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Pepi I Meryre

Pepi I Meryre (also Pepy I) was an ancient Egyptian pharaoh, third king of the Sixth Dynasty of Egypt, who ruled for over 40 years at the turn of the 24th and 23rd centuries BC, toward the end of the Old Kingdom period. He was the son of Teti, the founder of the dynasty, and ascended the throne only after the brief intervening reign of the shadowy Userkare. His mother was Iput, who may have been a daughter of Unas, the final ruler of the preceding Fifth Dynasty. Pepi I, who had at least six consorts, was succeeded by his son Merenre Nemtyemsaf I, with whom he may have shared power in a coregency at the very end of his reign. Pepi II Neferkare, who might also have been Pepi I's son, succeeded Merenre.

Pepi I Meryre
  • Pepy
  • Phios
  • Phius
  • φιός
Lifesize copper statue of Pepi I, Cairo Museum[1]
Pharaoh
ReignDuration: over 40 years, in the second half of the 24th century BC or early 23rd century BC[note 1]
Coregencyuncertain, possibly with his son Merenre at the end of his reign
PredecessorUserkare
SuccessorMerenre Nemtyemsaf I
Horus name
Mery Tawy
mry tꜣwj
Beloved of the Two Lands[13]

Nebty name
Mery Khet Nebti
mry ẖt nbtj
Beloved of the Two Ladies' body[13]

Golden Horus
Biku Nebu
bjkw nbw
The triple falcons are golden[13]

Prenomen  (Praenomen)
  • Nefer za hor
    nfr zꜣ ḥr
    Perfect is the protection of Horus[13]
    Excellent is the protection of Horus[14]


  • Meryre[15]
    mry rꜥ
    Beloved of Re[13]


    [7]
Nomen
Pepi
ppy[13][7]


Consort One consort responsible for a conspiracy against Pepi known only through her title "Weret-Yamtes"
Children
FatherTeti
MotherIput
BurialPyramid of Pepi I in South Saqqara
MonumentsPyramid complex Pepi Men-nefer, at least six pyramids for his consorts and numerous Ka-chapels
Dynasty6th Dynasty

Several difficulties accumulated during Pepi's reign, beginning with the possible murder of his father and the ensuing reign of Userkare. Later, probably after his twentieth year of reign, Pepi faced a harem conspiracy hatched by one of his consorts who may have tried to have her son designated heir to the throne, and possibly another conspiracy involving his vizier at the end of his reign. Confronted with the protracted decline of pharaonic power and the emergence of dynasties of local officials, Pepi reacted with a vast architectural program involving the construction of temples dedicated to local gods and numerous chapels for his own cult throughout Egypt, reinforcing his presence in the provinces. Egypt's prosperity allowed Pepi to become the most prolific builder of the Old Kingdom. At the same time, Pepi favored the rise of small provincial centres and recruited officials of non-noble extraction to curtail the influence of powerful local families. Continuing Teti's policy, Pepi expanded a network of warehouses accessible to royal envoys and from which taxes and labor could easily be collected. Finally, he buttressed his power after the harem conspiracy by forming alliances with Khui, the provincial nomarch of Abydos, marrying two of his daughters, Ankhesenpepi I and Ankhesenpepi II, and making both Khui's wife Nebet and her son Djau viziers. The Egyptian state's external policy under Pepi comprised military campaigns against Nubia, Sinai and the southern Levant, landing troops on the Levantine coast using Egyptian transport boats. Trade with Byblos, Ebla and the oases of the Western Desert flourished, while Pepi launched mining and quarrying expeditions to Sinai and further afield.

Pepi had a pyramid complex built for his funerary cult in Saqqara, next to which he built at least a further six pyramids for his consorts. Pepi's pyramid, which originally stood 52.5 m (172 ft) tall, and an accompanying high temple, followed the standard layout inherited from the late Fifth Dynasty. The most extensive corpus of Pyramid Texts from the Old Kingdom cover the walls of Pepi I's burial chamber, antechamber and much of the corridor leading to it. For the first time, these texts also appear in some of the consorts' pyramids. Excavations revealed a bundle of viscera and a mummy fragment, both presumed to belong to the pharaoh. Pepi's complex, called Pepi Mennefer, remained the focus of his funerary cult well into the Middle Kingdom and ultimately gave its name to the nearby capital of Egypt, Memphis. Pepi's cult stopped early in the Second Intermediate Period. Pepi's monuments began to be quarried for their stone in the New Kingdom, and in the Mamluk era they were almost entirely dismantled.

Family edit

Parents edit

Pepi was the son of the pharaoh Teti and Iput.[16] Her parentage is directly attested to by a relief on a decree uncovered in Coptos that mentions Iput as Pepi's mother,[17] by inscriptions in her mortuary temple mentioning her titles as mother of a king and as mother of Pepi,[18][note 2] by the architecture of her tomb which had been changed from an original mastaba form into a pyramid on the accession of her son to the throne,[18] and by her mention as being Pepi's mother on the Sixth Dynasty royal annals.[19] Iput may have been a daughter of Unas, the last pharaoh of the Fifth Dynasty,[3] although this remains uncertain and debated.[20] She seems to have died before Pepi's accession to the throne.[21] The observation that Teti was most probably Pepi's father follows from the location of Iput's tomb, next to Teti's pyramid as was customary for a queen consort.[19]

Consorts edit

 
Ankhesenpepi II shown on a relief from her mortuary temple, Imhotep Museum

Egyptologists have identified six consorts of Pepi I with near certainty.[22] Pepi's best-attested consorts were Ankhesenpepi I and Ankhesenpepi II,[23][note 3] who both bore future pharaohs and were daughters of the nomarch of Abydos Khui and his wife Nebet.[23][25] Further consorts are Nubwenet,[26][27] Inenek-Inti,[28] who became one of Pepi's viziers,[22] and Mehaa (also called Haaheru). All were buried in pyramids adjacent to that of Pepi.[29] Relief fragments from the necropolis surrounding Pepi's pyramid mention another consort, Sebwetet.[30]

Two more consorts have been proposed for Pepi I based on partial evidence. The first is Nedjeftet,[25][31] whose name is recorded on blocks excavated in the necropolis adjacent to Pepi's pyramid. The identification of Nedjeftet as Pepi's consort remains uncertain owing to the lack of inscriptions explicitly naming her husband.[32] Given the location of Nedjeftet's blocks in the necropolis, she may be the owner of a pyramid west of Pepi's.[33][34] The second is another consort, named Behenu, who was buried in the second largest queen pyramid of Pepi's necropolis, north of his. She could either be one of his consorts or a consort of Pepi II.[35]

A final unnamed consort, only referred to by her title "Weret-Yamtes"[36] meaning "great of affection",[37] is known from inscriptions uncovered in the tomb of Weni, an official serving Pepi. This consort, whose name is purposefully left unmentioned by Weni,[38] conspired against Pepi and was prosecuted when the conspiracy was discovered.[36]

Children edit

Pepi fathered at least four sons. Ankhesenpepi I probably bore him the future pharaoh Merenre Nemtyemsaf I.[note 4] Ankhesenpepi II was the mother of Pepi II Neferkare,[40] who was probably born at the very end of Pepi I's reign given he was only six upon ascending the throne after Merenre's rule.[39] While a majority of Egyptologists favor this hypothesis,[41] an alternative one holds that Pepi II could be a son of Merenre.[35] Another of Pepi I's sons was Teti-ankh, meaning "Teti lives", whose mother has yet to be identified.[40] Teti-ankh is known only from an ink inscription bearing his name discovered in Pepi's pyramid.[17] Buried nearby is Prince Hornetjerkhet, a son of Pepi with Mehaa.[40]

At least three of Pepi I's daughters have been tentatively identified, all future consorts of Pepi II.[42] The first, Meritites IV,[note 5] was the king's eldest daughter and was buried in the necropolis surrounding her father's pyramid.[44] The second is Neith,[45][note 6] whom he fathered with Ankhesenpepi I.[47] She may have been the mother of Pepi II's successor Merenre Nemtyemsaf II.[45] The third is Iput II,[48] whose identity as Pepi's daughter remains uncertain because her title of "daughter of the king" may only be honorary.[42]

Chronology edit

Relative chronology edit

 
Pepi I's cartouche reading "Meryre" on the Abydos King List[49]

The relative chronology of Pepi I's reign is well established by historical records, contemporary artifacts and archeological evidence, which agree he succeeded Userkare and was succeeded by Merenre I Nemtyemsaf.[50] For example, the near-contemporary South Saqqara Stone, a royal annal inscribed during the reign of Pepi II, gives the succession "Teti → Userkare → Pepi I → Merenre I", making Pepi the third king of the Sixth Dynasty. Two more historical sources agree with this chronology: the Abydos king list, written under Seti I which places Pepi I's cartouche as the 36th entry between those of Userkare and Merenre,[49] and the Turin canon, a list of kings on papyrus dating to the reign of Ramses II which records Pepi I in the fourth column, third row.[51]

Historical sources against this order of succession include the Aegyptiaca (Αἰγυπτιακά), a history of Egypt written in the 3rd century BC during the reign of Ptolemy II (283 – 246 BC) by Manetho. No copies of the Aegyptiaca have survived, and it is now known only through later writings by Sextus Julius Africanus and Eusebius. According to the Byzantine scholar George Syncellus, Africanus wrote that the Aegyptiaca mentioned the succession "Othoês → Phius → Methusuphis" at the start of the Sixth Dynasty. Othoês, Phius (in Greek, φιός), and Methusuphis are understood to be the Hellenized forms for Teti, Pepi I and Merenre, respectively,[52][note 7] meaning that the Aegyptiaca omits Userkare. Manetho's reconstruction of the early Sixth Dynasty agrees with the Karnak king list written under Thutmosis III. This list places Pepi's birth name immediately after that of Teti in the seventh entry of the second row.[54] Unlike other sources such as the Turin canon, the purpose of the Karnak king list was not to be exhaustive, but rather to list a selection of royal ancestors to be honoured. Similarly the Saqqara Tablet, written under Ramses II,[55] omits Userkare, with Pepi's name given as the 25th entry after that of Teti.[49]

Length of reign edit

 
Alabaster statuette of Pepi I dressed for the Sed Festival, Brooklyn Museum[56]

The length of Pepi I's reign remains somewhat uncertain, although as of 2021, the consensus is that he ruled over Egypt for over 40 years, possibly 49 or 50 years[57] and possibly longer.[58]

During the Old Kingdom period, the Egyptians counted years from the beginning of the reign of the current king. These years were referred to by the number of cattle counts which had taken place since the reign's start.[59] The cattle count was an important event aimed at evaluating the amount of taxes to be levied on the population. This involved counting cattle, oxen and small livestock.[60] During the early Sixth Dynasty, this count was probably biennial,[note 8] occurring every two years.[59][64]

The South Saqqara Stone and an inscription in Hatnub both record the 25th cattle count under Pepi I, his highest known date.[65][66] Accepting a biennial count, this indicates that Pepi reigned for 49 years. That a 50th year of reign could have also been recorded on the royal annal cannot be discounted, however, because of the damaged state of the South Saqqara Stone.[67] Another historical source supporting such a long reign is Africanus' epitome of Manetho's Aegyptiaca, which credits Pepi I with a reign of 53 years.[14][52][note 9]

Archaeological evidence in favor of a long reign for Pepi I includes his numerous building projects and many surviving objects made in celebration of his first Sed festival, which was meant to rejuvenate the king and was first celebrated on the 30th year of a king's rule. For example, numerous alabaster ointment vessels celebrating Pepi's first Sed festival have been discovered. They bear a standard inscriptions reading, "The king of Upper and Lower Egypt Meryre, may he be given life for ever. The first occasion of the Sed festival."[69] Examples can now be found in museums throughout the world:[5][70][71]

The Sed festival had a considerable importance for Old Kingdom kings.[63] Representations of it were part of the typical decoration of temples associated with the ruler during the Old Kingdom, whether the king had actually celebrated it or not.[72] As further evidence of the importance of this event in Pepi's case, the state administration seems to have had a tendency to mention his first jubilee repeatedly in the years following its celebration until the end of his rule in connection with building activities. For example, Pepi's final 25th cattle count reported on the Sixth Dynasty royal annals is associated with his first Sed festival even though it probably had taken place some 19 years prior.[63]

Politics edit

Ascending the throne edit

 
Kneeling statuette of Pepi I, Brooklyn Museum[73][note 10]

Pepi's accession to the throne may have occurred in times of discord. Manetho, writing nearly 2000 years after Pepi's reign, claims that Pepi's father Teti was assassinated by his own bodyguards.[8][52] The Egyptologist Naguib Kanawati has argued in support of Manetho's claim, noting for example that Teti's reign saw a significant increase in the number of guards at the Egyptian court, who became responsible for the everyday care of the king.[74] At the same time, the figures and names of several contemporary palace officials as represented in their tombs have been erased purposefully.[75] This seems to be an attempt at a damnatio memoriae[76] targeting three men in particular: the vizier Hezi,[note 11] the overseer of weapons Mereri and chief physician Seankhuiptah. These men could therefore be behind the regicide.[78]

Pepi may have been too young to be king. In any case, he did not immediately succeed his father. King Userkare succeeded him instead, but Userkare's identity and relationship to the royal family remain uncertain. It is possible Userkare served only as a regent with Pepi's mother Iput as Pepi reached adulthood,[79] occupying the throne in the interregnum until Pepi's coming of age.[80] The apparent lack of resistance to Pepi's eventual accession supports such hypotheses.[79]

Against this view, however, Kanawati has argued that Userkare's short reign—lasting perhaps only one year—cannot be a regency as a regent would not have assumed a full royal titulary as Userkare did, nor would he be included in king lists.[74] Rather, Userkare could have been an usurper[note 12] and a descendant of a lateral branch of the Fifth Dynasty royal family who seized power briefly in a coup,[81] possibly with the support of the priesthood of the sun god Ra.[74] This hypothesis finds indirect evidence in Userkare's theophoric name which incorporates the name of Ra, a naming fashion common during the preceding Fifth Dynasty that had fallen out of use since Unas's reign. Further archeological evidence of Userkare's illegitimacy in the eyes of his successor is the absence of any mention of him in the tombs and biographies of the many Egyptian officials who served under both Teti and Pepi I.[14][82] For example, the viziers Inumin and Khentika, who served both Teti and Pepi I, are completely silent about Userkare and none of their activities during his time on the throne are reported in their tomb.[83] The tomb of Mehi, a guard who lived under Teti, Userkare and Pepi, yielded an inscription showing that the name of Teti was first erased to be replaced by that of another king, whose name was itself erased and replaced again by that of Teti.[84] Kanawati argues the intervening name was that of Userkare to whom Mehi may have transferred his allegiance.[85] Mehi's attempt to switch back to Teti was seemingly unsuccessful, as there is evidence that work on his tomb stopped abruptly and that he was never buried there.[86]

For the Egyptologist Miroslav Bárta (cs), further troubles might have arisen directly between Pepi and relatives of his father Teti.[76] Bárta and Baud point to Pepi's apparent decision to dismantle the funerary complex of his paternal grandmother[87] Sesheshet, as witnessed by blocks from this queen's complex which were found reused as construction material in Pepi's own mortuary temple.[76][88] On the other hand, Wilfried Seipel disagrees with this interpretation of the blocks being reused by Pepi, instead, he thinks the blocks bear witness to Pepi's foundation of a pious memorial to his grandmother.[89] At the same time as he apparently distanced himself from his father's line, Pepi transformed his mother's tomb into a pyramid and posthumously bestowed a new title on her, "Daughter of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt", thereby emphasising his royal lineage as a descendant of Unas, last ruler of the Fifth Dynasty.[76]

Pepi chose the Horus name of Mery-tawy, meaning "He who is loved by the two lands" or "Beloved of the Two Lands", which Nicolas Grimal sees as a clear indication that he desired political appeasement in times of troubles.[90] Similarly, Pepi chose the throne name Nefersahor, meaning "Perfect is the protection of Horus".[9] Bárta adds that Pepi's writing of his own name "Mery-tawy" is also highly unusual: he chose to invert the order of the hieroglyphic signs composing it, placing the sign for "Beloved" before that for "Two Lands". For Bárta and Yannis Gourdon, this deliberate choice shows Pepi's deference to the powerful nobility of the country, on which he was dependent.[76] Although there seems to be no direct relation between Userkare's brief reign and one or more later conspiracies against him, this evidence suggests some form of political instability at the time.[90]

 
Turquoise cylinder seal of an official of Pepi I, "Sole companion, lector priest, who does what is ordered [...] privy to the secret(s) of the king"[91]

Provincial administration edit

In a long trend that began earlier in the Fifth Dynasty, the Old Kingdom Egyptian state was the subject of increasing decentralisation and regionalisation.[92] Provincial families played an increasingly important role, marrying into the royal family, accessing the highest offices of the state administration and having a strong influence at the court, while also consolidating their hold over regional power bases by creating local dynasties.[93] These processes, well under way during Pepi I's reign, progressively weakened the king's primacy and ascendancy over his own administration and would ultimately result in the princedoms of the First Intermediate Period.[94] Teti and Pepi I seem to have developed several policies to counteract this. They both changed the organisation of the territorial administration during their reigns: many provincial governors were nominated, especially in Upper Egypt,[95] while Lower Egypt was possibly under direct royal administration.[96] In addition, Pepi instigated the construction of royal Ka-chapels[note 13] throughout Egypt[94][98] to strengthen the royal presence in the provinces.[99] These expensive policies suggest Egypt was prosperous during Pepi's reign.[51] Small provincial centres in areas historically associated with the crown became more important, suggesting that pharaohs of the Sixth Dynasty tried to diminish the power of regional dynasties by recruiting senior officials who did not belong to them and were loyal to the pharaoh.[100] Some of these new officials have no known background, indicating they were not of noble extraction. The circulation of high officials, who were moved from key positions of power to other duties, occurred at an "astonishing" pace under Teti and Pepi I according to the Egyptologist Juan Carlos Moreno García,[93] in what might have been a deliberate attempt to curtail the concentration of power in the hands of a few officials.[95]

The Sixth Dynasty royal annals, only a small part of which are still legible, record further activities during Pepi's reign, including the offering of milk and young cows for a feast of Ra, the building of a "south chapel" on the occasion of the new year and the arrival of messengers at court.[101] Further offerings of lapis-lazuli,[66] cattle, bread and beer are mentioned,[102] for gods including Horus[103] and the Ennead.[104]

Conspiracy edit

 
Weni shown on a lintel from his tomb with the name of Pepi I's pyramid, Pepi Men-nefer, mentioned on the top row of hieroglyphs, Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum.[105][note 14]

At some point in his reign,[note 15] Pepi faced a conspiracy hatched by one of his harem consorts, only known by her title "Weret-Yamtes". Although Weni, who served as a judge during the subsequent trial, does not report the precise nature of her crime, this at least shows that the person of the king was not untouchable.[107] If the conspiracy happened early in Pepi's reign as proposed by Wilfried Seipel and Vivienne Callender, the queen concerned could have been Userkare's mother and Teti's consort rather than Pepi's.[108] Most scholars, however, agree with Hans Goedicke's thesis that the conspiracy occurred after more than two decades into Pepi's reign. For Goedicke, the queen could have been Merenre's mother.[39] Nicolas Grimal[note 16] and Baud see this as highly unlikely and outright outlandish respectively,[109] as this queen's son would have been punished along with her.[36] Rather, the queen might have attempted unsuccessfully to secure the throne for her son, whose name is now lost.[108]

Perhaps in response to these events, Pepi changed his prenomen Nefersahor to Meryre, meaning "Beloved of Ra", even updating the inscriptions inside his pyramid.[note 17] This late change with Pepi incorporating the sun god Ra's name into his own may reflect some agreement with the influential priesthood of Ra.[110] Around this time, Pepi married two daughters of Khui, the provincial governor of Abydos.[111] This may also have served to counteract the weakening of the king's authority over Middle and Upper Egypt by securing the allegiance of a powerful family.[112] For Baud and Christopher Eyre, this also demonstrates that at the time of the Sixth Dynasty, government and power was still largely determined by family relationships rather than by bureaucracy.[113][114]

The political importance of these marriages[114] is furthered by the fact that for the first and last time until the 26th Dynasty some 1800 years later, a woman, Khui's wife Nebet, bore the title of vizier of Upper Egypt. Egyptologists debate whether this title was purely honorific[115] or whether she really assumed the duties of a vizier.[75] Later, Khui's and Nebet's son Djau was made vizier as well. Pepi's marriages might be at the origin[116] of a trend which continued during the later Sixth and Eighth Dynasties, in which the temple of Min in Coptos—Khui's seat of power—was the focus of much royal patronage.[39] The Coptos Decrees, which record successive pharaohs granting tax exemptions to the temple, as well as official honours bestowed by the kings on the local ruling family while the Old Kingdom society was collapsing, manifest this.[117]

End of reign: coregency edit

The end of Pepi's rule may have been no less troubled than his early reign, as Kanawati conjectures that Pepi faced yet another conspiracy against him, in which his vizier Rawer may have been involved. To support his theory, Kanawati observes that Rawer's image in his tomb has been desecrated, with his name, hands and feet chiselled off, while this same tomb is dated to the second half of Pepi's reign on stylistic grounds.[118] Kanawati further posits that the conspiracy may have aimed at having someone else designated heir to the throne at the expense of Merenre. Because of this failed conspiracy, Pepi I may have taken the drastic[note 18] step of crowning Merenre during his own reign,[58] thereby creating the earliest documented coregency in the history of Egypt.[118] That such a coregency took place was first proposed by Étienne Drioton. A gold pendant bearing the names of both Pepi I and Merenre I as living kings,[122][123] and the copper statues of Hierakonpolis, discussed below, indirectly support this.[112] Goedicke has suggested further that an inscription mentioning King Merenre's tenth year of reign in Hatnub, contradicting Manetho's figure of seven years, is evidence that Merenre dated the start of his reign before the end of his father's reign, as a coregency would permit.[124]

The coregency remains uncertain. The Sixth Dynasty Royal annals bear no trace either for or against it, but the shape and size of the stone on which the annals are inscribed makes it more probable that Merenre did not start to count his years of reign until soon after the death of his father.[125][note 19] Furthermore, William J. Murnane writes that the gold pendant's context is unknown, making its significance regarding the coregency difficult to appraise. The copper statues are similarly inconclusive as the identity of the smaller one, and whether they originally formed a group, remains uncertain.[127]

Military campaigns edit

 
Autobiography of Weni, now at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo[128][note 20]

Militarily, aggressive expansion into Nubia marked Pepi I's reign.[129][130] The walls of the tombs of the contemporary nomarchs of Elephantine,[129] alabaster vessels bearing Pepi's cartouche found in Kerma[131] and inscriptions in Tumas report this.[80] The Sixth Dynasty royal annals also recount at least one campaign into Nubia. Although the campaign narrative is now largely illegible, according to the Egyptologists Baud and Dobrev, it comprised three phases: first, messengers were sent to Nubia for negotiation and surveillance purposes; then the military campaign took place and finally a booty of men and goods was brought back to Egypt for presentation to the pharaoh.[132]

To the north-east of Egypt, Pepi launched at least five military expeditions against the "sand dwellers"[note 21] of Sinai and southern Canaan.[112][134] These campaigns are recounted on the walls of the tomb of Weni, then officially a palace superintendent but given tasks befitting a general.[135] Weni states that he ordered nomarchs in Upper Egypt and the Nile Delta region to "call up the levies of their own subordinates, and these in turn summoned their subordinates down through every level of the local administration".[136] Meanwhile, Nubian mercenaries were also recruited and endowed with the power to enroll men and seize goods,[112][137][note 22] so that in total tens of thousands of men were at Weni's disposal.[135] This is the only text relating the raising of an Egyptian army during the Old Kingdom,[136] and it indirectly reveals the absence of a permanent, standing army at the time.[139] The goal of this army was either to repulse rebelling Semitic people[140][note 23] or to seize their properties and conquer their land in southern Canaan,[note 24] an action possibly motivated by the intense commercial activities between Egypt and this region.[145] The Egyptians campaigned up to what was probably Mount Carmel[142] or Ras Kouroun,[146] landing troops on the coast using transport boats.[112][147] Weni reports that walled towns were destroyed, fig trees and grape vines were cut down, and local shrines were burned.[148]

Economy edit

 
Ebla's royal palace, destroyed c. 2300 BC

The reign of Pepi I marks the apogee of the Sixth Dynasty foreign policy, with flourishing trade, several mining and quarrying expeditions and major military campaigns.[149]

Foreign trade and mining edit

Trade with settlements along the Levantine coast, which had existed during the Fifth Dynasty, seems to have peaked[150] under Pepi I and Pepi II. Their chief trade partner there might have been Byblos, where dozens of inscriptions on stone vessels showing Pepi's cartouches have been found,[151][152] and a large alabaster vessel bearing Pepi's titulary and commemorating his jubilee from the Temple of Baalat Gebal.[153][note 25] The high official, Iny, served Pepi during several successful expeditions to Byblos for which the king rewarded him with the name "Inydjefaw", meaning, "He who brings back provisions".[154] Through Byblos, Egypt, had indirect contacts[155] with the city of Ebla in modern-day Syria.[10][156][note 26] The contact with Ebla is established by alabaster vessels[157] bearing Pepi's name found near its royal palace G,[158][note 27] destroyed in the 23rd century BC, possibly by the Akkadian Empire under Sargon.[160] Trading parties departed Egypt for the Levant from a Nile Delta port called Ra-Hat, "the first mouth [of the Nile]". This trade benefited the nearby city of Mendes, from which one of Pepi's viziers probably originated.[161] Further contacts with Canaan may be inferred from a statue of Pepi, which is said to have been unearthed in Gezer but has since been lost.[162]

Expeditions and mining activities that were already taking place in the Fifth and early Sixth Dynasty continued unabated. These include at least one expedition of workmen and their military escort[163] to the mines of turquoise and copper in Wadi Maghareh, Sinai, [156] around Pepi's 36th year on the throne.[80][note 28] In all likelihood, this expedition departed Egypt from the Red Sea coast port of Ayn Soukhna, which was active during Pepi's reign.[165] The same port may also have been the origin of an expedition to the southern Red Sea, possibly to Punt, as witnessed by Ethiopian obsidian discovered on the site.[166] There were also one or more expeditions to Hatnub, where alabaster was extracted[156] at least once in Pepi's 49th year of reign,[80] as well as visits to the Gebel el-Silsila[167] and Sehel Island.[168] A trading expedition fetching lapis-lazuli and lead or tin may also have passed further south through Mirgissa.[169][note 29] Greywacke and siltstone for building projects originated from quarries of the Wadi Hammamat,[156] where some eighty graffiti mention Pepi I.[171] At the same time, an extensive network of caravan routes traversed Egypt's Western Desert, for example, from Abydos to the Kharga Oasis and from there to the Dakhla and Selima Oases.[156]

Domestic policies edit

Agricultural estates affiliated with the crown in the provinces during the preceding dynasty were replaced by novel administrative entities, the ḥwt, which were agricultural centres controlling tracts of land, livestock and workers. Together with temples and royal domains, these numerous ḥwt represented a network of warehouses accessible to royal envoys and from which taxes and labor could easily be collected.[172][173] This territorial mode of organisation disappeared nearly 300 years after Pepi I's reign, at the dawn of the Middle Kingdom period.[172]

Pepi decreed tax-exemptions to various institutions. He gave an exemption to a chapel dedicated to the cult of his mother located in Coptos.[174][note 30] Another decree has survived on a stele discovered near the Bent Pyramid in Dashur, whereby in his 21st year of reign, Pepi grants exemptions to the people serving in the two pyramids towns[note 31] of Sneferu:[175]

My majesty has commanded that these two pyramid towns be exempt for him throughout the course of eternity from doing any work of the palace, from doing any forced labor for any part of the royal residence throughout the course of eternity, or from doing any forced labor at the word of anybody in the course of eternity.[176]

The Egyptologist David Warburton sees such perpetual tax exemptions as capitulations by a king confronted with rampant corruption. Whether they were the result of religious or political motives, exemptions created precedents that encouraged other institutions to request similar treatment, weakening the power of the state as they accumulated over time.[177]

Further domestic activities related to agriculture and the economy may be inferred from the inscriptions found in the tomb of Nekhebu, a high official belonging to the family of Senedjemib Inti, a vizier during the late Fifth Dynasty. Nekhebu reports overseeing the excavations of canals in Lower Egypt and at Cusae in Middle Egypt.[178][179]

Building activities edit

 
Ruins of Pepi I's Ka-chapel in Bubastis[180]

Pepi I built extensively throughout Egypt,[181] so much so that in 1900 the Egyptologist Flinders Petrie stated "this king has left more monuments, large and small, than any other ruler before the Twelfth Dynasty".[51] The Egyptologist Jean Leclant reached a similar conclusion in 1999. He sees Pepi's rule as marking the apogee of the Old Kingdom owing to the flurry of building activities, administrative reforms, trade and military campaigns at the time.[14] Pepi devoted most of his building efforts to local cults[147] and royal Ka-chapels,[182] seemingly with the objective of affirming the king's stature and presence in the provinces.[183]

Ka-chapels edit

Ka-chapels were small cult buildings comprising one or more chambers to hold offerings dedicated to the cult of the Ka of a deceased or, in this case, the king.[184] Such chapels dedicated to Pepi I were uncovered or are known from contemporary sources to have stood in Hierakonpolis,[185][186] in Abydos,[187][188][note 32] and in the central Nile Delta region,[178] in Memphis, Zawyet el-Meytin, Assiut, Qus[182] and beyond the Nile Valley in Balat, a settlement of the Dakhla Oasis.[191] In addition, two[192] chapels were built in Bubastis[180] and probably more than one stood in Dendera.[note 33] Finally, yet another chapel is believed to have existed in Elkab, where rock inscriptions refer to his funerary cult.[194] All these buildings were probably peripheral to or inside[189] larger temples hosting extensive cult activities.[195][196] For example, the chapel at Abydos was next to the temple of Khenti-Amentiu.[197] For the Egyptologist Juan Moreno García, this proximity demonstrates the direct power that the king still held over the temples' economic activities and internal affairs during the Sixth Dynasty.[189]

 
The smaller copper statue from Hierakonpolis, representing Merenre or a young Pepi I[1]

In an underground store beneath the floor of Hierakonpolis' Ka-chapel of Pepi, the Egyptologist James Quibell uncovered a statue of King Khasekhemwy of the Second Dynasty, a terracotta lion cub made during the Thinite era,[198] a golden mask representing Horus and two copper statues.[199][200] Originally fashioned by hammering plates of copper over a wooden base,[199][201] these statues had been disassembled, placed inside one another and then sealed with a thin layer of engraved copper bearing the titles and names of Pepi I "on the first day of the Heb Sed" feast.[198] The two statues were symbolically "trampling underfoot the Nine bows"—the enemies of Egypt—a stylized representation of Egypt's conquered foreign subjects.[202] While the identity of the larger adult figure as Pepi I is revealed by the inscription, the identity of the smaller statue showing a younger person remains unresolved.[198] The most common hypothesis among Egyptologists is that the young man shown is Merenre.[186] As Alessandro Bongioanni and Maria Croce write: "[Merenre] was publicly associated as his father's successor on the occasion of the Jubilee [the Heb Sed feast]. The placement of his copper effigy inside that of his father would therefore reflect the continuity of the royal succession and the passage of the royal sceptre from father to son before the death of the pharaoh could cause a dynastic split."[203] Alternatively, Bongioanni and Croce have also proposed the smaller statue may represent "a more youthful Pepy I, reinvigorated by the celebration of the Jubilee ceremonies".[204]

Temples edit

The close association between Ka-chapels and temples to deities might have spurred building activities for the latter. For example, the Bubastis ensemble of Pepi I comprised a 95 m × 60 m (312 ft × 197 ft) enclosure wall with a small rectangular Ka-chapel housing eight pillars near its north corner.[205] This ensemble was peripheral to the main Old Kingdom temple dedicated to the goddess Bastet.[186] In Dendera, where a fragmentary statue of a seated Pepi I has been uncovered,[206] Pepi restored the temple complex to the goddess Hathor.[207] He seems particularly to have desired to be associated with her, using the epithet "son of Hathor of Dendera" on numerous vessels found throughout Egypt and abroad.[5][159][188][208] In Abydos,[209] he built a small rock cut chapel dedicated to the local god Khenti-Amentiu,[210] where he is again referred to as "Pepi, son of Hathor of Dendera".[211] Pepi also referred to himself as the son of Atum of Heliopolis, direct evidence for the strengthening of the Heliopolitan cults at the time.[212]

At the southern border of Egypt, in Elephantine, several faience plaques bearing Pepi's cartouche[213] have been uncovered in the temple of Satet. These may suggest royal interest in the local cult.[116] An alabaster statue of an ape with its offspring bearing Pepi I's cartouche[214] was uncovered in the same location, but it was probably a gift of the king to a high official who then dedicated it to Satet.[99] In this temple, Pepi built a red granite naos, [99] destined either to house the goddess's statue,[215] or a statue of Pepi I himself, which would mean the naos was yet another Ka-chapel.[216] Pepi I's cartouche and the epithet "beloved of Satet" is inscribed on the naos, which stands 1.32 m (4.3 ft) high.[99] Pepi seems to have undertaken wider works in the temple, possibly reorganising its layout by adding walls and an altar.[217] In this context, the faience tablets bearing his cartouche may be foundation offerings made at the start of the works,[218] although this has been contested.[219] For the Egyptologist David Warburton, the reigns of Pepi I and II mark the first period during which small stone temples dedicated to local deities were built in Egypt.[212]

Pyramid complex edit

 
Calcite-alabaster jar mentioning the cartouches of Pepi I, the name of his pyramid complex and his first Sed festival, Neues Museum, Berlin.[220]

Pepi I had a pyramid complex built for himself in South Saqqara,[221] which he named Men-nefer-Pepi variously translated as "Pepi's splendour is enduring",[222] "The perfection of Pepi is established",[223] "The beauty of Pepi endures",[3] or "The perfection of Pepi endures".[224] The shortened name Mennefer for the pyramid complex progressively became the name of the nearby capital of Egypt—which had originally been called Ineb-hedj. In particular, the Egyptian Mennefer ultimately gave Memphis in Greek, a name which is still in use for this ancient city.[3][202][224][note 34] Pepi I's mortuary complex is neighboured on its south-west corner by a necropolis built during his own reign and the reigns of Merenre and Pepi II. The necropolis housed the pyramids of Pepi I's consorts and their dedicated funerary temples.[22][note 35]

Main pyramid edit

Pepi's main pyramid was constructed in the same fashion as royal pyramids since the reign of Djedkare Isesi some 80 years earlier:[226] a core built six steps high from small roughly dressed blocks of limestone bound together using clay mortar encased with fine limestone blocks.[227] The pyramid, now destroyed, had a base length of 78.75 m (258 ft; 150 cu) converging to the apex at ~ 53° and once stood 52.5 m (172 ft; 100 cu) tall.[223] Its remains now form a meager mound of 12 m (39 ft; 23 cu),[221][222] containing a pit in its centre dug by stone thieves.[228]

The substructure of the pyramid was accessed from the north chapel which has since disappeared. From the entrance, a descending corridor gives way to a vestibule leading into the horizontal passage. Halfway along the passage, three granite portcullises guard the chambers. As in preceding pyramids, the substructure contains three chambers: an antechamber on the pyramids vertical axis, a serdab with three recesses to its east, and a burial chamber containing the king's sarcophagus to the west.[229] Extraordinarily, the pink granite canopic chest that is sunk into the floor at the foot of the sarcophagus has remained undisturbed.[223][230] Discovered alongside it was a bundle of viscera presumed to belong to the pharaoh.[230] The provenance of a mummy fragment and fine linen wrappings discovered in the burial chamber are unknown, but they are hypothesized to belong to Pepi I.[231]

The walls of Pepi I's antechamber, burial chamber, and much of the corridor[note 36] are covered with vertical columns of inscribed hieroglyphic text.[223][231][235] The hieroglyphs are painted green with ground malachite and gum arabic, a colour symbolising renewal.[236] His sarcophagus is also inscribed on its east side with the king's titles and names, as part of a larger set of spells that includes texts at the bottom of the north and south walls opposite the sarcophagus, and in a line running across the top of the north, west, and south walls of the chamber.[237] The writing comprises 2,263 columns and lines of text from 651 spells, of which 82 are unique to Pepi's pyramid.[238] This is the most extensive corpus of Pyramid Texts from the Old Kingdom.[239] The tradition of inscribing texts inside the pyramid was begun by Unas at the end of the Fifth Dynasty,[3][240][241] but originally discovered in Pepi I's pyramid in 1880.[223][242] Their function, like that of all funerary literature, was to enable the reunion of the ruler's ba and Ka, leading to the transformation into an akh,[243][244] and to secure eternal life among the gods in the sky.[245][246][247]

Mortuary temple edit

 
Fragments of the pyramid texts from Pepi I's pyramid in South Saqqara, now in the Petrie Museum[248][249][note 37]

Pepi's pyramid was part of a wider funerary complex comprising a small cult pyramid and mortuary temple surrounded by an enclosure wall. The purpose of the cult pyramid remains unclear. While it had a burial chamber, it was never used as such and must have been a purely symbolic structure.[250] It may have hosted the pharaoh's Ka,[251] or a miniature statue of the king,[252] and could have been used for ritual performances centring around the burial and resurrection of the Ka spirit during the Sed festival.[252] Excavations of the small cult pyramid yielded statue fragments, pieces of stelae and offering tables which indicate the continuation of Pepi's funerary cult into the Middle Kingdom.[223]

A valley temple by the Nile and a causeway leading from this temple up to the pyramid on the desert plateau completed the overall construction.[223] The high temple, next to the pyramid, was laid out according to a standard plan,[253] making it nearly the same as the temples of Djedkare Isesi, Unas, and Teti.[230] The temple had an entrance hall some 6.29 m (20.6 ft) high, now almost completely destroyed, leading into an open columned courtyard. Storage rooms to the north and south flanked the hall. The inner temple contained a chapel with five statue niches, an offering hall and other core chambers.[254] Either the mortuary temple or the causeway might have been lined with statues of kneeling bound captives[255] representing Egypt's traditional enemies.[223] Both the temple and the causeway are now heavily damaged due the activity of lime makers, who extracted and burned the construction stones to turn them into mortar and whitewash in later times. In particular, the original location of the statues remains uncertain as they had been displaced, ready to be thrown into a lime furnace.[223][254]

Necropolis of Pepi I edit

Pepi's mortuary complex was the centre of a wider necropolis which comprised the tombs of the royal family and further afield those of the high officials of the state administration including a tomb for Weni.[256] Pepi had pyramids built for his consorts to the south and south-west of his pyramid. These were all located outside the complex' enclosure wall but inside an area delimited by a street to the west. Three of the main queens' pyramids were built in a row on an east–west axis, each with a base side dimension of about 20 m (66 ft).[33] The Ancient Egyptians referred to the owners of these pyramids as the "Queen of the East", "Queen of the Centre" and "Queen of the West".[33]

 
Layout of the necropolis of Pepi I[22]

Pyramid of Nebwenet edit

The pyramid of the queen of the east belonged to Nebwenet, whose name, image and titles are preserved on a fallen jamb uncovered in the attached mortuary temple.[33] The pyramid had a base of 26.2 m (86 ft), making it similar in size to the other pyramids of the necropolis. On its northern face was a small mudbrick chapel, which hosted a limestone altar, now broken. The pyramid's substructures were accessed from a descending passageway leading first to an antechamber and, from there, to the burial chamber slightly to the south of the pyramid's apex. This chamber yielded fragments of pink granite sarcophagus and pieces of inscribed alabaster. To the east was a serdab and the scant remnants of funerary equipment.[22]

Pyramid of Inenek-Inti edit

Immediately west of the pyramid of the queen of the east was the pyramid of the queen of the centre, Inenek-Inti. The name, image and titles of this queen are inscribed on jambs and two 2.2 m (7.2 ft) high red-painted obelisks on either side of the gateway to the mortuary temple, establishing that Inenek-Inti was buried there.[257] With a base of 22.53 m (73.9 ft), the pyramid size and layout is similar to that of Nebwenet, except that the burial chamber is located precisely beneath the pyramid apex. Fragments of a greywacke sarcophagus and pieces of stone vessels were uncovered there. Unlike Ankhesenpepi II's burial chamber, that of Inenek-Inti had no inscriptions on its walls. Inenek's mortuary temple was much larger than Nebwenet's, surrounding her pyramid on its eastern, northern and southern sides. Inenek's complex also comprised a small cult pyramid, 6.3 m (21 ft) at the base, on the south-east corner of the mortuary temple.[258]

Queen of the West edit

West of Inenek's pyramid is that of the queen of the west. The identity of this pyramid's owner is preserved on an obelisk in front of her pyramid only as "the eldest daughter of the king".[259] The pyramid had a base length of around 20 m (66 ft),[33] similar to those of Inenek and Nebwenet, and now stands 3 m (9.8 ft) tall.[260] Entry into the substructure is gained on the north face.[261] The burial chamber is located under the vertical axis of the pyramid.[260] The location of the serdab is unusual, being to the south of the burial chamber instead of east.[260][261][262] Substantial remains of funerary equipment were found inside including wooden weights, ostrich feathers, copper fish hooks, and fired-clay vessels,[260] but none bore their owner's name.[263] It has a hastily built mortuary temple, with an offering hall and a room with two statue niches. Relief fragments discovered depict scenes of processions and estates, along with an incomplete cartouche of Pepi I's name.[260]

Pyramid of Ankhesenpepi II edit

 
View of the pyramids and temples of Ankhesenpepi II and III in the necropolis of Pepi I

The pyramid of Ankhesenpepi II occupies the south-western extremity of the necropolis of Pepi I.[264] With a base of 31.4 m (103 ft), the pyramid once reached 30 m (98 ft) high, making it the largest of the queens' pyramids.[265] The funerary complex of Ankhesenpepi II was also the largest in the necropolis except for that of Pepi himself, covering an area of 3,500 m2 (38,000 sq ft).[265] It comprised a mortuary temple to the north of the pyramid and 20 storage rooms for offerings. The queen's funerary complex had a monumental entrance with a granite frame, its lintel bearing the queen's name and titles being more than 3.6 m (12 ft) wide and weighing over 17 tons.[266] A small chapel stood on the pyramid northern face, at the entrance of the substructures. Painted reliefs of which only scant remains have been found including a small scene depicting the queen and a princess on a boat among papyrus plants, adorned the accompanying funerary temple.[265] The burial chamber walls were inscribed with spells from the pyramid texts, a privilege that had been the preserve of kings. Fragments from a black basalt sarcophagus were uncovered onsite.[41]

Pyramid of Behenu edit

With a base of 26.2 m (86 ft), Queen Behenu's pyramid was of similar size and layout to the other queens' pyramids of the necropolis. Located on the western end of the necropolis, immediately north-west of Mehaa's tomb on which it intrudes, Behenu's mortuary temple was on the pyramid's southern face with a cult pyramid on its south-east corner. The entrance of the temple, flanked with two granite obelisks, led to several rooms, which once housed statues and offering altars, while a further 10 rooms served for storage.[22] The burial chamber measured 6.24 m × 2.88 m (20.5 ft × 9.4 ft),[267] and its walls were inscribed with numerous spells of the pyramid texts. The head of a wooden statue of the queen as well as her opened basalt sarcophagus were unearthed there.[268]

Pyramid of Mehaa edit

Pepi's consort Mehaa was buried in a pyramid on the south-west corner of Pepi's enclosure wall.[261][262] Directly adjacent to Mehaa's pyramid's eastern face was her mortuary temple, where a relief bearing the name and image of Prince Hornetjerykhet, her son, was uncovered.[262] Mehaa's pyramid is intruded upon by the pyramid of Behenu, establishing that Mehaa was a consort of Pepi I early in his reign while Behenu lived in the later part of his rule.[269]

Legacy edit

 
Steatite cylinder seal belonging to a land tenant serving in Pepi's pyramid complex[270]

Old Kingdom edit

Pepi I was the object of a funerary cult after his death. For the remainder of the Old Kingdom period, the funerary cult of Pepi had active priests even outside of his Saqqara mortuary complex, for example inscriptions in Elkab attest to the presence of priests of his cult officiating in or in the vicinity of the local temple of Nekhbet.[194] The ritual activities taking place in his main funerary complex continued up until the Middle Kingdom. This means that Pepi's cult continued to be celebrated during the First Intermediate Period,[271] a period during which the Egyptian state seems to have collapsed, with only brief interruptions of the cultic activities at times of important political instability.[272]

As members of the royal family and high officials had continued to be buried in the necropolis next to Pepi's pyramid during the reigns of Merenre and Pepi II, including Ankhesenpepi II and III and Pepi's daughter Meritites,[273] Pepi's necropolis had grown and had attracted burials from the highest officials such as vizier Weni.[272] Starting with the reign of Pepi II, the necropolis also attracted burials from private individuals[274] as well as popular devotion to him and his consorts.[275] The deposit of numerous offering tables throughout the site confirms this.[274]

Middle Kingdom edit

The conquest of Egypt under Mentuhotep II seems to have interrupted all activities in the necropolis.[276] These resumed towards the end of the Eleventh Dynasty, when the state-sponsored funerary cult of Pepi was renewed,[277] albeit in a more limited form than earlier.[278] At this time, private cultic activities seem to cease in the wider necropolis of Pepi, rather concentrating in Pepi's own mortuary temple, mainly around his statues, then accessible to important officials participating in the pharaoh's cult.[279][280] Meanwhile, the abandonment of certain parts of the mortuary temple and the queens' necropolis led to the installation of novel tombs.[279] The most prominent of these was that of the high official Reheryshefnakht, who had a small pyramid complex built for himself in the midst of the tombs of the Sixth Dynasty royal family.[273] The royal cult of Pepi I seems to have ended with the onset of the Second Intermediate Period.[279]

New Kingdom edit

 
Head of Khaemweset, Altes Museum

The New Kingdom period witnessed renewed private burials in the necropolis of Pepi, including in several rooms of his mortuary temple which were used as a catacomb at the time,[281] although no such tomb was found in the main room hosting the royal funerary cult, suggesting continued use.[281] The individuals buried in the necropolis belonged to the lower ranks of Egyptian society, as shown by the simplicity, if not the absence, of funerary equipment,[282] while those using the catacombs were richer.[281]

The consequences of the long-lasting cults of Old Kingdom pharaohs during the New Kingdom are apparent in the Karnak king list. It was composed during the reign of Thutmosis III to honour a selection of royal ancestors. Several pharaohs of the Fifth and Sixth Dynasty including Nyuserre Ini, Djedkare Isesi, Teti and Pepi I are mentioned on the list by their birth name, rather than throne name. The Egyptologist Antonio Morales believes this is because the popular cults for these kings, which existed well into the New Kingdom, referred to these kings using their birth name.[283]

Later, during the reign of Ramses II, limited restoration works on the Old Kingdom monuments took place in the Memphite area under the direction of Prince Khaemweset. Pepi's pyramid complex was among those restored, as shown by inscriptions left on-site by Khaemweset,[284] even though it was actively being used for private burials.[281] Pepi I's necropolis was, therefore, probably in a ruined state at this point, with the area with the queens' pyramids serving as a stone quarry.[282] Khaemweset stated he had found the pyramid "abandoned" and "recalled his proprietor for posterity".[285] The progressive accumulation of burials in the passages leading up to the temple cult rooms blocked all access to it, demonstrating that Pepi's funerary cult had ceased.[281]

Late Period edit

The stone quarrying activities, which were limited to Pepi's necropolis during the New Kingdom and had spared his mortuary temple, became widespread during the Late Period of Egypt, with intermittent burials continuing nonetheless.[286] Both the stone robbing and funerary activities stopped at some point during the period, and the necropolis was abandoned until the Mamluk period when intense stone quarrying resumed.[287]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Dates proposed for Pepi I's reign: 2390–2361 BC,[2] 2354–2310 BC,[3][4] 2338–2298 BC,[5] 2335–2285 BC,[6] 2332–2283 BC,[7] 2321–2287 BC,[8][9][10] 2289–2255 BC,[11] 2285–2235 BC,[6] 2276–2228 BC.[12]
  2. ^ Among her titles, Iput bore the titles of king's mother (mwt-niswt), mother of the king of Upper and Lower Egypt (mwt-niswt-biti) and king's mother of the pyramid Mennefer-Pepy (mwt-niswt-mn-nfr-ppy).[18]
  3. ^ Their names are also rendered as Ankhnespepy I and II. In addition, the Ancient Egyptians also used the variants Ankhesenmeryre I and II.[23][24]
  4. ^ In an alternative hypothesis, Hans Goedicke has proposed that Merenre's mother was the consort known only from her title "Weret-Yamtes", responsible for the harem conspiracy against Pepi I. In this widely rejected hypothesis, Ankhesenpepi I was falsely claimed by the Ancient Egyptians to be Merenre's mother to safeguard his claim to the throne.[39]
  5. ^ Meritites has also been proposed to be one of Pepi I's consorts rather than daughter,[43] or an Eighth Dynasty queen buried here to indicate her filiation to Pepi I.[43] Both views were proved wrong following excavations in Saqqara indicating she was Pepi's daughter.[44]
  6. ^ Vivienne Callendar proposed her as Pepi's eldest daughter,[46] but excavations have now established that Meritites was the king's eldest daughter.[44]
  7. ^ In the case of Pepi I, the evolution of the name from Ancient Egyptian to Ancient Greek is understood to be as follows: "Pjpj ~ *Păyắpăyă > *Păyắpyă > *Pyŏ́ pyĕ > *Pyŏ́ p ~ Φίος".[53]
  8. ^ There has been some doubt whether the cattle count dating system was strictly biennial or slightly more irregular early in the Sixth Dynasty. That the latter situation appeared to be the case was suggested by the "Year after the 18th Count, 3rd Month of Shemu day 27" inscription from Wadi Hammamat No. 74–75 which mentions the "first occurrence of the Heb Sed" in that year for Pepi. Normally, the Sed festival is first celebrated in a king's 30th year of reign while the 18th cattle count would have taken place in his 36th year, had it been strictly biennial.[61] The Egyptologist Michel Baud points to a similar inscription dated to "Year after the 18th Count, 4th Month of Shemu day 5" in Sinai graffito No. 106.[62] This could imply that the cattle count during the Sixth Dynasty was not regularly biennial, or that it was referenced continuously in the years following it. Michel Baud stresses that the year of the 18th count is preserved in the South Saqqara Stone and writes that:

    Between the mention of count 18 [here] and the next memorial formula which belongs to count 19, end of register D, the available space for count 18+ is the expected half of the average size of a theoretical [year count] compartment. It is hard to believe that such a narrow space corresponds to the jubilee celebration, which obviously had a considerable importance for this (and every) king.[63]

    Therefore, the references to Pepi I's first jubilee being celebrated in his 18th cattle count are probably just part of this royal tendency to emphasize the king's first jubilee years after it was first celebrated and Baud notes that the longest year compartment in the South Saqqara Stone appears "at the beginning of register D. Fortuitously or not, this [year] compartment corresponds perfectly to year 30/31, if a strictly biennial system of numbering is presumed" for Pepi I's reign. (i.e. his 15th count) Therefore, the count was most probably biennial during Pepi I's reign and the reference to his final year—the 25 count—implies that he reigned for 49 full years.[63]

  9. ^ The Turin King List gives only 20 years on the throne to Pepi I while his successor Merenre I is said to have reigned 44 years. This latter figure contradicts both contemporaneous and archaeological evidence. For example, the royal annals mention no further cattle count under Merenre I beyond his fifth, which might correspond to his tenth year of rule. The Egyptologist Kim Ryholt suggests that the two entries of the Turin king list might have been interchanged.[68]
  10. ^ Catalog number 39.121.[73]
  11. ^ Because of a typo in Hubschmann 2011, Hezi became also known as "Heri" in various subsequent works.[77]
  12. ^ Pepi's claim to the throne, as the son of Iput and thus a male descendant of Unas was the strongest in Kanawati's view, implying that Userkare was an usurper.[74]
  13. ^ For the Ancient Egyptians, the Ka was the vital essence which, when it inhabited the body, made the person alive. At the death of the person, the Ka simply departed the body but continued to exist and had to be sustained through offerings, performed in the Ka-chapel associated with the tomb.[97]
  14. ^ Catalog number RC-1771.[105]
  15. ^ The precise date when Pepi faced the harem conspiracy is debated. Darrell Baker proposed that this happened early in his rule,[51] while Hans Goedicke proposes Pepi's 21st year of reign as the terminus post quem for this conspiracy,[106] positing that the most probable date is Pepi's 44th year on the throne.[39]
  16. ^ Hans Goedicke and Nicolas Grimal both use "Weret-Yamtes" as a proper name rather than a title,[36] but this is strongly opposed by others including Michel Baud.[109]
  17. ^ At this point, the Ancient Egyptian royal titulary assumed its definitive standard form.[76]
  18. ^ The drastic nature of Pepi's decision—if there was a coregency—is apparent on noting the Ancient Egyptians conception of the kingship as "rulership by a single individual holding a supreme office in a lifelong tenure, most often succeeding on a hereditary principle and wielding [...] great personal power".[119] The emphasis on a single individual holder follows from the Ancient Egyptians' perception of the king as a divine being, offspring of Ra, who upholds Egypt's unity and prosperity as well as the cosmic order preordained by the gods and playing the crucial role of mediator between the people and the gods, with the capacity of conveying the gods' messages and will.[120] The king not only had these unique roles but the institution of kingship was perceived as a divinely established order guarding Egypt against chaos.[121][120]
  19. ^ The royal annals mention the feast of the union of the two lands concerning Merenre, a feast normally celebrated once, shortly after the death of a king with the start of his successor's reign. Since it is very unlikely that this feast was celebrated twice for Merenre (that is once at the start of the coregency and once more at the death of his father), Baud and Dobrev deem it likely that the feast happened only once at Pepi's death (as would be normal) and hence everything written on the annals after the mention of the feast must have recorded Merenre's sole reign, had there been a coregency prior to that point or not. While almost all the inscriptions pertaining to Merenre's sole reign are now illegible, the space available for them on the royal annals shows that he may have been sole king for 11 to 14 years. This can be known because every occasion of a cattle count was written in a devoted and well-delimited case in the annals, and these cases are of roughly consistent sizes, allowing a good estimation of the maximum number of illegible cases. That Merenre reigned over a decade as sole king cannot easily be reconciled with Manetho's claim that he reigned only seven years by invoking seven years of sole reign plus an additional number of years as coregent as proponents of the coregency, including Goedicke, had done.[126]
  20. ^ Catalog number CGC 1435[128]
  21. ^ Transliteration from Ancient Egyptian ḥryw-š.[133]
  22. ^ The Dashur decree of Pepi I shows that such mercenaries were already "pacified",[137] integrated into Egyptian society, for example in pyramid towns, where they served as policemen and soldiers.[138]
  23. ^ Transliteration from Ancient Egyptian 3'mu often translated "Semite".[141]
  24. ^ Or, much less likely,[142][143] in the Eastern Nile Delta.[144]
  25. ^ A stone vessel bearing Pepi's name has been dated precisely to Byblos' KIV phase.[10]
  26. ^ Pepi is concurrent with Ebla's IIIB.1 phase.[10]
  27. ^ For example, an alabaster lid of a precious vessel is inscribed with, "Beloved of the two lands, king of Upper and Lower Egypt, the son of Hathor, lady of Dendera, Pepi." As Hathor was the chief deity of Byblos, it is probable that this vessel was destined to this city and was only later exchanged or given to Ebla.[159]
  28. ^ More precisely, the expedition is dated to Pepi's 18th cattle count, fifth day of the fourth month of Shemu, which might correspond to his 36th year of reign, some time between the July 26 and August 4 of that year.[164]
  29. ^ The geographical destination of this expedition, mentioned on the funerary texts of an Egyptian official, is uncertain. It may instead have taken place in the Levant.[170]
  30. ^ The decree recording this, called a Coptos Decree in modern Egyptology, is now in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo, catalog number 41890.[174]
  31. ^ Pyramid towns are areas of accommodation for workers who build pyramids and all craftsmen needed to sustain the construction effort including bakers, carpenters, water carriers and more. These towns continued to be used after the end of the pyramid construction.
  32. ^ A chapel in Akhmim attributed to a king "Pepi"[189] might belong to Pepi II.[190]
  33. ^ Pepi might have built more than one chapel there, as he seems to have been particularly interested in the cult of Hathor of Dendera,[192] presenting himself as the son of Hathor of Dendera in numerous inscriptions including on vessels traded abroad.[188][5][159][193]
  34. ^ The linguistic evolution from the name of Pepi's pyramid to the Greek word Memphis is well understood in modern Egyptology and reconstructed as "Mn-nfr ~ *Mĭ́ n-năfăr > *Mĕ́ mfĕ ~ Μέμφις → Mn-nfrw~ *Mĭn-nắ frŭw > *Mĕn-nŏ́ frĕ ~ ( * ) Μένοφρις".[225]
  35. ^ The tombs of Meritites and Ankhesenpepi III, both built after Pepi's reign, and tombs from later periods of Egyptian history in the necropolis are not discussed here.[22]
  36. ^ The corridor texts in Pepi I's pyramid are the most extensive, covering the whole horizontal passage, the vestibule, and even a section of the descending corridor.[232][233] Unas' pyramid constrained the texts to the south section of the corridor,[234] as did Teti's.[232] The texts in Merenre I's and Pepi II's pyramids covered the entire corridor and the vestibule.[232]
  37. ^ Catalog number UC14540.[248][249]

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pepi, meryre, also, pepy, ancient, egyptian, pharaoh, third, king, sixth, dynasty, egypt, ruled, over, years, turn, 24th, 23rd, centuries, toward, kingdom, period, teti, founder, dynasty, ascended, throne, only, after, brief, intervening, reign, shadowy, userk. Pepi I Meryre also Pepy I was an ancient Egyptian pharaoh third king of the Sixth Dynasty of Egypt who ruled for over 40 years at the turn of the 24th and 23rd centuries BC toward the end of the Old Kingdom period He was the son of Teti the founder of the dynasty and ascended the throne only after the brief intervening reign of the shadowy Userkare His mother was Iput who may have been a daughter of Unas the final ruler of the preceding Fifth Dynasty Pepi I who had at least six consorts was succeeded by his son Merenre Nemtyemsaf I with whom he may have shared power in a coregency at the very end of his reign Pepi II Neferkare who might also have been Pepi I s son succeeded Merenre Pepi I MeryrePepyPhiosPhiusfiosLifesize copper statue of Pepi I Cairo Museum 1 PharaohReignDuration over 40 years in the second half of the 24th century BC or early 23rd century BC note 1 Coregencyuncertain possibly with his son Merenre at the end of his reignPredecessorUserkareSuccessorMerenre Nemtyemsaf IRoyal titularyHorus nameMery Tawymry tꜣwjBeloved of the Two Lands 13 Nebty nameMery Khet Nebtimry ẖt nbtjBeloved of the Two Ladies body 13 Golden HorusBiku Nebubjkw nbwThe triple falcons are golden 13 Prenomen Praenomen Nefer za hornfr zꜣ ḥrPerfect is the protection of Horus 13 Excellent is the protection of Horus 14 Meryre 15 mry rꜥBeloved of Re 13 7 NomenPepippy 13 7 ConsortAnkhesenpepi IAnkhesenpepi IINubwenetInenek IntiMehaaSebwetet uncertain NedjeftetBehenu One consort responsible for a conspiracy against Pepi known only through her title Weret Yamtes ChildrenMerenre Nemtyemsaf I m probably Hornetjerkhet m Tetiankh m Meritites IV f Neith f Iput II f uncertain Pepi II m FatherTetiMotherIputBurialPyramid of Pepi I in South SaqqaraMonumentsPyramid complex Pepi Men nefer at least six pyramids for his consorts and numerous Ka chapelsDynasty6th DynastySeveral difficulties accumulated during Pepi s reign beginning with the possible murder of his father and the ensuing reign of Userkare Later probably after his twentieth year of reign Pepi faced a harem conspiracy hatched by one of his consorts who may have tried to have her son designated heir to the throne and possibly another conspiracy involving his vizier at the end of his reign Confronted with the protracted decline of pharaonic power and the emergence of dynasties of local officials Pepi reacted with a vast architectural program involving the construction of temples dedicated to local gods and numerous chapels for his own cult throughout Egypt reinforcing his presence in the provinces Egypt s prosperity allowed Pepi to become the most prolific builder of the Old Kingdom At the same time Pepi favored the rise of small provincial centres and recruited officials of non noble extraction to curtail the influence of powerful local families Continuing Teti s policy Pepi expanded a network of warehouses accessible to royal envoys and from which taxes and labor could easily be collected Finally he buttressed his power after the harem conspiracy by forming alliances with Khui the provincial nomarch of Abydos marrying two of his daughters Ankhesenpepi I and Ankhesenpepi II and making both Khui s wife Nebet and her son Djau viziers The Egyptian state s external policy under Pepi comprised military campaigns against Nubia Sinai and the southern Levant landing troops on the Levantine coast using Egyptian transport boats Trade with Byblos Ebla and the oases of the Western Desert flourished while Pepi launched mining and quarrying expeditions to Sinai and further afield Pepi had a pyramid complex built for his funerary cult in Saqqara next to which he built at least a further six pyramids for his consorts Pepi s pyramid which originally stood 52 5 m 172 ft tall and an accompanying high temple followed the standard layout inherited from the late Fifth Dynasty The most extensive corpus of Pyramid Texts from the Old Kingdom cover the walls of Pepi I s burial chamber antechamber and much of the corridor leading to it For the first time these texts also appear in some of the consorts pyramids Excavations revealed a bundle of viscera and a mummy fragment both presumed to belong to the pharaoh Pepi s complex called Pepi Mennefer remained the focus of his funerary cult well into the Middle Kingdom and ultimately gave its name to the nearby capital of Egypt Memphis Pepi s cult stopped early in the Second Intermediate Period Pepi s monuments began to be quarried for their stone in the New Kingdom and in the Mamluk era they were almost entirely dismantled Contents 1 Family 1 1 Parents 1 2 Consorts 1 3 Children 2 Chronology 2 1 Relative chronology 2 2 Length of reign 3 Politics 3 1 Ascending the throne 3 2 Provincial administration 3 3 Conspiracy 3 4 End of reign coregency 3 5 Military campaigns 4 Economy 4 1 Foreign trade and mining 4 2 Domestic policies 5 Building activities 5 1 Ka chapels 5 2 Temples 5 3 Pyramid complex 5 3 1 Main pyramid 5 3 2 Mortuary temple 5 4 Necropolis of Pepi I 5 4 1 Pyramid of Nebwenet 5 4 2 Pyramid of Inenek Inti 5 4 3 Queen of the West 5 4 4 Pyramid of Ankhesenpepi II 5 4 5 Pyramid of Behenu 5 4 6 Pyramid of Mehaa 6 Legacy 6 1 Old Kingdom 6 2 Middle Kingdom 6 3 New Kingdom 6 4 Late Period 7 Notes 8 References 9 BibliographyFamily editParents edit Pepi was the son of the pharaoh Teti and Iput 16 Her parentage is directly attested to by a relief on a decree uncovered in Coptos that mentions Iput as Pepi s mother 17 by inscriptions in her mortuary temple mentioning her titles as mother of a king and as mother of Pepi 18 note 2 by the architecture of her tomb which had been changed from an original mastaba form into a pyramid on the accession of her son to the throne 18 and by her mention as being Pepi s mother on the Sixth Dynasty royal annals 19 Iput may have been a daughter of Unas the last pharaoh of the Fifth Dynasty 3 although this remains uncertain and debated 20 She seems to have died before Pepi s accession to the throne 21 The observation that Teti was most probably Pepi s father follows from the location of Iput s tomb next to Teti s pyramid as was customary for a queen consort 19 Consorts edit nbsp Ankhesenpepi II shown on a relief from her mortuary temple Imhotep MuseumEgyptologists have identified six consorts of Pepi I with near certainty 22 Pepi s best attested consorts were Ankhesenpepi I and Ankhesenpepi II 23 note 3 who both bore future pharaohs and were daughters of the nomarch of Abydos Khui and his wife Nebet 23 25 Further consorts are Nubwenet 26 27 Inenek Inti 28 who became one of Pepi s viziers 22 and Mehaa also called Haaheru All were buried in pyramids adjacent to that of Pepi 29 Relief fragments from the necropolis surrounding Pepi s pyramid mention another consort Sebwetet 30 Two more consorts have been proposed for Pepi I based on partial evidence The first is Nedjeftet 25 31 whose name is recorded on blocks excavated in the necropolis adjacent to Pepi s pyramid The identification of Nedjeftet as Pepi s consort remains uncertain owing to the lack of inscriptions explicitly naming her husband 32 Given the location of Nedjeftet s blocks in the necropolis she may be the owner of a pyramid west of Pepi s 33 34 The second is another consort named Behenu who was buried in the second largest queen pyramid of Pepi s necropolis north of his She could either be one of his consorts or a consort of Pepi II 35 A final unnamed consort only referred to by her title Weret Yamtes 36 meaning great of affection 37 is known from inscriptions uncovered in the tomb of Weni an official serving Pepi This consort whose name is purposefully left unmentioned by Weni 38 conspired against Pepi and was prosecuted when the conspiracy was discovered 36 Children edit Pepi fathered at least four sons Ankhesenpepi I probably bore him the future pharaoh Merenre Nemtyemsaf I note 4 Ankhesenpepi II was the mother of Pepi II Neferkare 40 who was probably born at the very end of Pepi I s reign given he was only six upon ascending the throne after Merenre s rule 39 While a majority of Egyptologists favor this hypothesis 41 an alternative one holds that Pepi II could be a son of Merenre 35 Another of Pepi I s sons was Teti ankh meaning Teti lives whose mother has yet to be identified 40 Teti ankh is known only from an ink inscription bearing his name discovered in Pepi s pyramid 17 Buried nearby is Prince Hornetjerkhet a son of Pepi with Mehaa 40 At least three of Pepi I s daughters have been tentatively identified all future consorts of Pepi II 42 The first Meritites IV note 5 was the king s eldest daughter and was buried in the necropolis surrounding her father s pyramid 44 The second is Neith 45 note 6 whom he fathered with Ankhesenpepi I 47 She may have been the mother of Pepi II s successor Merenre Nemtyemsaf II 45 The third is Iput II 48 whose identity as Pepi s daughter remains uncertain because her title of daughter of the king may only be honorary 42 Chronology editRelative chronology edit nbsp Pepi I s cartouche reading Meryre on the Abydos King List 49 The relative chronology of Pepi I s reign is well established by historical records contemporary artifacts and archeological evidence which agree he succeeded Userkare and was succeeded by Merenre I Nemtyemsaf 50 For example the near contemporary South Saqqara Stone a royal annal inscribed during the reign of Pepi II gives the succession Teti Userkare Pepi I Merenre I making Pepi the third king of the Sixth Dynasty Two more historical sources agree with this chronology the Abydos king list written under Seti I which places Pepi I s cartouche as the 36th entry between those of Userkare and Merenre 49 and the Turin canon a list of kings on papyrus dating to the reign of Ramses II which records Pepi I in the fourth column third row 51 Historical sources against this order of succession include the Aegyptiaca Aἰgyptiaka a history of Egypt written in the 3rd century BC during the reign of Ptolemy II 283 246 BC by Manetho No copies of the Aegyptiaca have survived and it is now known only through later writings by Sextus Julius Africanus and Eusebius According to the Byzantine scholar George Syncellus Africanus wrote that the Aegyptiaca mentioned the succession Othoes Phius Methusuphis at the start of the Sixth Dynasty Othoes Phius in Greek fios and Methusuphis are understood to be the Hellenized forms for Teti Pepi I and Merenre respectively 52 note 7 meaning that the Aegyptiaca omits Userkare Manetho s reconstruction of the early Sixth Dynasty agrees with the Karnak king list written under Thutmosis III This list places Pepi s birth name immediately after that of Teti in the seventh entry of the second row 54 Unlike other sources such as the Turin canon the purpose of the Karnak king list was not to be exhaustive but rather to list a selection of royal ancestors to be honoured Similarly the Saqqara Tablet written under Ramses II 55 omits Userkare with Pepi s name given as the 25th entry after that of Teti 49 Length of reign edit nbsp Alabaster statuette of Pepi I dressed for the Sed Festival Brooklyn Museum 56 The length of Pepi I s reign remains somewhat uncertain although as of 2021 the consensus is that he ruled over Egypt for over 40 years possibly 49 or 50 years 57 and possibly longer 58 During the Old Kingdom period the Egyptians counted years from the beginning of the reign of the current king These years were referred to by the number of cattle counts which had taken place since the reign s start 59 The cattle count was an important event aimed at evaluating the amount of taxes to be levied on the population This involved counting cattle oxen and small livestock 60 During the early Sixth Dynasty this count was probably biennial note 8 occurring every two years 59 64 The South Saqqara Stone and an inscription in Hatnub both record the 25th cattle count under Pepi I his highest known date 65 66 Accepting a biennial count this indicates that Pepi reigned for 49 years That a 50th year of reign could have also been recorded on the royal annal cannot be discounted however because of the damaged state of the South Saqqara Stone 67 Another historical source supporting such a long reign is Africanus epitome of Manetho s Aegyptiaca which credits Pepi I with a reign of 53 years 14 52 note 9 Archaeological evidence in favor of a long reign for Pepi I includes his numerous building projects and many surviving objects made in celebration of his first Sed festival which was meant to rejuvenate the king and was first celebrated on the 30th year of a king s rule For example numerous alabaster ointment vessels celebrating Pepi s first Sed festival have been discovered They bear a standard inscriptions reading The king of Upper and Lower Egypt Meryre may he be given life for ever The first occasion of the Sed festival 69 Examples can now be found in museums throughout the world 5 70 71 nbsp Musee du Louvre nbsp Walters Art Museum nbsp Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp British MuseumThe Sed festival had a considerable importance for Old Kingdom kings 63 Representations of it were part of the typical decoration of temples associated with the ruler during the Old Kingdom whether the king had actually celebrated it or not 72 As further evidence of the importance of this event in Pepi s case the state administration seems to have had a tendency to mention his first jubilee repeatedly in the years following its celebration until the end of his rule in connection with building activities For example Pepi s final 25th cattle count reported on the Sixth Dynasty royal annals is associated with his first Sed festival even though it probably had taken place some 19 years prior 63 Politics editAscending the throne edit nbsp Kneeling statuette of Pepi I Brooklyn Museum 73 note 10 Pepi s accession to the throne may have occurred in times of discord Manetho writing nearly 2000 years after Pepi s reign claims that Pepi s father Teti was assassinated by his own bodyguards 8 52 The Egyptologist Naguib Kanawati has argued in support of Manetho s claim noting for example that Teti s reign saw a significant increase in the number of guards at the Egyptian court who became responsible for the everyday care of the king 74 At the same time the figures and names of several contemporary palace officials as represented in their tombs have been erased purposefully 75 This seems to be an attempt at a damnatio memoriae 76 targeting three men in particular the vizier Hezi note 11 the overseer of weapons Mereri and chief physician Seankhuiptah These men could therefore be behind the regicide 78 Pepi may have been too young to be king In any case he did not immediately succeed his father King Userkare succeeded him instead but Userkare s identity and relationship to the royal family remain uncertain It is possible Userkare served only as a regent with Pepi s mother Iput as Pepi reached adulthood 79 occupying the throne in the interregnum until Pepi s coming of age 80 The apparent lack of resistance to Pepi s eventual accession supports such hypotheses 79 Against this view however Kanawati has argued that Userkare s short reign lasting perhaps only one year cannot be a regency as a regent would not have assumed a full royal titulary as Userkare did nor would he be included in king lists 74 Rather Userkare could have been an usurper note 12 and a descendant of a lateral branch of the Fifth Dynasty royal family who seized power briefly in a coup 81 possibly with the support of the priesthood of the sun god Ra 74 This hypothesis finds indirect evidence in Userkare s theophoric name which incorporates the name of Ra a naming fashion common during the preceding Fifth Dynasty that had fallen out of use since Unas s reign Further archeological evidence of Userkare s illegitimacy in the eyes of his successor is the absence of any mention of him in the tombs and biographies of the many Egyptian officials who served under both Teti and Pepi I 14 82 For example the viziers Inumin and Khentika who served both Teti and Pepi I are completely silent about Userkare and none of their activities during his time on the throne are reported in their tomb 83 The tomb of Mehi a guard who lived under Teti Userkare and Pepi yielded an inscription showing that the name of Teti was first erased to be replaced by that of another king whose name was itself erased and replaced again by that of Teti 84 Kanawati argues the intervening name was that of Userkare to whom Mehi may have transferred his allegiance 85 Mehi s attempt to switch back to Teti was seemingly unsuccessful as there is evidence that work on his tomb stopped abruptly and that he was never buried there 86 For the Egyptologist Miroslav Barta cs further troubles might have arisen directly between Pepi and relatives of his father Teti 76 Barta and Baud point to Pepi s apparent decision to dismantle the funerary complex of his paternal grandmother 87 Sesheshet as witnessed by blocks from this queen s complex which were found reused as construction material in Pepi s own mortuary temple 76 88 On the other hand Wilfried Seipel disagrees with this interpretation of the blocks being reused by Pepi instead he thinks the blocks bear witness to Pepi s foundation of a pious memorial to his grandmother 89 At the same time as he apparently distanced himself from his father s line Pepi transformed his mother s tomb into a pyramid and posthumously bestowed a new title on her Daughter of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt thereby emphasising his royal lineage as a descendant of Unas last ruler of the Fifth Dynasty 76 Pepi chose the Horus name of Mery tawy meaning He who is loved by the two lands or Beloved of the Two Lands which Nicolas Grimal sees as a clear indication that he desired political appeasement in times of troubles 90 Similarly Pepi chose the throne name Nefersahor meaning Perfect is the protection of Horus 9 Barta adds that Pepi s writing of his own name Mery tawy is also highly unusual he chose to invert the order of the hieroglyphic signs composing it placing the sign for Beloved before that for Two Lands For Barta and Yannis Gourdon this deliberate choice shows Pepi s deference to the powerful nobility of the country on which he was dependent 76 Although there seems to be no direct relation between Userkare s brief reign and one or more later conspiracies against him this evidence suggests some form of political instability at the time 90 nbsp Turquoise cylinder seal of an official of Pepi I Sole companion lector priest who does what is ordered privy to the secret s of the king 91 Provincial administration edit In a long trend that began earlier in the Fifth Dynasty the Old Kingdom Egyptian state was the subject of increasing decentralisation and regionalisation 92 Provincial families played an increasingly important role marrying into the royal family accessing the highest offices of the state administration and having a strong influence at the court while also consolidating their hold over regional power bases by creating local dynasties 93 These processes well under way during Pepi I s reign progressively weakened the king s primacy and ascendancy over his own administration and would ultimately result in the princedoms of the First Intermediate Period 94 Teti and Pepi I seem to have developed several policies to counteract this They both changed the organisation of the territorial administration during their reigns many provincial governors were nominated especially in Upper Egypt 95 while Lower Egypt was possibly under direct royal administration 96 In addition Pepi instigated the construction of royal Ka chapels note 13 throughout Egypt 94 98 to strengthen the royal presence in the provinces 99 These expensive policies suggest Egypt was prosperous during Pepi s reign 51 Small provincial centres in areas historically associated with the crown became more important suggesting that pharaohs of the Sixth Dynasty tried to diminish the power of regional dynasties by recruiting senior officials who did not belong to them and were loyal to the pharaoh 100 Some of these new officials have no known background indicating they were not of noble extraction The circulation of high officials who were moved from key positions of power to other duties occurred at an astonishing pace under Teti and Pepi I according to the Egyptologist Juan Carlos Moreno Garcia 93 in what might have been a deliberate attempt to curtail the concentration of power in the hands of a few officials 95 The Sixth Dynasty royal annals only a small part of which are still legible record further activities during Pepi s reign including the offering of milk and young cows for a feast of Ra the building of a south chapel on the occasion of the new year and the arrival of messengers at court 101 Further offerings of lapis lazuli 66 cattle bread and beer are mentioned 102 for gods including Horus 103 and the Ennead 104 Conspiracy edit nbsp Weni shown on a lintel from his tomb with the name of Pepi I s pyramid Pepi Men nefer mentioned on the top row of hieroglyphs Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum 105 note 14 At some point in his reign note 15 Pepi faced a conspiracy hatched by one of his harem consorts only known by her title Weret Yamtes Although Weni who served as a judge during the subsequent trial does not report the precise nature of her crime this at least shows that the person of the king was not untouchable 107 If the conspiracy happened early in Pepi s reign as proposed by Wilfried Seipel and Vivienne Callender the queen concerned could have been Userkare s mother and Teti s consort rather than Pepi s 108 Most scholars however agree with Hans Goedicke s thesis that the conspiracy occurred after more than two decades into Pepi s reign For Goedicke the queen could have been Merenre s mother 39 Nicolas Grimal note 16 and Baud see this as highly unlikely and outright outlandish respectively 109 as this queen s son would have been punished along with her 36 Rather the queen might have attempted unsuccessfully to secure the throne for her son whose name is now lost 108 Perhaps in response to these events Pepi changed his prenomen Nefersahor to Meryre meaning Beloved of Ra even updating the inscriptions inside his pyramid note 17 This late change with Pepi incorporating the sun god Ra s name into his own may reflect some agreement with the influential priesthood of Ra 110 Around this time Pepi married two daughters of Khui the provincial governor of Abydos 111 This may also have served to counteract the weakening of the king s authority over Middle and Upper Egypt by securing the allegiance of a powerful family 112 For Baud and Christopher Eyre this also demonstrates that at the time of the Sixth Dynasty government and power was still largely determined by family relationships rather than by bureaucracy 113 114 The political importance of these marriages 114 is furthered by the fact that for the first and last time until the 26th Dynasty some 1800 years later a woman Khui s wife Nebet bore the title of vizier of Upper Egypt Egyptologists debate whether this title was purely honorific 115 or whether she really assumed the duties of a vizier 75 Later Khui s and Nebet s son Djau was made vizier as well Pepi s marriages might be at the origin 116 of a trend which continued during the later Sixth and Eighth Dynasties in which the temple of Min in Coptos Khui s seat of power was the focus of much royal patronage 39 The Coptos Decrees which record successive pharaohs granting tax exemptions to the temple as well as official honours bestowed by the kings on the local ruling family while the Old Kingdom society was collapsing manifest this 117 End of reign coregency edit The end of Pepi s rule may have been no less troubled than his early reign as Kanawati conjectures that Pepi faced yet another conspiracy against him in which his vizier Rawer may have been involved To support his theory Kanawati observes that Rawer s image in his tomb has been desecrated with his name hands and feet chiselled off while this same tomb is dated to the second half of Pepi s reign on stylistic grounds 118 Kanawati further posits that the conspiracy may have aimed at having someone else designated heir to the throne at the expense of Merenre Because of this failed conspiracy Pepi I may have taken the drastic note 18 step of crowning Merenre during his own reign 58 thereby creating the earliest documented coregency in the history of Egypt 118 That such a coregency took place was first proposed by Etienne Drioton A gold pendant bearing the names of both Pepi I and Merenre I as living kings 122 123 and the copper statues of Hierakonpolis discussed below indirectly support this 112 Goedicke has suggested further that an inscription mentioning King Merenre s tenth year of reign in Hatnub contradicting Manetho s figure of seven years is evidence that Merenre dated the start of his reign before the end of his father s reign as a coregency would permit 124 The coregency remains uncertain The Sixth Dynasty Royal annals bear no trace either for or against it but the shape and size of the stone on which the annals are inscribed makes it more probable that Merenre did not start to count his years of reign until soon after the death of his father 125 note 19 Furthermore William J Murnane writes that the gold pendant s context is unknown making its significance regarding the coregency difficult to appraise The copper statues are similarly inconclusive as the identity of the smaller one and whether they originally formed a group remains uncertain 127 Military campaigns edit nbsp Autobiography of Weni now at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo 128 note 20 Militarily aggressive expansion into Nubia marked Pepi I s reign 129 130 The walls of the tombs of the contemporary nomarchs of Elephantine 129 alabaster vessels bearing Pepi s cartouche found in Kerma 131 and inscriptions in Tumas report this 80 The Sixth Dynasty royal annals also recount at least one campaign into Nubia Although the campaign narrative is now largely illegible according to the Egyptologists Baud and Dobrev it comprised three phases first messengers were sent to Nubia for negotiation and surveillance purposes then the military campaign took place and finally a booty of men and goods was brought back to Egypt for presentation to the pharaoh 132 To the north east of Egypt Pepi launched at least five military expeditions against the sand dwellers note 21 of Sinai and southern Canaan 112 134 These campaigns are recounted on the walls of the tomb of Weni then officially a palace superintendent but given tasks befitting a general 135 Weni states that he ordered nomarchs in Upper Egypt and the Nile Delta region to call up the levies of their own subordinates and these in turn summoned their subordinates down through every level of the local administration 136 Meanwhile Nubian mercenaries were also recruited and endowed with the power to enroll men and seize goods 112 137 note 22 so that in total tens of thousands of men were at Weni s disposal 135 This is the only text relating the raising of an Egyptian army during the Old Kingdom 136 and it indirectly reveals the absence of a permanent standing army at the time 139 The goal of this army was either to repulse rebelling Semitic people 140 note 23 or to seize their properties and conquer their land in southern Canaan note 24 an action possibly motivated by the intense commercial activities between Egypt and this region 145 The Egyptians campaigned up to what was probably Mount Carmel 142 or Ras Kouroun 146 landing troops on the coast using transport boats 112 147 Weni reports that walled towns were destroyed fig trees and grape vines were cut down and local shrines were burned 148 Economy edit nbsp Ebla s royal palace destroyed c 2300 BCThe reign of Pepi I marks the apogee of the Sixth Dynasty foreign policy with flourishing trade several mining and quarrying expeditions and major military campaigns 149 Foreign trade and mining edit Trade with settlements along the Levantine coast which had existed during the Fifth Dynasty seems to have peaked 150 under Pepi I and Pepi II Their chief trade partner there might have been Byblos where dozens of inscriptions on stone vessels showing Pepi s cartouches have been found 151 152 and a large alabaster vessel bearing Pepi s titulary and commemorating his jubilee from the Temple of Baalat Gebal 153 note 25 The high official Iny served Pepi during several successful expeditions to Byblos for which the king rewarded him with the name Inydjefaw meaning He who brings back provisions 154 Through Byblos Egypt had indirect contacts 155 with the city of Ebla in modern day Syria 10 156 note 26 The contact with Ebla is established by alabaster vessels 157 bearing Pepi s name found near its royal palace G 158 note 27 destroyed in the 23rd century BC possibly by the Akkadian Empire under Sargon 160 Trading parties departed Egypt for the Levant from a Nile Delta port called Ra Hat the first mouth of the Nile This trade benefited the nearby city of Mendes from which one of Pepi s viziers probably originated 161 Further contacts with Canaan may be inferred from a statue of Pepi which is said to have been unearthed in Gezer but has since been lost 162 Expeditions and mining activities that were already taking place in the Fifth and early Sixth Dynasty continued unabated These include at least one expedition of workmen and their military escort 163 to the mines of turquoise and copper in Wadi Maghareh Sinai 156 around Pepi s 36th year on the throne 80 note 28 In all likelihood this expedition departed Egypt from the Red Sea coast port of Ayn Soukhna which was active during Pepi s reign 165 The same port may also have been the origin of an expedition to the southern Red Sea possibly to Punt as witnessed by Ethiopian obsidian discovered on the site 166 There were also one or more expeditions to Hatnub where alabaster was extracted 156 at least once in Pepi s 49th year of reign 80 as well as visits to the Gebel el Silsila 167 and Sehel Island 168 A trading expedition fetching lapis lazuli and lead or tin may also have passed further south through Mirgissa 169 note 29 Greywacke and siltstone for building projects originated from quarries of the Wadi Hammamat 156 where some eighty graffiti mention Pepi I 171 At the same time an extensive network of caravan routes traversed Egypt s Western Desert for example from Abydos to the Kharga Oasis and from there to the Dakhla and Selima Oases 156 Domestic policies edit Agricultural estates affiliated with the crown in the provinces during the preceding dynasty were replaced by novel administrative entities the ḥwt which were agricultural centres controlling tracts of land livestock and workers Together with temples and royal domains these numerous ḥwt represented a network of warehouses accessible to royal envoys and from which taxes and labor could easily be collected 172 173 This territorial mode of organisation disappeared nearly 300 years after Pepi I s reign at the dawn of the Middle Kingdom period 172 Pepi decreed tax exemptions to various institutions He gave an exemption to a chapel dedicated to the cult of his mother located in Coptos 174 note 30 Another decree has survived on a stele discovered near the Bent Pyramid in Dashur whereby in his 21st year of reign Pepi grants exemptions to the people serving in the two pyramids towns note 31 of Sneferu 175 My majesty has commanded that these two pyramid towns be exempt for him throughout the course of eternity from doing any work of the palace from doing any forced labor for any part of the royal residence throughout the course of eternity or from doing any forced labor at the word of anybody in the course of eternity 176 The Egyptologist David Warburton sees such perpetual tax exemptions as capitulations by a king confronted with rampant corruption Whether they were the result of religious or political motives exemptions created precedents that encouraged other institutions to request similar treatment weakening the power of the state as they accumulated over time 177 Further domestic activities related to agriculture and the economy may be inferred from the inscriptions found in the tomb of Nekhebu a high official belonging to the family of Senedjemib Inti a vizier during the late Fifth Dynasty Nekhebu reports overseeing the excavations of canals in Lower Egypt and at Cusae in Middle Egypt 178 179 Building activities edit nbsp Ruins of Pepi I s Ka chapel in Bubastis 180 Pepi I built extensively throughout Egypt 181 so much so that in 1900 the Egyptologist Flinders Petrie stated this king has left more monuments large and small than any other ruler before the Twelfth Dynasty 51 The Egyptologist Jean Leclant reached a similar conclusion in 1999 He sees Pepi s rule as marking the apogee of the Old Kingdom owing to the flurry of building activities administrative reforms trade and military campaigns at the time 14 Pepi devoted most of his building efforts to local cults 147 and royal Ka chapels 182 seemingly with the objective of affirming the king s stature and presence in the provinces 183 Ka chapels edit Ka chapels were small cult buildings comprising one or more chambers to hold offerings dedicated to the cult of the Ka of a deceased or in this case the king 184 Such chapels dedicated to Pepi I were uncovered or are known from contemporary sources to have stood in Hierakonpolis 185 186 in Abydos 187 188 note 32 and in the central Nile Delta region 178 in Memphis Zawyet el Meytin Assiut Qus 182 and beyond the Nile Valley in Balat a settlement of the Dakhla Oasis 191 In addition two 192 chapels were built in Bubastis 180 and probably more than one stood in Dendera note 33 Finally yet another chapel is believed to have existed in Elkab where rock inscriptions refer to his funerary cult 194 All these buildings were probably peripheral to or inside 189 larger temples hosting extensive cult activities 195 196 For example the chapel at Abydos was next to the temple of Khenti Amentiu 197 For the Egyptologist Juan Moreno Garcia this proximity demonstrates the direct power that the king still held over the temples economic activities and internal affairs during the Sixth Dynasty 189 nbsp The smaller copper statue from Hierakonpolis representing Merenre or a young Pepi I 1 In an underground store beneath the floor of Hierakonpolis Ka chapel of Pepi the Egyptologist James Quibell uncovered a statue of King Khasekhemwy of the Second Dynasty a terracotta lion cub made during the Thinite era 198 a golden mask representing Horus and two copper statues 199 200 Originally fashioned by hammering plates of copper over a wooden base 199 201 these statues had been disassembled placed inside one another and then sealed with a thin layer of engraved copper bearing the titles and names of Pepi I on the first day of the Heb Sed feast 198 The two statues were symbolically trampling underfoot the Nine bows the enemies of Egypt a stylized representation of Egypt s conquered foreign subjects 202 While the identity of the larger adult figure as Pepi I is revealed by the inscription the identity of the smaller statue showing a younger person remains unresolved 198 The most common hypothesis among Egyptologists is that the young man shown is Merenre 186 As Alessandro Bongioanni and Maria Croce write Merenre was publicly associated as his father s successor on the occasion of the Jubilee the Heb Sed feast The placement of his copper effigy inside that of his father would therefore reflect the continuity of the royal succession and the passage of the royal sceptre from father to son before the death of the pharaoh could cause a dynastic split 203 Alternatively Bongioanni and Croce have also proposed the smaller statue may represent a more youthful Pepy I reinvigorated by the celebration of the Jubilee ceremonies 204 Temples edit The close association between Ka chapels and temples to deities might have spurred building activities for the latter For example the Bubastis ensemble of Pepi I comprised a 95 m 60 m 312 ft 197 ft enclosure wall with a small rectangular Ka chapel housing eight pillars near its north corner 205 This ensemble was peripheral to the main Old Kingdom temple dedicated to the goddess Bastet 186 In Dendera where a fragmentary statue of a seated Pepi I has been uncovered 206 Pepi restored the temple complex to the goddess Hathor 207 He seems particularly to have desired to be associated with her using the epithet son of Hathor of Dendera on numerous vessels found throughout Egypt and abroad 5 159 188 208 In Abydos 209 he built a small rock cut chapel dedicated to the local god Khenti Amentiu 210 where he is again referred to as Pepi son of Hathor of Dendera 211 Pepi also referred to himself as the son of Atum of Heliopolis direct evidence for the strengthening of the Heliopolitan cults at the time 212 At the southern border of Egypt in Elephantine several faience plaques bearing Pepi s cartouche 213 have been uncovered in the temple of Satet These may suggest royal interest in the local cult 116 An alabaster statue of an ape with its offspring bearing Pepi I s cartouche 214 was uncovered in the same location but it was probably a gift of the king to a high official who then dedicated it to Satet 99 In this temple Pepi built a red granite naos 99 destined either to house the goddess s statue 215 or a statue of Pepi I himself which would mean the naos was yet another Ka chapel 216 Pepi I s cartouche and the epithet beloved of Satet is inscribed on the naos which stands 1 32 m 4 3 ft high 99 Pepi seems to have undertaken wider works in the temple possibly reorganising its layout by adding walls and an altar 217 In this context the faience tablets bearing his cartouche may be foundation offerings made at the start of the works 218 although this has been contested 219 For the Egyptologist David Warburton the reigns of Pepi I and II mark the first period during which small stone temples dedicated to local deities were built in Egypt 212 Pyramid complex edit nbsp Calcite alabaster jar mentioning the cartouches of Pepi I the name of his pyramid complex and his first Sed festival Neues Museum Berlin 220 Pepi I had a pyramid complex built for himself in South Saqqara 221 which he named Men nefer Pepi variously translated as Pepi s splendour is enduring 222 The perfection of Pepi is established 223 The beauty of Pepi endures 3 or The perfection of Pepi endures 224 The shortened name Mennefer for the pyramid complex progressively became the name of the nearby capital of Egypt which had originally been called Ineb hedj In particular the Egyptian Mennefer ultimately gave Memphis in Greek a name which is still in use for this ancient city 3 202 224 note 34 Pepi I s mortuary complex is neighboured on its south west corner by a necropolis built during his own reign and the reigns of Merenre and Pepi II The necropolis housed the pyramids of Pepi I s consorts and their dedicated funerary temples 22 note 35 Main pyramid edit Main article Pyramid of Pepi I Pepi s main pyramid was constructed in the same fashion as royal pyramids since the reign of Djedkare Isesi some 80 years earlier 226 a core built six steps high from small roughly dressed blocks of limestone bound together using clay mortar encased with fine limestone blocks 227 The pyramid now destroyed had a base length of 78 75 m 258 ft 150 cu converging to the apex at 53 and once stood 52 5 m 172 ft 100 cu tall 223 Its remains now form a meager mound of 12 m 39 ft 23 cu 221 222 containing a pit in its centre dug by stone thieves 228 The substructure of the pyramid was accessed from the north chapel which has since disappeared From the entrance a descending corridor gives way to a vestibule leading into the horizontal passage Halfway along the passage three granite portcullises guard the chambers As in preceding pyramids the substructure contains three chambers an antechamber on the pyramids vertical axis a serdab with three recesses to its east and a burial chamber containing the king s sarcophagus to the west 229 Extraordinarily the pink granite canopic chest that is sunk into the floor at the foot of the sarcophagus has remained undisturbed 223 230 Discovered alongside it was a bundle of viscera presumed to belong to the pharaoh 230 The provenance of a mummy fragment and fine linen wrappings discovered in the burial chamber are unknown but they are hypothesized to belong to Pepi I 231 The walls of Pepi I s antechamber burial chamber and much of the corridor note 36 are covered with vertical columns of inscribed hieroglyphic text 223 231 235 The hieroglyphs are painted green with ground malachite and gum arabic a colour symbolising renewal 236 His sarcophagus is also inscribed on its east side with the king s titles and names as part of a larger set of spells that includes texts at the bottom of the north and south walls opposite the sarcophagus and in a line running across the top of the north west and south walls of the chamber 237 The writing comprises 2 263 columns and lines of text from 651 spells of which 82 are unique to Pepi s pyramid 238 This is the most extensive corpus of Pyramid Texts from the Old Kingdom 239 The tradition of inscribing texts inside the pyramid was begun by Unas at the end of the Fifth Dynasty 3 240 241 but originally discovered in Pepi I s pyramid in 1880 223 242 Their function like that of all funerary literature was to enable the reunion of the ruler s ba and Ka leading to the transformation into an akh 243 244 and to secure eternal life among the gods in the sky 245 246 247 Mortuary temple edit nbsp Fragments of the pyramid texts from Pepi I s pyramid in South Saqqara now in the Petrie Museum 248 249 note 37 Pepi s pyramid was part of a wider funerary complex comprising a small cult pyramid and mortuary temple surrounded by an enclosure wall The purpose of the cult pyramid remains unclear While it had a burial chamber it was never used as such and must have been a purely symbolic structure 250 It may have hosted the pharaoh s Ka 251 or a miniature statue of the king 252 and could have been used for ritual performances centring around the burial and resurrection of the Ka spirit during the Sed festival 252 Excavations of the small cult pyramid yielded statue fragments pieces of stelae and offering tables which indicate the continuation of Pepi s funerary cult into the Middle Kingdom 223 A valley temple by the Nile and a causeway leading from this temple up to the pyramid on the desert plateau completed the overall construction 223 The high temple next to the pyramid was laid out according to a standard plan 253 making it nearly the same as the temples of Djedkare Isesi Unas and Teti 230 The temple had an entrance hall some 6 29 m 20 6 ft high now almost completely destroyed leading into an open columned courtyard Storage rooms to the north and south flanked the hall The inner temple contained a chapel with five statue niches an offering hall and other core chambers 254 Either the mortuary temple or the causeway might have been lined with statues of kneeling bound captives 255 representing Egypt s traditional enemies 223 Both the temple and the causeway are now heavily damaged due the activity of lime makers who extracted and burned the construction stones to turn them into mortar and whitewash in later times In particular the original location of the statues remains uncertain as they had been displaced ready to be thrown into a lime furnace 223 254 Necropolis of Pepi I edit Pepi s mortuary complex was the centre of a wider necropolis which comprised the tombs of the royal family and further afield those of the high officials of the state administration including a tomb for Weni 256 Pepi had pyramids built for his consorts to the south and south west of his pyramid These were all located outside the complex enclosure wall but inside an area delimited by a street to the west Three of the main queens pyramids were built in a row on an east west axis each with a base side dimension of about 20 m 66 ft 33 The Ancient Egyptians referred to the owners of these pyramids as the Queen of the East Queen of the Centre and Queen of the West 33 nbsp Layout of the necropolis of Pepi I 22 Pyramid of Nebwenet edit The pyramid of the queen of the east belonged to Nebwenet whose name image and titles are preserved on a fallen jamb uncovered in the attached mortuary temple 33 The pyramid had a base of 26 2 m 86 ft making it similar in size to the other pyramids of the necropolis On its northern face was a small mudbrick chapel which hosted a limestone altar now broken The pyramid s substructures were accessed from a descending passageway leading first to an antechamber and from there to the burial chamber slightly to the south of the pyramid s apex This chamber yielded fragments of pink granite sarcophagus and pieces of inscribed alabaster To the east was a serdab and the scant remnants of funerary equipment 22 Pyramid of Inenek Inti edit Immediately west of the pyramid of the queen of the east was the pyramid of the queen of the centre Inenek Inti The name image and titles of this queen are inscribed on jambs and two 2 2 m 7 2 ft high red painted obelisks on either side of the gateway to the mortuary temple establishing that Inenek Inti was buried there 257 With a base of 22 53 m 73 9 ft the pyramid size and layout is similar to that of Nebwenet except that the burial chamber is located precisely beneath the pyramid apex Fragments of a greywacke sarcophagus and pieces of stone vessels were uncovered there Unlike Ankhesenpepi II s burial chamber that of Inenek Inti had no inscriptions on its walls Inenek s mortuary temple was much larger than Nebwenet s surrounding her pyramid on its eastern northern and southern sides Inenek s complex also comprised a small cult pyramid 6 3 m 21 ft at the base on the south east corner of the mortuary temple 258 Queen of the West edit West of Inenek s pyramid is that of the queen of the west The identity of this pyramid s owner is preserved on an obelisk in front of her pyramid only as the eldest daughter of the king 259 The pyramid had a base length of around 20 m 66 ft 33 similar to those of Inenek and Nebwenet and now stands 3 m 9 8 ft tall 260 Entry into the substructure is gained on the north face 261 The burial chamber is located under the vertical axis of the pyramid 260 The location of the serdab is unusual being to the south of the burial chamber instead of east 260 261 262 Substantial remains of funerary equipment were found inside including wooden weights ostrich feathers copper fish hooks and fired clay vessels 260 but none bore their owner s name 263 It has a hastily built mortuary temple with an offering hall and a room with two statue niches Relief fragments discovered depict scenes of processions and estates along with an incomplete cartouche of Pepi I s name 260 Pyramid of Ankhesenpepi II edit nbsp View of the pyramids and temples of Ankhesenpepi II and III in the necropolis of Pepi IThe pyramid of Ankhesenpepi II occupies the south western extremity of the necropolis of Pepi I 264 With a base of 31 4 m 103 ft the pyramid once reached 30 m 98 ft high making it the largest of the queens pyramids 265 The funerary complex of Ankhesenpepi II was also the largest in the necropolis except for that of Pepi himself covering an area of 3 500 m2 38 000 sq ft 265 It comprised a mortuary temple to the north of the pyramid and 20 storage rooms for offerings The queen s funerary complex had a monumental entrance with a granite frame its lintel bearing the queen s name and titles being more than 3 6 m 12 ft wide and weighing over 17 tons 266 A small chapel stood on the pyramid northern face at the entrance of the substructures Painted reliefs of which only scant remains have been found including a small scene depicting the queen and a princess on a boat among papyrus plants adorned the accompanying funerary temple 265 The burial chamber walls were inscribed with spells from the pyramid texts a privilege that had been the preserve of kings Fragments from a black basalt sarcophagus were uncovered onsite 41 Pyramid of Behenu edit With a base of 26 2 m 86 ft Queen Behenu s pyramid was of similar size and layout to the other queens pyramids of the necropolis Located on the western end of the necropolis immediately north west of Mehaa s tomb on which it intrudes Behenu s mortuary temple was on the pyramid s southern face with a cult pyramid on its south east corner The entrance of the temple flanked with two granite obelisks led to several rooms which once housed statues and offering altars while a further 10 rooms served for storage 22 The burial chamber measured 6 24 m 2 88 m 20 5 ft 9 4 ft 267 and its walls were inscribed with numerous spells of the pyramid texts The head of a wooden statue of the queen as well as her opened basalt sarcophagus were unearthed there 268 Pyramid of Mehaa edit Pepi s consort Mehaa was buried in a pyramid on the south west corner of Pepi s enclosure wall 261 262 Directly adjacent to Mehaa s pyramid s eastern face was her mortuary temple where a relief bearing the name and image of Prince Hornetjerykhet her son was uncovered 262 Mehaa s pyramid is intruded upon by the pyramid of Behenu establishing that Mehaa was a consort of Pepi I early in his reign while Behenu lived in the later part of his rule 269 Legacy edit nbsp Steatite cylinder seal belonging to a land tenant serving in Pepi s pyramid complex 270 Old Kingdom edit Pepi I was the object of a funerary cult after his death For the remainder of the Old Kingdom period the funerary cult of Pepi had active priests even outside of his Saqqara mortuary complex for example inscriptions in Elkab attest to the presence of priests of his cult officiating in or in the vicinity of the local temple of Nekhbet 194 The ritual activities taking place in his main funerary complex continued up until the Middle Kingdom This means that Pepi s cult continued to be celebrated during the First Intermediate Period 271 a period during which the Egyptian state seems to have collapsed with only brief interruptions of the cultic activities at times of important political instability 272 As members of the royal family and high officials had continued to be buried in the necropolis next to Pepi s pyramid during the reigns of Merenre and Pepi II including Ankhesenpepi II and III and Pepi s daughter Meritites 273 Pepi s necropolis had grown and had attracted burials from the highest officials such as vizier Weni 272 Starting with the reign of Pepi II the necropolis also attracted burials from private individuals 274 as well as popular devotion to him and his consorts 275 The deposit of numerous offering tables throughout the site confirms this 274 Middle Kingdom edit The conquest of Egypt under Mentuhotep II seems to have interrupted all activities in the necropolis 276 These resumed towards the end of the Eleventh Dynasty when the state sponsored funerary cult of Pepi was renewed 277 albeit in a more limited form than earlier 278 At this time private cultic activities seem to cease in the wider necropolis of Pepi rather concentrating in Pepi s own mortuary temple mainly around his statues then accessible to important officials participating in the pharaoh s cult 279 280 Meanwhile the abandonment of certain parts of the mortuary temple and the queens necropolis led to the installation of novel tombs 279 The most prominent of these was that of the high official Reheryshefnakht who had a small pyramid complex built for himself in the midst of the tombs of the Sixth Dynasty royal family 273 The royal cult of Pepi I seems to have ended with the onset of the Second Intermediate Period 279 New Kingdom edit nbsp Head of Khaemweset Altes MuseumThe New Kingdom period witnessed renewed private burials in the necropolis of Pepi including in several rooms of his mortuary temple which were used as a catacomb at the time 281 although no such tomb was found in the main room hosting the royal funerary cult suggesting continued use 281 The individuals buried in the necropolis belonged to the lower ranks of Egyptian society as shown by the simplicity if not the absence of funerary equipment 282 while those using the catacombs were richer 281 The consequences of the long lasting cults of Old Kingdom pharaohs during the New Kingdom are apparent in the Karnak king list It was composed during the reign of Thutmosis III to honour a selection of royal ancestors Several pharaohs of the Fifth and Sixth Dynasty including Nyuserre Ini Djedkare Isesi Teti and Pepi I are mentioned on the list by their birth name rather than throne name The Egyptologist Antonio Morales believes this is because the popular cults for these kings which existed well into the New Kingdom referred to these kings using their birth name 283 Later during the reign of Ramses II limited restoration works on the Old Kingdom monuments took place in the Memphite area under the direction of Prince Khaemweset Pepi s pyramid complex was among those restored as shown by inscriptions left on site by Khaemweset 284 even though it was actively being used for private burials 281 Pepi I s necropolis was therefore probably in a ruined state at this point with the area with the queens pyramids serving as a stone quarry 282 Khaemweset stated he had found the pyramid abandoned and recalled his proprietor for posterity 285 The progressive accumulation of burials in the passages leading up to the temple cult rooms blocked all access to it demonstrating that Pepi s funerary cult had ceased 281 Late Period edit The stone quarrying activities which were limited to Pepi s necropolis during the New Kingdom and had spared his mortuary temple became widespread during the Late Period of Egypt with intermittent burials continuing nonetheless 286 Both the stone robbing and funerary activities stopped at some point during the period and the necropolis was abandoned until the Mamluk period when intense stone quarrying resumed 287 Notes edit Dates proposed for Pepi I s reign 2390 2361 BC 2 2354 2310 BC 3 4 2338 2298 BC 5 2335 2285 BC 6 2332 2283 BC 7 2321 2287 BC 8 9 10 2289 2255 BC 11 2285 2235 BC 6 2276 2228 BC 12 Among her titles Iput bore the titles of king s mother mwt niswt mother of the king of Upper and Lower Egypt mwt niswt biti and king s mother of the pyramid Mennefer Pepy mwt niswt mn nfr ppy 18 Their names are also rendered as Ankhnespepy I and II In addition the Ancient Egyptians also used the variants Ankhesenmeryre I and II 23 24 In an alternative hypothesis Hans Goedicke has proposed that Merenre s mother was the consort known only from her title Weret Yamtes responsible for the harem conspiracy against Pepi I In this widely rejected hypothesis Ankhesenpepi I was falsely claimed by the Ancient Egyptians to be Merenre s mother to safeguard his claim to the throne 39 Meritites has also been proposed to be one of Pepi I s consorts rather than daughter 43 or an Eighth Dynasty queen buried here to indicate her filiation to Pepi I 43 Both views were proved wrong following excavations in Saqqara indicating she was Pepi s daughter 44 Vivienne Callendar proposed her as Pepi s eldest daughter 46 but excavations have now established that Meritites was the king s eldest daughter 44 In the case of Pepi I the evolution of the name from Ancient Egyptian to Ancient Greek is understood to be as follows Pjpj Păyắpăyă gt Păyắpyă gt Pyŏ pyĕ gt Pyŏ p Fios 53 There has been some doubt whether the cattle count dating system was strictly biennial or slightly more irregular early in the Sixth Dynasty That the latter situation appeared to be the case was suggested by the Year after the 18th Count 3rd Month of Shemu day 27 inscription from Wadi Hammamat No 74 75 which mentions the first occurrence of the Heb Sed in that year for Pepi Normally the Sed festival is first celebrated in a king s 30th year of reign while the 18th cattle count would have taken place in his 36th year had it been strictly biennial 61 The Egyptologist Michel Baud points to a similar inscription dated to Year after the 18th Count 4th Month of Shemu day 5 in Sinai graffito No 106 62 This could imply that the cattle count during the Sixth Dynasty was not regularly biennial or that it was referenced continuously in the years following it Michel Baud stresses that the year of the 18th count is preserved in the South Saqqara Stone and writes that Between the mention of count 18 here and the next memorial formula which belongs to count 19 end of register D the available space for count 18 is the expected half of the average size of a theoretical year count compartment It is hard to believe that such a narrow space corresponds to the jubilee celebration which obviously had a considerable importance for this and every king 63 Therefore the references to Pepi I s first jubilee being celebrated in his 18th cattle count are probably just part of this royal tendency to emphasize the king s first jubilee years after it was first celebrated and Baud notes that the longest year compartment in the South Saqqara Stone appears at the beginning of register D Fortuitously or not this year compartment corresponds perfectly to year 30 31 if a strictly biennial system of numbering is presumed for Pepi I s reign i e his 15th count Therefore the count was most probably biennial during Pepi I s reign and the reference to his final year the 25 count implies that he reigned for 49 full years 63 The Turin King List gives only 20 years on the throne to Pepi I while his successor Merenre I is said to have reigned 44 years This latter figure contradicts both contemporaneous and archaeological evidence For example the royal annals mention no further cattle count under Merenre I beyond his fifth which might correspond to his tenth year of rule The Egyptologist Kim Ryholt suggests that the two entries of the Turin king list might have been interchanged 68 Catalog number 39 121 73 Because of a typo in Hubschmann 2011 Hezi became also known as Heri in various subsequent works 77 Pepi s claim to the throne as the son of Iput and thus a male descendant of Unas was the strongest in Kanawati s view implying that Userkare was an usurper 74 For the Ancient Egyptians the Ka was the vital essence which when it inhabited the body made the person alive At the death of the person the Ka simply departed the body but continued to exist and had to be sustained through offerings performed in the Ka chapel associated with the tomb 97 Catalog number RC 1771 105 The precise date when Pepi faced the harem conspiracy is debated Darrell Baker proposed that this happened early in his rule 51 while Hans Goedicke proposes Pepi s 21st year of reign as the terminus post quem for this conspiracy 106 positing that the most probable date is Pepi s 44th year on the throne 39 Hans Goedicke and Nicolas Grimal both use Weret Yamtes as a proper name rather than a title 36 but this is strongly opposed by others including Michel Baud 109 At this point the Ancient Egyptian royal titulary assumed its definitive standard form 76 The drastic nature of Pepi s decision if there was a coregency is apparent on noting the Ancient Egyptians conception of the kingship as rulership by a single individual holding a supreme office in a lifelong tenure most often succeeding on a hereditary principle and wielding great personal power 119 The emphasis on a single individual holder follows from the Ancient Egyptians perception of the king as a divine being offspring of Ra who upholds Egypt s unity and prosperity as well as the cosmic order preordained by the gods and playing the crucial role of mediator between the people and the gods with the capacity of conveying the gods messages and will 120 The king not only had these unique roles but the institution of kingship was perceived as a divinely established order guarding Egypt against chaos 121 120 The royal annals mention the feast of the union of the two lands concerning Merenre a feast normally celebrated once shortly after the death of a king with the start of his successor s reign Since it is very unlikely that this feast was celebrated twice for Merenre that is once at the start of the coregency and once more at the death of his father Baud and Dobrev deem it likely that the feast happened only once at Pepi s death as would be normal and hence everything written on the annals after the mention of the feast must have recorded Merenre s sole reign had there been a coregency prior to that point or not While almost all the inscriptions pertaining to Merenre s sole reign are now illegible the space available for them on the royal annals shows that he may have been sole king for 11 to 14 years This can be known because every occasion of a cattle count was written in a devoted and well delimited case in the annals and these cases are of roughly consistent sizes allowing a good estimation of the maximum number of illegible cases That Merenre reigned over a decade as sole king cannot easily be reconciled with Manetho s claim that he reigned only seven years by invoking seven years of sole reign plus an additional number of years as coregent as proponents of the coregency including Goedicke had done 126 Catalog number CGC 1435 128 Transliteration from Ancient Egyptian ḥryw s 133 The Dashur decree of Pepi I shows that such mercenaries were already pacified 137 integrated into Egyptian society for example in pyramid towns where they served as policemen and soldiers 138 Transliteration from Ancient Egyptian 3 mu often translated Semite 141 Or much less likely 142 143 in the Eastern Nile Delta 144 A stone vessel bearing Pepi s name has been dated precisely to Byblos KIV phase 10 Pepi is concurrent with Ebla s IIIB 1 phase 10 For example an alabaster lid of a precious vessel is inscribed with Beloved of the two lands king of Upper and Lower Egypt the son of Hathor lady of Dendera Pepi As Hathor was the chief deity of Byblos it is probable that this vessel was destined to this city and was only later exchanged or given to Ebla 159 More precisely the expedition is dated to Pepi s 18th cattle count fifth day of the fourth month of Shemu which might correspond to his 36th year of reign some time between the July 26 and August 4 of that year 164 The geographical destination of this expedition mentioned on the funerary texts of an Egyptian official is uncertain It may instead have taken place in the Levant 170 The decree recording this called a Coptos Decree in modern Egyptology is now in the Egyptian Museum Cairo catalog number 41890 174 Pyramid towns are areas of accommodation for workers who build pyramids and all craftsmen needed to sustain the construction effort including bakers carpenters water carriers and more These towns continued to be used after the end of the pyramid construction A chapel in Akhmim attributed to a king Pepi 189 might belong to Pepi II 190 Pepi might have built more than one chapel there as he seems to have been particularly interested in the cult of Hathor of Dendera 192 presenting himself as the son of Hathor of Dendera in numerous inscriptions including on vessels traded abroad 188 5 159 193 The linguistic evolution from the name of Pepi s pyramid to the Greek word Memphis is well understood in modern Egyptology and reconstructed as Mn nfr Mĭ n năfăr gt Mĕ mfĕ Memfis Mn nfrw Mĭn nắ frŭw gt Mĕn nŏ frĕ Menofris 225 The tombs of Meritites and Ankhesenpepi III both built after Pepi s reign and tombs from later periods of Egyptian history in the necropolis are not discussed here 22 The corridor texts in Pepi I s pyramid are the most extensive covering the whole horizontal passage the vestibule and even a section of the descending corridor 232 233 Unas pyramid constrained the texts to the south section of the corridor 234 as did Teti s 232 The texts in Merenre I s and Pepi II s pyramids covered the entire corridor and the vestibule 232 Catalog number UC14540 248 249 References edit a b Tiradritti amp de Luca 1999 p 89 Wright amp Pardee 1988 p 144 a b c d e Verner 2001b p 590 Altenmuller 2001 p 602 a b c d Brooklyn Museum 2020a a b von Beckerath 1997 p 188 a b c Clayton 1994 p 64 a b Rice 1999 p 150 a b Malek 2000 p 104 a b c d Sowada 2009 p 4 MET Cylinder 2020 Hornung 2012 p 491 a b c d e f Leprohon 2013 p 42 a b c d Allen et al 1999 p 10 Leprohon 2013 p 236 Dodson amp Hilton 2004 pp 64 65 amp 76 a b Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 78 a b c Janosi 1992 p 54 a b Baud amp Dobrev 1995 p 28 Baud 1999b p 411 Baud 1999b p 410 a b c d e f g Mission Archeologique Franco Suisse de Saqqara 2020a a b c Baud 1999b pp 426 429 Callender 1994 pp 153 amp 160 a b Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 73 Baud 1999b p 483 Callender 1994 p 152 Baud 1999b p 415 Leclant 1999 p 866 Leclant amp Labrousse 2006 p 112 Dobrev amp Leclant 1997 pp 154 156 Dobrev amp Leclant 1997 p 153 a b c d e Lehner 1997 p 159 Baud 1999b pp 625 626 a b Collombert 2011 p 938 a b c d Grimal 1992 pp 82 83 Strudwick 2005 pp 353 amp footnote 25 p 377 Strudwick 2005 footnote 25 p 377 a b c d e Goedicke 1955 p 183 a b c Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 76 a b Collombert 2018 p 70 a b Baud 1999b p 413 a b Baud 1999b p 471 a b c Leclant amp Labrousse 2006 p 107 a b Baud 1999b pp 506 507 Callender 1994 p 169 Callender 1994 p 185 Baud 1999b p 412 a b c von Beckerath 1997 p 27 von Beckerath 1999 pp 62 63 king number 3 a b c d Baker 2008 p 293 a b c Waddell 1971 p 53 Gundacker 2018 p 139 footnote 66 Morales 2006 p 320 footnote 30 Daressy 1912 p 205 Brooklyn Museum 2020c Baud amp Dobrev 1995 p 49 a b Barta 2017 p 11 a b Gardiner 1945 pp 11 28 Katary 2001 p 352 Spalinger 1994 p 303 Baud 2006 p 148 a b c d Baud 2006 p 150 Verner 2001a p 364 Anthes 1928 p 234 Inschrift III a b Baud amp Dobrev 1995 p 38 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 pp 46 49 Ryholt 1997 pp 13 14 Strudwick 2005 pp 130 131 Allen et al 1999 pp 446 449 Walters Art Museum 2020 Verner 2001a p 404 a b Brooklyn Museum 2020b a b c d Kanawati 2003 p 184 a b Kanawati 2003 p 173 a b c d e f Barta 2017 p 10 Hubschmann 2011 Hubschmann 2011 p 2 a b Grimal 1992 p 81 a b c d Smith 1971 p 191 Baker 2008 p 487 Kanawati 2003 p 95 Kanawati 2003 p 89 Kanawati 2003 pp 94 95 Kanawati 2003 p 163 Kanawati 2003 p 164 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 p 27 Baud 1999b pp 558 amp 562 563 Callender 1994 p 137 a b Grimal 1992 p 82 MET Cylinder 2020 catalog number 17 5 Tyldesley 2019 p 57 a b Moreno Garcia 2013 p 122 a b Bussmann 2007 p 16 a b Moreno Garcia 2013 p 124 Moreno Garcia 2013 pp 125 amp 132 Bolshakov 2001 pp 217 219 Fischer 1958 pp 330 333 a b c d Bussmann 2007 p 17 Moreno Garcia 2013 p 123 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 pp 32 33 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 pp 35 36 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 p 36 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 p 37 a b Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum 2020 Goedicke 1954 p 89 Malek 2000 p 105 a b Callender 1994 p 151 a b Baud 1999b p 626 Kanawati 2003 p 185 Malek 2000 pp 104 105 a b c d e Smith 1971 p 192 Eyre 1994 p 117 118 a b Baud 1999a p 379 Baud 1999b p 630 a b Yurco 1999 p 240 Hayes 1946 pp 3 23 a b Kanawati 2003 p 177 Baines amp Yoffee 1998 p 205 a b Barta 2013 p 259 Kurth 1992 p 30 Drioton 1947 p 55 Allen et al 1999 p 11 Goedicke 1988 pp 119 120 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 p 50 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 pp 50 amp 54 Murnane 1977 pp 111 112 a b Richards 2002 p 76 a b Hayes 1978 p 122 Encyclopaedia Britannica 2020 Pepi I king of Egypt Smith 1971 p 194 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 p 34 Goedicke 1963 p 188 Hayes 1978 p 125 a b Redford 1992 p 54 a b Schulman 1999 p 166 a b Moreno Garcia 2010 p 25 Spalinger 2013 p 448 Kanawati 2003 p 1 Redford 1992 p 55 Goedicke 1963 p 189 a b Wright amp Pardee 1988 p 154 Sowada 2009 p 11 Goedicke 1963 pp 189 197 Sowada 2009 p 175 Helck 1971 p 18 a b Hayes 1978 p 126 Goedicke 1963 p 190 Sowada 2009 p 5 Wright amp Pardee 1988 p 294 Baker 2008 p 294 Sowada 2009 p 129 Wright amp Pardee 1988 p 149 Collombert 2015b p 41 Matthiae 1978 pp 230 231 a b c d e Malek 2000 p 106 Redford 1992 p 41 Matthiae 1978 pp 230 231 fig 20 a b c Matthiae 1978 pp 230 232 Astour 2002 p 60 Moreno Garcia 2013 pp 132 133 Sowada 2009 p 119 Sowada 2009 p 92 Tallet 2015 p 58 Tallet 2015 pp 41 amp 60 Tallet 2015 p 64 Smith 1999 p 394 Petrie 1897 p 89 Marcolin 2006 p 295 Marcolin 2006 p 296 Meyer 1999 p 1063 a b Moreno Garcia 2013 p 129 Moreno Garcia 2008 p 4 a b Hayes 1946 p 4 Edwards 1999 p 253 Redford 1992 p 61 Warburton 2012 p 79 a b Moreno Garcia 2013 p 134 Strudwick 2005 pp 265 266 a b Lange 2016 p 121 Breasted amp Brunton 1924 p 27 a b Bussmann 2007 pp 16 17 Bussmann 2007 p 20 Bolshakov 2001 p 217 O Connor 1992 pp 91 92 fig 5A a b c Brovarski 1994 p 18 Brovarski 1994 p 17 a b c Kraemer 2017 p 20 a b c Moreno Garcia 2008 p 2 Strudwick 2005 p 360 Pantalacci 2013 p 201 a b Strudwick 2005 p 36 Sowada 2009 p 144 object 186 a b Hendrickx 1999 p 344 O Connor 1992 pp 84 87 96 Moreno Garcia 2013 p 127 Brovarski 1994 p 19 a b c Bongioanni amp Croce 2001 p 84 a b Muhly 1999 p 630 Heinz 2002 pp 127 131 Peck 1999 p 875 a b Grimal 1992 p 84 Bongioanni amp Croce 2001 pp 84 85 Bongioanni amp Croce 2001 p 85 Warburton 2012 p 127 Daumas 1952 pp 163 172 Cauville 1999 p 298 Sowada 2009 p 144 O Connor 1999 p 110 Kraemer 2017 p 13 Kraemer 2017 p 1 a b Warburton 2012 p 69 Dreyer 1986 no 428 447 Dreyer 1986 no 455 Kaiser 1999 p 337 Franke 1994 p 121 Bussmann 2007 pp 17 18 Dreyer 1986 p 94 Bussmann 2007 p 18 Amin 2020 a b Lehner 1997 p 157 a b Verner 2001c p 351 a b c d e f g h i Lehner 1997 p 158 a b Altenmuller 2001 p 603 Gundacker 2018 pp 159 amp 160 see also footnotes 198 amp 199 Verner 2001c p 352 Verner 2001c pp 325 amp 352 353 Lehner 1997 pp 157 158 Verner 2001c pp 353 354 a b c Hellum 2007 p 107 a b Verner 2001c p 354 a b c Allen 2005 p 12 Hays 2012 p 111 Lehner 1997 p 154 Hayes 1978 p 82 Leclant 1999 p 867 Allen 2005 p 97 amp 100 Mission Archeologique Franco Suisse de Saqqara 2020b Allen 2005 p 97 Malek 2000 p 102 Allen 2001 p 95 Verner 2001c pp 39 40 Allen 2005 pp 7 8 Lehner 1997 p 24 Verner 1994 p 57 Grimal 1992 p 126 Hays 2012 p 10 a b Petrie Museum 2020 a b Stevenson 2015 p 49 Verner 2001c p 53 Lehner 1997 p 18 a b Arnold 2005 p 70 Verner 2001c pp 344 amp 355 a b Wilkinson 2000 p 129 Verner 2001c p 355 Collombert 2015b p 37 Lehner 1997 p 160 Leclant amp Labrousse 1998 p 485 Lehner 1997 pp 159 160 a b c d e Verner 2001c p 358 a b c Legros 2017 p 212 fig 1 a b c Leclant amp Labrousse 1998 p 486 Leclant amp Labrousse 1998 pp 486 488 Collombert 2018 p 67 a b c Collombert 2018 p 71 Collombert 2018 pp 68 amp 69 Collombert 2011 p 933 Tomb of Behenu 2010 Collombert 2015a p 18 Cylinder seal of Pepi I MET 2020 Moreno Garcia 2015 p 5 6 a b Legros 2017 p 211 a b Collombert 2015b p 36 a b Legros 2017 p 212 Legros 2016 pp 235 253 Leclant 1983 p 483 Berger El Naggar 1990 pp 90 93 Leclant amp Clerc 1986 pp 258 259 a b c Legros 2017 p 213 Leclant amp Berger El Naggar 1996 pp 499 506 a b c d e Legros 2017 p 215 a b Legros 2017 p 214 Morales 2006 p 320 Leclant amp Clerc 1994 p 385 figs 22 amp 23 Lehner 1997 pp 158 159 Legros 2017 p 216 Legros 2017 p 217 Bibliography editAllen James Allen Susan Anderson Julie Arnold Dieter Arnold Dorothea Cherpion Nadine David Elisabeth Grimal Nicolas Grzymski Krzysztof Hawass Zahi Hill Marsha Janosi Peter Labee Toutee Sophie Labrousse Audran Lauer Jean Phillippe Leclant Jean Der Manuelian Peter Millet N B Oppenheim Adela Craig Patch Diana Pischikova Elena Rigault Patricia Roehrig Catharine H Wildung Dietrich Ziegler Christiane 1999 Egyptian Art in the Age of the Pyramids New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art OCLC 41431623 Allen James 2001 Pyramid Texts In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 3 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 95 98 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Allen James 2005 Der Manuelian Peter ed The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts Writings from the Ancient World Number 23 Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 978 1 58983 182 7 Altenmuller Hartwig 2001 Old Kingdom Fifth Dynasty In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 597 601 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Amin Osama Shukir Muhammed 2020 Jar of Pepi I World History Encyclopedia Anthes Rudolf 1928 Die Felseninschriften von Hatnub nach den Aufnahmen Georg Mollers Untersuchungen zur Geschichte und Altertumskunde Agyptens in German 9 Leipzig J C Hinrichs Arnold Dieter 2005 Royal cult complexes of the Old and Middle Kingdoms In Schafer Byron E ed Temples of Ancient Egypt London New York I B Tauris pp 31 86 ISBN 978 1 85043 945 5 Astour Michael C 2002 A Reconstruction of the History of Ebla Part 2 In Gordon Cyrus H Rendsburg Gary A eds Eblaitica Essays on the Ebla Archives and Eblaite Language Vol 4 Winona Lake Eisenbrauns The Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 978 1 57506 060 6 Baines John Yoffee Norman 1998 Order Legitimacy and Wealth in Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia In Feinman G M Marcus J eds Archaic States Santa Fe NM School of American Research Press pp 199 260 OCLC 1119736998 Baker Darrell 2008 The Encyclopedia of the Pharaohs Volume I Predynastic to the Twentieth Dynasty 3300 1069 BC London Stacey International ISBN 978 1 905299 37 9 Barta Miroslav 2013 Egyptian Kingship during the Old Kingdom In Hill Jane A Jones Philip Morales Antonio J eds Experiencing Power Generating Authority Cosmos Politics and the Ideology of Kingship in Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology pp 257 283 ISBN 978 1 934536 64 3 Barta Miroslav 2017 Radjedef to the Eighth Dynasty UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology Baud Michel Dobrev Vassil 1995 De nouvelles annales de l Ancien Empire egyptien Une Pierre de Palerme pour la VIe dynastie Bulletin de l Institut Francais d Archeologie Orientale in French 95 23 92 ISSN 0255 0962 Baud Michel 1999a Famille Royale et pouvoir sous l Ancien Empire egyptien Tome 1 PDF Bibliotheque d etude 126 1 in French Cairo Institut francais d archeologie orientale ISBN 978 2 7247 0250 7 Baud Michel 1999b Famille Royale et pouvoir sous l Ancien Empire egyptien Tome 2 PDF Bibliotheque d etude 126 2 in French Cairo Institut francais d archeologie orientale ISBN 978 2 7247 0250 7 Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Baud Michel 2006 The Relative Chronology of Dynasties 6 and 8 In Hornung Erik Krauss Rolf Warburton David eds Ancient Egyptian Chronology Handbook of Oriental Studies Brill Publishers Berger El Naggar Catherine 1990 Le temple de Pepy Ier au Moyen Empire Saqqara Aux Origines de l Egypte Pharaonique Dossiers d Archeologie in French 146 Dijon Editions Faton 90 93 Bolshakov Andrey 2001 Ka Chapel In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 217 219 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Bongioanni Alessandro Croce Maria eds 2001 The Treasures of Ancient Egypt From the Egyptian Museum in Cairo Universe Publishing a division of Ruzzoli Publications Inc Breasted James Henry Brunton Winifred 1924 Kings and Queens of Ancient Egypt London Hodder amp Stoughton OCLC 251195519 Brooklyn Museum 2020a Vase of Pepi I Brooklyn Museum Brooklyn Museum 2020b Kneeling Statuette of Pepy I Brooklyn Museum Brooklyn Museum 2020c Seated Statuette of Pepy I with Horus Falcon Brooklyn Museum Brovarski Edward 1994 Abydos in the Old Kingdom and First Intermediate Period Part II In Silverman David P ed For His Ka Essays Offered in Memory of Klaus Baer Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization Vol 55 Chicago The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago pp 15 45 ISBN 0 918986 93 1 Bussmann Richard 2007 Pepi I and the Temple of Satet at Elephantine In Mairs Rachel Stevenson Alice eds Current Research in Egyptology 2005 Proceedings of the Sixth Annual Symposium University of Cambridge 6 8 January 2005 PDF Oxford Oxbow Books pp 16 21 JSTOR j ctt1cd0npx Callender Vivienne Gae 1994 Part III A prosopographical register of the wives of the Egyptian Kings Dynasties I XVII The wives of the Egyptian kings dynasties I XVII Macquarie University School of History Philosophy and Politics OCLC 862671624 Cauville Sylvie 1999 Dendera In Bard Kathryn A Blake Shubert Steven eds Encyclopedia of the Archeology of Ancient Egypt New York Routledge pp 298 301 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Clayton Peter A 1994 Chronicle of the Pharaohs London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05074 3 Collombert Philippe 2011 Decouvertes recentes de la mission archeologique francaise a Saqqara campagnes 2007 2011 Comptes rendus des seances de l Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres Annee 2011 in French 155 2 persee 921 938 doi 10 3406 crai 2011 93230 Collombert Philippe 2015a Decouvertes recentes dans la necropole de Pepy Ier a Saqqara PDF Pharaon Magazine in French 21 Bretigny sur Orge Nefer IT 10 18 Collombert Philippe 2015b Le mysterieux vizir Nefer oun Meryre et la necropole des hauts dignitaires de Pepy Ier a Saqqara Egypte PDF Afrique amp Orient in French 77 35 44 Collombert Philippe 2018 Recent discoveries of the Mission archeologique franco suisse de Saqqara in the funerary complex of queen Ankhnespepy II Saqqara Newsletter 16 Leiden Friends of Saqqara Foundation 66 75 Cylinder Seal with the Name of Pepi I ca 2289 2255 B C Metropolitan Museum of Art 19 August 2020 Daressy Georges 1912 La Pierre de Palerme et la chronologie de l Ancien Empire Bulletin de l Institut Francais d Archeologie Orientale in French 12 161 214 doi 10 3406 bifao 1916 1736 ISSN 0255 0962 S2CID 267263127 Retrieved 11 August 2018 Daumas Francois 1952 Le trone d une statuette de Pepi Ier trouve a Dendara avec 3 planches Bulletin de l Institut Francais d Archeologie Orientale in French 52 163 172 Decouverte de la chambre funeraire de la reine Behenou La France en Egypte Ambassade de France au Caire in French Retrieved 18 August 2020 Dobrev Vassil Leclant Jean 1997 Nedjeftet Une nouvelle reine identifiee a Saqqara Sud Bulletin de l Institut Francais d Archeologie Orientale in French 97 Le Caire Institut francais d archeologie orientale 149 156 Dodson Aidan Hilton Dyan 2004 The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05128 3 Dreyer Gunter 1986 Elephantine 8 Der Tempel der Satet Die Funde der Fruhzeit und des Alten Reiches Archaologische Veroffentlichungen in German Vol 39 Mainz Philipp von Zabern ISBN 3 80 530501 X Drioton Etienne 1947 Notes diverses 2 Une coregence de Pepi Ier et de Merenre Annales du service des antiquites de l Egypte in French 45 Cairo Conseil supreme des Antiquites egyptiennes 53 92 Edwards Iorwerth Eiddon Stephen 1999 Dahshur the Northern Stone Pyramid In Bard Kathryn A Blake Shubert Steven eds Encyclopedia of the Archeology of Ancient Egypt New York Routledge pp 252 254 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Eyre Christopher 1994 Weni s Career and Old Kingdom Historiography In Shore A F Eyre C Leahy A L M Leahy eds The unbroken reed studies in the culture and heritage of Ancient Egypt in honour of A F Shore London Egypt Exploration Society pp 107 124 ISBN 0856981249 Fischer H G 1958 Review of L Habachi Tell Basta American Journal of Archaeology 62 Cairo Institut Francais d Archeologie Orientale du Caire 330 333 doi 10 2307 501964 JSTOR 501964 Franke Detlef 1994 Das Heiligtum des Heqaib auf Elephantine Geschichte eines Provinzheiligtums im Mittleren Reich Studien zur Archaologie und Geschichte Altagyptens in German Vol 9 Heidelberg Heidelberger Orientverlag ISBN 3 92 755217 8 Gardiner Alan 1945 Regnal Years and Civil Calendar in Pharaonic Egypt The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 31 11 28 doi 10 1177 030751334503100103 JSTOR 3855380 S2CID 192251888 Goedicke Hans 1954 An Approximate Date for the Harem Investigation under Pepy I Journal of the American Oriental Society 74 2 American Oriental Society 88 89 doi 10 2307 596209 JSTOR 596209 Goedicke Hans 1955 The Abydene Marriage of Pepi I Journal of the American Oriental Society 75 3 Ann Arbor American Oriental Society 180 183 doi 10 2307 595170 JSTOR 595170 Goedicke Hans 1963 The alleged military campaign in southern Palestine in the reign of Pepi I VIth Dynasty Rivista degli studi orientali 38 3 Rome Sapienza Universita di Roma 187 197 JSTOR 41879487 Goedicke Hans 1988 The Death of Pepi II Neferkare Studien zur Altagyptischen Kultur 15 Hamburg Helmut Buske Verlag GmbH 111 121 JSTOR 44324580 Grimal Nicolas 1992 A History of Ancient Egypt Translated by Ian Shaw Oxford Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 631 19396 8 Gundacker Roman 2018 The names of the kings of the Fifth Dynasty according to Manetho s Aegyptiaca In Kuraszkiewicz Kamil O Kopp Edyta Takacs Daniel eds The perfection that endures Studies on Old Kingdom Art and Archeology Warsaw Department of Egyptology Faculty of Oriental Studies University of Warsaw ISBN 978 83 947612 0 2 Hays Harold M 2012 The Organization of the Pyramid Texts Typology and Disposition Volume 1 Probleme der Agyptologie Vol 31 Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 22749 1 ISSN 0169 9601 Hayes William C 1946 Royal decrees from the temple of Min at Coptus Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 32 3 23 doi 10 1177 030751334603200102 JSTOR 3855410 S2CID 192279269 Hayes William 1978 The Scepter of Egypt A Background for the Study of the Egyptian Antiquities in The Metropolitan Museum of Art Vol 1 From the Earliest Times to the End of the Middle Kingdom New York Metropolitan Museum of Art OCLC 7427345 Heinz Guido 2002 Pharoh Pepi I Documentation of the oldest known life size metal sculpture using laser scanning and photogrammetry In Bohler Wolfgang ed Proceedings of the CIPA WG 6 International Workshop on Scanning for Cultural Heritage Recording Thessaloniki ZITI pp 127 131 OCLC 931857202 Helck Wolfgang 1971 Die Beziehungen Agyptens zu Vorderasien im 3 und 2 Jahrtausend v Chr Agyptologische Abhandlungen in German Vol 5 2nd ed Wiesbaden O Harrassowitz ISBN 3 44 701298 6 Hellum Jennifer 2007 The Pyramids Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 9780313325809 Hendrickx Stan 1999 Elkab In Bard Kathryn A Blake Shubert Steven eds Encyclopedia of the Archeology of Ancient Egypt New York Routledge pp 342 346 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 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 Hubschmann Caroline 2011 Naguib Kanawati Conspiracies in the Egyptian Palace Unis to Pepy I PDF Eras Melbourne Monash University Janosi Peter 1992 The Queens of the Old Kingdom and their Tombs The Bullentin of the Australian Center for Egyptology 3 51 57 Kaiser Werner 1999 Elephantine In Bard Kathryn A Blake Shubert Steven eds Encyclopedia of the Archeology of Ancient Egypt New York Routledge pp 335 342 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Kanawati Naguib 2003 Conspiracies in the Egyptian Palace Unis to Pepy I Oxford and New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 61937 8 Katary Sally 2001 Taxation 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 Kraemer Bryan 2017 A shrine of Pepi I in South Abydos Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 103 1 13 34 doi 10 1177 0307513317722450 S2CID 191624758 Kurth Angela 1992 Usurpation Conquest and Ceremonial From Babylon to Persia In Cannadine David Price Simon eds Rituals of Royalty Power and Ceremonial in Traditional Societies Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 20 55 ISBN 9780521428910 La necropole de Pepy Ier MAFS Mission Archeologique Franco Suisse de Saqqara in French 18 August 2020 Lange Eva 2016 Die Ka Anlage Pepis I in Bubastis im Kontext koniglicher Ka Anlagen des Alten Reiches Zeitschrift fur Agyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde in German 133 2 121 140 doi 10 1524 zaes 2006 133 2 121 S2CID 160297448 Leclant Jean 1983 Fouilles et travaux en Egypte et au Soudan 1981 1982 Orientalia Nova Series in French 52 4 Roma GBP Gregorian Biblical Press 461 542 JSTOR 43075253 Leclant Jean Clerc Gisele 1986 Fouilles et travaux en Egypte et au Soudan 1984 1985 Orientalia Nova Series in French 55 3 Roma GBP Gregorian Biblical Press 236 319 JSTOR 43075409 Leclant Jean Clerc Gisele 1994 Fouilles et travaux en Egypte et au Soudan 1992 1993 Orientalia Nova Series in French 63 4 Roma GBPress Gregorian Biblical Press 345 473 JSTOR 43076189 Leclant Jean Berger El Naggar Catherine 1996 Des confreries religieuses a Saqqara a la fin de la XIIe dynastie In Der Manuelian Peter Freed R E eds Studies in Honor of William Kelly Simpson PDF in French Vol 2 Boston Museum of Fine Arts pp 499 506 ISBN 0 87846 390 9 Leclant Jean Labrousse Audran 1998 La necropole des reines de Pepy Ier a Saqqara 1988 1998 Comptes rendus des seances de l Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres 142e annee in French 2 481 491 doi 10 3406 crai 1998 15882 Leclant Jean 1999 Saqqara pyramids of the 5th and 6th Dynasties In Bard Kathryn A Blake Shubert Steven eds Encyclopedia of the Archeology of Ancient Egypt New York Routledge pp 865 868 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Leclant Jean Labrousse Audran 2006 Decouvertes recentes de la Mission archeologique francaise a Saqqara campagnes 2001 2005 Comptes rendus des seances de l Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres 150ᵉ annee in French 1 persee 103 120 doi 10 3406 crai 2006 86916 Legros Remi 2016 Strategies memorielles Les cultes funeraires prives en Egypte ancienne de la VIe a la XIIe dynastie Vol 70 Lyon Maison de l Orient et de la Mediterranee Jean Pouilloux ISBN 978 2 35668 058 7 Legros Remi 2017 Inhumations privees dans la necropole de Pepy Ier In Barta Miroslav Coppens Filip Krejci Jaromir eds Abusir and Saqqara in the year 2015 in French Prague Faculty of Arts Charles University pp 211 218 ISBN 978 80 7308 758 6 Lehner Mark 1997 The Complete Pyramids New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 28547 3 Leprohon Ronald J 2013 The Great Name Ancient Egyptian Royal Titulary Writings from the ancient world Vol 33 Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 978 1 589 83736 2 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 Marcolin Michele 2006 Iny a much traveled official of the Sixth Dynasty unpublished reliefs in Japan In Barta Miroslav Coppens Filip Krejci Jaromir eds Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2005 Proceedings of the Conference held in Prague June 27 July 5 2005 Prague Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Oriental Institute pp 282 310 ISBN 978 80 7308 116 4 Matthiae Paolo 1978 Recherches archeologiques a Ebla 1977 le quartier administratif du palais royal G Comptes rendus des seances de l Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres in French 122 2 204 236 Metropolitan Museum of Art 2020 Cylinder Seal with the Name of Pepi I ca 2289 2255 B C Metropolitan Museum of Art Meyer Carol 1999 Wadi Hammamat In Bard Kathryn A Blake Shubert Steven eds Encyclopedia of the Archeology of Ancient Egypt New York Routledge pp 1062 1065 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Morales Antonio J 2006 Traces of official and popular veneration to Nyuserra Iny at Abusir Late Fifth Dynasty to the Middle Kingdom In Barta Miroslav Coppens Filip Krejci Jaromir eds Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2005 Proceedings of the Conference held in Prague June 27 July 5 2005 Prague Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Oriental Institute pp 311 341 ISBN 978 80 7308 116 4 Moreno Garcia Juan Carlos 2008 Estates Old Kingdom PDF UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology Moreno Garcia Juan Carlos 2010 War in Old Kingdom Egypt 2686 2125 BCE In Vidal Jordi ed Studies on War in the Ancient Near East Collected Essays on Military History Vol 372 Munster Ugarit Verlag pp 5 41 ISBN 978 3868350357 Moreno Garcia Juan Carlos 2013 The Territorial Administration of the Kingdom in the 3rd Millennium In Moreno Garcia Juan Carlos ed Ancient Egyptian administration Leiden Boston Brill pp 85 152 ISBN 978 90 04 24952 3 Moreno Garcia Juan Carlos 2015 Climatic change or sociopolitical transformation Reassessing late 3rd millennium BC in Egypt 2200 BC ein Klimasturz als Ursache fur den Zerfall der Alten Welt 7 Mitteldeutscher Archaologentag vom 23 bis 26 Oktober 2014 in Halle Saale 2200 BC a climatic breakdown as a cause for the collapse of the old world 7th Archaeological Conference of Central Germany October 23 26 2014 in Halle Saale Tagungen des Landesmuseums fur Vorgeschichte Halle Saale Vol 13 Halle Saale Landesamt fur Denkmalpflege und Archaologie Sachsen Anhalt Landesmuseum fur Vorgeschichte pp 1 16 ISBN 978 8 44 905585 0 Muhly James 1999 Metallurgy In Bard Kathryn A Blake Shubert Steven eds Encyclopedia of the Archeology of Ancient Egypt New York Routledge pp 628 634 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Murnane William J 1977 Ancient Egyptian Coregencies Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization 40 Chicago The Oriental Institute O Connor David 1992 The Status of Early Egyptian Temples An 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Ancient Egyptian administration Leiden Boston Brill pp 393 478 ISBN 978 90 04 24952 3 Stevenson Alice 2015 Pyramids in the Petrie In Stevenson Alice ed Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Characters and Collections London UCL Press pp 48 51 doi 10 2307 j ctt1g69z2n ISBN 9781910634356 JSTOR j ctt1g69z2n Strudwick Nigel C 2005 Texts from the Pyramid Age Writings from the Ancient World book 16 Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 978 1 58983 680 8 Tallet Pierre 2015 Argemi Bruno Tallet Pierre eds Les ports intermittents de la mer Rouge a l epoque pharaonique caracteristiques et chronologie Nehet revue numerique d egyptologie in French 3 Paris Sorbonne Universite Libre de Bruxelles 31 72 Textes des Pyramides MAFS Mission Archeologique Franco Suisse de Saqqara in French 18 August 2020 Tiradritti Francesco de Luca Araldo 1999 Egyptian Treasures from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo New York Harry Abrams ISBN 978 0810932760 Tyldesley Joyce 2019 The pharaohs London Quercus ISBN 978 1 52 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Waddell William Gillan 1971 Manetho Loeb Classical Library 350 Cambridge Massachusetts London Harvard University Press W Heinemann OCLC 6246102 Walters Art Museum 2020 Jubilee Vessel of Pepi I a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint ref duplicates default link Warburton David 2012 Architecture power and religion Hatshepsut Amun amp Karnak in context Beitrage zur Archaologie Vol 7 Munster Lit Verlag GmbH ISBN 978 3 64 390235 1 Weny Fragment Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum 2020 Wilkinson Richard H 2000 The Complete Temples of Ancient Egypt New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05100 9 Wright Mary Pardee Dennis 1988 Literary Sources for the History of Palestine and Syria Contacts between Egypt and Syro Palestine during the Old Kingdom The Biblical Archaeologist 51 3 Chicago The University of Chicago Press on behalf of The American Schools of Oriental Research 143 161 doi 10 2307 3210065 JSTOR 3210065 S2CID 163985913 Yurco Frank J 1999 Cult temples prior to the New Kingdom In Bard Kathryn A Blake Shubert Steven eds Encyclopedia of the Archeology of Ancient Egypt New York Routledge pp 239 242 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pepi I Meryre amp oldid 1213151752, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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