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Unas

Unas /ˈjnəs/ or Wenis, also spelled Unis (Ancient Egyptian: wnjs, hellenized form Oenas /ˈnəs/ or Onnos), was a pharaoh, the ninth and last ruler of the Fifth Dynasty of Egypt during the Old Kingdom. Unas reigned for 15 to 30 years in the mid-24th century BC (circa 2345–2315 BC), succeeding Djedkare Isesi, who might have been his father.

Unas
Oenas, Onnos, Unis, Wenis
Black greywacke[1] sarcophagus in the funerary chamber of Unas' pyramid
Pharaoh
Reignduration uncertain; 15 to 30 years in the mid-24th century BC.[a]
PredecessorDjedkare Isesi
SuccessorTeti
ConsortNebet, Khenut
ChildrenHemetre Hemi, Khentkaues, Neferut, Nefertkaues Iku, Sesheshet Idut.
Uncertain: Unas-ankh, Iput.
Conjectured: Nebkauhor, Shepsespuptah.
Fatherpossibly Djedkare Isesi
Motherpossibly Setibhor
BurialPyramid of Unas
DynastyFifth Dynasty

Little is known of Unas' activities during his reign, which was a time of economic decline. Egypt maintained trade relations with the Levantine coast and Nubia, and military action may have taken place in southern Canaan. The growth and decentralization of the administration in conjunction with the lessening of the king's power continued under Unas, ultimately contributing to the collapse of the Old Kingdom some 200 years later.

Unas built a pyramid in Saqqara, the smallest of the royal pyramids completed during the Old Kingdom. The accompanying mortuary complex with its high and valley temples linked by a 750-metre-long (2,460 ft) causeway was lavishly decorated with painted reliefs, whose quality and variety surpass the usual royal iconography.[6] Furthermore, Unas was the first pharaoh to have the Pyramid Texts carved and painted on the walls of the chambers of his pyramid, a major innovation that was followed by his successors until the First Intermediate Period (c. 2160 – c. 2050 BC). These texts identify the king with Ra and with Osiris, whose cult was on the rise in Unas' time, and were meant to help the king reach the afterlife.

Unas had several daughters and possibly one or two sons who are believed to have predeceased him. Manetho, a third-century BC Egyptian priest of the Ptolemaic Kingdom and author of the first history of Egypt, claims that with Unas' death the Fifth Dynasty came to an end. Unas was succeeded by Teti, the first pharaoh of the Sixth Dynasty, possibly after a short crisis. However, the archaeological evidence suggests that the Egyptians at the time made no conscious break with the preceding dynasty and the distinction between the Fifth and Sixth dynasties might be illusory.

The funerary cult of Unas established at his death continued until the end of the Old Kingdom and may have survived during the chaotic First Intermediate Period. The cult was still in existence or revived during the later Middle Kingdom (c. 2050 – c. 1650 BC). This did not prevent Amenemhat I and Senusret I (c. 1990 – c. 1930 BC) from partially dismantling the mortuary complex of Unas for its materials.

In parallel to the official cult, Unas may have received popular veneration as a local god of Saqqara until as late as the Late Period (664–332 BC), nearly 2000 years after his death.

Attestations Edit

Historical sources Edit

Unas is well attested by historical sources with three ancient Egyptian king lists dating to the New Kingdom period mentioning him.[18] He occupies the 33rd entry of the Abydos King List, which was written during the reign of Seti I (1290–1279 BC). Unas' name is also present on the Saqqara Tablet (32nd entry)[19] and on the Turin canon (third column, 25th row), both of which were written during the reign of Ramses II (1279–1213 BC).[18] The Turin canon further credits Unas with 30 years of reign.[18][20] These sources all place Unas as the ninth and final ruler of the Fifth Dynasty, succeeding Djedkare Isesi and preceding Teti on the throne.[21] This relative chronology is corroborated by archaeological evidence, for example in the tomb of officials serving under these kings.[22]

In addition to these sources, Unas was also likely mentioned in the Aegyptiaca, a history of Egypt written in the 3rd century BC during the reign of Ptolemy II (283–246 BC) by the Egyptian priest Manetho. No copies of the Aegyptiaca have survived to this day and it is known to us only through later writings by Sextus Julius Africanus and Eusebius. Africanus relates that the Aegyptiaca mentioned a pharaoh "Onnos" reigning for 33 years at the end of the Fifth Dynasty. Onnos is believed to be the hellenized form for Unas, and Africanus' 33-year figure fits well with the 30 years of reign given to Unas on the Turin canon.[18]

Contemporaneous sources Edit

 
Alabaster globular vase of Unas, Louvre[23]

The primary contemporaneous sources attesting to Unas' activities are the many reliefs from his pyramid complex. Excluding these, surprisingly few documents dating to Unas' reign have survived to this day, considering the 30-year length that later records give for his reign. Excavations at Abusir, the royal necropolis of the Fifth Dynasty, have produced only four dated inscriptions safely attributable to Unas. They explicitly mention his third, fourth, sixth and eighth years on the throne.[24] Unas also left a rock inscription on the island of Elephantine, next to the First Cataract of the Nile in Nubia.[25]

In addition, several alabaster vases bearing Unas' cartouche are known. A complete vessel and additional fragments originating from Byblos[14] on the Levantine coast are now in the National Museum of Beirut.[26] A vase of unknown provenance is located in the National Archaeological Museum of Florence and reads "Horus Wadjtawy, living eternally, king of Upper and Lower Egypt, son of Ra, Unas, living eternally".[27][28][b] Another vessel, of unknown origins, is on display at the Louvre Museum. It is a 17-centimetre-tall (6.7 in), 13.2-centimetre-wide (5.2 in) globular alabaster vase finely decorated with a falcon with outstretched wings and two uraei, or rearing cobras, holding ankh signs surrounding Unas' cartouche.[23] An ointment jar bearing Unas' cartouche and Horus name is in the Brooklyn Museum.[30] Finally, a fragment of a calcite vase rim bearing two cartouches of Unas is on display in the Petrie Museum.[31][c]

Reign Edit

Family Edit

Unas assumed the throne at the death of his predecessor Djedkare Isesi. Djedkare is thought to have been Unas' father,[2] in spite of the complete lack of evidence bearing on the question.[33] The succession from Djedkare Isesi to Unas seems to have been smooth.[34]

Unas had at least two queens, Nebet[35] and Khenut,[36] who were buried in a large double mastaba adjacent to their husband's pyramid. Unas and Nebet possibly had a son, the "king's son", "royal chamberlain", "priest of Maat" and "overseer of Upper Egypt" Unas-Ankh,[37] who died about 10 years into Unas' reign.[38] The filiation of Unas-Ankh is indirectly hinted at by his name and titles and by the presence of his tomb near those of Nebet and Unas[39] but is not universally accepted.[40][41][d] Two other sons have been proposed, Nebkauhor[43] and Shepsespuptah,[44] but these filiations are conjectural and contested.[45] Unas likely died without a male heir.[45]

Unas had at least five daughters named Hemetre Hemi,[46] Khentkaues,[47] Neferut,[48] Nefertkaues Iku,[49] and Sesheshet Idut.[50] The status of another possible daughter, Iput, is uncertain.[51]

Duration Edit

 
Relief of Sahure wearing the tunic of the Sed festival,[52] similar to the relief depicting Unas' Sed festival from his mortuary complex[53]

The duration of Unas' reign is uncertain. As indicated above, historical sources credit him with 30 and 33 years on the throne, figures that have been adopted by many Egyptologists, including Flinders Petrie,[54] William C. Hayes,[55] Darrell Baker,[14] Peter Munro,[56] and Jaromir Malek.[6] In favor of such a long reign are scenes[57] of a Sed festival found in Unas' mortuary temple.[58][2] This festival was normally celebrated only after 30 years of reign and was meant to rejuvenate the pharaoh's strength and power. Mere depictions of the festival do not necessarily imply a long reign, however. For example, a relief showing pharaoh Sahure in the tunic of the Sed festival has been found in his mortuary temple,[52][59] although both historical sources and archeological evidence agree that he ruled Egypt for less than 14 full years.[60][10][11]

Other Egyptologists suspect a reign of less than 30 years for Unas, owing to the scarcity of artefacts datable to his reign as well as the lack of documents dated to beyond his eighth year on the throne.[61] Hence, Jürgen von Beckerath believes that Unas ruled Egypt for 20 years[10] while Rolf Krauss, David Warburton and Erik Hornung shortened this number to 15 years in their 2012 study of Egyptian chronology.[11] Krauss and Miroslav Verner further question the credibility of the Turin Canon concerning the Fourth and Fifth Dynasties, so that the 30-year figure credited to Unas by the canon might not be reliable.[62]

Excavations[63] of the tomb of Nikau-Isesi under the direction of Naguib Kanawati at Saqqara have yielded evidence in support of a shorter reign.[64] Nikau-Isesi was an official who started his career during the reign of Djedkare Isesi. He lived through that of Unas and died as overseer of Upper-Egypt under Unas' successor Teti.[22] Nikau-Isesi is known to have died on the year of the eleventh cattle count during Teti's reign, an event consisting of counting the livestock throughout the country to evaluate the amount of taxes to be levied. It is traditionally believed that such counts occurred every two years during the Old Kingdom and every year during the later Middle Kingdom (c. 2055 – c. 1650 BC).[22] Thus, Nikau-Isesi would have lived for 22 years after Teti took the throne and together with the 30 years of reign credited to Unas, would have died past 70 years old.[22] However, forensic examination of his mummy yielded an age at death of no more than 45 years old. This suggests that the cattle count occurred more than once every two years during Unas and Teti's time, possibly irregularly. If so, Unas' 30-year figure on the Turin canon, understood to mean 15 cattle counts, could translate into as little as 15 years, which together with just 11 years during Teti's reign would account for Nikau-Isesi's death at around 40 to 45 years of age.[22]

Activities Edit

 
Drawing[54] of the rock inscription of Unas on Elephantine[e]
Trade and warfare

Owing to the scarcity of evidence dating to Unas' reign, we know very little about his activities.[14] Existing trade relations with foreign countries and cities, in particular Byblos,[67] seem to have continued during Unas' time on the throne. Reliefs from the causeway of his pyramid complex show two large seagoing ships coming back from an expedition to the Levantine coast with Syro-Canaanite men, who were either the boat crews or slaves.[68][69] Another relief depicts a military campaign,[70] Egyptians armed with bows and daggers attacking Canaanite nomads called the Shasu.[71] Similar reliefs have been found in preceding pyramid complexes, such as that of Sahure, and they may thus be standard themes rather than depictions of actual events.[70] Other sources tend to confirm the accuracy of these depictions; for example, the autobiography of Weni relates many punitive raids against Canaanite nomads in the early Sixth Dynasty.[70][72]

To the South of Egypt, inscriptions of Unas on Elephantine record a visit of the king to Lower Nubia, possibly to receive tribute from local chieftains[58] or because of growing unrest in the region.[73] In addition, a relief from the causeway of Unas leading to his pyramid shows a giraffe, suggesting trade relations with Nubia.[74]

Domestic
 
Relief showing starving nomads from Unas' causeway at Saqqara

Unas' reign was a time of economic decline[73] although, as the French Egyptologist Nicolas Grimal writes, it was "by no means a time of decadence".[33] Indeed, the Egyptian state was still capable of mounting important expeditions to provide building stones for the king's pyramid complex.[2] These expeditions are depicted on unique reliefs found in Unas' causeway[75][76][2] and are also referred to in the autobiographical stela of an administration official.[77][f] This official reports the transport of 10.40-metre-tall (34.1-foot) palmiform[g] columns of red granite from Elephantine to Saqqara in only four days, a feat for which he was praised by the king.[77] In addition to the important construction works undertaken in Saqqara for the construction of his pyramid complex, building activities also took place on Elephantine.[33]

Until 1996, the domestic situation during Unas' reign was thought to have been disastrous, based on reliefs from the causeway of his pyramid complex showing emaciated people and thus suggesting times of famine.[5][79] This changed when excavations at Abusir in 1996 yielded similar reliefs in the mortuary complex of Sahure, who reigned at a prosperous time in the early Fifth Dynasty.[80] In addition, research showed that the starving people are likely to be desert dwellers, nomads distinguished by their specific hair-style, rather than Egyptians.[81] Thus, these reliefs are now understood to be standard representations of the generosity of the king towards the destitute and of the hardships of life in the desert regions bordering Egypt[82] rather than referring to actual events.[81]

Death and end of a dynasty Edit

In his history of Egypt, Manetho states that with the death of Unas the Fifth Dynasty came to an end.[33] This may be because Unas died without a male heir,[73] his probable son Unas-Ankh having predeceased him. This might have caused a succession crisis[73] hinted at by the personal name chosen by Teti upon his accession to the throne: "Seheteptawy" meaning "He who reconciles/pacifies the two lands".[33][73] Teti's claim to the throne could have relied on his marriage to Iput, who may have been a daughter of Unas.[83][84][85] This possibility is heavily debated, as the interpretation of Iput's titles that would indicate that she was the daughter of a king is uncertain.[h][51] Furthermore, the idea that Teti could legitimate his claim by marrying into the royal family is rejected by many Egyptologists, including Munro, Dobrev, Baud, Mertz, Pirenne, and Robin, who do not think that the right to the pharaonic throne passed through the female line.[86]

In addition to Manetho's statement, the Turin king list presents a special break point between Unas and his successor Teti. Although the king list is not organized in dynasties–which were invented by Manetho–the Egyptologist Jaromir Malek explains that "the criterion for such divisions in the Turin Canon invariably was the change of location of the capital and royal residence."[84] Malek thus suggests that the capital of Egypt, then known as Inbu-Hedj,[i] was indeed supplanted at the time by settlements located to the South, East of South Saqqara, where Unas' palace may have been located. In the second millennium BC these cities finally merged and gave rise to Memphis.[88][j]

Whatever the basis for Manetho's choice to end the Fifth Dynasty with Unas, Egyptians living at the time probably perceived no particular change from one dynasty to the next.[33] The administration of the state shows no evidence of disturbances, with many officials continuing their careers from Unas' onto Teti's reign.[33] These include the viziers Mehu, Kagemni and Nikau-Isesi and the overseer of the province of Edfu Isi.[89] Given that the Egyptians of the Old Kingdom might not have conceived of dynasties,[90] the distinction between the Fifth and Sixth Dynasties might be illusory.[33]

Evolution of religion and kingship Edit

The reigns of Djedkare Isesi and of Unas were a time of changes in Ancient Egyptian religion and in the ideology of kingship, changes that are first demonstrable under Unas.[91] A statistical analysis of clay seal fragments bearing Horus names of pharaohs of the Fifth Dynasty points to a marked decline of the cult of the king during Unas' time on the throne.[92] This continued under Unas' successor Teti, for whom we know only two seals bearing his Horus name.[93] This trend reflects the lessening of the king's power in conjunction with the growth of the administration and priesthood.[73]

Meanwhile, the cult of Osiris was becoming more important[94] with this god replacing the king as the guarantor of life after death for the pharaoh's subjects.[84][95] The German Egyptologist Hartwig Altenmüller writes that for an Egyptian of the time "the [...] afterlife no longer depends on the relationship between the individual mortal and the king, [...] instead it is linked to his ethical position in direct relation to Osiris".[95] In contrast, the cult of the sun god Ra was in apparent decline,[96] even though Ra was still the most important deity of the Egyptian pantheon.[95] Thus, Djedkare Isesi and Unas did not build a sun temple in contrast with most of their Fifth Dynasty predecessors.[94][97] In addition, the names of Menkauhor Kaiu and Unas do not incorporate any reference to Ra, in rupture with a tradition which held since the reign of Userkaf, about a century earlier. The Pyramid Texts found in Unas' pyramid demonstrate the importance of Osiris and Ra in ancient Egyptian religion at the time. Both gods were believed to play the key roles in accessing the afterlife, with Ra as the source of life and Osiris as the force through which the next life would be attained.[98][k]

Pyramid complex Edit

 
The pyramid of Unas at Saqqara

Unas had a pyramid built for himself in North Saqqara, between the pyramid of Sekhemkhet and the southwestern corner of the pyramid complex of Djoser, in symmetry with the pyramid of Userkaf located at the northeastern corner.[102] In the process, workers leveled and covered older tombs located in the area,[2] most notably the tomb of the Second Dynasty pharaoh Hotepsekhemwy (c. 2890 BC).[102]

The original Egyptian name of the pyramid was "Nefer Isut Unas", meaning "Beautiful are the places of Unas".[103] The pyramid of Unas is the smallest[102] of the pyramids completed during the Old Kingdom, having a square base of 57.7 m × 57.7 m (189 ft × 189 ft) for a height of 43 m (141 ft).[102][103]

Mortuary complex Edit

 
A restored section of the causeway of Unas

The pyramid of Unas is part of a larger mortuary complex built around it. It was approached via an ancient lake[104] on the shores of which Unas' valley temple was located. This temple received the provisions for the cult of the king and the offerings to be made were prepared there. At the back of the valley temple was the beginning of a 750-metre (2,460-foot) causeway, equaled only by that of Khufu,[102] and leading to an upper temple adjacent to the pyramid. A thin slit in the roof of the causeway allowed the light to illuminate its walls covered for their entire length in painted reliefs. These depicted the Egyptian seasons, processions of people from the nomes of Egypt, craftsmen at work, offerings bearers, battle scenes and the transport of granite columns for the construction of the pyramid complex.[105]

At the end of the causeway was a large hall leading to a pillared open court surrounded by magazine chambers.[105] The court led into the mortuary temple proper which housed statues of the king and where the offerings to the deceased took place.[105] This was immediately adjacent to the eastern side of the pyramid, which was surrounded by an enclosure wall defining the sacred space. At the southeast corner of the enclosure was a small satellite pyramid for the Ka of the king.[102] The internal chambers of the pyramid were entered in 1881 by Gaston Maspero, who thus discovered the pyramid texts. The burial chamber housed nothing but a black greywacke[1] sarcophagus sunk into the floor and a canopic chest. The sarcophagus proved to contain scattered bones, which may belong to Unas.[102]

Pyramid Texts Edit

 
The Pyramid Texts inscribed on the walls of Unas' burial chamber

The main innovation of the pyramid of Unas is the first appearance of the Pyramid Texts,[6] one of the oldest religious texts in Egypt to have survived to this day.[l] In doing so, Unas initiated a tradition that would be followed in the pyramid of the kings and queens of the Sixth to Eighth Dynasties, until the end of the Old Kingdom circa 200 years later.[107]

In total 283 magical spells,[106][m] also known as utterances, were carved and the signs painted blue on the walls of the corridor, antechamber, and burial chamber of Unas' pyramid.[109] They constitute the most complete rendition of the Pyramid Texts existing today.[110] These spells were intended to help the king in overcoming hostile forces and powers in the Underworld and thus join with the sun god Ra, his divine father in the afterlife.[111] By writing the texts on the walls of the pyramid's internal chambers, the architects of Unas' pyramid ensured that the king would benefit from their potency even if the funerary cult was to cease.[2][112] Hence, the Pyramid Texts of the pyramid of Unas incorporate instructions for ritual actions and words to be spoken, suggesting that they were precisely those performed and recited during the cult of the king in his mortuary temple.[113]

The good preservation of the texts in Unas' pyramid shows that they were arranged so as to be read by the Ba of Unas, as it arose from the sarcophagus thanks to resurrection utterances and surrounded by protective spells and ritual offerings.[110][114] The Ba would then leave the burial chamber, which incorporates texts identifying the king with Osiris in the Duat, and would move to the antechamber symbolizing the Akhet. Included in the spells written on the walls of the antechamber of Unas are two utterances known as the Cannibal Hymn, which portrays the pharaoh as flying to heaven through a stormy sky and eating both gods and men. In doing so the king would receive the life force of the gods.[110][n][o] At this point the Ba of Unas would face east, the direction of the sunrise, and beyond the pyramid masonry, the false door of the mortuary temple where funerary rituals were performed. Finally, turning left the Ba would join Ra in the sky by passing through the pyramid corridor.[110]

An example of a spell from the pyramid of Unas is Utterance 217:[111]

Re-Atum, this Unas comes to you
A spirit indestructible
Your son comes to you
This Unas comes to you
May you cross the sky united in the dark
May you rise in lightland, the place in which you shine!

Legacy Edit

 
Scarab bearing Unas' name[117]

Unas' most immediate legacy is his funerary cult, which continued at least until the end of the Old Kingdom. This cult is attested by the tombs at Saqqara of seven priests responsible for the religious duties to be performed in the funerary complex. Three of these tombs date to the early Sixth Dynasty in the time following the death of Pepi I. Three more tombs date to the reign of Pepi II and the last one dates to the very end of the Old Kingdom (c. 2180 BC). The priests of the cult of Unas adopted basilophorous names, incorporating that of the king, possibly upon taking office.[118]

Unas' funerary cult appears to have survived during the chaotic First Intermediate Period until the Middle Kingdom.[119] By the time of the 12th Dynasty (c. 1990–c. 1800 BC), the lector-priest Unasemsaf[p] and his family were involved in the cult of Unas.[120][121] In spite of this, Unas' funerary complex was partially dismantled and its materials reemployed for the construction of Amenemhat I and Senusret I own pyramid complexes.[122][123]

In addition to his official cult, Unas was deified and became a local god of the Saqqara necropolis. Grimal attributes this directly to the grandeur of his funerary complex.[33] Malek doubts the existence of a popular cult of Unas during the Old Kingdom but acknowledges it from the Middle Kingdom onwards.[124] He attributes this Middle Kingdom revival to the geographic position of Unas' complex making it a natural gateway to the Saqqara necropolis.[125] The popular cult of the deified Unas continued for nearly 2,000 years as shown by the numerous scarabs bearing Unas' name found in Saqqara and dated from the New Kingdom (c.1550–c.1077 BC) until the Late Period (664–332 BC).[117][126][127][128] The epicenter of this cult was not the pyramid of Unas nor the associated mortuary temple but rather the statues of the king in the valley temple.[129] This activity could explain why the pyramid complex of Unas was the object of restoration works under the impulse of Prince Khaemweset, a son of Ramesses II (1279–1213 BC).[105]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Proposed dates for Unas' reign: 2404–2374 BC,[2][3] 2375–2345 BC,[4][5][6][7] 2367–2347 BC,[8] 2353–2323 BC,[9] 2342–2322 BC,[10] 2321–2306 BC[11] 2312–2282 BC.[12]
  2. ^ Inventory number 3253.[29]
  3. ^ Reference number UC13258.[32]
  4. ^ In particular the title of "king's son" was given to both actual royal sons and non-royal high officials.[42]
  5. ^ The text of the inscription reads "Horus Wadjtawy, the king of Upper and Lower Egypt Unas, lord of the foreign lands, given life and dominion for ever, beloved of Khnum, given life for ever".[65][66]
  6. ^ Stela CG 1433, Egyptian Museum, Cairo.[77]
  7. ^ A palmiform column is a column whose capital has the form of palm leaves. This style is for example present in the mortuary complex of king Sahure.[78]
  8. ^ Iput held the title of z3t nswt-bjtj, which literally means "Daughter of the king of Upper and Lower Egypt". However, this title could equally well be a variant of z3t-ntjr, meaning that she was the mother of a king (Pepi I)[51]
  9. ^ Inbu-Hedj means "White Walls".[87]
  10. ^ From "Mennefer", meaning "Perfect and enduring", the name of the pyramid of Pepi I next to which Mennefer was located.[87]
  11. ^ Another important religious work, the Memphite Theology, may have been written during the reign of Unas.[73] The Memphite Theology is a story of the creation of the world and of the religious and social order of ancient Egypt through the word and will of the god Ptah. The king himself is described as the personified Horus and an aspect of Ptah.[99] It is now widely believed, however, that this theological text dates to either to the 19th Dynasty or to the much later 25th Dynasty (760–656 BC).[100][101]
  12. ^ Note that the archaic style of certain sections of the Pyramid Texts indicate that these are much older than Unas' reign.[106]
  13. ^ The number reported differs from scholar to scholar. Clayton mentions 228 spells;[108] Allen gives 236.[107]
  14. ^ While most historians believe that it is unlikely that Unas himself engaged in cannibalism, the Egyptologist Ernest Alfred Wallis Budge proposed that the Cannibal Hymn may harken back to an earlier time in Egyptian history when cannibalism was in fact practiced.[115]
  15. ^ This inspired the American technical death metal band Nile, which recorded an 11:43-long song titled "Unas, Slayer of the Gods" based on the Cannibal Hymn. It appears on their 2002 album In Their Darkened Shrines.[116]
  16. ^ Unasemsaf means "Unas is his protection".

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Verner 2001d, p. 334.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Altenmüller 2001, p. 600.
  3. ^ Hawass & Senussi 2008, p. 10.
  4. ^ Clayton 1994, p. 60.
  5. ^ a b Rice 1999, p. 213.
  6. ^ a b c d Malek 2000a, p. 102.
  7. ^ Lloyd 2010, p. xxxiv.
  8. ^ Strudwick 2005, p. xxx.
  9. ^ Arnold 1999.
  10. ^ a b c von Beckerath 1999, p. 283.
  11. ^ a b c Hornung 2012, p. 491.
  12. ^ Dodson & Hilton 2004, p. 288.
  13. ^ a b c d e Barsanti 1901, p. 254.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g Baker 2008, p. 482.
  15. ^ Leprohon 2013, p. 40.
  16. ^ a b Petrie 1917, p. 18 & p. 63.
  17. ^ a b Leprohon 2013, p. 41, footnote 65.
  18. ^ a b c d Baker 2008, pp. 482–483.
  19. ^ Mariette 1864, p. 15.
  20. ^ Gardiner 1959, pl. II & Col. III num. 25.
  21. ^ von Beckerath 1999, pp. 60–61, king no. 9.
  22. ^ a b c d e Kanawati 2001, pp. 1–2.
  23. ^ a b Ziegler in Allen et al. 1999, pp. 361–362, "123. Jar inscribed with the name of king Unis".
  24. ^ Verner 2001a, pp. 410–411.
  25. ^ Petrie 1907, p. 84 & fig. 49 p. 82.
  26. ^ Porter, Moss & Burney 1951, p. 390.
  27. ^ Guidotti 1991, p. 82, no. 18.
  28. ^ Vase of Unas 2015.
  29. ^ Touring Club Italiano 1993, p. 352.
  30. ^ Brooklyn Museum Catalog 2015.
  31. ^ Brunton 2015.
  32. ^ Digital Egypt 2000.
  33. ^ a b c d e f g h i Grimal 1992, p. 80.
  34. ^ Baud 1999, p. 563.
  35. ^ Baud 1999, p. 489.
  36. ^ Baud 1999, p. 545.
  37. ^ Williams 1981, p. 31.
  38. ^ Onderka 2009, p. 166.
  39. ^ Baud 1999, p. 422.
  40. ^ Schmitz 1976, p. 31 & 89.
  41. ^ Onderka 2009, p. 150 & pp. 167–170.
  42. ^ Onderka 2009, pp. 149–150.
  43. ^ Munro 1993, pp. 20–33.
  44. ^ Baud 1999, pp. 580–582.
  45. ^ a b Onderka 2009, p. 170.
  46. ^ Baud 1999, p. 519.
  47. ^ Dodson & Hilton 2004, p. 64.
  48. ^ Baud 1999, p. 499.
  49. ^ Baud 1999, pp. 496–497.
  50. ^ Baud 1999, pp. 564–565.
  51. ^ a b c Baud 1999, pp. 410–411.
  52. ^ a b Borchardt 1913, Blatt 45.
  53. ^ Labrousse, Lauer & Leclant 1977, p. 86, fig. 57.
  54. ^ a b Petrie 1907, p. 82.
  55. ^ Hayes 1978, p. 58.
  56. ^ Munro 1993, p. 8ff.
  57. ^ Labrousse, Lauer & Leclant 1977, p. 85, fig. 56 & p. 86 fig. 57.
  58. ^ a b Baker 2008, p. 483.
  59. ^ Richter 2013.
  60. ^ Rice 1999, p. 173.
  61. ^ Verner 2001a, p. 411.
  62. ^ Verner 2001a, p. 416.
  63. ^ Kanawati & ʻAbd-ar-Rāziq 2000.
  64. ^ Verner 2001a, p. 412.
  65. ^ Strudwick 2005, p. 133, num. 48.
  66. ^ Sethe 1903, entry 69.
  67. ^ Malek 2000a, p. 106.
  68. ^ Hayes 1978, p. 67.
  69. ^ Wachsmann 1998, p. 12 & p. 18.
  70. ^ a b c Malek 2000a, p. 105.
  71. ^ Stevenson Smith 1971, p. 189.
  72. ^ Lichtheim 1973, pp. 18–23.
  73. ^ a b c d e f g Verner 2001b, p. 590.
  74. ^ Stevenson Smith 1971, p. 188.
  75. ^ Landström 1970, p. 62, fig. 185.
  76. ^ Lehner 1997, p. 202.
  77. ^ a b c Fischer 1975.
  78. ^ Lehner 1997, pp. 142–144.
  79. ^ Dodson 1995, pp. 38–39.
  80. ^ Hawass & Verner 1996, pp. 184–185.
  81. ^ a b Ziegler in Allen et al. 1999, pp. 360, "122. Starving bedouin".
  82. ^ Coulon 2008, p. 2.
  83. ^ Stevenson Smith 1971, p. 190.
  84. ^ a b c Malek 2000a, p. 103.
  85. ^ Baker 2008, p. 461.
  86. ^ Baud & Dobrev 1995, p. 58.
  87. ^ a b Jeffreys 2001, p. 373.
  88. ^ Malek 2000a, p. 104.
  89. ^ Altenmüller 2001, p. 602.
  90. ^ Baud & Dobrev 1995, pp. 55–58.
  91. ^ Goedicke 1971, p. 155.
  92. ^ Verner 2001a, pp. 408–409.
  93. ^ Verner 2001a, p. 409.
  94. ^ a b Dorman 2015.
  95. ^ a b c Altenmüller 2001, p. 601.
  96. ^ Verner 2001b, p. 589.
  97. ^ Verner 2003, p. 84.
  98. ^ Allen & Der Manuelian 2005, pp. 7–8, The Function of the Pyramid Texts.
  99. ^ Arieh Tobin 2001, p. 471.
  100. ^ Arieh Tobin 2001, p. 470.
  101. ^ Ockinga 2010, p. 113.
  102. ^ a b c d e f g Lehner 1997, p. 154.
  103. ^ a b Grimal 1992, p. 118, Table 3.
  104. ^ Lehner 1997, p. 83.
  105. ^ a b c d Lehner 1997, p. 155.
  106. ^ a b Lehner 1997, pp. 154–155.
  107. ^ a b Allen 2001, p. 95.
  108. ^ Clayton 1994, p. 63.
  109. ^ Verner 2001c, p. 92.
  110. ^ a b c d Lehner 1997, p. 33.
  111. ^ a b Oakes & Gahlin 2002, p. 94.
  112. ^ Lehner 1997, p. 95.
  113. ^ Lehner 1997, pp. 32–33.
  114. ^ Allen 2001, p. 96.
  115. ^ Budge 1988, p. 323.
  116. ^ Music Song Lyrics 2015, Nile Unas Slayer Of The Gods lyrics.
  117. ^ a b Petrie 1917, Plate IX & p. 34, see the scarabs.
  118. ^ Altenmüller 1974, pp. 3–4.
  119. ^ Morales 2006, p. 314.
  120. ^ Moussa 1971.
  121. ^ Moussa & Altenmüller 1975.
  122. ^ Goedicke 1971.
  123. ^ Malek 2000b, p. 257.
  124. ^ Malek 2000b, pp. 250–251.
  125. ^ Malek 2000b, p. 256.
  126. ^ Newberry 2003, Plate IV. Scarabs 32, 33 & 34.
  127. ^ MFA Online catalog 2015.
  128. ^ MMA Online catalog 2015.
  129. ^ Gundlach 2001, p. 375.

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Preceded by Pharaoh of Egypt
Fifth Dynasty
(end of dynasty)
Succeeded by

unas, this, article, about, king, ancient, egypt, other, uses, disambiguation, wenis, also, spelled, unis, ancient, egyptian, wnjs, hellenized, form, oenas, onnos, pharaoh, ninth, last, ruler, fifth, dynasty, egypt, during, kingdom, reigned, years, 24th, centu. This article is about the king of ancient Egypt For other uses see Unas disambiguation Unas ˈ j uː n e s or Wenis also spelled Unis Ancient Egyptian wnjs hellenized form Oenas ˈ iː n e s or Onnos was a pharaoh the ninth and last ruler of the Fifth Dynasty of Egypt during the Old Kingdom Unas reigned for 15 to 30 years in the mid 24th century BC circa 2345 2315 BC succeeding Djedkare Isesi who might have been his father UnasOenas Onnos Unis WenisBlack greywacke 1 sarcophagus in the funerary chamber of Unas pyramidPharaohReignduration uncertain 15 to 30 years in the mid 24th century BC a PredecessorDjedkare IsesiSuccessorTetiRoyal titularyConsortNebet KhenutChildrenHemetre Hemi Khentkaues Neferut Nefertkaues Iku Sesheshet Idut Uncertain Unas ankh Iput Conjectured Nebkauhor Shepsespuptah Fatherpossibly Djedkare IsesiMotherpossibly SetibhorBurialPyramid of UnasDynastyFifth DynastyLittle is known of Unas activities during his reign which was a time of economic decline Egypt maintained trade relations with the Levantine coast and Nubia and military action may have taken place in southern Canaan The growth and decentralization of the administration in conjunction with the lessening of the king s power continued under Unas ultimately contributing to the collapse of the Old Kingdom some 200 years later Unas built a pyramid in Saqqara the smallest of the royal pyramids completed during the Old Kingdom The accompanying mortuary complex with its high and valley temples linked by a 750 metre long 2 460 ft causeway was lavishly decorated with painted reliefs whose quality and variety surpass the usual royal iconography 6 Furthermore Unas was the first pharaoh to have the Pyramid Texts carved and painted on the walls of the chambers of his pyramid a major innovation that was followed by his successors until the First Intermediate Period c 2160 c 2050 BC These texts identify the king with Ra and with Osiris whose cult was on the rise in Unas time and were meant to help the king reach the afterlife Unas had several daughters and possibly one or two sons who are believed to have predeceased him Manetho a third century BC Egyptian priest of the Ptolemaic Kingdom and author of the first history of Egypt claims that with Unas death the Fifth Dynasty came to an end Unas was succeeded by Teti the first pharaoh of the Sixth Dynasty possibly after a short crisis However the archaeological evidence suggests that the Egyptians at the time made no conscious break with the preceding dynasty and the distinction between the Fifth and Sixth dynasties might be illusory The funerary cult of Unas established at his death continued until the end of the Old Kingdom and may have survived during the chaotic First Intermediate Period The cult was still in existence or revived during the later Middle Kingdom c 2050 c 1650 BC This did not prevent Amenemhat I and Senusret I c 1990 c 1930 BC from partially dismantling the mortuary complex of Unas for its materials In parallel to the official cult Unas may have received popular veneration as a local god of Saqqara until as late as the Late Period 664 332 BC nearly 2000 years after his death Contents 1 Attestations 1 1 Historical sources 1 2 Contemporaneous sources 2 Reign 2 1 Family 2 2 Duration 2 3 Activities 2 4 Death and end of a dynasty 3 Evolution of religion and kingship 4 Pyramid complex 4 1 Mortuary complex 4 2 Pyramid Texts 5 Legacy 6 Notes 7 References 8 BibliographyAttestations EditHistorical sources Edit Unas is well attested by historical sources with three ancient Egyptian king lists dating to the New Kingdom period mentioning him 18 He occupies the 33rd entry of the Abydos King List which was written during the reign of Seti I 1290 1279 BC Unas name is also present on the Saqqara Tablet 32nd entry 19 and on the Turin canon third column 25th row both of which were written during the reign of Ramses II 1279 1213 BC 18 The Turin canon further credits Unas with 30 years of reign 18 20 These sources all place Unas as the ninth and final ruler of the Fifth Dynasty succeeding Djedkare Isesi and preceding Teti on the throne 21 This relative chronology is corroborated by archaeological evidence for example in the tomb of officials serving under these kings 22 In addition to these sources Unas was also likely mentioned in the Aegyptiaca a history of Egypt written in the 3rd century BC during the reign of Ptolemy II 283 246 BC by the Egyptian priest Manetho No copies of the Aegyptiaca have survived to this day and it is known to us only through later writings by Sextus Julius Africanus and Eusebius Africanus relates that the Aegyptiaca mentioned a pharaoh Onnos reigning for 33 years at the end of the Fifth Dynasty Onnos is believed to be the hellenized form for Unas and Africanus 33 year figure fits well with the 30 years of reign given to Unas on the Turin canon 18 Contemporaneous sources Edit nbsp Alabaster globular vase of Unas Louvre 23 The primary contemporaneous sources attesting to Unas activities are the many reliefs from his pyramid complex Excluding these surprisingly few documents dating to Unas reign have survived to this day considering the 30 year length that later records give for his reign Excavations at Abusir the royal necropolis of the Fifth Dynasty have produced only four dated inscriptions safely attributable to Unas They explicitly mention his third fourth sixth and eighth years on the throne 24 Unas also left a rock inscription on the island of Elephantine next to the First Cataract of the Nile in Nubia 25 In addition several alabaster vases bearing Unas cartouche are known A complete vessel and additional fragments originating from Byblos 14 on the Levantine coast are now in the National Museum of Beirut 26 A vase of unknown provenance is located in the National Archaeological Museum of Florence and reads Horus Wadjtawy living eternally king of Upper and Lower Egypt son of Ra Unas living eternally 27 28 b Another vessel of unknown origins is on display at the Louvre Museum It is a 17 centimetre tall 6 7 in 13 2 centimetre wide 5 2 in globular alabaster vase finely decorated with a falcon with outstretched wings and two uraei or rearing cobras holding ankh signs surrounding Unas cartouche 23 An ointment jar bearing Unas cartouche and Horus name is in the Brooklyn Museum 30 Finally a fragment of a calcite vase rim bearing two cartouches of Unas is on display in the Petrie Museum 31 c Reign EditFamily Edit Unas assumed the throne at the death of his predecessor Djedkare Isesi Djedkare is thought to have been Unas father 2 in spite of the complete lack of evidence bearing on the question 33 The succession from Djedkare Isesi to Unas seems to have been smooth 34 Unas had at least two queens Nebet 35 and Khenut 36 who were buried in a large double mastaba adjacent to their husband s pyramid Unas and Nebet possibly had a son the king s son royal chamberlain priest of Maat and overseer of Upper Egypt Unas Ankh 37 who died about 10 years into Unas reign 38 The filiation of Unas Ankh is indirectly hinted at by his name and titles and by the presence of his tomb near those of Nebet and Unas 39 but is not universally accepted 40 41 d Two other sons have been proposed Nebkauhor 43 and Shepsespuptah 44 but these filiations are conjectural and contested 45 Unas likely died without a male heir 45 Unas had at least five daughters named Hemetre Hemi 46 Khentkaues 47 Neferut 48 Nefertkaues Iku 49 and Sesheshet Idut 50 The status of another possible daughter Iput is uncertain 51 Duration Edit nbsp Relief of Sahure wearing the tunic of the Sed festival 52 similar to the relief depicting Unas Sed festival from his mortuary complex 53 The duration of Unas reign is uncertain As indicated above historical sources credit him with 30 and 33 years on the throne figures that have been adopted by many Egyptologists including Flinders Petrie 54 William C Hayes 55 Darrell Baker 14 Peter Munro 56 and Jaromir Malek 6 In favor of such a long reign are scenes 57 of a Sed festival found in Unas mortuary temple 58 2 This festival was normally celebrated only after 30 years of reign and was meant to rejuvenate the pharaoh s strength and power Mere depictions of the festival do not necessarily imply a long reign however For example a relief showing pharaoh Sahure in the tunic of the Sed festival has been found in his mortuary temple 52 59 although both historical sources and archeological evidence agree that he ruled Egypt for less than 14 full years 60 10 11 Other Egyptologists suspect a reign of less than 30 years for Unas owing to the scarcity of artefacts datable to his reign as well as the lack of documents dated to beyond his eighth year on the throne 61 Hence Jurgen von Beckerath believes that Unas ruled Egypt for 20 years 10 while Rolf Krauss David Warburton and Erik Hornung shortened this number to 15 years in their 2012 study of Egyptian chronology 11 Krauss and Miroslav Verner further question the credibility of the Turin Canon concerning the Fourth and Fifth Dynasties so that the 30 year figure credited to Unas by the canon might not be reliable 62 Excavations 63 of the tomb of Nikau Isesi under the direction of Naguib Kanawati at Saqqara have yielded evidence in support of a shorter reign 64 Nikau Isesi was an official who started his career during the reign of Djedkare Isesi He lived through that of Unas and died as overseer of Upper Egypt under Unas successor Teti 22 Nikau Isesi is known to have died on the year of the eleventh cattle count during Teti s reign an event consisting of counting the livestock throughout the country to evaluate the amount of taxes to be levied It is traditionally believed that such counts occurred every two years during the Old Kingdom and every year during the later Middle Kingdom c 2055 c 1650 BC 22 Thus Nikau Isesi would have lived for 22 years after Teti took the throne and together with the 30 years of reign credited to Unas would have died past 70 years old 22 However forensic examination of his mummy yielded an age at death of no more than 45 years old This suggests that the cattle count occurred more than once every two years during Unas and Teti s time possibly irregularly If so Unas 30 year figure on the Turin canon understood to mean 15 cattle counts could translate into as little as 15 years which together with just 11 years during Teti s reign would account for Nikau Isesi s death at around 40 to 45 years of age 22 Activities Edit nbsp Drawing 54 of the rock inscription of Unas on Elephantine e Trade and warfareOwing to the scarcity of evidence dating to Unas reign we know very little about his activities 14 Existing trade relations with foreign countries and cities in particular Byblos 67 seem to have continued during Unas time on the throne Reliefs from the causeway of his pyramid complex show two large seagoing ships coming back from an expedition to the Levantine coast with Syro Canaanite men who were either the boat crews or slaves 68 69 Another relief depicts a military campaign 70 Egyptians armed with bows and daggers attacking Canaanite nomads called the Shasu 71 Similar reliefs have been found in preceding pyramid complexes such as that of Sahure and they may thus be standard themes rather than depictions of actual events 70 Other sources tend to confirm the accuracy of these depictions for example the autobiography of Weni relates many punitive raids against Canaanite nomads in the early Sixth Dynasty 70 72 To the South of Egypt inscriptions of Unas on Elephantine record a visit of the king to Lower Nubia possibly to receive tribute from local chieftains 58 or because of growing unrest in the region 73 In addition a relief from the causeway of Unas leading to his pyramid shows a giraffe suggesting trade relations with Nubia 74 Domestic nbsp Relief showing starving nomads from Unas causeway at SaqqaraUnas reign was a time of economic decline 73 although as the French Egyptologist Nicolas Grimal writes it was by no means a time of decadence 33 Indeed the Egyptian state was still capable of mounting important expeditions to provide building stones for the king s pyramid complex 2 These expeditions are depicted on unique reliefs found in Unas causeway 75 76 2 and are also referred to in the autobiographical stela of an administration official 77 f This official reports the transport of 10 40 metre tall 34 1 foot palmiform g columns of red granite from Elephantine to Saqqara in only four days a feat for which he was praised by the king 77 In addition to the important construction works undertaken in Saqqara for the construction of his pyramid complex building activities also took place on Elephantine 33 Until 1996 the domestic situation during Unas reign was thought to have been disastrous based on reliefs from the causeway of his pyramid complex showing emaciated people and thus suggesting times of famine 5 79 This changed when excavations at Abusir in 1996 yielded similar reliefs in the mortuary complex of Sahure who reigned at a prosperous time in the early Fifth Dynasty 80 In addition research showed that the starving people are likely to be desert dwellers nomads distinguished by their specific hair style rather than Egyptians 81 Thus these reliefs are now understood to be standard representations of the generosity of the king towards the destitute and of the hardships of life in the desert regions bordering Egypt 82 rather than referring to actual events 81 Death and end of a dynasty Edit In his history of Egypt Manetho states that with the death of Unas the Fifth Dynasty came to an end 33 This may be because Unas died without a male heir 73 his probable son Unas Ankh having predeceased him This might have caused a succession crisis 73 hinted at by the personal name chosen by Teti upon his accession to the throne Seheteptawy meaning He who reconciles pacifies the two lands 33 73 Teti s claim to the throne could have relied on his marriage to Iput who may have been a daughter of Unas 83 84 85 This possibility is heavily debated as the interpretation of Iput s titles that would indicate that she was the daughter of a king is uncertain h 51 Furthermore the idea that Teti could legitimate his claim by marrying into the royal family is rejected by many Egyptologists including Munro Dobrev Baud Mertz Pirenne and Robin who do not think that the right to the pharaonic throne passed through the female line 86 In addition to Manetho s statement the Turin king list presents a special break point between Unas and his successor Teti Although the king list is not organized in dynasties which were invented by Manetho the Egyptologist Jaromir Malek explains that the criterion for such divisions in the Turin Canon invariably was the change of location of the capital and royal residence 84 Malek thus suggests that the capital of Egypt then known as Inbu Hedj i was indeed supplanted at the time by settlements located to the South East of South Saqqara where Unas palace may have been located In the second millennium BC these cities finally merged and gave rise to Memphis 88 j Whatever the basis for Manetho s choice to end the Fifth Dynasty with Unas Egyptians living at the time probably perceived no particular change from one dynasty to the next 33 The administration of the state shows no evidence of disturbances with many officials continuing their careers from Unas onto Teti s reign 33 These include the viziers Mehu Kagemni and Nikau Isesi and the overseer of the province of Edfu Isi 89 Given that the Egyptians of the Old Kingdom might not have conceived of dynasties 90 the distinction between the Fifth and Sixth Dynasties might be illusory 33 Evolution of religion and kingship EditThe reigns of Djedkare Isesi and of Unas were a time of changes in Ancient Egyptian religion and in the ideology of kingship changes that are first demonstrable under Unas 91 A statistical analysis of clay seal fragments bearing Horus names of pharaohs of the Fifth Dynasty points to a marked decline of the cult of the king during Unas time on the throne 92 This continued under Unas successor Teti for whom we know only two seals bearing his Horus name 93 This trend reflects the lessening of the king s power in conjunction with the growth of the administration and priesthood 73 Meanwhile the cult of Osiris was becoming more important 94 with this god replacing the king as the guarantor of life after death for the pharaoh s subjects 84 95 The German Egyptologist Hartwig Altenmuller writes that for an Egyptian of the time the afterlife no longer depends on the relationship between the individual mortal and the king instead it is linked to his ethical position in direct relation to Osiris 95 In contrast the cult of the sun god Ra was in apparent decline 96 even though Ra was still the most important deity of the Egyptian pantheon 95 Thus Djedkare Isesi and Unas did not build a sun temple in contrast with most of their Fifth Dynasty predecessors 94 97 In addition the names of Menkauhor Kaiu and Unas do not incorporate any reference to Ra in rupture with a tradition which held since the reign of Userkaf about a century earlier The Pyramid Texts found in Unas pyramid demonstrate the importance of Osiris and Ra in ancient Egyptian religion at the time Both gods were believed to play the key roles in accessing the afterlife with Ra as the source of life and Osiris as the force through which the next life would be attained 98 k Pyramid complex Edit nbsp The pyramid of Unas at SaqqaraMain article Pyramid of Unas Unas had a pyramid built for himself in North Saqqara between the pyramid of Sekhemkhet and the southwestern corner of the pyramid complex of Djoser in symmetry with the pyramid of Userkaf located at the northeastern corner 102 In the process workers leveled and covered older tombs located in the area 2 most notably the tomb of the Second Dynasty pharaoh Hotepsekhemwy c 2890 BC 102 The original Egyptian name of the pyramid was Nefer Isut Unas meaning Beautiful are the places of Unas 103 The pyramid of Unas is the smallest 102 of the pyramids completed during the Old Kingdom having a square base of 57 7 m 57 7 m 189 ft 189 ft for a height of 43 m 141 ft 102 103 Mortuary complex Edit nbsp A restored section of the causeway of UnasThe pyramid of Unas is part of a larger mortuary complex built around it It was approached via an ancient lake 104 on the shores of which Unas valley temple was located This temple received the provisions for the cult of the king and the offerings to be made were prepared there At the back of the valley temple was the beginning of a 750 metre 2 460 foot causeway equaled only by that of Khufu 102 and leading to an upper temple adjacent to the pyramid A thin slit in the roof of the causeway allowed the light to illuminate its walls covered for their entire length in painted reliefs These depicted the Egyptian seasons processions of people from the nomes of Egypt craftsmen at work offerings bearers battle scenes and the transport of granite columns for the construction of the pyramid complex 105 At the end of the causeway was a large hall leading to a pillared open court surrounded by magazine chambers 105 The court led into the mortuary temple proper which housed statues of the king and where the offerings to the deceased took place 105 This was immediately adjacent to the eastern side of the pyramid which was surrounded by an enclosure wall defining the sacred space At the southeast corner of the enclosure was a small satellite pyramid for the Ka of the king 102 The internal chambers of the pyramid were entered in 1881 by Gaston Maspero who thus discovered the pyramid texts The burial chamber housed nothing but a black greywacke 1 sarcophagus sunk into the floor and a canopic chest The sarcophagus proved to contain scattered bones which may belong to Unas 102 Pyramid Texts Edit Main article Pyramid Texts nbsp The Pyramid Texts inscribed on the walls of Unas burial chamberThe main innovation of the pyramid of Unas is the first appearance of the Pyramid Texts 6 one of the oldest religious texts in Egypt to have survived to this day l In doing so Unas initiated a tradition that would be followed in the pyramid of the kings and queens of the Sixth to Eighth Dynasties until the end of the Old Kingdom circa 200 years later 107 In total 283 magical spells 106 m also known as utterances were carved and the signs painted blue on the walls of the corridor antechamber and burial chamber of Unas pyramid 109 They constitute the most complete rendition of the Pyramid Texts existing today 110 These spells were intended to help the king in overcoming hostile forces and powers in the Underworld and thus join with the sun god Ra his divine father in the afterlife 111 By writing the texts on the walls of the pyramid s internal chambers the architects of Unas pyramid ensured that the king would benefit from their potency even if the funerary cult was to cease 2 112 Hence the Pyramid Texts of the pyramid of Unas incorporate instructions for ritual actions and words to be spoken suggesting that they were precisely those performed and recited during the cult of the king in his mortuary temple 113 The good preservation of the texts in Unas pyramid shows that they were arranged so as to be read by the Ba of Unas as it arose from the sarcophagus thanks to resurrection utterances and surrounded by protective spells and ritual offerings 110 114 The Ba would then leave the burial chamber which incorporates texts identifying the king with Osiris in the Duat and would move to the antechamber symbolizing the Akhet Included in the spells written on the walls of the antechamber of Unas are two utterances known as the Cannibal Hymn which portrays the pharaoh as flying to heaven through a stormy sky and eating both gods and men In doing so the king would receive the life force of the gods 110 n o At this point the Ba of Unas would face east the direction of the sunrise and beyond the pyramid masonry the false door of the mortuary temple where funerary rituals were performed Finally turning left the Ba would join Ra in the sky by passing through the pyramid corridor 110 An example of a spell from the pyramid of Unas is Utterance 217 111 Re Atum this Unas comes to youA spirit indestructibleYour son comes to you This Unas comes to you May you cross the sky united in the dark May you rise in lightland the place in which you shine Legacy Edit nbsp Scarab bearing Unas name 117 Unas most immediate legacy is his funerary cult which continued at least until the end of the Old Kingdom This cult is attested by the tombs at Saqqara of seven priests responsible for the religious duties to be performed in the funerary complex Three of these tombs date to the early Sixth Dynasty in the time following the death of Pepi I Three more tombs date to the reign of Pepi II and the last one dates to the very end of the Old Kingdom c 2180 BC The priests of the cult of Unas adopted basilophorous names incorporating that of the king possibly upon taking office 118 Unas funerary cult appears to have survived during the chaotic First Intermediate Period until the Middle Kingdom 119 By the time of the 12th Dynasty c 1990 c 1800 BC the lector priest Unasemsaf p and his family were involved in the cult of Unas 120 121 In spite of this Unas funerary complex was partially dismantled and its materials reemployed for the construction of Amenemhat I and Senusret I own pyramid complexes 122 123 In addition to his official cult Unas was deified and became a local god of the Saqqara necropolis Grimal attributes this directly to the grandeur of his funerary complex 33 Malek doubts the existence of a popular cult of Unas during the Old Kingdom but acknowledges it from the Middle Kingdom onwards 124 He attributes this Middle Kingdom revival to the geographic position of Unas complex making it a natural gateway to the Saqqara necropolis 125 The popular cult of the deified Unas continued for nearly 2 000 years as shown by the numerous scarabs bearing Unas name found in Saqqara and dated from the New Kingdom c 1550 c 1077 BC until the Late Period 664 332 BC 117 126 127 128 The epicenter of this cult was not the pyramid of Unas nor the associated mortuary temple but rather the statues of the king in the valley temple 129 This activity could explain why the pyramid complex of Unas was the object of restoration works under the impulse of Prince Khaemweset a son of Ramesses II 1279 1213 BC 105 Notes Edit Proposed dates for Unas reign 2404 2374 BC 2 3 2375 2345 BC 4 5 6 7 2367 2347 BC 8 2353 2323 BC 9 2342 2322 BC 10 2321 2306 BC 11 2312 2282 BC 12 Inventory number 3253 29 Reference number UC13258 32 In particular the title of king s son was given to both actual royal sons and non royal high officials 42 The text of the inscription reads Horus Wadjtawy the king of Upper and Lower Egypt Unas lord of the foreign lands given life and dominion for ever beloved of Khnum given life for ever 65 66 Stela CG 1433 Egyptian Museum Cairo 77 A palmiform column is a column whose capital has the form of palm leaves This style is for example present in the mortuary complex of king Sahure 78 Iput held the title of z3t nswt bjtj which literally means Daughter of the king of Upper and Lower Egypt However this title could equally well be a variant of z3t ntjr meaning that she was the mother of a king Pepi I 51 Inbu Hedj means White Walls 87 From Mennefer meaning Perfect and enduring the name of the pyramid of Pepi I next to which Mennefer was located 87 Another important religious work the Memphite Theology may have been written during the reign of Unas 73 The Memphite Theology is a story of the creation of the world and of the religious and social order of ancient Egypt through the word and will of the god Ptah The king himself is described as the personified Horus and an aspect of Ptah 99 It is now widely believed however that this theological text dates to either to the 19th Dynasty or to the much later 25th Dynasty 760 656 BC 100 101 Note that the archaic style of certain sections of the Pyramid Texts indicate that these are much older than Unas reign 106 The number reported differs from scholar to scholar Clayton mentions 228 spells 108 Allen gives 236 107 While most historians believe that it is unlikely that Unas himself engaged in cannibalism the Egyptologist Ernest Alfred Wallis Budge proposed that the Cannibal Hymn may harken back to an earlier time in Egyptian history when cannibalism was in fact practiced 115 This inspired the American technical death metal band Nile which recorded an 11 43 long song titled Unas Slayer of the Gods based on the Cannibal Hymn It appears on their 2002 album In Their Darkened Shrines 116 Unasemsaf means Unas is his protection References Edit a b Verner 2001d p 334 a b c d e f g Altenmuller 2001 p 600 Hawass amp Senussi 2008 p 10 Clayton 1994 p 60 a b Rice 1999 p 213 a b c d Malek 2000a p 102 Lloyd 2010 p xxxiv Strudwick 2005 p xxx Arnold 1999 a b c von Beckerath 1999 p 283 a b c Hornung 2012 p 491 Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 288 a b c d e Barsanti 1901 p 254 a b c d e f g Baker 2008 p 482 Leprohon 2013 p 40 a b Petrie 1917 p 18 amp p 63 a b Leprohon 2013 p 41 footnote 65 a b c d Baker 2008 pp 482 483 Mariette 1864 p 15 Gardiner 1959 pl II amp Col III num 25 von Beckerath 1999 pp 60 61 king no 9 a b c d e Kanawati 2001 pp 1 2 a b Ziegler in Allen et al 1999 pp 361 362 123 Jar inscribed with the name of king Unis Verner 2001a pp 410 411 Petrie 1907 p 84 amp fig 49 p 82 Porter Moss amp Burney 1951 p 390 Guidotti 1991 p 82 no 18 Vase of Unas 2015 Touring Club Italiano 1993 p 352 Brooklyn Museum Catalog 2015 Brunton 2015 Digital Egypt 2000 a b c d e f g h i Grimal 1992 p 80 Baud 1999 p 563 Baud 1999 p 489 Baud 1999 p 545 Williams 1981 p 31 Onderka 2009 p 166 Baud 1999 p 422 Schmitz 1976 p 31 amp 89 Onderka 2009 p 150 amp pp 167 170 Onderka 2009 pp 149 150 Munro 1993 pp 20 33 Baud 1999 pp 580 582 a b Onderka 2009 p 170 Baud 1999 p 519 Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 64 Baud 1999 p 499 Baud 1999 pp 496 497 Baud 1999 pp 564 565 a b c Baud 1999 pp 410 411 a b Borchardt 1913 Blatt 45 Labrousse Lauer amp Leclant 1977 p 86 fig 57 a b Petrie 1907 p 82 Hayes 1978 p 58 Munro 1993 p 8ff Labrousse Lauer amp Leclant 1977 p 85 fig 56 amp p 86 fig 57 a b Baker 2008 p 483 Richter 2013 Rice 1999 p 173 Verner 2001a p 411 Verner 2001a p 416 Kanawati amp ʻAbd ar Raziq 2000 Verner 2001a p 412 Strudwick 2005 p 133 num 48 Sethe 1903 entry 69 Malek 2000a p 106 Hayes 1978 p 67 Wachsmann 1998 p 12 amp p 18 a b c Malek 2000a p 105 Stevenson Smith 1971 p 189 Lichtheim 1973 pp 18 23 a b c d e f g Verner 2001b p 590 Stevenson Smith 1971 p 188 Landstrom 1970 p 62 fig 185 Lehner 1997 p 202 a b c Fischer 1975 Lehner 1997 pp 142 144 Dodson 1995 pp 38 39 Hawass amp Verner 1996 pp 184 185 a b Ziegler in Allen et al 1999 pp 360 122 Starving bedouin Coulon 2008 p 2 Stevenson Smith 1971 p 190 a b c Malek 2000a p 103 Baker 2008 p 461 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 p 58 a b Jeffreys 2001 p 373 Malek 2000a p 104 Altenmuller 2001 p 602 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 pp 55 58 Goedicke 1971 p 155 Verner 2001a pp 408 409 Verner 2001a p 409 a b Dorman 2015 a b c Altenmuller 2001 p 601 Verner 2001b p 589 Verner 2003 p 84 Allen amp Der Manuelian 2005 pp 7 8 The Function of the Pyramid Texts Arieh Tobin 2001 p 471 Arieh Tobin 2001 p 470 Ockinga 2010 p 113 a b c d e f g Lehner 1997 p 154 a b Grimal 1992 p 118 Table 3 Lehner 1997 p 83 a b c d Lehner 1997 p 155 a b Lehner 1997 pp 154 155 a b Allen 2001 p 95 Clayton 1994 p 63 Verner 2001c p 92 a b c d Lehner 1997 p 33 a b Oakes amp Gahlin 2002 p 94 Lehner 1997 p 95 Lehner 1997 pp 32 33 Allen 2001 p 96 Budge 1988 p 323 Music Song Lyrics 2015 Nile Unas Slayer Of The Gods lyrics a b Petrie 1917 Plate IX amp p 34 see the scarabs Altenmuller 1974 pp 3 4 Morales 2006 p 314 Moussa 1971 Moussa amp Altenmuller 1975 Goedicke 1971 Malek 2000b p 257 Malek 2000b pp 250 251 Malek 2000b p 256 Newberry 2003 Plate IV Scarabs 32 33 amp 34 MFA Online catalog 2015 MMA Online catalog 2015 Gundlach 2001 p 375 Bibliography EditAllen James Allen Susan Anderson Julie Arnold Arnold 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 ISBN 978 0 8109 6543 0 OCLC 41431623 Allen James 2001 Pyramid Texts In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Vol 3 Oxford University Press pp 95 98 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Allen James Der Manuelian Peter 2005 The ancient Egyptian pyramid texts Writings from the Ancient World Vol 23 Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 978 1 58983 182 7 Altenmuller Hartwig 1974 Zur Vergottlichung des Konigs Unas im Alten Reich Studien zur Altagyptischen Kultur in German 1 1 18 Altenmuller Hartwig 2001 Old Kingdom Fifth Dynasty In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Vol 2 Oxford University Press pp 597 601 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Arieh Tobin Vincent 2001 Myths Creation Myths In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Vol 2 Oxford University Press pp 469 472 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Arnold Dorothea 19 July 1999 Old Kingdom Chronology and List of Kings Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 7 February 2015 Baker Darrell 2008 The Encyclopedia of the Pharaohs Vol I Predynastic to the Twentieth Dynasty 3300 1069 BC Stacey International ISBN 978 1 905299 37 9 Barsanti Alessandro 1901 Rapports de M Alexandre Barsanti sur les deblaiements operes autour de la pyramide d Ounas pendant les annees 1899 1901 Annales du Service des antiquites de l Egypte Tome II pp 244 257 ISSN 1687 1510 OCLC 1189841 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Baud Michel 1999 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 Dobrev Vassil 1995 De nouvelles annales de l Ancien Empire Egyptien Une Pierre de Palerme pour la VIe dynastie PDF Bulletin de l Institut Francais d Archeologie Orientale in French 95 23 92 Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 von Beckerath Jurgen 1999 Handbuch der agyptischen Konigsnamen Munchner agyptologische Studien Heft 49 in German Mainz Philip von Zabern ISBN 978 3 8053 2591 2 Borchardt Ludwig 1913 Das Grabdenkmal des Konigs S aḥu Re in German Vol Band 2 Die Wandbilder Abbildungsblatter Leipzig Hinrichs ISBN 978 3 535 00577 1 Fragmentary Ointment Jar Inscribed for Unas Online database of the Brooklyn Museum Retrieved 1 April 2015 Brunton Guy 2015 Vase UC13258 of Unas Online catalog of the Petrie Museum Retrieved 21 February 2015 Budge Ernest Alfred Wallis 1988 From fetish to God in ancient Egypt Reprint Originally published London Oxford University Press 1934 ed New York Dover Publications ISBN 978 0 486 25803 4 Clayton Peter 1994 Chronicle of the Pharaohs Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05074 3 Coulon Laurent 2008 Famine Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology University of California Los Angeles Retrieved 4 March 2015 Dodson Aidan 1995 Monarchs of the Nile London Rubicon Press ISBN 978 0 948695 21 6 Dodson Aidan Hilton Dyan 2004 The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt London Thames amp Hudson Ltd ISBN 978 0 500 05128 3 Dorman Peter 2015 The 5th dynasty c 2465 c 2325 bc Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 23 February 2015 Unas Digital Egypt for Universities 2000 Retrieved 21 February 2015 Fischer Henry 1975 Two Tantalizing Biographical Fragments of Historical Interest The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 61 33 37 doi 10 1177 030751337506100104 S2CID 192254681 Gardiner Alan 1959 The Royal Canon of Turin Griffith Institute OCLC 21484338 Goedicke Hans 1971 Re Used Blocks from the Pyramid of Amenemhet I at Lisht New York Metropolitan Museum of Art Egyptian Expedition ISBN 978 0 87099 107 3 Grimal Nicolas 1992 A History of Ancient Egypt Translated by Shaw Ian Oxford Blackwell publishing ISBN 978 0 631 19396 8 Guidotti M Cristina 1991 Vasi dall epoca protodinastica al nuovo regno Cataloghi dei musei e gallerie d Italia in Italian Rome Istituto poligrafico e Zecca dello Stato Libreria dello Stato ISBN 978 88 240 0177 9 Gundlach Rolf 2001 Temples In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 3 Oxford University Press pp 363 379 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Hawass Zahi Verner Miroslav 1996 Newly discovered blocks from the causeway of Sahure Archaeological report Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaologischen Instituts Abteilung Kairo MDAIK 52 177 186 Hawass Zahi Senussi Ashraf 2008 Old Kingdom Pottery from Giza American University in Cairo Press ISBN 978 977 305 986 6 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 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 Jeffreys David G 2001 Memphis In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford University Press pp 373 376 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Kanawati Naguib 2001 Nikauisesi A Reconsideration of the Old Kingdom System of Dating PDF The Rundle Foundation for Egyptian Archaeology Newsletter 75 Kanawati Naguib ʻAbd ar Raziq Maḥmud 2000 The Teti Cemetery at Saqqara Volume VI The Tomb of Nikauisesi Australian Centre for Egyptology Reports Vol 14 Warminster Aris amp Phillips ISBN 978 0 85668 819 5 Labrousse Audran Lauer Jean Philippe Leclant Jean 1977 Le temple haut du complexe funeraire du roi Ounas Bibliotheque d etude tome 73 Cairo Institut francais d archeologie orientale du Caire OCLC 5065554 Landstrom Bjorn 1970 Ships of the Pharaohs 4000 Years of Egyptian Shipbuilding Garden City N Y Doubleday OCLC 108769 Lehner Mark 1997 The Complete Pyramids New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05084 2 Leprohon Ronald J 2013 The great name ancient Egyptian royal titulary Writings from the ancient world no 33 Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 978 1 58983 736 2 Lichtheim Miriam 1973 Ancient Egyptian literature Volume 1 The Old and Middle Kingdoms Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 02899 9 Lloyd Alan 2010 Lloyd Alan ed A Companion to Ancient Egypt Volume I Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 5598 4 Malek Jaromir 2000a The Old Kingdom c 2160 2055 BC In Shaw Ian ed The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 815034 3 Malek Jaromir 2000b Old Kingdom rulers as local saints in the Memphite area In Barta Miroslav Krejci Jaromir eds Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2000 PDF Prague Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Oriental Institute pp 241 258 ISBN 978 80 85425 39 0 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 02 01 Mariette Auguste 1864 La table de Saqqarah Revue Archeologique in French Paris 10 168 186 amp Pl 17 The Online Collection Scarab Unas Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 11 March 2015 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 Moussa Ahmed Mahmoud 1971 A Stela from Saqqara of a Family Devoted to the Cult of King Unas Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaologischen Instituts Abteilung Kairo MDAIK 27 81 84 Moussa Ahmed Mahmoud Altenmuller Hartwig 1975 Ein Denkmal zum Kult des Konigs Unas am Ende der 12 Dynastie Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaologischen Instituts Abteilung Kairo MDAIK in German 31 93 97 Munro Peter 1993 Der Unas Friedhof Nord West in German Mainz am Rhein von Zabern OCLC 66014930 Scarab with name of Unas Museum of Fine Arts Boston Retrieved March 11 2015 Ockinga Boyo G 2010 The Memphite Theology Its Purpose and Date In Woods Alexandra McFarlane Ann Binder Susanne eds Egyptian culture and society studies in honour of Naguib Kanawati Annales du Service des Antiquites de l Egypte Cahier 38 Volume II Cairo Conseil supreme des antiquities de l Egypte pp 99 117 OCLC 705718659 Newberry Percy 2003 Ancient Egyptian scarabs and cylinder seals the Timins Collection London Kegan Paul International ISBN 978 0 7103 0944 0 Nile Unas Slayer Of The Gods lyrics Retrieved March 23 2015 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Oakes Lorna Gahlin Lucia 2002 Ancient Egypt An Illustrated reference to the myths religions pyramids and temples of the Land of the Pharaohs New York Hermes House ISBN 978 1 84309 429 6 Onderka Pavel 2009 The Tomb of Unisankh at Saqqara and Chicago Diploma Charles University in Prague Czech Institute of Egyptology Petrie Flinders 1907 A History of Egypt I From the earliest times to the XVIth dynasty Sixth ed OCLC 27060979 Petrie Flinders 1917 Scarabs and cylinders with names illustrated by the Egyptian collection in University College London Publications of the British School of Archaeology in Egypt 29 London School of Archaeology in Egypt OCLC 3246026 Porter Bertha Moss Rosalind Burney Ethel 1951 Topographical bibliography of ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic texts reliefs and paintings VII Nubia the deserts and outside Egypt PDF 1995 reprint ed Oxford Griffith Institute ISBN 978 0 900416 04 0 Rice Michael 1999 Who is who in Ancient Egypt Routledge London amp New York ISBN 978 0 203 44328 6 Richter Barbara 2013 Sed Festival Reliefs of the Old Kingdom Paper Presented at the Annual Meeting of the 58th Annual Meeting of the American Research Center in Egypt Wyndham Toledo Hotel Toledo Ohio Apr 20 2007 Retrieved 24 February 2015 Schmitz Bettina 1976 Untersuchungen zum Titel S3 NJSWT Konigssohn Habelts Dissertationsdrucke Reihe Agyptologie Heft 2 in German Bonn Habelt ISBN 978 3 7749 1370 7 Sethe Kurt Heinrich 1903 Urkunden des Alten Reichs in German wikipedia entry Urkunden des Alten Reichs Leipzig J C Hinrichs OCLC 846318602 Stevenson Smith William 1971 The Old Kingdom in Egypt In Edwards I E S Gadd C J Hammond N G L eds The Cambridge Ancient History Vol 2 Part 2 Early History of the Middle East Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 145 207 ISBN 978 0 521 07791 0 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 Firenze e provincia Guida d Italia del T C I Milano Touring Club Italiano 1993 ISBN 978 88 365 0533 3 Vase with the name of king Unas Global Egyptian Museum Retrieved 21 February 2015 Verner Miroslav 2001a Archaeological Remarks on the 4th and 5th Dynasty Chronology PDF Archiv Orientalni 69 3 363 418 Verner Miroslav 2001b Old Kingdom An Overview In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford University Press pp 585 591 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Verner Miroslav 2001c Pyramid In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 3 Oxford University Press pp 87 95 ISBN 978 0 19 513823 8 Verner Miroslav 2001d The Pyramids The Mystery Culture and Science of Egypt s Great Monuments New York Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 1703 8 Verner Miroslav 2003 Abusir The Realm of Osiris The American University in Cairo Press ISBN 978 977 424 723 1 Wachsmann Shelley 1998 Seagoing Ships and Seamanship in the Bronze Age Levant College Station Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 709 6 Williams Bruce 1981 Walsten David ed The Tomb Chapels of Netjer User and Unis Ankh Field Museum of Natural History Bulletin Chicago 26 32 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Unas Preceded byDjedkare Isesi Pharaoh of EgyptFifth Dynasty end of dynasty Succeeded byTeti Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Unas amp oldid 1159271969, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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