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In the old Egypt, the pharaoh is a descendant of God and at the same time an instrument of connecting the world of Gods with the one of the people as well as to make viable the cycle of the permanent change of the nature, which allows the continuality of the life in the Valley of Nile. In case the pharaoh didn’t manage correctly his assignment, he was not considered to be worth to be PER-AA ("house of God") and could be even murdered for the good of the community and its survival and thus substituted for another more suitable and qualified one. (Accompanied by the texts of the conspiracies of the harems and priests of Ammon in the books of murdered Amenhamat II, Akhenaton and Tutankhamen.)
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