17th dynastyの例文
- From the 17th Dynasty are also known many private rishi coffins.
- Theban princes ( now known as the 17th Dynasty ) of Thebes.
- According to egyptologists Kim Ryholt and Darrell Baker, he was the fifth king of the 17th Dynasty.
- "' Sekhemre Seusertawy Sobekhotep VIII "'was possibly the third king of the 17th Dynasty.
- By the 15th Dynasty, they ruled lower Egypt, and they were expelled at the end of the 17th Dynasty.
- Foundation deposits point to a temple of Thutmose III of the 17th dynasty ruler Nubkheperre Intef was found by the East doorway.
- Polz states that this is the most plausible reconstruction of the relationship between the two kings with the name Sobekemsaf in the 17th dynasty.
- Senebhenaf is known from the coffin of his daughter, queen 17th dynasties ), so the position of Senebhenaf is also not yet fixed.
- Polz also accepts this view but he placed Nubkheperre Intef just prior to the three final Ahmoside kings of the 17th dynasty in his 2003 book.
- Nebiryraw's throne name " Sewadjenre " ( along with the epithets " 17th Dynasty which would replace the 16th Dynasty shortly thereafter.
- In Ancient Egypt, Ahmose-Henuttamehu ( 17th Dynasty, 1574 BCE ) : Henuttamehu was probably a daughter of Seqenenre Tao and Ahmose Inhapy.
- Ryholt believed that Sekhemre Wadjkhaw Sobekemsaf intervened between the line of Intef kings and the accession of Senakhtenre the first 17th Dynasty kings from the Ahmoside family line.
- Evidence of royal propaganda has been uncovered and attributed to the Theban kings of the 17th dynasty, who initiated the reconquest of the kingdom half a century later.
- By the 17th dynasty, the " Book of the Dead " had become widespread not only for members of the royal family, but courtiers and other officials as well.
- He studied from 1999 to 2004 Classical Archaeology and wrote his dissertation on the " The royal necropolis of the 17th dynasty at Dra Abu el-Naga ( Thebes west ) ".
- Indeed, Mar閑 notes that the workshop which produced Pantjeny's stele is also responsible for the production of the stelae of Wepwawetemsaf and Rahotep, the latter reigning in the early 17th Dynasty.
- Normally rishi coffins are associated with the 17th Dynasty ( about 100 years later ), but Neferhotep most likely died in the 13th Dynasty, showing that this coffin type was used earlier than normally thought.
- Indeed, Mar閑 notes that the workshop which produced Wepwawetemsaf's stele is also responsible for the production of the stelae of Pantjeny and Rahotep, the latter most often assigned to the early 17th Dynasty.
- For example, the tomb of the 17th Dynasty Queen Tetisheri, whose discovery and excavation form the basis of the plot in " The Hippopotamus Pool " has, in fact, never been found.
- If he was indeed a ruler of the early 17th Dynasty, Rahotep would have controlled Upper Egypt as far north as Min of which " " gates and doors [ have ] fallen into ruins " ".