Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Usermaatre Akhenamun Ramesses VIII (also written Ramses and Rameses) or Ramesses Sethherkhepshef Meryamun ('Set is his Strength, beloved of Amun') [2] (reigned 1130–1129 BC, or 1130 BC [3]), was the seventh Pharaoh of the Twentieth Dynasty of the New Kingdom of Egypt, and was the 9th of the 10 sons of Ramesses III. [4]
Bierbrier suggested to identify this Amennakht with the Chief Workman of that name who was active in year 3 of Ramesses X. [9] This would make the Ramessesnakht of the graffito into the second High Priest of this name. However, Bierbrier's hypothesis would also imply that Ramesses X reached a hitherto unattested year 8.
The list is similar to the one inscribed in the temple built at the site by Ramesses' father, Seti I, but with the addition of Ramesses' own throne name and nomen. Ramesses' list is in fragments, so that only some of the kings' names survive. The surviving fragments were removed in 1837 by the French consul in Egypt and sold to the British ...
Albert Marchinsky, an illusionist whose stage name was "The Great Rameses" Ramases , an early-1970s-era British musician Ramsés VII, pseudonym used by Argentine singer-songwriter Tanguito (1945-1972)
The scene with the list was first published by Jean-Francois Champollion in 1845, [1] and by Karl Richard Lepsius four years later. [2] The upper register of the second western pylon, shows a processions where ancestors of Ramesses II are honored at ceremonies of the festival of Min. It contains 19 cartouches with the names of 14 pharaohs.
8th dynasty: fl. c. 22nd century BC: Reigned c. 2163 BC–c. 2161 BC, during the First Intermediate Period. Neferkaure II: Pharaoh: 8th dynasty: fl. c. 22nd century BC: Reigned c. 2167 BC–c. 2163 BC, during the First Intermediate Period. Nefermaat I: Vizier: 4th dynasty: fl. c. 26th century BC: Son of pharaoh Sneferu. He was a vizier and was ...
Among her titles are "King's Daughter", which would make her a daughter of Merneptah or Ramesses II or possibly a granddaughter of Ramesses. The name Takhat appears in a list of princesses dated to Year 53 of Ramesses II (Louvre 666). [17] If this is the same Takhat, she would be about the same age as Seti II. [18]
Neferkare Setepenre Ramesses IX, 20th Dynasty Neferkare Amenemnisu , 21st Dynasty Neferkare Peftjauawybast , king of Herakleopolis Magna during the 25th Dynasty