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Topic: 1362 BC


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  14th century BC - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1334 BC/1333 BC - Death of Smenkhkare, Pharaoh of Egypt and co-ruler with Akhenaton.
1334 BC/1333 BC - Death of Akhenaton, Pharaoh of Egypt.
1323 BC - Death of Pharaoh Tutankhamun of Egypt.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/14th_century_BC   (646 words)

  
 Akhenaten   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
He is thought to have been born to Amenhotep III and his Chief Queen Tiy in the year 26 of their reign (1379 BC or 1362 BC).
He reigned from 1367 BC to 1350 BC or from 1350 BC/1349 BC to 1334 BC/ 1333 BC during the Eighteenth Dynasty.
In year 7 of his reign (1361 BC or 1343 BC) the capital was moved from Thebes to Amarna, though construction of the city seems to have continued for two more years (till 1359 BC or 1341 BC).
bopedia.com /en/wikipedia/a/ak/akhenaten.html   (930 words)

  
 Biography of Akhenaten   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Meritaten - year 2 (1366 BC or 1348 BC).
Neferneferuaten Tasherit - year 6 (1362 BC or 1344 BC).
The new Pharaoh is believed to be a younger brother of Smenkhkare and a son of either Amenhotep III or Akhenaten.
biography-1.qardinalinfo.com /a/Akhenaten.html   (878 words)

  
 Royal Ontario Museum | Exhibitions & Galleries | World Culture Galleries | Galleries of Africa: Egypt   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
The centre of the gallery uses objects found in temples and tombs to chronologically trace landmark events from the Predynastic Period (4000 - 3100 BC), when the Nile was populated by small agricultural communities, to Egypt's invasion by a succession of foreign powers in the Late Period (1085 BC - AD 324).
Among the highlights are stone relief fragments (1379 - 1362 BC) from the New Kingdom.
The final section is devoted to an expedition or trade mission to the land of Punt, located to the south of Egypt.
www.rom.on.ca /exhibitions/wculture/wcegypt.php   (490 words)

  
 Galactic Encyclopedia: Kzinti
The Silurian Empire, around 4,956 to 4,053 BC was the first to unite the Kzinti, who have remained loosely united through a succession of empires since then, with interludes of chaos and warring states.
By 1362, the empire had broken into five warring fragments and lost 50% of its territories to revolts and T'zili aggression.
From 432 BC to around 113 AD, the empire was a sea of petty states, constantly at war.
www.maison-otaku.net /~rhea/GE/kzinti.htm   (2645 words)

  
 Ancient Egypt   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
In the 14th century BC the Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep IV undertook a religious reform by displacing all the traditional deities with the sun-god Aton.
A famous bust of Nefertiti, dating from c.1363-1343 BC and made of painted limestone, is now in the Staatliche Museen, Berlin.
1503 to 1480 B.C. In contrast to the warlike temper of her dynasty, she devoted herself to administration and the encouragement of commerce.
www.ahram.org /ancientegy.html   (777 words)

  
 Egypt Dismisses Briton's Nefertiti Mummy Claim
Her husband ruled from 1379 to 1362 BC.
Joanne Fletcher, a mummification specialist from England's University of York, announced Monday she thought one of three mummies found in a tomb in Luxor's Valley of the Kings may have been that of Nefertiti.
The tomb of Tutankhamen, a boy king who ruled Egypt in the 14th century BC, was discovered in 1922 in one of Egyptology's most famous finds.
www.rense.com /general38/nefer.htm   (331 words)

  
 Images and History of Queen Nefertiti   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
The wife of Pharaoh Akhenaten and perhaps a ruler in her own right after his death, Nefertiti was little more than a historical whisper when, in 1912, an exquisite limestone sculpture of her now famous face was unearthed at the royal retreat of Amarna.
It was more than 3,200 years old, dating from 1345 B.C. But from the moment it went on display at the Egyptian Museum in Berlin in 1924, the enigmatic bust with the swan like neck assumed a place as one of the world's most famous icons.
The couple's renegade practice of monotheism they worshipped the sun disc god over all others, and seem to have outlawed their subjects' polytheistic devotion threatened Egypt's priesthood and ensured they would have no shortage of powerful enemies.
www.homestead.com /wysinger/nefertiti.html   (672 words)

  
 WIST - A Collection of Quotations :: Authors   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Cato the Elder (234-149 BC) Roman politician and orator [Marcus Portius Cato]...
Chuang Tzu (369-286 BC) Chinese philosopher, co-founder of Taoism...
Horace (65-8 BC) Roman poet and satirist [Quintus Horacius Flaccus]...
www.wist.info /authors.html   (1879 words)

  
 Islam is "Repackaged Polytheism": 12 Similarities between Muhammad and Pharaoh Akhenaten. (Amenophis IV)
Like Akhenaten (1379 - 1362 BC), Muhammad chose one god, from among hundreds of pagan gods, to be his one monotheistic god.
Since the exodus of the Jews is dated at about 1450 BC, that means that Akhenaten lived about 70 years after the Pharaoh who experienced the 10 plagues of Moses.
Shortly before Pharaoh Akhenaten's death in 1362 BC the "forced to be monotheistic" priesthood, ruling class and common folk, desired to revert back to polytheism.
www.bible.ca /islam/islam-polytheism-pharaoh-akhenaton.htm   (2304 words)

  
 History
He ruled from 1279 to 1212 BC and is known for his prodigious buildings, rising temples, statues and other monuments throughout Egypt.
Among his major achievements was the signing of the first Peace Treaty to be recorded in history, concluded between Egypt and the Hitites.
The Ptolemies ruled Egypt until 30 BC and were succeeded by the Romans until 642 AD when the Arabs arrived.
www.presidency.gov.eg /html/history.html   (938 words)

  
 Pharos & Queens
In the 14th century BC this Egyptian pharaoh undertook a religious reform by displacing all the traditional deities with the sun-god Aton.
In 48 BC Caesar appeared in Egypt in pursuit of his rival, Pompey.
When Cleopatra heard that Caesar was in the palace in Alexandria, she had one of her attendants carry her to him, rolled up in a rug offered as a gift.
www.egyptreservation.com /Pharos.htm   (1484 words)

  
 1360s BC - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Centuries: 15th century BC - 14th century BC - 13th century BC
Decades: 1410s BC 1400s BC 1390s BC 1380s BC 1370s BC - 1360s BC - 1350s BC 1340s BC 1330s BC 1320s BC 1310s BC
This page was last modified 20:01, 5 July 2006.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/1360_BC   (154 words)

  
 History of Loofah
They ruled jointly until 1473 when she declared herself pharaoh.
Hatshepsut disappeared in 1458 B.C. when Thutmose III, wishing to reclaim the throne, led a revolt.
1380-1362 BC The queen-consort of the controversial Egyptian king AKHENATON of the 18th dynasty.
www.loofah.biz /luffasavannah/history.htm   (237 words)

  
 Akhenaton the Pharaoh
The Biblical Moses lived around the 14th-13th century BC and was expelled with his followers from Egypt possibly in the reign of Ramses II who ascended the throne some fifty-six years after the death of Akhenaten, who reputedly died at around the young age of thirty.
In the old Testament this kidnapped youth is identified as Joseph, and in another Arabic legend we have Ran, who through his interpretation of dreams gained power and may have imported the notion of a single god (his local god) into Egyptian consciousness.
(from the 13th Dynasty, Semitic races invaded Egypt and by 1663 BC they are the Hyksos or Desert Princes) Some hundreds of years later Akhenaton on his ascension to the throne of Egypt developed his beliefs in a one god and enforced worship of the single deity as revealed in the Sun disk Aton.
users.bigpond.net.au /bstone/akhenaton.htm   (2209 words)

  
 Untitled Document
But the king of Assyria, on retiring, placed guards at the river and the aqueducts to prevent the Tyrians from drawing water, and this they endured for five years, and drank from wells which they had dug.
In Phoenicia there is an important city called Tripolis, whose name is appropriate to its nature, for there are in it three cities, at a distance of a stade from one another, and the names by which these are called are the city of the Aradians, of the Sidonians and of the Tyrians.
Of the ancient walls and port traces remain, and of old there was a chain across the mouth of the port.
www.ancientcash.info /page-2/Tyrereferences.html   (2864 words)

  
 Talaria Enterprises museum store TEACH art history newsletter Celtic Art Roman Charioteer, Greek Chariot Vase, Dying ...
Created c200 BC and for that time and place, she was a marvel of construction with the introduction of a twisting ‘S’ curve within the female form.
The ‘Nike of Samothrace’ is also known as ‘Winged Victory.’ She was created c200 BC and found headless and fragmented into 118 pieces on the Greek Island of Samothrace.
Built on the Acropolis at Athens c421–405 BC is the Erechtheum.
www.talariaenterprises.com /teach/women/antiquity_women.html   (1703 words)

  
 History 1O   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
This wall relief is an example of the radical aesthetic break with the traditional "official" proportions authorized by the Pharaoh and his priests who controlled public art forms.
2500 BC, 138 cm H, slate, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
This monument, almost life-sized, represents a portrait likeness of the king and queen, but with bodies stylized to official proportions.
www.thomasmorearts.ca /1O/Art1/Art01Egypt1.htm   (352 words)

  
 www.careercentre.org Your Future is Working
You will still find BC Nursing Jobs, BC Doctor Employment, BC Medical employment of all sorts at Peercentral.com, as well as BC jobs in Law, Government, Sales, Marketing and more.
This website lists employment opportunities for Physicians, LPNs and other heath professionals in rural and urban areas of BC as well as links to other health service organization websites in BC.
This comprehensive BC based Web site offers industry profiles and job descriptions, information on training, and a job board to assist you in your job search in BC's tourism industry.
www.careercentre.org /Links/jsHealthnTourism.asp   (267 words)

  
 When did Monotheism start
The religion at that time worshiped God as a reflection of the pharaoh, who was the absolute ruler of the Egyptian empire.
Amenhotep, who ruled Egypt from 1379-1362 BC, tried to impose this version of monotheism during his tenure, but when he died, everything connected with him was banned and the people reverted to their old religious traditions.
Ahura means "Lord," and Mazda means "Wise," so Zoroastrians call God the "Wise Lord." No one knows exactly when Zarathushtra lived, but scholars say it could be anywhere from 1500 BC to 600 BC.
www.allabouthistory.org /when-did-monotheism-start-faq.htm   (261 words)

  
 World Captions: No Plans
House of Comedians, Delos, Greece, 125 BC Columns of Temple of Athena Polias, Priene, c.
Altar of Zeus, Pergamon, Turkey (Staatliche Museen, Berlin), c.166-156 BC (G: 175 BC).
Theater of Marcellus, Rome, 11 BC Pont du Gard, Nìmes, France, late 1st c.
www.brynmawr.edu /Acads/Cities/wld/wcaptsb.html   (2586 words)

  
 Bust - Nefertiti Bust with Color Details Art - eMuseumStore.com Art Reproductions
The German professor Borchardt found the original bust made of painted limestone in 1912 at Tel-El-Amarna (ancient Akhetaton) in what used to be the workshop of the sculptor Thutmes.
Nefertiti was the daughter of a high dignitary in the Pharaoh’s court and the wife of King Akhenaten who ruled from 1379 to 1362 BC.
She was an influential Queen but is principally remembered for her personal beauty.
www.emuseumstore.com /product/1642/4   (136 words)

  
 Museums With Egyptian Exhibits   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
Ptomely XII Auletes died in 51 BC leaving the power in the hands of his two oldest children: Cleopatra VII (18 years old) and Ptolemy XIII (10 years old).
In the springtime of 51 BC, Ptolemy Auletes died and left his kingdom in his will to his eighteen year old daughter, Cleopatra, and her younger brother Ptolemy XIII who was twelve at the time.
During his military service, Rameses I rose in rank, reaching the office of Vizier.
www.cdli.ca /CITE/egypt_famous.htm   (250 words)

  
 Over 4600 Images of Art and Architecture.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
1379-1362 BC Thebes: Tomb of Djeserkareseneb: Guest and servant girl
1425-1417 BC Thebes: Tomb of Menena: Hunting and fishing in the marshes
1425-1417 BC Thebes: Tomb of Menena: Portrait of an elegant lady
rubens.anu.edu.au /htdocs/surveys/charlotte/bymedium/00198.html   (60 words)

  
 WIST - A Collection of Quotations :: A
Know thyself as the pride of His creation, the link uniting divinity and matter; behold a part of God Himself within thee; remember thine own dignity nor dare descend to evil or meanness.
Say not unto thyself, Behold, truth breedeth hatred, and I will avoid it; dissimulation raiseth friends, and I will follow it.
The wise man doubteth often, and changeth his mind; the fool is obstinate, and doubteth not; he knoweth all things but his own ignorance.
www.wist.info /authors/a.html   (5467 words)

  
 Pondering the Cost of the Clash of Cultures
Apparently, the above notes are good enough reasons to ask the role of Pharaoh Akhenaton in the history of monotheism.
Some sources inform us that Amenhotep IV was the tenth or eleventh pharaoh of Dynasty XVIII (1379 BC to 1362 BC).
A note on another webpage (accessed on 12/30/2004) indicates that a dramatic revolution took place in Egypt with the accession of Amenhotep IV in the year 1379 BC.
www.voicefinfinne.org /English/Column/Kiya_Arkamani.htm   (2509 words)

  
 Over 4600 Images of Art and Architecture.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-23)
1379-1362 BC New Kingdom: Head of a colossal statue of Amenophis III
1391-1353 BC Thebes: Tomb of Ramose: Mai and his wife Urel from the family of Vizier Ramose
1417-1379 BC Luxor: colonnade of the great temple of Amon
rubens.anu.edu.au /htdocs/surveys/charlotte/bymedium/00427.html   (49 words)

  
 history.literate
6000 BC: hunting nomads descend from high grasslands worldwide 5550 BC: Black Sea suffers catastrophic salt flood from Mediterranean 5500 BC: farming villages in Mesopotamia; potters' wheels 5000 BC: Euphrates irrigation; Nile settlers harness the cycle of floods
4000 BC: plowing with oxen, irrigation by Nile earthworks; deforestation?
4000 BC: sheep favored for wool 3500 BC: Uruk's cities reach 10k population; cylinder seals; the wheel 3440 BC: Desertification of Sahara begins 3400 BC: first writing in Egypt 3300 BC: numerical notation tablets; Iceman mummified in Alps 3000 BC: sea level reaches present level, temps 2 degrees warmer than current
www.robotwisdom.com /netlit/history.html   (1306 words)

  
 World survey: lacunae
1500 BC Tell el Amarna housing, Tell el Amarna, Upper Egypt, c.
House of Comedians, Delos, Greece, 125 BC Sanctuary of Asclepius, Kos, c.
120 BC Arch of Trajan, Benevento, Italy, c.
www.brynmawr.edu /Acads/Cities/wld/wcapts0.html   (814 words)

  
 AR & Vegn Quotes
But the tears of the compassionate are sweeter than dew-drops, falling from roses on the bosom of spring.”
Amenohis IV aka Akhenaton (“servant of the one, true god”), the Heretic King (1380 – 1362 BC) (Egyptian pharaoh, pacifist, banned animal sacrifice and traditional Egyptian religion and instituted a religion based on compassion and monotheism)
Those whose minds are at peace and who are free from passions do not desire to live at the expense of others.”
animalliberationfront.com /Saints/Authors/Quotes/ARandVegnQuotes.htm   (10513 words)

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