Aktisanes is a Nubian king who is mentioned by the Greek historianHecataeus of Abdera. He is perhaps identical with Menmaatre-Setepenamun Gatisen known from Nubian sources.
Titles
Horus name: Kanakht Merymaat
Nebty name: Wer-menu-em-per-itef-Amen-en-nepet
Golden horus name: Ir-sankhy-rekhyu
Prenomen: Menmaatre Setepenamun
Nomen: Gatisen
Gatisen had a Ramesside-style titulary. His throne name Menmaatre-Setepenamun is the same as the throne name of Ramesses II. Aktisanes' Horus name Kanakht-nerymaat is the same as the Horus name of Ramesses II. This is a second reason why he is placed by some scholars around 300 BC. It had been assumed that in the fourth centuryBC, there was a Ramesside revival in Nubia. Other researchers have pointed out that the reading of the name Gatisen is uncertain. They place the king before 700 BC and assume that there was no Ramesside revival.
Monuments and Inscriptions
His longest text is a now lost building inscription copied by the Lepsiusexpedition in Nuri, but only published in 1977. The text was only partly preserved. It once most likely adorned a door at a temple in Napata. The names of the king are not preserved, most importantly the nomen Gatisen is missing. The other inscription is to be found on two adjoining blocks, showing the king in front of Amun-Re-Horachte-Atum. The blocks were found at the Jebel Barkal. In this inscription the throne name and the nomen of the king are preserved, but the nomen Gatisen is difficult to read. The same holds true for a doorjamb from the same place providing the full titulary of the king, but with the nomen only partly preserved. The name Gatisen has been identified with Aktisanes, known from the Greek historian Hecataeus of Abdera. This identification is not certain, especially because the reading of the name as Gatisen is uncertain. Hecataeus describes Aktisanes as an enemy of the Egyptian king Amasis. This seems unlikely as the earlier Nubian kings are well-known. Therefore and for other reasons it is in general assumed that Hecataeus chose the name of a contemporary Nubian king as he composed his more fictional story.
Burial
Aktisanes was buried at Jebel Barkal. He is thought to have been buried in either pyramid 11 or pyramid 14.
Literature
Laszlo Török, in: Fontes Historiae Nubiorum, Vol. II, Bergen 1996, 511-520,