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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Index_of_ancient_Egypt–related_articles
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dbr:Land_reform_in_ancient_Egypt
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dbr:Ancient_Egyptian_agriculture
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Land reform in ancient Egypt
rdfs:comment
Land ownership in ancient Egypt cycled between private, monarch, and feudal. A strong king could take advantage of harsh situations such as famine, buy lands from private owners and make them a property of the crown. A weaker king would have to buy services from strong lords by giving them gifts of land.
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1038354396
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dbr:Twenty-fourth_dynasty_of_Egypt dbr:Sais dbr:Diodorus_Siculus dbr:Bakenranef dbr:Ancient_Egypt dbr:Lincoln_Institute_of_Land_Policy dbc:Ancient_Egypt dbc:Land_reform dbr:Ancient_Egyptian_agriculture
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August 2017
dbp:inaccurate
yes
dbo:abstract
Land ownership in ancient Egypt cycled between private, monarch, and feudal. A strong king could take advantage of harsh situations such as famine, buy lands from private owners and make them a property of the crown. A weaker king would have to buy services from strong lords by giving them gifts of land. Bakenranef, a king of the Twenty-fourth Dynasty who ruled Sais around 725 BCE, has been credited with initiating a land reform program. The tradition of Bakenranef as a great lawgiver dates back to the ancient historian Diodorus Siculus, but the brevity of Bakenranef's reign and the small geographical extent of the area he ruled, together with the indirect character of the historical evidence for it, has cast some doubt upon this.
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dbr:Bakenranef
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