From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10209 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Wednesday, November 30 2022 Volume 14 : Number 10209 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Every woman's fantasy ["Erectile Dysfunction" Subject: Every woman's fantasy Every woman's fantasy http://boostaro.best/2cpI7EdXuKbIE4FGVAXDspFZC3HE0bTeufTVYqhxtJcotzHOtw http://boostaro.best/5wPzWwTpNlOiovdu2Hr-5mqmBJprqGJK82WguaqMULM2f5Pc-Q he mastaba, oriented on a northbsouth axis, is rectangular in shape with a base of 99.6 m C 74.4 m (327 ft C 244 ft) and a height of 18 m (59 ft). The outer slope of its wall is 65B0 or 70B0 and it may have risen in two steps. The tomb dimensions are deemed very small and modest by Verner as compared with the great pyramids of Shepseskaf's fourth dynasty predecessors. Indeed, the total volume of the mastaba masonry represents no more than a third that of Menkaure's pyramid. For Verner and Egyptologist Abeer El-Shahawy, this could be explained by the decline in the economic prosperity of Egypt at the time as well as a decline in the king's power. At the opposite, for Stadelmann one should not conclude that political instability or economic difficulties prevented Menkaure, Shepseskaf and their successors from emulating the great pyramids of their forebears. Instead he proposes that the main impetus be ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Nov 2022 18:29:32 +0100 From: "Restore Vision" Subject: Crystal Clear Vision In Just A Couple of Weeks? Crystal Clear Vision In Just A Couple of Weeks? http://maasalongpremier.email/IA6-cAGPD1JP8pwEwlKwAf1HUQrXE47DDqSTGQ9TjP_wi5vqhQ http://maasalongpremier.email/DXb0zFAeE5iD-LjQgpXa-5SGiuBdz1lJY1RKrp5uOwjqkQk9KQ urthermore, Egyptologist Patrick O'Mara underlines that "no names of estates of the period [which are] compounded with royal names make mention of any other kings than these, nor do the names of royal grandchildren, who often bore the name of a royal ancestor as a component of their own ." This reconstruction of late fourth to early fifth dynasty is also in agreement with that given on the Abydos king list written during the reigns of Seti I (c. 1292b1279 BC), where Shepseskaf's cartouche is on the 25th entry between those of Menkaure and Userkaf. Three historical sources go directly or indirectly against this order of succession. The source in direct contradiction is the Aegyptiaca (??????????), a history of Egypt written in the 3rd century BC during the reign of Ptolemy II (283b246 BC) by Manetho. No copies of the Aegyptiaca have survived and it is now known only through later writings by Sextus Julius Africanus and Eusebius. According to the Byzantine scholar George Syncellus, Africanus wrote that the Aegyptiaca mentioned the succession "Bicheris ? SebercherC*s ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Nov 2022 13:37:50 +0100 From: "Good News" Subject: BONUS: $90 WALGREENS Gift Card Opportunity BONUS: $90 WALGREENS Gift Card Opportunity http://dicksweep.shop/NVRJgQa8xQECfbn8wYzpenSl_aZK1ICM3zEoCPTyIYtJwUwX8g http://dicksweep.shop/E40OD9TinkMmympFGI6kAce25KadmyXQE4VS2LOyNiOT2b4huA xceptional circumstances could explain this observation, for example if there was no other suitable female descendant to officiate in Shepseskaf's cult after his death. Bunefer's mother could have been Khentkaus I whose tomb is located near Bunefer's so that Khentkaus I might have been a consort of Shepseskaf. Bunefer's royal husband may have been pharaoh Thamphthis, whose existence is uncertain however as he is not attested archaeologically, see below for a discussion. Hassan, who excavated Bunefer's tomb, rejects the opinion that Bunefer was Shepseskaf's daughter. He notes that most of Bunefer's titles are wifely ones and stresses "the fact that the name of Shepseskaf appears in her tomb is in favour of the assumption that he was her husband". In any case Bunefer had at least one son, whose name is lost, and whose father was not a king according to this son's titles. He was possibly an issue from a second, non-royal, marriage of Bunefer. Princess Khamaat married to the high priest of Ptah, Ptahshepses, and is known by her titles to have been the daughter of a king. She was long thought to be a daughter of Sh ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Nov 2022 15:18:48 -0500 From: "Protects Brain Health" Subject: Moringa gift worth $147 for you Moringa gift worth $147 for you http://moringa.best/WNYjZPrlM6Ypvx8DelXl8YZq-iASPKGO48GuXxxLeVaALMGSSw http://moringa.best/PsHxWQhl5I2_REsMtI-twM6ehk_Ubh7mDcUX-NfgYcYjCvHclA cavations of Menkaure's mortuary temple confirm that it was probably left unfinished at this pharaoh's death. Originally planned to be made of granite, then altered to be completed of white Turah limestone, all stone construction ceased and the temple was hastily finished in crude bricks during Shepseskaf's rule. This material allows for rapid construction. Shepseskaf's works concerned the causeway and entrance corridors of the temple, its great open court, storerooms and inner temple as well as the exterior walls. All brick constructions were covered in yellow mud then plastered white and left plain, except for the walls of the great open court which were made into a system of niches. The completed doorways were fitted with wooden doors and the temple floors were of beaten mud on packed limestone chips, while the great court received a stone flooring. Further activities are reported in Herodotus' account of the late fourth dynasty. According to Herodotus, Menkaure was succeeded by a king, whom he calls Asukhis,[note 12] who built an outer court of Hephaestus's temple, decreed a new law on borrowing to remedy the lack of ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Nov 2022 05:42:30 -0500 From: "Congrats!" Subject: Congrats! You've received an Starbucks reward Congrats! You've received an Starbucks reward http://savagegrowpluszy.today/Sr7QeVGnK4tUb5wnEsBi0_0Sh1VOaDl1qNUEKn2psgfAqiiVzQ http://savagegrowpluszy.today/OaS-MdxHsyyD052VdE9faUHzCJxXqDJv-7IgOxKaEfVg7rnfww scriptions in queen Bunefer's Giza tomb[note 5] demonstrate that she is related to Shepseskaf: she notably bore the title of "Great of praise, priestess of King Shepseskaf, the king's wife, the great ornament, the great favourite". Lana Troy, an Egyptologist, deduces from this title that while she married a pharaoh, she served as a priestess in the funerary cult for her father[note 6] and therefore must have been Shepseskaf's daughter and the consort of another unspecified king. Indeed, all priestesses serving in a king's funerary cult were princesses, daughters or granddaughters of that king. If this hypothesis is true, it makes Bunefer the only queen known from Ancient Egypt to have served in a mortuary cult. Exceptional circumstances could explain this observation, for example if there was no other suitable female descendant to officiate in Shepseska ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 29 Nov 2022 15:02:26 -0500 From: "Dead kidneys?" Subject: If you're diabetic or even pre-diabetic you still have time. If you're diabetic or even pre-diabetic you still have time. http://kidneydisease.best/ZEsDoVLDlsb8NIlejk-ScZMDJ6nwvTZhdmhroS_kfOPDB6VlzA http://kidneydisease.best/HtBpcHMkdX_DWcR0Pm0F1DdO5UG4C2MV9v34RKdTfPlDSJI9 he division of ancient Egyptian kings into dynasties is an invention of Manetho's Aegyptiaca, intended to adhere more closely to the expectations of Manetho's patrons, the Greek rulers of Ptolemaic Egypt. The historical reality of these dynasties is difficult to appraise and they might not correspond to the modern conception for that term: for example Djoser, the first king of the third dynasty, was the son of Khasekhemwy, final king of the Second dynasty.[note 16] Stadelmann and BC!rta remark that Shepseskaf (which means "His Ka is noble") and Userkaf have much in common, for example their throne names both follow the same pattern qualifying the Ka of Ra as "noble" for the former and "strong" for the later[note 3] and they probably belonged to the same family with Userkaf being either Shepseskaf's son or his brother. In addition, the biographies of officials serving at the time show no break in their careers at the juncture of the fourth and fifth dynasties and no traces of religious, political or economic upheavals at the time.[note 17] Some distinction between the fourth and fifth dynasties may nonetheless have been recognised by the ancient Egyptians, as recorded by a tradition much older[note 18] than Manetho's and found in the tale of the Westcar Papyrus. In this story, King Khufu is foretold the demis ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10209 ***********************************************