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Nynetjer

Nynetjer (also known as Ninetjer and Banetjer) is the Horus name of the third pharaoh of the Second Dynasty of Egypt during the Early Dynastic Period. Archaeologically, Nynetjer is the best attested king of the entire dynasty. Direct evidence shows that he succeeded Raneb on the throne. What happened after him is much less clear as historical sources and archaeological evidences point to some breakdown or partition of the state.

Nynetjer
Ninetjer, Ninuter, Nyneter, Neteren, Banetjer, Banetjeren, Banetjeru, Binothris, Biophis, [Netjermu deprecated]
Quartzite[note 1] statue of Nynetjer wearing ceremonial clothes of the sed festival,[3][4] Rijksmuseum van Oudheden.
Pharaoh
ReignDuration: 38–49 years, most probably 40, sometime in the 29th century BC to early 27th century BC[note 2]
PredecessorNebra
Successoruncertain: Nubnefer,[12] or Weneg (only if distinct from Raneb, may also be identified with Wadjenes[13]) or Seth-Peribsen[14]
Horus name
Nynetjer
Nj-nṯr
Godlike[15]
He who belongs to the god [i.e. to Ra][16]
Nebty name
Nynetjer-Nebty
Nj-nṯr-nbt.j
Godlike one of the Two Ladies
Nomen
Abydos King List
Banetjer
B3-nṯr


Saqqara King List
Banetjeru
B3-nṯr.w



Turin Canon
...Netjer-ren
...nṯr-rn



Gold name (Palermo stone)
Ren-nebu
Rn-nb.w


Consortuncertain
Childrenuncertain,Wadjenes and Weneg ?
FatherNebra ?
BurialGallery Tomb B, Saqqara
Dynasty2nd Dynasty

Nynetjer's reign is difficult to date precisely, with most experts proposing that he flourished some time during the late 29th century BC to the early 27th century BC. Estimating the duration of his rule is equally difficult and Egyptologists have proposed from 43 to 50 years of reign for him.

Attestations edit

 
Cartouche of Nynetjer in the Abydos King List (no. 11).

Archaeologically, Nynetjer is the best attested kings of the early second dynasty.[17] His name appears in inscriptions on stone vessels and clay sealings in large numbers from his tomb at Sakkara. A large number of artifacts bearing his name were also found in the tomb of king Peribsen at Abydos and in the galleries beneath the step pyramid of king Djoser. However, the datings of some inscriptions, especially those made of black ink, caused some problems. Writing experts and archaeologists such as Ilona Regulski point out that the ink inscriptions are of a somewhat later date than the stone and seal inscriptions. She dates the ink markings to the reigns of kings such as Khasekhemwy and Djoser and assumes that the artifacts originated from Abydos. In fact, alabaster vessels and earthen jars with black ink inscriptions with very similar font design showing Nynetjer's name were found in Peribsen's tomb.[18][19]

Nynetjer's name also appears on a rock inscription near Abu Handal in Lower Nubia. The inscription only presents a "N" sign inside a serekh of the king 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 king Peribsen to have Set instead of Horus above his serekhs and of pharaoh Khasekhemwy, final ruler of the dynasty, to have both gods facing each other above his.[20] The inscription itself might represent a clue that Nynetjer sent a military expedition into this region, likely after his 20 years of reign since such an expedition is not mention in the surviving royal annals covering Nynetjer's first two decades of rule.[20]

Identity edit

Nynetjer is commonly identified with the Ramesside cartouche names Banetjer from the Abydos King List, Banetjeru from the Sakkara table and Netjer-ren from the Royal Canon of Turin. The Palermo Stone inscription presents an unusual goldname of Nynetjer: Ren-nebu, meaning "golden offspring" or "golden calf". This name appears already on artefacts surviving from Nynetjer's lifetime and Egyptologists such as Wolfgang Helck and Toby Wilkinson think that it could be some kind of forerunner of the golden-Horus-name that was established in the royal titulature at the beginning of 3rd dynasty under king Djoser.[21]

Chronology edit

 
Shoulder of Hetepedief's statue with the serekhs of Hotepsekhemwy, Raneb and Nynetjer (right to left)

Relative chronology edit

The relative chronological position of Nynetjer as the third ruler of the early Second Dynasty and successor of Raneb makes consensus among Egyptologists.[22][23][24][25][26][27][28] This is directly attested by the contemporary statue of Hetepedief. The statue, uncovered in Memphis 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 then Nynetjer.[29][30][28] Further archaeological evidences support this theory, notably stone bowls of Hotepsekhemwy and Raneb reinscribed during Nynetjer's rule.[31][32] Two historical sources also point to the same conclusion: the Old Kingdom royal annals, which while not preserving the identity of Nynetjer's predecessor is consistent with him not being the first king of the Second Dynasty; and the Turin canon, a list of kings written under Ramses II (c. 1303 BC – 1213 BC) which explicitly ranks Nynetjer as the third king of his dynasty after Hotepsekhemwy and Raneb.[33]

Reign Duration edit

 
Seated statue of Nynetjer wearing the sed-festival robe

The duration of Nynetjer's rule may be appraised from several historical sources. The oldest of these is the Old Kingdom royal annals now known after the name of its main fragment, the Palermo Stone. These annals were likely first compiled during the early Fifth Dynasty, possibly under Neferirkare Kakai (mid-25th century BC) around whose reign the record stops.[34][35] These annals are considered to be a reliable witness to Nynetjer's rule notably because they correctly give his name "in contrast to the corrupt, garbled variants found in later king lists" (Wilkinson).[36] The surviving fragments of the annals record the main events and Nile flood levels from what is likely the seventh year of Nynetjer's reign until the 21st. 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 3] all the Egyptologists who studied this problem have proposed long reigns[note 4] lasting between 38 years[13] up to 49 years.[37] The most recent reconstruction of the royal annals by Wilkinson in 2000 concludes that Nynetjer's reign as recorded on the Palermo stone was most probably of 40 complete or partial years.[39]

The Turin Canon suggests an improbable reign of 96 years[40] and Egyptian historian Manetho suggested that Nynetjer's reign lasted 47 years.[41] Egyptologists question both statements as misinterpretations or exaggerations. They generally credit Nynetjer with a reign of either 43 years or 45 years.

Archaeological evidence in favor of a long reign includes the seated statuette of Nynetjer showing him wearing the ceremonial tight-fitting vestment of the sed 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]

Reign edit

Events edit

 
Year events 7–21 from the reign of Nynetjer (Palermo Stone, recto. To read from right to left)


Most of the information known about Nynetjer's reign are found on the main fragments of the Annal Stone of the 5th dynasty. The Palermo Stone lists[42] the following events:

  • 7th year: Following of Horus...(rest is missing)
  • 8th year: Appearance of the king; "stretching the cords" (a ceremony for a foundation[42]) for "Hor-Ren". Flood level: 1.57 metres.
  • 9th year: Following of Horus. Flood level: 1.09 metres
  • 10th year: Appearance of the king of Lower- and Upper Egypt; "Race of the Apis bull" (pḥrr Ḥp). Flood level: 1.09 metres.
  • 11th year: Following of Horus. Flood level: 1.98 metres.
  • 12th year: Appearance of the king of Lower Egypt; second celebration of the Sokar feast. Flood level: 1.92 metres.
  • 13th year: Following of Horus. Flood level: 0.52 metres.
  • 14th year: First celebration of "Hor-seba-pet" (Horus the star in heaven); Destruction / Foundation of "Shem-Re" and "Ha" (The northern city[42]). The reading of this text passage is the subject of much discussion, since the hieroglyphic sign of a hoe as used here can mean either 'Destruction' or 'Foundation'.[43][42] Flood level: 2.15 metres.
  • 15th year: Following of Horus. Flood level: 2.15 metres.
  • 16th year: Appearance of the king of Lower Egypt; second "Race of the Apis bull" (pḥrr Ḥp). Flood level: 1.92 metres.
  • 17th year: Following of Horus. Flood level: 2.40 metres.
  • 18th year: Appearance of the king of Lower Egypt; third celebration of the Sokar feast. Flood level: 2.21 metres.
  • 19th year: Following of Horus. Flood level: 2.25 metres.
  • 20th year: Appearance of the king of Lower Egypt; offering for the king's mother; celebrating of the "Feast of eternity" (a burial ceremony[42]) Flood level 1.92 metres.
  • 21st year: Following of Horus...(rest is missing).

The Cairo Stone gives the years 36–44. The surface of the stone slab is damaged. Therefore, most of the events are illegible, except for the "birth" (creation) of an Anubis fetish and parts of a "Appearance of the king of Lower- and Upper Egypt".[42] The ancient Egyptian historian Manetho, over 2000 years later, called Nynetjer Binôthrís and said that during this ruler's reign "women received the right to gain royal dignity", meaning that women were allowed to reign like a king. Egyptologists such as Walter Bryan Emery assume that this reference was an obituary to the queens Meritneith and Neithhotep from the early 1st dynasty, both of whom are believed to have held the Egyptian throne for several years because their sons were too young to rule.[44]

Religion edit

The reigns of Raneb and Nynetjer saw the development of sun worship and the cult of Ra.[45][46] The 14th year record on the Palermo stone might refer to the foundation (rather than the destruction) on Nynetjer's behalf of the "Shem-Ra" an institution or building whose name has been variously translated as "The going of Ra",[47] "The sun proceeds",[47] or "The sun has come".[42]

Administration edit

The biennial event "Following of Horus" referred to on the Palermo stone most probably involved a journey of the king and the royal court throughout Egypt.[48] From at least the reign of Nynetjer onwards the purpose of this journey was to undertake a census for taxation purposes, collect and distribute various commodities. An historical source dated to the Third Dynasty details that this census involved an "enumeration of gold and land".[48] The responsibility for the supervision of state revenues was under the authority of the chancellor of the treasury of the king,[49] who directed three administrative institutions introduced by Nynetjer in replacement of an older one.[50] Nynetjer might also have introduced an office for food management related to the census.[51] At the beginning of Third Dynasty the "Following of Horus" disappears from the records replaced by a more thorough census, which may have originated during Nynetjer's reign.[52] From at least the reign of Sneferu onwards this extended census included cattle counts—under which name it became known—while oxen and small livestock were recorded from the Fifth Dynasty onwards.[49]

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.[note 5][54] Nynetjer's novelties were certainly paralleled with an increase in the size of the civil service. Its main task was to ensure the continuing existence and effectiveness of kingship, which included providing for the king's life after death.[54] 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.[55]

End of reign and succession edit

 
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.[56]

What happened towards the end of Nynetjer's rule and shortly thereafter is very uncertain. It is possible, though not certain,[57] that Egypt saw civil unrest[58] and the rise of competing claimants to the throne reigning concurrently over two realms in Upper and Lower Egypt.[59][25] Historical records preserve conflicting lists of kings between the end of Nynetjer's reign and that of Khasekhemwy.[60] Three hypotheses have been put forth to explain these observations: first there could have been a political breakdown and a religious conflict; second this could result from a deliberate choice on Nynetjer's behalf following administrative considerations; or third an economic collapse might have led to Egyptian disunity.

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.[61] This is manifested through he abandonment of the First Dynasty necropolis of Abydos in favor of Saqqara, which saw the construction of the tombs of the first three kings of the Second Dynasty. This political conflict might also have taken on a religious aspect under Nynetjer's successors: Hornung and Schlögl point to Peribsen's choice of the god Set rather than Horus as a divine patron for his name, Set being an Upper Egyptian god from Ombos.[61] Peribsen further chose to have his tomb built in old royal burial grounds of Abydos, where he also erected a funerary enclosure.[61] A Lower Egyptian response to these developments also took place, with kings who associated themselves to Horus reigning concurrently over the North of Egypt.[10][61]

Egyptologists such as Wolfgang Helck, Nicolas Grimal, Hermann Alexander 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.[62][63]

 
Diorite vase of Nynetjer bearing the king's name and mentioning a ″palace of the White Crown". Discovered in the gallery B beneath the Pyramid of Djoser.

In contrast, Egyptologists such as Barbara Bell believe that an economic catastrophe such as a famine or a long lasting drought affected Egypt around this time. Therefore, to address the problem of feeding the Egyptian population, Nynetjer split the realm into two and his successors ruled two independent states until the famine came to an end. Bell points to the inscriptions of the Palermo stone, where, in her opinion, the records of the annual Nile floods show constantly low levels during this period.[64] Bell's theory is now refuted by Egyptologists such as Stephan Seidlmayer, who corrected Bell's calculations. Seidlmayer has shown that the annual Nile floods were at their usual levels at Nynetjer's time up to the period of the Old Kingdom. Bell had overlooked that the heights of the Nile floods in the Palermo Stone inscriptions only takes into account the measurements of the nilometers around Memphis, but not elsewhere along the river. Any long-lasting drought is therefore less likely to be an explanation.[65]

It is also unclear if Nynetjer's successor already shared his throne with another ruler, or if the Egyptian state was split at the time of his death. All known king lists such as the Sakkara list, the Turin Canon and the Abydos table list a king Wadjenes as Nynetjer's immediate successor and as the predecessor of a king called Senedj. After Senedj, the kinglists differ from each other regarding successors. While the Sakkara list and the Turin canon mention the kings Neferka(ra) I, Neferkasokar and Hudjefa I as immediate successors, the Abydos list skips them and lists a king Djadjay (identical with king Khasekhemwy). If Egypt was already divided when Senedj gained the throne, kings like Sekhemib and Peribsen would have ruled Upper Egypt, whilst Senedj and his successors, Neferka(ra) and Hudjefa I, would have ruled Lower Egypt. The division of Egypt was brought to an end by Khasekhemwy.[66]

Tomb edit

 
Fragment of a diorite vase mentioning Nynetjer and the goddess of the Delta, Bastet.

The tomb of Nynetjer was discovered by Selim Hassan in 1938 while he was excavating mastabas under the aegis of the Service des Antiquités de l'Egypte in the vicinity of the Pyramid of Unas.[67] Hassan proposed that Nynetjer was the owner of the tomb thanks to numerous seal impressions bearing his serekh found onsite.[note 6][69] The tomb was partially excavated in the 1970s to 1980s under the direction of Peter Munro,[70] then Günther Dreyer,[71] who both confirmed Hassan's proposition.[72] Thorough excavations continued during seven campaigns until the 2010s under the supervision of archaeologist Claudia Lacher-Raschdorff of the Deutsches 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".[73] The tomb is located out of sight of Memphis,[74][75] next to a natural wadi running west to east[75] 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[76] and set within a desert backdrop symbolizing death which the king would finally overcome.[77]

Nynetjer's tomb, in the immediate vicinity of Hotepsekhemwy's and Raneb's,[78] now lies beneath the causeway of Unas 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 around his own pyramid.[79] All above-ground structures which may have been associated to Nynetjer's tomb have been largely destroyed,[78][80] either during Unas' rule[81] or earlier under Djoser's.[82]

To the south and east of the tomb, archaeological evidences suggest the presence of a wider necropolis of the Second Dynasty hosting the gallery tombs of several high ranking officials of the time.[83] According to Erik Hornung, the choice of Saqqara over the Abydos burial grounds of the First Dynasty points to some neglect of the older Upper Egyptian center of power in favour of Memphis, which might have contributed to an Upper Egyptian reaction in the troubled times following Nynetjer's rule.[10]

Superstructure edit

Archaeological excavations suggest the existence of above-ground structures originally associated with Nynetjer's tomb, none of which have survived.[75] Archaeological remains are not sufficient to determine the layout of the structures nor if they were made of mud-brick or limestone.[75] They most likely incorporated an offering place with false door and niche stele, a mortuary temple and a serdab.[84] The heights of these superstructures may have reached 8 m (26 ft) to 10 m (33 ft) and may have resembled a mastaba.[85] A separate enclosure wall built of stone was in all probability built as well,[86] such structures accompanying royal tombs since the First Dynasty, albeit here likely on a much grander scale. The nearby Gisr el-Mudir and L-shape enclosures may belong to Hotepsekhemwy and Nynetjer.[87][76]

Substructures edit

The tomb comprises two vast subterranean ensembles hewn into the local rock. The main one, dug some 5 m (16 ft) to 6 m (20 ft) below ground level,[88] has 157 rooms of 2.1 m (6.9 ft) height over an area of 77 m × 50.5 m (253 ft × 166 ft).[75] The second ensemble is made of 34 rooms. The tomb was originally entered via a 25 m (82 ft)-long ramp blocked by two portcullises and leading to three galleries on a rough east-west axis. These extend into a maze-like system of doorways, vestibules and corridors built during two distinct construction phases.[75] 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. Copper tools marks show that the workers were organised in several groups hewing the rock from different directions.[89]

The tomb marks an important development in monumental royal mortuary architecture with its extended layout incorporating many storage rooms, while the tomb itself became the locus of renewal funerary rituals.[84] At the southern end of the tomb, a group of chambers seems to be model of the royal palace.[90][91] Some chambers of the tomb were found almost undisturbed,[92] still 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 the 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.[75][93] Further vessels include a group decorated with red stripes that held jujube fruits and less than ten jars of beer.[75] Excavations of the tomb also yielded 144 to 151 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 stones left for producing further vessels in the afterlife.[75][93] 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.[94] 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 later tomb of queen Hetepheres I (fl. c. 2600 BC).[75]

Nynetjer's tomb shows great architectural similarities to the Gallery Tomb A, which is thought to be either Raneb's or Hotepsekhemwy's burial site. This led the DAI to the conclusion that Nynetjer was inspired by his predecessor's tombs. Some of the wine jars originated from the tombs of the late First Dynasty.

The main burial chamber was located at the southwestern end of the tomb, but the whole burial site is highly unstable and is in danger of collapsing.[95][96][97]

Later usages 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. A mummy mask and a woman's coffin of the Ramesside era found in the tomb indicate that it was partially re-used during the New Kingdom. At this time an extensive private necropolis extended over the entire area of the tomb. This necropolis continued to be used until the Late Period and, more sporadically, until the early Christian period when the nearby monastery of Jeremiah was built.[75]

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to publications[1] as well as the purchase description of the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden in Leiden, the statue of Pharaoh Ninetjer was made of alabaster, but doubts soon arose about this after purchase. In 2017, the statue was therefore examined by geologist Dr. Hanco Zwaan of the Naturalis Biodiversity Center in Leiden. It turned out that the statue was indeed made of a different rock, namely quartzite. The hard quartzite is difficult to work, especially with the bronze and flint tools available to the Egyptians at the time. It is therefore special that they could already handle this hard rock so well.[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. ^ With the exception of Ricci who proposed only 15 years of reign for Nynetjer in his 1917 appraisal of the Palermo stone.[37]
  4. ^ Following Helck who points to Nynetjer's celebrating a sed-festival to support a reign of at least 30 years,[38] Wilkinson sees 35 years as the minimum possible duration for Nynetjer's reign given the space devoted to it on the royal annals.[17]
  5. ^ In the early dynastic period, this treasury did not function as envisaged by a modern reader,[53] rather it was an institution responsible for administering agricultural produces and/or 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.[53]
  6. ^ The large mastaba of the high official Ruaben (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.[68]

References edit

  1. ^ Wilkinson 2005, p. 72.
  2. ^ [Two pharaoh statues]. Rijksmuseum van Oudheden (in Dutch). Leiden. 2013-10-17. Archived from the original on 2023-01-17. Retrieved 2024-04-21.
  3. ^ Simpson 1956, p. 46.
  4. ^ Emery 1961, p. 95.
  5. ^ Bierbrier 1999, pp. xviii & 263.
  6. ^ a b von Beckerath 1997, p. 187.
  7. ^ Chauvet 2001, p. 176.
  8. ^ von Beckerath 1999, p. 283.
  9. ^ a b Lacher-Raschdorff 2015, p. 47.
  10. ^ a b c d Hornung & Lorton 1999, p. 11.
  11. ^ Hornung 2012, p. 490.
  12. ^ Kahl 2007, p. 16.
  13. ^ a b Edwards 1971, p. 31.
  14. ^ Bierbrier 1999, p. 175.
  15. ^ Clayton 1994, p. 26.
  16. ^ Grimal 1992, p. 54.
  17. ^ a b Wilkinson 2005, p. 71.
  18. ^ Petrie & Griffith 1901, p. 5, obj. 6.
  19. ^ Ilona Regulski: Second Dynasty Ink Inscriptions from Saqqara, in: Stan Hendrickx & Barbara Adams: Egypt at its Origins; Peeters Publishers, Lieuven 2004; ISBN 90-429-1469-6, Seite 949 - 970.
  20. ^ a b Žába 1974, pp. 30–31.
  21. ^ Helck 1987, pp. 116–117.
  22. ^ Reader 2017, p. 75.
  23. ^ Wilkinson 2005, p. 22.
  24. ^ Wilkinson 2010, p. 50.
  25. ^ a b Wilkinson 2014, p. 2.
  26. ^ Kahl 2007, p. 17.
  27. ^ Vercoutter 1992, p. 222.
  28. ^ a b Edwards 1971, p. 30.
  29. ^ Fischer 1961, pp. 45–46.
  30. ^ Emery 1961, p. 35.
  31. ^ Petrie & Griffith 1901, p. 26.
  32. ^ Kahl 2007, p. 21.
  33. ^ Fischer 1961, p. 46.
  34. ^ Bárta 2017, p. 2.
  35. ^ Grimal 1992, p. 77.
  36. ^ Wilkinson 2000, p. 24 & 119.
  37. ^ a b Wilkinson 2000, p. 256.
  38. ^ Helck 1979, p. 128.
  39. ^ Wilkinson 2000, pp. 79–80.
  40. ^ Gardiner 1959, p. 15, Table I.
  41. ^ William Gillian Waddell: Manetho (The Loeb Classical Library, Volume 350). Harvard University Press, Cambridge (Mass.) 2004 (Reprint), ISBN 0-674-99385-3, page 37–41.
  42. ^ a b c d e f g after Siegfried Schott: Altägyptische Festdaten, Verlag der Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur, Mainz/Wiesbaden 1950, page 59–67. See also: Francesco Raffaele: Ninetjer (nswt-bity Nynetjer)
  43. ^ Kahl 2007, p. 56.
  44. ^ Walter Bryan Emery: Ägypten - Geschichte und Kultur der Frühzeit. Fourier-Verlag Wiesbaden 1964, ISBN 3-921695-39-2, page 104 & 175.
  45. ^ Reader 2014, p. 428.
  46. ^ Kahl 2007, pp. 44–46.
  47. ^ a b Kahl 2007, p. 57.
  48. ^ a b Haring 2010, p. 229.
  49. ^ a b Katary 2001, p. 352.
  50. ^ Kahl 2013, p. 311.
  51. ^ Andrassy 2008, p. 75.
  52. ^ Andrassy 2008, pp. 16 & 113.
  53. ^ a b Fritschy 2018, p. 169.
  54. ^ a b Andrassy 2008, p. 16.
  55. ^ Andrassy 2008, p. 13.
  56. ^ Petrie & Griffith 1901, pp. 26–27, see also Pl VIII.13..
  57. ^ Wilkinson 2010, p. 51.
  58. ^ Regulski 2004, p. 962.
  59. ^ Wilkinson 2000, p. 73.
  60. ^ Baines & Málek 2000, p. 32.
  61. ^ a b c d Schlögl 2019, p. 27.
  62. ^ Grimal 1992, p. 55.
  63. ^ Tiradritti & Donadoni Roveri 1998, pp. 80–85.
  64. ^ Bell 1970, pp. 571–572.
  65. ^ Seidlmayer 2001, pp. 87–89.
  66. ^ Schlögl 2019, p. 28.
  67. ^ Tristant 2018, p. 140.
  68. ^ Emery 1961, p. 94.
  69. ^ Hassan 1938, p. 503–521.
  70. ^ Munro 1983, pp. 277–295.
  71. ^ Dreyer 2007, pp. 130–138.
  72. ^ Wilkinson 2014, p. 4.
  73. ^ Stadelmann 1981, p. 163.
  74. ^ Sullivan 2016, p. 83.
  75. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lacher-Raschdorff 2014, p. 251.
  76. ^ a b Reader 2004, p. 66.
  77. ^ Sullivan 2016, p. 85.
  78. ^ a b Málek 2000, p. 79.
  79. ^ Wilkinson 2010, p. 67.
  80. ^ Baines & Málek 2000, p. 142.
  81. ^ Sullivan 2016, p. 78.
  82. ^ Roth 1993, p. 48, footnote 49.
  83. ^ Reader 2017, pp. 76–77.
  84. ^ a b Wegner 2018, p. 622.
  85. ^ Sullivan 2016, p. 80, see also Fig. 2.
  86. ^ Wengrow 2009, p. 250.
  87. ^ Dodson 2010, p. 807.
  88. ^ Reader 2017, pp. 75 & 84.
  89. ^ Lacher-Raschdorff 2015, p. 48.
  90. ^ Reader 2017, p. 76.
  91. ^ Lacher-Raschdorff 2014, pp. 59 & 251.
  92. ^ Tristant 2018, p. 141.
  93. ^ a b Lacher-Raschdorff 2015, pp. 48–49.
  94. ^ Lacher-Raschdorff 2015, p. 49.
  95. ^ Walter Bryan Emery: Ägypten - Geschichte und Kultur der Frühzeit. Fourier-Verlag, Wiesbaden 1964, ISBN 3-921695-39-2, page 104-105.
  96. ^ Toby A. H. Wilkinson: Early Dynastic Egypt: Strategies, Society and Security. Routledge, London/New York 2001, ISBN 0-415-26011-6, page 85–87.
  97. ^ J. Van Wetering: The royal cemetery of Early Dynasty Period at Saqqara and the Second Dynasty Royal Tombs; in: Stan Hendrickx: Egypt at its Origins. Peeters Publishers, Leuven 2004; ISBN 90-429-1469-6, page 1065–1066.

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nynetjer, also, known, ninetjer, banetjer, horus, name, third, pharaoh, second, dynasty, egypt, during, early, dynastic, period, archaeologically, best, attested, king, entire, dynasty, direct, evidence, shows, that, succeeded, raneb, throne, what, happened, a. Nynetjer also known as Ninetjer and Banetjer is the Horus name of the third pharaoh of the Second Dynasty of Egypt during the Early Dynastic Period Archaeologically Nynetjer is the best attested king of the entire dynasty Direct evidence shows that he succeeded Raneb on the throne What happened after him is much less clear as historical sources and archaeological evidences point to some breakdown or partition of the state NynetjerNinetjer Ninuter Nyneter Neteren Banetjer Banetjeren Banetjeru Binothris Biophis Netjermu deprecated Quartzite note 1 statue of Nynetjer wearing ceremonial clothes of the sed festival 3 4 Rijksmuseum van Oudheden PharaohReignDuration 38 49 years most probably 40 sometime in the 29th century BC to early 27th century BC note 2 PredecessorNebraSuccessoruncertain Nubnefer 12 or Weneg only if distinct from Raneb may also be identified with Wadjenes 13 or Seth Peribsen 14 Royal titularyHorus nameNynetjerNj nṯr Godlike 15 He who belongs to the god i e to Ra 16 Nebty nameNynetjer NebtyNj nṯr nbt j Godlike one of the Two LadiesNomenAbydos King ListBanetjerB3 nṯr Saqqara King ListBanetjeru B3 nṯr wTurin Canon Netjer ren nṯr rnGold name Palermo stone Ren nebuRn nb wConsortuncertainChildrenuncertain Wadjenes and Weneg FatherNebra BurialGallery Tomb B SaqqaraDynasty2nd Dynasty Nynetjer s reign is difficult to date precisely with most experts proposing that he flourished some time during the late 29th century BC to the early 27th century BC Estimating the duration of his rule is equally difficult and Egyptologists have proposed from 43 to 50 years of reign for him Contents 1 Attestations 2 Identity 3 Chronology 3 1 Relative chronology 3 2 Reign Duration 4 Reign 4 1 Events 4 2 Religion 4 3 Administration 4 4 End of reign and succession 5 Tomb 5 1 Location 5 2 Superstructure 5 3 Substructures 5 4 Later usages 6 Notes 7 References 8 BibliographyAttestations edit nbsp Cartouche of Nynetjer in the Abydos King List no 11 Archaeologically Nynetjer is the best attested kings of the early second dynasty 17 His name appears in inscriptions on stone vessels and clay sealings in large numbers from his tomb at Sakkara A large number of artifacts bearing his name were also found in the tomb of king Peribsen at Abydos and in the galleries beneath the step pyramid of king Djoser However the datings of some inscriptions especially those made of black ink caused some problems Writing experts and archaeologists such as Ilona Regulski point out that the ink inscriptions are of a somewhat later date than the stone and seal inscriptions She dates the ink markings to the reigns of kings such as Khasekhemwy and Djoser and assumes that the artifacts originated from Abydos In fact alabaster vessels and earthen jars with black ink inscriptions with very similar font design showing Nynetjer s name were found in Peribsen s tomb 18 19 Nynetjer s name also appears on a rock inscription near Abu Handal in Lower Nubia The inscription only presents a N sign inside a serekh of the king 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 king Peribsen to have Set instead of Horus above his serekhs and of pharaoh Khasekhemwy final ruler of the dynasty to have both gods facing each other above his 20 The inscription itself might represent a clue that Nynetjer sent a military expedition into this region likely after his 20 years of reign since such an expedition is not mention in the surviving royal annals covering Nynetjer s first two decades of rule 20 Identity editNynetjer is commonly identified with the Ramesside cartouche names Banetjer from the Abydos King List Banetjeru from the Sakkara table and Netjer ren from the Royal Canon of Turin The Palermo Stone inscription presents an unusual goldname of Nynetjer Ren nebu meaning golden offspring or golden calf This name appears already on artefacts surviving from Nynetjer s lifetime and Egyptologists such as Wolfgang Helck and Toby Wilkinson think that it could be some kind of forerunner of the golden Horus name that was established in the royal titulature at the beginning of 3rd dynasty under king Djoser 21 Chronology edit nbsp Shoulder of Hetepedief s statue with the serekhs of Hotepsekhemwy Raneb and Nynetjer right to left Relative chronology edit The relative chronological position of Nynetjer as the third ruler of the early Second Dynasty and successor of Raneb makes consensus among Egyptologists 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 This is directly attested by the contemporary statue of Hetepedief The statue uncovered in Memphis 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 then Nynetjer 29 30 28 Further archaeological evidences support this theory notably stone bowls of Hotepsekhemwy and Raneb reinscribed during Nynetjer s rule 31 32 Two historical sources also point to the same conclusion the Old Kingdom royal annals which while not preserving the identity of Nynetjer s predecessor is consistent with him not being the first king of the Second Dynasty and the Turin canon a list of kings written under Ramses II c 1303 BC 1213 BC which explicitly ranks Nynetjer as the third king of his dynasty after Hotepsekhemwy and Raneb 33 Reign Duration edit nbsp Seated statue of Nynetjer wearing the sed festival robe The duration of Nynetjer s rule may be appraised from several historical sources The oldest of these is the Old Kingdom royal annals now known after the name of its main fragment the Palermo Stone These annals were likely first compiled during the early Fifth Dynasty possibly under Neferirkare Kakai mid 25th century BC around whose reign the record stops 34 35 These annals are considered to be a reliable witness to Nynetjer s rule notably because they correctly give his name in contrast to the corrupt garbled variants found in later king lists Wilkinson 36 The surviving fragments of the annals record the main events and Nile flood levels from what is likely the seventh year of Nynetjer s reign until the 21st 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 3 all the Egyptologists who studied this problem have proposed long reigns note 4 lasting between 38 years 13 up to 49 years 37 The most recent reconstruction of the royal annals by Wilkinson in 2000 concludes that Nynetjer s reign as recorded on the Palermo stone was most probably of 40 complete or partial years 39 The Turin Canon suggests an improbable reign of 96 years 40 and Egyptian historian Manetho suggested that Nynetjer s reign lasted 47 years 41 Egyptologists question both statements as misinterpretations or exaggerations They generally credit Nynetjer with a reign of either 43 years or 45 years Archaeological evidence in favor of a long reign includes the seated statuette of Nynetjer showing him wearing the ceremonial tight fitting vestment of the sed 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 Reign editEvents edit nbsp Year events 7 21 from the reign of Nynetjer Palermo Stone recto To read from right to left Most of the information known about Nynetjer s reign are found on the main fragments of the Annal Stone of the 5th dynasty The Palermo Stone lists 42 the following events 7th year Following of Horus rest is missing 8th year Appearance of the king stretching the cords a ceremony for a foundation 42 for Hor Ren Flood level 1 57 metres 9th year Following of Horus Flood level 1 09 metres 10th year Appearance of the king of Lower and Upper Egypt Race of the Apis bull pḥrr Ḥp Flood level 1 09 metres 11th year Following of Horus Flood level 1 98 metres 12th year Appearance of the king of Lower Egypt second celebration of the Sokar feast Flood level 1 92 metres 13th year Following of Horus Flood level 0 52 metres 14th year First celebration of Hor seba pet Horus the star in heaven Destruction Foundation of Shem Re and Ha The northern city 42 The reading of this text passage is the subject of much discussion since the hieroglyphic sign of a hoe as used here can mean either Destruction or Foundation 43 42 Flood level 2 15 metres 15th year Following of Horus Flood level 2 15 metres 16th year Appearance of the king of Lower Egypt second Race of the Apis bull pḥrr Ḥp Flood level 1 92 metres 17th year Following of Horus Flood level 2 40 metres 18th year Appearance of the king of Lower Egypt third celebration of the Sokar feast Flood level 2 21 metres 19th year Following of Horus Flood level 2 25 metres 20th year Appearance of the king of Lower Egypt offering for the king s mother celebrating of the Feast of eternity a burial ceremony 42 Flood level 1 92 metres 21st year Following of Horus rest is missing The Cairo Stone gives the years 36 44 The surface of the stone slab is damaged Therefore most of the events are illegible except for the birth creation of an Anubis fetish and parts of a Appearance of the king of Lower and Upper Egypt 42 The ancient Egyptian historian Manetho over 2000 years later called Nynetjer Binothris and said that during this ruler s reign women received the right to gain royal dignity meaning that women were allowed to reign like a king Egyptologists such as Walter Bryan Emery assume that this reference was an obituary to the queens Meritneith and Neithhotep from the early 1st dynasty both of whom are believed to have held the Egyptian throne for several years because their sons were too young to rule 44 Religion edit The reigns of Raneb and Nynetjer saw the development of sun worship and the cult of Ra 45 46 The 14th year record on the Palermo stone might refer to the foundation rather than the destruction on Nynetjer s behalf of the Shem Ra an institution or building whose name has been variously translated as The going of Ra 47 The sun proceeds 47 or The sun has come 42 Administration edit The biennial event Following of Horus referred to on the Palermo stone most probably involved a journey of the king and the royal court throughout Egypt 48 From at least the reign of Nynetjer onwards the purpose of this journey was to undertake a census for taxation purposes collect and distribute various commodities An historical source dated to the Third Dynasty details that this census involved an enumeration of gold and land 48 The responsibility for the supervision of state revenues was under the authority of the chancellor of the treasury of the king 49 who directed three administrative institutions introduced by Nynetjer in replacement of an older one 50 Nynetjer might also have introduced an office for food management related to the census 51 At the beginning of Third Dynasty the Following of Horus disappears from the records replaced by a more thorough census which may have originated during Nynetjer s reign 52 From at least the reign of Sneferu onwards this extended census included cattle counts under which name it became known while oxen and small livestock were recorded from the Fifth Dynasty onwards 49 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 note 5 54 Nynetjer s novelties were certainly paralleled with an increase in the size of the civil service Its main task was to ensure the continuing existence and effectiveness of kingship which included providing for the king s life after death 54 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 55 End of reign and succession edit nbsp 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 56 What happened towards the end of Nynetjer s rule and shortly thereafter is very uncertain It is possible though not certain 57 that Egypt saw civil unrest 58 and the rise of competing claimants to the throne reigning concurrently over two realms in Upper and Lower Egypt 59 25 Historical records preserve conflicting lists of kings between the end of Nynetjer s reign and that of Khasekhemwy 60 Three hypotheses have been put forth to explain these observations first there could have been a political breakdown and a religious conflict second this could result from a deliberate choice on Nynetjer s behalf following administrative considerations or third an economic collapse might have led to Egyptian disunity 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 61 This is manifested through he abandonment of the First Dynasty necropolis of Abydos in favor of Saqqara which saw the construction of the tombs of the first three kings of the Second Dynasty This political conflict might also have taken on a religious aspect under Nynetjer s successors Hornung and Schlogl point to Peribsen s choice of the god Set rather than Horus as a divine patron for his name Set being an Upper Egyptian god from Ombos 61 Peribsen further chose to have his tomb built in old royal burial grounds of Abydos where he also erected a funerary enclosure 61 A Lower Egyptian response to these developments also took place with kings who associated themselves to Horus reigning concurrently over the North of Egypt 10 61 Egyptologists such as Wolfgang Helck Nicolas Grimal Hermann Alexander Schlogl 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 62 63 nbsp Diorite vase of Nynetjer bearing the king s name and mentioning a palace of the White Crown Discovered in the gallery B beneath the Pyramid of Djoser In contrast Egyptologists such as Barbara Bell believe that an economic catastrophe such as a famine or a long lasting drought affected Egypt around this time Therefore to address the problem of feeding the Egyptian population Nynetjer split the realm into two and his successors ruled two independent states until the famine came to an end Bell points to the inscriptions of the Palermo stone where in her opinion the records of the annual Nile floods show constantly low levels during this period 64 Bell s theory is now refuted by Egyptologists such as Stephan Seidlmayer who corrected Bell s calculations Seidlmayer has shown that the annual Nile floods were at their usual levels at Nynetjer s time up to the period of the Old Kingdom Bell had overlooked that the heights of the Nile floods in the Palermo Stone inscriptions only takes into account the measurements of the nilometers around Memphis but not elsewhere along the river Any long lasting drought is therefore less likely to be an explanation 65 It is also unclear if Nynetjer s successor already shared his throne with another ruler or if the Egyptian state was split at the time of his death All known king lists such as the Sakkara list the Turin Canon and the Abydos table list a king Wadjenes as Nynetjer s immediate successor and as the predecessor of a king called Senedj After Senedj the kinglists differ from each other regarding successors While the Sakkara list and the Turin canon mention the kings Neferka ra I Neferkasokar and Hudjefa I as immediate successors the Abydos list skips them and lists a king Djadjay identical with king Khasekhemwy If Egypt was already divided when Senedj gained the throne kings like Sekhemib and Peribsen would have ruled Upper Egypt whilst Senedj and his successors Neferka ra and Hudjefa I would have ruled Lower Egypt The division of Egypt was brought to an end by Khasekhemwy 66 Tomb edit nbsp Fragment of a diorite vase mentioning Nynetjer and the goddess of the Delta Bastet The tomb of Nynetjer was discovered by Selim Hassan in 1938 while he was excavating mastabas under the aegis of the Service des Antiquites de l Egypte in the vicinity of the Pyramid of Unas 67 Hassan proposed that Nynetjer was the owner of the tomb thanks to numerous seal impressions bearing his serekh found onsite note 6 69 The tomb was partially excavated in the 1970s to 1980s under the direction of Peter Munro 70 then Gunther Dreyer 71 who both confirmed Hassan s proposition 72 Thorough excavations continued during seven campaigns until the 2010s under the supervision of archaeologist Claudia Lacher Raschdorff of the Deutsches Archaologisches 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 73 The tomb is located out of sight of Memphis 74 75 next to a natural wadi running west to east 75 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 76 and set within a desert backdrop symbolizing death which the king would finally overcome 77 Nynetjer s tomb in the immediate vicinity of Hotepsekhemwy s and Raneb s 78 now lies beneath the causeway of Unas 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 around his own pyramid 79 All above ground structures which may have been associated to Nynetjer s tomb have been largely destroyed 78 80 either during Unas rule 81 or earlier under Djoser s 82 To the south and east of the tomb archaeological evidences suggest the presence of a wider necropolis of the Second Dynasty hosting the gallery tombs of several high ranking officials of the time 83 According to Erik Hornung the choice of Saqqara over the Abydos burial grounds of the First Dynasty points to some neglect of the older Upper Egyptian center of power in favour of Memphis which might have contributed to an Upper Egyptian reaction in the troubled times following Nynetjer s rule 10 Superstructure edit Archaeological excavations suggest the existence of above ground structures originally associated with Nynetjer s tomb none of which have survived 75 Archaeological remains are not sufficient to determine the layout of the structures nor if they were made of mud brick or limestone 75 They most likely incorporated an offering place with false door and niche stele a mortuary temple and a serdab 84 The heights of these superstructures may have reached 8 m 26 ft to 10 m 33 ft and may have resembled a mastaba 85 A separate enclosure wall built of stone was in all probability built as well 86 such structures accompanying royal tombs since the First Dynasty albeit here likely on a much grander scale The nearby Gisr el Mudir and L shape enclosures may belong to Hotepsekhemwy and Nynetjer 87 76 Substructures edit The tomb comprises two vast subterranean ensembles hewn into the local rock The main one dug some 5 m 16 ft to 6 m 20 ft below ground level 88 has 157 rooms of 2 1 m 6 9 ft height over an area of 77 m 50 5 m 253 ft 166 ft 75 The second ensemble is made of 34 rooms The tomb was originally entered via a 25 m 82 ft long ramp blocked by two portcullises and leading to three galleries on a rough east west axis These extend into a maze like system of doorways vestibules and corridors built during two distinct construction phases 75 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 Copper tools marks show that the workers were organised in several groups hewing the rock from different directions 89 The tomb marks an important development in monumental royal mortuary architecture with its extended layout incorporating many storage rooms while the tomb itself became the locus of renewal funerary rituals 84 At the southern end of the tomb a group of chambers seems to be model of the royal palace 90 91 Some chambers of the tomb were found almost undisturbed 92 still 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 the 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 75 93 Further vessels include a group decorated with red stripes that held jujube fruits and less than ten jars of beer 75 Excavations of the tomb also yielded 144 to 151 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 stones left for producing further vessels in the afterlife 75 93 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 94 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 later tomb of queen Hetepheres I fl c 2600 BC 75 Nynetjer s tomb shows great architectural similarities to the Gallery Tomb A which is thought to be either Raneb s or Hotepsekhemwy s burial site This led the DAI to the conclusion that Nynetjer was inspired by his predecessor s tombs Some of the wine jars originated from the tombs of the late First Dynasty The main burial chamber was located at the southwestern end of the tomb but the whole burial site is highly unstable and is in danger of collapsing 95 96 97 Later usages 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 A mummy mask and a woman s coffin of the Ramesside era found in the tomb indicate that it was partially re used during the New Kingdom At this time an extensive private necropolis extended over the entire area of the tomb This necropolis continued to be used until the Late Period and more sporadically until the early Christian period when the nearby monastery of Jeremiah was built 75 Notes edit According to publications 1 as well as the purchase description of the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden in Leiden the statue of Pharaoh Ninetjer was made of alabaster but doubts soon arose about this after purchase In 2017 the statue was therefore examined by geologist Dr Hanco Zwaan of the Naturalis Biodiversity Center in Leiden It turned out that the statue was indeed made of a different rock namely quartzite The hard quartzite is difficult to work especially with the bronze and flint tools available to the Egyptians at the time It is therefore special that they could already handle this hard rock so well 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 With the exception of Ricci who proposed only 15 years of reign for Nynetjer in his 1917 appraisal of the Palermo stone 37 Following Helck who points to Nynetjer s celebrating a sed festival to support a reign of at least 30 years 38 Wilkinson sees 35 years as the minimum possible duration for Nynetjer s reign given the space devoted to it on the royal annals 17 In the early dynastic period this treasury did not function as envisaged by a modern reader 53 rather it was an institution responsible for administering agricultural produces and or 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 53 The large mastaba of the high official Ruaben 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 68 References edit Wilkinson 2005 p 72 Twee faraobeeltjes Two pharaoh statues Rijksmuseum van Oudheden in Dutch Leiden 2013 10 17 Archived from the original on 2023 01 17 Retrieved 2024 04 21 Simpson 1956 p 46 Emery 1961 p 95 Bierbrier 1999 pp xviii amp 263 a b von Beckerath 1997 p 187 Chauvet 2001 p 176 von Beckerath 1999 p 283 a b Lacher Raschdorff 2015 p 47 a b c d Hornung amp Lorton 1999 p 11 Hornung 2012 p 490 Kahl 2007 p 16 a b Edwards 1971 p 31 Bierbrier 1999 p 175 Clayton 1994 p 26 Grimal 1992 p 54 a b Wilkinson 2005 p 71 Petrie amp Griffith 1901 p 5 obj 6 Ilona Regulski Second Dynasty Ink Inscriptions from Saqqara in Stan Hendrickx amp Barbara Adams Egypt at its Origins Peeters Publishers Lieuven 2004 ISBN 90 429 1469 6 Seite 949 970 a b Zaba 1974 pp 30 31 Helck 1987 pp 116 117 Reader 2017 p 75 Wilkinson 2005 p 22 Wilkinson 2010 p 50 a b Wilkinson 2014 p 2 Kahl 2007 p 17 Vercoutter 1992 p 222 a b Edwards 1971 p 30 Fischer 1961 pp 45 46 Emery 1961 p 35 Petrie amp Griffith 1901 p 26 Kahl 2007 p 21 Fischer 1961 p 46 Barta 2017 p 2 Grimal 1992 p 77 Wilkinson 2000 p 24 amp 119 a b Wilkinson 2000 p 256 Helck 1979 p 128 Wilkinson 2000 pp 79 80 Gardiner 1959 p 15 Table I William Gillian Waddell Manetho The Loeb Classical Library Volume 350 Harvard University Press Cambridge Mass 2004 Reprint ISBN 0 674 99385 3 page 37 41 a b c d e f g after Siegfried Schott Altagyptische Festdaten Verlag der Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur Mainz Wiesbaden 1950 page 59 67 See also Francesco Raffaele Ninetjer nswt bity Nynetjer Kahl 2007 p 56 Walter Bryan Emery Agypten Geschichte und Kultur der Fruhzeit Fourier Verlag Wiesbaden 1964 ISBN 3 921695 39 2 page 104 amp 175 Reader 2014 p 428 Kahl 2007 pp 44 46 a b Kahl 2007 p 57 a b Haring 2010 p 229 a b Katary 2001 p 352 Kahl 2013 p 311 Andrassy 2008 p 75 Andrassy 2008 pp 16 amp 113 a b Fritschy 2018 p 169 a b Andrassy 2008 p 16 Andrassy 2008 p 13 Petrie amp Griffith 1901 pp 26 27 see also Pl VIII 13 Wilkinson 2010 p 51 Regulski 2004 p 962 Wilkinson 2000 p 73 Baines amp Malek 2000 p 32 a b c d Schlogl 2019 p 27 Grimal 1992 p 55 Tiradritti amp Donadoni Roveri 1998 pp 80 85 Bell 1970 pp 571 572 Seidlmayer 2001 pp 87 89 Schlogl 2019 p 28 Tristant 2018 p 140 Emery 1961 p 94 Hassan 1938 p 503 521 Munro 1983 pp 277 295 Dreyer 2007 pp 130 138 Wilkinson 2014 p 4 Stadelmann 1981 p 163 Sullivan 2016 p 83 a b c d e f g h i j k Lacher Raschdorff 2014 p 251 a b Reader 2004 p 66 Sullivan 2016 p 85 a b Malek 2000 p 79 Wilkinson 2010 p 67 Baines amp Malek 2000 p 142 Sullivan 2016 p 78 Roth 1993 p 48 footnote 49 Reader 2017 pp 76 77 a b Wegner 2018 p 622 Sullivan 2016 p 80 see also Fig 2 Wengrow 2009 p 250 Dodson 2010 p 807 Reader 2017 pp 75 amp 84 Lacher Raschdorff 2015 p 48 Reader 2017 p 76 Lacher Raschdorff 2014 pp 59 amp 251 Tristant 2018 p 141 a b Lacher Raschdorff 2015 pp 48 49 Lacher Raschdorff 2015 p 49 Walter Bryan Emery Agypten Geschichte und Kultur der Fruhzeit Fourier Verlag Wiesbaden 1964 ISBN 3 921695 39 2 page 104 105 Toby A H Wilkinson Early Dynastic Egypt Strategies Society and Security Routledge London New York 2001 ISBN 0 415 26011 6 page 85 87 J Van Wetering The royal cemetery of Early Dynasty Period at Saqqara and the Second Dynasty Royal Tombs in Stan Hendrickx Egypt at its Origins Peeters Publishers Leuven 2004 ISBN 90 429 1469 6 page 1065 1066 Bibliography editAndrassy Petra 2008 Untersuchungen zum agyptischen Staat des Alten Reiches und seinen Institutionen Internet Beitrage zur Agyptologie und Sudanarchaologie in German Vol XI Berlin London Golden House Publications ISBN 978 1 906137 08 3 Archived from the original on 2018 03 26 Baines John Malek Jaromir 2000 Cultural atlas of Ancient Egypt New York Facts on file ISBN 978 0 8160 4036 0 Barta Miroslav 2017 Radjedef to the Eighth Dynasty UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology Bell Barbara 1970 Oldest Records of the Nile Floods Geographical Journal 136 4 569 573 doi 10 2307 1796184 JSTOR 1796184 Bierbrier Morris 1999 Historical Dictionary of Ancient Egypt Lanham Md The Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 0 8108 3614 9 Chauvet Violaine 2001 Saqqara In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 3 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 176 179 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Clayton Peter A 1994 Chronicle of the Pharaohs London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05074 3 Dodson Aidan 2010 Mortuary Architecture and Decorative Systems In Lloyd Alan B ed A Companion to Ancient Egypt Volume I Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World Chichester UK Wiley Blackwell pp 804 825 ISBN 978 1 4051 5598 4 Dreyer Gunter 2007 Ein unterirdisches Labyrinth Das Grab des Konigs Ninetjer in Sakkara In Dreyer Gunter Polz Daniel eds Begegnung mit der Vergangenheit 100 Jahre in Agypten Deutsches Archaologisches Institut Kairo 1907 2007 in German Mainz am Rhein Philipp von Zabern pp 130 138 ISBN 978 3 80 533793 9 Edwards I E S 1971 The Early Dynastic Period of Egypt In Edwards I E S Gadd C J Hammond N G L eds The Cambridge Ancient History Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 1 70 ISBN 978 1 13 905425 6 Emery Walter B 1961 Archaic Egypt Pelican book Vol A462 1st ed Harmondsworth Penguin Books OCLC 636876268 Fischer Henry George 1961 An Egyptian Royal Stela of the Second Dynasty Artibus Asiae 24 1 45 56 doi 10 2307 3249184 JSTOR 3249184 Fritschy Wantje 2018 The pr ḥḏ and the Early Dynastic State The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 104 2 161 176 JSTOR 26843204 Gardiner Alan 1959 The Royal Canon of Turin Oxford Griffith Institute OCLC 21484338 Grimal Nicolas 1992 A History of Ancient Egypt Translated by Ian Shaw Oxford Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 631 19396 8 Haring Ben 2010 Administration and Law Pharaonic In Lloyd Alan B ed A Companion to Ancient Egypt Volume I Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World Chichester UK Wiley Blackwell pp 218 236 ISBN 978 1 4051 5598 4 Hassan Selim 1938 Excavations at Saqqara 1937 1938 Annales du Service de Antiquites de l Egypte in French 38 Le Caire Imprimerie de l Institut Francais d Archeologie Orientale OCLC 230793245 Helck Wolfgang 1979 Die Datierung der Gefassaufschriften der Djoserpyramide Zeitschrift fur Agyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde in German 106 1 Berlin De Gruyter 120 132 doi 10 1524 zaes 1979 106 1 120 Helck Wolfgang 1987 Untersuchungen zur Thinitenzeit Agyptologische Abhandlungen in German Vol 45 Wiesbaden Otto Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 44 702677 2 Hornung Erik Lorton David 1999 History of Ancient Egypt An Introduction Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 8475 8 Hornung Erik Krauss Rolf Warburton David eds 2012 Ancient Egyptian Chronology Handbook of Oriental Studies Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 11385 5 ISSN 0169 9423 Kahl Jochem 2007 Ra is my Lord searching for the rise of the Sun God at the dawn of Egyptian history Menes Vol 1 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 44 705540 6 Kahl Jochem 2013 Review Lo Stato egiziano nelle fonti scritte del periodo tinita by Simone Lanna Journal of Near Eastern Studies 72 2 Chicago The University of Chicago Press 310 312 doi 10 1086 671441 JSTOR 10 1086 671441 Katary Sally L D 2001 Saqqara In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 3 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 351 356 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Lacher Raschdorff Claudia 2014 Das Grab des Konigs Ninetjer in Saqqara architektonische entwicklung fruhzeitlicher grabanlagen in Agypten Archaologische Veroffentlichungen Deutsches archaologisches Institut Abteilung Kairo in German Vol 125 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 44 706999 1 Lacher Raschdorff Claudia 2015 Saqqara Agypten Das Grab des Konigs Ninetjer Elektronische Publikationen des Deutschen Archaologischen Insituts e Forschungsberichte in German 1 Berlin Deutsches Archaologisches Institut 47 49 Malek Jaromir 2000 The Old Kingdom c 2686 2160 BC In Shaw Ian ed The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt Oxford University Press pp 104 ISBN 978 0 19 815034 3 Munro Peter 1983 Einige Bemerkungen zum Unas Friedhof in Saqqara 3 Vorbericht uber die Arbeiten der Gruppe Hannover im Herbst 1978 und im Fruhjahr 1980 Studien zur Altagyptischen Kultur in German 10 277 295 JSTOR 44325742 Petrie W M Flinders Griffith Francis Llewellyn 1901 The royal tombs of the earliest dynasties PDF London Egypt Exploration Fund OCLC 863347205 Reader Colin 2004 On Pyramid Causeways The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 90 63 71 JSTOR 3822244 Reader Colin 2014 The Netjerikhet stela and the early dynastic cult of Ra The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 100 421 435 JSTOR 24644981 Reader Colin 2017 An Early Dynastic Ritual Landscape at North Saqqara An Inheritance from Abydos The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 103 1 71 87 Regulski Ilona 2004 2nd Dynasty Ink Inscriptions from Saqqara paralleled in the Royal Museums of Art and History Brussels Egypt at its Origins Studies in Memory of Barbara Adams Proceedings of the International Conference Origin of the State Predynastic and Early Dynastic Egypt OLA Vol 138 Leuven Peeters Leuven pp 949 970 ISBN 978 9 04 291469 8 Roth Ann Macy 1993 Social Change in the Fourth Dynasty The Spatial Organization of Pyramids Tombs and Cemeteries Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 30 33 55 doi 10 2307 40000226 JSTOR 40000226 Schlogl Hermann A 2019 Das alte Agypten C H Beck Paperback in German Vol 2305 5 durchgesehene Auflage ed Munchen C H Beck ISBN 978 3 40 673174 7 Seidlmayer Stephan Johannes 2001 Historische und moderne Nilstande Historische und moderne Nilstande Untersuchungen zu den Pegelablesungen des Nils von der Fruhzeit bis in die Gegenwart in German Berlin Achet ISBN 978 3 9803730 8 1 Simpson William Kelly 1956 A Statuette of King Nyneter The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 42 London Egypt Exploration Society 45 49 doi 10 2307 3855121 JSTOR 3855121 Stadelmann Rainer 1981 Die khentjou she der Konigsbezirk she n per aa und die Namen der Grabanlagen der Fruhzeit Bulleting de l Institut Francais d Archeologie Orientale in German 81 1 Le Caire Institut francais d archeologie orientale 153 164 Sullivan Elaine 2016 Potential pasts Taking a humanistic approach to computer visualization of ancient landscapes Bulletin of the Institute of Classical Studies 59 2 71 88 JSTOR 44254154 Tiradritti Francesco Donadoni Roveri Anna Maria 1998 Kemet Alle Sorgenti Del Tempo in Italian Milano Electa ISBN 978 8 84 356042 4 Tristant Yann 2018 Das Grab des Konigs Ninetjer in Saqqara Architektonische Entwicklung fruhzeitlicher Grabanlagen in AgyptenClaudia M Lacher Raschdorff Archaologische Veroffentlichungen 125 Harrassowitz Wiesbaden 2014 compte rendu Archeo Nil Revue de la societe pour l etude des cultures prepharaoniques de la vallee du Nil in French 28 140 142 Vercoutter Jean 1992 L Egypte et la Vallee du Nil Tome 1 Des origines a la fin de l Ancien Empire 12000 2000 avant J C in French Paris Presses universitaires de France ISBN 978 2 13 059136 8 von Beckerath Jurgen 1997 Chronologie des pharaonischen Agypten die Zeitbestimmung der agyptischen Geschichte von der Vorzeit bis 332 v Chr Munchner agyptologische Studien in German Vol 46 Mainz am Rhein Philipp von Zabern ISBN 978 3 8053 2310 9 von Beckerath Jurgen 1999 Handbuch der agyptischen Konigsnamen Munchner agyptologische Studien in German Mainz Philip von Zabern ISBN 978 3 8053 2591 2 Wegner M A Pouls 2018 Das Grab des Konigs Ninetjer in Saqqara Architektonische Entwicklung fruhzeitlicher Grabanlagen in Agypten by Claudia M Lacher Raschdorff Review by M A Pouls Wegner Journal of the American Oriental Society 138 3 621 623 Wengrow David 2009 The archaeology of early Egypt social transformations in North East Africa 10 000 to 2 650 BC Cambridge world archaeology Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 54374 3 Wilkinson Toby A H 2000 Royal Annals of Ancient Egypt The Palermo Stone and its Associated Fragments London New York Kegan amp Paul International ISBN 978 0 7103 0667 8 Wilkinson Toby A H 2005 Early dynastic Egypt London Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 02438 6 Wilkinson Toby A H 2010 The Early Dynastic Period In Lloyd Alan B ed A Companion to Ancient Egypt Volume I Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World Chichester UK Wiley Blackwell pp 48 62 ISBN 978 1 4051 5598 4 Wilkinson Toby A H 2014 Grajetzki Wolfram Wendrich Willeke eds Dynasties 2 and 3 UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology 1 1 Los Angeles University of California Los Angeles Zaba Zbynek 1974 The rock inscriptions of Lower Nubia Czechoslovak concession Publications Ceskoslovensky egyptologicky ustav Vol 1 Prague Charles University OCLC 6047001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nynetjer amp oldid 1220960947, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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