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Topic: Shishaq


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In the News (Fri 18 Dec 09)

  
  Shishaq - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shishaq (Šîšaq שׁישׁק) is the biblical Hebrew form of the ancient Egyptian name of a pharaoh.
Shishaq had provided refuge to Jeroboam during the later years of Solomon's reign, and upon Solomon's death, Jeroboam became king of the breakaway tribes in the north, which became the kingdom of Israel.
According to 2 Chronicles, he was supported by "the Lubim, the Sukkiim, and the Ethiopians." Shishaq captured a number of cities of that kingdom, including Jerusalem, where he pillaged the temple and the royal palace, and carried away the shields of gold which Solomon had made.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Shishaq   (842 words)

  
 Shoshenq I   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
David Rohl, among others, has criticized this identification of Shishaq with Shoshenq I asserting it is based solely on a reading made by Jean-François Champollion of the text of Shoshenq’s Triumphal Relief near the Bubastite Portal of the temple of Karnak at Thebes.
Rohl's identification of Shishaq with Ramesses on philological grounds is weaker than with Shoshenq: for it to agree with Shoshenq, the "n" must be dropped—which automatically happens in Biblical Hebrew before a consonant—but for it to agree with s-y-s-w, a "q" must be added, which does not correspond to any Hebrew phonological rule.
A few scholars (such as Peter James), who accept Rohl's criticism of identifying Shishaq with Shoshenq I while not his other theories, have sought to identify Shishaq with one of the other Shoshenqs of this period with varying success.
shoshenq-i.iqnaut.net   (757 words)

  
 HISTORICAL OVERVIEW
Solomon (971-932) made it the capital of a province: his palaces are still to be seen on the mound.
But five years after his death, the pharaoh Shishaq drove north to gut and plunder the newly-established kingdom.
Shishaq's conquest of Megiddo is attested both in his inscriptions and in a stela that he erected at the site.
jbe.la.psu.edu /JST/MEGIDDO/megiddo98/historic.htm   (1282 words)

  
 Indiana Jones and Raiders of the Lost Ark
The headpiece is a golden disk that, when affixed to the top of a staff of a specific height, focuses a beam of sun light on a model of Tanis (an ancient Egyptian city) and thus reveals the Ark's location.
According to Ravenswood, the Pharaoh Shishaq stole the Ark from Jerusalem but then buried it in the desert sands of his capital city, Tanis, in the Well of Souls.
Indy flies to snowy, mountainous Nepal to speak with Marion Ravenswood, the professor's tough-minded and independent daughter, only to find that her father died and that she's reluctant to part with the headpiece.
www.kelboa.citymax.com /IndianaJones.html   (1109 words)

  
 The Joseph Smith Hypocephalus
[28] It may be more than coincidence that the name of the owner of the Joseph Smith Hypocephalus is Sheshonq (Shishaq).
Even more interesting, in 150 B.C. refugees from Jerusalem under the leadership of the priest Onias got permission from the Pharaoh Ptolemy Philometor to build a temple similar to the temple of Jerusalem at Leontopolis in the Nome (administrative district) of Heliopolis.
Shishaq or Sheshonq was the name of several Egyptian pharaohs of Dynasty XXI, the Libyan dynasty.
www.think-aboutit.com /Spiritual/joseph_smith_hypocephalus.htm   (5840 words)

  
 Raiders of the Lost Ark Images
The headpiece is a golden disk that, when affixed to the top of a staff of a specific height, focuses a beam of sunlight on to a model of Tanis (an ancient Egyptian city) and thus reveals the Ark's location.
According to Ravenwood, the Pharaoh Shishaq stole the Ark from Jerusalem but then buried it in the desert sands of his capital city, Tanis, in the Well of Souls.
Jones flies to snowy, mountainous Nepal to speak with Marion Ravenwood, the professor's tough-minded and independent daughter, only to find that her father died and that she's reluctant to part with the headpiece.
www.scrup.com /RaidersoftheLostArk.htm   (1130 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
The professor (you are in good company) wanted to go back to the time of the exodus, because of the mentioning of the towns Pithom and Ramses in the Bible.
I only wanted to go back to the Shishaq campaign (10th century B.C.E.).
And now I only am going back to the Qarqar battle (9th century B.C.E.), because it is far from proven that the Shishaq campaign is confirmed in the so-called Shishaq-stele of Sosenk I. But thank you for the mentioning of your assumptions.
ourworld.compuserve.nl /johnverbeek01/Forums/s64932.txt   (144 words)

  
 Heliopolis on Rim of Joseph Smith Hypocephalus - Fac #2
It was the pharoah Sheshonq III, who sacked the Temple of Jerusalem in Rehoboam’s time, son of Solomon, and carried off all the holy implements to use in the Temple of On (Heliopolis).
It maybe more than a coincidence that the name of the owner of the Joseph Smith Hypocephalus is Sheshonq (Shishaq).
In 150 B.C. refugees from Jerusalem under the leadership of the priest Onias got permission from Pharoah Ptolemy Philometor to build a temple similar to the Temple at Jerusalem at Leontopolis in the nome (administrative) district of Heliopolis.(Rhodes, The Joseph Smith Hypocephalus...
www2.ida.net /graphics/shirtail/heliopol.htm   (2976 words)

  
 Pharaoh - Avoo - Ask Us A Question - Pharaoh is a title used to refer to any ruler, usually male, of the Egyptian ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
The same is true of the use of the title Pharao for kings earlier than the eighteenth dynasty, which is quite in keeping with Egyptian usage at the time of the nineteenth dynasty.
The first king mentioned by name is Shishaq (probably Sheshonk I), the founder of the twenty-second dynasty and contemporary of Rehoboam and Jeroboam (1 Kings 11:40; 2 Books of Chronicles 12:2 sqq.).
Pharaoh is not prefixed to his name probably because the Hebrews had not yet become familiarized with the new style.
www.sanpablocaus.com /details/Pharaoh   (1693 words)

  
 Kolob, astronomy, Book of Abraham and Bible - KOLOB ORDER
Shishaq live forever>with that Mighty God in Heliopolis.
O Mighty God, Lord of heaven and earth, of the hereafter, and of his great waters, may the soul of the Osiris Shishaq be granted life.
Bottom: May this tomb never be desecrated, and may this soul and its lord never be desecrated in the hereafter.
koloborder.blog4ever.com /blog/lirarticle-18187-100535.html   (2041 words)

  
 raiders_of_the_lost_ark   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
It mentions Professor Ravenwood, Jones's former mentor, and the Staff of Ra.
Jones realizes that the Nazis have discovered the ancient Egyptian city of Tanis where the Pharaoh Shishaq placed the Ark of the Covenant after stealing it from Jerusalem.
Jones explains that the Ark was placed in the Well of Souls, but was lost after a sandstorm buried the city.
www.treyparker.com /wiki/?title=Raiders_of_the_Lost_Ark   (3799 words)

  
 Saybrook Orchestra - Education Initiative
Presumably, whoever possesses the Ark will acquire invincible power and the ability to contact God.
According to legend, the Pharaoh Shishaq removed the Ark from Jerusalem and placed it in the Well of Souls in the Egyptian city of Tanis.
However, Tanis was lost after a sandstorm buried the city.
www.yale.edu /syorchestra/education_packet.html   (1145 words)

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