Joseph in Egypt
By Bonnie Oswald, BFA, MA
When I began the study of art history as an undergraduate
art major, I found Egyptian art very weird. It seemed
that the people depicted couldn't decide which direction
they were going. The slides we were shown in class
were dark and very poor, and uninspiring.
Will Cuppy, in "The
Decline and Fall of Practically Everybody," said,
"Their hieroglyphics, or picture writing, consists
of owls, canaries, garter snakes, and the insides
of alarm clocks." I agreed with him. Then, as
a graduate student in Boston, I discovered the Egyptian
art in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and I changed
my mind fast. The statues were huge and overwhelming.
I even loved the jewelry for the Pharaoh's horses.
But Egyptian art takes some explanation. The figures
were drawn with a rigid set of guidelines as to proportion,
and they are depicted with a device known as frontalism,
in which the shoulders, eye, and torso were shown from
the front, while the head, neck, legs, feet, arms
and hands are drawn from the side or in profile. This
shows each of these body parts in its simplest, most
easy to identify view, giving a representation of
the essence of the king, but not a literal portrait.
Some 4000 years later, Picasso used a similar device,
combining different views in a single image.
In Egyptian art, males
were painted with red/brown skin while females were
painted with paler or white skin. The pharaoh was
shown larger than others in the single picture. Pharaoh
was also shown wearing a ceremonial beard. Hatshepsut,
the only woman to hold the position of pharaoh for
any length of time, wore a false beard at ceremonial
functions, and was often depicted as a male with red/brown
skin.
The desire
of the Egyptians to preserve the body extended to
the statues of the Pharaoh and Queen. Hands and arms
were close to the body, and the hands were usually
fists, to protect fingers. A large portion of stone
was still attached to the back of the statue to increase
stability. In fact, the only part of these ancient
statues to suffer significant damage was usually the
nose.

A drawing of a
tomb painting showing a brilliantly colored scene
of the Pharaoh Nebaman and his family hunting birds
using a throwing stick. The Pharaoh is larger than
the other figures. His wife and son are shown on the
small boat. The son wears the typical shaved head
and sidelock that identify him as the son of the king.
(Nebaman Hunting Birds, a fragment of a wall painting.
Thebes, 1400 BC. British Museum, London)
Semitic
people ― Canaanites and probably Israelites
― came to Egypt for centuries as traders and
in times of drought or famine. Sometimes they came
as slaves. While Northern Egypt shares the same general
climatic conditions as Canaan, Egypt's economy depends
on the Nile, the longest river in the world. Weather
in Africa, far to the south, affects the annual Nile
flood, and crops can be lush in Egypt while Canaan
is dry.
This tomb painting shows Semitic traders coming to
Egypt. They are depicted in Egyptian style art, with
the men red/brown, but with the clothing and beards
of the Semites. The men shown here were probably metalsmiths,
and they are carrying weapons.

Artist's rendering of a portion of
a painting in the tomb of Beni Hasen ca. 1900 BCE,
showing Semitic traders coming to Egypt.
Joseph would
have come to Egypt as a slave at an unusual time in
the 3000 years of Egypt's history. During a period
when Egypt was ruled by weak kings, and was unstable
militarily and politically, a group of foreign invaders
was able to overthrow the monarchy. They were known
as the Hyksos, a name that means "foreign rulers"
or "shepherd kings." They were Semitic,
and had names related to Israelite names. They ruled
primarily in the Northern part of Egypt, and conquered
Egypt using superior weaponry that the Egyptians did
not have ― body armor, metal weapons, horses
and especially chariots.
This period, known as
the Second Intermediate Period, lasted for about 100
years, from 1650 BC to 1550 BC. During this time,
the Hyksos gradually spread south and adopted the
language and customs of the Egyptians. Eventually
the Egyptians, adopting the weapons of the Hyksos,
were able to drive the hated Hyksos from Egypt. Many
of the events of the Old Testament probably occurred
during this time.
Abraham
may have come to Egypt during the reign of the Hyksos.
When he came, the pyramids would have been at least
500 years old. Most scholars think that Joseph definitely
came to Egypt during the Hyksos period. Egyptians
maintained a very closed and snobbish society, and
it is unlikely that a foreigner would have been given
the position of responsibility that Joseph held. The
Hyksos were closely related to Joseph, spoke the same
language and had a Semitic relationship. Joseph would
have been accepted by them.
The early art of the Hyksos reveals their Canaanite
roots, and is dramatically different than that of
the more artistically sophisticated Egyptians. Over
the 100 years of Hyksos rule, they adopted the art
and architecture of the Egyptians, probably using
Egyptian craftsmen, but their early art is very different.
This earthen Hyksos vessel or vase,
in the shape of a man's head, was found in an archaeological
dig in Jericho. Pinpricks in the clay represent a
beard. The proportions are strange and the artistic
quality is very crude. (Department of Antiquities
and Museum, Jerusalem)
When the Hyksos were expelled from Egypt and the New
Kingdom began, most evidence of the Hyksos was destroyed.
Hyksos names were chiseled off statues and temples,
or the statues and temples were demolished. Once the
Egyptians took control of their nation again, the
Israelites would have then come under the control
of Egyptians. Any large Semitic group within the borders
of Egypt would have been treated with suspicion and
mistrust. We read in the Bible that there arose a
Pharaoh "who knew not Joseph." This could
have happened at that time.
Evidence of Hyksos or Israelite towns in Egypt is
hard to find. No mention in Egypt is made of the Israelites
until many years later when they were settled in Canaan.
Egyptians only told their successes on the monuments.
Recently archaeologists have found evidence of early
settlements in the delta that might be Israelite settlements,
and also Hyksos areas. Hyksos towns were usually converted
into Egyptian places. More information is sure to
come to light in the near future, as exploration of
these sites continues.
Several other interesting events occurred during the
430 years the Israelites were in Egypt. Hatshepsut
ruled from c. 1473 to 1458 BC. She reigned first as
regent for her young stepson when her husband died,
and then took control and declared herself Pharaoh.
At her death Thutmoses III, who had waited 20 years
to take his place as Pharaoh, apparently ordered her
name chiseled from all royal statues and buildings,
to be replaced by his own.
Another period that deviated from the norm in Egypt,
and while the Israelites were in Egypt, was that of
the Amarna Period. The Egyptian pharaoh had always
been considered divine. It was believed that at his
death he would become one with the gods after his
embalming and burial,
if all the rites had been conducted properly. It was
essential that his body be preserved intact. Amenhotep
III apparently decided not to wait till death to become
a god, and declared himself a god during his lifetime,
uniting himself with the solar deity and de-emphasizing
the other many gods, such as Amen, the creator god.
The sun had always been
worshiped in Egyptian theology. The 5th dynasty temple
at Heliopolis worshiped Aten, the sun disk. The city
of Heliopolis was called by the Egyptians "Iunu."
In the Bible we find it as "On."
When Amenhotep III died,
his son, who had been co-ruling with him for the last
years of his life, assumed the throne.. Suggested
dates vary from 1369-1332 BC to 1351-1336 BC
for his reign. He changed his name from Amenhotep
IV, which means "Amen is pleased," to Akhenaten
(Serviceable to the Aten).
The Egyptians
had always believed in many gods. Akhenaten believed
in one god only, the sun disk. He closed all the temples
and removed the powerful priesthood, and decreed that
he alone was the only intermediary with god. He moved
the capitol to a city he built called Akhetaten (now
Tell el Amarna).
The art of this period (known as the Amarna Period)
changed dramatically. His beautiful wife was the famous
Nefertiti, and they are depicted in murals and carvings
in relaxed poses, and loving family scenes with their
daughters, quite different from the rigid art
of other Pharaohs. It is curious that while the Israelites
were in Egypt, with their strong belief in one God,
that Akhenaten would change the religion so drastically
to a belief in one god. He is often known as the "heretic
king."
Pillar statue of Akhenaten from the temple of Amen-Re,
Karnak. 1375 BC. Sandstone, approximately 12 feet
tall. (Egyptian Museum, Cairo, Egypt)
At his death, after a brief period, nine-year-old
Tutankhaten became Pharaoh. He was possibly Akhenaten's
half brother or son-in-law, or even son. After the
death of Akhenaten, Young Tutankhaten changed his
name to Tutankhamen and was taken by the priests from
Amarna to Thebes. It was then that the old religion
returned, with a belief in many gods.