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Search results for: ram*ses in all categories
670 results found.
67 pages of results. 591. Metallurgy and Chronology [Journals] [SIS Review]
... definitely fits the unique Sardinian lead pattern", providing the first hard evidence for the origin of the Shardana, a tribe associated with the Philistines in Egyptian inscriptions. A dagger from Beth Shan bearing the cartouche of Amenhotep III is made of Laurion copper, a result that might support Velikovsky's claim that the land of "Atika" from which Ramesses III imported ores (hmt, translated as copper by Breasted) was simply Attica in Greece [5 ]. Technological Horizons A major theme of Dayton's work is the definition of new "technological horizons" as a means of correlating cultural phases. In particular he finds the advanced metallurgy and glazing of early Mesopotamian periods, such as Jemdet ...
592. Forum [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... Shoshenk was found in the secret royal cache at Deir el-Bahari along with the great kings of the 18th to 20th Dynasties, re-interred there during the reign of Siamun. Not only is this an embarrassing problem for the orthodox chronology, which places Shoshenk I 80 years after Siamun but it is also significant that Djedptahefankh is called "King's Son of Ramesses and King's Son of the Lord of the Two Lands" [7 ] which must surely point to a close relationship to one of the last Ramessides of the 20th Dynasty. This is only satisfactorily catered for in a chronology which assumes Shoshenk I to have followed on soon after the Ramesside period and therefore at a time when Psusennes was ...
593. A New Interpretation of the Assyrian King List [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... Thus, as has been argued elsewhere, a more modified approach to Egyptian chronology than was proposed by Velikovsky in his Ages in Chaos series would be in agreement with this approach for Mesopotamian chronology, based upon the close cross-synchronizations attested between Assyria/Babylonia, the Hittites and Egypt in the period between the Amarna Age and the late reign of Ramses II. There is no need to call the conventional view of this era into question, aside from the actual dates involved. It is hoped this paper will provide a stimulus for others working on the problems of approaching a revised Mesopotamian chronology. Copyright (c ) Lester J. Mitcham 1985 APPENDIX Only days after this paper had been ...
594. Anchors Aweig [Journals] [Kronos]
... dates that are closer to the true historical age than samples obtained from material having a comparatively long-growing lifespan, eg. wood beams, planks, and derived charcoal. . ." (5 ) MacKie has pointed out elsewhere that such results as the date of 1060+ 80 BC., from reeds in the wall of the Ramesseum of Ramesses II "favour the conventional date for that Pharaoh", especially when the bristlecone pine calibration is applied. And referring to his earlier study with Burgstahler, he felt that the "obvious conclusion is that the vast majority of these dates support the conventional, not the revised shorter chronology".(6 ) This negative picture of C14 ...
595. Focus [Journals] [SIS Review]
... to the true historical age than samples obtained from material having a comparatively long-growing lifespan, e.g . wood beams, planks, and derived charcoal .. ." [8 ] MacKie has elsewhere pointed out that such results as the date of 1060 80 bc (TF 1209), from reeds in the wall of the Ramesseum of Ramesses II, "favour the conventional date for that Pharaoh", especially when the bristlecone pine calibration is applied. And referring to his earlier study with Burgstahler, he felt that the "obvious conclusion is that the vast majority of these dates support the conventional, not the revised shorter chronology" [9 ]. This negative picture of ...
596. The Saturn Thesis (Part 2) [Journals] [Aeon]
... the triskeleon, you see the symbolism of the three-fold goddess in the active expression or phase as a rotating celestial form. You also see the precise relationship to a large sphere and a much smaller, central sphere, inside of which appears a still smaller sphere, corresponding very nicely to the general scale suggested by our model. Son of Ramesses III shown holding the feathered wand, the insignia of authority. Feathered wands, sometimes referred to as fans, Egyptian insignias of high rank and authority. From symbols such as the triskeleon, it becomes very easy to see how the three-goddesses-in-one principle established itself in myth-making imagination. But is there any direct evidence that the three arms, ...
597. Letters [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... prow pointing east and the other pointing west. (I checked this in 1965). Obviously Khufu wanted his Ka to be able to follow the sundown whatever happened to the Earth. (A tradition of Earth inversions was given to Herodotus on his visit to Egypt by the priests). I happened to be flying over the monuments of Ramses II at Abu Simbel in Jan. 1943 and noted that they faced present east. As the king was depicted with his false beard I knew he was supposed to be dead and ready to meet the gods, therefore looking towards the sunset and following the sun down into the underworld. It would seem therefore that the sun rose in ...
598. Letters [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... description, in no way comparable to that of Psusennes I, its next-door neighbour." (A . Gardiner, Egypt of the Pharaohs [London 1961], p.324) An earlier Amenemope described as a scribe (ibid, p.274) we find writing to a certain Hori in the time of Merenptah, son of Ramesses II; and yet another Amenemope, also described as a scribe, helped to set up an Apis Stele in the 23rd year of Osorkon II. We also find the names of High Priests or petty kings called Smendes and Menkheperre in the time of the 22nd Dynasty; so these may provide some hope for an alternative chronology. We ...
599. Focus [Journals] [SIS Review]
... Solon (in terms of the accepted chronology); it is therefore assumed that Plato's 9,000 years are simply a tenfold exaggeration of the antiquity of this event. It has also been suggested that the account of an Atlantean invasion of the Mediterranean from the west may be a folk-memory of the "Sea Peoples" who were repelled by Ramesses III. Unfortunately, this event is dated to a period some 300 years after the destruction of Thera! During the last few years, extensive excavations of the Minoan colony on Thera have thrown doubt on Marinatos' ingenious theory. Detailed examination of the pottery styles and comparison with those found on mainland Crete have shown that Minoan civilisation survived ...
600. Physics, Astronomy and Chronology [Journals] [SIS Review]
... of the main anchors of Velikovsky's revised chronology. Many of the Society's members have, with understandable conviction, held the view that the revision put forward in Ages in Chaos is, with some fairly minor modifications, a sound reconstruction - in spite of the grave problems that have been brought to light over his later reconstructions, set out in Ramses II and His Time and Peoples of the Sea. As a result, the audience were eagerly waiting to find out on which side Dr Bimson would argue his case - for or against the identification which seemed so attractive to those who had followed Velikovsky's arguments in Ages in Chaos. Dr John Bimson: "The main evidence against Velikovsky's ...
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