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Pharaoh table
table started by
robert for the Ancient Egypt Base
There is no user-contributed description yet.
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| x name | x image | x Also Typed With | Reign | x article | |
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| x Start | x End | ||||
| x Tiu |
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Person |
Tiu, also Teyew etc, was a Predynastic ancient Egyptian king who ruled in the Nile Delta . He is mentioned in the Palermo Stone inscriptions along with a small number of kings of Lower Egypt . Nothing else is known of his life or reign.
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| x Thesh |
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Person |
Thesh, or Tjesh, Tesh etc, was a Predynastic ancient Egyptian king who ruled in the Nile Delta . He is mentioned in the Palermo Stone inscriptions among a small number of kings of Lower Egypt
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| x Hsekiu | Person |
Hsekiu , also Seka, was a Predynastic ancient Egyptian king who ruled in the Nile Delta . He is mentioned in the Palermo Stone inscriptions among a small number of kings of Lower Egypt
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| x Wazner | Person |
Wazner, also Wazenez or Wadjenedj, was a Predynastic Egyptian king who ruled in the Nile Delta. He is mentioned in the Palermo Stone inscriptions among a small number of kings of Lower Egypt.
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| x Scorpion I |
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Person |
Scorpion I was the first of two kings so-named of Upper Egypt during the Protodynastic Period. His name may refer to the scorpion goddess Serket.
He is believed to have lived in Thinis one or two centuries before the rule of the better known King...
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| x Iry-Hor |
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Person |
Iry-Hor or Ro (as read by Petrie) was a Predynastic pharaoh of ancient Egypt, although some archaeologists are doubtful of his existence. He was most likely Ka's immediate predecessor. He ruled over Abydos and was buried in its local cemetery at Umm...
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| x Ka |
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Person |
Ka, also Sekhem Ka , was a predynastic pharaoh of Upper Egypt. He ruled over Abydos in the late 32nd or early 31st century BC and was buried at Umm el-Qa'ab. He most likely was the immediate successor to Iry-Hor and was succeeded by Narmer. He is...
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| x King Scorpion |
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Person |
Scorpion, also King Scorpion or Scorpion II refers to the second of two kings so-named of Upper Egypt during the Protodynastic Period.
The only pictorial evidence of his existence is the so-called Scorpion Macehead that was found in the Main deposit...
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| x Narmer |
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Person |
Narmer was an Egyptian Pharaoh who ruled in the 31st century BC. Thought to be the successor to the predynastic Scorpion and/or Ka, he is considered by some to be the unifier of Egypt and founder of the First dynasty, and therefore the first king of...
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| x Menes |
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Person |
Menes is the name of the Egyptian king credited with founding the First dynasty, sometime around 3100 BC. Menes was seen as a founding figure for much of the history of Ancient Egypt, and was possibly a mythical founding king similar to Romulus and...
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| x Hor-Aha |
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Person |
Hor-Aha is considered the second pharaoh of the first dynasty of Ancient Egypt in current Egyptology. He lived around the thirty-first century BC. The two logographic glyphs used to write his name are roughly translated as Hor, (a reference to the...
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| x Djer |
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Person |
Djer is the second or third pharaoh of the first dynasty of Egypt, which dates from approximately 3100 B.C. Djer's Horus name means "Horus who succours".
The Abydos King List lists the second pharaoh as Teti, the Turin Canon lists Iteti, while...
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| x Merneith |
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Person |
Merneith (Meritnit, Meryet-Nit or Meryt-Neith) was a consort, a regent, and possibly, the fourth pharaoh of Ancient Egypt during the first dynasty. Her rule was in the thirtieth century B.C., for an undetermined period of time. Merneith’s name means...
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| x Djet |
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Person |
Djet, also known as Wadj, Zet, and Uadji (in Greek possibly the pharaoh known as Uenephes), was the third Egyptian pharaoh of the first dynasty. Djet's Horus name means "Horus Cobra."
Little is known about his reign, but he has become famous because...
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| x Den |
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Person |
Den (or Dewen) was the fourth Egyptian king of the First dynasty. He was the son of Queen Merneith and presumably Djet. Early Egyptian records mention battles against Bedouin tribes in the Sinai during his reign. He was the first to use the title...
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| x Anedjib |
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Person |
As the fifth ruler of the First dynasty of Ancient Egypt, Anedjib (also Enezib, Adjib, or Andjyeb meaning "The Man with the Bold Heart" or "Safe is his Heart" ) is poorly attested and fairly obscure within monumental records. He ruled over Egypt...
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| x Semerkhet |
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Person |
Semerkhet was the sixth king of Ancient Egypt's First Dynasty who ruled around 2950 BC. Although little is known of his reign, Semerkhet seems to have had a difficult time as king judging by the records of Manetho.
Manetho states that there were...
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| x Hotepsekhemwy |
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Person |
Hotepsekhemwy, (in Greek known as Boethos), was the first king of the Second dynasty of Egypt. His name means "Pleasing in Powers." Little is known about his reign.
It is possible that Pharaoh Hotepsekhemwy reached office through marriage with a...
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| x Raneb |
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Person |
Raneb was a pharaoh during the Second dynasty of Egypt. The Egyptian priest Manetho, calls him Kaiechos and states that he ruled Egypt for 39 years but such a high figure is not confirmed from the few contemporary objects known from his reign. The...
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| x Nynetjer |
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Person |
Nynetjer or Ninetjer was the third king of the Second dynasty of Egypt. His name translates as "Godlike" in English. Ninetjer is mentioned on the Palermo Stone and is known from mud sealings found in an underground gallery at Saqqara which may have...
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| x Weneg |
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Person |
Weneg (or Wneg or Wadjnes or Tlas) was the royal Nebti name of a pharaoh during the Second dynasty of Egypt. His identity was unknown and he was assumed to have been a king who ruled Egypt between Nynetjer and Khasekhemwy for 8 years. However,...
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| x Senedj |
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Person |
Senedj was a pharaoh of the Second dynasty of Egypt who ruled for 20 years. He resided at Memphis . A chapel to one of his successors, Peribsen, was erected in Senedj's funerary temple
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| x Seth-Peribsen |
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Person |
Seth-Peribsen was a pharaoh during the Second dynasty of Egypt who ruled for seventeen years. He is considered to be the predecessor of Khasekhemwy and was buried in Umm el-Qa'ab in Abydos, where a seal impression contains the first full sentence...
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| x Sekhemib-Perenmaat |
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Person |
Sekhemib-Perenmaat, a poorly attested pharaoh of the Egyptian second dynasty, may have been the same individual also known as Peribsen, or, more likely, was a separate king who ruled Lower Egypt at the same time that Peribsen ruled Upper Egypt....
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| x Khasekhemwy |
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Person |
Khasekhemwy (d. 2686 BC; sometimes spelled Khasekhemui) was the fifth and final Pharaoh of the Second dynasty of Egypt. Little is known of Khasekhemwy, other than that he led several significant military campaigns and built several monuments, still...
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| x Sanakhte |
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Person | 2686 B.C.E. | 2667 B.C.E. |
Sanakht, generally identified with the Nebka of much later king lists, was probably either the first or second pharaoh of the Third Dynasty of Ancient Egypt. The dates assigned to his reign by Shaw are ca. 2686-2667 BC; for various conjectures of...
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| x Djoser |
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Person |
Netjerikhet or Djoser (Turin King List "Dsr-it"; Manetho "Tosarthros") is the best-known pharaoh of the Third dynasty of Egypt. He commissioned the official, Imhotep (2650-2600BC), to build the first of the pyramids, a Step Pyramid for him at...
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| x Sekhemkhet |
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Person | 2649 B.C.E. | 2643 B.C.E. |
Sekhemkhet was a Pharaoh in Egypt during the Third dynasty. According to the Manethonian tradition, a king known as Tyris (which may be compared to the Turin Canon's "Djoser-ti") reigned for a relatively brief period of seven years, and modern...
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| x Khaba |
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Person | 2643 B.C.E. | 2637 B.C.E. |
Khaba was a Pharaoh of Ancient Egypt's Old Kingdom and is generally considered to have reigned near the end of the Third Dynasty. He is thought to be the successor to Sekhemkhet. Khaba is believed to have reigned a relatively brief four years...
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