- the foot of the
Mountain of Anubis, a hill
resembling a
pyramid in the
Abydene desert,
close to a rock-cut tomb
built for
pharaoh Senusret III. The existence...
- the
ideology of his reign. He
appears to have died
before 197 BC. The
Abydene graffito, one of the few do****ents
remaining from his reign, is written...
- Asia
Minor by
October 190 BC. Dard**** was
subsequently liberated from
Abydene control, and the
Treaty of
Apamea of 188 BC
returned Abydos to the Kingdom...
- Dynasty, an odd
fashion can be observed: On
several clay
seals from the
Abydene tombs of king Hor-Aha, Qa'a and
queen Meritneith, the
Horus names of all...
- El Gabrawi. Some of
these nomarchs held the
title Great Overlord of the
Abydene Nome, and so
controlled a
large area
extending from the 8th nome (Abydos)...
-
Djary was a
military officer who
fought the
Herakleopolitan forces in the
Abydene nome
during Intef II's armies'
northward push. His
stele recounts the struggle...
-
temples known from the Old
Kingdom period. As
usual for the
Early Kingdom,
abydene rulers had
their own
mastaba tomb with a
separated funerary enclosure close...
-
Senusret III was
never buried there and that he
might have
preferred his
Abydene tomb as his
final resting place, as
suggested by the lack of a blocking...
- Society: 88–89. doi:10.2307/596209. JSTOR 596209. Goe****e, Hans (1955). "The
Abydene Marriage of Pepi I".
Journal of the
American Oriental Society. 75 (3)....
-
central Egypt and that his name
comprises the
theophoric reference to the
Abydene god Wepwawet. Thus he
concludes that
Wepwawetemsaf most
likely ruled from...