Ticket #5658: untitled-part.html

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3        <title>Newsletter</title>
4        <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
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7<center>&nbsp;
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23                        <td style="text-align: center" width="600"><a href="http://coolmepro.us/yp6BfLAARxUlg-ZvWiz4fRPfgKkdvE6TT_fUTkU3KKvfzyYfjg" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://coolmepro.us/7edf9e3df5c5aa8ddd.jpg" /></a></td>
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39<a href="http://coolmepro.us/tXk5e7gNu-OvrrYGhE3dcGUaH5H80tdic13kujStmIwdYpoKKw" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://coolmepro.us/5cf1d7ff10bfa94c8e.jpg" /></a><br />
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45<span style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:6px;">sperity allowed Pepi to become the most prolific builder of the Old Kingdom. At the same time, Pepi favored the rise of small provincial centres and recruited officials of non-noble extraction to curtail the influence of powerful local families. Continuing Teti&#39;s policy, Pepi expanded a network of warehouses accessible to royal envoys and from which taxes and labor could easily be collected. Finally, he buttressed his power after the harem conspiracy by forming alliances with Khui, the provincial nomarch of Abydos, marrying two of his daughters, Ankhesenpepi I and Ankhesenpepi II, and making both Khui&#39;s wife Nebet and her son Djau viziers. The Egyptian state&#39;s external policy under Pepi comprised military campaigns against Nubia, Sinai and the southern Levant, landing troops on the Levantine coast using Egyptian transport boats. Trade with Byblos, Ebla and the oases of the Western Desert flourished, while Pepi launched mining and
46  quarrying expeditions to Sinai and further afield. Pepi had a pyramid complex built for his funerary cult in Saqqara, next to which he built at least a further six pyramids for his consorts. Pepi&#39;s pyramid, which originally stood 52.5 m (172 ft) tall, and an accompanying high temple, followed the standard layout inherited from the late Fifth Dynasty. The most extensive corpus of Pyramid Texts from the Old Kingdom cover the walls of Pepi I&#39;s burial chamber, antechamber and much of the corridor leading to it. For the first time, these texts also appear in some of the consorts&#39; pyramids. Excavations revealed a bundle of viscera and a mummy fragment, both presumed to belong to the pharaoh. Pepi&#39;s complex, called Pepi Mennefer, remained the focus of his funerary cult well into the Middle Kingdom and ultimately gave its name to the nearby capital of Egypt, Memphis. Pepi&#39;s cult stopped early in the Second Intermediate Period. Pepi&#39;s monuments began to be quarried f
47 or their stone in the New Kingdom, and in the Mamluk era they were almost entirely disma</span></center>
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