-
Paneb was a
chief at Deir el-Medina, a workmen's
community at Thebes. The
author of the
Papyrus Salt 124, Amennakht,
describes himself as a
workman and...
-
records of the
trial of
Paneb. Neferhotep, one of the two
chief workmen of the Deir el-Medina necropolis, had been
replaced by
Paneb, his
troublesome son-in-law...
-
presumably a
predecessor of Pra'emhab,
whereupon Amenmose had
Paneb punished.
Paneb, however, then
successfully brought a
complaint before 'Mose'/'Msy'...
- only two were replaced. The
other two
pillars may have been
stolen by
Paneb, a
worker in the craftsman's
village (Deir el-Medina), for use in his own...
-
vizier of the time, most
likely Hori. It
brings various complaints against Paneb, a chief-workman at Deir el-Medina, a workmen’s
community at Thebes, where...
-
original on 2018-01-20.
Retrieved 2018-01-20. "Kaitseväe
Logistikakeskus paneb oksjonile enam kui 170 kaitseväe sõidukit". mil.ee (in Estonian). Archived...
- ja inimesed".
Tartu Linnaajaloo Muuseumid. Eili Arula, "Presidendi
kaasa paneb muuseumijuhi ameti maha, sest
asutus jäi
loodetud rahata", Postimees, 08...
- (1996)
Under the
Western Acacia (1997)
Nefer the
Silent The Wise
Woman Paneb the
Ardent The
Place of
Truth The tale of
Queen Ahhotep and her crusade...
-
ancient Egyptian named Paneb, who
lived during the 19th
Dynasty as a
servant of the Lord of the Two
Lands in the
Place of Truth.
Paneb would have
lived in...
- the
Valley of the Kings. One of the most
famous cases recorded relates to
Paneb, the son of an overseer, who was
accused of
looting royal tombs, adultery...