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670 results found.
67 pages of results. 521. The Founding of Rome [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... (supposedly the 12th century) and the -700 or later Greek settlement. A Late Bronze house was obviously used by 7th century Greeks. Beset by the dogmas of Egyptian chronology scholars such as Blegen and Coldstream resorted to the excuse of an abandonment followed by contamination in a mixing of debris. In Egypt this was the time around the Pharaoh Ramses III, on whose temple of Medinet Habu relating to the year 8 is recorded, of the "Invasion of Sea Peoples," that "They were coming, while the flame was prepared before them, forward toward Egypt."(3 ) Fire "before them" is not metaphor but refers probably to the innumerable cases of ...
522. Society News [Journals] [SIS Review]
... required by most revisionists. Bob pinned up some scaled strips of paper, one strip per dynasty, to illustrate how the conventional period of about 400 years had been arrived at for the Third Intermediate Period. He stated that he wished to be able to reduce this to c. 120 years, following Rohl's equation of the biblical Shishak with Ramesses II. He came up with a new idea as to how this could be done after coming across a diagram of the Bubastis temple in which, inexplicably, a forecourt inscribed by Osorkon I had been added after a main festival court, inscribed by Osorkon II. Previous explanations that the two Osorkons had reinscribed an earlier Ramesside building had ...
523. Society News [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... for Manetho they were a people of obscure race'. When they occupied Egypt they worshipped Seth, who was identified with the Canaanite god Baal, and this, together with their pottery remains, suggests that they were Semitic. Their main base in the Delta was the city of Avaris, which was renamed Per-Ramesses in the 19th Dynasty by Ramesses II. Today it is known as Tell el-Daba/Qantir. Thus, its connections with the histories of three different peoples make the long-running excavation of the site by the Austrian Institute for Egyptology under Manfred Bietak of exceptional interest. The main areas of excavation are at Tell A, Area F and Ezbet Helmi. In Tell A the ...
524. A Reply to Stiebing [Journals] [Pensee]
... strongest appears to be the following: Egyptian scarabs or seals and other objects of the 18th Dynasty, specifically those of Thutmose III or Amenhotep III, are not found in the excavated strata in Israel dating from the time of the monarchy (from David to Jehoshaphat, the period covered in Ages in Chaos 1); neither have seals of Ramses II of the 19th Dynasty turned up in Palestine of the Divided Kingdom or in Syria of the Iron Age. The factual situation is the opposite of this statement by Dr. Stiebing. The scarabs found in Palestine and elsewhere are in the greatest number of cases disregarded by archaeologists as to their chronological value. The reader can obtain some ...
525. EARLY GLASSMAKING AND CHRONOLOGICAL PUZZLES [Journals] [Aeon]
... possibility of a major misplacement of the Amarna period in the conventional chronology. We also have to keep in mind that the reappearance of glass vessels in Egypt does not necessarily mean that local manufacture of glass vessels was resumed. Quite probably, "no coreformed glasses were made between the twelfth century and Ptolemaic times."(33) Between Ramses III and Alexander the Great, Egypt apparently did not produce vessels out of glass. (Remember that we have already noted an equally long cessation of portraits made from this material.) The 800 year gap is considered peculiarly puzzling because the mere technique of glass-forming- wherever the vessels came from- does not seem to undergo a recognisable ...
526. Early Historic Man -- Catastrophism and Calendars [Articles]
... ? We don't know, there is no indication. But I suggest that the changeover occurred when the sub-Atlantic climate came into effect, which means around 750 BC. Generally with the Sothic computation of Egyptian chronology, it is accepted that the New Kingdom, comprising the XVIIIth, XIXth and XXth Dynasties, still included the eight first years of Ramses III, finished about 1200 BC, and that at 1200 BC began the Iron Age. If you take the Climatology, the Iron Age begins only in 750 BC, and even many Egyptologists, Flinders Petrie, Lucas and others write very clearly in their books that the Iron Age in Egypt began in 750 BC, but the official ...
527. Joseph and Imhotep [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... the Great's conquest in 332 B.C . In spite of all defects this division into dynasties has taken so firm a root in the literature of Egyptology that there is but little chance of its ever being abandoned." Another foundation of the Egyptian chronology is the so-called TURIN CANON OF KINGS, a hieratic papyrus written about the reign of Ramesses II which was in fragments when acquired by the Turin Museum. Sir Alan Gardiner gives this description and evaluation. "The chronicle started, like that of Manetho, with the gods and demi-gods, to whom reigns of fabulous length are attributed. It agrees with Manetho and the classical authors in making Menes the founder of the Egyptian monarchy ...
... and took all the people and drove them forth, dispersing them all over the world."4 This is a most interesting folklore memory of its type, for it gives a sidelight on the period to that of the Hebrew or Mosaic standpoint. The student of Egyptian history will find no difficulty in recognizing the Pharaoh in question as the Ramses monarch called Sesostris by Herodotus and Sethosis by Diodomus, the great Ramses' monarch who, there is reason to believe, was subsequently deified as Osiis, Lord of the Underworld. This same Sesostris, according to the two Greek historians, erected hilltop towns and villages and transferred his subjects to them from the valleys, presumably because he ...
529. Reflections [Journals] [SIS Review]
... . Eileen, our super Cruise Manageress - mothering and managing us rowdy lot with such finesse and ease. Eddie Schorr - never seen without his drinking bottle hanging from his neck (except, I think, at mealtimes). "Hi again Eddie!" With wild gesticulation, and standing on a large rock beside the fallen colossus of Ramesses II at the Ramesseum, David Roth's recitation of Shelley's poem Osymandias. Loved it!! Peter James, having secreted Eileen's "attention please" bell from her table one evening, ringing it, and impersonating her voice so well we were surprised to find it wasn't her. Mostafa's beckoning whistle, and his call to all of us ...
530. Further Notes on Abi Milki and Pygmalion [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... lower the rule of Jehu as far below 841 as possible. Revised Table Israel Judah Egypt Omri 879-869 Tibni 879-874 Thutmosis IV 876-868 Ahab 868-848 Amunhotep III 868-832 Ahaziah 847-846 Jehoram 845-834 Akhnaton 845-828 Jehu 833-806 Athaliah 833-828 Smenkare 830-828 Jehoahaz 819-803 Joash 827-787 Tutankhamun 827-819 Joash 805-790 Amaziah 802-774 Ay ? Jeroboam II 789-748 Azariah 786-735 Horemhab ? Zechariah 748 Pekah 748-729 Ramses I 805-804 Shallum 747 Jotham 747-732 Seti I 804-794 Menahem 747-738 Ahaz 735-717 Ramses II 803-737 Pekahiah 737-736 Merenptah 737-728 Hoshea 729-721 Seti II; Amenmesse; Siptah and Twosret Phillip Clapham References 1. i.e . Shalmaiati; Ages in Chaos, p. 318. 2. Mitcham, C&AH, vol. II part 1, ...
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