Pharaoh (novel) - Characters

Characters

Prus took characters' names where he found them, sometimes anachronistically or anatopistically. At other times (as with the priest Samentu in chapter 55) he apparently invented them. The origins of the names of some prominent characters may be of interest:

  • Ramses, the novel's protagonist: the name of two pharaohs of the 19th Dynasty and nine pharaohs of the 20th Dynasty.
  • Nikotris, Ramses' mother: semi-historic Sixth Dynasty female pharaoh Nitocris; or the identically named daughter, Nitocris, of the Twenty-sixth Dynasty king Psamtik I.
  • Amenhotep, high priest and Ramses' maternal grandfather: name of a number of ancient Egyptians, including four 18th Dynasty pharaohs and the High Priest of Amon under Pharaohs Ramses IX to Ramses XI (the High Priest played a key role in the civil war that ended Egypt’s 20th Dynasty and, with it, the New Kingdom).
  • Herhor, High Priest of Amon and Ramses' principal antagonist: historic high priest Herihor.
  • Pentuer, scribe to Herhor: historic scribe Pentewere (Pentaur); or perhaps Pentawer, a son of Pharaoh Ramses III.
  • Thutmose, Ramses' cousin: a fairly common name, also the name of four pharaohs of the 18th Dynasty.
  • Sarah, Ramses' Jewish mistress; Taphath, Sarah's relative and servant; Gideon, Sarah's father: names drawn from those of Biblical personalities.
  • Patrokles, a Greek mercenary general: Patroklos, in Homer's Iliad.
  • Ennana, a junior military officer: Egyptian scribe-pupil's name, attached to an ancient text (cited in Pharaoh, chapter 4: Ennana's "plaint on the sore lot of a junior officer").
  • Dagon, a Phoenician merchant: a Phoenician and Philistine god of agriculture and the earth; the national god of the Philistines.
  • Tamar, Dagon's wife (chapters 8, 13): Biblical wife of Er, then of his brother Onan; she subsequently had children by their father Judah, eponymous ancestor of the Judeans and Jews.
  • Dutmose, a peasant (chapter 11): historic scribe Dhutmose, in the reign of Pharaoh Ramses XI.
  • Menes (three distinct individuals: the first pharaoh; Sarah's physician; a savant and Pentuer's mentor): Menes, the first Egyptian pharaoh.
  • Asarhadon, a Phoenician innkeeper: a variant of "Esarhaddon", an Assyrian king.
  • Berossus, a Chaldean priest: Berossus, a Babylonian historian and astrologer who flourished about 300 BCE.
  • Phut (another name used by Berossus): Phut, a descendant of Noah named in Genesis.
  • Cush, a guest at Asarhadon's inn: Cush, a descendant of Noah named in Genesis.
  • Mephres, an elderly Egyptian high priest and the most implacable foe of the protagonist, Ramses: an 18th-Dynasty pharaoh, evidently identical with Thutmose I.
  • Hiram, a Phoenician prince: Hiram I, king of Tyre, in Phoenicia.
  • Kama, a Phoenician priestess who becomes Ramses' mistress: Kama, a word in Hindu scriptures, associated variously with sensuality, longing and sexuality.
  • Lykon, a young Greek, Ramses' look-alike and nemesis: Lycon, in the Iliad.
  • Sargon, an Assyrian envoy: name of two Assyrian kings, the first being the founder of one of history's first empires.
  • Seti, Ramses' infant son by Sarah: name of several ancient Egyptians, including two Pharaohs.
  • Osokhor, a priest thought (chapter 40) to have sold Egyptian priestly secrets to the Phoenicians: a Meshwesh king who ruled Egypt in the late 21st Dynasty.
  • Musawasa, a Libyan prince: the Meshwesh, a Libyan tribe.
  • Tehenna, Musawasa's son: "Tjehenu", a generic Egyptian term for "Libyan."
  • Dion, a Greek architect: Dion, a historic name that appears in a number of contexts.
  • Hebron, Ramses' last mistress: Hebron, the largest city in the present-day West Bank.

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