There is some controversy about Pharaoh Hor Aha. Some think this is another name for the son of Namur and others say it was the same as the first pharaoh.The majority think Hor Aha was the son of the first pharaoh and he conquered the Nubians and united upper and lower Egypt.
He was pharaoh at the time he was pharaoh
Hor-aha, the son of Pharaoh Narmer, continued the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt when he ascended the throne. Among his accomplishments are the building of the temple to the goddess Neith in the Delta, and spreading Egypt's boundaries to the first cataract of the Nile as a result of military campaigns against Nubia in the south. He reigned 62 years.
The earliest known pharonic burial is of Hor-Aha, circa 3050 BC. The tombs are undecorated and simple from that times. Satellite(sacrificial) burials were used.
who cares they are awesome. aha just kidding in wild they live for 10 years and in captivity they'd live for 15 years.
The pharaoh who went by the name of Meni ruled in Egypt ruled in the early dynastic period. The pharoah Meni's successor was someone by the name of Hor-Aha.
it is hor
Menes is the name of an ancient Egyptian pharoah of the early dynastic period who founded Dynasty I and united Upper and Lower Egypt. He is typically identified as the pre-dynastic pharoah Narmer or the first dynasty pharoah Hor-Aha. Both Narmer and Hor-Aha are said to have united Egypt. According to English Egyptologist I.E.S. Edwards, Menes (which means "He who endures") could be "a mere descriptive epithet denoting a semi-legendary hero [...] whose name had been lost." This means that while Menes could have been a real pharoah, it's also possible, and likely, that it is the collective identity of several pre-dynastic pharoahs, including Narmer, as well as Hor-Aha.
aha what
Hor-aha, the son of Pharaoh Narmer, continued the unification of Upper and Lower Egypt when he ascended the throne. Among his accomplishments are the building of the temple to the goddess Neith in the Delta, and spreading Egypt's boundaries to the first cataract of the Nile as a result of military campaigns against Nubia in the south. He reigned 62 years.
27 hor
The king was Mene. Menes is a legendary name like Minos of Crete. Archaeologists are uncertain of the exact identity of the single king who unified Egypt. The unification occurred after the reign of Ka (also called Scorpion II) and was probably partly accomplished by Narmer and finished by his son Hor-Aha who was succeeded by Pharoah Zer. Most likely Menes consists of both Narmer and Hor-Aha together. This was accomplished around about 3000 BCE.