I trust the period from Ramesses VI until Ramesses XI meets every one of the requirements of the missing 300 years. Little was recorded about Ramesses VII, VIII or IX. As indicated by Herodotus the following lord to succeed Proteus was a ruler named Rhampsinutus (numerous students of history trust this is the Greek rendering for a lord named Ramesses). So which Ramesses would it say it was? I trust he was Ramessses XI. Herodotus expresses that Rhampsinutus had a "tremendous fortune in silver" bigger than any ruler of Egypt before him. The main two Pharoahs in Egypt's history that had silver boxes that have been found were Psusennes of the 21st tradition and Shoshenq I of the 23rd line. This is critical on the grounds that I trust this is prove that Ramessess XI fits better as a lord of the 21st line instead of the twentieth administration.
I recommend that Ramesses XI, much the same as Rhampsinitus, gained his fortune in working with metals since history records that he raised two incredible statues at the site of the Temple of Vulcan, the divine force of metal-working. Old Egypt was well known for its gold mines not its silver mines. Silver was mined generally in Canaan and Mesopotamia. A huge silver fortune would show Ramesses XI had turned out to be rich in silver by exchanging different items to countries in Canaan (most likely steeds). Students of history additionally have discovered that Ramesses XI proclaimed another stamping of time called the "reiteration of-births". A significant number of the rules of the lords of Egypt after Ramesses XI were portrayed as far as years "in the reiteration of-births" instead of "in the year" of the authoritative contemporary ruler. I trust Ramesses XI was utilizing the redundancy of-births idea to demonstrate the "resurrection" of the Egyptian country following 300 years of quiet. The proof of this new checking of time originated from an engraving on a divider at the Temple of Karnak that read "year 7 of the Repetition of Births...under Ramesses XI".
Herodotus likewise says this ruler Rhampsinutus founded another yearly perception that sounds suspiciously near the "redundancy of-births". Herodotus portrays how Rhampsinitus went down alive to Hades (the black market) and played dice with a divine being gotten back to Demeter and he woke up from Hades with a brilliant hand towel, his rewards from his round of dice. This story was the premise of a yearly festival. It sounds like Rhampsinitus typically passes on and wakes up each year through this festival. Only one passage after Herodotus discusses this festival, he discusses the accompanying Egyptian religious principle.
The Egyptians trusted the human body was godlike and when a man kicked the bucket his spirit entered a creature; when that creature passed on his spirit kept on being reawakened in an extensive rundown of creatures that included creatures from the land, ocean and air until his spirit entered a human body. This was a cycle accepted to keep going for a long time. Again this sounds suspiciously like the possibility of "redundancy of-births". Along these lines I trust that the Rhampsinitus depicted by greek mythology and Herodotus must be Ramesses XI.
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