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Nynetjer

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Egyptian pharaoh

Nynetjer
Ninetjer, Ninuter, Nyneter, Neteren, Banetjer, Banetjeren, Banetjeru, Binōthris, Biophis, Netjermu
Small yellowish statue of a man seated on a throne, wearing a tight fitting robe, a crook and a flail
Quartzite[note 1] statue of Nynetjer wearing ceremonial clothes of theSed festival,[3][4]Rijksmuseum van Oudheden
Pharaoh
ReignDuration: 35–49 years, most probably 40, sometime in the29th century BC to early27th century BC[note 2]
PredecessorRaneb
Successoruncertain:Wadjenes,[12]Nubnefer,[13]Weneg (if distinct from Raneb) orSeth-Peribsen[14]
Horus name
Nynetjer
Nj-nṯr
Godlike one of Horus[15]
Horus of divine nature[16]
He who belongs to the god[i.e. to Ra-Horus][17]
G5
R8n
Nebty name
Nynetjer-Nebty
Nj-nṯr-nbt.j
Godlike one of the Two Ladies
G16
R8n
Golden Horus
Palermo Stone (5th dynasty)
Ren-nebu
Rn-nb.w
Golden offspring
M22D21
N35
S12
Nomen
Abydos King List
Banetjer
B3-nṯr[18]
His soul is godlike
<
W10AE11R8N35
>


Saqqara King List
Banetjeru
B3-nṯr.w
His soul is godlike
<
W10AG29R8X1
D21
G43
>


Turin Canon
...Netjer-ren
...nṯr-rn
<
HASHHASHR8r
N35
>G7
BurialGallery Tomb B, Saqqara
DynastySecond dynasty

Nynetjer (also known asNinetjer andBanetjer) was the thirdpharaoh of theSecond Dynasty of Egypt during theEarly Dynastic Period, prior to theOld Kingdom period. The dates for his reign are uncertain. Egyptologists have proposed that it took place at some point between the late 29th and the early 27th century BC for 35 to 49 years, and most probably lasted around 40 years. Archaeologically, Nynetjer is the best-attested king of the early Second Dynasty and he is also recorded on several king lists dating to the Old Kingdom and the laterRamesside andPtolemaic periods. There is strong evidence that he succeededRaneb on the throne. The events at the end of his reign and the identity of his successor are much less clear. Both historical sources and archaeological evidence point to some breakdown or partition of the state along both religious and political lines, most probably seeing concurrent rulers reigning overUpper andLower Egypt until the country was reunited byKhasekhemwy at the end of the dynasty.

Most of the events recorded for Nynetjer's reign on thePalermo Stone, the Old Kingdom royal annals, are regular religious festivals and censuses undertaken for taxation purposes. The probable locations for these events indicate that royal activity was largely confined to the capitalMemphis and its vicinity in Lower Egypt, with the possible exception of a military campaign inNubia. The administrative structure of the state continued on its First Dynasty (c. 3150 – 3000 BC) basis but became more sophisticated, with the earliest evidence for the administrative partition of Egypt intonomes, a regional management system, dating to Nynetjer's reign.

Nynetjer had a large gallery tomb dug for himself inSaqqara, now beneath parts of bothDjoser's andUnas'spyramid complexes. His tomb comprises a maze of over 150 rooms, some of which are arranged to model a royal palace. Although it was disturbed during Egypt's later periods, the tomb when excavated still housed some of the original funerary equipment of the king. This included hundreds of jars that once held wine, beer andjujube fruits. Excavations have also produced numerous stone tools, some of which seem to have been used in a ritual feast for Nynetjer's burial. The subterranean tomb was probably built with associated superstructures but these have not survived as they were levelled and overbuilt by subsequent pharaohs.

Chronology and identity

[edit]

Attestations

[edit]
On a yellowish stone, cartouche inscribed with the hieroglyphs of a ram, above a flag-pole-like symbol and a wave of water
Banetjer, cartouche of Nynetjer on the Abydos king list

Archaeologically, Nynetjer is the best attested of the kings of the early Second Dynasty.[19] His name appears ininscriptions on numerousstone vessels and clay sealings from histomb atSaqqara.[1] A large number ofalabaster vessels and earthen jars with black ink inscriptions bearing his name were also found in the tomb ofSeth-Peribsen (late Second Dynasty) atAbydos and in the galleries beneath thestep pyramid ofDjoser (earlyThird Dynasty).[20]Further attestations include a small ivory vessel from Saqqara[21] and sealings bearing his name from the tombs of three elite individuals in North Saqqara.[22][23] Additional sealings were uncovered in amastaba inGiza[24] and in another tomb in Helwan.[25][19]

Nynetjer's name also appears on a rock inscription near Abu Handal inLower Nubia which shows aserekh of the king. A serekh is a rectangular symbol enclosing a royal name and representing the façade of a palace surmounted by the falcon of the godHorus. It is the oldest form ofroyal titulary from ancient Egypt. In this case the serekh only encloses a "N" sign but with the sign "Netjer" for "God" placed above the serekh in the position normally occupied by the Horus falcon. Consequently Nynetjer's name is rendered as "The God N". The absence of Horus may hint at religious disturbances as suggested by the later choices of Seth-Peribsen to haveSet instead of Horus above his serekhs and of Khasekhemwy, final ruler of the dynasty, to have both gods facing each other above his.[26]

Relative chronology

[edit]
Close-up of the back of the head and shoulder of a granite statue showing white inscribed hieroglyphs on a reddish-brown background
Shoulder of Hetepedief's statue with the serekhs of Hotepsekhemwy, Raneb and Nynetjer (right to left)

Most Egyptologists agree on the relative chronological position of Nynetjer as the third ruler of the early Second Dynasty and successor ofRaneb.[note 3]This is directly attested by the contemporary statue of Hetepedief. The statue, uncovered inMemphis and made of speckled red granite, is one of the earliest example of private Egyptian sculpture. Hetepedief was priest of the mortuary cults of the first three kings of the dynasty, whose serekhs are inscribed in seemingly chronological order on Hetepedief's right shoulder:Hotepsekhemwy, Raneb, and then Nynetjer.[33][34][35] Further archaeological evidence supports this theory such as stone bowls of Hotepsekhemwy and Raneb reinscribed during Nynetjer's rule.[36][37]

Several historical sources also point to the same conclusion. The oldest of these is the Old Kingdom royal annals, called after the name of its largest surviving fragment, thePalermo Stone. These annals were probably first compiled during the earlyFifth Dynasty, possibly underNeferirkare Kakai (mid-25th century BC) around whose reign the record stops.[38][39] These annals are considered to be a reliable witness to Nynetjer's rule in particular because, as the EgyptologistToby Wilkinson puts it, they correctly give his name "in contrast to the corrupt, garbled variants found in later king lists".[40] While the Palermo Stone does not preserve the identity of Nynetjer's immediate predecessors, it is consistent with him not being the first king of the dynasty. This source also presents an additional name for Nynetjer: Ren-nebu, meaning "golden offspring" or "golden calf". This name was also found on artefacts dating to Nynetjer's lifetime, and Egyptologists including Wilkinson andWolfgang Helck think that it could be some kind of forerunner of thegolden-Horus-name that was established in the royal titulature at the beginning of Third Dynasty under Djoser.[41] The second-oldest historical source on Nynetjer is theTurin canon, a list of kings written underRamses II (c. 1303 – 1213 BC). It ranks him under the name Netjer-ren as the third king of his dynasty after Hotepsekhemwy and Raneb.[42] Two more sources of the Ramesside era present similar informations: theAbydos King List gives a Banetjer as the third kind of the Second Dynasty,[43] while theSaqqara table lists Banetjeru at the same position.[44] Both Banetjer and Banetjeru are understood to be corrupt forms of Nynetjer's ancient name.[12]

The latest ancient historical source on Nynetjer's reign is theAegyptiaca, written during the reign ofPtolemy II (283 – 246 BC) byManetho. No copies of theAegyptiaca have survived and it is now known only through later writings bySextus Julius Africanus (c. 160 – 240) andEusebius (c. 260/265 – 339). According to the Byzantine scholarGeorge Syncellus (fl. 800), Africanus and Eusebius wrote that theAegyptiaca recorded "Binōthris"[note 4] or "Biophis"[note 5] as the third king of the Second Dynasty,[45]Binōthris probably being the Hellenized form ofBanetjer, the name used for Nynetjer during the Ramesside era.[46]

Reign duration

[edit]
Light brown statuette of a man seated on a throne with high rounded crown, hieroglyphs inscribe on his right on side
Seated statue of Nynetjer wearing the Sed festival robe

The duration of Nynetjer's rule may be appraised from several historical sources. The surviving fragments of the Old Kingdom royal annals record the main events and Nile flood levels from what is probably the fifth or sixth year of Nynetjer's reign until the 21st.[19] The remainder of the records concerning his rule are lost. Nonetheless, given the space afforded for each year on the annals and the position of subsequent reigns reconstructions have been attempted from the surviving fragments to estimate the total of Nynetjer's years on the throne. With a single exception,[note 6] all the Egyptologists who studied this problem have proposed long reigns[note 7] lasting between 38 years[12] and up to 49 years.[47] The most recent reconstruction of the royal annals by Wilkinson in 2000 concludes that Nynetjer's record on the Palermo Stone was most probably of 40 complete or partial years.[49][50] Two additional historical sources record a reign length for Nynetjer: firstly, the Turin Canon gives him 96 years of rule,[51] which is universally rejected by modern Egyptologists. Secondly, in Africanus's version of theAegyptiaca king Binōthris—as Nynetjer was most probably known in Greek—is credited with a reign of 47 years.[45]

Archaeological evidence favours a long reign too. A seated statuette of Nynetjer shows him wearing the ceremonial tight-fitting vestment of theSed festival, a feast for the rejuvenation of the king that came to be celebrated for the first time only after the king had reigned for 30 years.[10] This statuette is the earliest known representation in the round of a well-identified Egyptian king.[1]That Nynetjer celebrated a Sed festival is further supported by the large quantity of stone vessels bearing Nynetjer's name that were unearthed in the galleries beneath Djoser's step pyramid which were probably made in connection with the Sed festival.[1]

Reign

[edit]

Events

[edit]
Drawing in black and white of a large section of an inscribed stone slab covered in hieroglyphs organized in vertical registers
Events spanning the seventh until the 21st year of reign of Nynetjer as transcribed from the Palermo Stone, Old Kingdom royal annals dating to the later Fifth Dynasty

The Palermo Stone mostly records standard rituals performed by the king, in particular the biennial "Following of Horus"connected to taxation, and regular religious festivals.[52] These included special feasts of the godSokar occurring every six years, the running of theApis bull and an "adoration of the celestial Horus".[53] Although not mentioned in the royal annals, the goddessesBastet andNeith must also have been venerated as witnessed by stone bowls on which their names are associated with Nynetjer's.[54][55] Another bowl bearing the king's name mentions a chapel ofHedjet, the white crown ofUpper Egypt, possibly set up in Memphis,[56][57] then probably the capital of Egypt.[58]All of these activities took place in the Memphite area except possibly for one ritual associated toNekhbet, goddess ofElkab.[59]Wilkinson observes that, with few exceptions,[26] Nynetjer is not well attested archaeologically outside of the Memphite region. This could point to royal activity being largely confined toLower Egypt during his reign.[60][50] The inscription bearing Nynetjer's name found in Nubia could be the main exception to this observation, as it may be a clue that he sent a militaryexpedition into this region. Given that the expedition is not mentioned in the surviving fragments of the royal annals, which do not cover Nynetjer's reign after his 20th year on the throne, it may have taken place later.[26]

Two special events are also recorded on the annals, namely the foundation of "Hor-ren", a temple, palace or estate during Nynetjer's seventh year of rule,[61] and either the foundation of or the attack on two localities "Shem-Ra" and "Ha", the latter of which translates to "north land".[1] This may refer to the suppression of a rebellion in Lower Egypt.[61] Alternatively, for the Egyptologists Colin Reader andJochem Kahl, this event is to be understood as part of the important development of the cult of the sun godRa during the reigns of Raneb and Nynetjer.[62] They interpret the record as referring to the foundation of an institution or building whose name, "Shem-Ra", has been variously translated as "The going of Ra", "The sun proceeds",[63] or "The sun has come".[52] For them as well as the EgyptologistNicolas Grimal, the ancient Egyptians started to see their ruler as the offspring of the sun deity. Within this context, Nynetjer's name should be understood as meaning "He who belongs to the god (Ra)".[17]

A smaller fragment of the annals, the Cairo Stone, may record further events belonging to Nynetjer's later reign: another festival of Sokar in his 24th year on the throne and a Following of Horus in his 34th,[1][52] although the dating is uncertain.[64] The surface of the stone slab in this section is much damaged and most of the record is illegible. The EgyptologistSiegfried Schott [de] has proposed reading also the "birth" (creation) of a statue of Anubis and an "Appearance of the king of Lower and Upper Egypt".[52] Among later historical sources, theAegyptiaca reported concerning Binōthris that:

In his reign it was decided that women might hold the kingly office.[65]

ForWalter Bryan Emery this comment may possibly be related to the status of queensMeritneith andNeithhotep of theFirst Dynasty (c. 3150 – 3000 BC), both of whom are believed to have held the Egyptian throne for several years.[66][67]

Administration

[edit]
Drawing in black and white of a small fragment of seal impression showing a Horus above a serekh with hieroglyphs on the right-hand side and more hieroglyphs in a crenelated rectangle on the left-hand side
Drawing of a seal impression mentioning "the estate ofnatron of the gods" next to Nynetjer's serekh[68][69]

The reign of Nynetjer probably witnessed an increase in the number of people involved in the administration as the tasks for which they were responsible grew significantly.[70] For example, the biennial event "Following of Horus" referred to on the Palermo Stone most probably involved ajourney of the king and the royal court throughout Egypt.[71] From at least the reign of Nynetjer onwards the goal of this journey was to undertake a census for taxation purposes, collect and distribute various commodities. According to the annals of the Third Dynasty (27th century BC) this census involved an enumeration of gold and land.[71] The responsibility for the supervision of state revenues was under the authority of the chancellor of the treasury of the king,[72][73] who directed three administrative institutions introduced by Nynetjer in replacement of an older one.[74] Nynetjer might also have introduced an office for food management related to the census.[75] At the beginning of the Third Dynasty the "Following of Horus" disappears from the records replaced by a more thorough census, which may have originated during Nynetjer's reign.[76] From at least the reign ofSneferu (c. 2600 BC) onwards this extended census includedcattle counts—under which name it became known—while oxen and small livestock were recorded from the Fifth Dynasty (25th-24th century BC) onwards.[72]

Ink inscriptions on jars strongly suggest that the administrative partition of Egypt intonomes existed under Nynetjer's rule, providing the earliest evidence for this regional management system.[note 8][79] Similarly, the earliest individual holding the full titles associated with the office ofvizier, Menka, may have served Nynetjer.[80][81]

These innovations represent a qualitatively new stage in resource collection and management on behalf of the nascent Egyptian state after the creation in the mid-First Dynasty of the institutions responsible for the preparation of the royal tomb and the upkeep of subsequent funerary cults, as well as the state treasury.[70] In the Early Dynastic Period, this treasury did not function as its modern counterparts.[82] Rather it was an institution responsible for administering agricultural produces and stone ware, the latter being an important component of the funerary furniture. Tombs of kings of the First to Third dynasties included thousands to tens of thousands of stone bowls, jars and cups. The ritualised supply of these to the royal tomb played a major role in the grand spectacle of the preparation of the king's tomb and so were a crucial element in the early ideology of kingship.[82] Archaeological evidence confirms the existence of the treasury during Nynetjer's rule.[83][84][85]

Piece of dark-grey stone bowl inscribed with white hieroglyphs, one of which shows a boat on a river
Fragment of a vase of Nynetjer discovered in the tomb of Seth-Peribsen which may have been part of the equipment of a boat of the king, depicted below his name[86]

The main task of the state administration was to ensure the continuing existence and effectiveness of kingship, which included providing for the king's life after death.[70] This, in turn, required increasing quantities of commodities to be regularly collected as the Second Dynasty royal tombs were modelled after the king's palace, incorporating a large number of storage rooms for wine and food.[87] Goods necessary for the provision of the court and funerary cults were produced in large agricultural domains and estates dedicated to producing specific resources. Such institutions had been set up by kings since at least the First Dynasty.[88] Although a single estate providingnatron—a type of salt used forcuring food, cleaning and in themummification process—is known from a seal impression in connection with Nynetjer,[68][69] he probably established novel estates and domains during his reign as well as maintaining those founded prior to his rule.[89]

Positions at court and highest offices of the state were probably determined on family ties and bonds of kinship,[90] as in the preceding latePredynastic Period.[91][92] Few officials serving Nynetjer are known by name. These include Iyenkhnum,[93][94][95]Ruaben the overseer of sculptors,[96] and possibly the vizier Menka.[80]

End of reign

[edit]

What happened towards the end of Nynetjer's rule and shortly thereafter is uncertain. It is possible[97] that Egypt saw civil unrest[98] and the rise of competing claimants to the throne reigning concurrently over two realms in Upper and Lower Egypt.[30][99] Historical records preserve conflicting lists of kings between the end of Nynetjer's reign and that of Khasekhemwy, who oversaw military campaigns against Lower Egypt.[100] Wilkinson wrote in 1999 that negligible progress had been made on the internal history of the Second Dynasty over the preceding generation.[101] Consequently, an accurate estimate of its length is impossible,[102] the total duration of the Second Dynasty remains debated by Egyptologists and boils down to educated guesses[103] of one to two centuries.[104][11][105]

Three hypotheses have been put forth concerning this period: first, there could have been a political breakdown and a religious conflict;[1][10][106] second, this could result from a decision by Nynetjer to bequeath Upper and Lower Egypt to different sons to better manage Egypt;[107][108] or third, an economic collapse might have led to Egyptian disunity.[109]

Fragment of a dark-grey stone bowl inscribed with light-coloured hieroglyphs
Fragment of a diorite vase mentioning Nynetjer and the goddess of the Delta,Bastet[54]

For Erik Hornung, the troubles originate from an Upper Egyptian reaction to the migration of power and royal interest towards Memphis and Lower Egypt, leading to a breakdown of the unity of the state.[106] This is manifested through the abandonment of theFirst Dynasty necropolis of Abydos in favour of Saqqara, which saw the construction of the tombs of the first three kings of the Second Dynasty.[10] An attempt to counteract this trend could explain why Hotepsekhemwy and Nynetjer maintained a chapel to the white crown of Upper Egypt in Memphis.[57]The nascent political conflict between Lower and Upper Egypt might also have taken on a religious aspect. For Grimal, Raneb's establishment of the cult of Ra and Raneb and Nynetjer's emphasis on Bastet andSopdu, both Lower Egyptian deities, may have been perceived as too favourable to northern Egypt.[108] Hornung andHermann Alexander Schlögl also point to king Seth-Peribsen, who reigned some time after Nynetjer and chose the god Set rather than Horus as a divine patron for his name, Set being an Upper Egyptian god fromOmbos.[106] Additionally, Seth-Peribsen chose to havehis tomb built inold royal burial grounds of Abydos, where he also erected a funerary enclosure.[106] Seth-Peribsen probably ruled only Upper Egypt while another line of kings reigned over Lower Egypt and they associated themselves with Horus.[10][106]

For Wilkinson, unrest had already broken out during Nynetjer's reign because the king had difficulties asserting his rule over Lower Egypt. Wilkinson interprets the events of Nynetjer's 13th year on the throne as the quelling of rebellion in the North.[110] To further that hypothesis, he points to no less than four rituals named "Appearances of the king ofLower Egypt" reported for Nynetjer on the Old Kingdom royal annals as possibly "intended to deliver a political message about the extent of his authority" over this region.[111] For Wilkinson, another indirect evidence that troubles had started before Nynetjer's death is given by the numerous stone vessels originally prepared for Nynetjer's Sed festival that were found in the galleries beneath Djoser's pyramid. These vessels may have remained in storage at Saqqara instead of being distributed because strife disrupted communications and weakened the authority of the central administration.[1]

Egyptologists such as Helck, Grimal, Schlögl and Francesco Tiradritti believe instead that Nynetjer left a realm that was suffering from an overly complex state administration. Consequently, Nynetjer could have decided to split Egypt between his two successors, possibly his sons, who would rule two separate kingdoms in the hope that the two rulers could better administer the states.[108][107] In this case, the division of Egypt would have been peaceful at first,[112] as possibly witnessed by the joint mortuary cults in Saqqara of two subsequent Second Dynasty kingsSenedj and Seth-Peribsen, who might have ruled over Lower and Upper Egypt, respectively.[113]

Speckled dark grey stone bowl, a small section of which is inscribed with light-coloured hieroglyphs
Diorite vase of Nynetjer bearing the king's name and mentioning a "palace of the White Crown" discovered in gallery B beneath the Pyramid of Djoser

In contrast, Egyptologists such asBarbara Bell and Michael Hoffman believe that an economic catastrophe such as afamine or a long-lasting drought could have affected Egypt around this time.[114] Therefore, to address the problem of feeding the Egyptian population, Nynetjer may have split the realm into two and his successors ruled independent states until the famine came to an end. Bell points to the inscriptions of thePalermo Stone, where, in her opinion, the records of theannual Nile floods show constantly low levels during this period.[109] Bell's theory is not accepted by some Egyptologists such asStephan Seidlmayer according to whom the annual Nile floods were at their usual levels at Nynetjer's time up to the period of theOld Kingdom. Any long-lasting drought is would then be less probable to be an explanation.[115]

As Wilkinson remarks, all attempts by modern Egyptologists at reconstructing events between the end of Nynetjer's reign and Khasekhemwy's ascent to the Upper Egyptian throne remain highly speculative owing to the lack of strong, direct evidence on the matter.[116]

Succession

[edit]
Statue of a seated king wearing the white crown of Upper Egypt
Statue of Khasekhemwy

The identity of Nynetjer's successor is uncertain and it is unclear whether this successor voluntarily shared his reign with another ruler, if there were rival claimants to the throne,[117] or if the Egyptian state was split later, at the time of this successor's death. All known king lists from historical sources such as the Saqqara list, the Turin Canon and the Abydos table haveWadjenes as Nynetjer's immediate successor, a king who is otherwise not attested.[note 9]These sources claim that Wadjenes was succeeded by the equally obscure Senedj.[119] Wadjenes and Senedj may or may not be the same asWeneg[note 10] andNubnefer, shadowy rulers who also may have ruled shortly after Nynetjer.[124][125][126][127]After Senedj, the king lists differ from each other. While the Saqqara list and the Turin canon mention the kingsNeferka(ra) I,Neferkasokar andHudjefa I as immediate successors, the Abydos list skips them and lists a king Djadjay, now identified withKhasekhemwy. This may reflect two traditions, a Lower and an Upper Egyptian one, both preserving the names of distinct regional dynasties. Indeed, if Egypt was already divided when Senedj gained the throne, kings likeSekhemib-Perenmaat and Seth-Peribsen would have ruled Upper Egypt,[128] whilst Senedj and his successors would have ruled the Memphite region in Lower Egypt.[108] Political unrest and religious division are further confirmed by archaeological evidence pertaining to Khasekhemwy, last king of the Second Dynasty who is believed to have reunited the country. Indeed, he started his reign in Upper Egypt under the name Khasekhem, "The powerful one has appeared", placing his serekh under the patronage of the god Horus. An inscription on a stone vase records him "fighting the northern enemy withinNekheb",[129] indicating that an enemy was closing in on the historical seat of Upper Egyptian power. Later in his reign he added Horus to his serekh, changed his name to Khasekhemwy which means "The two powers have appeared",[129] along with the addition "The two lords are at peace with him".[130][131]

Tomb

[edit]

The tomb of Nynetjer was discovered by the Egyptian EgyptologistSelim Hassan in 1938 while he was excavating mastabas under the aegis of theService des Antiquités de l'Egypte in the vicinity of thePyramid of Unas.[132] A mastaba is a type of flat-roofed, rectangular tomb with inward sloping sides that was common in the Early Dynastic and Old Kingdom periods. Hassan proposed that Nynetjer was the owner of the tomb due to numerous seal impressions bearing his serekh found onsite.[note 11][133] The tomb was partially excavated in the 1970s to 1980s under the direction of the archaeologists Peter Munro[134] and later Günther Dreyer,[135] who both confirmed Hassan's proposition.[136] Thorough excavations continued during seven campaigns until the 2010s under the supervision of Claudia Lacher-Raschdorff of theDeutsches Archäologisches Institut.[9]

Location

[edit]

Nynetjer's tomb lies in North Saqqara. Now known as Gallery Tomb B, the ancient name of the tomb might originally have been "Nurse of Horus" or "Nurse of the God".[137] The tomb is located out of sight of Memphis,[138][139] next to a natural wadi—a dry river bed only active during flash floods—running west to east[139] which may have functioned as a causeway from the valley up to the local plateau. This location was not only convenient—the wadi serving as an accessway for bringing construction materials to the tomb—but also ensured that the tomb remained hidden from the Nile valley[140] and set within a desert backdrop symbolizing death which the king would finally overcome.[141]

Nynetjer's tomb, in the immediate vicinity of Hotepsekhemwy's and Raneb's,[142] now lies beneath the causeway ofUnas (mid-24th century BC) built at the end of the Fifth Dynasty. By that time, the original entrance of the tomb had already been blocked by a ditch, which Djoser had dug aroundhis own pyramid.[143]

To the south and east of the tomb, archaeological evidence suggests the presence of a wider necropolis of the Second Dynasty hosting the gallery tombs of several high ranking officials of the time.[144]

Superstructure

[edit]
Map with the location of the main tombs in the Saqqara necropolis
Gallery Tomb B of Nynetjer (in blue) and Gisr el-Mudir (in red) in Saqqara[145]

Archaeological excavations suggest the existence of above-ground structures originally associated with Nynetjer's tomb, none of which have survived.[139][142][146] What remains is not sufficient to determine the layout of the structures or if they were made of mud-brick or limestone.[139] For Munro the superstructure is unlikely to have been a giant mastaba covering the entire extent of the underground galleries, for this would have represented an immense quantity of materials of which there are scant traces today.[147] Nonetheless, Djoser may have levelled the structures and reused the construction materials for his own tomb complex,[148][149] which might also explain why some funerary provisions made for Hotepsekhemwy and Nynetjer were found in the galleries beneath Djoser's pyramid.[150] Consequently, the superstructures associated with Nynetjer's tomb must have been in ruins by the time of Unas[151] since this king had the whole area levelled for his pyramid. Alternatively, Unas rather than Djoser may be responsible for the destruction of Nynetjer's monuments.[152]

The superstructures probably incorporated an offering place withfalse door andniche stele, amortuary temple and aserdab—a sealed chamber housing aKa statue of the king.[153] The heights of these superstructures may have reached 8 to 10 m (26 to 33 ft) and may have resembled a mastaba.[154] In all probability, a separate enclosure wall built of stone was built as well[155] as was the case for royal tombs of the First Dynasty. Yet here, the enclosure was probably on a much grander scale than those built in earlier times. The nearbyGisr el-Mudir (meaning "Great Enclosure") and L-shape enclosures may belong to Hotepsekhemwy and Nynetjer,[156][140] the latter being a strong possibility for, as Wilkinson puts it, the "enormous" Gisr el-Mudir construction given his long reign.[157]

Substructures

[edit]
Close up of a dark stone bowl inscribed with white hieroglyphs showing a Horus falcon above a serekh and further signs on the left
Stone bowl inscribed with the horus name of Nynetjer (right) and mentioning a Ka-house of Hotepsekhemwy (left)

Layout

[edit]

The tomb comprises two vast subterranean ensembles hewn into the local rock and built during two distinct construction phases.The tomb was originally entered via a 25 m (82 ft)-long ramp surrounded by an ensemble of 34 rooms built in the first phase. This part of the tomb follows a layout similar to that found in Hotepsekhemwy's. At the end of the ramp, the access is blocked by two stone portcullises behind which is a 35 m (115 ft)-long corridor, roughly along a north-south axis.[158] The corridor branches into three galleries on a east-west axis. Dug some 5 m (16 ft) to 6 m (20 ft) below ground level,[159] these galleries lead to the second ensemble of 157 rooms of 2.1 m (6.9 ft) height over an area of 77 m × 50.5 m (253 ft × 166 ft).[139] This ensemble comprises a maze-like system of doorways, vestibules and smaller corridors.[139] Lacher-Raschdorff estimates that the tomb rooms and galleries could have been dug by a team of 90 people working over a duration of two years. Marks left by copper tools show that the workers were organised in several groups hewing the rock from different directions.[160]

The tomb shows great architectural similarities to Gallery Tomb A with its maze of subterranean rooms. Gallery Tomb A is located some 130 m (430 ft) to the west. It is thought to be either Raneb's or Hotepsekhemwy's burial site.[19] Nynetjer's tomb marks an important development in monumental royal mortuary architecture. Its extended labyrinthine layout may have been meant to represent a city, rather than a simple system of corridors and magazine chambers. Firstly, many rooms of the tomb are too narrow to be functional and some had their ceiling painted with stars. For Lacher-Raschdorff this indicates that the tomb chambers symbolically represented open courtyards or entrances to dummy buildings, themselves modelled only by the walls of the underground chambers, that is by the massive unhewn bedrock. According to Lacher-Raschdorff, "the entire maze functioned as a model residence, with small streets, courtyards, dummy houses and dummy magazines".[161] Several special groups of rooms can be discerned, three of which being model cult-places.[153][162] At the southern end of the tomb, a further group of chambers seems to be a model of the royal palace which comprises the burial chamber.[163][164] The idea of a model city inside the royal tomb complex was continued after Nynetjer's reign as can be seen from Djoser's pyramid complex, which comprises dummy rather than fully functional buildings with no internal rooms.[161]

Since its construction, the tomb has become highly unstable and the whole burial site is in danger of collapsing.[165][166]

Contents

[edit]
Picture showing hundreds of small round fruits in a basket, someone taking a handful of them
Jujube fruits in theAswanbazaar

Although in the main ensemble of rooms south of the portcullises proved to have been much disturbed in antiquity,[161] some chambers were found almost undisturbed,[167] holding some of Nynetjer's original burial goods. One such room included 560 jars of wine, some of which were still sealed by sealings bearing the king's name and covered by a thick net made of plant fibres. Another room produced fragments of a further 420 unfinished and unsealed wine jars which seem to have been deliberately broken in a ceremony at the time of burial.[139][168] Further vessels include a group decorated with red stripes that heldjujube fruits[note 12] and up to ten jars of beer.[139] Excavations of the tomb also yielded about 150 stone tools comprising knives with and without handles, stone sickles, blades, scrapers, hatchets and many further fragments of stone tools. There were also numerous stone vessels and unworked pieces of stone left for producing further vessels in the afterlife.[139][168] Detailed examination of the stone tools revealed minor traces of use and residues of a reddish-brown liquid, but no identifiable wear from intensive use nor resharpening of the tools seems to have taken place; Lacher-Raschdorff therefore hypotheses that the tools were made for the burial of the king and used during a ceremony for slaughtering animals and preparing food.[170] In addition, some pieces of carved wood suggest the presence of a tent or canopy in the mortuary equipment of the king, similar to that found in the latertomb of Queen Hetepheres I (fl. 2600 BC).[139]

Later use

[edit]

The northern part of Nynetjer's gallery tomb area was covered by the necropolis associated with the pyramid of Unas at the end of the Fifth Dynasty. At this time period, construction of the tombs of Nebkauhor and Iyenhor hit Nynetjer's galleries, probably unexpectedly.[171]

During theNew Kingdom (c. 1570 – c. 1069 BC), an extensive private necropolis extended over the area. Several burial shafts broke into the subterranean galleries and some of rooms were reused as burial chambers.[172] Amummy mask, fragments ofcanopic jars, pottery sherds and coffins of theRamesside era were uncovered there.[173]

Numerous mummy cases, mummies, statues of divinities were deposited in the tomb rooms during theThird Intermediate (c. 1077 – 664 BC) and theLate Periods (c. 664 – 332 BC).[50][174] Some of these finds could be dated precisely to theTwenty-seventh Dynasty of Egypt (525 BC – 404 BC).[174]

This area of the Saqqara necropolis remained in use sporadically until theearly Christian period; in the sixth century, after it had fallen into disuse, the nearby monastery of Jeremiah was built.[139]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The statue was originally described as being made of alabaster,[1] but doubts arose about this after its purchase by Rijksmuseum van Oudheden. In 2017, the statue was examined by geologist Hanco Zwaan of theNaturalis Biodiversity Center in Leiden who found it to be made of quartzite.[2]
  2. ^Proposed dates for Nynetjer's reign: c. 2810 BC,[5] 2810–2760 BC,[6] 2790–2754 BC,[7] 2785–2742 BC,[8][9] 2767–2717 BC,[6] 2760–2715 BC,[10] c. 2700–2660 BC.[11]
  3. ^Egyptologists sharing this opinion include Reader,[27] Wilkinson,[28][29][30] Kahl,[31] Vercoutter[32] and Smith.[33]
  4. ^Inancient Greek, Bίνωθρις.[45]
  5. ^In ancient Greek, Βίοφις.[45]
  6. ^With the exception of Ricci who proposed only 15 years of reign for Nynetjer in his 1917 appraisal of the Palermo Stone.[47]
  7. ^Helck points to the celebration of a Sed festival by Nynetjer. This was a rejuvenation feast that could only be first held after three decades of rule. Consequently, according to Helck, this supports a reign of at least 30 years.[48] Both Helck and Wilkinson see 35 years as the minimum possible duration for Nynetjer's reign given the space devoted to it on the royal annals.[48][19] In 1916,Georges Daressy had proposed 47 and a half years of reign of Nynetjer after studying the same annals.[46]
  8. ^Dating these inscriptions made of black ink is difficult. Writing experts and archaeologists such as Ilona Regulski point out that the ink inscriptions may be of a somewhat later date than the stone and seal inscriptions. She dates the ink markings to the reigns of kings Khasekhemwy and Djoser and assumes that the artifacts originated from Abydos.[77] Others including Helck and Wilkinson believe the inscriptions do date to Nynetjer's rule.[78][79]
  9. ^Wadjenes is the name given to Nynetjer's successor in all of these king lists, but this name is otherwise not known from sources. Egyptologists such as Bernhard Grdseloff and Smith believe that thepapyrus haulm, the first symbol in Wadjenes's name, is a misinterpretation of the hieroglyphic sign of a flower called 'Weneg' (also read as 'Uneg'), which is rarely used in Egyptian writing. It is possible that Ramesside-era scribes interchanged the Weneg flower with the papyrus haulm, since both signs are very similar to each other inhieratic script. Hence these Egyptologists equate Wadjenes with Weneg, who is identified by black-ink inscriptions on alabaster-shards and as incised writings on schist vessels originating from the underground galleries beneath the step pyramid of Djoser.[118][12]
  10. ^According to Jochem Kahl, Weneg is a name of Nynetjer's predecessor Raneb[120][121] but forBernhard Grdseloff and Wilkinson it is rather Wadjenes that is to be identified with Weneg.[122][123]
  11. ^The large mastaba of the high officialRuaben (or Ni-Ruab) who held his office during the reign of Nynetjer, now known as mastaba S2302, had been proposed to be Nynetjer's tomb until Hassan's proposal regarding Gallery Tomb B as the burial site of the king was confirmed. The earlier misinterpretations were caused by the large amount of clay seals with Nynetjer's serekh name that were found in Ruaben's mastaba.[66]
  12. ^These fruits were utilized inancient Egyptian medicine for their supposed anti-inflammatory properties, specifically in treating pain, swelling, and heat.[169]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghWilkinson 2005, p. 72.
  2. ^Twee faraobeeltjes, Rijksmuseum van Oudheden 2023.
  3. ^Simpson 1956, p. 46.
  4. ^Emery 1961, p. 95.
  5. ^Bierbrier 1999, pp. xviii & 263.
  6. ^abvon Beckerath 1997, p. 187.
  7. ^Chauvet 2001, p. 176.
  8. ^von Beckerath 1999, p. 283.
  9. ^abLacher-Raschdorff 2015, p. 47.
  10. ^abcdeHornung & Lorton 1999, p. 11.
  11. ^abHornung 2012, p. 490.
  12. ^abcdSmith 1971, p. 31.
  13. ^Kahl 2007, p. 16.
  14. ^Bierbrier 1999, p. 175.
  15. ^Clayton 1994, p. 26.
  16. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 173.
  17. ^abGrimal 1992, p. 54.
  18. ^Sethe 1905, p. 23.
  19. ^abcdeWilkinson 2005, p. 71.
  20. ^Petrie & Griffith 1901, p. 5, obj. 6.
  21. ^Kaplony 1964, fig. 1074.
  22. ^Quibell 1923, Tomb S2171, pl. XV.3; Tomb S2302 pl. XVII.3 and p. 30; Tomb S2498 pp. 44–45.
  23. ^Porter & Moss 1974, tomb S2171 p. 436, Tomb S2302 p. 437, Tomb S2498 p. 440.
  24. ^Petrie 1907, p. 7, pl. VE.
  25. ^Saad 1951, p. 17, pls XII.a & b, XIII.a.
  26. ^abcŽába 1974, pp. 30–31.
  27. ^Reader 2017, p. 75.
  28. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 22.
  29. ^Wilkinson 2010, p. 50.
  30. ^abWilkinson 2014, p. 2.
  31. ^Kahl 2007, p. 17.
  32. ^Vercoutter 1992, p. 222.
  33. ^abSmith 1971, p. 30.
  34. ^Fischer 1961, pp. 45–46.
  35. ^Emery 1961, p. 35.
  36. ^Petrie & Griffith 1901, p. 26.
  37. ^Kahl 2007, p. 21.
  38. ^Bárta 2017, p. 2.
  39. ^Grimal 1992, p. 77.
  40. ^Wilkinson 2000, pp. 24 & 119.
  41. ^Helck 1987, pp. 116–117.
  42. ^Fischer 1961, p. 46.
  43. ^Daressy 1916, p. 205.
  44. ^Mariette 1864, p. 20.
  45. ^abcdWaddell 1971, pp. 37–39.
  46. ^abDaressy 1916, p. 187.
  47. ^abWilkinson 2000, p. 256.
  48. ^abHelck 1979, p. 128.
  49. ^Wilkinson 2000, pp. 79–80.
  50. ^abcBaker 2008, pp. 281–283.
  51. ^Gardiner 1959, p. 15, Table I.
  52. ^abcdSchott 1950, pp. 59–67.
  53. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 260.
  54. ^abLacau & Lauer 1959, pl. 13, no. 63–66.
  55. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 252.
  56. ^Lacau & Lauer 1959, pl. 16, no. 78.
  57. ^abWilkinson 2005, p. 246.
  58. ^Sethe 1905, p. 139.
  59. ^Wilkinson 2005, pp. 253 & 260.
  60. ^Wilkinson 2005, pp. 71–72.
  61. ^abEmery 1961, p. 93.
  62. ^Reader 2014, p. 428.
  63. ^Kahl 2007, p. 57.
  64. ^Kahl 2012, p. 107.
  65. ^Waddell 1971, p. 37.
  66. ^abEmery 1961, p. 94.
  67. ^Emery 1964, pp. 104 & 175.
  68. ^abWilkinson 2005, p. 105.
  69. ^abKaplony 1963, fig. 749.
  70. ^abcAndrassy 2008, p. 16.
  71. ^abHaring 2010, p. 229.
  72. ^abKatary 2001, p. 352.
  73. ^Wilkinson 2001, p. 317.
  74. ^Kahl 2013, p. 311.
  75. ^Andrassy 2008, p. 75.
  76. ^Andrassy 2008, pp. 16 & 113.
  77. ^Regulski 2004, pp. 949–970.
  78. ^Helck 1979, p. 129.
  79. ^abWilkinson 2005, p. 121.
  80. ^abWilkinson 2005, p. 117.
  81. ^Shaw & Nicholson 1995, p. 15.
  82. ^abFritschy 2018, p. 169.
  83. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 108.
  84. ^Lacau & Lauer 1959, pl. 14, no. 70.
  85. ^Kaplony 1963, figs 746, 748.
  86. ^Petrie & Griffith 1901, pp. 26–27, see also pl. VIII.13.
  87. ^Andrassy 2008, p. 13.
  88. ^Wilkinson 2005, pp. 99–100.
  89. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 103.
  90. ^Hoffman 1990, p. 325.
  91. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 94.
  92. ^Roth 1991, p. 216.
  93. ^Kahl 1994, p. 880.
  94. ^Faltings & Köhler 1996, p. 100, n. 52.
  95. ^Lacau & Lauer 1965, pp. 3–8, pls. 2–9 [no. 2–8].
  96. ^Emery 1961, pp. 93–94.
  97. ^Wilkinson 2010, p. 51.
  98. ^Regulski 2004, p. 962.
  99. ^Wilkinson 2000, p. 73.
  100. ^Wilkinson 2005, pp. 69 & 77–79.
  101. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 69.
  102. ^Wilkinson 2005, pp. 69–70.
  103. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 70.
  104. ^Baines & Málek 2000, p. 36.
  105. ^Shaw 2000, p. 482.
  106. ^abcdeSchlögl 2019, p. 27.
  107. ^abTiradritti & Donadoni Roveri 1998, pp. 80–85.
  108. ^abcdGrimal 1992, p. 55.
  109. ^abBell 1970, pp. 571–572.
  110. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 191.
  111. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 180.
  112. ^Helck 1979, p. 132.
  113. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 75.
  114. ^Hoffman 1990, p. 312.
  115. ^Seidlmayer 2001, pp. 87–89.
  116. ^Wilkinson 2010, pp. 50–51.
  117. ^Baines & Málek 2000, p. 32.
  118. ^Grdseloff 1944, pp. 279–306.
  119. ^Wilkinson 2005, pp. 74–75.
  120. ^Hornung 2012, p. 21.
  121. ^Kahl 2012, pp. 102–103.
  122. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 73.
  123. ^Grdseloff 1944, pp. 288–291.
  124. ^Smith 1971, p. 25.
  125. ^Helck 1979, pp. 120–132.
  126. ^Wilkinson 2005, pp. 73 & 75.
  127. ^Kahl 2012, p. 104.
  128. ^Wilkinson 2005, pp. 75–77.
  129. ^abWilkinson 2005, p. 77.
  130. ^Schlögl 2019, p. 28.
  131. ^Grimal 1992, pp. 55–57.
  132. ^Tristant 2018, p. 140.
  133. ^Hassan 1938, pp. 503–521.
  134. ^Munro 1983, pp. 277–295.
  135. ^Dreyer 2007, pp. 130–138.
  136. ^Wilkinson 2014, p. 4.
  137. ^Stadelmann 1981, p. 163.
  138. ^Sullivan 2016, p. 83.
  139. ^abcdefghijkLacher-Raschdorff 2014, p. 251.
  140. ^abReader 2004, p. 66.
  141. ^Sullivan 2016, p. 85.
  142. ^abMálek 2000, p. 79.
  143. ^Wilkinson 2010, p. 67.
  144. ^Reader 2017, pp. 76–77.
  145. ^Lehner 2008, p. 83.
  146. ^Baines & Málek 2000, p. 142.
  147. ^Munro 1993, p. 50.
  148. ^Munro 1993, pp. 48–49.
  149. ^Roth 1993, p. 48, n. 49.
  150. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 217.
  151. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 209.
  152. ^Sullivan 2016, p. 78.
  153. ^abWegner 2018, p. 622.
  154. ^Sullivan 2016, p. 80, see also fig. 2.
  155. ^Wengrow 2009, p. 250.
  156. ^Dodson 2010, p. 807.
  157. ^Wilkinson 2005, p. 211.
  158. ^Lacher-Raschdorff 2011, pp. 537–538.
  159. ^Reader 2017, pp. 75 & 84.
  160. ^Lacher-Raschdorff 2015, p. 48.
  161. ^abcLacher-Raschdorff 2011, p. 542.
  162. ^Lacher-Raschdorff 2011, p. 540.
  163. ^Reader 2017, p. 76.
  164. ^Lacher-Raschdorff 2014, pp. 59 & 251.
  165. ^Emery 1964, pp. 104–105.
  166. ^Van Wetering 2004, pp. 1065–1066.
  167. ^Tristant 2018, p. 141.
  168. ^abLacher-Raschdorff 2015, pp. 48–49.
  169. ^Kadioglu et al. 2016, pp. 361–369.
  170. ^Lacher-Raschdorff 2015, p. 49.
  171. ^Lacher-Raschdorff 2014, p. 543.
  172. ^Lacher-Raschdorff 2011, p. 545.
  173. ^Lacher-Raschdorff 2011, pp. 545–546.
  174. ^abLacher-Raschdorff 2011, p. 548.

Bibliography

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