Egypt’s Pharaoh Necho II had abandoned Asia…
597 BCE to 586 BCE
Egypt’s Pharaoh Necho II had abandoned Asia after 601 BCE, strengthening the Egyptian navy for strategic and trading purposes and maintaining close links with the Greeks.
According to Herodotus (4.42), Necho engages a crew of Phoenician mariners to undertake the first known circumnavigation of Africa.
The expedition departs Egypt by way of the Red Sea and travels south past Ethiopia, reportedly expecting to turn west shortly after that point, as conventional theory has the continent as roughly rectangular in shape.
Finding that it is not, the sailors journey for three years, during which the sailors, each autumn, establish long-term encampments to sow, grow, and harvest grain that they carry with them.
They finally enter the Pillars of Hercules and sail through the Mediterranean to reappear in Egypt.
Some current historians tend to believe Herodotus' account, primarily because he stated with disbelief that the Phoenicians "as they sailed on a westerly course round the southern end of Libya (Africa), they had the sun on their right—to northward of them" (The Histories 4.42)—in Herodotus' time it was not known that Africa extended south past the equator; however, Egyptologists also point out that it would have been extremely unusual for an Egyptian Pharaoh to carry out such an expedition.
Necho II dies in 595 BCE and is succeeded by his son, Psamtik II, as the next pharaoh of Egypt.
Psamtik II, however, will later remove Necho's name from almost all of his father's monuments for unknown reasons.
Psamtik II is succeeded in 589 BCE by Apries, his son by Queen Takhut, a Princess of Athribis.
Th royal couple were also the parents of Menekhubaste, a Priestess of Atum at Heliopolis, and Ankhnesneferibre, a God's Wife of Amun who is to be served in this powerful office in Upper Egypt through to the remainder of the Saite period.
Apries is the name by which Herodotus (ii. 161) and Diodorus (i. 68) designate Wahibrea, pharaoh of Egypt (589 BC-570 BCE), the fourth king (counting from Psammetichus I) of the Twenty-sixth dynasty of Egypt.
Apries continues his father’s poor military record.
Unsuccessful attempts to intervene in the kingdom of Judah are followed by a mutiny of soldiers at Aswan.