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670 results found.
67 pages of results. 361. Letters [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... the west gate of the Ptah temple in Memphis which Herodotus visited in the 5th century BC, a century or two before the Ptolemies, I note that the Egypt Exploration Society's Memphis expedition have been cleaning the area just outside the pylon (EES Report for the Year 1992/3 , p. 5) and have uncovered further inscriptions of Ramesses III, in addition to those already known of Ramesses II and III. It may be of interest that the name Rhampsinitis (spelt rho, alpha, mu, psi, etc) is a Greek version of Egyptian Ramesses plus S3 Nt (= son of Neith) which was a Late Period royal title (ref. A. ...
362. Up-date of year counts in the time of the Divided Monarchy (Israel and Judah) [Journals] [SIS Review]
... John Bimson's Glasgow chronology is set out on p. 24 of SISR V:1 and shows a remarkably short span of years for Dyn. XX but he unfortunately does not appear to attempt to justify this. If such re-dating should still be found impossible, the principally favoured alternative has to be David Rohl's New Chronology' (Shishak = Ramesses II, if not Ramesses III). This would entail abandoning almost all of the currently claimed synchronisms between Palestine and Egypt but it has the merit of bringing Dyn. XX into the XY' era, though lifting Ramesses II out of it. Actually, I find the independent evidence that Ramesses II belongs within the XY' era ...
363. The Identification of the Biblical "Queen of Sheba" with Hatshepsut, "Queen of Egypt and Ethiopia"" [Journals] [Kronos]
... written literary evidence of King Solomon's Mines'."(60) And Rothenberg quotes I Chron. 18:8 as proof that the copper used for the Temple was brought to King David from an entirely different region. "The Egyptian Kings represented by inscriptions in the Timna Temple are: Sethos I (1318-1304 B.C .) Ramses II (1304-1237 B.C .) Merneptah (1236-1223 B.C .) Sethos II (1216-1210 B.C .) Queen Twoseret (1209-1200? B.C .) , all of the XIXth Dynasty. And: Ramses III (1198-1166 B.C .) Ramses IV (1166-1160 B.C .) and ...
364. Afterword [Books]
... , could the catastrophes that are described in the ancient sources be correlated between Egyptian and Biblical sources, I discovered a systematical chronological error in ancient history. To my amazement, I discovered that descriptions of' ancient history were confused; acccepted dates meant nothing. For the past twenty-four years scholars have debated whether the beginning of the reign of Ramses the Second should be moved from -1289 to -1303. As I show in Ramses II and his Time, this debate has absolutely no meaning if Ramses belongs at the end of the seventh or at the beginning of the sixth century before the present era instead of centuries earlier. Another volume deals with the Dark Age of Greece. In ...
365. Bookshelf [Journals] [SIS Review]
... LBA occupation terminated c. 1300 BC, this is the date chosen for Joshua's attack. There are, however, no traces of violent (or any other kind of) destruction at this time, and no LBA fortifications to fit the walled city of the biblical story. Since Kenyon accepts a date for the Exodus in the reign of Ramesses II (conventionally 13th century), she has to acknowledge that "one cannot fit in an Exodus during the reign of Ramesses II, say c. 1250 BC .. . with a crossing of the Jordan and a destruction of Jericho .. . somewhere about the beginning of the thirteenth century" (p . 42). ...
... a deity, was justified in using such a title as the Great Ram, the living Hermes. I do not assert that he was the only bearer of the title, for there were other Ramas, and in ascertaining the past the claim offers a clue to problems as yet unresolved. For example, we have the dynasty of the Ramses, greatest of Egypt's monarchs, who defeated and succeeded the Hyksos' sequence of rulers. Leaving aside modern interpreters of the monuments, who, I am bound to admit, often offer shaky evidence, the outstanding historian of Egypt, indeed, the only acceptable recorder, himself a priest of high position who had access to sacred documents ...
367. Confessions Of A Philosophical Velikovskian [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... with the `Twenty-Sixth' a dynasty known to us, significantly enough, from Greek and Israelite sources, but scarcely if at all from traces within Egypt itself.48 A puzzle about the succession of Babylonian kings becomes perfectly clear when one takes into account the `Hittite sources.49 The `peoples of the sea, ' who fought with Ramses III of the Twentieth Dynasty, are not `palaeo-Greeks' of the twelfth century, of whom nothing else is known, but ordinary Greeks of the fourth century. (C . T. Selman remarked how alike the two peoples were, but did not guess the truths50) The Egyptian and Greek material, though usually supposed to refer ...
368. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... 35,000 years. Polished stone axes, however, do not appear frequently in the archaeological record until after the rise of farming communities. An interesting corollary of this study was that the people frequently used organic materials such as split bamboo for many of their tasks, which could explain the simplicity of stone tools in East Asian sites. Ramesses was here National Geographic August 1992. geographica The little known Sohag area of Egypt, 300 miles south of Cairo, has yielded part of a temple with statues of Ramesses II and one of his wives. A seated limestone statue of the pharaoh has the usual megalomaniac proportions, being nearly 50 feet long. New Exodus site The Times ...
369. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... discovered the unplundered tomb of Aper-el, prime minister to Akhenaten. The name suggests that Aper-el was a foreigner, el' originating in the Near East and Aper' possibly being derived from apiru' the Egyptian name for their nomad neighbours. Proponents of theories of an 18th Dynasty Joseph will no doubt be watching results from the excavation closely. Rameses Found?source: Sunday Times 21.5 .89 The Egyptian government's department of antiquities, led by Mohammed Maksoud, has excavated the site of Kantarah Shark in Sinai and have discovered the remains of massive walled fortifications built upon the foundations of an earlier Hyksos city. It is still not clear which city this represents: Ahmed Osman ...
370. Chapter 8 Mesopotamia and Ghost Empires [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... after his conquest of Babylon."6 First Stiebing claims Velikovsky identified Shalmaneser III with both Asshur-uballit of Assyria and Burnaburiash of Babylon, but then he offers that Shalmaneser only used the name of Burnaburiash in Babylon. Nowhere in his book Ages in Chaos does Velikovsky even discuss Asshur-uballit, nor in his book Peoples of the Sea. Only in Ramses II and His Time does Velikovsky discuss Asshur-uballit twice: "There he [Mursilis] met and fought Assuruballit, king of Assyria"7 and ". . . Assuruballit, a younger brother of Assurbanipal . . . proclaimed himself king of Assyria. According to the Chronicles, Assur-uballit in Harran took his seat on the throne as king ...
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