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Ammon |
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Ammon![]() An avenue of ram-headed sphinxes leads to the entrance to the temple precinct of Amun-Ra, Karnak, Egypt. Situated on the east bank of the Nile close to the modern town of Luxor, Karnak was part of ancient Thebes. The remains of this city, which reached its peak during the New Kingdom (1550–1070 BC), form one of the largest religious complexes known to archaeology. In Egyptian mythology, king of the gods; the equivalent of the Greek Zeus (Roman Jupiter). The Egyptian pharaohs identified themselves with his supremacy, adopting his name as in Tutankhamen. In art he is represented as a ram or goose, as a man with a ram's head, or as a man crowned with two tall feathers. He had temples at Siwa oasis, Libya, and at Napata and Thebes, Egypt; his oracle at Siwa was patronized by the classical Greeks.
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| ? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | ||
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| Ammon,
Adventist Health's president and chief executive officer, said in a
prepared statement. Bette Ammon, Director, Coeur d'Alene Public Library, ID
But during the five weeks when Penn State University professors
Rachel Grant and Dick Ammon visited Warren and his classmates to teach
them about jazz music, its history, and the abundant literature that
surrounds it, Warren blossomed. |
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