- (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 Dynasty...
- Abraham, this no
longer extant hypocephalus belonged to a
person named Sheshonq.
Hypocephali were disk
shaped writings placed under the
heads of their...
-
Shoshenq (also
commonly spelled Sheshonq, Sheshonk, Shoshenk, Shashank) was the name of many
Ancient Egyptians with Libu
ancestry since the
Third Intermediate...
- 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...
-
Ancient Art,
William Morrow &
Company Inc., New York, (1994). p. 145.
Sheshonq II Brier, p. 144. Clayton,
Peter A.,
Chronicle of the Pharaohs: The Reign-by-Reign...
-
Aakheperre Shoshenq V was an
ancient Egyptian pharaoh of the late 22nd Dynasty.
Despite having enjo**** one of the
longest reigns of the
entire dynasty...
- an era
starting in 950 BC, the
approximate date that the
Libyan pharaoh Sheshonq I came to
power in Egypt. The
Roman calendar began the year on 1 January...
-
known depiction dates to a
stele from Mendes,
erected during the
reign of
Sheshonq III (22nd
Libyan Dynasty),
commemorating a
donation by the
flutist Ânkhhorpakhered...
- name of a town in the
Negev listed in a
victory inscription of
Pharaoh Sheshonq I (biblical Shishak),
which is
referred as "the
Fortress of Abraham", suggesting...
- Dead, he is said to
fashion silver bowls and at
Tanis a
silver coffin of
Sheshonq II has been
discovered decorated with the
iconography of Seker. Seker's...