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Ramessés 8th Pharaoh 20th Dynasty IX
- Preferred Name: Ramessés 8th Pharaoh 20th Dynasty IX
- Alternate Name: Amon-her-khepshef Khaemwaset
- Gender: M
- Death: 1109 BC
- FSID: 9WCX-V8F
- Birth: 1175 BC
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: 8th Pharaoh of the 20th DynastyBET 1129 BC AND 1111 BC
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
Neferkare Setepenre Ramesses IX (also written Ramses) (originally named Amon-her-khepshef Khaemwaset) (ruled 1129–1111 BC) was the eighth pharaoh of the Twentieth Dynasty of Egypt. He was the third longest serving king of this Dynasty after Ramesses III and Ramesses XI. He is now believed to have assumed the throne on I Akhet day 21 based on evidence presented by Jürgen von Beckerath in a 1984 GM article.
According to Papyrus Turin 1932+1939, Ramesses IX enjoyed a reign of 18 years and 4 months and died in his 19th Year in the first month of Peret between day 17 and 27. His throne name, Neferkare Setepenre, means "Beautiful Is The Soul of Re, Chosen of Re." Ramesses IX is believed to be the son of Mentuherkhepeshef, a son of Ramesses III, since Mentuherkhopshef's wife, the lady Takhat bears the prominent title of King's Mother on the walls of tomb KV10, which she usurped and reused in the late 20th Dynasty; no other 20th Dynasty king is known to have had a mother with this name. Ramesses IX was, therefore, probably a grandson of Ramesses III.
Ramesses IX is known to have had two sons: at Heliopolis, "a gateway was reinscribed with texts including the king's names and also those of the prince and High Priest Nebmaatre, who was fairly certainly his son." Ramesses IX's second son, Montuherkhopshef C, perhaps this king's intended heir, who did not live long enough to succeed his father, took over the former KV19 tomb of Sethirkhepsef B in the Valley of the Kings. The throne was instead assumed by Ramesses X whose precise relationship to Ramesses IX is unclear. Ramesses X might have been Ramesses IX's son, but this assumption remains unproven. Tomb KV19, which was one of the most beautifully decorated tombs in the royal valley, had been abandoned by Sethirkhepsef B when the latter assumed the throne as king Ramesses VIII and one of prince Montuherkhopshef's depictions there "bears the prenomen cartouche to Ramesses IX on its belt" thereby establishing the identity of this prince's father. The tomb of Ramesses IX, KV6, has been open since antiquity, as is evidenced by the presence of Roman and Greek graffiti on the tomb walls. It is quite long in the tradition of the 'syringe' tunnels of the later 19th and 20th Dynasties and lies directly opposite the tomb of Ramesses II in the Valley of the Kings; this fact may have influenced Ramesses IX's choice of location for his final resting place due to its proximity to this great Pharaoh. While Ramesses IX's chief queen is not precisely identified in surviving Egyptian inscriptions, she was most likely Baketwernel.
Preferred Parents:
Father: Montjuhirkopshef ben Ramesses III III, b. ABT 1190 BC d. AFT 1155 BC
Mother: Takhat of Egypt, b. in Pi-Ramesses, Qantir, Ash Sharqiyah, Egypt d. in Pi-Ramesses, Qantir, Ash Sharqiyah, Egypt
Family 1: Baktwernel de Egypt, b. in , , Egypt d. in KV10, Egypt
- Tiye Nesmout , b. 1133 BC
- Ramessès 9th Pharaoh 20th Dynasty X, b. 1140 BC in Memphis,Goshen,Egypt d. 1105 BC
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