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Shoshenq (also
commonly spelled Sheshonq,
Sheshonk, Shoshenk, Shashank) was the name of many
Ancient Egyptians with Libu
ancestry since the
Third Intermediate...
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Shoshenq I (Egyptian ššnq;
reigned c. 943–922 BC)—also
known as
Shashank or
Sheshonk or
Sheshonq I—was a
pharaoh of
ancient Egypt and the
founder of the Twenty-second...
- Shishak, also
spelled Shishaq or
Susac (Hebrew: שִׁישַׁק, romanized: Šīšaq, Tiberian: [ʃiʃaq],
Ancient Gr****: Σουσακίμ, romanized: Sousakim), was, according...
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Heqakheperre Shoshenq II or
Shoshenq IIa was a
pharaoh of the Twenty-second
Dynasty of Egypt. He was the only
ruler of this
dynasty whose tomb was not...
- The
modern designation Shoshenq III
refers to King
Usermaatre Setepenre Shoshenq Sibaste Meryamun Netjerheqaon, who
reigned for
about four decades, c....
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mentioned in the
accounts of an
invasion of
Canaan by the
Egyptian king
Sheshonk I of
Egypt in the 10th
century BCE. The
Valley of
Ayalon was
first mentioned...
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Hedjkheperre Setepenre Shoshenq IV was an
ancient Egyptian ruler of the 22nd Dynasty,
between the
reigns of
Shoshenq III and Pami. In 1986,
David Rohl...
- The
Joseph Smith Hypocephalus (also
known as the
Hypocephalus of
Sheshonq or
Facsimile Number 2) was a
papyrus fragment, part of a
larger collection of...
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Nesitaudjatakhet (Nesi-taudjat-akhet) was a wife of
Pharaoh Sheshonk II and the
mother of
Prince Osorkon D.
Nesitaudjatakhet and her son
Osorkon are mentioned...
- Tentshepeh.
Sheshonk I
pursued an
aggressive foreign policy against Syria, Philistine, Phoenicia,
Judah and Israel. Also
known as
Shoshenq I,
Sheshonk, Sheshonq...