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Search results for: ram*ses in all categories
670 results found.
67 pages of results. 611. The Great Kingship of the Medes [Journals] [Velikovskian]
... immense" building activity, (51) was, we hold identical to the Hittite/Lydian Great King Muwatallis, the greatest monarch of his time. We know that Muwatallis made the Hittite Land dominant in the Ancient East, and that in his final years he smashed the pretensions of Egypt in Syria when his army bested the might of Ramses II at the Battle of Kadesh. At the time of this momentous engagement, Muwatallis had already associated his son Urhi-Teshub with him on the throne. But Urhi-Teshub never wore the crown; he was deposed, probably very shortly after Muwatallis' death, by his uncle Hattusilis, who banished him first to Nuhasse in northern Syria, and ...
612. THE VELIKOVSKY AFFAIR [Journals] [Aeon]
... . Leroy Ellenberger for sharing his detailed knowledge and informed insight into the Velikovsky Affair. References 1. This article originally appeared in La Recherche 205 (December, 1988), pp. 1448-1455. It is reprinted here with the permission of the author. 2. Immanuel Velikovsky, Peoples of the Sea (New York, 1977); Ramses II and his Time (New York, 1978). 3. John Q. Stewart, Harper's, June 1951, pp. 57-63. 4. Paul C. Craig, Harper's, August 1951, p. 14. 5. Immanuel Velikovsky, Ages in Chaos (New York, 1952). 6. IDEM, Earth ...
613. Focus [Journals] [SIS Review]
... (four issues): $12; overseas $14 by surface or $18 by air; available to British members through Roy MacKinnon (address with Society information). Papers in Vol. III No. 3 are small in number but large in bulk: VELIKOVSKY: "From the End of the Eighteenth Dynasty to the Time of Ramses II', closing the gap; CARDONA: " 'Let There Be Light'" with more on Saturn as primary and as nova; GREENBERG & SIZEMORE: "Jerusalem - city of Venus", with massed evidence for the site of the city as an ancient astral cult centre; Forum on Egyptological problems in Peoples of the ...
614. Hereditary Monarchy in Assyria and the Assyrian Kinglist [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... in the sociological composition of ANE society. 31. CAD AII, 176, for discussion. 32. See Gelb, "Two Assyrian King Lists." JNES, 1954, 209-30. Those students of Egyptian chronology should not be ignorant of this interpretation of son (s3) for their reconstruction. We immediately recall the ubiquitous sons of Rameses of the 20th dynasty in this connection, and also the priestly dynasties of the T.I .P . 33. Landsberger, op. cit. n. 2, 42-44. 34. Oppenheim, op. cit. n. 4, 312, especially his n. 31. 35. CAD AI, 195-205. 36 ...
615. The Archaeology of Shiloh and Pottery Chronology [Journals] [SIS Review]
... especially town walls. The difference between central hill country and western lowlands is increasingly accepted for the Persian period (Stern 1984, p. 74), and so may have applied in earlier times also. At many sites Late Bronze II pottery develops into a similar style which is included in Iron I because it dates to the time of Ramesses III and later (i .e ., after 1200 BC, which is defined as the Iron I time period). This Iron I group was renamed LB III at the recent Archaeology and the Bible' exhibition at the British Museum. On the time chart at the entrance to the exhibition LB III was shown extending from 1200 ...
616. In Response to Mitcham's "Critique" [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... Egypt was not available to the writer at the time of publication of these volumes. The alternate proposal contained therein agrees with the consensus of opinion at Glasgow, i.e ., that his proposal for abbreviating the later chronology of Egypt is not acceptable and an alternate method must be sought. Basic to my proposal is the placement of Ramesses II and his Dynasty in the eighth century, in agreement with the Glasgow consensus. 7. Mitcham holds (1 ) that the Synchronistic Chronicle is in error in its correlations of Sealand and Kassite kings with a sequence of Assyrian kings, and (2 ) that the dynasties of the Sealand and Kassite peoples were contemporaneous and not in ...
617. Letters [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... more painful since he is one of the few not moving in the wrong direction and he seems prepared, unlike most, to throw the Bible into the melting pot along with Sothic dating and other questionable habits of thinking. 2. Steven Robinson's interesting article contains a footnote (no. 16) in connection with his presumption that Rhampsinitus was Ramesses III which reads: "Not that the resemblance of these two names counts for much. The chronology of Herodotus goes seriously awry after Rhampsinitus, after whom he places the famous Cheops of the 4th Dynasty." Many readers will be aware that it was approximately during the period of Rhampsinitus that Heinsohn considers the Great Pyramid was built. ...
618. Mitcham Replies [Journals] [Catastrophism & Ancient History]
... he has left the orthodox chronology for the later Mesopotamian dynasties unaltered, thus the Assyrian kings Tukulti-Ninurta, of whom there were two, are dated 1242-1206 and 890-884. Now even if it should be decided that it was the second who returned the letter of Urhi-Teshub, who as nephew of Hattusilis III therefore reigned contemporary with the early years of Ramses II, it would be impossible to accept that the letter, written to Tukulti-Ninurta's father, can be related into a chronological scheme whereby a Hittite king whose reign can be dated no later than c. 900 was the contemporary of an Egyptian king whose reign did not commence until 793. Thus the question of where to date Egypt's eighteenth ...
619. Site Stratification: is it a Sound Methodology? [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... The early dates now accepted are the mistaken product of a flawed methodology. References 1. J. E. Lasken: Towards A New Chronology of Ancient Egypt', Discussions in Egyptology 17 (1990), pp. 89-141. 2. Ibid: pp. 131-136. Velikovsky also raised serious questions concerning the iron/bronze dichotomy in Ramses II and His Time, pp. 221-237. 3. Ibid: pp. 131-132. 4. P. R. S. Moorey: Ur of the Chaldees' A Revised and Updated Edition of Sir Leonard Woolley's Excavations at Ur (Ithaca, 1982), p. 27. Hereafter referred to as Ur. 5. R ...
620. Velikovsky and Catastrophism: A Hidden Agenda? [Journals] [SIS Review]
... : Ages in Chaos. Volume 1, From the Exodus to King Akhnaton, New York & London, 1952 idem: Earth in Upheaval, New York & London, 1955 idem: Oedipus and Akhnaton: Myth and History, New York & London, 1960 idem: Peoples of the Sea, New York & London, 1977 idem: Ramses II and His Time, New York & London, 1978 idem: Mankind in Amnesia, New York & London, 1982 idem: Stargazers and Gravediggers: Memoirs to Worlds in Collision', New York, 1983 Clark Whelton: Velikovsky, Fundamentalism, and the Revised Chronology', paper delivered at the Seventh Annual CSIS Seminar, Haliburton ...
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