- or
Pedubast) (P3-dj-Bstt),
meaning "Given by Bastet".
Notable bearers were:
Pedubast I (r. 9th
century BCE), a
pharaoh of the 23rd
Dynasty Pedubast II...
-
Pedubast II was a
pharaoh of
Ancient Egypt ****ociated with the 22nd or more
likely the 23rd Dynasty. Not
mentioned in all King lists, he is
mentioned as...
-
Pedubastis I or
Pedubast I was an
Upper Egyptian Pharaoh of
ancient Egypt during the 9th
century BC.
Based on
lunar dates which are
known to
belong to...
- be
Pedubast I's
immediate successor at
Thebes based upon the
career of the
Letter Writer to
Pharaoh Hor IX, who
served under Osorkon II and
Pedubast I...
-
Egypt ceases to be
ruled by
Libyan pharaohs. 730 BC—Osorkon IV
succeeds Pedubast II as king of the Twenty-second
Dynasty of Egypt. (approximate date) 730...
-
Nefertiti and Neferibre.
Pedubast I (High
Priest of Ptah), son of Nesisti-
Pedubast and Nefersobek.
Amenhor II, son of Nesisti-
Pedubast and Nefersobek. Married...
-
Pedubast (also Padibast, or Padibastet) was an
ancient Egyptian official during the 26th Dynasty. He is so far only
known from his burial,
found within...
- found, is in the
British Museum (BM 886). Born as the son of High
Priest Pedubast III and the sistrum-player of Ptah, Herankh-Beludje in the 25th regnal...
- Egypt. In Thebes, a
civil war
engulfed the city,
pitting the
forces of
Pedubast I, who had
proclaimed himself pharaoh,
against the
existing line of Takelot...
- Polyaenus,
Stratagems VII, 11 §7.
Wikimedia Commons has
media related to
Pedubast Seheruibre.
Uzume Z.
Wijnsma (2018), "The
Worst Revolt of the
Bisitun Crisis:...