Rameses in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
ra-am'-sez, ram'-e-sez (Ex 1:11), (Gen 47:11; Ex 12:37; Nu
33:3,5) (ra`mecec, ra`amcec; Rhamesse; Egyptian Ra-messu,
"Ra created him" (or "it")):
1. The Meaning of "Store-Cities":
One of the two "settlements" (mickenoth) built, or "built
up," by the Hebrews for the Pharaoh, the other being Pithom,
to which the Septuagint adds a third, namely, "On which is
Heliopolis," a town near Cairo (Ex 1:11). The Hebrew term
mickenoth comes from a root meaning "to settle down" (Arabic
sakan, "settlement," Assyrian sakanu or shakanu, "to set"),
but it is rendered "strong cities" in Septuagint, "treasure
cities" in the King James Version, and (incorrectly) "store-
cities" in the Revised Version: The "land of Rameses," where
Jacob and his sons settled, was apparently the "field of
Zoan" (see ZOAN), thus lying in the Delta East of the
Bubastic branch of the Nile.
2. The Meaning of the Name:
It is often assumed that no city called Rameses would have
existed before the time of Rameses II, or the 14th century
BC, though even before Rameses I the name occurs as that of
a brother of Horemhib under the XVIIIth Dynasty. The usual
translation "Child of Ra" is grammatically incorrect in
Egyptian and as Ra was an ancient name for the "sun" it
seems possible that a town may have borne the title "Ra
created it" very early. The mention of Rameses in Gen
(47:11) is often regarded as an anachronism, since no
scholar has supposed that Jacob lived as late as the time of
Rameses II. This would equally apply to the other notices,
and at most would serve to mark the age of the passages in
the Pentateuch where Rameses is mentioned, but even this
cannot be thought to be proved (see EXODUS). According to De
Rouge (see Pierret, Vocab. Hieroglyph., 1875, 143) there
were at least three towns in Lower Egypt that bore the name
Pa Rames-ses ("city of Rameses"); but Brugsch supposes that
the place mentioned in the Old Testament was Zoan, to which
Rameses II gave this name when making it his capital in the
Delta. Dr. Budge takes the same view, while Dr. Naville and
others suppose that the site of Raamses has still to be
found.
3. Situation:
There appears to have been no certain tradition preserving
the site, for though Silvia (about 385 AD) was told that it
lay 4 miles from the town of Arabia (see GOSHEN), she found
no traces of such a place. Brugsch ("A New City of Rameses,
1876," Aegyptische Zeitschrift, 69) places one such city in
the southern part of Memphis itself. Goodwin (Rec. of Past,
Old Series, VI, 11) gives an Egyptian letter describing the
"city of Rameses-Miamun," which appears to be Zoan, since it
was on the seacoast. It was a very prosperous city when this
letter was written, and a pa-khennu or "palace city." It had
canals full of fish, lakes swarming with birds, fields of
lentils, melons, wheat, onions and sesame, gardens of vines,
almonds and figs. Ships entered its harbor; the lotus and
papyrus grew in its waters. The inhabitants greeted Rameses
II with garlands of flowers. Besides wine and mead, of the
"conqueror's city," beer was brought to the harbor from the
Kati (in Cilicia), and oil from the "Lake Sagabi." There is
no reason to suppose that Zoan was less prosperous in the
early Hyksos age, when the Hebrews dwelt in its plain,
whatever be the conclusion as to the date when the city
Rameses received that name. The description above given
agrees with the Old Testament account of the possession
given by Joseph to his family "in the best of the land, in
the land of Rameses" (Gen 47:11).
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