Second dynasty of Egypt
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The names of the actual rulers of the Second Dynasty, in the History of Ancient Egypt, are in dispute. For the first five kings, the sources are fairly close in agreement:
Name | Years Reigned |
---|---|
Hotepsekhemwy | 38 |
Raneb (also read Nebra) | 39 |
Nynetier | 23 |
Weneg | 8 |
Senedj | 20 |
However, the identity of the next two or three rulers is unclear: we may have both the Horus-name or Nebty(meaning (female) two)-name and their birth names for these rulers; they may be entirely different individuals; or there may be legendary names here. On the left are the rulers most Egyptologists place here; on the right are the names that ultimately come from Manetho's Aegyptica:
Proposed Ruler | Manetho's List |
---|---|
Peribsen | Kaires |
Nepherkheres | |
Sekhemib-Perenmaat | Sesokhris |
With the last ruler, we return to an agreement:
Name | Years Reigned |
---|---|
Khasekhemwy | 30 |
Although Manetho states that their capital was at Tanis, the same as during the First dynasty, at least the first three kings were buried at Saqqara, suggesting that the center of power had moved to the nearby city of Memphis. Beyond this, little can be said about the events during this period; the annual records on the Palermo stone only survive for the end of the reign of Raneb and for parts of Nynetier's. One important event possibly happened during the reign of Khasekhemwy: many Egyptologists read his name ("the Two Powers are Crowned") as commemorating the union of Upper and Lower Egypts.
External link
- Ancient Egypt: The Second Dynasty (http://xoomer.virgilio.it/_XOOM/francescoraf/hesyra/dynasty2.htm)fr:Égypte antique, IIe dynastie