[permalink] [id link]
Sobekhotep IV was succeeded by the short reign of Sobekhotep V, who was followed by Wahibre Ibiau, then Merneferre Ai.
from
Wikipedia
Some Related Sentences
Sobekhotep and IV
According to Manetho, this latter revolt occurred during the reign of Neferhotep's successor, Sobekhotep IV, though there is no archaeological proof.
Wahibre Ibiau ruled ten years, and Merneferre Ai ruled for twenty three years, the longest of any Thirteenth Dynasty king, but neither of these two kings left as many attestations as either Neferhotep or Sobekhotep IV.
The Hyksos first appear during the reign of the Thirteenth Dynasty pharaoh Sobekhotep IV, and by 1720 BC took control of the town of Avaris.
The splintering of the land accelerated after the reign of the thirteenth dynasty king Sobekhotep IV.
It was sometime after the reign of Sobekhotep IV that the Hyksos may have made their first appearance, and around 1710 BC took control of the town of Avaris ( the modern Tell ed-Dab ' a / Khata ' na ), a few miles from Qantir.
Beginning with the reign of Sobekhotep IV, the power of this dynasty, weak to begin with, deteriorated.
Avaris was a strong candidate to be an independent kingdom after the unity of Egypt began to lapse after the reign of the last powerful king of the 13th dynasty, Sobekhotep IV, since it was a rich and powerful city.
Neferhotep I's brother, king Sobekhotep IV, stated that he was born there, on a stela that was placed during his reign in the temple of Amun at Karnak.
His successor was his brother, Sobekhotep IV, and who is perhaps the most important ruler of the Thirteenth Dynasty.
Sobekhotep and was
Inscriptions show that a shrine or altar was dedicated to her at this site by the 13th dynasty Pharaoh Sobekhotep III.
Based on his name it has been suggested that Sobekhotep was a son of the last king of the 12th Dynasty, King Amenemhat IV.
Sobekhotep and by
Satis being worshiped by the pharaoh Sobekhotep III of the thirteenth dynasty of Egypt | thirteenth dynasty, a portion of her conical crown, the Hedjet, adorned with antelope horns shows in the fragment-c. 1760 B. C.
* The " new king who did not know Joseph " in Exodus 1: 8 is identified by Rohl with Sobekhotep III.
" This expedition dates to either Ramesses III or IV's reign since Sobekhotep is attested in office until at least the reign of Ramesses V. Ramesses IV's final venture to the turquoise mines of the Sinai is documented by the stela of a senior army scribe named Panufer.
Sobekhotep and V
A kneeling statue of Sobekhotep V, one of the pharaohs from the declining years of the Middle Kingdom.
0.154 seconds.