Khentkaus II

The hieroglyphic
name of Khentkaus II
Khentkaus II (2475 BC - 2445 BC) was a queen of Egypt. She was a married woman of Egyptian Pharaoh Neferirkare Kakai of the Fifth Dynasty. She was the mother of Pharaohs Neferefre and Nyuserre Ini. Khentkaus II was the married woman of Neferirkare Kakai. Her pyramid complex was started during the prevail of her husband, when her title was still that of king's wife (hmt nswt). The building of her tomb was halted, maybe when her husband died, and was later resumed during the reign of her son. After the making was resumed her title was king's mother (mwt nswt). Khentkaues is shown on a block with her husband Neferirkare and a son addressed Ranefer (B).

Part of stone showing Khentkaus II
A limestone fragmentize was saw in the pyramid complex observing a king's girl Reputnebty, who is come after by a king's son Khentykauhor. From context, Reputnebty was a girl of Nyuserre and thus a granddaughter of Khentkaus. A further king's son Irenre Junior (nedjes) is mentioned.

Khentkaus II held several titles including the title Mwt-neswt-bity-neswt-bity which she has in common with Khentkaus I. This title is not well taken and could mean either mother of the multiple kings, or dual king and mother of the dual king. Other titles given by Khentkaus II let in important one of the hetes-sceptre (wrt-hetes), she who sees Horus and Seth (m33t-hrw-stsh), important of extolment (wrt-hzwt), king's wife (hmt-nisw), king's wife, his loved (hmt-nisw meryt.f), priestess of Bapef (hmt-ntr-b3-pf), priestess of Tjazepef (hmt-ntr-t3-zp.f), patroness of the slaughters in the acacia house (khrpt-sshmtiw-shndt), attendant of Horus (kht-hrw), God's daughter (s3t-ntr), fellow of Horus (smrt-hrw and tist-hrw).

The king's mother Khentkaus is mentioned in the Abusir Papyri. Khentkaus II got a pyramid complex in Abusir next to the pyramid complex of her hubby Neferirkare Kakai. The pyramid was initially excavated in 1906 by Borchardt. The social structure was then supposed to be a extended mastaba and was not unearthed very thoroughly. Seventy years later the Czech Institute took a thorough excavation of the site. The construction of the pyramid was probable started during the dominate of her husband Neferirkare Kakai and gone during the dominate of her son Nyuserre Ini. The pyramid was soaked during the First Intermediate Period. During the Middle Kingdom the pyramid was resume and the sarcophagus reprocessed for the burial of a young baby. By the stop of the New Kingdom the destruction of the site come when stones were taken from the site to be recycled elsewhere.

The mortuary temple of Khentkaues II was mounted, but the rests were damaged and what stays are a collection of fragments. The scenes included depictions of oblations, a funeral repast, agricultural settings, the advancement of funerary acres and the family of King Nyuserre recognise the Queen-Mother.

Recent Posts:



·        Medicine in Ancient Egypt
·        Kemsit
·        Akhmin (Khemmis)
·        Ancient Egyptian Surgery
·        Khenemsu
·        Ancient Egyptian Doctors
·        Nectanebo II (380-363 BC)
·        Khensuhotep
·        Nefat
·        Khentkaus I

Khentkaus I

The hieroglyphic
name of Khentkaus
Khentkaus I, likewise referred to as Khentkawes, was a Queen of Ancient Egypt during the 4th dynasty. She may have been a daughter of pharaoh Menkaure, wife of both pharaohs Shepseskaf and Userkaf and mother of Sahure. Her Mastaba at Giza - tomb LG100 - is placed very last to Menkaure's pyramid complex. This close joining may point to a family relationship, but it is not quite clear exactly what that relationship is. The proximity of Khentkaus' pyramid complex to that of King Menkaure has led to the supposition that she may have been his girl. She may have been married to pharoah Userkaf and may have been the mother of Sahure and Neferirkare Kakai. Verner has stated that it is more probable however that Sahure was a son of Userkaf and his wife Neferhetepes. It has likewise been indicated Khentkaus was the mother and compelling for her son Thampthis and the mother of Neferirkare Kakai rather. Manetho's King List has Menkaure and Thampthis strong in the 4th dynasty, which bonds her to the end of the 4th dynasty. Khentkaus appears to have served as a strong and may have even taken on kingly titles. Some of her titles are ambiguous and are apparently open to reading.

The "Khentkaus Problem" has a long history. In the 1930s Hassan projected that Khentkaus was a girl of Menkaure, and married first to Shepseskaf and later to Userkaf. Ventikiev was the first to suggest that the title mwt nswt bity nswt bity should be read as "The Mother of two Kings of Upper and Lower Egypt". Junker believed that the universe of the pyramid town suggested that Khentkaus was a very important person and that the title should be taken as "the King of Upper and Lower Egypt and the Mother of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt". He advised that she was the girl of Menkaure and the sister of Shepseskaf.

Borchardt evoked that Shepseskaf was a commoner who married the kings girl Khentkaus. He encourage thought that Sahure and Neferirkare Kakai were boys of Shepseskaf and Khentkaus. Borchardt supposed that Userkaf was an foreigner who was able to take the throne because Sahure and Neferirkare were likewise young to climb up the throne when Shepseskaf died. Grdseloff proposed that Shepseskaf and Khentkaus were the son and girl of Menkaure, and that Userkaf was a prince form a collateral branch of the royal family who came to the throne when he married the royal widow woman and mother of the heirs to the throne Khentkaus.

Altenmller suggested that Khentkaus was none other than the lady Redjedjet named in the Westcar Papyrus. He indicated that Khentkaus was the mother of Userkaf, Sahure and Neferirkare Kakai. Kozloff supposed that Shepseskaf was the son of Menkaure with a small wife who related the throne later the death of the Kings Son Khuenre. Shepseskaf married Menkaures daughter Khentkaus. Upon the earlier death of Shepseskaf, Khentkaus married the high Priest of Re to guarantee the throne for her two sons.

Callender took the fact that Khentkaus name never come out in a cartouche to mean that she never ruled Egypt. Instead she preferred to read the mwt nswt bity nswt bity title as the mother of two Kings of Upper and Lower Egypt. She considered Khentkaus had to be a daughter of Menkaure and the wife of either Shepseskaf or Thampthis. She showed to Userkaf and Neferirkare as the 2 sons named to as the sons of Khentkaus in her title. Khentkaus was buried in Giza. Her tomb is noted as LG 100 and G 8400 and is set in the central field, Giza which is section of the Giza Necropolis. The pyramid complex of Khentkaus takes her pyramid, a boat pit, a Valley Temple and a pyramid town.

Depicting for Khentkaus from her tomb
The pyramid complex dwells of the pyramid, a chapel, a solar boat, the pyramid city, a water tank and granaries. The pyramid was primitively described in the 19th century as an incomplete pyramid and it had been supposed that it belonged King Shepseskaf. The pyramid was excavated by Selim Hassan starting in 1932. The tomb was presented the number LG100 by Lepsius.

The chapel comprised of a extended hall and an secret chapel. A passage cut in the floor of the inner chapel results to the burial chamber. The floor of the chapel was covered in Tura limestone. The walls were covered in relief, but the scenes are very seriously hurt. ease fragments were saw in the debris when the tomb was unearthed by Selim Hassan. The passage to the burial chamber and the chamber itself were lined with red granite. The passage is 5.6 m long and comes below the essential structure of the pyramid. The burial chamber is great and most nearly resembles the burial chamber of King Shepseskaf in Saqqara. The burial chamber perhaps housed an alabaster sarcophagus, many pieces were found in the sand and rubble that filled the chamber. also in the chamber held a small scarab made of a brown color limestone. Its craftsmanship leads to the belief that it is from the 12th dynasty. It leads some to trust that her tomb was reused for other later tombs.

The solar boat is set to the south-west of the pyramid. A pit measuring some 30.25 m long and 4.25 m deep was cut into the rock. The prow and stern of the boat were upraised and the boat appears to have had a roof. It may represent the night-boat of the sun-god Ra. If so there may be an accompanying day-boat. Immediately to the eastside of the pyramid lies a pyramid city. The city is laid out on several streets which separate the city into groups of houses. These houses had their own magazines and granaries. The city was builded from unbaked mud-brick, and surfaces were extended in a yellow plaster. The city was likely the home of the priests and retainers of the pyramid complex. The pyramid city was reconstructed towards the end of the 4th or start of the 5th dynasty and appears to have been operation well into the 6th dynasty.

A causeway connects the pyramid chapel to the valley temple of Khentkaus. The temple lies hot to the valley temple of Menkaure which suggests a close kinship between Khentkaus and Menkaure. Before of the temple a small structure referred to as the "washing tent of Queen Khentkaus" was named. This structure was the location where the body of the passed queen would have been taken to be purified before being embalmed. The debris filling this chamber held many fragments of stone vases, potsherds and flint instrumentate. The floor is the opening of a limestone drain which runs downward under the ground for a distance of 720 m., emptying into a large, rectangular lavatory. The drain is covered by arched sections of the same material, the whole forming an nearly circular stone pipe. Though by no means the oldest subterranean water-channel known in Egyptian funerary architecture, checking to Hassan, it is the earliest of this particular type and structure.

The valley temple of Khentkaus and Menkaure were both partially manufactured of mud-brick and gone with white limestone and alabaster. The essential entrance is set on the northern lateral which is a departure form the more common situation where the great entrance is placed to the east. Entering the Valley temple from the important entrance, you would walk up a wide brick-paved causeway which chalks up from the valley in a westerly direction. The doorway was embroidered with a portico held up by two columns. Once you enter the doorway, The doorway opens into a vestibule, the roof of which was based upon 4 columns. nearly the room access a statue of King Khafra (father of Menkaure) once stood. rests of a statue of a king (possibly Khafra) and the personify of a sphinx statue were saw in the vestibule of the temple. The hall opens up to a court which in turn led to the magazines.

Recent Posts:



·        Akhlane
·        Medicine in Ancient Egypt
·        Kemsit
·        Akhmin (Khemmis)
·        Ancient Egyptian Surgery
·        Khenemsu
·        Ancient Egyptian Doctors
·        Nectanebo II (380-363 BC)
·        Khensuhotep
·        Nefat

Nefat

Nefat was a site south of Thebes, plausibly modern el-Muallah. based close Tod, Nefat served as a necropolis area for the First Intermediate Period (2134-2040 B.C.E.) nomarchs  of the region. The tombs of Ankhtify and Sobekhotep were dug the rocky drop-off at Nefat.

Recent Posts:



·        Akhlane
·        Medicine in Ancient Egypt
·        Kemsit
·        Akhmin (Khemmis)
·        Ancient Egyptian Surgery
·        Khenemsu
·        Ancient Egyptian Doctors
·        Nectanebo II (380-363 BC)
·        Khensuhotep

Khensuhotep

Khensuhotep was the source of the Maxims. The Maxims were a religious literary text of the Eighteenth Dynasty (1550-1307 B.C.E.). Khensuhotep covered his fellow Egyptians and inspired them to recall that the gods honored silent prayer and decreed right  behavior (Maat) in all creatures. The Maxims were popular passim the Nile Valley.

Recent Posts:



·        Khedebneitheret
·        Akhlane
·        Medicine in Ancient Egypt
·        Kemsit
·        Akhmin (Khemmis)
·        Ancient Egyptian Surgery
·        Khenemsu
·        Ancient Egyptian Doctors
·        Nectanebo II (380-363 BC)

Nectanebo II (380-363 BC)

The hieroglyphic
name of Nectanebo II
Nectanebo II (Nakhtharheb), King, 30th Dynasty, Late Period, 360-343 BC. After swearing King Teos, Nectanebo II, the important-grandson of Nectanebo I, ruled for 18 years, during a time when the Persian Empire was first to disintegrate. His policies in the management of Egypt took back successfulness to the country, once again indicated by much increased making programmes, specially of the temples. The priests extended their wealth and power greatly.

Isis with Nectanebo II
from the Serapeum of
Saqqara
Artaxerxes III, the Persian important King, attacked Egypt in 351-350 BC but was bluntly defeated by Nectanebo. Artaxerxes given to the approach in 343 BC, this time assisted by Greek mercenaries, whose generals were the lead stategists of the day. Nectanebo fought valorously but was outnumbered by a more enterprising foe. eventually he recognised that he was defeated, and the last native king of Egypt fled southwards into Nubia taking, it was suspicious, much of the royal treasure with him.

Nectanebo evaporates at this point, though he may have extended some sort of clear status in Nubia for a while. The vague rebel leader, Khababash, may have based him before himself being glorified king for a brief period.

One final legend clings to Nectanebos name. According to some ancient sources it was trusted that he was the regular father of Alexander the extended, having visited olympias, Alexanders mother, during one of Phillip II's standard absences; both Olympias and Alexander preferred to claim Amun as Alexanders father. However, the preceding of Amun having adopted the individual, the king, as saw by his presumption of the physical form of King Thutmose II to engender King Amenhotep III (1382-1344), should not be forgot.

Recent Posts:



·        Nectanebo I (380-363 BC)
·        Khedebneitheret
·        Akhlane
·        Medicine in Ancient Egypt
·        Kemsit
·        Akhmin (Khemmis)
·        Ancient Egyptian Surgery
·        Khenemsu
·        Ancient Egyptian Doctors

Ancient Egyptian Doctors

The ancient Egyptian doctor was called doctor is "swnw". This title has a extended history. The earliest showed physician in the world, Hesy-Ra, practiced in ancient Egypt. He was "Chief of Dentists and Physicians" to King Djoser, who ruled in the 27th century BC. The lady Peseshet (2400 BC) may be the first showed female doctor: she was perchance the mother of Akhethotep, and on a stela gave to her in his tomb she is referred to as imy-r swnwt, which has been translated as "Lady Overseer of the Lady Physicians" (swnwt is the feminine of swnw).

There were numerous ranks and specialities in the field of medicine. Royalty employed their own swnw, even their own specialists. There were examiners of doctors, overseers and chief doctors. knew ancient Egyptian specialists are oculist, gastroenterologist, proctologist, dentist, "doctor who supervises butchers" and an unspecified "inspector of liquids". The ancient Egyptian term for proctologist, neru phuyt, literally translates as "shepherd of the anus". The latter title is already good around 2200 BC by Irynachet.

Institutions, called (Per Ankh) or Houses of Life, are knew to have been showed in ancient Egypt since the 1st Dynasty and may have had medical functions, being at times connected in inscriptions with physicians, such as Peftauawyneit and Wedjahorresnet living in the middle of the 1st millennium BC. By the time of the nineteenth Dynasty their employees loved such benefits as medical insurance, pensions and light lead.

Recent Posts:



·        Akhethotep
·        Khay
·        Nectanebo I (380-363 BC)
·        Khedebneitheret
·        Akhlane
·        Medicine in Ancient Egypt
·        Kemsit
·        Akhmin (Khemmis)
·        Ancient Egyptian Surgery
·        Khenemsu

Khenemsu

Khenemsu was an official and minelaying leader of the 12th Dynasty He attended Senwosret III (1878-1841 B.C.E.) as the royal treasurer and the leader of the various mining expeditions took in that  era. The utilization of Egypt's natural resources was a essential aspect of Senwosret III's rule. Khenemsu  was in care  of the Sinai territory  and  had  to defend Egypts properties from Bedouin (bedwi) raids while excavation copper and malachite. While inspecting the Wadi Maghara, Khenemsu was accompanied  on  his  tours by Ameniseneb, Sitra,  and  Sebeko,  as well  officials. A Stela erected by a subordinate, Harnakht, confirms the expedition and the unusual manner of travel, by boat. Khenemsu is also listed as Khentikhety-hotep in some records.

Recent Posts:



·        Khay
·        Nectanebo I (380-363 BC)
·        Khedebneitheret
·        Akhlane
·        Medicine in Ancient Egypt
·        Kemsit
·        Akhmin (Khemmis)
·        Ancient Egyptian Surgery

Ancient Egyptian Surgery

Ancient Egyptian surgery tools
The oldest metal (Bronze or copper) straight tools in the world were saw in the tomb of Qar. Surgery was a frequent exercise among physicians as handling for physical injuries. The Egyptian physicians recognized three categories of injuries; treatable, disputable, and untreatable complaints. Treatable ailments the surgeons would quickly set to right. Contestable ailments were those where the victim could presumably survive without treatment, so patients accepted to be in this class were observed and if they gone then surgical attempts could be made to fix the problem with them. They used knives, hooks, drills, forceps, pincers, scales, spoons, saws and a vase with burning incense.

Circumcision of males was the normal exercise, as stated by Herodotus in his Histories. [clarification needed] Though its functioning as a procedure was rarely mentioned, the uncircumcised nature of other cultures was oftentimes noted, the uncircumcised nature of the Liberians was frequently registered and military campaigns got back uncircumcised phalli as trophies, which evokes novelty. However, other records describe initiates into the religious orders as regarding circumcision which would imply that the practice was great and not widespread. The only knew depiction of the procedure, in The Tomb of the Physician, burial place of Ankh-Mahor at Saqqara, points adolescents or grownups, not babies. Female circumcision may have been old, although the single reference to it in ancient texts may be a mistranslation.

Prosthetics, such as artificial toes and eyeballs, were also used; typically, they served little more than decorative purposes. In planning for burial, losing body parts would be exchanged; however, these do not appear as if they would have been useful, or even clip-on, before death.

The great use of surgery, mummification practices, and autopsy as a religious exercise gave Egyptians a large knowledge of the body's morphology, and even a considerable understanding of organ functions. The function of most major organs was correctly presumedfor exercise, blood was right guessed to be a transpiration medium for vitality and waste which is not also far from its actual role in carrying oxygen and removing carbon dioxidewith the exclusion of the heart and brain whose uses were exchanged.

Recent Posts:



·        Necho II (610-595 BC)
·        Kheneres
·        Akhethotep
·        Khay
·        Nectanebo I (380-363 BC)
·        Khedebneitheret
·        Akhlane
·        Medicine in Ancient Egypt
·        Kemsit
·        Akhmin (Khemmis)

Akhmin (Khemmis)

Location of Akhmin
Temple of Min at Akhmim
Akhmin (Khemmis) was a site  almost  300  miles  south  of  modern  Cairo,  described Khent Menu, or Apu by the Egyptians and Panopolis by the Greeks. Another name, Khemmis, was came from the  Greeks.  Akhmin  attended  as  the  capital  of  the  ninth nome and  the  cultic  center  for  the  adoration  of  the  god Min (1). The goddess Tait was as well observed in the city. A necropolis  dating  to  the  6th  Dynasty  (2323-2150 B.C.E.)  is  on  the  site.  Recent  construction  revealed  a statue of Ramesses II (1290-1224 B.C.E.) in Akhmin. A second  statue  drawn  Ramesses  II's  daughter,  Queen Meryamun. A  temple  dating  to  Egypts  Eighteenth Dynasty was likewise uncovered there. Egypts linen industry was  nurtured  in  Akhmin  in  late  eras.  The  Greek  scholar Strabo saw Akhmin in the Ptolemaic Period (304-30 B.C.E.).

 Recent Posts:

·        Horizon (akhet)
·        Necho II (610-595 BC)
·        Kheneres
·        Akhethotep
·        Khay
·        Nectanebo I (380-363 BC)
·        Khedebneitheret
·        Akhlane
·        Medicine in Ancient Egypt

Kemsit


The hieroglyphic
name of Kemsit
A relief showing Kemsit
(from Deir el-Bahari)
Kemsit, or Khemsit, was a royal companion of the Eleventh Dynasty. She  was  a  member  of  the  Harem of  Montuhotep II (206-12010 B.C.E.) of the 11th Dynasty. Kemsit was buried  in  the  pharaohs  extended  mortuary  complex  in  Deir el-Bahri on the western shore of Thebes. Her Sarcophagus designated her as yet another Sole Favorite of the King.

Recent Posts:




·        Medamud
·        Kharga Oasis
·        Horizon (akhet)
·        Necho II (610-595 BC)
·        Kheneres
·        Akhethotep
·        Khay
·        Nectanebo I (380-363 BC)
·        Khedebneitheret
·        Akhlane
·        Medicine in Ancient Egypt

Medicine in Ancient Egypt

Medical instruments
from Ancient Egypt
Medicine, this science was called the Necessary Art in Ancient Egypt and supported by the Per-Ankh, the House of Life, and by schools of checking and research. Most general practicians of Egyptian medicine were priests developed  in  medical  techniques  passing  from  trauma  to gynecology, and many special in unique fields. The Egyptian  medical  men  saw  the  role  of  the pulse,  blood,  bucks,  mucus,  urine,  and  come  and  their anatomical lineages from the earliest periods.

Because  of  the  mythological  and  magical  aspects assigned  to  the  practice  of  medicine  in  Egypt  by  the Greek historians, scholars have not bestowed honor upon the practices nurtured in the Nile Valley. The Greeks good many of the early Egyptian priest-physicians, however,  peculiarly Imhotep of  the  3rd Dynasty  (2620 B.C.E.),  whom  they  compared  with  their  god Asclepius. When  they  recorded  the  Egyptian  medical  customs  and procedures as history, the Greeks involved the magic and incantations  used  by  the  priest, which  made  medicine appear  trivial  or  a  nonrational  aspect  of  Egyptian  life. Magical spells were indeed a part of Egyptian medicine, thus the Greeks refuse was not totally wrong. Nevertheless,  scholars  have  long  known  that  the  Egyptians  carefully  observed  various  ailments,  injuries,  and physical  malformations  and  offered  many  ethical drugs  for their ease.

Circumcision scene
from a tomb at Saqqara
Diagnostic functions for injuries and diseases were common and super in Egyptian medical practice. The physicians consulted texts and made their own observations.  Each  physician  listed  the  symptoms  present  in  a patient and then certain whether he had the skill to treat that shape. If a priest determined that a cure was potential, he reconsidered the processes, medicines, or therapeutic  remedies  available  and  acted  accordingly.  The physicians understood that the pulse was the Speaker of the heart, and they taken the shape known as angina. They were also aware of the relationship between the  stimulated  system  and  voluntary  movements.  The physicians could place lesions of the head, fractures of the vertebrae, and other complex checks. Operations were performed on the brain, and skulls recovered from graves and tombs point that the Egyptian patients lived through  such  processes  and  lived  for  years  afterward.  The  human  brain  was  not  saved  during  the embalming  process,  however,  deemed  bad  of  protection  in the canopic jars.  Brains  of  the  passed  were normally  destroyed  or  savaged  in  the  actual  embalming operation.

Trauma care in Egypt involved the treatment of variable bone injuries, with cranial fractures popular. Surgical procedures were provided, including the intromission of rolled  linens  for  fractured  noses  and  the  splinting  of pearls  with  bark,  wood,  linen,  and  veg  fibers. Amputations  were  executed  successfully,  and  trepanation,  taking  the  removal  of  pieces  of  bone  from  the brain,  was  also  provided  to  patients.  Gags  and  wooden tubes  were  inserted  into  the  mouths  of  patients  being addressed for jaw wounds. The tubes were used to provide nourishment conveniently and to drain fluids. Brick backups and body casts were engaged to keep patients still and  upright,  and  other  materials  were  molded  to  their bodies  to  provision  clean,  sturdy  bases  for  recovery. Flax and other fabrics were used in the clinics or medical establishments to pack wounds as well as in the treatment  of  sores  or  surgical  incisions.  Bandages  were normally made of linen and were held with hygienic standards adopted in the nation. Priests as well used poultices, sticky strips, and cleansing agents. Other therapeutic  procedures  included  cauterization  of  wounds using fire drills or white scalpels.

Recent Posts:




·        Medamud
·        Kharga Oasis
·        Horizon (akhet)
·        Necho II (610-595 BC)
·        Kheneres
·        Akhethotep
·        Khay
·        Nectanebo I (380-363 BC)
·        Khedebneitheret
·        Akhlane

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