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Takeloth I was the first pharaoh and founder of the 23rd Dynasty, made up of Ethiopians, hoping to capture the broken, shattered Egypt of the time. In the Hebrew Bible, he is known as Tirhakah (Takeloth = Takeroth = Tarekoth = Tareko = Tereka = Tirhakah). Although this sounds like a quite difficult transition to make, a professor of linguistics would understand. He ruled over the Ethiopians in Egypt from 715 to 690 B.C.
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Pedubast I, the second pharaoh of the 23rd Dynasty, ruled over the Ethiopians in Egypt from 705 to 679 B.C.
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Around 701 B.C., Sennacherib king of Assyria attacked Israel, and Takeloth I, or Tirhakah (Takeloth = Takeroth = Tarekoth = Tareka = Tirhakah), helped save Israel. He is described in the Hebrew Bible as a Cushite king of Egypt, which is exactly what Takeloth I was. This is commonly dated to 701 B.C.
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Iuput I, the third pharaoh of the 23rd Dynasty, ruled over the Ethiopians in Egypt from 691 to 673 B.C.
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Osorkon III, the fourth pharaoh of the 23rd Dynasty, ruled over the Ethiopians in Egypt from 673 to 665 B.C.
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Takeloth III, the fifth pharaoh of the 23rd Dynasty, ruled over the Ethiopians in Egypt from 672 to 665 B.C.
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Rudamon, the sixth and terminal pharaoh of the Ethiopian 23rd Dynasty in Egypt, ruled from 665 to 646 B.C.