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Scarab of Sobekhotep III giving the name of his father, god's father Mentuhotep. [1] The family of the king is known from several sources. A monument from Sehel Island shows Sobekhotep with his father Mentuhotep, his mother was king's mother Iuhetibu (Yauheyebu), his brothers Seneb and Khakau, and a half-sister called Reniseneb. Reniseneb was a ...
The translation of the lion-hunt story in the first ten years of Amenhotep's reign is: (following introduction): Amenhotep's name and Tiye's name; List of the lions brought in His Majesty by his own shooting, beginning with year 1-(="renpet") up to year X. Lions fierce 102 (!) [3]
Scarab is a hefty, egotistically brilliant and occasionally comical man who yearns for the secret to eternal life and world domination. His right eye has been modified with a monocle that has a low-powered scanner that can detect individuals with bionics, even when they are disguised, and a destructive, high-powered beam.
Khahotepre Sobekhotep may have had four regnal years. Only a few objects attest to his reign. There exists a scarab seal from Abydos [3] and a kneeling statuette of the king, possibly from Kerma. At Abydos, a fragmentary funerary stela dedicated to the god Wepwawet mentions [Kha]hotepre. [4] [5] The stela has also been assigned to Merhotepre Ini.
Yaqub-Har is attested by no less than 27 scarab seals. Three are from Canaan , four from Egypt, one from Nubia and the remaining 19 are of unknown provenance. [ 2 ] The wide geographic repartition of these scarabs indicate the existence of trade relations among the Nile Delta , Canaan, and Nubia during the Second Intermediate Period.
Gamezebo's Total Domination: Nuclear Strategy strategy guide and walkthrough will provide you with a quick start guide, tips and tricks, hints, and cheats to help you build an impenetrable base.
No matter if you decorate immediately after Halloween or you wait until post-Thanksgiving, Christmas trees are a staple of the winter season. From balsam firs to pines and spruces to cedars, there ...
For political reasons, Gilukhipa was sent to Egypt to join Amenhotep III in marriage. The Egyptian pharaoh made a special issue of commemorative scarabs on the occasion of his marriage to Gilukhipa in his 10th regnal year (ca.1378–1376 BCE), where he recorded that the princess was escorted by 317 ladies-in-waiting, women from the Mitanni king's royal palace. [2]