egyptian forces to attack the footsoldiers who would quickly retreat as if they
were fleeing.The pursuing Egyptians would break ranks and could be attacked by the hidden
Canaanite charioteers.
Behold, His Majesty has come forth together with his victorious army and they have filled the valley;
let our victorious lord hearken to us this once, and let our lord await for us the rear of his
army and his people. When the rear of the army has come right out to us, then we will fight
against these Asiatics and we shall not have no trouble about the rear of our army.
The Egyptians rested during the night and disposed their forces in three wings. The attacking
Canaanites were routed and so hotly pursued, that the defenders of Megiddo refused to open
the gates and pulled their fleeing charioteers over the walls to safety. Instead of attacking the city
the Egyptians began to loot the abandoned camps, which gave the Canaanites time to organise
their defense.
Would that the army of His Majesty had not set their hearts upon looting the chattels of those enemies,
for they would have captured Megiddo at that moment, while the vile enemy of Kadesh and the
vile enemy of this town were being hoisted up.
The conquest of Megiddo and its inhabitants was vital; and it fell after a siege of seven months.
All the princes of all the northern countries are cooped up within it. The capture of Megiddo is the capture of a thousand towns.
Thutmose led many more campaigns into Canaan, and eight years after the battle of Megiddo he took Kadesh on the Orontes. Following the conquest of Retenu, he built a big navy, which was instrumental in his extending Egyptian influence over much of the littoral Near East. His army could reach any coastal town in Syria by ship in four to five days, while by foot the journey would take more than a fortnight. Surprise became a major weapon in his arsenal.
[ ] The map is drawn after a map in Carta's Atlas of the Bible by Yohanan Aharoni, Jerusalem, 1964, p.32
|