Palermo Stone Kings List

Part of Palermo king list
Palermo Stone Kings List is the earliest kings list. The Palermo Stone was engrossed on both sides of a large separate temple stela, only a fragment of which continues nowadays. Egyptologists believe that the intact rock would have offered a record of every last king who ruled preexisting to the 5th Dynasty, taking on some Predynastic Period ones, as well as a complete record of the events of their rule (such as expeditions of different kinds, military victories, and constructing projects).

Royal King List of Abydos (Abydos Tablet)

Part of Abydos king list
Royal King List of Abydos is a list broken in the corridors of the Hall of the Ascendents in the mortuary temple of King Seti I (1306-1290 B.C.E.) in Abydos. This list checks the names of the swayer from Narmer (c. 2920 B.C.E). to King Seti I, a good of 76 rulers. In That Location are reportedly intentional skips in the  Abydos  Tablet, taking the Second Intermediate Period  rulers, Akhenaten, and other Amarna rulers. Ramses II copied the list for his own temple. The Abydos Kings list is in London (the British Museum).

Royal King List of Karnak (Karnak Tablet)

Part of Karnak king list
Royal King List of Karnak engraved on the festival lobby of King Tuthmosis III at Karnak and utilizing the nesu or royal names of the pharaohs from Menes (c. 2920 B.C.E.) to King Tuthmosis III (1479-1425 B.C.E.). Located on earlier traditions, the list is not as close as Seti I's at Abydos. Of particular worry,  however,  are  the  points  of  the  Second  Intermediate Period (1640-1550 B.C.E.) rulers. The Karnak King List or (The Karnak Tablet) is in Paris (in Louvre Museum).

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