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A period of domestic instability also afflicted his reign, as evidenced by the fact that, according to the Turin Papyrus Cat. 2044, the workmen of Deir el-Medina periodically stopped work on Ramesses V's KV9 tomb in this king's first regnal year, out of fear of "the enemy", presumably Libyan raiding parties, who had reached the town of Per-Nebyt and "burnt its people."
Ramesses V reigned for no more than 4 years, dying of smallpox in 1143 BC. The Turin Papyrus Cat. 2044 attests that during his reign the workmen of Set Maat were forced to periodically stop working on Ramesses' KV9 tomb out of "fear of the enemy", suggesting increasing instability in Egypt and an inability to defend the country from what are ...
75 years Yakbim Sekhaenre [h] Unknown Dynasty XV (Hyksos) Avaris: 1650 BC 1550 BC 100 years Salitis: Khamudi Abydos dynasty [i] Abydos: 1650 BC 1600 BC 50 years Unknown: Unknown Dynasty XVI: Thebes or Avaris: 1649 BC 1582 BC 67 years Anat-her: Unknown Dynasty XVII: Thebes: 1580 BC 1550 BC 30 years Rahotep: Kamose New Kingdom; Dynasty XVIII ...
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Ramesses V" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
Women who were dating their regnal years in royal protocols (alongside their co-rulers or independently) and thus were unquestionable Pharaohs were: [5] Cleopatra II (170-164, 163–127, 124-116 BC) initially Queen consort, then Queen regnant alongside her brother-husband Ptolemy VI , her younger brother (later husband) Ptolemy VIII , her son ...
Tomb KV9 in Egypt's Valley of the Kings was originally constructed by Pharaoh Ramesses V. He was interred here, but his uncle, Ramesses VI , later reused the tomb as his own. The architectural layout is typical of the 20th Dynasty – the Ramesside period – and is much simpler than that of Ramesses III 's tomb ( KV11 ).
Surrounding the date of his death and burial there is some controversy. The highest attested date for Ramessesnakht so far stems from year 2 of Ramesses IX. [14] In a text stemming from the reign of Ramesses XI, [15] [16] the High Priest of Amun, Amenhotep, refers to the burial of his father “in year ..... [year lost] of Pharaoh”. [17]
Albert Marchinsky, an illusionist whose stage name was "The Great Rameses"; Ramases, an early-1970s-era British musician; Ramsés VII, pseudonym used by Argentine singer-songwriter Tanguito (1945-1972)