Psamtik I (also spelled
Psammeticus or
Psammetichus; Greek: Ψαμμήτιχος) (r. 664 – 610 BCE), was the first of three kings of that name of the
Saite, or
Twenty-sixth dynasty of Egypt. His prenomen,
Wah-Ib-Re, means "Constant [is the] Heart [of]
Re." Historical references for the Dodecarchy and the rise of Psamtik I in power, establishing the Saitic Dynasty, are recorded in
Herodotus's
Histories, Book II: 151-157. It is also known from
cuneiform texts that twenty local princelings were appointed by
Esarhaddon and confirmed by
Assurbanipal to govern Egypt.
Necho I, the father of Psamtik by his Queen Istemabet, was the chief of these kinglets, but they seem to have been quite unable to hold the
Egyptians to the hated
Assyrians against the more sympathetic
Nubians. The
labyrinth built by
Amenemhat III of the
Twelfth dynasty of Egypt is ascribed by Herodotus to the Dodecarchy, or rule of 12, which must represent this combination of rulers. Psamtik was the son of Necho I who died in 664 BCE when the Kushite king Tantamani tried unsuccessfully to seize control of lower Egypt from the Assyrian Empire. After his father's death, Psamtik managed to both unite all of Egypt and free her from Assyrian control within the first ten years of his reign.