Wikipedia:Today's featured article/January 28, 2016
Shepseskare (Egyptian for "Noble is the Soul of Ra") was an Ancient Egyptian pharaoh, the fourth or fifth ruler of the Fifth Dynasty (2494–2345 BC) during the Old Kingdom period. He lived in the mid-25th century BC, and was probably the owner of an unfinished pyramid platform in Abusir that was abandoned after a few weeks of work in the earliest stages of its construction. Very few artefacts are attributable to this most obscure ruler of the dynasty, and historians disagree on whether he reigned for a few months or for as long as seven years, between the reigns of Neferirkare Kakai and Neferefre. Shepseskare's relations to his predecessor and successor are not known for certain. The Egyptologist Miroslav Verner, who favours the shorter reign, has proposed that he was a son of Sahure and a brother to Neferirkare Kakai, who briefly seized the throne following the premature death of his predecessor and probable nephew, Neferefre. Shepseskare may himself have died unexpectedly or he may have lost the throne to another of his nephews, the future pharaoh Nyuserre Ini. (Full article...)