Khaemweset I

The hieroglyphic
name of Khaemweset I
Khaemweset I was a prince of the Nineteenth Dynasty, addressed the Egyptologist. He  was  a  son  of  Ramses II (1290-1224  B.C.E.)  and Queen I setnofret (1), getting the heritor to the throne upon  the  death  of  3  older  brothers.  Khaemweset did as the full priest of Ptah and as the superintendent of the  interment  of  the  sacred  Apis bull  in  Saqqara. He devoted infinite hours to repairing repositories and was august for his magical acquirements.

The head of Khaemwaset I
Prince  Khaemweset  was  shown  in  the  relief  of  a battle scene as accompanying Ramses II on an expedition to Nubia (modern Sudan). In that scene Ramses II was described as a prince, not having followed Seti I at  the  time.  Taking  in  battle  and  in  administrative functions in the royal court was come by further education in divine subjects in the temple of the god Ptah in Memphis.

Pectoral from Khaemweset's
 tomb at Serapeum
When  Khaemweset  was  addressed  heir  to  the  throne in  regnal  year  c.  43  of  Ramses  II,  he  was  already  at  an won age and gone in regnal year 55. His tomb has  not  been  named,  but  a  mummy  learned  in  the granite tomb of Apis Bull XIV has raised possibilities as to  the  princes  final  breathing  place.  A  golden  mask trusted  to  belong  to  Khaemweset  was  named  in the catacombs of the Serapeum in Saqqara. The prince and his mother, Queen Isetnofret, were maybe buried near.

Recent Posts:



·        Masara Stela
·        Khababash
·        Agathocles (Prince of Thales)
·        Mastaba
·        Khabrias
·        Mastabat Al-Faraun
·        Khaemhet
·        Agathocles (Court official)
·        Matit

Matit

Matit, or Goddess Matit, was a lion goddess whose cults were placed in Hierakonpolis and Tanis. The pictures of Matit were saw on jars seeing to the Early Dynastic Period (2920-2575 B.C.E.). In special historical periods Matit attended as guardian of royal abodes. Lion cults were standard in Egypt.

Recent Posts:



·        Kha
·        Nebttawy I
·        Agatharchides
·        Masara Stela
·        Khababash
·        Agathocles (Prince of Thales)
·        Mastaba
·        Khabrias
·        Mastabat Al-Faraun
·        Khaemhet
·        Agathocles (Court official)

Agathocles (Court official)

Agathocles  is a court  official  and plotter of the Ptolemaic Period. He got essential in the court in the dominate of Ptolemy V Epiphanes (205-180 B.C.E.). Agathocles engaged forces with a courtier described Sosibius in a palace takeover in Alexandria, the great of Egypt.Ambitious and anxious to control Ptolemy V, who was rather young, Agathocles and Sosibius late the kings mother, Arsinoe (3). Agathocles served as strong for the orphaned king, but he was unable to hold office.

Governor Tlepolemus of the city of Pelusium (near modern Port Said in Egypt) was so sore by the murder of Queen Arsinoe  that  he  marched  on  Alexandria with  his  frontier  army. on the way,  Tlepolemus alleged  his  intentions  to  the Egyptian  people, who left  their  hamlets  to  swell  the  orders  of  his  forces.  An angry  horde  of  Egyptians  thus  presented Agathocles  at  the palace in the capital. He quit on the spot and hurried home to check for a flying out of the city. Ptolemy V was carried to a great arena in Alexandria, surrounded by Tlepolemuss troops. There the Egyptians hooked before the young  king,  relying  their  loyalty. The  governor  then demanded vengeance for the death of Queen  Arsinoe, and Ptolemy V held. A crowd  raced to Agathocles home, where they get him to death on with his full family.

Recent Posts:



·        Kha
·        Nebttawy I
·        Agatharchides
·        Masara Stela
·        Khababash
·        Agathocles (Prince of Thales)
·        Mastaba
·        Khabrias
·        Mastabat Al-Faraun
·        Khaemhet

Khaemhet

The hieroglyphic name of Khaemhet
Khaemhet was a scribe and overseer of the Eighteenth Dynasty. He  served  Amenhotep III (1391-1353  B.C.E.). Khaemhet  was  a  court  Scribe and  an  overseer  of  the royal garners of Thebes. He was buried in a necropolis on  the  western  shore  at  Thebes.  His tomb  has  fine  low rests  that  depict  Amenhotep III as  a Sphinx. likewise  presented are Osirian funeral rites, scenes of daily life, and court ceremonies.
Substitute of King
Amenhotep III inside
TT57 tomb
Plan of tomb (TT57)
The Tomb of Khaemhet (TT57) is located in Sheikh Abd el-Qurna. It makes part of the Theban Necropolis, set on the west bank of the Nile opposite Luxor. The tomb is the inhumation place of the Ancient Egyptian formal, Khaemhat who was Royal Scribe, Overseer of Royal Granaries, during the reign Amenhotep III.

Recent Posts:


·        Afnet
·        Kha
·        Nebttawy I
·        Agatharchides
·        Masara Stela
·        Khababash
·        Agathocles (Prince of Thales)
·        Mastaba
·        Khabrias
·        Mastabat Al-Faraun

Mastabat Al-Faraun

Location of Mastabat
Al-Faraun to the Giza
PyramidsLocation of Mastabat
Al-Faraun to the Giza
Pyramids
Mastabat Al-Faraun
Mastabat Al-Faraun, or the Mastaba of Shepseskaf, was  Arabic for Seat of the Pharaoh, given to the complex of Pepi I (2289-2255 B.C.E.) at Memphis. nearby, a monument of Shepseskhaf (2472-2467  B.C.E.) stands addressed with Tureh limestone. Pepi Is mortuary temple held an inner shrine of set stone stops on a granite base. He died before extra his valley temple, but the breaks of a causeway remain broad. The tomb is worked in the form of an actual sarcophagus.

Recent Posts:



·        Kewab
·        Nebt
·        Afnet
·        Kha
·        Nebttawy I
·        Agatharchides
·        Masara Stela
·        Khababash
·        Agathocles (Prince of Thales)
·        Mastaba
·        Khabrias

Khabrias

Khabrias was a Greek commercial general. He dominated the mercenary forces service Hakoris (393-380  B.C.E.) of the Twenty-ninth Dynasty. An Athenian, Khabrias resided in Egypt, and his girl, Ptolemais (1), married an Egyptian super addressed Nakhtnebef. Nakhtnebef gone the yield of the Thirtieth Dynasty, as Nectanebo I. General Khabrias was Remembered to Athens c. 373 B.C.E.

Recent Posts:



·        Masara
·        Kewab
·        Nebt
·        Afnet
·        Kha
·        Nebttawy I
·        Agatharchides
·        Masara Stela
·        Khababash
·        Agathocles (Prince of Thales)
·        Mastaba

Mastaba

Case of a Mastaba
The mastaba was practiced by the early pharaohs of Pre- and Early-Dynastic periods, but faded out of royal use in privilege of the pyramids. The word occurs from the Arabic word for "bench," and it was a normal structure that served as a tomb. The mastaba covered to be old by Egyptians who were not of the royalty.

In ancient Egyptian, the term for a mastaba intended "eternal house", concerning to the final staying place of the dead. The word mastaba derived from an Arabic word significant "bench", and indeed, from far off, the structure does look like a work bench. It had a flat roof and a normal shape with gentle sides lining outward. It was constructed with stone or bricks got of mud from the Nile.

Mastabas were tombs and they got as burial sites for royals, including pharaohs, back in the earliest dynasties of ancient Egypt. As the Old Kingdom set about, the pharaohs started to be buried in pyramids instead of mastabas. Commoners extended using the mastaba as a burial family for over a thousand years.

It is not an exaggeration to say that the ancient Egyptians were engaged with death, and in particular, the afterlife. This belief is highlighted in most of the Egyptian architecture, from the pyramids on down. Incredible amounts of work were put into tomb construction, with the pyramids obviously being the pinnacle of this. The Egyptians considered that the soul could not live on in the afterlife if its body was not maintained and free from corruption back on Earth.

Primitive design of a Mastaba
First in the Predynastic Era and extended into later dynasties, the Egyptians worked at producing better and more complex methods of burying their dead. The primary targets in housing the dead was saving of the body and protection from the outside.

The very first method acting used by the ancient Egyptians was a simple pit dug into the sand. The body was placed in the grave on with own effects or structural items for the afterlife. Due to contact with the dry desert, the body was naturally maintained with mummification, however, it was not as maintained.

A plan for mastaba
Thus the mastaba came along. This was the first tomb construction developed by the Egyptians. Mastabas gave the body tribute from wild animals and belike grave robbers, however, they did not continue the body as naturally as sand burial. That taken the Egyptians to develop a system of mummification through colored means. Up until old in the Old Kingdom, only royalty and lead officials would be entombed in the mastaba.

The social system of the mastaba may have come from Mesopotamian ideas, as this civilization was constructing similar edifices and structures at the same time. constructed from Nile mud bricks or stone, the mastaba had a different bench-like shape with a flat roof and sloping sides.
The step pyramid of Djoser as a advanced stage of Mastaba
The Pyramid, as the final form of a Mastaba
Mud bricks from the Nile were used only in the start of mastaba structure, and they made up most of the construction even when stone gone available. The builders would build the significant areas of the tomb with stone and then conception the rest with mud bricks. This probable had much to do with the easy handiness of mud-bricks and the fact that the mastaba eventually got a commoner's tomb rather than a royal one.

Recent Posts:


·        The Kingdom of Kush
·        Adule
·        Masara
·        Kewab
·        Nebt
·        Afnet
·        Kha
·        Nebttawy I
·        Agatharchides
·        Masara Stela
·        Khaabash
·        Agathocles (Prince of Thales)

Agathocles (Prince of Thales)

Agathocles the Prince of Thales. This prince fell victim to the political  intrigues of Arsinoe (2), the sister of Ptolemy II Philadelphus (285-246 B.C.E.). The son of King Lysimachus, he was the superior heritor to the throne of Thrace, a neighborhood in the modern  southeastern  Balkans.  Agathocles  featured  the  political deep of Arsinoe. She married  Lysimachus  and  bore him  two  children,  seeing  Agathocles  as  an  obstruction to the throne. He became the objective of ridicule and rumors in the court of Thrace, whole fashioned to isolate him and to alienate  him  from  his  father.  Arsinoe  and  her followings then  impeached  him  of  treason,  requiring  he  was  bent  on slaying Lysimachus  and making  the  throne.  Lysimachus considered the charge and late Agathocles. Arsinoe did not do good from the death, however. When Lysimachus died, she presented her own melancholy consequences seeing her sons stopped from hereditary and having to flee to her half brother. The governor of Pergamum (modern Bergama in Turkey), so fearful by the unjust discussion of  the  Thracian  prince,  started  a  campaign  of  military payback against Lysimachus. Thrace fell to the Seleucids of Syria as a effect.

Recent Posts:


·        Adule
·        Masara
·        Kewab
·        Nebt
·        Afnet
·        Kha
·        Nebttawy I
·        Agatharchides
·        Masara Stela
·        Khababash

Khababash

Part of the Nastasen Stela
with name of Khababash
Khababash was an Egyptian rebel named in the Satrap Stela. Considered a replacement to Nectanebo II (360-343 B.C.E.), Khababash led a rebellion against the Persians sometime around 338 B.C.E. Ptolemy I Soter (304-284 B.C.E.) was the satrap (parochial regulator) of Egypt for Phillip III Arrhidaeus (333-316 B.C.E.) and Alexander IV (316-304 B.C.E.) when he published the stella to link his hold prevail to that of Khababash, who was a national champion. Khababash ruled over a small part of Egypt, during the Persian occupation of the Nile Valley. He had the throne name of Senentanen-setepenptah.

More about Khababash at:


Torok (L.), Between two worlds the frontier region between ancient Nubia and Egypt 3700 BC - AD 500, Brill Academic Publishers, 2008, PP.373, 374.


Recent Posts:


·        Kerma
·        The Kingdom of Kush
·        Adule
·        Masara
·        Kewab
·        Nebt
·        Afnet
·        Kha
·        Nebttawy I
·        Agatharchides
·        Masara Stela

Masara Stela

Masara Stela is a remembrance dating to the rule of Ahmose (1550-1525  B.C.E.), the  break  of  the New Kingdom. A quarry was open at Masara on the eastern bank of the Nile by Ahmose, and the limestone quarried there  was  old  for  temples  and  shrines  in  Luxor and Heliopolis. An official described Neferperet set up a Stela that  remembered  this  quarrying  natural action. The  repository  states  that  conquered  oxen,  taken  from  the  Hyksos, were practiced to trail the quarried stone from Masara to the banks of the Nile.

Recent Posts:


·        Keper
·        Masaharta
·        Nebseni Papyrus
·        Kerma
·        The Kingdom of Kush
·        Adule
·        Masara
·        Kewab
·        Nebt
·        Afnet
·        Kha
·        Nebttawy I
·        Agatharchides

Agatharchides

Agatharchides is a Chronicler and trade expert. He served Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II (170-163, 145-116  B.C.E.) in the capital of Alexandria. Born  a Greek in Cnidus, a city on the seashore of Anatolia (modern Turkey), Agatharchides  went to Egypts capital to study the monumental archives in the Library of Alexandria. As a effect of his scholarly repute, he was approved by Ptolemys officials to prepare a heavy report on the citys  trade and commerce. Agatharchides got on The Red Sea, a work  that  used  testimony from modern  merchants and  traders. Their stories offer historical legitimacy to the account and offer vivid perceptivities into the wide-ranging trade efforts of that  time. Agatharchides is considered one of the most healthy scholars of the 2nd century B.C.E. He also wrote Events in Asia and Events in Europe, now musing.

Recent Posts:


·        Keper
·        Masaharta
·        Nebseni Papyrus
·        Kerma
·        The Kingdom of Kush
·        Adule
·        Masara
·        Kewab
·        Nebt
·        Afnet
·        Kha
·        Nebttawy I

Nebttawy I

Nebttawy I, or Nebt-tawy I, was a royal woman of the Nineteenth Dynasty. A  lesser-ranked  consort  of  Ramses II (1290-1224 B.C.E.),  she  was  credibly  the  mother  of  Nebttawy  (2). Nebt-Tawy was forgot in the Valley of the Queens.

Recent Posts:


·        Masaharta
·        Nebseni Papyrus
·        Kerma
·        The Kingdom of Kush
·        Adule
·        Masara
·        Kewab
·        Nebt
·        Afnet
·        Kha

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