Ammu Aahotepre

Egyptian pharaoh From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ammu Aahotepre

'Ammu Aahotepre was a pharaoh of the 14th Dynasty who ruled over parts of Lower Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period.[5][2]

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Attestations

This king is poorly attested, see Ryholt 1997:364-365 File 14:4. Like other kings of the dynasty, scarab seals are the only surviving evidence for his reign.

Scarab seals

'Ammu Aahotepre has 61 seals bearing his name: 30 for the nomen 'Ammu and 32 for the prenomen Aahotepre.[6] The theory that 'Ammu and Aahotepre refer to the same ruler is not certain.

At Tell el-Ajjul, a scarab bearing the nomen of this king was discovered by Flinders Petrie in 1933.[7]

Prenomen Aahotepre

Scarab seals from 1x Lachish,[8] 2x Tell el-Ajjul,[9] 1x Canaan (?),[10] 1x Delta (?),[11] 27x Provenance Unknown.[12]

Nomen 'Ammu

Scarab seals from 2x Tell el-Ajjul,[13] 1x Abydos,[14] 1x Semna,[15] 26x Provenance Unknown.[16]

Theories

His reign is believed to have lasted about 15 years, from 1760 BC until 1745 BC.[6]

Identification

Ryholt (1997) identified king 'Ammu with Aahotepre in his reconstruction of the Turin canon.[2] Von Beckerath (1964) had previously assigned the prenomen Aahotepre to a pharaoh of the Sixteenth dynasty of Egypt.[17]

See also

References

Bibliography

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