fbpx
Wikipedia

Pyramid of Neferirkare

The pyramid of Neferirkare (Egyptian: Bꜣ Nfr-ỉr-kꜣ-rꜥ "the Ba of Neferirkare"[5]) was built for the Fifth Dynasty pharaoh Neferirkare Kakai in the 25th century BC.[7][a] It was the tallest structure on the highest site at the necropolis of Abusir, found between Giza and Saqqara, and still towers over the necropolis. The pyramid is also significant because its excavation led to the discovery of the Abusir Papyri.

Pyramid of Neferirkare
Neferirkare Kakai
Coordinates29°53′42″N 31°12′09″E / 29.89500°N 31.20250°E / 29.89500; 31.20250
Ancient name

[1]
Bꜣ Nfr-ỉr-kꜣ-Rꜥ
Ba Nefer-ir-ka-Re
"Ba Neferirkare"
Alternatively translated as "Neferirkare takes form"[2]
ConstructedFifth Dynasty (c. 25th century BC)
TypeStep pyramid (originally)
True pyramid (converted)
MaterialLimestone[3]
Height52 metres (171 ft; 99 cu)[4]
(Step pyramid)
72.8 metres (239 ft; 139 cu)[5] (True pyramid, original)
Base72 metres (236 ft; 137 cu)[4] (Step pyramid)
105 metres (344 ft; 200 cu)[5] (True pyramid)
Volume257,250 m3 (336,470 cu yd)[6]
Slope76°[4] (Step pyramid)
54°30′[5] (True pyramid)
Location within Lower Egypt

The Fifth Dynasty marked the end of the great pyramid constructions during the Old Kingdom. Pyramids of the era were smaller and becoming more standardized, though intricate relief decoration also proliferated. Neferirkare's pyramid deviated from convention as it was originally built as a step pyramid: a design that had been antiquated after the Third Dynasty (26th or 27th century BC).[b] This was then encased in a second step pyramid with alterations intended to convert it into a true pyramid;[c] However, the pharaoh's death left the work to be completed by his successors. The remaining works were completed in haste, using cheaper building material.

Because of the circumstances, Neferirkare's monument lacked several basic elements of a pyramid complex: a valley temple, a causeway, and a cult pyramid. Instead, these were replaced by a small settlement of mudbrick houses south of the monument from where cult priests could conduct their daily activities, rather than the usual pyramid town near the valley temple. The discovery of the Abusir papyri in the 1890s is owed to this. Normally, the papyrus archives would have been contained in the pyramid town where their destruction would have been assured. The pyramid became part of a greater family cemetery. The monuments to Neferirkare's consort, Khentkaus II; and his sons, Neferefre and Nyuserre Ini, are found in the surrounds. Though their construction began under different rulers, all four of these monuments were completed during the reign of Nyuserre.

Location and excavation edit

 
1907 painting of the Abusir necropolis, by A. Bollacher and E. Decker, presented as it was in the Old Kingdom

The pyramid of Neferirkare is situated on the necropolis at Abusir, between Saqqara and the Giza Plateau.[18] Abusir assumed great import in the Fifth Dynasty after Userkaf, the first ruler, built his sun temple and, his successor, Sahure inaugurated a royal necropolis there with his funerary monument.[19][20] Sahure's successor,[20] his son Neferirkare, was the second ruler to be entombed in the necropolis.[21][22][23][24] The Egyptologist Jaromír Krejčí proposes a number of hypotheses for the position of Neferirkare's complex in relation to Sahure's complex: (1) that Neferirkare was motivated to distance himself from Sahure and thus chose to found a new cemetery and redesign the mortuary temple plan to differentiate it from Sahure's; (2) that geomorphological pressures – particularly the slope between Neferirkare's and Sahure's complexes – required Neferirkare to situate his complex elsewhere; (3) on the basis of the site being the highest point, Neferirkare may have selected it to ensure his complex dominated the surrounding area and; (4) that the site may have been intentionally selected to build the pyramid in line with Heliopolis.[25][d] The Abusir diagonal is a figurative line connecting the north-west corners of the pyramids of Neferirkare, Sahure and Neferefre. It is similar to the Giza axis, which connects the south-east corners of the Giza pyramids, and converges with the Abusir diagonal to a point in Heliopolis.[28][32]

 
Neferirkare's pyramid with original step pyramid clearly visible underneath the rubble exterior

The location of the complex affected the construction process. The Egyptologist Miroslav Bárta said the location was chosen partly because of its relation to the administrative capital[e] of the Old Kingdom, Inbu-Hedj[f] known today as Memphis.[34][35] Providing that the location of ancient Memphis is accurately known, the Abusir necropolis would have been no further than 4 km (2.5 mi) from the city centre.[6] The benefit of the site being close to the city was the increased access to resources and manpower.[36] South-west of Abusir, workers could exploit a limestone quarry to gather resources for the manufacture of masonry blocks used in the construction of the pyramid. The limestone there was particularly easy to quarry considering that gravel, sand and tafl layers sandwiched the limestone into thin segments of between 0.60 m (2.0 ft) and 0.80 m (2 ft 7 in) thick making it easier to dislodge from its matrix.[37]

In 1838, John Shae Perring, an engineer working under Colonel Howard Vyse,[38] cleared the entrances to the pyramids of Sahure, Neferirkare and Nyuserre.[39] Five years later, the Egyptologist Karl Richard Lepsius, sponsored by King Frederick William IV of Prussia,[40][41] explored the Abusir necropolis and catalogued Neferirkare's pyramid as XXI.[39] It was Lepsius who proposed the theory that the accretion layer method[g] of construction was applied to the pyramids of the Fifth and Sixth Dynasty.[45] One important development was the discovery of the Abusir papyri, found in the temple of Neferirkare during illicit excavations in 1893.[46] In 1902–1908, the Egyptologist Ludwig Borchardt, working for the Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft or German Oriental Society, resurveyed those same pyramids and had their adjoining temples and causeways excavated.[39][47] Borchardt's was the first, and only other, major expedition carried out at the Abusir necropolis,[47] and contributed significantly to archaeological investigation at the site.[48] His findings were published in Das Grabdenkmal des Königs Nefer-Ir-Ke-Re (1909).[49][50] The Czech Institute of Egyptology has had a long-term excavation project going at the site since the 1960s.[47][51]

Mortuary complex edit

 
Three-dimensional model of Neferirkare's mortuary complex

Layout edit

Pyramid construction techniques underwent a transition in the Fifth Dynasty.[52] The monumentality of the pyramids diminished, the design of mortuary temples changed, and the substructure of the pyramid became standardized.[52][53] By contrast, relief decoration proliferated[52] and the temples were enriched with greater storeroom complexes.[53]

These two conceptual changes had developed by the time of Sahure's reign at the latest. Sahure's mortuary complex indicates that symbolic expression through decoration became favoured over sheer magnitude. For example, Fourth Dynasty pharaoh Khufu's complex had a total of 100 linear metres (330 linear feet) reserved for decoration, while Sahure's temple had around 370 linear metres (1,200 linear feet) dedicated to relief decorations.[54] Bárta identifies that storage space in mortuary temples expanded consistently from Neferirkare's reign onwards.[55] This was a result of the combined centralization of administrative focus onto the funerary cult, the increase in the numbers of priests and officials involved in the maintenance of the cult, and the increase in their revenues.[56][57] The discovery of considerable remains of stone vessels – mostly broken or otherwise incomplete – in the pyramid temples of Sahure, Neferirkare, and Neferefre bears testament to this development.[58]

Old Kingdom mortuary complexes consisted of five essential components: (1) a valley temple; (2) a causeway; (3) a mortuary temple; (4) a cult pyramid; and (5) the main pyramid.[35] Neferirkare's mortuary complex had only two of these basic elements: a mortuary temple which had been hastily constructed from cheap mudbrick and wood;[59][60][61] and the largest main pyramid at the site.[3] The valley temple and causeway that were originally intended for Neferirkare's monument were co-opted by Nyuserre for his own mortuary complex.[62] Conversely, a cult pyramid[h] never entered construction, as a consequence of the rush to complete the monument upon Neferirkare's death.[64] Its replacement was a small settlement and lodgings constructed from mudbrick to the south of the complex where the priests would live.[64] An enormous brick enclosure wall was built around the perimeter of the pyramid and mortuary temple to complete Neferirkare's funerary monument.[64]

Main pyramid edit

The monument was intended as a step pyramid, an unusual choice for a Fifth Dynasty king, given that the era of step pyramids ended with the Third Dynasty (26th or 27th century BC) centuries prior, depending on the scholar and source.[2][65][66][67] The reasoning behind this choice is not understood.[5][68] The Egyptologist Miroslav Verner considers a speculative connection between the Turin Canon's listing him "as the founder of a new dynasty"[i] and the original project, though he also considers the possibility of religious reasons and power politics as well.[68] The first build contained six carefully laid steps[60][j] of high quality limestone blocks[77][3] reaching a height of 52 m (171 ft; 99 cu).[65] A white limestone casing was to be applied to the structure,[77] but after minimal work on this was completed – extending only to the first step[65] – the pyramid was redesigned to form a "true pyramid".[60][65] Verner describes the architecture of a Fifth Dynasty pyramid:

 
The three stages of the pyramid's construction. Light grey: original six step core of the planned step pyramid. Dark grey: extension project with two extra steps. Beige: planned granite casing. Internally, the corridor and three layer limestone gable roof of the ante- and burial- chamber are also depicted.

The outer face of the first step of the pyramid core was formed by a frame made of huge blocks of dark grey limestone up to 5 m long and well bound together. Similarly, there was an inner frame built of smaller blocks, and making up the walls of the rectangular trench destined for the underground chambers of the tomb. Between the two frames pieces of poor-quality limestone had been packed, sometimes "dry" and sometimes stuck together with clay mortar and sand. ... The core was indeed modelled into steps, but these were built in horizontal layers and only the stone blocks making up the outer surface were of high quality and well joined together. The inner part of the core was filled up with only partially joined rough stones of varying quality and size.[78]

To convert the step into a genuine pyramid, the whole structure was extended outwards by about 10 m (33 ft; 19 cu) and raised a further two steps in height.[77][79] This expansion project was completed in rough order with small stone fragments intended to be cased in red granite.[60][77] The premature death of the king halted the project after only the lowest level(s) of the casing had been completed.[60][65][77] The resultant base of the structure measured 105 m (344 ft; 200 cu) on each side,[60] and, had the project been completed, the pyramid would have reached approximately 72 m (236 ft; 137 cu) in height with an inclination from base to tip of about 54°.[65] Despite the incompleteness of the structure, the pyramid – which is of comparable size to Menkaure's pyramid at Giza – dominates its surrounds as a result of the position of its site standing on a hill some 33 m (108 ft) above the Nile delta.[2][65][80]

Substructure edit

 
Substructure of Neferirkare's pyramid with limestone beams

The descending corridor near the middle of the north face of the pyramid serves as the entry into the substructure of Neferirkare's pyramid. The corridor begins approximately 2 m (6 ft 7 in) above ground level and ends at a similar depth below ground level.[59] It has proportions of 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in) height and 1.27 m (4 ft 2 in) width.[81] It is reinforced at the entrance and exit points with granite casing.[59] The corridor breaks out into a vestibule leading to a longer corridor which is guarded by a portcullis.[59] This second corridor has two turns, but maintains a generally eastward direction and ends in an antechamber offset from the burial chamber.[59] The roof of the corridor is unique: the flat roof has a second gabled roof made of limestone on top of it which itself has a third roof made from a layer of reeds.[59]

The burial and ante chamber's ceilings were constructed with three gabled layers of limestone. The beams disperse weight from the superstructure onto either side of the passageway, preventing collapse.[60][59] Thieves have ransacked the chambers of its limestone making it impossible to properly reconstruct,[59] though some details can still be discerned. Namely, that (1) both rooms were oriented along an east–west axis, (2) both chambers were the same width; the antechamber was shorter of the two, and (3) both chambers had the same style roof, and are missing one layer of limestone.[59]

Overall, the substructure is badly damaged: the collapse of a layer of the limestone beams has covered the burial chamber.[60] No trace of the mummy, sarcophagus, or any burial equipment has been found inside.[59][60] The severity of the damage to the substructure prevents further excavation.[5]

Mortuary temple edit

 
Mortuary temple of Neferirkare's pyramid

The mortuary temple is located at the base of the pyramid's Eastern face.[65] It is larger than is typical for the period.[82] Archaeological evidence suggests that it was unfinished at Neferirkare's death, and was completed by Neferefre and Nyuserre.[83] For example, while the inner temple and statue niches were built from stone,[60][82] much of the rest of the temple, including the court and entrance hall, was apparently hastily completed using cheap mudbrick and wood.[60][61] This left large portions of the mortuary temple susceptible to erosion from rain and wind, where stone would have given it significant durability.[84] The site was less aesthetically impressive, although its basic layout and features remained roughly analogous to Sahure's temple.[85] Its enlarged size can be attributed to a design decision to build the complex without a valley temple or a causeway.[82] Instead, the causeway and temple, whose foundations had been constructed, were diverted to Nyuserre's complex.[60][85]

 
Layout of Neferirkare's mortuary temple. In order: (1) entry portico; (2) entry hall; (3) courtyard with (4) wooden columns; (5) transverse corridor; (6) storerooms, notable for the Abusir papyri found there; (7) inner temple; (8) columned corridor leading to (9) a passageway into the main courtyard.

The temple was entered through the columned portico, and columned entrance hall which terminates into a large columned courtyard.[86] The columns of the hall and courtyard are made from wood arranged into the form of lotus stalks and buds.[60] The courtyard is adorned with thirty-seven such columns; these columns are asymmetrically positioned.[87] The archaeologist Herbert Ricke hypothesized that columns near the altar may have been damaged by fire and removed. A papyrus fragment from the temple archives corroborates this story.[87] A low stepped ramp in the courtyard's west leads to a transverse (north–south) corridor which leads south into storerooms and north into another smaller corridor containing six wooden columns through which the open courtyard of the main pyramid can be accessed.[86] It is in the southern storerooms that the Abusir papyri were discovered by graverobbers in the 1890s.[82] Beyond the storerooms is a gate which has another access point to the main pyramid's courtyard, and through which a second excavated south-western gate leads to Khentkaus II's complex.[64] Finally, traversing across the corridor leads directly into the inner sanctuary or temple.[60][82]

 
A lotus shaped papyrus column similar to those found in the mortuary temple

The surviving reliefs are fragmentary. Of the preserved materials, one particular block stands out as vitally important in reconstructing the genealogy of the royal family at this time. A limestone block, discovered in the 1930s by the Egyptologist Édouard Ghazouli, depicts Neferirkare with his consort, Khentkaus II, and eldest son, Neferefre.[82] It was not found at the site of the pyramid, but as a part of a house in the village of Abusir.[28]

The Abusir papyri document details concerning Neferirkare's mortuary temple at Abusir. One testimony from the papyri is that five statues were housed in the niches of the central chapel.[60] The central statue depicted Neferirkare as the deity Osiris, whereas the two outermost statues portrayed him as the king of Upper and Lower Egypt respectively.[88] The papyri also record the existence of at least four funerary boats at Abusir. Two boats are located in sealed rooms while the other two are to the north and south of the pyramid itself. The southern boat was discovered when Verner unearthed the funerary boat during excavations.[89]

Valley temple, causeway and cult pyramid edit

At the time of Neferirkare's death, only the foundations of the valley temple and two-thirds of the causeway to the mortuary temple had been laid.[60][90] When Nyuserre took over the site, he had the causeway diverted from its original destination to his own mortuary temple.[91] As such, the causeway travels in one direction for more than half its distance, then bends away to another for the remainder of its length.[91][92]

Neferirkare's monument has no cult pyramid.[64] Rather, the cult pyramid was replaced with a small settlement, called Ba Kakai,[k] of mudbrick lodgings for priests, south of the monument.[64][93]

The omission of these "essential"[35] elements had one significant impact.[85] Under normal circumstances, the priests tending to the deceased pharaoh's funerary cult would have lived in a 'pyramid town' built in the vicinity of the valley temple, situated on the Abusir Lake.[64][94][95] The daily records of the administration would have had their residence in the town with the priests.[85] Instead, as a result of circumstance, these documents were instead kept inside the mortuary temple.[64] This has allowed their archives to be preserved, as they would have otherwise long ago disintegrated, buried under the mud.[85] The siting of the settlement by the complex also allowed small restorative works to be conducted.[93]

Later history edit

Nyuserre was the last king to build his funerary monument at Abusir; his successors Menkauhor and Djedkare Isesi chose sites elsewhere,[47][96][97] and Abusir ceased to be the royal necropolis.[98][93] But the site was not abandoned. The Abusir Papyri demonstrate that funerary cults remained active at Abusir at least until the reign of Pepi II at the end of the Sixth Dynasty.[96] Priests who served Neferirkare include Kaemnefret, priest of Neferirkare's pyramid and sun temple and of Sahure's pyramid;[99] Nimaatptah, priest in the pyramid and sun temple of Neferirkare;[100] Kuyemsnewy and Kamesenu,[l] priests of the cults of Sahure, Neferirkare, and Nyuserre;[102][101] Nimaatsed, priest of the pyramids of Neferirkare, Neferefre, and Nyuserre;[103] Khabauptah, priest of Sahure, Neferirkare, Neferefre, and Nyuserre Ini.[104]

Verner believes that royal cultic activities ceased by the First Intermediate Period.[47] Málek notes that some limited evidence for the persistence of the cults of Neferirkare and Nyuserre throughout the Herakleopolitan Period exists, though this means Nyuserre's cult operated continuously until at least the Twelfth Dynasty.[105] Professor Antonio Morales believes funerary cults may have continued beyond the Old Kingdom,[106] in particular the cult of Nyuserre appears to have survived both in its official form and in popular public veneration until the early Middle Kingdom,[107] and some scant evidence in the form of two statues[m] dated to the Middle Kingdom may suggest that Neferirkare's cult was active during that period as well.[109]

The necropoleis near Memphis, specifically those at Saqqara and Abusir, were used extensively during the Twenty-Sixth Dynasty (c. 664–525 BC).[110] Considerable quantities of stone were required to build these tombs, and this was very probably sourced from the Old Kingdom pyramids, thereby inflicting further damage to them.[111] Graves estimated to be from the fifth century BC have been discovered in the vicinity of Neferirkare's mortuary temple. One yellow calcite gravestone, discovered by Borchardt, bears an Aramaic inscription: "(Belonging) to Nsnw, the daughter of Paḥnûm" alternatively read as "(Belonging) to Nesneu, the daughter of Tapakhnum".[112] A second inscription, found by Verner on a limestone block in the mortuary temple bears the inscription: "Mannu-ki-na'an son of Šewa". The dating of this second inscription is uncertain, but may plausibly be from the same period.[113]

Family cemetery edit

Pyramid of Khentkhaus II edit

 
Remains of Khentkaus II's pyramid

Borchardt initially thought a ruined structure on the southern side of Neferirkare's complex to be an unimportant mastaba, and surveyed it only briefly.[114] In the 1970s, Verner's Czech team identified it as the pyramid tomb of Neferirkare's consort, Khentkaus II.[114][115] Perring had previously discovered griffonage on a limestone block from the site of Neferirkare's tomb which mentioned "the King's wife Khentkawes".[115] She also appeared in a relief of the royal family on another limestone block on which Neferirkare's son, Neferefre, also appears.[115]

Khentkhaus's pyramid was built in two phases.[116] The first must have begun during Neferirkare's reign, as is evidenced by the inscription Perring discovered. The project was halted around the tenth year of Neferirkare's reign.[114] Verner suggested Neferirkare's untimely death interrupted the project and that it was finished during Nyuserre's reign.[114] The word "mother" appears inscribed above "wife" on another block indicating that the relationship between Khentkaus II and Nyuserre was as mother and son.[116][114] The completed structure has a square base measuring 25 m (82 ft; 48 cu) across each side, and with a slope of 52° would stand 17 m (56 ft; 32 cu) tall were it not in ruins. Her mortuary complex also includes a satellite pyramid, a courtyard, and an extended mortuary temple.[116]

Unfinished pyramid (Neferefre) edit

Located directly south-west[46] of Neferirkare's monument, and just to the west of Khentkaus II's, Neferefre's unfinished pyramid is another member of the family cemetery born around Neferirkare's tomb.[85] Built on the Abusir diagonal, Neferefre's pyramid was never completed owing to the unexpectedly early death of the pharaoh.[116][n] Originally built with a base length of 65 m (213 ft; 124 cu), slightly shorter than that of Sahure's pyramid, and with only a single step completed, the plan had to be altered to accommodate the remains of the king.[118] For this reason, the pyramid was hastily converted into a squared mastaba[75][117][119] and completed with the application of limestone facing at a slope of 78° and a clay and desert stone capping.[75] The accompanying mortuary temple is believed to have been built promptly following Neferefre's death.[75] The main features of the temple were a hypostyle hall, two large wooden boats, and a number of broken statues found in rooms near the aforementioned hall.[46]

Nyuserre's pyramid edit

 
Pyramids of Nyuserre Ini (left) and Neferirkare (right)

Nyuserre joined the family cemetery with his mortuary complex,[120] and was the last king to be interred in the Abusir necropolis.[98] Upon taking the throne, Nyuserre undertook to complete the three unfinished monuments of his closest family members: his father, Neferirkare; his mother, Khentkaus II; and his brother, Neferefre. The costs of this project burdened the construction of his own monument, which manifested itself in the siting of the complex.[120]

Instead of being seated on the Abusir-Heliopolis axis, Nyuserre's complex is nestled between Neferirkare's and Sahure's pyramids.[62][121][122] Respecting the axis would have meant placing the complex south-west of Neferefre's unfinished pyramid, and far from the Nile valley. The expense would have been unreasonable.[121]

The pyramid, located north-east of Neferirkare's pyramid,[21] stands around 52 m (171 ft; 99 cu) tall with a base length of about 79 m (259 ft; 151 cu).[92] The causeway connecting the valley temple to the mortuary complex was originally intended for Neferirkare's pyramid, but Nyuserre had these diverted, to serve his monument.[62][85]

Abusir papyri edit

 
Abusir papyrus documenting daily activities at Neferirkare's pyramid

The monument's significance comes from the circumstances of its construction, and the contents of the Abusir papyri archives.[3][123][124] The Egyptologist Nicolas Grimal says that "this was the most important known collection of papyri from the Old Kingdom until the 1982 expedition of the Egyptological Institute of the University of Prague discovered an even richer cache in a storeroom of the nearby mortuary temple of Neferefre."[124]

The first fragments of the Abusir papyri were discovered by illicit diggers in 1893,[46] and sold and distributed around the world in the antiquities market.[125] Later, Borchardt discovered additional fragments while excavating in the same area.[126] The fragments were found to be written in hieratic; a cursive form of hieroglyphics.[75] Other papyri found in Neferirkare's tomb were comprehensively studied and published by the Egyptologist Paule Posener-Kriéger.[75][127]

The papyri records span the period between the reign of Djedkare Isesi through to the reign of Pepi II.[124] They recount all aspects of the management of the funerary cult of the king including the daily activities of priests, lists of offerings, letters, and inventory checks of the temple.[46][127][128] Importantly, the papyri connect the larger picture of the interplay between the mortuary temple, sun temple and other institutions.[127] For example, the fragmentary evidence of the papyri indicates that goods for Neferirkare's funerary cult were transported by ship to the pyramid complex of the king.[129] The full extent of the records of the papyri found at Abusir is unknown as more recent findings remain unpublished.[46]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Proposed dates for Neferirkare Kakai's reign: c. 2492–2482 BC,[2][7] c. 2477–2467 BC,[8] c. 2475–2455 BC,[9] c. 2446–2438 BC,[10] c. 2446–2426 BC,[11] c. 2373–2363 BC.[12]
  2. ^ Proposed dates for the Third Dynasty: c. 2700–2625 BC,[13] c. 2700–2600 BC,[14] c. 2687–2632 BC,[2] c. 2686–2613 BC,[9] c. 2680–2640 BC,[15] c. 2650–2575 BC,[11] c. 2649–2575 BC,[10] c. 2584–2520[16]
  3. ^ The term "true pyramid" refers to pyramids which have the geometric shape of a pyramid. That is, they have a square base with four triangular faces converging to a single point at the apex.[17]
  4. ^ Heliopolis, or Iunu, was a major city of ancient Egypt.[26] The temple of Heliopolis housed the sacred stone of Benben[27] – the primeval hill which arose from the primordial waters of Nu.[28] The temple was also the location of the cult of the sun god,[29] Atum.[30] The Egyptologist Mark Lehner proposes that the pyramids relation to the temple of Heliopolis is evidence in support of the pyramid being a sun symbol.[31]
  5. ^ Administrative centres in the early Old Kingdom period generally consisted of officials, personnel and some craftsmen. Memphis was the largest of these centres, and housed the royal court of the pharaoh during the Old Kingdom. The exact extent of the spatial organization of Memphis in the Old Kingdom remains unknown, though it was most probably not densely populated or walled like its contemporaries such as Sumerian cities. Most of the population of Egypt lived as peasant farmers in rural communities.[33]
  6. ^ transl. inbw-ḥḏ[34]
  7. ^ A solid central limestone core is constructed[42] and encased in successive layers of small stone blocks laid at an inwards slant.[42][43] As a result of the inwards tilt of each layer, the pyramid had a slope of about 74°.[42] These blocks were roughly dressed with the exception of the outer edge of each layer which was smoothed to flatten the surface.[43] This was the method of construction applied to Third Dynasty step pyramids.[42][43][44]
  8. ^ The purpose of the cult pyramid remains unclear, though, it may have had some relation to the pharaoh's Ka.[63]
  9. ^ The division of the Turin Canon into dynasties is a contested topic. The Egyptologist Jaromír Málek holds the conviction that the divisions in kinglists coincide with the transfer of the royal residence and believes that the introduction of dynasties, as used in modern study, began with Manetho.[69] Similarly, the Egyptologist Stephan Seidlmayer, considers the break in the Turin Canon at the end of the Eighth Dynasty to represent the relocation of the royal residence from Memphis to Herakleopolis.[70] The Egyptologist John Baines does not accept Málek's explanation for these features, and instead believes the list is divided into dynasties with totals given at the end of each, though only a few such divisions have survived.[71] Similarly, Professor John Van Seters views the breaks in the canon as divisions between dynasties, but in contrast, says that the criterion for these divisions remains unknown. He speculates that the pattern of dynasties may have been taken from the nine divine kings of the Greater and Lesser Enneads.[72] The Egyptologist Ian Shaw believes the Turin Canon gives some credibility to Manetho's division of dynasties, but considers the king lists to be a form of ancestor worship and not a historical record.[73]
  10. ^ It was originally believed that the pyramid was built by layering small rectangular stone blocks – which measured up to two feet (six-tenths of a metre) in length – and were angled inwards towards a solid core.[45] This theory was proposed initially by Richard Lepsius, an Egyptologist who visited the site briefly in the 1830s, and propagated by the archaeologist Ludwig Borchardt, who conducted excavations in Egypt, including at Neferirkare's pyramid, at the start of the 20th century, after discovering what he believed were accretion layers on "internal faces" of the pyramids at Abusir.[45][74] It was challenged by Vito Maragioglio and Celeste Rinaldi who conducted careful examinations of pyramidal architecture in the Old Kingdom and failed to find blocks lying on a slant in any Fourth or Fifth Dynasty pyramid they studied. Rather, they found that in each instance these blocks were always set horizontally. This lead them to reject the accretion layer hypothesis.[45] The theory was effectively disproven by the Czech excavation team at Abusir led by the Egyptologist Miroslav Verner.[45][74] The unfinished nature of Neferefre's monument allowed Verner's team to test Lepsius and Borchardt's hypothesis; if the pyramid had been constructed as suggested, then underneath the clay and desert stone capping, the pyramid's structure would have resembled the layers of an onion.[75] Instead the excavators found that the pyramid of Neferefre and pyramid of Neferirkare consisted of: an outer retaining wall of four or five courses of large horizontally layered stone blocks;[75] an inner pit of small horizontally layered roughly dressed limestone blocks;[76] with the gap between the two frames filled with a mash of crude limestone chunks, mortar and sand;[75][76] and not in the slanted fashion proposed by the accretion layer theory.[45][74][75]
  11. ^ transl. Bʒ–Kʒ–kʒi[93]
  12. ^ Kʒ-m-śn.w[101]
  13. ^ The statues are of a Sekhemet-hetep[ty] (transl. Sḫmt–ḥtp[ty]) from the Twelfth Dynasty. The first is notable for having the formula [n]r–pr ny–swt–bity Nfr–ir–kʒ–rˁ mʒˁ–ḫrw, meaning "of the temple of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Neferirkare, true of voice". The second statue was found at Abusir, providing corroborating evidence, but does not have a reference to the mortuary temple.[108]
  14. ^ The exact duration of Neferefre's reign remains undetermined, but the archaeological evidence and state of the unfinished pyramid suggest that his reign lasted no longer than at most three years, though most probably not more than two.[117]

References edit

  1. ^ Borchardt 1909, p. 4.
  2. ^ a b c d e Altenmüller 2001, p. 598.
  3. ^ a b c d Verner 2001e, p. 291.
  4. ^ a b c Verner 2001e, p. 463.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Arnold 2003, p. 160.
  6. ^ a b Bárta 2005, p. 180.
  7. ^ a b Verner 2001c, p. 589.
  8. ^ Clayton 1994, p. 30.
  9. ^ a b Shaw 2003, p. 482.
  10. ^ a b Allen et al. 1999, p. xx.
  11. ^ a b Lehner 2008, p. 8.
  12. ^ Dodson & Hilton 2004, p. 288.
  13. ^ Grimal 1992, p. 389.
  14. ^ Arnold 2003, p. 265.
  15. ^ Verner 2001e, p. 473.
  16. ^ Dodson & Hilton 2004, p. 287.
  17. ^ Verner 2001d, pp. 87, 89.
  18. ^ Arnold 2003, p. 2.
  19. ^ Verner 2001b, p. 5.
  20. ^ a b Bárta 2017, p. 6.
  21. ^ a b Verner 2001b, p. 6.
  22. ^ Verner 2001e, p. 302.
  23. ^ Dodson 2016, p. 27.
  24. ^ Bárta 2015, Abusir in the Third Millennium BC.
  25. ^ Krejčí 2000, pp. 475–477.
  26. ^ Allen 2001, p. 88.
  27. ^ Lehner 2008, p. 32.
  28. ^ a b c Verner 1994, p. 135.
  29. ^ Verner 2001e, p. 34.
  30. ^ Myśliwiec 2001, p. 158.
  31. ^ Lehner 2008, p. 34.
  32. ^ Isler 2001, p. 201.
  33. ^ Bard 2015, p. 138.
  34. ^ a b Jefferys 2001, p. 373.
  35. ^ a b c Bárta 2005, p. 178.
  36. ^ Bárta 2005, p. 179.
  37. ^ Krejčí 2000, p. 473.
  38. ^ Lehner 2008, p. 50.
  39. ^ a b c Edwards 1999, p. 97.
  40. ^ Lehner 2008, p. 54.
  41. ^ Peck 2001, p. 289.
  42. ^ a b c d Lehner 1999, p. 778.
  43. ^ a b c Sampsell 2000, Vol 11, No. 3 the Ostracon.
  44. ^ Isler 2001, p. 96.
  45. ^ a b c d e f Sampsell 2000, Vol 11, No. 3 The Ostracon.
  46. ^ a b c d e f Edwards 1999, p. 98.
  47. ^ a b c d e Verner 2001b, p. 7.
  48. ^ Verner 1994, pp. 105, 215–217.
  49. ^ Verner 1994, p. 216.
  50. ^ Borchardt 1909, Titelblatt & Inhaltsverzeichnis.
  51. ^ Krejčí 2015, Térenní projekty: Abúsír.
  52. ^ a b c Verner 2001d, p. 90.
  53. ^ a b Bárta 2005, p. 185.
  54. ^ Bárta 2005, pp. 183–185.
  55. ^ Bárta 2005, p. 186.
  56. ^ Bárta 2005, pp. 185–188.
  57. ^ Loprieno 1999, p. 41.
  58. ^ Allen et al. 1999, p. 125.
  59. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Verner 2001e, p. 293.
  60. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Lehner 2008, p. 144.
  61. ^ a b Verner 1994, pp. 77–79.
  62. ^ a b c Lehner 2008, p. 148.
  63. ^ Lehner 2008, p. 18.
  64. ^ a b c d e f g h Verner 2001e, p. 296.
  65. ^ a b c d e f g h Verner 1994, p. 77.
  66. ^ Verner 2002, p. 52.
  67. ^ Kahl 2001, p. 591.
  68. ^ a b Verner 2001e, p. 297.
  69. ^ Málek 2003, pp. 84, 103–104.
  70. ^ Seidlmayer 2003, p. 108.
  71. ^ Baines 2007, p. 198.
  72. ^ Seters 1997, pp. 135–136.
  73. ^ Shaw 2003, pp. 7–8.
  74. ^ a b c Verner 2002, pp. 50–52.
  75. ^ a b c d e f g h i Lehner 2008, p. 147.
  76. ^ a b Verner 2014, Neferefre's (unfinished) pyramid.
  77. ^ a b c d e Verner 2014, Neferirkare's pyramid.
  78. ^ Verner 1994, pp. 139–140.
  79. ^ Verner 1994, pp. 76–77.
  80. ^ Verner 2002, p. 50.
  81. ^ Lehner 2008, p. 143.
  82. ^ a b c d e f Verner 2001e, p. 294.
  83. ^ Verner 1994, pp. 77–78.
  84. ^ Bareš 2000, p. 3.
  85. ^ a b c d e f g Verner 1994, p. 79.
  86. ^ a b Verner 2001e, pp. 294–295.
  87. ^ a b Verner 2001e, p. 295.
  88. ^ Allen et al. 1999, p. 97.
  89. ^ Altenmüller 2002, p. 270.
  90. ^ Verner 2001e, p. 318.
  91. ^ a b Verner 1994, pp. 81–82.
  92. ^ a b Lehner 2008, p. 149.
  93. ^ a b c d Krejčí 2000, p. 483.
  94. ^ Lehner 2008, pp. 142, 144–145.
  95. ^ Edwards 1975, p. 186.
  96. ^ a b Goelet 1999, p. 87.
  97. ^ Verner 1994, pp. 79–80, 86.
  98. ^ a b Verner 1994, p. 86.
  99. ^ Mariette 1889, pp. 242–249, d. 23.
  100. ^ Mariette 1889, p. 250, d. 24.
  101. ^ a b Sethe 1933, p. 175.
  102. ^ Hayes 1990, pp. 104–106.
  103. ^ Mariette 1889, p. 329, d. 56.
  104. ^ Mariette 1889, pp. 294–295.
  105. ^ Málek 2000, pp. 245–246, 248.
  106. ^ Morales 2006, pp. 312–313.
  107. ^ Morales 2006, p. 314.
  108. ^ Málek 2000, p. 249.
  109. ^ Morales 2006, p. 313.
  110. ^ Dušek & Mynářová 2012, pp. 53, 65.
  111. ^ Bareš 2000, p. 13.
  112. ^ Dušek & Mynářová 2012, p. 55.
  113. ^ Dušek & Mynářová 2012, p. 67.
  114. ^ a b c d e Verner 2002, p. 54.
  115. ^ a b c Lehner 2008, p. 145.
  116. ^ a b c d Lehner 2008, p. 146.
  117. ^ a b Verner 2001a, p. 400.
  118. ^ Lehner 2008, pp. 146–147.
  119. ^ Verner 1994, p. 138.
  120. ^ a b Verner 1994, pp. 79–80.
  121. ^ a b Verner 1994, p. 80.
  122. ^ Verner 2001e, p. 303.
  123. ^ Lehner 2008, pp. 144–145.
  124. ^ a b c Grimal 1992, p. 77.
  125. ^ Davies & Friedman 1998, pp. 89–90.
  126. ^ Strudwick 2005, pp. 39–40.
  127. ^ a b c Strudwick 2005, p. 40.
  128. ^ Allen et al. 1999, p. 7.
  129. ^ Krejčí 2000, p. 472.

Sources edit

  • Allen, James; Allen, Susan; Anderson, Julie; et al. (1999). Egyptian Art in the Age of the Pyramids. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 978-0-8109-6543-0. OCLC 41431623.
  • Allen, James P. (2001). "Heliopolis". In Redford, Donald B. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, Volume 2. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 88–89. ISBN 978-0-19-510234-5.
  • Altenmüller, 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.
  • Altenmüller, Hartwig (2002). "Funerary Boats and Boat Pits of the Old Kingdom". In Coppens, Filip (ed.). Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2001 (PDF). Vol. 70. Prague: Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Oriental Institute. pp. 269–290. ISSN 0044-8699. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Arnold, Dieter (2003). The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egyptian Architecture. London: I.B Tauris & Co Ltd. ISBN 978-1-86064-465-8.
  • Baines, John (2007). Visual and Written Culture in Ancient Egypt. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-815250-7.
  • Bard, Kathryn (2015). An Introduction to the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt. Chicester: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-118-89611-2.
  • Bareš, Ladislav (2000). "The destruction of the monuments at the necropolis of Abusir". In Bárta, Miroslav; Krejčí, Jaromír (eds.). Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2000. Prague: Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic – Oriental Institute. pp. 1–16. ISBN 978-80-85425-39-0.
  • Bárta, Miroslav (2005). (PDF). Cambridge Archaeological Journal. Cambridge. 15 (2): 177–191. doi:10.1017/s0959774305000090. S2CID 161629772. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-02-28.
  • Bárta, Miroslav (2015). "Abusir in the Third Millennium BC". CEGU FF. Český egyptologický ústav. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  • Bárta, Miroslav (2017). "Radjedef to the Eighth Dynasty". UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology.
  • Borchardt, Ludwig (1909). "Das Grabdenkmal des Königs Nefer-Ir-Ke-Re". Ausgrabungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft in Abusir. Ausgrabungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft in Abusir; 5: Wissenschaftliche Veröffentlichungen der Deutschen Orient-Gesellschaft; 11 (in German). Leipzig: Hinrichs. doi:10.11588/diglit.30508.
  • Clayton, Peter A. (1994). Chronicle of the Pharaohs. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-05074-3.
  • Davies, William V.; Friedman, Renée F. (1998). Egypt Uncovered. New York: Stewart, Tabori & Chang. ISBN 978-1-55670-818-3.
  • Dodson, Aidan (2016). The Royal Tombs of Ancient Egypt. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-4738-2159-0.
  • Dodson, Aidan; Hilton, Dyan (2004). The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-05128-3.
  • Dušek, Jan; Mynářová, Jana (2012). "Phoenician and Aramaic Inscriptions from Abusir". In Botta, Alejandro (ed.). In the Shadow of Bezalel. Aramaic, Biblical, and Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honour of Bezalel Porten. Culture and History of the Ancient Near East. Vol. 60. Leiden: Brill. pp. 53–69. ISBN 978-90-04-24083-4.
  • Edwards, Iorwerth (1975). The pyramids of Egypt. Baltimore: Harmondsworth. ISBN 978-0-14-020168-0.
  • Edwards, Iorwerth (1999). "Abusir". In Bard, Kathryn (ed.). Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt. London; New York: Routledge. pp. 97–99. ISBN 978-0-203-98283-9.
  • Goelet, Ogden (1999). "Abu Ghurab/Abusir after the 5th Dynasty". In Bard, Kathryn (ed.). Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt. London; New York: Routledge. p. 87. ISBN 978-0-203-98283-9.
  • Grimal, Nicolas (1992). A History of Ancient Egypt. Translated by Ian Shaw. Oxford: Blackwell publishing. ISBN 978-0-631-19396-8.
  • Hayes, William C. (1990) [1953]. 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 233920917.
  • Isler, Martin (2001). Sticks, Stones, and Shadows: Building the Egyptian Pyramids. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3342-3.
  • Jefferys, David (2001). "Memphis". In Redford, Donald B. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, Volume 2. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 373–376. ISBN 978-0-19-510234-5.
  • Kahl, Jochem (2001). "Old Kingdom: Third Dynasty". In Redford, Donald B. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, Volume 2. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 591–593. ISBN 978-0-19-510234-5.
  • Krejčí, Jaromír (2000). "The origins and development of the royal necropolis at Abusir in the Old Kingdom". In Bárta, Miroslav; Krejčí, Jaromír (eds.). Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2000. Prague: Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic – Oriental Institute. pp. 467–484. ISBN 978-80-85425-39-0.
  • Krejčí, Jaromír (2015). "Abúsír". CEGU FF (in Czech). Český egyptologický ústav. Retrieved 21 January 2018.
  • Lehner, Mark (1999). "pyramids (Old Kingdom), construction of". In Bard, Kathryn (ed.). Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt. London; New York: Routledge. pp. 778–786. ISBN 978-0-203-98283-9.
  • Lehner, Mark (2008). The Complete Pyramids. New York: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-28547-3.
  • Loprieno, Antonio (1999). "Old Kingdom, overview". In Bard, Kathryn (ed.). Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt. London; New York: Routledge. pp. 38–44. ISBN 978-0-203-98283-9.
  • Málek, Jaromír (2000). "Old Kingdom rulers as "local saints" in the Memphite area during the Old Kingdom". In Bárta, Miroslav; Krejčí, Jaromír (eds.). Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2000. Prague: Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic – Oriental Institute. pp. 241–258. ISBN 978-80-85425-39-0.
  • Málek, Jaromír (2003). "The Old Kingdom (c. 2686–2160 BC)". In Shaw, Ian (ed.). The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 83–107. ISBN 978-0-19-815034-3.
  • Mariette, Auguste (1889). Maspero, Gaston (ed.). Les Mastabas de l'Ancien Empire: fragment du dernier ouvrage de Auguste Édouard Mariette. Paris: F. Vieweg. OCLC 10266163.
  • Morales, Antonio J. (2006). "Traces of official and popular veneration to Nyuserra Iny at Abusir. Late Fifth Dynasty to the Middle Kingdom". In Bárta, Miroslav; Coppens, Filip; Krejčí, Jaromír (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.
  • Myśliwiec, Karol (2001). "Atum". In Redford, Donald B. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, Volume 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 158−160. ISBN 978-0-19-510234-5.
  • Peck, William H. (2001). "Lepsius, Karl Richard". In Redford, Donald B. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, Volume 2. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 289–290. ISBN 978-0-19-510234-5.
  • Sampsell, Bonnie (2000). "Pyramid Design and Construction – Part I: The Accretion Theory". The Ostracon. Denver. 11 (3).
  • Seidlmayer, Stephen (2003). "The First Intermediate Period (c. 2160–2055 BC)". In Shaw, Ian (ed.). The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 108–136. ISBN 978-0-19-815034-3.
  • Seters, John Van (1997). In Search of History: Historiography in the Ancient World and the Origins of Biblical History. Warsaw, Indiana: Eisenbrauns. ISBN 978-1-57506-013-2.
  • Sethe, Kurt (1933). Urkunden des Alten Reiches (in German). Vol. 1. Leipzig: J. C. Hinrichs'sche Buchhandlung. OCLC 883262096.
  • Shaw, Ian, ed. (2003). The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-815034-3.
  • Strudwick, Nigel (2005). Leprohon, Ronald (ed.). Texts from the Pyramid Age. Leiden, Boston: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-13048-7.
  • Verner, Miroslav (1994). (PDF). Prague: Academia Škodaexport. ISBN 978-80-200-0022-4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-02-01.
  • Verner, Miroslav (2001a). "Archaeological Remarks on the 4th and 5th Dynasty Chronology" (PDF). Archiv Orientální. Prague. 69 (3): 363–418. ISSN 0044-8699.
  • Verner, Miroslav (2001b). "Abusir". In Redford, Donald B. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, Volume 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 5–7. ISBN 978-0-19-510234-5.
  • Verner, Miroslav (2001c). "Old Kingdom". In Redford, Donald B. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, Volume 2. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 585–591. ISBN 978-0-19-510234-5.
  • Verner, Miroslav (2001d). "Pyramid". In Redford, Donald B. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt, Volume 3. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 87–95. ISBN 978-0-19-510234-5.
  • Verner, Miroslav (2001e). The Pyramids: The Mystery, Culture and Science of Egypt's Great Monuments. New York: Grove Press. ISBN 978-0-8021-1703-8.
  • Verner, Miroslav (2002). Abusir: Realm of Osiris. Cairo; New York: American Univ in Cairo Press. ISBN 978-977-424-723-1.
  • Verner, Miroslav (2014). The Pyramids. New York: Atlantic Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1-78239-680-2.

pyramid, neferirkare, pyramid, neferirkare, egyptian, bꜣ, ỉr, kꜣ, rꜥ, neferirkare, built, fifth, dynasty, pharaoh, neferirkare, kakai, 25th, century, tallest, structure, highest, site, necropolis, abusir, found, between, giza, saqqara, still, towers, over, nec. The pyramid of Neferirkare Egyptian Bꜣ Nfr ỉr kꜣ rꜥ the Ba of Neferirkare 5 was built for the Fifth Dynasty pharaoh Neferirkare Kakai in the 25th century BC 7 a It was the tallest structure on the highest site at the necropolis of Abusir found between Giza and Saqqara and still towers over the necropolis The pyramid is also significant because its excavation led to the discovery of the Abusir Papyri Pyramid of NeferirkareNeferirkare KakaiCoordinates29 53 42 N 31 12 09 E 29 89500 N 31 20250 E 29 89500 31 20250Ancient name 1 Bꜣ Nfr ỉr kꜣ RꜥBa Nefer ir ka Re Ba Neferirkare Alternatively translated as Neferirkare takes form 2 ConstructedFifth Dynasty c 25th century BC TypeStep pyramid originally True pyramid converted MaterialLimestone 3 Height52 metres 171 ft 99 cu 4 Step pyramid 72 8 metres 239 ft 139 cu 5 True pyramid original Base72 metres 236 ft 137 cu 4 Step pyramid 105 metres 344 ft 200 cu 5 True pyramid Volume257 250 m3 336 470 cu yd 6 Slope76 4 Step pyramid 54 30 5 True pyramid Location within Lower EgyptThe Fifth Dynasty marked the end of the great pyramid constructions during the Old Kingdom Pyramids of the era were smaller and becoming more standardized though intricate relief decoration also proliferated Neferirkare s pyramid deviated from convention as it was originally built as a step pyramid a design that had been antiquated after the Third Dynasty 26th or 27th century BC b This was then encased in a second step pyramid with alterations intended to convert it into a true pyramid c However the pharaoh s death left the work to be completed by his successors The remaining works were completed in haste using cheaper building material Because of the circumstances Neferirkare s monument lacked several basic elements of a pyramid complex a valley temple a causeway and a cult pyramid Instead these were replaced by a small settlement of mudbrick houses south of the monument from where cult priests could conduct their daily activities rather than the usual pyramid town near the valley temple The discovery of the Abusir papyri in the 1890s is owed to this Normally the papyrus archives would have been contained in the pyramid town where their destruction would have been assured The pyramid became part of a greater family cemetery The monuments to Neferirkare s consort Khentkaus II and his sons Neferefre and Nyuserre Ini are found in the surrounds Though their construction began under different rulers all four of these monuments were completed during the reign of Nyuserre Contents 1 Location and excavation 2 Mortuary complex 2 1 Layout 2 2 Main pyramid 2 3 Substructure 2 4 Mortuary temple 2 5 Valley temple causeway and cult pyramid 2 6 Later history 3 Family cemetery 3 1 Pyramid of Khentkhaus II 3 2 Unfinished pyramid Neferefre 3 3 Nyuserre s pyramid 4 Abusir papyri 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 SourcesLocation and excavation edit nbsp 1907 painting of the Abusir necropolis by A Bollacher and E Decker presented as it was in the Old KingdomThe pyramid of Neferirkare is situated on the necropolis at Abusir between Saqqara and the Giza Plateau 18 Abusir assumed great import in the Fifth Dynasty after Userkaf the first ruler built his sun temple and his successor Sahure inaugurated a royal necropolis there with his funerary monument 19 20 Sahure s successor 20 his son Neferirkare was the second ruler to be entombed in the necropolis 21 22 23 24 The Egyptologist Jaromir Krejci proposes a number of hypotheses for the position of Neferirkare s complex in relation to Sahure s complex 1 that Neferirkare was motivated to distance himself from Sahure and thus chose to found a new cemetery and redesign the mortuary temple plan to differentiate it from Sahure s 2 that geomorphological pressures particularly the slope between Neferirkare s and Sahure s complexes required Neferirkare to situate his complex elsewhere 3 on the basis of the site being the highest point Neferirkare may have selected it to ensure his complex dominated the surrounding area and 4 that the site may have been intentionally selected to build the pyramid in line with Heliopolis 25 d The Abusir diagonal is a figurative line connecting the north west corners of the pyramids of Neferirkare Sahure and Neferefre It is similar to the Giza axis which connects the south east corners of the Giza pyramids and converges with the Abusir diagonal to a point in Heliopolis 28 32 nbsp Neferirkare s pyramid with original step pyramid clearly visible underneath the rubble exteriorThe location of the complex affected the construction process The Egyptologist Miroslav Barta said the location was chosen partly because of its relation to the administrative capital e of the Old Kingdom Inbu Hedj f known today as Memphis 34 35 Providing that the location of ancient Memphis is accurately known the Abusir necropolis would have been no further than 4 km 2 5 mi from the city centre 6 The benefit of the site being close to the city was the increased access to resources and manpower 36 South west of Abusir workers could exploit a limestone quarry to gather resources for the manufacture of masonry blocks used in the construction of the pyramid The limestone there was particularly easy to quarry considering that gravel sand and tafl layers sandwiched the limestone into thin segments of between 0 60 m 2 0 ft and 0 80 m 2 ft 7 in thick making it easier to dislodge from its matrix 37 In 1838 John Shae Perring an engineer working under Colonel Howard Vyse 38 cleared the entrances to the pyramids of Sahure Neferirkare and Nyuserre 39 Five years later the Egyptologist Karl Richard Lepsius sponsored by King Frederick William IV of Prussia 40 41 explored the Abusir necropolis and catalogued Neferirkare s pyramid as XXI 39 It was Lepsius who proposed the theory that the accretion layer method g of construction was applied to the pyramids of the Fifth and Sixth Dynasty 45 One important development was the discovery of the Abusir papyri found in the temple of Neferirkare during illicit excavations in 1893 46 In 1902 1908 the Egyptologist Ludwig Borchardt working for the Deutsche Orient Gesellschaft or German Oriental Society resurveyed those same pyramids and had their adjoining temples and causeways excavated 39 47 Borchardt s was the first and only other major expedition carried out at the Abusir necropolis 47 and contributed significantly to archaeological investigation at the site 48 His findings were published in Das Grabdenkmal des Konigs Nefer Ir Ke Re 1909 49 50 The Czech Institute of Egyptology has had a long term excavation project going at the site since the 1960s 47 51 Mortuary complex edit nbsp Three dimensional model of Neferirkare s mortuary complexLayout edit Pyramid construction techniques underwent a transition in the Fifth Dynasty 52 The monumentality of the pyramids diminished the design of mortuary temples changed and the substructure of the pyramid became standardized 52 53 By contrast relief decoration proliferated 52 and the temples were enriched with greater storeroom complexes 53 These two conceptual changes had developed by the time of Sahure s reign at the latest Sahure s mortuary complex indicates that symbolic expression through decoration became favoured over sheer magnitude For example Fourth Dynasty pharaoh Khufu s complex had a total of 100 linear metres 330 linear feet reserved for decoration while Sahure s temple had around 370 linear metres 1 200 linear feet dedicated to relief decorations 54 Barta identifies that storage space in mortuary temples expanded consistently from Neferirkare s reign onwards 55 This was a result of the combined centralization of administrative focus onto the funerary cult the increase in the numbers of priests and officials involved in the maintenance of the cult and the increase in their revenues 56 57 The discovery of considerable remains of stone vessels mostly broken or otherwise incomplete in the pyramid temples of Sahure Neferirkare and Neferefre bears testament to this development 58 Old Kingdom mortuary complexes consisted of five essential components 1 a valley temple 2 a causeway 3 a mortuary temple 4 a cult pyramid and 5 the main pyramid 35 Neferirkare s mortuary complex had only two of these basic elements a mortuary temple which had been hastily constructed from cheap mudbrick and wood 59 60 61 and the largest main pyramid at the site 3 The valley temple and causeway that were originally intended for Neferirkare s monument were co opted by Nyuserre for his own mortuary complex 62 Conversely a cult pyramid h never entered construction as a consequence of the rush to complete the monument upon Neferirkare s death 64 Its replacement was a small settlement and lodgings constructed from mudbrick to the south of the complex where the priests would live 64 An enormous brick enclosure wall was built around the perimeter of the pyramid and mortuary temple to complete Neferirkare s funerary monument 64 Main pyramid edit The monument was intended as a step pyramid an unusual choice for a Fifth Dynasty king given that the era of step pyramids ended with the Third Dynasty 26th or 27th century BC centuries prior depending on the scholar and source 2 65 66 67 The reasoning behind this choice is not understood 5 68 The Egyptologist Miroslav Verner considers a speculative connection between the Turin Canon s listing him as the founder of a new dynasty i and the original project though he also considers the possibility of religious reasons and power politics as well 68 The first build contained six carefully laid steps 60 j of high quality limestone blocks 77 3 reaching a height of 52 m 171 ft 99 cu 65 A white limestone casing was to be applied to the structure 77 but after minimal work on this was completed extending only to the first step 65 the pyramid was redesigned to form a true pyramid 60 65 Verner describes the architecture of a Fifth Dynasty pyramid nbsp The three stages of the pyramid s construction Light grey original six step core of the planned step pyramid Dark grey extension project with two extra steps Beige planned granite casing Internally the corridor and three layer limestone gable roof of the ante and burial chamber are also depicted The outer face of the first step of the pyramid core was formed by a frame made of huge blocks of dark grey limestone up to 5 m long and well bound together Similarly there was an inner frame built of smaller blocks and making up the walls of the rectangular trench destined for the underground chambers of the tomb Between the two frames pieces of poor quality limestone had been packed sometimes dry and sometimes stuck together with clay mortar and sand The core was indeed modelled into steps but these were built in horizontal layers and only the stone blocks making up the outer surface were of high quality and well joined together The inner part of the core was filled up with only partially joined rough stones of varying quality and size 78 To convert the step into a genuine pyramid the whole structure was extended outwards by about 10 m 33 ft 19 cu and raised a further two steps in height 77 79 This expansion project was completed in rough order with small stone fragments intended to be cased in red granite 60 77 The premature death of the king halted the project after only the lowest level s of the casing had been completed 60 65 77 The resultant base of the structure measured 105 m 344 ft 200 cu on each side 60 and had the project been completed the pyramid would have reached approximately 72 m 236 ft 137 cu in height with an inclination from base to tip of about 54 65 Despite the incompleteness of the structure the pyramid which is of comparable size to Menkaure s pyramid at Giza dominates its surrounds as a result of the position of its site standing on a hill some 33 m 108 ft above the Nile delta 2 65 80 Substructure edit nbsp Substructure of Neferirkare s pyramid with limestone beamsThe descending corridor near the middle of the north face of the pyramid serves as the entry into the substructure of Neferirkare s pyramid The corridor begins approximately 2 m 6 ft 7 in above ground level and ends at a similar depth below ground level 59 It has proportions of 1 87 m 6 ft 2 in height and 1 27 m 4 ft 2 in width 81 It is reinforced at the entrance and exit points with granite casing 59 The corridor breaks out into a vestibule leading to a longer corridor which is guarded by a portcullis 59 This second corridor has two turns but maintains a generally eastward direction and ends in an antechamber offset from the burial chamber 59 The roof of the corridor is unique the flat roof has a second gabled roof made of limestone on top of it which itself has a third roof made from a layer of reeds 59 The burial and ante chamber s ceilings were constructed with three gabled layers of limestone The beams disperse weight from the superstructure onto either side of the passageway preventing collapse 60 59 Thieves have ransacked the chambers of its limestone making it impossible to properly reconstruct 59 though some details can still be discerned Namely that 1 both rooms were oriented along an east west axis 2 both chambers were the same width the antechamber was shorter of the two and 3 both chambers had the same style roof and are missing one layer of limestone 59 Overall the substructure is badly damaged the collapse of a layer of the limestone beams has covered the burial chamber 60 No trace of the mummy sarcophagus or any burial equipment has been found inside 59 60 The severity of the damage to the substructure prevents further excavation 5 Mortuary temple edit nbsp Mortuary temple of Neferirkare s pyramidThe mortuary temple is located at the base of the pyramid s Eastern face 65 It is larger than is typical for the period 82 Archaeological evidence suggests that it was unfinished at Neferirkare s death and was completed by Neferefre and Nyuserre 83 For example while the inner temple and statue niches were built from stone 60 82 much of the rest of the temple including the court and entrance hall was apparently hastily completed using cheap mudbrick and wood 60 61 This left large portions of the mortuary temple susceptible to erosion from rain and wind where stone would have given it significant durability 84 The site was less aesthetically impressive although its basic layout and features remained roughly analogous to Sahure s temple 85 Its enlarged size can be attributed to a design decision to build the complex without a valley temple or a causeway 82 Instead the causeway and temple whose foundations had been constructed were diverted to Nyuserre s complex 60 85 nbsp Layout of Neferirkare s mortuary temple In order 1 entry portico 2 entry hall 3 courtyard with 4 wooden columns 5 transverse corridor 6 storerooms notable for the Abusir papyri found there 7 inner temple 8 columned corridor leading to 9 a passageway into the main courtyard The temple was entered through the columned portico and columned entrance hall which terminates into a large columned courtyard 86 The columns of the hall and courtyard are made from wood arranged into the form of lotus stalks and buds 60 The courtyard is adorned with thirty seven such columns these columns are asymmetrically positioned 87 The archaeologist Herbert Ricke hypothesized that columns near the altar may have been damaged by fire and removed A papyrus fragment from the temple archives corroborates this story 87 A low stepped ramp in the courtyard s west leads to a transverse north south corridor which leads south into storerooms and north into another smaller corridor containing six wooden columns through which the open courtyard of the main pyramid can be accessed 86 It is in the southern storerooms that the Abusir papyri were discovered by graverobbers in the 1890s 82 Beyond the storerooms is a gate which has another access point to the main pyramid s courtyard and through which a second excavated south western gate leads to Khentkaus II s complex 64 Finally traversing across the corridor leads directly into the inner sanctuary or temple 60 82 nbsp A lotus shaped papyrus column similar to those found in the mortuary templeThe surviving reliefs are fragmentary Of the preserved materials one particular block stands out as vitally important in reconstructing the genealogy of the royal family at this time A limestone block discovered in the 1930s by the Egyptologist Edouard Ghazouli depicts Neferirkare with his consort Khentkaus II and eldest son Neferefre 82 It was not found at the site of the pyramid but as a part of a house in the village of Abusir 28 The Abusir papyri document details concerning Neferirkare s mortuary temple at Abusir One testimony from the papyri is that five statues were housed in the niches of the central chapel 60 The central statue depicted Neferirkare as the deity Osiris whereas the two outermost statues portrayed him as the king of Upper and Lower Egypt respectively 88 The papyri also record the existence of at least four funerary boats at Abusir Two boats are located in sealed rooms while the other two are to the north and south of the pyramid itself The southern boat was discovered when Verner unearthed the funerary boat during excavations 89 Valley temple causeway and cult pyramid edit At the time of Neferirkare s death only the foundations of the valley temple and two thirds of the causeway to the mortuary temple had been laid 60 90 When Nyuserre took over the site he had the causeway diverted from its original destination to his own mortuary temple 91 As such the causeway travels in one direction for more than half its distance then bends away to another for the remainder of its length 91 92 Neferirkare s monument has no cult pyramid 64 Rather the cult pyramid was replaced with a small settlement called Ba Kakai k of mudbrick lodgings for priests south of the monument 64 93 The omission of these essential 35 elements had one significant impact 85 Under normal circumstances the priests tending to the deceased pharaoh s funerary cult would have lived in a pyramid town built in the vicinity of the valley temple situated on the Abusir Lake 64 94 95 The daily records of the administration would have had their residence in the town with the priests 85 Instead as a result of circumstance these documents were instead kept inside the mortuary temple 64 This has allowed their archives to be preserved as they would have otherwise long ago disintegrated buried under the mud 85 The siting of the settlement by the complex also allowed small restorative works to be conducted 93 Later history edit Nyuserre was the last king to build his funerary monument at Abusir his successors Menkauhor and Djedkare Isesi chose sites elsewhere 47 96 97 and Abusir ceased to be the royal necropolis 98 93 But the site was not abandoned The Abusir Papyri demonstrate that funerary cults remained active at Abusir at least until the reign of Pepi II at the end of the Sixth Dynasty 96 Priests who served Neferirkare include Kaemnefret priest of Neferirkare s pyramid and sun temple and of Sahure s pyramid 99 Nimaatptah priest in the pyramid and sun temple of Neferirkare 100 Kuyemsnewy and Kamesenu l priests of the cults of Sahure Neferirkare and Nyuserre 102 101 Nimaatsed priest of the pyramids of Neferirkare Neferefre and Nyuserre 103 Khabauptah priest of Sahure Neferirkare Neferefre and Nyuserre Ini 104 Verner believes that royal cultic activities ceased by the First Intermediate Period 47 Malek notes that some limited evidence for the persistence of the cults of Neferirkare and Nyuserre throughout the Herakleopolitan Period exists though this means Nyuserre s cult operated continuously until at least the Twelfth Dynasty 105 Professor Antonio Morales believes funerary cults may have continued beyond the Old Kingdom 106 in particular the cult of Nyuserre appears to have survived both in its official form and in popular public veneration until the early Middle Kingdom 107 and some scant evidence in the form of two statues m dated to the Middle Kingdom may suggest that Neferirkare s cult was active during that period as well 109 The necropoleis near Memphis specifically those at Saqqara and Abusir were used extensively during the Twenty Sixth Dynasty c 664 525 BC 110 Considerable quantities of stone were required to build these tombs and this was very probably sourced from the Old Kingdom pyramids thereby inflicting further damage to them 111 Graves estimated to be from the fifth century BC have been discovered in the vicinity of Neferirkare s mortuary temple One yellow calcite gravestone discovered by Borchardt bears an Aramaic inscription Belonging to Nsnw the daughter of Paḥnum alternatively read as Belonging to Nesneu the daughter of Tapakhnum 112 A second inscription found by Verner on a limestone block in the mortuary temple bears the inscription Mannu ki na an son of Sewa The dating of this second inscription is uncertain but may plausibly be from the same period 113 nbsp Mummified remains in a canvas cartonnage dated to the 26th Dynasty nbsp Aramaic inscription discovered by Ludwig BorchardtFamily cemetery editPyramid of Khentkhaus II edit Main article Pyramid of Khentkaus II nbsp Remains of Khentkaus II s pyramidBorchardt initially thought a ruined structure on the southern side of Neferirkare s complex to be an unimportant mastaba and surveyed it only briefly 114 In the 1970s Verner s Czech team identified it as the pyramid tomb of Neferirkare s consort Khentkaus II 114 115 Perring had previously discovered griffonage on a limestone block from the site of Neferirkare s tomb which mentioned the King s wife Khentkawes 115 She also appeared in a relief of the royal family on another limestone block on which Neferirkare s son Neferefre also appears 115 Khentkhaus s pyramid was built in two phases 116 The first must have begun during Neferirkare s reign as is evidenced by the inscription Perring discovered The project was halted around the tenth year of Neferirkare s reign 114 Verner suggested Neferirkare s untimely death interrupted the project and that it was finished during Nyuserre s reign 114 The word mother appears inscribed above wife on another block indicating that the relationship between Khentkaus II and Nyuserre was as mother and son 116 114 The completed structure has a square base measuring 25 m 82 ft 48 cu across each side and with a slope of 52 would stand 17 m 56 ft 32 cu tall were it not in ruins Her mortuary complex also includes a satellite pyramid a courtyard and an extended mortuary temple 116 Unfinished pyramid Neferefre edit Main article Pyramid of Neferefre Located directly south west 46 of Neferirkare s monument and just to the west of Khentkaus II s Neferefre s unfinished pyramid is another member of the family cemetery born around Neferirkare s tomb 85 Built on the Abusir diagonal Neferefre s pyramid was never completed owing to the unexpectedly early death of the pharaoh 116 n Originally built with a base length of 65 m 213 ft 124 cu slightly shorter than that of Sahure s pyramid and with only a single step completed the plan had to be altered to accommodate the remains of the king 118 For this reason the pyramid was hastily converted into a squared mastaba 75 117 119 and completed with the application of limestone facing at a slope of 78 and a clay and desert stone capping 75 The accompanying mortuary temple is believed to have been built promptly following Neferefre s death 75 The main features of the temple were a hypostyle hall two large wooden boats and a number of broken statues found in rooms near the aforementioned hall 46 Nyuserre s pyramid edit Main article Pyramid of Nyuserre nbsp Pyramids of Nyuserre Ini left and Neferirkare right Nyuserre joined the family cemetery with his mortuary complex 120 and was the last king to be interred in the Abusir necropolis 98 Upon taking the throne Nyuserre undertook to complete the three unfinished monuments of his closest family members his father Neferirkare his mother Khentkaus II and his brother Neferefre The costs of this project burdened the construction of his own monument which manifested itself in the siting of the complex 120 Instead of being seated on the Abusir Heliopolis axis Nyuserre s complex is nestled between Neferirkare s and Sahure s pyramids 62 121 122 Respecting the axis would have meant placing the complex south west of Neferefre s unfinished pyramid and far from the Nile valley The expense would have been unreasonable 121 The pyramid located north east of Neferirkare s pyramid 21 stands around 52 m 171 ft 99 cu tall with a base length of about 79 m 259 ft 151 cu 92 The causeway connecting the valley temple to the mortuary complex was originally intended for Neferirkare s pyramid but Nyuserre had these diverted to serve his monument 62 85 Abusir papyri edit nbsp Abusir papyrus documenting daily activities at Neferirkare s pyramidThe monument s significance comes from the circumstances of its construction and the contents of the Abusir papyri archives 3 123 124 The Egyptologist Nicolas Grimal says that this was the most important known collection of papyri from the Old Kingdom until the 1982 expedition of the Egyptological Institute of the University of Prague discovered an even richer cache in a storeroom of the nearby mortuary temple of Neferefre 124 The first fragments of the Abusir papyri were discovered by illicit diggers in 1893 46 and sold and distributed around the world in the antiquities market 125 Later Borchardt discovered additional fragments while excavating in the same area 126 The fragments were found to be written in hieratic a cursive form of hieroglyphics 75 Other papyri found in Neferirkare s tomb were comprehensively studied and published by the Egyptologist Paule Posener Krieger 75 127 The papyri records span the period between the reign of Djedkare Isesi through to the reign of Pepi II 124 They recount all aspects of the management of the funerary cult of the king including the daily activities of priests lists of offerings letters and inventory checks of the temple 46 127 128 Importantly the papyri connect the larger picture of the interplay between the mortuary temple sun temple and other institutions 127 For example the fragmentary evidence of the papyri indicates that goods for Neferirkare s funerary cult were transported by ship to the pyramid complex of the king 129 The full extent of the records of the papyri found at Abusir is unknown as more recent findings remain unpublished 46 See also editList of Egyptian pyramidsNotes edit Proposed dates for Neferirkare Kakai s reign c 2492 2482 BC 2 7 c 2477 2467 BC 8 c 2475 2455 BC 9 c 2446 2438 BC 10 c 2446 2426 BC 11 c 2373 2363 BC 12 Proposed dates for the Third Dynasty c 2700 2625 BC 13 c 2700 2600 BC 14 c 2687 2632 BC 2 c 2686 2613 BC 9 c 2680 2640 BC 15 c 2650 2575 BC 11 c 2649 2575 BC 10 c 2584 2520 16 The term true pyramid refers to pyramids which have the geometric shape of a pyramid That is they have a square base with four triangular faces converging to a single point at the apex 17 Heliopolis or Iunu was a major city of ancient Egypt 26 The temple of Heliopolis housed the sacred stone of Benben 27 the primeval hill which arose from the primordial waters of Nu 28 The temple was also the location of the cult of the sun god 29 Atum 30 The Egyptologist Mark Lehner proposes that the pyramids relation to the temple of Heliopolis is evidence in support of the pyramid being a sun symbol 31 Administrative centres in the early Old Kingdom period generally consisted of officials personnel and some craftsmen Memphis was the largest of these centres and housed the royal court of the pharaoh during the Old Kingdom The exact extent of the spatial organization of Memphis in the Old Kingdom remains unknown though it was most probably not densely populated or walled like its contemporaries such as Sumerian cities Most of the population of Egypt lived as peasant farmers in rural communities 33 transl inbw ḥḏ 34 A solid central limestone core is constructed 42 and encased in successive layers of small stone blocks laid at an inwards slant 42 43 As a result of the inwards tilt of each layer the pyramid had a slope of about 74 42 These blocks were roughly dressed with the exception of the outer edge of each layer which was smoothed to flatten the surface 43 This was the method of construction applied to Third Dynasty step pyramids 42 43 44 The purpose of the cult pyramid remains unclear though it may have had some relation to the pharaoh s Ka 63 The division of the Turin Canon into dynasties is a contested topic The Egyptologist Jaromir Malek holds the conviction that the divisions in kinglists coincide with the transfer of the royal residence and believes that the introduction of dynasties as used in modern study began with Manetho 69 Similarly the Egyptologist Stephan Seidlmayer considers the break in the Turin Canon at the end of the Eighth Dynasty to represent the relocation of the royal residence from Memphis to Herakleopolis 70 The Egyptologist John Baines does not accept Malek s explanation for these features and instead believes the list is divided into dynasties with totals given at the end of each though only a few such divisions have survived 71 Similarly Professor John Van Seters views the breaks in the canon as divisions between dynasties but in contrast says that the criterion for these divisions remains unknown He speculates that the pattern of dynasties may have been taken from the nine divine kings of the Greater and Lesser Enneads 72 The Egyptologist Ian Shaw believes the Turin Canon gives some credibility to Manetho s division of dynasties but considers the king lists to be a form of ancestor worship and not a historical record 73 It was originally believed that the pyramid was built by layering small rectangular stone blocks which measured up to two feet six tenths of a metre in length and were angled inwards towards a solid core 45 This theory was proposed initially by Richard Lepsius an Egyptologist who visited the site briefly in the 1830s and propagated by the archaeologist Ludwig Borchardt who conducted excavations in Egypt including at Neferirkare s pyramid at the start of the 20th century after discovering what he believed were accretion layers on internal faces of the pyramids at Abusir 45 74 It was challenged by Vito Maragioglio and Celeste Rinaldi who conducted careful examinations of pyramidal architecture in the Old Kingdom and failed to find blocks lying on a slant in any Fourth or Fifth Dynasty pyramid they studied Rather they found that in each instance these blocks were always set horizontally This lead them to reject the accretion layer hypothesis 45 The theory was effectively disproven by the Czech excavation team at Abusir led by the Egyptologist Miroslav Verner 45 74 The unfinished nature of Neferefre s monument allowed Verner s team to test Lepsius and Borchardt s hypothesis if the pyramid had been constructed as suggested then underneath the clay and desert stone capping the pyramid s structure would have resembled the layers of an onion 75 Instead the excavators found that the pyramid of Neferefre and pyramid of Neferirkare consisted of an outer retaining wall of four or five courses of large horizontally layered stone blocks 75 an inner pit of small horizontally layered roughly dressed limestone blocks 76 with the gap between the two frames filled with a mash of crude limestone chunks mortar and sand 75 76 and not in the slanted fashion proposed by the accretion layer theory 45 74 75 transl Bʒ Kʒ kʒi 93 Kʒ m sn w 101 The statues are of a Sekhemet hetep ty transl Sḫmt ḥtp ty from the Twelfth Dynasty The first is notable for having the formula n r pr ny swt bity Nfr ir kʒ rˁ mʒˁ ḫrw meaning of the temple of the King of Upper and Lower Egypt Neferirkare true of voice The second statue was found at Abusir providing corroborating evidence but does not have a reference to the mortuary temple 108 The exact duration of Neferefre s reign remains undetermined but the archaeological evidence and state of the unfinished pyramid suggest that his reign lasted no longer than at most three years though most probably not more than two 117 References edit Borchardt 1909 p 4 a b c d e Altenmuller 2001 p 598 a b c d Verner 2001e p 291 a b c Verner 2001e p 463 a b c d e f Arnold 2003 p 160 a b Barta 2005 p 180 a b Verner 2001c p 589 Clayton 1994 p 30 a b Shaw 2003 p 482 a b Allen et al 1999 p xx a b Lehner 2008 p 8 Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 288 Grimal 1992 p 389 Arnold 2003 p 265 Verner 2001e p 473 Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 287 Verner 2001d pp 87 89 Arnold 2003 p 2 Verner 2001b p 5 a b Barta 2017 p 6 a b Verner 2001b p 6 Verner 2001e p 302 Dodson 2016 p 27 Barta 2015 Abusir in the Third Millennium BC Krejci 2000 pp 475 477 Allen 2001 p 88 Lehner 2008 p 32 a b c Verner 1994 p 135 Verner 2001e p 34 Mysliwiec 2001 p 158 Lehner 2008 p 34 Isler 2001 p 201 Bard 2015 p 138 a b Jefferys 2001 p 373 a b c Barta 2005 p 178 Barta 2005 p 179 Krejci 2000 p 473 Lehner 2008 p 50 a b c Edwards 1999 p 97 Lehner 2008 p 54 Peck 2001 p 289 a b c d Lehner 1999 p 778 a b c Sampsell 2000 Vol 11 No 3 the Ostracon Isler 2001 p 96 a b c d e f Sampsell 2000 Vol 11 No 3 The Ostracon a b c d e f Edwards 1999 p 98 a b c d e Verner 2001b p 7 Verner 1994 pp 105 215 217 Verner 1994 p 216 Borchardt 1909 Titelblatt amp Inhaltsverzeichnis Krejci 2015 Terenni projekty Abusir a b c Verner 2001d p 90 a b Barta 2005 p 185 Barta 2005 pp 183 185 Barta 2005 p 186 Barta 2005 pp 185 188 Loprieno 1999 p 41 Allen et al 1999 p 125 a b c d e f g h i j Verner 2001e p 293 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Lehner 2008 p 144 a b Verner 1994 pp 77 79 a b c Lehner 2008 p 148 Lehner 2008 p 18 a b c d e f g h Verner 2001e p 296 a b c d e f g h Verner 1994 p 77 Verner 2002 p 52 Kahl 2001 p 591 a b Verner 2001e p 297 Malek 2003 pp 84 103 104 Seidlmayer 2003 p 108 Baines 2007 p 198 Seters 1997 pp 135 136 Shaw 2003 pp 7 8 a b c Verner 2002 pp 50 52 a b c d e f g h i Lehner 2008 p 147 a b Verner 2014 Neferefre s unfinished pyramid a b c d e Verner 2014 Neferirkare s pyramid Verner 1994 pp 139 140 Verner 1994 pp 76 77 Verner 2002 p 50 Lehner 2008 p 143 a b c d e f Verner 2001e p 294 Verner 1994 pp 77 78 Bares 2000 p 3 a b c d e f g Verner 1994 p 79 a b Verner 2001e pp 294 295 a b Verner 2001e p 295 Allen et al 1999 p 97 Altenmuller 2002 p 270 Verner 2001e p 318 a b Verner 1994 pp 81 82 a b Lehner 2008 p 149 a b c d Krejci 2000 p 483 Lehner 2008 pp 142 144 145 Edwards 1975 p 186 a b Goelet 1999 p 87 Verner 1994 pp 79 80 86 a b Verner 1994 p 86 Mariette 1889 pp 242 249 d 23 Mariette 1889 p 250 d 24 a b Sethe 1933 p 175 Hayes 1990 pp 104 106 Mariette 1889 p 329 d 56 Mariette 1889 pp 294 295 Malek 2000 pp 245 246 248 Morales 2006 pp 312 313 Morales 2006 p 314 Malek 2000 p 249 Morales 2006 p 313 Dusek amp Mynarova 2012 pp 53 65 Bares 2000 p 13 Dusek amp Mynarova 2012 p 55 Dusek amp Mynarova 2012 p 67 a b c d e Verner 2002 p 54 a b c Lehner 2008 p 145 a b c d Lehner 2008 p 146 a b Verner 2001a p 400 Lehner 2008 pp 146 147 Verner 1994 p 138 a b Verner 1994 pp 79 80 a b Verner 1994 p 80 Verner 2001e p 303 Lehner 2008 pp 144 145 a b c Grimal 1992 p 77 Davies amp Friedman 1998 pp 89 90 Strudwick 2005 pp 39 40 a b c Strudwick 2005 p 40 Allen et al 1999 p 7 Krejci 2000 p 472 Sources editAllen James Allen Susan Anderson Julie et al 1999 Egyptian Art in the Age of the Pyramids New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 8109 6543 0 OCLC 41431623 Allen James P 2001 Heliopolis In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 88 89 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 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 Altenmuller Hartwig 2002 Funerary Boats and Boat Pits of the Old Kingdom In Coppens Filip ed Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2001 PDF Vol 70 Prague Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Oriental Institute pp 269 290 ISSN 0044 8699 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Arnold Dieter 2003 The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egyptian Architecture London I B Tauris amp Co Ltd ISBN 978 1 86064 465 8 Baines John 2007 Visual and Written Culture in Ancient Egypt Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 815250 7 Bard Kathryn 2015 An Introduction to the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt Chicester John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 89611 2 Bares Ladislav 2000 The destruction of the monuments at the necropolis of Abusir In Barta Miroslav Krejci Jaromir eds Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2000 Prague Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Oriental Institute pp 1 16 ISBN 978 80 85425 39 0 Barta Miroslav 2005 Location of the Old Kingdom Pyramids in Egypt PDF Cambridge Archaeological Journal Cambridge 15 2 177 191 doi 10 1017 s0959774305000090 S2CID 161629772 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 02 28 Barta Miroslav 2015 Abusir in the Third Millennium BC CEGU FF Cesky egyptologicky ustav Retrieved 1 February 2018 Barta Miroslav 2017 Radjedef to the Eighth Dynasty UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology Borchardt Ludwig 1909 Das Grabdenkmal des Konigs Nefer Ir Ke Re Ausgrabungen der Deutschen Orient Gesellschaft in Abusir Ausgrabungen der Deutschen Orient Gesellschaft in Abusir 5 Wissenschaftliche Veroffentlichungen der Deutschen Orient Gesellschaft 11 in German Leipzig Hinrichs doi 10 11588 diglit 30508 Clayton Peter A 1994 Chronicle of the Pharaohs London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05074 3 Davies William V Friedman Renee F 1998 Egypt Uncovered New York Stewart Tabori amp Chang ISBN 978 1 55670 818 3 Dodson Aidan 2016 The Royal Tombs of Ancient Egypt Barnsley South Yorkshire Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1 4738 2159 0 Dodson Aidan Hilton Dyan 2004 The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05128 3 Dusek Jan Mynarova Jana 2012 Phoenician and Aramaic Inscriptions from Abusir In Botta Alejandro ed In the Shadow of Bezalel Aramaic Biblical and Ancient Near Eastern Studies in Honour of Bezalel Porten Culture and History of the Ancient Near East Vol 60 Leiden Brill pp 53 69 ISBN 978 90 04 24083 4 Edwards Iorwerth 1975 The pyramids of Egypt Baltimore Harmondsworth ISBN 978 0 14 020168 0 Edwards Iorwerth 1999 Abusir In Bard Kathryn ed Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt London New York Routledge pp 97 99 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Goelet Ogden 1999 Abu Ghurab Abusir after the 5th Dynasty In Bard Kathryn ed Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt London New York Routledge p 87 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Grimal Nicolas 1992 A History of Ancient Egypt Translated by Ian Shaw Oxford Blackwell publishing ISBN 978 0 631 19396 8 Hayes William C 1990 1953 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 233920917 Isler Martin 2001 Sticks Stones and Shadows Building the Egyptian Pyramids Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3342 3 Jefferys David 2001 Memphis In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 373 376 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Kahl Jochem 2001 Old Kingdom Third Dynasty In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 591 593 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Krejci Jaromir 2000 The origins and development of the royal necropolis at Abusir in the Old Kingdom In Barta Miroslav Krejci Jaromir eds Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2000 Prague Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Oriental Institute pp 467 484 ISBN 978 80 85425 39 0 Krejci Jaromir 2015 Abusir CEGU FF in Czech Cesky egyptologicky ustav Retrieved 21 January 2018 Lehner Mark 1999 pyramids Old Kingdom construction of In Bard Kathryn ed Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt London New York Routledge pp 778 786 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Lehner Mark 2008 The Complete Pyramids New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 28547 3 Loprieno Antonio 1999 Old Kingdom overview In Bard Kathryn ed Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt London New York Routledge pp 38 44 ISBN 978 0 203 98283 9 Malek Jaromir 2000 Old Kingdom rulers as local saints in the Memphite area during the Old Kingdom In Barta Miroslav Krejci Jaromir eds Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2000 Prague Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Oriental Institute pp 241 258 ISBN 978 80 85425 39 0 Malek Jaromir 2003 The Old Kingdom c 2686 2160 BC In Shaw Ian ed The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt Oxford Oxford University Press pp 83 107 ISBN 978 0 19 815034 3 Mariette Auguste 1889 Maspero Gaston ed Les Mastabas de l Ancien Empire fragment du dernier ouvrage de Auguste Edouard Mariette Paris F Vieweg OCLC 10266163 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 Mysliwiec Karol 2001 Atum In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 1 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 158 160 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Peck William H 2001 Lepsius Karl Richard In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 289 290 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Sampsell Bonnie 2000 Pyramid Design and Construction Part I The Accretion Theory The Ostracon Denver 11 3 Seidlmayer Stephen 2003 The First Intermediate Period c 2160 2055 BC In Shaw Ian ed The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt Oxford Oxford University Press pp 108 136 ISBN 978 0 19 815034 3 Seters John Van 1997 In Search of History Historiography in the Ancient World and the Origins of Biblical History Warsaw Indiana Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1 57506 013 2 Sethe Kurt 1933 Urkunden des Alten Reiches in German Vol 1 Leipzig J C Hinrichs sche Buchhandlung OCLC 883262096 Shaw Ian ed 2003 The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 815034 3 Strudwick Nigel 2005 Leprohon Ronald ed Texts from the Pyramid Age Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 13048 7 Verner Miroslav 1994 Forgotten pharaohs lost pyramids Abusir PDF Prague Academia Skodaexport ISBN 978 80 200 0022 4 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 02 01 Verner Miroslav 2001a Archaeological Remarks on the 4th and 5th Dynasty Chronology PDF Archiv Orientalni Prague 69 3 363 418 ISSN 0044 8699 Verner Miroslav 2001b Abusir In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 1 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 5 7 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Verner Miroslav 2001c Old Kingdom In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 585 591 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Verner Miroslav 2001d Pyramid In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 3 Oxford Oxford University Press pp 87 95 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Verner Miroslav 2001e The Pyramids The Mystery Culture and Science of Egypt s Great Monuments New York Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 1703 8 Verner Miroslav 2002 Abusir Realm of Osiris Cairo New York American Univ in Cairo Press ISBN 978 977 424 723 1 Verner Miroslav 2014 The Pyramids New York Atlantic Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 78239 680 2 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pyramid of Neferirkare Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pyramid of Neferirkare amp oldid 1117564483, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.