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This is an alphabetical list of songs recorded by Phyllis Hyman.

Table
Albums

Singles

K-O-A
The kings of Axum ruled an important trading state in the area which is now Eritrea and northern Ethiopia, from 150 BC to 960 AD.

Monarchs named on traditional regnal lists
The Axumites and their Abyssinian descendants recorded the names of their kings on written and oral regnal lists. These lists however are often inconsistent in the order of kings and only some of them record individual reign lengths. These differences are likely due to the fact that they were compiled over a long period of time in different monasteries.

The traditional history of Axum can be divided into these periods:
 * From Arwe to Makeda (c. 14th to 10th century BC)
 * From Menelik I to Bazen (c. 10th century BC to 1st century AD)
 * From Bazen to Abreha and Atsbeha (c. 1st to 4th centuries AD)
 * From Abreha and Atsbeha to Dil Na'od (c. 4th to 10th centuries AD)

No archaeological evidence has surfaced to date to support the existence of the Axumite kingdom before the 1st century BC. The traditional dates assigned to some monarchs is often hard to reconcile with the available evidence outside of the written sources.

14th to 10th centuries BC (traditional)
These monarchs sometimes have "Za" placed in front of their names. Due to Makeda being identified with the Biblical Queen of Sheba in Ethiopian tradition, her reign is dated to the 10th century BC in order to be contemporary with Solomon. This would place Angabo's reign in the 14th century BC.

10th century BC to 1st century AD (traditional)
Menelik I, as the son of Solomon and Makeda, is traditionally dated to the 10th century BC. A much later king, Bazen began his reign in 8 BC according to traditional sources and regnal lists. However, the number, order and reign lengths of the kings who reigned between Menelik and Bazen varies considerably from one list to the next. Adding up the recorded reign lengths also does not allow Menelik's reign to be pushed back far enough to reach the 10th century BC.

The following table includes monarchs who are named on August Dillmann's king lists "A" and "B", which were both compiled from multiple sources. Only list A included reign lengths. Additional kings recorded by Carlo Conti Rossini and Pedro Páez are also included in the table.

Páez believed that some lists included the birth names of kings while other lists included the names they took upon ascending to the throne. His list of regnal lists was similar to Dillmann's list A, while his list of birth names was similar to Dillmann's list B.

The overall combined order of the monarchs from both of Dillmann's lists is partially based on the 1922 regnal list of Ethiopia, written by either Heruy Wolde Selassie or Alaqa Taye Gabra Mariam. This list attempted to combine the order of rulers from multiple lists into a longer line of succession. However, its historical accuracy is undermined by the fact that large parts of it are pseudohistorical and include many rulers of ancient Nubia who did not rule Axum. Because of this, the reign lengths from this particular list are not included below.

Many of the rulers named below have "Za" placed in front of their names on some lists.

1st to 4th centuries AD (traditional)
The brothers Abreha and Atsbeha are traditionally venerated as the first kings of Axum to convert to Christianity in the early 4th century AD. The monarchs who reigned between Bazen and Abreha and Atsbeha therefore reigned during a span of just over three centuries from the first decade of the first century AD to the 330s AD.

The following table includes monarchs named on August Dillmann's lists "A", "B" and "C", which were compiled from multiple sources. Only list A includes reign lengths. The overall order in the table is partially based on the 1922 regnal list of Ethiopia.

L-E
The following list of legendary monarchs of Egypt derives from numerous sources dating from Ancient Egypt, the Greco-Roman world, and Coptic and Arabic literature.

Pharaonic Period
In ancient times, some Egyptian regnal lists included names of various deities who were said to have ruled Egypt before the first human ruler Menes.

Turin King List
The Turin King List or Turin Royal Canon, dated to the reign of Ramesses II, included a line of gods and spirits before the first dynasty. This list however only exists in a fragmentary state and many parts of it are lost. The mythical rulers are divided into multiple sections or possibly dynasties. The first nine rulers are gods who are attested in many other examples of Egyptian literature, while the second and third columns include groups of sacred animals and demigods.

Manetho and the Book of Sothis
The regnal list included with Manetho's Aegyptica originally contained the names of mythical kings, though quotations of the list by Africanus and Eusebius do not include them. The original text of Aegyptica is lost and the exact names of the mythical kings is unknown. A later text called the Book of Sothis was attributed to Manetho but modern historians now consider it to be a forgery. Panodorus of Alexandria altered the reign lengths of these mythical rulers because Christian authors considered them to be impossibly high. These Egyptian gods were identified with various Greco-Roman gods.

Coptic and Islamic sources
Akhbar al-zaman

VHS Range (1994–2003)
The Video Top 100 and TV on Video Top 50 charts began in January 1994. The chart positions of the VHS releases from before January 1994 thus reflect the highest peak they attained long after their original releases.

Classic Series DVD and Blu-Ray Range (1999–present)
Note: No charts were published between 30 April and 11 September 2005. Instead, all sales between those two dates were collated into one longer chart covering the period 1 May–10 September 2005. This resulted in The Claws of Axos and Revelation of the Daleks not gaining a placement on any of the video charts.

Revived Series DVD and Blu-Ray range (2005–present)
Note: Chart positions for Volumes 1 to 3 may not reflect true weekly popularity, as no charts were published between 30 April and 11 September 2005. Instead, all sales between those two dates were collated into one longer chart covering the period 1 May–10 September 2005.

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