Meri[..]re Akhtoy

Meri[.....]re Akhtoy was the founder of 10th dynasty. No more known about that king.

Ninth Dynasty of Ancient Egypt

Ninth Dynasty (2134–? B.C.E.)


List of the known pharaohs of the Ninth Dynasty

Khetys (date unknown)
Merikar (date unknown)
Kaneferré (date unknown)
Ity (date unknown)

Ity

Ity (date unknown) was the rule of the Ninth Dynasty, date of reign unknown His capital was at Herakleopolis, and he was the successor  of  Kh-neferr.  Itys  brief  reign  is  obscure,  and  his burial site is obscure.



Kaneferr

Kaneferr (ruled about 2040 B.C.E.) was the ruler of the 9th Dynasty His  name  reads  as  Beautiful  Is  the  Soul  of  Re. Kaneferrs rule is not well good, but the noted Ankhtify helped him, and he is named in a tomb at Moalla. His sepulture site is obscure.

Merikar

Hieroglyphic Name:
Merikar Hieroglyphic Name

Merikar (date unknown) was the ruler  of  the  Herakleopolitan Ninth Dynasty (2134 B.C.E.). He was belike the son of Khety III. The instructions for merikare, a didactic document attributed by scholars to  his  father,  was  saved  for  him  reportedly,  although the paternity has not been proven. The text concerns the events of Khety III's reign, a point in which the Inyotefs were beginning their assaults on the Herakleopolitans. Khety III sorrows many issues that took place, and he  speaks  of  the  ideals  and  the  feel  that  the  rulers and  themes  should  take  in  order  to  attain  spiritual due date.

Merikar  comes out  to  have  been  middle-aged  when Khety  bequeathed  him  the  Herakleopolitan  throne.  He faced growing tensions with Thebes in an uncertain political era of transfer, but he died before the armies of Montuhotep II raised  upon  his  capital.  ITY was  his replacement. Merikar's mortuary pyramid was made near Memphis City.


Related Posts:

Seventh Dynasty of Ancient Egypt
Eighth Dynasty of Ancient Egypt
Neferkuré
Qakar Iby
Wadjkar
Nakare-Aba
Neferku-Hor
Neferku-Min
Khetys

Khetys

Hieroglyphic Name:
Khetys Hieroglyphic Name


Name: Khetys and Wahkare Khety

There is no contemporary demonstrate taking his name. His cartouches looks on a 12th Dynasty wooden coffin inscribed with coffin texts and originally made for a steward named Nefri, was observed in Deir el-Bersha and today is in the Cairo Museum (CG 28088). On it, Wahkare Khety's name was found once in position of Nefri's, but it is stranger if the texts were originally inscribed for the king, or if they were simply copied later from an earlier source. His name is maybe also good in the Royal canon of Turin.

Wahkare Khety was an Ancient Egyptian king of the 9th or 10th Dynasty during the First Intermediate Period. The identity operator of Wahkare Khety is contentious. While some scholars conceive that he was the break of the 9th Dynasty, many others set him in the attendant 10th Dynasty.

If Wahkare Khety was the break of the ninth Dynasty, he may be discovered with the hellenized king Achthos, the founder of this dynasty reported to Manetho. Wahkare Khety may have been a Herakleopolitan prince who gained from the failing of the Memphite rulers of the 8th Dynasty to appropriate the throne of Middle and Lower Egypt about 2150 B. C. This hypothesis is held by contemporary inscriptions consulting to the northern, Herakleopolitan kingdom as the Home of Khety, although that only evidences that the founder of the 9th Dynasty was a Khety, but not of necessity Wahkare Khety.

Related Posts:

Eighth Dynasty of Ancient Egypt

Date: Eighth Dynasty (2150–2134 B.C.E.)

King List:

Neferkuré (2150–?)
Qakaré Iby date unknown
Wadjkaré date unknown
Nakare-Aba date unknown
Neferku-Hor date unknown
Neferku-Min date unknown


Related Posts:



·         Kom el-Hisn

·         Abu Rawash

·         Abu Simbel

·         Abusir

·         Abydos

·         Abydos Fleet

·         Dendera (Inuit)



·         Umm el-Ga’ab (Umm el-Qa'ab)

·         Shunet ez Zebib

·         Osireion


·         Djer (Itit) (3016—2970)

·         Mernieth

·         Djet (Wadj) (2970—2963)

·         Den (Udimu) (2963—2949)

·         Anendjib (2949—2897)

·         Semerkhet (2897—2889)

·         Qa'a (2889—2859)

·         Sneferka (2859—2857)

·         Unknown Pharaoh

·         Iry-Hor

Neferku-Min

Name: Neferku-Min and Neferes

Neferku-Min or Neferes (date unknown) was an separated swayer of the 8th Dynasty. He was listed in the Turin canon list of kings, Neferku-Min ruled bad than two  and  one  half  years,  but  the  dates  of  his  rule  are strange.

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Neferku-Hor

Neferku-Hor was the fourteenth ruler of the obscure 8th Dynasty. Neferku-Hor come out four decrees in one afternoon during his first year of dominate, the dates of which are unfamiliar. One decree lists the titles of his prime daughter, Nebyet;a second orders the expression of a solar bark for the deity Horus-Min; and other renders respects for the house of shemay, the vizier who married Nebyet. She-mays family outlasted Neferku-Hor.

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Nakare-Aba

Nakare-Aba (date unknown) was the ruler of the obscure Eighth Dynasty. His pyramid was  discovered in the  southern Saqqara complex of Pepi II. The dates of his  actual reign  are unknown, but his rule would have been brief, considering the era. Nothing else has been documented about him, as this dynasty ruled in the midst of unrest and political change and held only limited territories.

Related Posts:

Seventh Dynasty of Ancient Egypt
Neferkuré
Qakar Iby
Wadjkar

Wadjkar

Hieroglyphic Name:
Wadjkaré Hieroglyphic Name
Names: Wadjkar and Menech-ka-R

Wadjkar was the swayer  of  the  elliptical Eighth Dynasty He is an obscure ruler, as the only going documentation  of  his  rule  is  a  royal  exemption  decree  issued  by him. His name was rendered as Prosperous is the Soul of Ra.



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Qakar Iby

Hieroglyphic Name:
Qakaré Iby Hieroglyphic Name

Names: Qakar Iby and Qakare Ib

Qakar Iby was the ruler of the short Eighth Dynasty. He dependent nearly 2100 B.C.E.). All that continues from his unregistered reign is a little pyramid in southern Saqqara, accepting his name, which understands  as  Strong  Is  the  Soul  of  Ra.  The  Pyramid Texts,  favorite  in  earlier dynasties,  grace  Qakar  Ibys pyramid.



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Neferkuré

Hieroglyphic Name:
Neferkuré Hieroglyphic Name


Names: Neferkur and Neferkure

King Neferkur (died about 2150  B.C.E.) was the founder  of  the  Eighth Dynasty Neferkur notified was a son or grandson of Pepy II and Queen Ankhnes-Pepy. He is listed in the Turin canon Kings list as having  a  rule  of  four  years  and  two  months,  but  the effective dates are not attested. Neferkur built a small pyramid in  Saqqara. He  also  below ground  Queen  Ankhnes-Pepi in a adopted sarcophagus. His pyramid was named running is the life of Neferkur.

Related Posts:



Manetho's King List 
Saqqara King List (Saqqara Tablet)
Royal King List of Karnak (Karnak Tablet) 
Royal King List of Abydos (Abydos Tablet)  
Palermo Stone Kings List 
Turin Canon Kings List 
Ancient Egypt Kings Lists
Seventh Dynasty of Ancient Egypt

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