Merneptah
Merneptah, (died 1204?) king of Egypt (reigned 1213–04 BC) who successfully defended Egypt against a serious invasion from Libya.
The 13th son of his long-lived father, Ramses II, Merneptah was nearing 60 years of age at his accession in about 1213. Toward the end of his father’s reign, Egypt’s military preparedness had deteriorated. Early in Merneptah’s reign, his troops had to suppress a revolt in Palestine by the cities of Ashqelon, Gezer, and Yenoam. (The action is shown by battle reliefs at al-Karnak previously ascribed to Ramses II.) Merneptah’s greatest challenge, however, came from the west. Libyans had penetrated the buffer territory west of the delta oases and were encroaching on Egyptian lands. About 1209 Merneptah learned that some Sea Peoples, wanderers who had been displaced from Asia Minor and the Aegean lands and were roving the Middle East, had joined and armed the Libyans and with them were conspiring to attack Memphis and Heliopolis, the great administrative and religious centres near the delta’s apex.
Merneptah Victory Stele exhibited in the Egyptian Museum.