Raneb
Raneb (or Nebra, "Ra is Lord") ruled egypt during the second dynasty of theEarly Dynastic Period.Manetho recorded that Raneb reigned for 39 years, but most scholars belive his reign was much shorter, possibly only ten years. Manetho also claims that he introduced the worship of Mendes (the sacred goat) and began the bull cults of the Mnevis in Heliopolis, and the Apis in Memphis. However, references to the cult of the Apis in Den's reign prove that the cult predates Raneb. As far as we know, he was the first pharaoh to include the sun god Ra in his name and his reign marked a swing in power to the cult of Ra. As a result, his name is sometimes given as "Nebra" (meaning "Lord of the Sun").
He is thought to have been the son or brother of his predecessor,Hotepsekhemwy's, but there is no firm evidence of a family relationship. We do not know the name of his wife, but an individual named Perneb is referred to as "son of the king" in a tomb which may belong to him. However, the tomb may in fact be that of Hotepsekhemwy.
A granite statuette of the mortuary priest (Hotepdief) lists the names ofHotepsekhemwy, Raneb and Nynetjer, suggesting that there were no successional problems at the beginning of the second dynasty. His name also appears on stone vessels (mostly shist, alabaster and marble) found in Abydos, Giza and Saqqara. However, rather strangely, his name always appears with that of Hotepsekhemwy or Nynetjer, and never on its own.
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