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670 results found.
67 pages of results. 551. Recent Developments In Near Eastern Archaeology [Journals] [SIS Review]
... read the damaged ring containing the name Israel (pp. 24-5). At that time he thought the inscription probably dated to the early-mid 18th Dynasty on the basis of the spellings. In the middle of p. 25 is his new proposed restoration of the hieroglyphic name. On p. 26 he suggests that the inscription probably dates to Ramesses II, as the group of place names is also found in the time of his son Merneptah but the spelling is of an older period than that on Merneptah's Israel stela and Ramesses is known to have copied old spellings from 18th Dynasty lists. Obviously there are uncertainties here but we have a strong suggestion that the name Israel went back ...
552. The el-Amarna Letters (Concluded) (Ages in Chaos) [Velikovsky]
... ancient history as solved until we have covered the full distance to the point where the histories of the peoples of the ancient East no longer present a problem of synchronization. We have before us the eighth and the following centuries, according to Israelite history. Where, then, shall we find room for the so-called Nineteenth Dynasty, that of Ramses II and other famous kings? And what about the Hittite king with whom Ramses II signed a treaty? And where is there room for the Twentieth and Twenty-first Dynasties, the Libyan and Ethiopian dominion in Egypt, and all the others up to and including the Thirtieth Dynasty, that which expired shortly before Alexander reached Egypt? The identifications ...
553. Letters [Journals] [SIS Review]
... built some seventy years after the sack of Jerusalem. Rohl concentrates on Labayu' and the habiru'. There is one further point. Rohl in his examination of Royal Architect Khnemibre's genealogy inscribed in the Wadi Hammamet, counts back through 22 twenty year generations from year 26 of Darius I (446BC). He arrives at the conclusion that Ramesses II began his reign in 936BC and was the Pharaoh Shishak' who sacked Jerusalem. Interestingly, if we take Velikovsky's Revised Chronology' and work back 440 years from 496BC we get to the reign of Thutmose III, who Velikovsky designated Pharaoh Shishak' fifty years ago. James' provisional alternative scheme finds Ramesses III of the 20th Dynasty ...
554. The Secret of Baalbek (Concluded) [Journals] [Kronos]
... : "Dunip (Tunip) of the el-Amarna letters and other ancient sources was Dan. It was also Kadesh of Seti's conquest. Finally, the place is known as Yenoam ( 'Yahwe speaks') which refers to the oracle." Tunip : As Velikovsky noted in "From the End of the Eighteenth Dynasty to the Time of Ramses II" (KRONOS III:3 , p. 32) certain scholars(e .g ., Gauthier) have identified Tunip with Baalbek, though others (e .g ., Astour) have disputed the link. Thutmose III recorded the capture of Tunip in the 29th year of his reign; an inscription recounts the Egyptian ...
555. On testing The Polar configuration [Journals] [Aeon]
... " One naturally wonders if this unique merging of crescent and band might occur also in the Egyptian symbolism of the Aten, the sun god's enclosure. We do not have to look far for an answer. In numerous representations of the Aten, a crescent forms exactly half of the band, as in our example below from the tomb of Ramesses VI (Fig. 7). Figure 7 A popular Egyptian figure of the crescent was the divinity Ah or Aah, whose special hieroglyph has caused one Egyptologist after another to identify him with our Moon. The root ah, however, means "to embrace," a concept devoid of meaning in connection with our Moon, but ...
556. Star Names: Their Lore and Meaning [Books]
... was known as the symbol of Khons, or Khonsu, the first southern star-god; and of other similar temples later. At least two of the great structures at Karnak, of 2100 and 1700 B.C , respectively, pointed to its setting; as did another at Naga, and the temple of Khons at Thebes, built by Rameses III about 1300 B.C . afterwards restored and enlarged under the Ptolemies. It thus probably was the prominent object in the religion of Southern Egypt, where it represented the god of the waters. Some of the Rabbis have asserted, and Delitzsch in modern times that this star, and not Orion, was the H-asil of the ...
557. The Celestial Ship of North Vol II [Books]
... be seen who are described as "Those who have insulted Ra on earth, those who have cursed that which is in the egg; . . . those who have uttered blasphemies against Khut; ' who was the Sun of the Resurrection, and the future life."2 According to instructions found on a MSS of the time of Rameses II, leprosy was looked upon with profound disquiet some six thousand years ago. There is a collection of directions for curing this disease in a papyrus of the time of the Fifth Pharaoh of the First Dynasty. These were found in an ancient writing case under the feet of a statue of SutAnubis, a first Hermes, the Divine ...
558. The Celestial Ship of North Vol. I [Books]
... departure and developments were made out of the oldest of all materials, originally mythical in Egypt, but converted into the historical by the Jews. Celsus says, "The Jews were a tribe of Egyptians who revolted from the established religion." Their Jehovah can be traced back to the Great Mother. The Eighteenth Dynasty overcame the Sut-Typhonians. Ramese II was a follower of the Typhonian religion, and must, therefore, have befriended the Jews. His wife also adhered to this early religion of the Mother and Son. The persecution of the Jews was due to their religion and to the fact that they placed the male element in superiority- the Father and Son above the Mother ...
559. Velikovsky: A Personal Chronological Perspective of His Final Years [Journals] [Aeon]
... person, had shown him to be an inveterate raconteur, usually giving me a lesson in his historical reconstruction of ancient history, especially after I'd made some blunder about the role of an Assyrian or Babylonian king. The problem afterward was always one of not remembering the details of what he had related, and constantly wishing that he would publish Ramses II and Peoples of the Sea, not to mention the unpublished segment of Worlds in Collision treating Saturn. At this point it had been some 15 years since his previous book, and it was difficult enough for an historian to defend Velikovsky's unpublished views on the reconstruction of ancient history, let alone a non-historian who is nevertheless intrigued by ...
560. Did Thutmose III Despoil the Temple in Jerusalem? [Journals] [SIS Review]
... & 121; decoration with lotus flowers no. 35. The crater, no. 73 on plate 33b (plate VIII of A in C) is so outstanding that Wreszinsky added a special, most detailed, description of it (plate 25c of the Atlas) stressing its marvellous design and workmanship in comparison with a crater brought home by Ramesses II from one of his Syrian campaigns - a vessel of similar character but much inferior in design and execution. 5. Velikovsky identifies Shoshenk I with "Pharaoh So to whom Hoshea, the last king of the northern realm, sent tribute (II Kings 17:4 )" : A In C, iv: "Sosenk ( ...
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