The Decree of Sethos II at Karnak : Further Thoughts on the Succession Problem after Merenptah. (original) (raw)

A New Reading to Ramesses III’s Great Double Stela: The Placement of Fragment C

2017

Fragment C (KRI V 247, 1–8) is a large loose block with parts of eight lines of Ramesses III’s Great Double Stela in Karnak. Its exact position has been debated since the 1950s. The present paper provides philological and epigraphical arguments for its placement to the upper part of the Northern Stela of Ramesses III’s double monument. The new reading of lines 7–14 of the Northern Stela, which is presented here in hieroglyphic transcript as well as in transliteration and translation, respects the coherence of the overall articulation of the double inscription.

Józefowicz E., 'Ramesside Inscriptions and Preparatory Sketches in the Western Wall of Portico of Obelisks of Hatshepsut’s Temple at Deir el-Bahari', Études et Travaux XXXIII (2020), 107-119

Études et Travaux, 2020

The representations of all the gods on the western wall of the Portico of Obelisks in Hatshepsut’s temple at Deir el-Bahari were destroyed during the Amarna period and restored under the reign of Ramesses II. In this paper, the inscriptions related to those restorations are commented on, along with a set of dipinti drawn on undecorated blocks below the dado lines. Those dipinti, of varying quality, represent the god Amun. Because of their location and form they were probably ‘restoration guidelines’ for the sculptors re-creating the destroyed images of the god. The paper’s aim is to reconfirm the dating of the restorations in this part of the temple and discuss the possible reasons for the dipinti creation. Full-text PDF available here: http://etudesettravaux.iksiopan.pl/images/etudtrav/EtudTrav\_otwarte/EtudTrav\_33/EtudTrav\_33\_07\_Jozefowicz\_compressed.pdf

THE 400 YEAR STELA OF RAMSES II

Pharaoh Ramses II 'the Great' in Egyptian history reverberates down to the present day. In 'The complete Valley of the Kings' (1996) by N Reeves and R H Wilkinson, the opening narrative on page 140 informs the reader that 'Ramesses II fully merits his epithet, 'the Great'…during his 67 year reign built more temples and monuments, took more wives (eight plus concubines) and-according to tradition-sired more children (over 100) than any other pharaoh. The item under review is a specific monument which was erected during his 67 th year. Cairo Museum houses this Stela which had been discovered at Tanis. From 'Ancient Records of Egypt' by James H Breasted-Volume 3 (1962) narrative is drawn from sections 539-542 (pages 227 and 228). 539. At the top of the monument is a relief, showing Ramses II offering wine to Set. Behind the king stands Seti, the author of the monument, praying as follows: _ _ _ thy ka, O Set, son of Nut, mayest thou grant a happy life following thy ka, to the ka of ……[Seti]. 540. Below the relief is Seti's record of his commission, with the appended prayer, as follows: Live …King Ramses II, sovereign, who equips the Two Lands with monuments in his name, so that Re rises in heaven for love of him, King Ramses II. 541. His majesty commanded to make a great stela of granite, in the great name of his fathers, in order that the name of his grandfather, King Menmare, Son of Re: Seti-Merneptah, might be exalted, enduring and abiding forever, like Re, every day. 542. In the year 400, in the fourth month of the third season, on the fourth

The Royal Funerary Stelae of the First Two Dynasties in Abydos. The "stela" of King Den reconsidered (RMAH, Brussels, inv. E.562)

Koregos (https://urlz.fr/8S5r), 2019

Full version available online: https://urlz.fr/8S5r This paper deals with the royal stelae of the first two dynasties discovered at Abydos and, more specifically, with the "stela" of King Den exhibited at the Royal Museums of Art and History in Brussels (E.0562). A careful analysis shows that this object can hardly be a royal stela. This paper presents the arguments that allow us to doubt the now centenary identification of this object and then adresses the issue of the royal stelae of Abydos. It offers a new analysis of the data at our disposal and deals in particular with the materials that were used and the architectural evolution of the royal tombs during the first dynasty. This study is based on an updated catalog of these stelae.