by
Damien F. Mackey
In the case of the so-called Twentieth
Dynasty, Seti-nakhte, the heroic dynastic founder
who drove out the usurper, and who is Seti, rears
up again in the guise of Ramses XI
at the end of that dynasty.
The characteristic
feature of the early reign of Horemheb, of Seti, is restoration (and lawgiving) after a period of chaos and usurpation.
Hence the institution of a new era, whm mswt
(‘Repetition of Births’).
This connection
between the Nineteenth Dynasty and, supposedly, the era the preceded it, is
picked up again with Ramses XI, also (like Seti) named Menmare, with his new era of restoration, whm mswt.
Ramses XI is
supposed to have reigned, like Horemheb, for 28 years.
Topsy-turvy
Egyptian dynasties, as we noted elsewhere, with a dynasty’s beginning
re-emerging at its end.
Thus, in the
case of the so-called Twentieth Dynasty, Seti-nakhte, the heroic dynastic
founder who drove out the usurper, and who is Seti (supporting the strong
tradition of a “Sethos” as dynastic founder), rears up again in the guise of
Ramses XI at the end of that dynasty.
That is already a
chronological stretch from c. 1320 BC (Horemheb) - 1070 BC (Ramses XI).
250 years for he
who I consider to be the one pharaoh: Seti the Great.
And this does
not yet take into account possible further extensions of Seti, via Psusennes I
(=II) and on even into the 25th dynasty.
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