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670 results found.
67 pages of results. 281. The Astronomical Basis of Egyptian Chronology [Journals] [SIS Review]
... was the year AD 283/4 and so, if you take off 1605 years, we get back again to 1322 BC - the year when a Sothic Year began, according to Censorinus. Now, if - as was done - we accept this annotation, the next step was to identify Menophres. It was accepted that he was Ramesses I, founder of the XIXth Dynasty. Consequently, if you accept that chain of reasoning and deduction, then you have to accept that 1322 BC is fixed as the year in which Ramesses I began his reign. It can be modified by a few years because of precession, but you are fixed at Ramesses I at about 1322 ...
282. On Dating the Trojan War [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... Agamemnon's and Nestor's own palaces at the end of LH IIIB, it is unclear at what point in the LH IIIB period city VI came to grief [2 ]. Nor is it easy to determine when, in relation to Egypt's history, the LH IIIB period itself ended. We can date its beginning to shortly before the accession of Ramesses II on the basis of Mycenaean pottery found at Gurob in the Faiyum, but no such unequivocal correlation can be made for the end of the period [3 ]. Another approach, suggested by Rohl in a recent letter to Workshop [4 ], is to quantify the interval between the war and some later known date by reference ...
283. Letters [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... regnal year twenty-four, at the height of his power and glory. On Bob Porter's variant model it was early in Solomon's reign. In view of the above inscriptional details, their explanations are rejected. Those details recorded by Seti I are in themselves sufficient to totally destroy the credibility and viability of the entire New Chronology' model. Merneptah Ramesses II built a wall at Ashkelon containing six scenes inscribed with his Hittite peace treaty. that treaty occurred in his regnal year twenty-one (NC date 911 BC). Later on, four more scenes were added by Merneptah to the left and right of the original inscriptions. The details on those four were battle scenes that matched the details ...
284. Pillars of Straw [Journals] [Aeon]
... temple in Jerusalem. [2 ] Egyptologists identify this king as the Pharaoh Soshenq. Velikovsky disagreed, identifying him instead as Thutmose III. [3 ] But not everyone was happy with this and other identifications followed with their reliant years sliding up and down the scale of ages. David Rohl not only saw Shishak reflected in the person of Ramses II, [4 ] but also, at the same time, as the Sesostris mentioned by Herodotus. [5 ] Peter James, who had once worked hand in hand with Rohl, on the other hand, was sure that Shishak was really Ramses III. [6 ] Phillip Clapham opted for Psusennes. [7 ] Eric ...
285. Philistia Ascendant [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... Home | Issue Contents INTERACTION Philistia Ascendant Clark Whelton In his interesting article, "Gezer and the Mysterious Gates of Solomon" (C &AH, 911), Michael S. Sanders makes several points about the Philistines which deserve clarification. He casts doubt on the identification of the Philistines as the "Peoples of the Sea" who fought Ramses III- an identification supported by mainstream historians and by Martin Sieff. Sanders asks: "Will no one scream the question- why sea captains of a supposedly seafaring nation would disembark and inhabit a land without either a natural harbor or a decent port?" The answer, in a nutshell, is "any port in a storm ...
286. The Third World of Science [Books] [de Grazia books]
... , is an indication. I wish you good weather (pleasant driving, good new friends, and many invigorating experience). Regards from Elisheva and my regards for Paul and John. Yours, Immanuel. [P .S .] It would be good if at the Cairo Museum you could obtain some organic object of the time of Ramses II or Ramses II (or of both) for radiocarbon test(better seed, mummy swathing, leather, papyrus, linen- and not wood, if possible) at the lab of the University of Pennsylvania (Dr. Elizabeth Ralph.) To apply to Dr. Isnander Hanna (Director at the Lab at the Museum) ...
287. Chapter 5 Pottery Dating, Faience, and Tin [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... the researcher with an anachronism because the material is dated to another, sometimes very distant period. In this respect, this author will employ a material somewhat like pottery, namely scarabs, to describe the manner by which competent archaeologists and historians apply a double standard to evidence which contradicts their chronological expectations. This material is taken directly from Velikovsky's Ramses II and His Time, pages 237 ff, sometimes without attribution. Here all the reasons employed to mitigate and remove inconvenient evidence by the investigator are clearly observed. Scarabs are models of beetles made of ceramics, glass, stone, and metal, and may have the names of kings or ordinary people on them. Sometimes these were ...
288. C&C Review 1994 Issue (Volume XVI): Contents [Journals] [SIS Review]
... From: C&C Review 1994 Issue (Volume XVI) Texts Home | SIS Review Home Chronology & Catastrophism Review Journal of the Society for Interdisciplinary Studies 1994 Issue (Volume XVI)Articles Irving Wolfe: A Catastrophist Reading of Religious Systems 2 Robert M. Porter: Shishak - Ramesses II or Ramesses III? 11 Daphne Garbett: The Reliability of Synchronisms in Reconstructing an Historical Chronology from Rehoboam to Hezekiah' 14 Antony H. Rees: Artificially Structured Biblical Chronologies 24 Forum Part 1: Natural Selection and Evolution a challenge set by David Salkeld and a response from Trevor Palmer 36 Part 2: The Cambridge Conference A Flop? a challenge set by Benny Peiser with responses from ...
289. Olympia [Journals] [Kronos]
... ) Home | Issue Contents Olympia Immanuel Velikovsky Copyright © 1976 by Immanuel Velikovsky "Olympia" is a section of the soon to be completed Volume II (The Time of Isaiah and Homer) of the series Ages in Chaos. The entire series will consist of four volumes (the other volumes, since sometime in printer's proofs, are titled Ramses II and His Time and Peoples of the Sea) ." Olympia" follows the section, "The Scandal of Enkomi" that was printed in Pensee X (Winter, 1974-75), pp. 21-23. Both of these sections were written more than a quarter of a century ago, and set in print in 1952 as part ...
290. The Nature of the Historical Record [Journals] [SIS Review]
... XVIIIth and XIXth Dynasties are among the best documented, but the closing stages of both dynasties are obscure. It seems clear that the XIXth Dynasty deliberately suppressed all mention of Akhnaton and his immediate successors. Thus, in the Abydos and Saqqara king lists, Horemheb appears directly after Amenhotep III; the intervening pharaohs are completely ignored. Again, Ramesses III pictures his father Setnakht, the founder of the XXth Dynasty, as rescuing Egypt from the rule of a foreign prince for whom there is no clear evidence in the records of the XIXth Dynasty, which is held to be its immediate predecessor. Under later dynasties, a wealth of private monuments and documents is not always matched by ...
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