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These were fastened to the front of the Pschent and referred to as the Two Ladies.
The Cairo fragment, on the other hand, shows these prehistoric rulers wearing the Pschent.
As is the case with the Deshret and the Hedjet Crowns, no Pschent has survived.
In later history, kings of the whole of ancient Egypt would wear a combination of the two crowns, called a Pschent.
The head is 2.90m high, and is depicted wearing the pschent, the double crown of Upper and Lower Egypt.
The Pschent was generally used for the highest state occasions, and was conferred on all Pharaohs from at least the First Dynasty on.
Thus, the pharaohs were known as the rulers of the Two Lands, and wore the pschent, a double crown, each half representing sovereignty of one of the kingdoms.
Their tracks are often included in music compilations issued by such foreign record companies as Pork Recordings, George V, Les Maquis, Pschent, and Petrol Records.
He approached Pschent, then a small French label, to make a mix of the kind of music he played in the hotel, and the company urged him to sell it in stores, too.
Since signing with Pschent in 1996, he has mixed the six Overground House compilations, as well Club Pride and Elite Model's Attitude with Felix and Hugo Boss.
The crown was white and, after the unification of Egypt, it was combined with the Red Crown of Lower Egypt, with the delta to form the Pschent, the Double Crown of Egypt.
The invention of the Pschent is generally attributed to the First Dynasty pharaoh Menes, but the first one to wear a Double Crown was First Dynasty pharaoh Djet: a rock inscription shows his Horus wearing it.
The king list on the Palermo stone, which begins with the names of Lower Egyptian pharaohs (nowadays thought to have been mythological demi-gods), shown wearing the Red Crown, marks the unification of the country by giving the Pschent to all First Dynasty and later pharaohs.