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Other sources say that Scota was the daughter of Pharaoh Neferhotep I of Egypt and his wife Senebsen, and was the wife of Míl, that is Milesius, and the mother of Éber Donn and Érimón.
Míl had given Neferhotep military aid against ancient Ethiopia and was given Scota in marriage as a reward for his services.
There, Nephthys was the primary protectress of the resident Osirian relic, of the Bennu Bird, and of the local Horus / Osiris manifestation, the god Neferhotep.
* Neferhotep I with the adoptive grandfather of Moses.
* Khanefere Sebekhotep IV, brother and successor of Neferhotep, with Khenephres, the Pharaoh from whom Moses fled to Midian.
* Neferhotep 1696-1685
The strongest king of this period, Neferhotep I, ruled for eleven years and maintained effective control of Upper Egypt, Nubia, and the Delta, with the possible exceptions of Xois and Avaris.
Neferhotep I was even recognized as the suzerain of the ruler of Byblos, indicating that the Thirteenth Dynasty was able to retain much of the power of the Twelfth Dynasty, at least up to his reign.
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 splintering of the land accelerated after the reign of the Thirteenth Dynasty king Neferhotep I.
Papyrus Salt 124 records that Neferhotep, one of the two chief workmen of the Deir el-Medina necropolis, had been killed during the reign of Amenmesse ( the king's name is written as ' Msy ' in the document ).
Neferhotep was replaced by Paneb his adopted son, against whom many crimes were alleged by Neferhotep's brother Amennakhte in a strongly worded indictment preserved on a papyrus in the British Museum.
Also he had allegedly tried to kill Neferhotep in spite of having been educated by him, and after the chief workman had been killed by ' the enemy ' had bribed the vizier Pra ' emhab in order to usurp his place.
Neferhotep had complained of the attacks upon himself to the vizier Amenmose, presumably a predecessor of Pra ' emhab, whereupon Amenmose had Paneb punished.
Famine, which had plagued Upper Egypt during late Dynasty XIII and Dynasty XIV, also blighted Dynasty XVI, most evidently in the reign of Neferhotep III.
* Neferhotep, findspot of the Papyrus Boulaq 18
He was the successor of Neferhotep III and is assigned a reign of 1 year in the Turin Canon.
His predecessor was Sekhemre Sankhtawy Neferhotep III.
* TT257-Mahu or Neferhotep
Neferhotep I was an Egyptian king of the Thirteenth Dynasty and one of the most powerful rulers of this dynasty.
Neferhotep I came from a military family.
Haankhef and Kemi were the parents of Neferhotep I.
The family of Neferhotep I seems to have come from Thebes.
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.
A woman called Senebsen is known as Neferhotep I's wife.

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