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Sewadjare Mentuhotep

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Egyptian pharaoh
Sewadjare Mentuhotep
Sewedjare Mentuhotep V
Photography of a relief showing the cartouches of Sewadjare Mentuhotep from the mortuary temple of Mentuhotep II at Deir el-Bahri.[1]
Photography of a relief showing the cartouches of Sewadjare Mentuhotep from the mortuary temple ofMentuhotep II atDeir el-Bahri.[1]
Pharaoh
Reignvery short reign, some time between 1662 BC and 1649 BC, most probably 1655 BC[2]
Predecessorunknown
Successorunknown
Praenomen
Sewadjare
Swḏˁ-Rˁ
M23L2
N5sAa21D36
Nomen
Mentuhotep
Mn-ṯw-ḥtp
Montu is content
G39N5
mn
n
V13G43R4
ConsortSitmut (?)
ChildrenHerunefer (?)
Dynasty13th Dynasty

Sewadjare Mentuhotep (also known asMentuhotep V or Mentuhotep VI depending on the scholar) is a poorly attestedEgyptianpharaoh of the late13th Dynasty, who reigned for a short time c. 1655 BC during theSecond Intermediate Period.[2] The EgyptologistsKim Ryholt and Darrell Baker respectively believe that he was the fiftieth and forty-ninth king of the dynasty, thereby making him Mentuhotep V.[2][3] Thus, Sewadjare Mentuhotep most likely reigned shortly before the arrival ofHyksos over theMemphite region and concurrently with the last rulers of the14th Dynasty.

Name

[edit]

Ryholt, Baker andJacques Kinnaer refer to Sewadjare Mentuhotep as Mentuhotep V because they believe that he lived at the very end of the 13th Dynasty. On the other hand, in his studies of the Second Intermediate Period,Jürgen von Beckerath leaves Sewadjare Mentuhotep's position within the 13th Dynasty completely undetermined, but names him Mentuhotep VI nonetheless.[4][5][6]

Attestations

[edit]

Sewadjare Mentuhotep is a poorly attested pharaoh. Unfortunately, theTurin canon is severely damaged after the record ofSobekhotep VII and the identity and chronological order of the last nineteen kings of the 13th Dynasty are impossible to ascertain from the document.[2] According to Nobert Dautzenberg and Ryholt, Mentuhotep's prenomenSewadjare is nonetheless partially preserved on column 8, line 20 of the papyrus, which reads[...]dj[are].[2][7]

The only contemporary attestation safely attributable to Sewadjare Mentuhotep V is a single fragment of a relief showing his cartouches.[3] The relief was found in the ruins of the mortuary temple ofMentuhotep II during the excavation ofÉdouard Naville at the beginning of the 20th century.[1]

Coffin of Herunefer

[edit]

Another possible attestation of Sewedjare Mentuhotep V is given by a fragment of a wooden coffin, now in theBritish Museum under the catalog number BM EA 29997. The coffin bears the following text:[2]

The Patrician, Royal Representative, Eldest King's son, the Senior CommanderHerunefer,true of voice, who was begotten by kingMentuhotep, true of voice, and borne by thesenior Queen Sitmut.

The prenomen of the king Mentuhotep is missing and the identification of this Mentuhotep remains problematic. Kim Ryholt notes however that the coffin is also inscribed with an early version of passages of theBook of the Dead, which is one of only two pre-New Kingdom inscriptions of this text. Thus, Ryholt argues that this Mentuhotep must have reigned during the late Second Intermediate Period. Thus, three kings could possibly be the one mentioned on the coffin:Seankhenre Mentuhotepi,Merankhre Mentuhotep VI and Sewadjare Mentuhotep. Although it sounds similar to Mentuhotep, Ryholt has shown that Mentuhotepi is a different name than Mentuhotep and would therefore not have been reported as Mentuhotep. To decide between the two remaining kings, Ryholt notes that the other instance of the Book of the Dead is found on the coffin of queenMentuhotep, wife ofDjehuti, the second pharaoh of the16th Dynasty who reigned c. 1645 BC. In this case, the text is almost identical to that found on Herunefer's coffin, which argues for a close proximity in time between the two. While Sewadjare Mentuhotep reigned c. 10 years before Djehuti, Merankhre Mentuhotep is believed to have reigned 60 years after him. Hence, Ryholt concludes that Sewadjare Mentuhotep is the Mentuhotep of the coffin, Sitmut his queen and Herunefer his son.This identification is far from certain however, and Aidan Dodson and Dyan Hilton have instead dated the coffin to the end of the 16th dynasty, thereby giving Herunefer as the son of Merankhre Mentuhotep VI.[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abÉdouard Naville:The XI Dynasty Temple at Deir el-Bahri, Part I, 1907,available copyright-free online, see p. 68 and pl. XII [i]
  2. ^abcdefK.S.B. Ryholt,The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, c.1800–1550 BC, Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications, vol. 20. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 1997,excerpts available online here.
  3. ^abDarrell D. Baker:The Encyclopedia of the Pharaohs: Volume I - Predynastic to the Twentieth Dynasty 3300–1069 BC, Stacey International,ISBN 978-1-905299-37-9, 2008, p. 231-232
  4. ^Jürgen von Beckerath:Untersuchungen zur politischen Geschichte der Zweiten Zwischenzeit in Ägypten, Glückstadt, 1964
  5. ^Jürgen von Beckerath:Chronologie des pharaonischen Ägyptens, Münchner Ägyptologische Studien 46. Mainz am Rhein, 1997
  6. ^Jürgen von Beckerath:Handbuch der Ägyptischen Königsnamen, MÄS 49, Philip Von Zabern. (1999)
  7. ^Norbert Dautzenberg:Plazierungvorshläge zu zwei Königen der 13. Dynastie, GM 127, (1992), 17-19
  8. ^Aidan Dodson, Dyan Hilton:The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames and Hudson, 2004.
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs
    • male
    • female
  • uncertain
Protodynastic
(pre-3150 BC)
Lower
Upper
Early Dynastic
(3150–2686 BC)
I
II
Old Kingdom
(2686–2181 BC)
III
IV
V
VI
1st Intermediate
(2181–2040 BC)
VII/VIII
IX
X
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs
    • male
    • female
  • uncertain
Middle Kingdom
(2040–1802 BC)
XI
Nubia
XII
2nd Intermediate
(1802–1550 BC)
XIII
XIV
XV
XVI
Abydos
XVII
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs  (male
  • female)
  • uncertain
New Kingdom
(1550–1070 BC)
XVIII
XIX
XX
3rd Intermediate
(1069–664 BC)
XXI
High Priests of Amun
XXII
XXIII
XXIV
XXV
Late toRoman Period(664 BC–313 AD)
Period
Dynasty
  • Pharaohs
    • male
    • female
  • uncertain
Late
(664–332 BC)
XXVI
XXVII
XXVIII
XXIX
XXX
XXXI
Hellenistic
(332–30 BC)
Argead
Ptolemaic
Roman
(30 BC–313 AD)
XXXIV
Dynastic genealogies
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