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Topic: Ramses VII


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In the News (Fri 25 Dec 09)

  
  Dynasty 20 - Setnakht, Ramesses III - XI
Ramses VII - Usermaatresetepenre - 1136-1129 B.C. Ramesses VII is probably the son of Ramesses VI and was the sixth king of the Twentieth Dynasty.
Ramses Vlll - Usermaatreakhenamun - 1129-1126 B.C. Ramesses VIII was the seventh king of the Twentieth Dynasty and was probably Ramesses III's son.
Ramses IX - Neferkaresetepenre - 1126-1108 B.C. Ramesses IX was the eighth king of the Twentieth Dynasty.
www.crystalinks.com /dynasty20.html   (4798 words)

  
 Living in Truth by Charles N.Pope - Chapter 36:"Neither Before Nor After"(An Empire in Transition)
The disgrace of Meremptah was sufficient for Ramses-the-Great to appoint a new successor.
As detailed in the previous chapters, Osorkon believed that the natural line of Ramses II as Joshua-Salitis was not fated to go on, but should be supplanted by a true collateral line, and that his son Shabaka was the best qualified to seize the throne in the role of Jacob.
Ramses III was only about 11 years old at his coronation, therefore if the Biblical accounting is correct, he would have acquired his third kingship (Nubia) in Year 14 of his reign as pharaoh of Egypt.
www.domainofman.com /book/chap-36.html   (5139 words)

  
 Aegyptica Antica
c.1184-1153 BC Ramses III is generally regarded as being the last of the great Pharaohs, reigning for 31 years.
All this evidences is that Egypt was plagued by military assaults upon it by this period.
Ramses usurped and was interred in the tomb of his predecessor (KV9).
mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk /aegypticaantica/chronology/dynasty20.htm   (375 words)

  
 Living in Truth by Charles N.Pope - Chapter 40:"I Will Wipe Jerusalem as a Dish"(The Destruction of Thebes)
The mummies of Ramses V (Ramses-nakht/Esarhaddon) and Ramses VI (Siamun/Nebuchadrezzar) were discovered in the other major cache of KV 35 (tomb of Amenhotep II) in the Valley of the Kings.
In Year 16 of Ramses IX (Taharqa) an investigation of tomb robberies that had occurred during the anarchy of the past eight years concluded with the capital punishment of 17 individuals (N. Grimal, A History of Ancient Egypt, p 290).
Ramses III died in his Year 33, that is, about 19 more years after the attack dated to his Year 14.
www.domainofman.com /book/chap-40.html   (7338 words)

  
 ANNE RICE VILÁGÁNAK KRONOLÓGIÁJA   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Ramses arranges his own death, leaves the throne of Egypt to Meneptah and sets out to roam the world.
Ramses goes to his tomb to sleep a timeless sleep.
Ramses discovers the mummified corpse of Cleopatra VII in an Egyptian museum and wakes her with the elixir.
sslx.orl.szote.u-szeged.hu /timelines/kronengl.htm   (3506 words)

  
 Facts and Features
Ramses IV was already in his forties when became pharao and although he wanted to live up to his predeccessors Ramses II and the III, he was not able to do so.
When Ramses V died after a brief reign of 6 years he was succeeded by Ramses VI, the son of Pe?n-ta-weret, and the grandson of Ramses III.
Because of the fact that his father was put to death by Ramses IV for his part in the conspiracy of the murder he showed his gratitude by encountering the monuments of his predeccessorwith great hostility.
home.zonnet.nl /senmut/manual.htm   (6961 words)

  
 Egypt: The Valley of the Kings - Travel Africa Magazine
Ramses VI (1156-1148 BC) No. 9 The discovery of this tomb caused excitement, as reliefs on the corridor walls, from unknown and long-lost Books, shed light on beliefs of reincarnation more usually associated with India.
Ramses III (1198-1166 BC) No. 11 The entrance corridor, three passageways and ten side chambers (which contained objects the dead pharaoh would need) are impressive.
Ramses I (1320-1318 BC) No. 16 A very brief reign deprived this pharaoh (founder of the 19th Dynasty) of a large resting place.
www.travelafricamag.com /content/view/434/56   (1864 words)

  
 Postscript To Temporal Fugues
The remains of tomb VII incorporate a limestone lintel taken from an even earlier building which clearly names Akheperre Psusennes I. This single fact is sufficient to demolish Rohl's entire reconstruction.
Since tomb II is the tomb adjacent to that of Osorkon II, and the date of construction of this casement wall is not precisely known, Rohl triumphantly concludes that the lintel in question does not disprove his chronology, and accuses Brissaud of misrepresenting the data.
The remains of tomb VII are actually separated vertically from the wall of tomb II by a layer of fill, but they directly underlie tomb I.
members.aol.com /IanWade/Waste/Bennett3.html   (3869 words)

  
 Egyptian Holiday: Valley of the Kings
As the East Valley has most of the tombs of the New Kingdom Kings, it generally attracts the most interest.The first tomb to be discovered was that of Ramses VII and the last was that of Tutankhamun "the boy king", on the 4th of November 1922.
Each tomb has been numbered (such as the examples pictured below) from Tomb no 1 Ramses VII to the tomb of Tutankhamun Tomb no 62 and although the "boy King's" tomb is the smallest in the valley it's discovery has generated great interest.
Tutankhamun's tomb was discovered by Howard Carter in 1922.Tutankhamun's tomb was the last to be discovered because it lay beneath the rubbble generated by the excavation of Ramses VI tomb, the 9th tomb to be discovered.
www.egyptianholiday.net /king.htm   (511 words)

  
 EGYPTIAN MUSEUM
Years later, when Egyptologist were invited to look at the new acquisitions in Atlanta, the directors of the Carlos museum were more interested in the coffins that came with the other three Rassul brother mummies, as they are decorated with rare specimens of funerary art from the 21st and 25th dynasties.
Ramses, lest anyone forget, was one of the kings who decorated Karnak, who opened the great turquoise mines of the Sinai, and who grandfathered Ramses II, the egoist behind the construction of Abu Simbel.
While they want the mummy to be Ramses, something that would surely draw paying visitors, they do not want him to definitely be Ramses, for this would mean they would be honour bound to give him back to the Egyptians.
www.egyptianmuseum.com /article16_torlife.html   (3523 words)

  
 Egypt   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Ramses II is the pharaoh who is the best candidate for the opponent of Moses.
Ramses II is the king most often identified with the unnamed adversary of Moses in the Book of Exodus.
Ramses had something on the order of 80 sons and an uncounted number of daughters during his nearly seven decades on the throne; by the time he died his heir Merneptah was on the later side of middle age but another probable son, Setnakht, was in his prime some twenty years after Ramses’ death.
ellone-loire.net /obsidian/egypt.html   (4448 words)

  
 EUROPEAN HISTORY 1150 - 1001 B.C.
Pharaoh Ramses (Rameses) VII (1135-1125 B.C.) (1137-1129 B.C.) dynasty 20 but effective control is with the High Priest of Amun Usermarenakhte son Ramsesnakhte (1166-1135).
Pharaoh Ramses (Rameses) IX (1115-1105 B.C.) (1128-1110 B.C.) dynasty 20 but effective control is with the High Priest of Amun Amunhotpe son Ramsesnakhte (1166-1135).
Reign Pharaoh Ramses (Rameses) XI (1095-1085 B.C.) (1106-1078 B.C.) dynasty 20 but effective control is with the High Priest of Amun Hrihor that is being challenged by the Viceroy Pinhasy of Nubia who controls the grain and army.
www3.telus.net /public/dgarneau/euro21.htm   (2112 words)

  
 Untitled Document
The most dramatic such salvage operation was for the two temples built by Ramses II, the Great Temple dedicated to himself and the Theban triad, and the Temple of Hathor dedicated to his favorite wife, Nefertari.
The first Pylon and first court were built by Ramses II, attatched to the rest of the complex on a slightly different axis.
The tomb was originally built for and by Queen Tausert, but Ramses III buried his father Setnakht in the tomb, changed some of the decorations, and then took over his father's original tomb.
montgomery.cas.muohio.edu /nimissa/pharonic.html   (2177 words)

  
 valley of the kings   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Unfortunately in a bad state of repair the tomb belongs t one of the last Ramses of the XX Dynasty, whose reign was distinguished by a long series of internal disorders and famine.
The great discovery was made on the 4th November 1922: almost at the base of the tomb of Ramses VI they came across a stone step that led to a second one and so forth, until the sixteenth step stopped in front of a sealed door, walled in with slaked lime.
The front part is the oldest and was commenced under Ramses V. Having been enlarged, the plan is now quite linear with a corridor that leads to an anteroom, a room with pillars, a second corridor and a second anteroom preceding the sarcophagus room.
www.a-1hotels.com /eg/history/valley_of_kings.htm   (3544 words)

  
 Egyptian History - New Kingdom
Ramses II fought in Battle of Kadesh in 1274 BC.
Systematic robbing of royal tombs especially in the reigns of Ramses IX and Ramses XI.
During the reign of Ramses XI the High Priest of Amun at Thebes became the effective ruler of Upper Egypt
www.aldokkan.com /egypt/new_kingdom.htm   (148 words)

  
 The 21st Dynasty of Egypt
Ramses XI He is credited with 28 years but his proper time frame is still uncertain but was after 458 and before 410 BC but if he was Inaros, Ramses XI/Inaros was executed in 454 BC.
Ramses VI/Nectanebo II With the defeat of the Sea Peoples campaign against Egypt in the days of Ramses III there were found signs in Palestine that Ramses III actually did occupy or enter into the defenseless regions of Palestine.
Ramses VII, whose [fore]father (predecessor) was `Nebmare-meryamun, Son of Re.
www.specialtyinterests.net /dyn21b.html   (17620 words)

  
 IV HISTORY   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The Medinet Habu texts on the battle of Ramses III against the Sea Peoples in his regnal year 8 claim that they were settled by the Egyptians in their strongholds in Southern Canaan as vassals.
Ramses II quickly redressed the balance by promoting his own sons to an unprecedented position in public life, then maintained that policy so successfully that it became standard practice throughout the later N.K. See also AEB 95.1027.
The first dates to the end of the reign of Ramses III or the reign of Ramses IV, when Egyptian military and administrative centers in Palestine were destroyed; these events are to be ascribed to the activities of the Sea Peoples.
www.leidenuniv.nl /nino/aeb95/aeb95_4.html   (10963 words)

  
 Ramses 7
His name was not Ramses, this was a name/title he took when assuming power.
He had his tomb built in the Valley of the Kings near Thebes, where also was buried.
He was succeeded by Ramses 8, although some chronicles state that Ramses 8 ruled before Ramses 7.
i-cias.com /e.o/ramses_7.htm   (108 words)

  
 JSA Chronology: JSA
He is humbled in battle with the Spectre, who kills Ramses for his crimes against the Hebrews.
Despite Nabu's warnings, the pharaoh's son, Ramses II, continues the persecution of the Hebrews.
Heiroglyphs in Metamorpho v.2 claimed that Ahk-ton was a Pharoah, which is not possible during the reign of the Ramses.
www.mykey3000.com /cosmicteams/jsa/_chron/jsachron.html   (2596 words)

  
 VI RELIGION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Ramses VI with Re-Harakhti and Osiris, Ramses VII with Ptah-Sokar-Osiris, and Ramses IX with Amun-Re-Harakhti and Meretseger.
With Ramses IX this exploration then ends - at least iconographically - and his design becomes the standard for the last two royal tombs of the dynasty.
The formulation of Ramses IX's scene was most significantly influenced by the contemporary theology of Amun-Re and, as the appearance of Meretseger indicates, more specifically Theban conceptions as well.
www.leidenuniv.nl /nino/aeb92/aeb92_6.html   (10897 words)

  
 II. Egyptian Sky Charts
This is shown best of all by the chart in the Tomb of Ramses V, in which the line held by the hawk-headed man divides the chart of the sky at the middle.
The existence of another meridian is clearly indicated by one of the charts of the Tomb of Ramses VII, in which Cepheus not only has outstretched arms but actually holds a meridian in them.
The chart of the Ramesseum, palace of Ramses II, is highly significant because in it the meridian held by the Swan has a secondary position and the entire chart is divided by the meridian held by Cepheus.
www.metrum.org /key/pyramids/second.htm   (3895 words)

  
 New Page 2
Tomb of Ramses IX Unfortunately in a bad state of repair the tomb belongs t one of the last Ramses of the XX Dynasty, whose reign was distinguished by a long series of internal disorders and famine.
The great discovery was made on the 4th November 1922: almost at the base of the tomb of Ramses VI they came across a stone step that led to a second one and so forth, until the sixteenth step stopped in front of a sealed door, walled in with slaked lime.
Tomb of Ramses VI Known in ancient times as the tomb of Memnon and also the “tomb of the metempsychosis” by the scholars of the archaeological expedition of the 1798, it was discovered by the Englishman James Burton.
www.luxor.gov.eg /english/kings_Valley/kings1.htm   (3455 words)

  
 Ägypten | Tal der Könige
KV 1 Ramses VII., König in der 20.
KV 4 Ramses XI., König in der 20.
KV 16 Ramses I., König in der 19.
www.aegypten-informationen.de /ausflugziele-aegypten/aegypten-tal-der-koenige.html   (937 words)

  
 [No title]
However, while such debates are intensely fought by the specialists involved, the underlying sequence of events has never been revised: the 18 th, 19th, 20th, 21st and 22nd dynasties reigned in succession, while the 23rd, 24th and early 25th dynasties overlapped the last part of the 22nd.
Since Ramses II reigned 66 years, Ramses III reigned 31 years, and Ramses XI reigned 28 years, making 125 years before any of the other 13 Ramessid kings are even considered, this would be a remarka ble feat.
However, for the period between the first Api s of Ramses II and that of Psamtek I (606 years in conventional chronology) the evidence only permits at most 23 Apis Bulls to be recognised \endash sufficient for 396 years.
abr.christiananswers.net /docs/temporalfugues.rtf   (9400 words)

  
 Egypt: KV1, the Tomb of Ramesses VII in the Valley of the Kings
KV1, the Tomb of Ramesses VII in the Valley of the Kings
The tomb of Rameses VII Usermaatre Setepenre Meryamun (20th Dynasty) is a small tomb of typical late Ramesside plan, and can be found at the entrance to the Valley of the Kings West Bank at Luxor (ancient Thebes), a little way back from the road.
Four faience cups bearing the king's name were found near the DB320 mummy cache that may suggest his is one of the unidentified bodies of that find.
touregypt.net /featurestories/kv1.htm   (1207 words)

  
 Ramses VIII - TheBestLinks.com - Ramesses VIII, Pharaoh, TheBestLinks.com:Find or fix a stub, TheBestLinks.com:Perfect ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Ramses VIII - TheBestLinks.com - Ramesses VIII, Pharaoh, TheBestLinks.com:Find or fix a stub, TheBestLinks.com:Perfect stub article,...
Ramesses VIII, Ramses VIII, Pharaoh, TheBestLinks.com:Find or fix a stub...
Ramses VIII Sutekhikhopshef (died 1129 BC), was the seventh Pharaoh of the Twentieth Dynasty of the New Kingdom of Ancient Egypt and is believed to have been a son of Rameses III.
www.thebestlinks.com /Ramesses_VIII.html   (172 words)

  
 Tombs of The New kingdom   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Tombs of are numbered in the order of discovery from Ramses VII tomb KV1, to KV63 discovered in 2005.
The tombs of Tutankhamen Kv62 and of Ramses II sons, are among the most splendid in the world, and the site has been the scene of much important archaeological work.
Most tombs had a 'well', this well originated as an actual barrier intended to stop flood waters entering the lower parts of the tombs, it later developed a 'magical' purpose as a symbolical shaft.
www.aldokkan.com /art/valley.htm   (328 words)

  
 Xlibris.Com Bookstore
V. When the girl rejects him, he takes a boat from Barcelona to Athens, where he lives near a whorehouse in Piraeus; he sells his blood to survive; he climbs Mount Olympus in a snow storm; he hitchhikes across Algeria just after the war of independence; he takes drugs in Tangiers.
Ramses and Isis travel to Egypt, where they run up against Egyptian bureaucracy and attendant horrors; a Copt cheats them and takes their money; their hopes to see the mummies of the pharaohs come to naught.
Ramses feels intense pains in his abdomen and goes to the emergency room, where his colon bursts; they operate, but after terrible suffering he dies, remembering the vision of light he saw in his youth.
www2.xlibris.com /RAMSESINNIGHTTOWN   (156 words)

  
 [No title]
It's terminal king Ramses XI was exiled to the southern oases by the Assyrians in 671 B.C. following Esarhaddon's conquest of the country, and he likely died in exile in 661 B.C., his 27
Some referred to the reigning king Ramses XI by name even though he lived in exile, others referenced the years expressly to the whm mswt, and still other, as is the case with the six quay inscriptions cited, simply omitted any king name.
Needless to say, if we are correct, the famed warrior king Ramses II cannot be the pharaoh of the Exodus, as is typically claimed, no matter how much scholars strive to lower the dates for that event.
www.kent.net /DisplacedDynasties/Eighth_Century_Chronology.html   (4767 words)

  
 History of Constellation and Star Names
(The latter group of sources considered the decans simply as thirds of zodiacal signs.) In both the cenotaph of Seti I and the tomb of Ramses IV the decans are represented on the body of the sky goddess Nut.
Only a few of the stars/asterisms used in the earlier decanal star clocks are the same as, or near to, those used in the Ramesside star clocks.
The evidence for these later star clocks comes exclusively from the ceilings of a number of Egyptian royal tombs of the Ramesside period (Ramses VI, Ramses VII, and Ramses IX of the 12th-century BCE).
members.optusnet.com.au /~gtosiris/page11-17.html   (2718 words)

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