User:القجيج القجيج/sandbox

Libyan leader Buyowa

Hua Libyan leader Boywa leader of the Libyan tribes. The name of this leader is mentioned in the Stela of Pasenhor Council. Libyan leader Boywa is the first male ancestor of the twenty-first Libyan family and the twenty-second Libyan family. a period of time There is not much detail about this leader, but perhaps this is what was written in the Basnahr plate that was discovered in 1851 by August Mariette, the Egyptologist who had an excellent role in preserving the antiquities of Egypt, later known as Mariette. The time period of this leader proved to us, or roughly, during the reign of Ramses III around (1186 BC - 1155 BC) and Ramses. This is the ruler in the Twentieth Dynasty, and there is a suggestion from some Egyptian archaeologists that the Libyan leader Pia is one of the leaders who participated in the wars against the Kingdom or the Ramses III family of the twentieth Egyptian family.

studies
This weighting resulted from what was found, and it is a witness and evidence of the wars of the Pharaohs and the Libyan tribes of that period, as well as the arrival of his descendants, who is their first grandfather to the rule of the ancients. Egypt during the twenty-first and twenty-second dynasty.

Papyrus
One of the papyri describes the Battle of Delta: during his reign, the Libyans aspired to take control of Egypt, but Ramses III defeated them near the Wadi al-Natrun. The text of the papyrus ((What Ramses III did to the enemies: their majesty swept them as a flame of fire that spread with great brutality, threw to the ground, drowned in their blood, and everyone who was left alive to Egypt), and if this weighting was true, then the Libyan leader Boywa was the leader of the Libyan tribal armies in that time.

Battle of Delta
This battle and its facts are recorded on the walls of the funeral of Ramses III funerary temple in Medinet Habu (now near Luxor). It is a battle between the Egyptian army, and the Libo tribes took place around 1178 or 1175 BC when Ramses III, Pharaoh of Egypt at that time, resisted a major invasion by the peoples of the sea and the barbarian tribes in the battle matrix somewhere near Egypt on the Libyan border but the site The flour is unknown. This battle is great between the Pharaohs and the Libo tribes, and its facts are recorded on the walls of the funeral temple of Ramses III at Habu (now near Luxor). The peoples of the Mediterranean were known by a number of names, such as Sheridan, Libo, and others. In the twelfth century BC, he invaded ancient Egypt. It was clear that the desired goal of these powers was a vast and resource-rich land, like Egypt, where it sought not only to spoil the land, but to occupy the land itself. The sea and the barbarians of Libo had a great desire to seize land suitable for settlement, and it seemed to them that Egypt was the best option. Therefore, the defense of the Egyptians in that war was desperate, as Egypt was almost besieged and defended its presence against the occupation. The attack of the peoples of the Mediterranean is one of the most serious threats that ancient Egypt has ever faced. The inscriptions of Ramesses III's funeral temple describe how he succeeded in his successful battle against the enemy on the Egyptian-Syrian border and the Egyptian-Libyan border to stop his advance to the Egyptian kingdom and its borders.

Offspring
After that, Pasenhor begins to trace back along his genealogy for sixteen generations, until about the end of the 20th Dynasty:

Buyuwawa “the Libyan” |                         |                          |                                           GC Mawasun |                 |                  |                GC Nebneshi |                 |                  |                GC Paihut(y) |                 |                  |               GC Shoshenq A = Mehtenweskhet A                         | +--+                 |           GF GC Nimlot A = Tentsepeh A                                                 | ++                |            P Shoshenq I = Karomama A |                 +--+                  |            P Osorkon I = Tashedkhonsu |                +--+                 |            P Takelot I = Kapes |                +--+                 |            P Osorkon II = Djedmutesankh |                +---+                 |           CH Nimlot C = Tentsepeh C |               +--+                |       CH Ptahudjankhef = princess Tentsepeh D |             +-+              |       CH Hemptah A = Tjankemit |            +--+             |       CH Pasenhor A = Petpetdidies |             +--+              |       CH Hemptah B = Iretirou |                   |                    |                Pasenhor B Where GC = Great Chief; GF = God's father; P = Pharaoh; CH = Chief of Herakleopolis

Pasenhor's genealogy is quite important since he was a member of the royal family and could claim common ancestors with many pharaohs of the 22nd Dynasty. Thanks to the stela, we know more about the Dynasty's origin and chronology, as well as the name of some otherwise unattested royal wives such as Karomama A, Tashedkhonsu and Kapes.