forms of government Other uses An interregnum plural interregna or interregnums is a period of discontinuity ... rex, r gis , king , and the concepts of interregnum and Regent regency therefore overlap. Examples .... In Roman law , interregnum was usually accompanied by the proclamation of justitium or state ...?docId 5000477723 Questia On the Way Out Interregnum Presidential Activity ref The term also refers ... as a caretaker government until the new government is established. Historical periods of interregnum ... Ua Briain , is sometimes regarded as an interregnum, as the High King of Ireland High Kingship of Ireland was disputed throughout these decades. The interregnum may even have extended to 1121 , when Toirdhealbhach Ua Conchobhair acceded to the title. The Great Interregnum 1254 1273 .... List of Monarchs of Scotland First Interregnum 1290.E2.80.931292 First Interregnum 1290 1292 in Scotland List of Monarchs of Scotland Second Interregnum 1296.E2.80.931306 Second Interregnum 1296 ... Crisis in Portugal The 1402 1413 Ottoman Interregnum The 1410 1412 crisis in Aragon and the Compromise ... dynasties The English Interregnum from 1649 1660 was a republic an period in Britain, comprising the Commonwealth ... II of England Charles II A second English interregnum occurred between 23 December 1688, when ... pursuant to the Declaration of Right . In some monarchies, such as the United Kingdom , an interregnum ... Primate religion primate who served as an interrex ruler between kings . Pope s interregnum or sede vacante An interregnum occurs also upon the death of the Pope, though this is generally known as a sede vacante vacant seat . The interregnum ends immediately upon Papal election election of the new ... were abolished during the interregnum years between Hakuchi and Shuch , and again between Shuch ... system to be reinstated, and it has continued uninterrupted through today. The two interregnum ... of Japanese era names Taika era Taika era , 645 650 Hakuchi era Hakuchi era , 650 654 u interregnum ... more details
Interregnum may refer to Interregnum , a period between monarchs, between pope s of the Roman Catholic Church , between parish priests of the Church of England or between consul s of the Roman Republic a period of discontinuity In competitive games, a period in which there is no recognized champion, for example the Interregnum of World Chess Champions Interregnum solitaire , a solitaire card game Interregnum documentary Interregnum documentary a documentary with and about the drawings of George Grosz Interregnum Foundation Series , the period between the first and the second Galactic Empires, in the fictitious future world of Isaac Asimov s The Foundation Series Foundation Series Interregnum Heinlein , a period in Robert A. Heinlein s Future History Interregnum Brust , the period between Adron s Disaster and the reformation of the empire, in the fictitious world of Steven Brust s Dragaera Interregnum Turney , a fantasy novel disambig simple Interregnum disambiguation ... more details
Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Orphan date October 2008 An interregnum regent is a person who rules in the place of the rightful heir until he or she reaches the age of maturity. In ancient Egypt , the tradition was established during Dynasty One during the reign of Merneith , who acted as interregnum regent for her son, Den , who later ruled as Pharaoh . That this queen ruled for a period of time is confirmed from the Palermo Stone , on which the early dynastic kings are named. DEFAULTSORT Interregnum Regent Category Regents Ancient Egypt stub ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Unreferenced date June 2008 Some more recent research has other findings, but according to early twentieth century writers in 1932, an interregnum queen , is a Great Royal Wife of a previous pharaoh who rules as a regent in the place of her heir son, who has not yet reached the age to solely assume the role of pharaoh of Egypt. Officially the young heir son is assumed to be king, de iure , making, in theory, his mother a co regent. In practice, the interregnum queen rules in the place of the young male heir as sole ruler , until the heir son reaches an age when he could assume the duties of pharaoh alone. Notes reflist 2 Category Ancient Egypt Category Ancient Egyptian society Category Ancient Egyptian queens consort AncientEgypt bio stub ... more details
Multiple issues unreferenced December 2009 orphan December 2009 wikify December 2009 This article is about the solitaire game. To know about interregnum, see Interregnum its associated article . Interregnum is a solitaire card game using two decks of 52 cards each. The object of this game is to build eight foundations of thirteen cards each, regardless of suit. But building the foundations is unusual compared to most foundation building games. The game starts with eight cards dealt in a row. The space below each card is a foundation and the card above the foundation is its last card. Therefore, the foundation must start with a card which is a rank higher than the card over it and is built up from there without any regard to the suits. E. g. a 5 above a 4, a 2 above an A, an A above a K, etc. Below the foundations are eight tableau piles each starting with one card each. The cards on the tableau must be moved to the foundations and there should be no further manipulation within the tableau. When no more moves are possible, a card is dealt from the 88 card reserve the leftover cards into each pile, whether empty or having at least one card. The top card of each pile is available for play. When a foundation has been filled to the twelfth card, the card above the foundation is placed over it as the thirteenth card, closing out the foundation and setting it aside. The game is over when the reserve has been used up and there no possible moves left. The game is won when all eight foundations have been set aside, each with thirteen cards each. Sometimes, the first eight cards dealt as mentioned above are the foundations and are built the same way as if they are the first cards. Once a foundation is filled with thirteen cards, ending with the card a rank lower than the first card, it is closed out and set aside. DEFAULTSORT Interregnum Solitaire Category Solitaire card games ... more details
Merge to Ern Ger date December 2010 Unreferenced date December 2009 Orphan date September 2006 att March 2011 The Ger Interregnum occurred in Hungary between the downfall of M ty s R kosi and the appointment of J nos K d r as General Secretary of the Hungarian Communist Party. On 18 July 1956, the Hungarian leader M ty s R kos was told to resign by Atanas Mikoyan, a member of the Soviet leadership who had the responsibility of overseeing Soviet relations with east European parties. R kosi in return called Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev for support, but was told to resign by Khrushchev, as it was his message that Atanas Mikoyan had relayed. Therefore, R kosi stepped down and appointed Ern Ger , his close associate since 1948 who was fully implicated in the purges, the industrialization and collectivization of Hungary and who was a former colonel in the Red Army, as his successor. This interregnum, led by Ger , lasted from 18 July 1956 to 24 October 1956, just over three months. In that period, Ger was not committed to reform, unlike the people of Hungary, but was for collectivization and the war against the intellectuals or the intelligentsia. Unlike what had happened in Poland, Ger had been changed in accordance with Soviet wishes and not in opposition to them. With bitter dislike of Ger by the intelligentsia, several demonstrations took place in the following three months. Imre Nagy , a former leader of Hungary, heightened the publics awareness of the purge trials of a century earlier, led the most powerful and fatal demonstration toward the leadership position of Ern Ger . Ger lost all of public support and resigned shortly after during the Hungarian Revolution of 1956 Hungarian Uprising . The central committee met and agreed that J nos K d r should be made party leader and Imre Nagy be made prime minister, marking the end of the Ger interregnum. DEFAULTSORT Gero Interregnum Category Hungarian Revolution of 1956 ... more details
History of the Ottoman Empire sidebar Timeline Timeline of Interregnum Ottoman Interregnum battles The Ottoman Interregnum also known as the Ottoman Triumvirate Fetret Devri in Turkish language Turkish began in 1402, when chaos reigned in the Ottoman Empire following the defeat of Sultan Bayezid I by the Turco Mongol warlord Timur Tamerlane . Although Mehmed elebi was confirmed as sultan by Tamerlane, his brothers refused to recognize his authority. ref Fine, John Van Antwerp, The Late Medieval Balkans , University of Michigan Press, 1994 , 499. ref Civil war was the result. The Interregnum lasted until 1413, when Mehmed elebi emerged as victor in the strife, crowned himself sultan as Mehmed I, and restored the empire. Civil war Civil war broke out among the sons of Sultan Bayezid I upon his death in 1403. His oldest son, S leyman elebi Suleyman , with his capital at Adrianople, ruled northern Greece , Bulgaria and Thrace . The second son, sa elebi , established himself as an independent ruler at Bursa, Turkey Bursa after the Timurids retired from Asia Minor. Mehmed, the youngest of the brothers, formed a kingdom at Amasya . War soon broke out between Mehmed and sa, in which Mehmed took Bursa which had been in sa s hands. S leyman crossed the straits. At first Suleyman was successful. He invaded Anatolia and captured Bursa and Ankara in 1404. Meanwhile the other surviving son of Bayezid, Prince Musa elebi M sa , who had been captured at the battle of Ankara in 1402 and later released in 1403, had been captured by the Seljuk Prince of Germiyan, through whose territories ... Interregnum br 1402&ndash 1413 width 30 align center Succeeded by br Mehmed I Category History ... Interregnum es Interregno otomano fr Interr gne ottoman hr Osmanski interegnum it Interregno ottomano he la Interregnum Ottomanicum lv Osma u bezvaldnieku laiks hu Oszm n interregnum mk nl Ottomaanse Interregnum no Det osmanske interregnum ru ... more details
The English Interregnum was the period of parliamentary and military rule by the Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell under the Commonwealth of England after the English Civil War . It began with the overthrow, and execution, of Charles I of England Charles I in January 1649, ref In Scotland where Charles II of England Charles II was proclaimed King of Scots in February 1649, the period de facto began with the defeat of Charles II at the Battle of Worcester in September 1651, see the article Tender of Union for details ref and ended with the English Restoration restoration of Charles II of England Charles II on May 29, 1660. This era in English history can be divided into four periods. The first period of the Commonwealth of England from 1649 until 1653 The Protectorate under Oliver Cromwell from 1653 to 1658 The Protectorate under Richard Cromwell from 1658 to 1659 The second period of the Commonwealth of England from 1659 until 1660 Life during the Interregnum After the Parliamentarian victory in the Civil War, the Puritan views of the majority of Parliament and its supporters began to be imposed on the rest of the country. The Puritans advocated an austere lifestyle and restricted what they saw as the excesses of the previous regime. Most prominently, holidays such as Christmas and Easter, whose origins were pagan solstice and equinox festivals, were suppressed. Pastimes such as the theatre ... by the Interregnum regime, as most of them had taken the Solemn League and Covenant and had ... such as a ban on their living in towns to lapse. Towards the end of the Interregnum, Parliamentarian ... points in Ireland in preparation for the restoration of the monarchy. Historical analysis The Interregnum ... to make all the different political factions happy. During the Interregnum, Oliver Cromwell lost ... date June 2008 Reflist DEFAULTSORT Interregnum Category English Civil War Category Stuart England Category Republicanism in England es Interregno ingl s fr Interr gne anglais simple English Interregnum ... more details
Infobox film name George Grosz Interregnum image image size caption director producer Altina Carey br Charles Carey writer narrator Lotte Lenya starring music cinematography Terry Sanders editing distributor released 1960 runtime 29 minutes country United States language English budget preceded by followed by George Grosz Interregnum is a 29 minute long documentary film about the artist George Grosz produced by Altina Carey and Charles Carey , and narrated by Lotte Lenya . It was nominated for an Academy Award for Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject Best Documentary Short . ref name NY Times cite web url http movies.nytimes.com movie 151734 George Grosz Interregnum details title NY Times George Grosz Interregnum accessdate 2008 11 27 work NY Times ref The original music was by Paul Glass , and the cinematography by Terry Sanders . The film was released on video as Germany Between The Wars. References reflist External links imdb title id 0053858 title George Grosz Interregnum Category 1960 films Category American films Category English language films Category American documentary films Category Short films Category Documentary films about visual artists arts documentary film stub bio documentary film stub ... more details
The Interregnum of World Chess Champions was the period between March 24, 1946 the date of Alexander Alekhine s death and May 17, 1948 when Mikhail Botvinnik won World Chess Championship 1948 a special championship tournament . When Alekhine suddenly died in 1946, the title of World Chess Champion became vacant for the first time in its 60 year history. Since the 19th century, the title was decided by List of chess world championship matches matches between the current champion and a challenger, who by winning would become the new champion. Alekhine died holding the title, leaving no obvious method for a new player to succeed him. The situation was very confused, with many respected players and commentators offering different solutions, for example Max Euwe should be declared champion because he was the last player to win a championship match Mikhail Botvinnik should be declared champion because Alekhine had accepted a challenge from Botvinnik before his death or Euwe should play a match for the title against Botvinnik. FIDE , the international chess federation, found it very difficult to organize the early discussions on how to resolve the interregnum because problems with money and travel so soon after the end of World War II prevented many countries from sending representatives most notably the Soviet Union . The shortage of clear information resulted in otherwise responsible magazines publishing rumors and speculation, which only made the situation more confused. ref name Winter2003Interregnum FIDE s discussions mainly favored a multi round Round robin tournament all play ... winter extra interregnum.html title Interregnum author Winter, E. date 2003 2004 publisher Chess History ... the new world champion and brought the interregnum to an end. Competitions for the World Chess Championship would be held exclusively under FIDE s auspices for the next 45 years. The Interregnum was a unique ... world championships de Interregnum Schach ... more details
years. The first historic study of the interregnum, Modest von Korff s Accession of Nicholas I , was commissioned ... Warsaw after dinner on OldStyleDateNY December 8 November 26 . ref name K66 Korff, p. 66. ref Interregnum ... with the profile of tsar Paul. It was painted in the year of the interregnum. In 1847 Nicholas commissioned historian Modest von Korff to write the first history of the interregnum and the Decembrist ..., despite constraints of censorship , remains the mainstream version of the interregnum, but not the revolt ... movement and treated the interregnum as an insignificant episode in the grand picture of class struggle . ref name S01 Interregnum resurfaced as an independent research topic in the 1970s ... driving forces of the interregnum. None of these alternatives received wide support in academia. According to historian Mikhail Safonov, the interregnum was orchestrated by Empress Maria in alliance ... a poet born in 1935 who switched into history writing in 1970s ref Polukhina, p. 41. ref the interregnum ... more details
Carl of Finland Swedish language Swedish Karl av Finland may refer to Charles VIII of Sweden , interregnum County Lord of Finland Carl Gustav, Great Prince of Finland, son of King Gustav IV Adolf of Sweden died young hndis Carl of Finland ... more details
Ottoman civil war may refer to a number of wars of succession within the Ottoman Empire Ottoman Interregnum 1403&ndash 1413 Ottoman Civil War 1481&ndash 1482 Ottoman Civil War 1509&ndash 1513 Ottoman Civil War 1559 Ottoman princes fighting for the throne disambig ... more details
List of Rulers of Nkamanga Malawi width 20 align left Term width 30 align left Incumbent width 40 align left Notes c. 1795 Foundation of Nkamanga state Sekuru Ruler c. 1795 Mlowoka , Sekuru Cikulamayembe Ruler ? to ? Gonapamuhanya , Cikulamayembe ? to ? Kampungu , Cikulamayembe ? to ? Pitamkusa , Cikulamayembe ? to ? Bwati I , Cikulamayembe Originally Cayeka ? to ? Bwati II , Cikulamayembe ? to ? Bamantha , Cikulamayembe 18?? to 1855 Mkuwayira , Cikulamayembe 1855 to 18?? Interregnum 18?? To 1880 Mujuma , Cikulamayembe 1880 to 1907 Interregnum 1907 to ? Cilongozi Mlowoka , Cikulamayembe br crowned as Cikulamayembe IX Category Government of Malawi Category History of Malawi Category Lists of rulers Nkamanga ... more details
FixBunching beg Infobox Military Conflict image caption partof the Ottoman Interregnum date 15 June, 1410 place Kosmidion , located just outside Constantinople result Victory for Suleyman ref International encyclopaedia of Islamic dynasties , Ed. Nagendra Kr Singh, Anmol Publications, 2005 , 639. ref combatant1 Ottomans of Suleyman br Serbian Despotate ref Kastritsis, Dimitris J., The Sons of Bayezid Empire Building and Representation in the Ottoman Civil War of 1402 13 , BRILL NV, 2007 , 150. ref combatant2 Ottomans of Musa commander1 Suleyman elebi br Vuk Lazarevi commander2 Musa elebi strength1 unknown strength2 unknown casualties1 casualties2 Serbian Ottoman Wars Medieval Ottoman Interregnum battles Campaigns of Stefan Lazarevi The Battle of Kosmidion , fought June 15, 1410, occurred during the Ottoman Interregnum and was fought between the forces of Musa elebi and the supporters of Suleyman elebi just outside the land walls of Constantinople . During the battle, some of Musa s vassals, including Vuk Lazarevic ref Kastritsis, 150. ref , deserted him and joined Suleyman. It ended in a victory for Suleyman elebi. ref Kastritsis, 149. ref Notes reflist Category Battles involving the Ottoman Empire Category Conflicts in 1410 Category Battles involving Serbia ... more details
Levellers has several meanings 17th Century Levellers , the English Civil Wars and Interregnum movement of agitators for political reform. Diggers , also called True Levellers, an anarchist or communist land rights movement 1649&ndash 1651 20th Century The Leveller magazine , a British radical political magazine published in the 1970s Levellers band , a contemporary British music group and band Leveller machine , a machine to straighten metal sheets or plates See also Levellers Day disambig ... more details
Unreferenced date December 2009 Omukama Daudi Kasagama Kyebambe IV c. 1874 1928 was the Omukama of Toro from 1891 to his death in 1928. s start Succession box before Interregnum title Omukama of Toro years 1891 1928 after Rukidi III s end DEFAULTSORT Kyebambe 04 Of Toro Category Toro Category Ugandan monarchies Category 1874 births Category 1928 deaths ... more details
Teuvo Aura s first cabinet was a caretaker government of Finland , led by Teuvo Aura Liberals Finland Lib. , which governed two months in the interregnum between Mauno Koivisto s first cabinet and Ahti Karjalainen s second cabinet . It did not produce a government platform . ref http www.valtioneuvosto.fi tietoa valtioneuvostosta hallitukset hallitusohjelmat vanhat aura fi.jsp ref References reflist Uncategorized date March 2011 fi Auran I hallitus sv Regeringen Aura I ... more details
bgcolor ffffec small 1947 to 1948 Interregnum small valign top bgcolor ffffec small 1948 to post ... Nii Amugi II , small G Mantse small valign top bgcolor ffffec small 2005 to 2007 Interregnum small ... more details
Unreferenced date April 2009 Keredic lang cy Ceredig was a List of legendary kings of Britain legendary king of the Britons , as recounted by Geoffrey of Monmouth . The origin of Geoffrey s character is unknown, but he is not depicted as a Saxons Saxon . According to Geoffrey, Keredic s rule was so unpopular that the Saxons enlisted the aid of an army of Vandals from Ireland to drive him from his kingdom. Geoffrey s legendary Keredic may have been a conflation of Cerdic of Wessex Cerdic , the traditional founder of Wessex, who, despite his political affiliation with the Saxons, was likely to be half British himself, and another Cerdic of Elmet Cerdic , who reigned over the Celt ic kingdom of Elmet around present day Leeds until his defeat at the hands of Edwin of Northumbria . Whatever the case, Geoffrey places a lengthy interregnum between the expulsion of Keredic and the rise of the next British king, Cadfan . Keredic should not be confused with Ceredig , one of the sons of Cunedda and traditional founder of Ceredigion . start box succession box before Malgo title List of legendary kings of Britain Mythical British Kings after Interregnum br br Cadfan ap Iago years end box Category British traditional history it Keredic ... more details
Not to be confused with wikt iustitia iustitia , the Latin word for justice, or Justitia , the allegorical figure representing justice. Justitium is a concept of Roman law , equivalent to the declaration of the state of emergency . It was usually declared following a Monarch sovereign s death, during the troubled period of interregnum , but also in case of invasions. However, in this last case, it was not as much the physical danger of invasion that justified the instauration of a state of exception, as the consequences that the news of the invasion had in Rome for example, justitium was proclaimed at the news of Hannibal s attacks. According to Giorgio Agamben , justitium progressively came to mean, after the Roman Republic , the public mourning of the sovereign a sort of privatization or diversion of the danger threatening the polis , as the sovereign claimed for himself the auctoritas necessary to the rule of law. See also Portal Philosophy Auctoritas Giorgio Agamben Interregnum State of emergency References Giorgio Agamben, State of Exception , 2005. External links http web.upmf grenoble.fr Haiti Cours Ak The Roman Law Library by Professor Yves Lassard and Alexandr Koptev Category Emergency laws Category Latin legal terms Category Philosophy of law Category Political philosophy Category Roman law law term stub Philosophy stub de Justizium fr Justitium sv Justitium ... more details
History of Laos Kingdom of Champasak 1713 1946 was a kingdom in southern Laos that broke away from the Lan Xang kingdom in 1713. The Kingdom of Champasak prospered at the beginning the 18th century, but it was reduced to a vassal state of Siam before the century had passed. Under French rule the kingdom became an administrative block with its royalty stripped of many of its privileges. The Kingdom of Champasak was abolished in 1946 when the Kingdom of Laos was formed. Kings of Champasak 1713 1904 Nokasad 1713 1737 Sayakumane 1737 1791 Fay Na 1791 1811 No Muong 1811 Manoi 1813 1819 Chao Yo house of Vientiane 1819 1826 Huy of Champasak Huy 1826 1841 Nark of Champasak Nark 1841 1851 Boua 1851 1852 Interregnum 1852 1856 Kham Nai 1856 1858 Interregnum 1858 1862 Kham Souk of Champasak Kham Souk 1863 1900 Ratsadanay 1900 1904 Heads of the Princely House 1904 present Ratsadanay 1904 1945 Boun Oum 1945 1980 Keo na Champassak 1980 present See also Champa References references External links http uqconnect.net zzhsoszy states asia champassak.html champassak Category History of Laos de K nigreich Champasak es Champasak reino ko hu Champassak kir lys g nl Koninkrijk Champassak ja ru th vi V ng qu c Champasak zh ... more details
Sir Tobias Bridge was fought for Parliament in the English Civil War , served the The Protectorate Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell during the Interregnum England Interregnum and after the restoration England restoration he served King Charles II of England Charles II . ref Name Pape Pape http books.google.co.uk books?id ExwNAQAAIAAJ&pg PA150&lr &as brr 3 p. 150 ref During the English Civil War , Bridge fought for Parliament under Fairfax. During the Interregnum England Interregnum he was an active supporter of Oliver Cromwell served on several influential committees. From 1655 and 1659 he as a Colonel of Horse, and on the death of Charles Worsley he succeeded to the governorship of Cheshire , Lancashire and Staffordshire district during the second half of 1656 of the Rule of the Major Generals . ref Name Pape During the English Commonwealth The Commonwealth 1659 1660 Second Commonwealth , in the immediate prelude to the restoration England restoration of the monarchy, he served as a major in Sir William Lockhart of Lee Lord Lockhart s Regiment of Horse at Dunkirk, and after the restoration he was appointed Captain of Horse at Dunkirk, a post where he took direct orders from the Governor of Dunkirk and King Charles II of England Charles II . He held the post until 1662 when Dunkirk was sold to France. On his return from Dunkirk he was commissioned into the Duke of Richmond s Regiment as a captain. ref Name Pape A year after he was knighted in 1666, Bridge went to Barbados as colonel of his regiment. In 1672 he commanded the local land forces against Tobago in one of History of Trinidad and Tobago History of Tobago the many wars over that island. In 1674 he was admitted to the council of Barbados. He probably died in Bridgetown , a town named after him and the capital of Barbados. ref Name Pape Notes reflist References Pape, Thomas 1938 . Newcastle under Lyme in Tudor and early Stuart times , Manchester university press Manchester . Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Pe ... more details
Edmund Dunch may refer to Sir Edmund Dunch Elizabethan 1551 1623 , son of William Dunch 1508 1597 , MP for Wallingford, then Berkshire in 1571 and later for Wootton Bassett and Dunwich 1584 1585 and 1588 1589 and was High Sheriff of Berkshire 1587 1588 . Edmund Dunch Roundhead 1602 1678 , was an English Member of Parliament who supported the Parliamentary cause before and during the English Civil War. During the Interregnum he also sat as an Member of Parliament Edmund Dunch Whig 1657 1719 , was Master of the Royal Household to Queen Anne and a British Member of Parliament. hndis name Dunch, Edmund ... more details
Infobox Monarch name K an Joy Chitam I title Ajaw of Palenque image caption reign February 25, 529 February 8, 565 coronation othertitles full name predecessor Interregnum, title last held by Ahkal Mo Naab I 524 successor Ahkal Mo Naab II suc type heir consort issue royal house royal anthem father mother date of birth birth date 490 5 4 mf y place of birth date of death death date and age 565 2 8 490 5 4 mf y place of death date of burial K an Joy Chitam I May 4, 490 February 8, 565 was a ruler of the maya civilization Maya city state of Palenque . He took the throne on February 25, 529 at age 34, ending an interregnum that had lasted for a little over four years. K an Joy Chitam I ruled until his death in 565 at age 74. start box succession box title Palenque Dynastic list King of Palenque before Interregnum br Title last held by Ahkal Mo Naab I 524 after Ahkal Mo Naab II years February 25, 529 February 8, 565 end box External links http www.mesoweb.com palenque resources rulers essay rulers 05001.html name glyph of K an Joy Chitam I Category 490 births Category 565 deaths Category Rulers of Palenque Category 6th century monarchs in North America it K an Joy Chitam I ... more details