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Siamun and is
Here, an induction of an individual to the Amun priesthood is dated specifically to the reign of Pharaoh Siamun.
She is depicted on a stela from Karnak with a son named Ahmose-ankh, a son named Siamun was reburied in the royal cache DB320, but it was her son Amenhotep I who would eventually succeed his father to the throne.
Unlike his immediate predecessor and successor – Siamun and Shoshenq I respectively – Psusennes II is generally less well attested in contemporary historical records even though various versions of Manetho's Epitome credits him with either a 14 or a 35 year reign, ( generally amended to 15 years by most scholars including the British Egyptologist Kenneth Kitchen ).
Rolf Krauss aptly observes that the earliest attested use of the word pharaoh as a title is documented in Year 17 of the 21st Dynasty king Siamun from Karnak Priestly Annals fragment 3B while a second use of the title ' name ' occurs during Psusennes II's reign where a hieratic graffito in the Ptah chapel of the Abydos temple of Seti I explicitly refers to Psusennes II as the " High Priest of Amen-Re, King of the Gods, the Leader, Pharaoh Psusennes.
This is not unprecedented since previous Egyptologists had previously amended the reign of Siamun by a decade from 9 years — as preserved in surviving copies of Manetho's Epitome — to 19 years based on certain Year 16 and Year 17 dates attested for the latter.
Siamun must therefore be more or less contemporary with Seqenenre, and since it is not possible to identify Siamun with his successor ( this being Kamose ), it may be suggested that Siamun was the nomen of his predecessor Senakhtenre.
His existence was doubted by most scholars until Eric Young established in 1963 that the induction of a temple priest named Nespaneferhor in Year 2 I Shemu day 20 under a certain king named Akheperre Setepenre — in fragment 3B, line 1-3 of the Karnak Priest Annals — occurred one generation prior to the induction of Hori, Nespaneferhor's son in Year 17 of Siamun, which is also recorded in the same annals.
He is credited with a reign of six years in Manetho's Aegyptiaca and was succeeded in power by Siamun, who was either Osochor's son or an unrelated native Egyptian.

Siamun and built
During the 21st dynasty, a shrine of the great god Amun was built by Siamun to the south of the temple of Ptah.

Siamun and Amun
Ankhefenmut kneels before the royal cartouche of Siamun, on a lintel from the Temple of Amun in Memphis.
However, a calculation of a lunar Tepi Shemu feast which records the induction of Hori son of Nespaneferhor into the Amun priesthood in regnal year 17 of Siamun, Psusennes II's predecessor — demonstrates that this date was equivalent to 970 BC.

Siamun and which
However, this argument does not account for the use of Pharaoh as a title in the Dakhla stela — a literary device which first occurs late during the reign of Siamun, an Egyptian king who ruled between 45 to 64 years after Year 19 of Psusennes I.
After an interregnum of 38 years, during which the native Egyptian kings Siamun and Psusennes II assumed the throne, they ruled Egypt throughout the 22nd and 23rd Dynasties under such powerful kings as Shoshenq I, Osorkon I, Osorkon II, Shoshenq III and Osorkon III respectively.

Siamun and by
In the early 10th century BCE, Gezer was conquered by an Egyptian pharaoh ( probably Siamun ), who gave it to King Solomon as the dowry of his daughter, Solomon's wife.
Since Siamun enjoyed a reign of 19 years, he would have died 2 years later in 968 / 967 BC and been succeeded by Psusennes II by 967 BC at the latest.

Siamun and .
For instance, the first dated instance of the title pharaoh being attached to a ruler's name occurs in Year 17 of Siamun on a fragment from the Karnak Priestly Annals.
* 978 BC: Siamun succeeds Osorkon the Elder as king of Egypt.
* 959 BC: Psusennes II succeeds Siamun as king of Egypt.
* 959 BC — Psusennes II succeeds Siamun as king of Egypt.
* 978 BC — Siamun succeeds Osorkon the Elder as king of Egypt.
He had been interred along with those of other 18th and 19th dynasty leaders Ahmose I, Amenhotep I, Thutmose II, Thutmose III, Ramesses I, Seti I, Ramesses II, and Ramesses IX, as well as the 21st dynasty pharaohs Pinedjem I, Pinedjem II, and Siamun.
This makes him a possible candidate for Psusennes II because Pinedjem II died in Year 10 of Siamun, who was the immediate predecessor of this Pharaoh.
Siamun was the predecessor of Psusennes II at Tanis.
Helen Jacquet-Gordon did not know of the two prior examples pertaining to Siamun and Psusennes II.
He was interred along with those of later, eighteenth and nineteenth dynasty leaders, Ahmose I ( his second son to be pharaoh ), Amenhotep I, Thutmose I, Thutmose II, Thutmose III, Ramesses I, Seti I, Ramesses II, and Ramesses IX, as well as the twenty-first dynasty pharaohs Psusennes I, Psusennes II, and Siamun.
It has been suggested that Siamun here was used as an epithet.
Since Siamun was a popular name during this period and the New Kingdom, it seems more likely that we are dealing with a name than an epithet.

is and cited
In his effort to stir the public from its lethargy, Steele goes so far as to list Catholic atrocities of the sort to be expected in the event of a Stuart Restoration, and, with rousing rhetoric, he asserts that the only preservation from these `` Terrours '' is to be found in the laws he has so tediously cited.
'' It is also worthy of note that Lot cited both Kemble and Lappenberg with favor in that article.
Generally, however, in such marriages as those cited, the husband is at his wife's mercy.
To be human, he believes, is to seek one's own destruction: the Freudian `` death-wish '' cliche inevitably cited whenever laymen talk about auto race-drivers.
The numbers of species cited above follow Frost and the total number of known amphibian species is approximately 7, 000, of which nearly 90 % are frogs.
* 1999 – US President Bill Clinton is cited for contempt of court for giving " intentionally false statements " in a sexual harassment civil lawsuit.
Reincarnation is cited by authoritative biblical commentators, including Ramban ( Nachmanides ), Menachem Recanti and Rabbenu Bachya.
He is frequently cited as the inventor of the airliner and was awarded several of the first air mail contracts, which he ultimately could not fulfill.
Perhaps the most comprehensive review of agate chemistry is a recent text by Moxon cited below.
Best known for his play Ubu Roi ( 1896 ), which is often cited as a forerunner to the surrealist theatre of the 1920s and 1930s, Jarry wrote in a variety of genres and styles.
Living in worsening poverty, neglecting his health, and drinking excessively, Jarry went on to write what is often cited as the first cyborg sex novel, Le Surmâle ( The Supermale ), which is partly a satire on the Symbolist ideal of self-transcendence.
The legend is also found cited in compendiums of historical sources from later periods, for example Gottfried Leibniz's Scriptures rerum Brunsvicensium ( 1710 ) and the Anthologia veterum latinorum epigrammatum et poematum ( 1835 ).
Daniel Berlyne created the field of experimental aesthetics in the 1970s, for which he is still the most cited individual decades after his death.
The philosopher Crantor, a student of Plato's student Xenocrates, is often cited as an example of a writer who thought the story to be historical fact.
This compendium is still cited regularly.
Also, it is often erroneously cited that total plate appearances is the divisor ( i. e., denominator ) used in calculating on base percentage ( OBP ), an alternative measurement of a player's offensive performance ; in reality, the OBP denominator does not include certain PAs, such as times reached via either catcher ’ s interference or fielder ’ s obstruction.
Beowulf (; in Old English or ) is the conventional title of an Old English heroic epic poem consisting of 3182 alliterative long lines, set in Scandinavia, commonly cited as one of the most important works of Anglo-Saxon literature.
Circa 585, a certain Gallactorius is cited as count of Bordeaux and fighting the Basques.
De Palma is often cited as a leading member of the New Hollywood generation of film directors, a distinct pedigree who either emerged from film schools or are overtly cine-literate.
The 1950 Landau-Ginzburg theory of superconductivity is not cited in either of the BCS papers.
Employing this schema, major depression would be denoted D. Unipolar mania ( M ) is, depending on the authority cited, either very rare, or nonexistent with such cases actually being Md.
The definition of rapid cycling most frequently cited in the literature ( including the DSM ) is that of Dunner and Fieve: at least four major depressive, manic, hypomanic or mixed episodes are required to have occurred during a 12-month period.
One of the most cited explanations in official inquiries as to the loss of any aircraft or vessel is human error.

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