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Nyuserre Ini

Nyuserre Ini (also Niuserre Ini or Neuserre Ini; in Greek known as Rathurês, Ῥαθούρης) was an Ancient Egyptian pharaoh, the sixth ruler of the Fifth Dynasty during the Old Kingdom period. He is credited with a reign of 24 to 35 years depending on the scholar, and likely lived in the second half of the 25th century BCE. Nyuserre was the younger son of Neferirkare Kakai and queen Khentkaus II, and the brother of the short-lived king Neferefre. He may have succeeded his brother directly, as indicated by much later historical sources. Alternatively, Shepseskare may have reigned between the two as advocated by Miroslav Verner, albeit only for a few weeks or months at the most. The relation of Shepseskare with Neferefre and Nyuserre remains highly uncertain. Nyuserre was in turn succeeded by Menkauhor Kaiu, who could have been his nephew and a son of Neferefre.

Nyuserre Ini
Niuserre Ini, Neuserre Ini, Nyuserra, Newoserre Any, Rathoris
Double statue portraying Nyuserre as both a young man and an old man, Museum of Egyptian Art in Munich
Pharaoh
Reign24 to 35 years in the late 25th century BCE[note 1][note 2]
PredecessorShepseskare (most likely) or Neferefre
SuccessorMenkauhor Kaiu
Horus name
Setibtawy
St jb tȝwj
The favourite (lit. place of the heart) of the two lands[19]


Nebty name
Nebtisetib
Nbti st ib
The favourite (lit. place of the heart) of the two Ladies[19]

Golden Horus
Bik Nebu Netjeri
Bjk-nbw-nṯr.j
The divine golden falcon[20]

Prenomen  (Praenomen)
Nyuserre
N.wsr Rˁ
Possessed of Ra's power[21]
[He] who belongs to the power of Ra[20]


Nomen
Ini
In.n j
Translation uncertain, possibly a nickname:[22]
The delayed one (for an overdue baby)
The [one with bushy] eyebrows



Hieroglyphic variants:[23]



ConsortReptynub, at least another queen whose name is lost, possibly two
ChildrenKhamerernebty, Reputnebty, Sheretnebty,
Khentykauhor, Okpo
Unlikely: Menkauhor Kaiu
FatherNeferirkare Kakai
MotherKhentkaus II
BurialPyramid of Nyuserre Ini
MonumentsBuilt ex-nihilo:
Pyramid of Nyuserre Ini
Pyramid Lepsius XXIV
Lepsius XXV
Sun temple Shesepibre
Completed:
Pyramid of Neferirkare Kakai
Pyramid of Neferefre
Pyramid complex of Khentkaus II
Sun temple of Userkaf
Renovated:
Mortuary complex of Menkaure
Uncertain:
Temple of Satet
DynastyFifth Dynasty

Nyuserre was the most prolific builder of his dynasty, having built three pyramids for himself and his queens and completed a further three for his father, mother and brother, all in the necropolis of Abusir. He built the largest surviving temple to the sun god Ra constructed during the Old Kingdom, named Shesepibre or "Joy of the heart of Ra". He also completed the Nekhenre, the Sun temple of Userkaf in Abu Gorab, and the valley temple of Menkaure in Giza. In doing so, he was the first king since Shepseskaf, last ruler of the Fourth Dynasty, to pay attention to the Giza necropolis, a move which may have been an attempt to legitimise his rule following the troubled times surrounding the unexpected death of his brother Neferefre.

There is little evidence for military action during Nyuserre's reign; the Egyptian state continued to maintain trade relations with Byblos on the Levantine coast and to send mining and quarrying expeditions to Sinai and Lower Nubia. Nyuserre's reign saw the growth of the administration, and the effective birth of the nomarchs, provincial governors who, for the first time, were sent to live in the provinces they administered rather than at the pharaoh's court.

As with other Old Kingdom pharaohs, Nyuserre benefited from a funerary cult established at his death. In Nyuserre's case, this official state-sponsored cult existed for centuries, surviving the chaotic First Intermediate Period and lasting until the Twelfth Dynasty of the Middle Kingdom. In parallel, a spontaneous popular cult appeared, with people venerating Nyuserre under his birth name "Iny". In this cult, Nyuserre played a role similar to that of a saint, being invoked as an intercessor between the believer and the gods. It left little archaeological evidence and seems to have continued until the New Kingdom, nearly 1000 years after his death.

Sources edit

Contemporaneous sources edit

Nyuserre Ini is well attested in sources contemporaneous with his reign,[note 3] for example in the tombs of some of his contemporaries including Nyuserre's manicurists Khnumhotep and Niankhkhnum, the high officials Khufukhaf II, Ty, Rashepses, Neferefre-ankh and Khabawptah,[29][30] and the priests of his funerary cult Nimaatsed and Kaemnefert.[31][32]

Historical sources edit

Nyuserre is attested in three ancient Egyptian king lists, all dating to the New Kingdom. The earliest of these is the Karnak king list, which was commissioned by Thutmose III (fl. 1479–1425 BCE) to honour some of his forebears and which mentions Nyuserre in the fourth entry, which shows his birth name "Iny" in a cartouche.[33] Nyuserre's prenomen occupies the 30th entry of the Abydos King List, written nearly 200 years later during the reign of Seti I (fl. 1290–1279 BCE). Nyuserre's prenomen was most likely also given on the Turin canon (third column, 22nd row), dating to the reign of Ramses II (fl. 1279–1213 BCE), but it has since been lost in a large lacuna affecting the document. Fragments of his reign length are still visible on the papyrus, indicating a reign of somewhere between 11 and 34 years.[34] Nyuserre is the only Fifth Dynasty king absent from the Saqqara Tablet.[35]

Nyuserre was also mentioned in the Aegyptiaca, a history of Egypt probably written in the 3rd century BCE during the reign of Ptolemy II (fl. 283–246 BCE) by the Egyptian priest Manetho. Even though no copies of the text survive, it is known through later writings by Sextus Julius Africanus and Eusebius. In particular, Africanus relates that the Aegyptiaca mentioned a pharaoh ´Ραθούρης, that is "Rathurês", reigning for forty-four years as the sixth king of the Fifth Dynasty.[36] "Rathurês" is believed to be the Hellenised form of Nyuserre.[37]

Reign edit

 
Neferefre, Nyuserre's elder brother, died unexpectedly in his early twenties after a short reign.

Accession to the throne edit

Two competing hypotheses exist in Egyptology to describe the succession of events running from the death of Neferirkare Kakai, the third king of the Fifth Dynasty, to the coronation of Nyuserre Ini, the sixth ruler of the dynasty. Relying on historical sources, where Nyuserre is said to have directly succeeded Neferefre, many Egyptologists such as Jürgen von Beckerath and Hartwig Altenmüller have traditionally believed[38] that the following succession took place: Neferirkare Kakai → Shepseskare → Neferefre → Nyuserre Ini. In this scenario, Neferefre is the father of Nyuserre, who would have become pharaoh after Neferefre's unexpected death.[4][39] Neferefre would be the successor of Shepseskare, credited with seven years of reign, as indicated in Manetho's Aegyptiaca.[36]

This view was challenged, most notably by Miroslav Verner in 2000 and 2001,[40][41][42] following excavations of the Abusir necropolis, which indicated that Neferefre's purported predecessor Shepseskare most likely reigned for only a few months between Neferefre and Nyuserre Ini. Verner proposes that the royal succession was Neferirkare Kakai → Neferefre → Shepseskare → Nyuserre Ini. In support of this hypothesis is Verner's observation that Neferefre and Nyuserre were very likely full brothers, both sons of Neferirkare Kakai,[note 4] There is also evidence that Neferefre was Neferirkare's eldest son and in his early twenties at the death of his father, and thus would have been likely to inherit the throne.[44] These observations, in addition to further archaeological evidence such as the lack of a pyramid of Shepseskare and the position of Neferefre's own, convinced Verner that Neferefre directly succeeded his father, dying after a very short reign of about two years.[44]

Nyuserre was then still a child and, in this hypothesis, his claim to the throne faced a serious challenge in the person of his possible uncle Shepseskare who might have been a son of Sahure. Alternatively, Shepseskare may have been a short-lived son of Neferefre[45] or, less likely, an usurper from outside the royal family.[46] In any case, Shepseskare apparently succeeded in holding the crown for a short time. Nyuserre ultimately prevailed however, either because of Shepseskare's own premature death or because he was backed by powerful high officials and members of the royal family,[47] foremost among whom were his mother Khentkaus II and Ptahshepses.[1] This latter hypothesis is motivated by the exalted positions that both individuals seem to have enjoyed. The mortuary temple of Khentkaus II was designed to imitate that of a king, for example by incorporating its own satellite pyramid and having an alignment on an east–west axis.[48] These features, together with Khentkaus II peculiar title of Mwt Nisw bity Nisw bity, originally translated by "Mother of the king of Upper and Lower Egypt [exercising office as] the king of Upper and Lower Egypt" led some scholars, including Verner, to propose that she might even have reigned in her own right.[48] This hypothesis is now deemed unlikely, and her title is rather translated as "Mother of two kings of Upper and Lower Egypt".[note 5] Ptahshepses became vizier under Nyuserre,[49] whose daughter he married; received the honorary title of "King's son";[note 6] and was buried in one of the largest private tombs in Egypt.[51] According to Verner and Nigel Strudwick, the architectural elements[52] of this tomb such as its lotus-bud columns similar to those used in Nyuserre's own temple, boat pits and layout of the burial chamber,[53][51] demonstrate "the favor shown by that king to his son-in-law".[53][51][54]

Reign length edit

 
Fragmentary statue of a Fifth Dynasty king, likely Nyuserre[25]

Historical and archaeological evidence edit

Manetho's Aegyptiaca related that Nyuserre reigned for 44 years, a figure which is rejected by Egyptologists, who rather credit him with about three decades of reign[37] owing to the paucity of secure dates for his rule.[note 7][56] The entry of the Turin canon pertaining to Nyuserre is damaged and the duration of his rule is difficult to read with certainty. Following Alan Gardiner's 1959 study of the canon,[57] scholars such as Nigel Strudwick credited Nyuserre with 11[15] years of reign.[note 8] Gardiner's reading of the canon was then reevaluated from facsimiles, yielding a 24 to 25 years figure for Nyuserre's reign. This duration is accepted by some scholars including Nicolas Grimal.[58] More recent analyses of the original papyrus conducted by Kim Ryholt have shown that Nyuserre's reign length as reported on the document could equally be 11–14, 21–24, or 31–34 years.[note 9][34] The later figure is now favoured by Egyptologists including Strudwick and Verner.[56]

The view that Nyuserre reigned in excess of twenty years is furthermore supported by archaeological evidence, which points to a fairly long reign for him. Verner, who has been excavating the Abusir necropolis on behalf of the University of Prague since 1976, points in particular to Nyuserre's numerous constructions, amounting to no less than three new pyramids, the completion of a further three, the construction of the largest sun temple built during the Old Kingdom.[17]

Nyuserre's Sed festival edit

 
Relief of Nyuserre celebrating his Sed festival, Egyptian Museum of Berlin

The hypothesis of a reign more than three decades long for Nyuserre Ini is supported, albeit indirectly, by reliefs discovered in his solar temple showing him participating in a Sed festival. This festival was meant to rejuvenate the king and was normally (though not always) first celebrated after 30 years of rule. Representations of the festival were part of the typical decorations of temples associated to the king during the Old Kingdom[17] and mere depictions of it do not necessarily imply a long reign.[note 10] For example, a relief showing Sahure in the tunic of the Sed festival has been found in his mortuary temple,[59][60] although both historical sources and archeological evidence agree that he ruled Egypt for less than 14 full years.[61][12][13] Yet, in Nyuserre's case, these reliefs taken together with the archaeological evidence have convinced most Egyptologists that Nyuserre enjoyed over 30 years of reign and that "the sed-festival scenes from Abu Gurab [most probably reflect] the 30th jubilee of the king's accession to the throne".[17]

The reliefs of Nyuserre's Sed festival offer a rare glimpse into the ritual acts carried out during this ceremony. In particular, the festival seems to have involved a procession in a barque over a body of water,[62][63] a detail either not represented or lost in all subsequent representations of the festival until the reign of Amenhotep III (fl. c. 1390–1350 BCE), over 1000 years after Nyuserre's lifetime.[63]

Domestic activities edit

 
Ptahshepses, vizier and son in law of Nyuserre Ini

The reign of Nyuserre Ini witnessed the unabated growth of the priesthood and state bureaucracy,[1][64] a phenomenon which had started in the early Fifth Dynasty[65] in particular under Neferirkare Kakai.[66] Changes in the Egyptian administration during this period are manifested by a multiplication in the number of titles, reflecting the creation of new administrative offices.[66] These in turn, reflect a movement to better organise the administration of the state with the new titles corresponding to charges attached to very specific duties.[66]

The king's power slowly weakened as the bureaucracy expanded,[note 11] although he remained a living god in the eyes of his subjects.[1]This situation went unchecked until the reign of Nyuserre's second successor Djedkare Isesi, who implemented the first comprehensive reforms of the system of ranking titles and thus of the administration.[71]

There are two pieces of direct evidence of administrative activities during Nyuserre's reign. The first is that the Old Kingdom royal annals, of which only fragments survive, are believed to have been composed during his reign. The annals, which give details on the reigns of kings from the First Dynasty onwards on a year-by-year basis,[72] are damaged and break off following the reign of Neferirkare Kakai. The second piece of evidence for administrative activity relates to the provincial administration. During the Old Kingdom, the Egyptian state was divided administratively into provinces, called nomes. These provinces were recognised as such since the time of Djoser, founder of the Third Dynasty, and probably harked back to the predynastic kingdoms of the Nile valley.[73] The earliest topographical lists of the nomes of Upper and Lower Egypt date back to the reign of Nyuserre,[73] a procession of personified nomes being depicted on reliefs from Nyuserre's sun temple.[74] It is also around this time that the nomarchs started to reside in their province rather than at the royal residence.[65]

Activities outside Egypt edit

Trade and mining expeditions edit

 
Relief of Nyuserre from the Wadi Maghareh

To the north of Egypt, trade contacts with Byblos on the Levantine coast, which existed during much of the Fifth Dynasty, were seemingly active during Nyuserre's reign, as suggested by a fragment of cylindrical alabaster vase bearing his name uncovered in the city.[75][76]

East of Egypt, Nyuserre commissioned at least one expedition to the Wadi Maghareh in Sinai,[77] where mines of copper and turquoise were exploited during much of the Old Kingdom.[78] This expedition left a large rock relief, now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.[note 12] The relief shows Nyuserre "smiting the Bedouins[note 13] of all foreign lands, the great god, lord of the two lands".[79] At the right of Nyuserre is a dedication to "Thoth, lord of the foreign lands, who has made pure libations".[79] This expedition departed Egypt from the port of Ain Sukhna, on the western shore of the Gulf of Suez, as revealed by seal impressions bearing Nyuserre's name found on the site.[80] The port comprised large galleries carved into the sandstone serving as living quarters and storage places. The wall of one such gallery was inscribed with a text in ink mentioning the expedition to Sinai and dating it to the year of the second cattle count – possibly Nyuserre's fourth year on the throne.[81]

To the south of Egypt, in Lower Nubia, Nyuserre exploited the gneiss quarries of Gebel el-Asr near Aswan, which provided material for buildings and statues,[note 14] as shown by a fragmentary stone stela inscribed with Nyuserre's Horus name that was discovered in a settlement adjacent to the quarries.[82]

Military activity edit

There is little evidence for military action during Nyuserre's reign. William C. Hayes proposed that a few fragmentary limestone statues of kneeling and bound prisoners of war discovered in his mortuary temple[83][84] possibly attest to punitive raids in Libya to the west or the Sinai and Palestine to the east during his reign.[85] The art historian William Stevenson Smith has pointed out, that such statues were customary[83] elements of the decoration of royal temples and mastabas, suggesting that they may not be immediately related to actual military campaigns. Similar statues and small wooden figures of kneeling captives were discovered in the mortuary complexes of Neferefre,[86] Djedkare Isesi,[87] Unas,[88] Teti,[89] Pepi I[90] and Pepi II[83] as well as in the tomb of vizier Senedjemib Mehi.[91][92]

Main building activities edit

 
Tomb relief of Iny excavated at Saqqara

Assuming Verner's reconstruction of the Fifth Dynasty royal family, Nyuserre Ini faced an enormous task when he ascended the throne: his father, mother and brother had all left their pyramids unfinished,[93] his father's and brother's sun temples were unfinished too and he had to construct his own pyramid as well as those of his queens. Nyuserre met this challenge by placing his pyramid in the immediate vicinity of the unfinished ones, on the north-eastern corner of that of Neferirkare Kakai and next to that of Sahure, thereby concentrating all pyramid building activities in South Abusir,[93] in an area of 300 m × 300 m (980 ft × 980 ft).[94] This meant that his pyramid was out of the alignment formed by the preceding ones, limited its size and constrained the layout of his mortuary complex.[95][96] This would explain why, despite having enjoyed one of the longest reigns of the Fifth Dynasty, Nyuserre's pyramid was smaller than that of his father and closer in size to that of his grandfather Sahure.[96] Builders and artisans who worked on Nyuserre's constructions projects lived in the pyramid town "Enduring-are-the-(cult)-places-of-Niuserre", which was very likely located in Abusir between the causeways of Sahure and Nyuserre.[97]

Pyramid of Nyuserre edit

 
The pyramid of Nyuserre Ini in Abusir

Nyuserre built a pyramid for himself at Abusir named Mensut Nyuserre,[note 15] meaning "Established are the places of Nyuserre"[99] or "The places of Nyuserre endure".[4]

The completed pyramid was entirely covered in fine limestone. It was about 52 m (171 ft) tall, with a base of 78.8 m (259 ft) along each side,[100] a slope of 52 degrees and a total volume of stone of about 112,000 m3 (4,000,000 cu ft). The burial chamber and antechamber were both lined with fine limestone as well and roofed with three tiers of gigantic limestone beams 10 m (33 ft) long weighing 90 tons each.[96]

The pyramid complex is unusual as the outer sections of the mortuary temple are offset to the south of the eastern side of the complex. This allowed Nyuserre to intercept and complete his father's causeway, which led from the valley temple close to the Nile to the pyramid itself on the desert edge. The valley temple of Nyuserre was thus built on the foundations laid by his father for his own unfinished valley temple. Once completed, it consisted of a portico with eight papyriform columns, its floor was of black basalt and its walls were made of limestone with painted reliefs above a dado of red granite.[96] The back of the portico led to the causeway, the base of which was entirely covered in basalt, while its upper portions were decorated with numerous reliefs, some showing the king as a sphinx trampling over his enemies.[101] The causeway was roofed by limestone blocks painted in blue with golden stars.[101] Arriving near the pyramid, the causeway led into a columned courtyard preceded by storage rooms and succeeded by the mortuary temple itself, which housed statues of the king and depictions of the royal family and Nyuserre in the presence of the gods.[101] The wider pyramid complex was enclosed by a wall, with two large rectangular structures on its north-east and south-east corners. Both Lehner and Verner see these as the precursor of the pylon, characteristic of later Egyptian temples.[102][101] Beyond the main pyramid was a smaller one for the Ka of the king.[101]

Pyramid Lepsius XXIV edit

 
Ruins of the pyramid Lepsius XXIV

South of the pyramid of his mother Khentkaus II, Nyuserre built a pyramid for a queen, either a consort of himself or of his brother Neferefre.[103] The pyramid is known today as Lepsius XXIV, after its number in Karl Richard Lepsius' pioneering list of pyramids.[104] It originally reached about 27 m (89 ft) high with a base of 31.5 m (103 ft), its core made of limestone and clay mortar organised in horizontal and accretion layers.[105]

Today the pyramid is heavily ruined, its outer casing of fine white limestone long gone, and it stands only 5 m (16 ft) tall. While graffiti left by the builders indicate that the construction of this pyramid dates to the later part of Nyuserre's reign and took place under the direction of vizier Ptahshepses,[105] the name of the queen for whom the pyramid was intended is lost.[104] Reptynub has been cited as a likely candidate. In the burial chamber, which is reached via a straight north–south passageway, the broken up mummy of a young woman was discovered. She stood around 160 cm (5.2 ft) tall and died between 21 and 23 years of age.[106] It is unclear whether the mummy is that of the original owner of the pyramid or dates to a later period as the mummification method employed could suggest.[105] Excavations of the burial chamber yielded fragments of a pink granite sarcophagus as well as pieces of large calcite canopic jars and smaller funerary equipment.[105]

On the eastern side of the pyramid, the ruins of a small satellite pyramid as well as of a mortuary temple have been discovered. Both were heavily affected by stone robbing, which started as early as the New Kingdom and reached a climax during the Saite (664–525 BCE) and Persian (525–402 BCE) periods, making a modern reconstruction of the temple layout impossible.[105]

Lepsius XXV edit

 
Ruins of Lepsius XXV in Abusir

The ruins known today as Lepsius XXV constitute not one but two large adjacent tombs built as a single monument on the south-eastern edge of the Abusir necropolis. The peculiar construction, which Verner has called a "double pyramid", was known to ancient Egyptians as "The Two are Vigilant".[note 16] The pyramids, both truncated, had rectangular bases of 27.7 m × 21.5 m (91 ft × 71 ft) for the eastern one and 21.7 m × 15.7 m (71 ft × 52 ft) for the western one, their walls reaching an inclination of about 78 degrees. This means that the construction resembled a pair of mastabas more than a couple of pyramids,[103] in fact so much so that Dušan Magdolen proposed that Lepsius XXV is a mastaba.[108]

A further peculiarity of the structure is the lack of associated mortuary temple.[103] Instead, the eastern tomb boasts a small offering chapel built of undecorated white limestone and situated within the tomb superstructure. Its ceiling reached 5 m (16 ft) high. Excavations revealed small pieces of papyrus inscribed with a list of offerings as well as fragments of an alabaster statue of a woman clothed in a simple robe. The burial chamber revealed scant remains of the female owner and a few pieces of funerary equipment.[103]

The western tomb was built subsequently to the eastern one and seems to have served to bury another woman. Builders graffiti uncovered during the Czech excavations demonstrate in all likelihood that the monument was built under Nyuserre, its owners possibly amongst the last members of the broader royal family to be buried in Abusir, the necropolis being abandoned by Nyuserre's successor Menkauhor.[103]

Sun Temple edit

 
Ludwig Borchardt's reconstruction of the Shesepibre[109]
 
Red granite entrance portico bearing Nyuserre's titulary, likely from his sun temple, Egyptian Museum

Nyuserre was the penultimate Egyptian pharaoh to build a sun temple. In doing so, he was following a tradition established by Userkaf that reflects the paramount importance of the cult of Ra during the Fifth Dynasty. Sun temples built during this period were meant to play for Ra the same role that the pyramid played for the king: they were funerary temples for the sun god, where his renewal and rejuvenation necessary to maintain the order of the world could take place. Cults performed in the temple were thus primarily concerned with Ra's creator function as well as his role as father of the king. During his lifetime, the king would appoint his closest officials to the running of the temple, allowing them to benefit from the temple's income and thus ensuring their loyalty. After the pharaoh's death, the sun temple's income would be associated with the pyramid complex, supporting Nyuserre's funerary cult.[110]

Located in Abu Ghurob, north of Abusir, Nyuserre's sun temple is the largest and best preserved of its kind,[4] leading some Egyptologists such as von Beckerath to see Nyuserre's reign as the peak of the solar cult,[111] an assertion which, according to Grimal, is exaggerated.[112] The temple was known as the Shesepibre by the Ancient Egyptians,[note 17] which has been variously translated as "Joy of the heart of Re",[4] "Re's Favorite Place",[113] "Delight of Ra",[114] or "Place agreeable to Ra".[99] Curiously,[114] Nyuserre's sun temple was first built in mudbrick, only later to be reconstructed entirely in stone.[114] It is the only such structure to receive this treatment,[note 18][112][111] thanks to which much of the architectural elements and reliefs have survived to this day.[112][115] While the reason for this renewal remains unclear, Lehner has proposed that it may be related to Nyuserre's Sed festival, or to some evolution in the ideology surrounding sun temples.[114]

 
Altar of the sun temple of Nyuserre

The temple was entered from the eastern side following a long causeway which departed from a valley temple located closer to the Nile. This temple mostly served as a gateway to the upper temple and housed a pillared portico of mudbrick encased in yellow limestone.[114] The upper temple comprised a large rectangular courtyard entered via five granite doorways located on its eastern side. An altar was located in the center of the courtyard, which can still be seen today. It was constructed from five large blocks of alabaster, one shaped like the hieroglyph for Ra and the others shaped like the glyph for hotep. They were arranged so as to read Ra Hotep, that is "May Ra be satisfied",[116] from the four cardinal points.[113] The sign for Hotep also means "offering" or "offering table" in Ancient Egyptian, so that the altar was literally an offering table to Ra.[117]

At the western end of the rectangular court was a giant obelisk, a symbol of the sun god Ra. It was built on a pedestal with sloping sides and a square top, like a truncated pyramid, which was 20 m (66 ft) high and was constructed of limestone and red granite around the base. The obelisk topping it was another 36 m (118 ft) high,[117] built entirely of limestone.[114]

The temple was adorned with numerous fine reliefs depicting Nyuserre's Sed festival as well as a "chapel of seasons" attached to the obelisk pedestal, decorated with representations of human activities throughout the seasons.[118][114]

Completion and restoration works edit

Pyramid complex of Neferirkare edit

 
The pyramid of Neferirkare in Abusir

The pyramid of Neferirkare was planned to be significantly larger than that of Neferirkare's Fifth Dynasty predecessors, with a square base side of 105 m (344 ft) and a height of 72 m (236 ft). Although well underway at the death of the pharaoh, the pyramid was lacking its external limestone cladding and the accompanying mortuary temple still had to be built. Neferefre had begun covering the pyramid surface with limestone and had built the foundation of a stone temple on the pyramid eastern side; Nyuserre completed their father's pyramid complex,[119] though he did so more parsimoniously than his brother. He abandoned the task of covering the pyramid altogether and finished the mortuary temple with cheaper materials than were normally used for such buildings. Its walls were made of mud-bricks rather than limestone and its floor was of beaten clay.[120] The outer part of the temple was built to comprise a column portico and a pillared court, all columns being made of wood rather than the usual granite.[120] The temple and pyramid were also surrounded by a brick wall. Likely for reasons of economy, the causeway leading to the mortuary temple at the foot of the pyramid was never built, no satellite pyramid was added to the mortuary complex, and the valley temple was left unfinished.[121] Consequently, the priest of the mortuary cult of Neferirkare lived on the temple premises, in dwellings of mud-bricks and rushes, rather than in the pyramid town closer to the Nile valley.[121]

Pyramid of Neferefre edit

 
The unfinished pyramid of Neferefre

Construction works on the pyramid of Neferefre had just begun when Neferefre died unexpectedly in his early twenties. At the time of Nyuserre's ascension to the throne, only one step of the core of Neferefre's pyramid had been completed. The substructures, built in a large open pit at the center of the pyramid were possibly unfinished as well. Nyuserre hastily[122] completed the pyramid by transforming it into a stylised primeval mound[122] resembling a mastaba: the walls of the core layer already in place were covered with limestone and the top was filled with clay and stones drawn from the local desert.[123]

The accompanying mortuary temple, which then comprised only a small stone chapel possibly built by the ephemeral Shepseskare,[38] was finished by Nyuserre.[96] Extending over the whole 65 m (213 ft) length of the pyramid side, the temple was built of mudbrick and comprised the earliest hypostyle hall of Ancient Egypt, its roof supported by wooden columns. The hall housed a large wooden statue of the deceased king.[96] Nyuserre also built storage rooms to the north of the hall and, east of it, the "Sanctuary of the Knife" where animals were ritually slaughtered. A column courtyard completed the temple entrance, adorned with two stone columns and 24 wooden ones.[96]

Pyramid complex of Khentkaus II edit

 
In the foreground, Khentkaus' ruined mortuary temple

Work on the pyramid and mortuary temple of Nyuserre's mother, Khentkaus II, had begun during her husband's rule but was stopped in the tenth year of his reign,[48] at which point only the pyramid core was still uncased.[124] After a delay of 12 years,[125] Nyuserre Ini restarted the building work, and expended much effort[126] in completing the majority of the construction.[127][128] The motivation for this might have been to legitimise his rule following the premature death of Neferefre and the possible challenge by Shepseskare.[129]

The pyramid is located in Abusir, next to that of Neferikare Kakai, who was Khentkaus' husband and under whose reign the construction of Khentkaus's complex had started.[126] Once completed, the pyramid stood 17 m (56 ft) high, with a side of 25 m (82 ft) at the base and a slope of 52 degrees.[48] Its sepulchral chamber likely housed a sarcophagus of red granite. Today, the pyramid is a 4 m (13 ft) high mound of rubble.[125]

The mortuary temple of the queen, at the eastern foot of the pyramid,[125] was the object of successive completion works during Nyuserre's reign, the earliest one used stone while the latest used only mudbrick.[126] Completely ruined today, the temple seems to have been designed in imitation of the mortuary temples of kings[128] incorporating, for example, a satellite pyramid,[130] and being aligned on an east–west axis.[48] The temple was administratively at least partially independent[131] from the temple of Neferirkare Kakai with which it nonetheless shared some religious services,[132] and it continued to function until the end of the Sixth Dynasty, some 300 years after Khentkaus' lifetime.[48]

Valley Temple of Menkaure edit

Archaeological excavations in 2012–2015 revealed that Nyuserre Ini undertook building works on the valley temple of Menkaure, as witnessed by numerous seal impressions bearing his serekh discovered on the site.[133][14] These works ended a long period from the reign of Shepseskaf until his reign during which the Giza necropolis was not the object of royal attention.[14] Beyond Menkaure's valley temple, Nyuserre apparently also took a wider interest in the administration of the pyramid town of Khafre and revived the cult of both Menkaure and queen Khentkaus I.[134] According to Mark Lehner, this queen, who bore the same name as Nyuserre's mother and like his mother bore two pharaohs, provided Nyuserre with a genealogical link relating him to his Fourth Dynasty forebears.[135] John Nolan believes that the mirroring position and names of both Khentkaus queens was emphasised so that Nyuserre could legimitise his rule after the troubled times surrounding Neferefre's death.[136]

In the valley temple of Menkaure, Nyuserre extended the eastern annex, where he added two sets of alabaster columns,[133] rebuilt the main entrance and refurbished the limestone causeway leading from the valley temple to the high temple.[137] There, Mark Lehner suggested that Nyuserre expanded the inner part of the high temple,[138][139] notably adding to it a square antechamber with a single central pillar.[133]

Sun Temple of Userkaf edit

Userkaf, founder of the Fifth Dynasty, was also the first pharaoh to build a temple to Ra in Abu Gurob. The temple was called Nekhenre by the Ancient Egyptian, which means "The Fortress of Ra", and built in four phases by three pharaohs. Userkaf first constructed a rectangular enclosure with a mound in its center. Sahure[140] or Neferirkare Kakai[141] then transformed this mound into a granite obelisk on a pedestal, adding two statue shrines near its base. The last two phases of construction were undertaken during Nyuserre's reign. Nyuserre first added an inner enclosure of limestone in the pre-existing court, extended the outside enclosure and either completed or built entirely the valley temple. In the last construction phase, Nyuserre encased the inner enclosure in mudbrick, added an altar and five stone benches to the central court, and built an annex to the temple.[141]

Temple of Satet edit

A temple dedicated to the goddess Satet, personification of the Nile floods, had stood on the island of Elephantine to the south of Egypt since at least the late Predynastic Period around 3200 BCE. The temple was enlarged and renovated several times from the Early Dynastic Period onwards and was again rebuilt in the course of the Fifth Dynasty, possibly during Nyuserre's reign. A faience plaque bearing Nyuserre's name was discovered in a deposit of votive offerings located under the floor of the sanctuary.[142] Unfortunately, this deposit does not represent the original context of the plaque, which could have once adorned the walls of the temple or could equally have been deposed in a foundational offering made in anticipation of the temple reconstruction.[142]

Family edit

 
Glazed relief showing Khentkaus II enthroned, Náprstek Museum

Parents and siblings edit

The identity of the mother of Nyuserre is known with certainty: it was queen Khentkaus II, in whose mortuary temple a fragmentary relief showing her facing her son Nyuserre and his family has been uncovered.[143][144][145] On this relief both Khentkaus and Nyuserre appear on the same scale.[144]

As a corollary, Nyuserre was almost certainly a son of Neferirkare Kakai as Khentkaus II was Neferirkare's queen.[146] This relationship is also indicated by the location of Nyuserre's pyramid in Abusir next to that of Neferirkare, as well as his reuse for his own valley temple of materials from Neferikare's unfinished constructions.[147]

At least one sibling of Nyuserre is known with near-certainty: Neferefre, who was a son of Neferirkare and Khentkaus II, was Nyuserre's elder brother.[148] Since the relation between Shepseskare and Nyuserre remains uncertain, it is possible that the two were brothers too, as suggested by Roth,[149] although the dominant hypothesis is that Shepseskare was a son of Sahure and hence Nyuserre's uncle. Finally, yet another brother,[150] possibly younger[151] than Nyuserre has also been proposed: Iryenre, a prince Iry-pat[note 19] whose relationship is suggested by the fact that his funerary cult was associated with that of his mother, both having taken place in the temple of Khentkaus II.[153][154]

Consorts and daughters edit

 
Entrance of the pyramid Lepsius XXIV, believed to belong to a consort of Nyuserre

Nyuserre Ini seems to have had at least two wives, as witnessed by two small pyramids located at the southern end of the pyramid field of Abusir.[104] Known today under the names of Lepsius XXIV and Lepsius XXV given to them by Lepsius in his list of pyramids, both monuments are heavily ruined and the names of their owners cannot be ascertained.[104] One of these two queens might have been Reptynub,[155] the only known consort of Nyuserre. Her existence and relation to Nyuserre are attested by a fragmentary alabaster statuette[156][note 20] of her discovered in the valley temple[157] of Nyuserre's pyramid complex.[158] Pieces of relief from the tomb of vizier Ptahshepses give the titles of a queen and while her name is lost, these titles are the same as those that Reptynub bore,[159] leading Egyptologists to propose that these refer to her.[160][158]

Nyuserre and Reptynub likely had a daughter in the person of princess Khamerernebty,[148][4][note 21] as suggested by her title of "King's daughter" as well as her marriage to the powerful vizier Ptahshepses.[161][162] This remains conjectural until direct evidence of this relationship can be discovered.[159] In particular, the only known connection between Reptynub and Khamerernebty are the reliefs from Ptahshepses's tomb, the presence of which would seem natural[163][159] if Reptynub was Khamerernebty's mother.[164] Hartwig Altenmüller goes further and hypothesises that Nyuserre had two more daughters, who he believes were buried close to Nyuserre's pyramid.[4] In 2012, the tomb of Sheretnebty, an hitherto unknown daughter of Nyuserre, was excavated in Abusir south by a team under the direction of Miroslav Bárta. She was married to an important Egyptian official, whose name is lost. According to Bárta, this type of marriage reflects the growing nepotism in the Egyptian elite and the progressive dilution of the king's power.[165]

Sons edit

Nyuserre Ini is known to have had at least one son: his first born, whose name is lost, is represented on several[166][167] relief fragments from the high temple of his pyramid complex.[158] Beyond the title of Iry-pat and "eldest king's son", he likely held two priestly titles: "lector priest"[168] and "priest of Min".[note 22][169] Although the name of Nyuserre's eldest son is lost, Michel Baud observes that one relief fragment comprises a "r[e]", possibly part of the prince's name. If so then he would be distinct from Menkauhor Kaiu, Nyuserre's successor.[171]

The precise relationship between Nyuserre and Menkauhor remains uncertain but indirect evidence from the mastaba of Khentkaus III, discovered in 2015, favors the hypothesis that Menkauhor was a son of Neferefre and thus a nephew of Nyuserre rather than his own son.[172] Khentkaus is called "king's wife" and "king's mother" in inscriptions left by the tomb builders. Given the location of the mastaba, close to the pyramid of Neferefre, her husband was likely this pharaoh.[173][174] Since she was also the mother of a king and since Nyuserre was a brother to Neferefre, the son in question is most probably the future Menkauhor Kaiu, who would thus have succeeded his uncle.[172]

In any case, the succession of Nyuserre seems to have gone smoothly. A seal bearing both Nyuserre's and Menkauhor's names has been uncovered in the mortuary complex of Nyuserre's mother Khentkaus II.[175][176] A further seal is believed to have both Nyuserre's and Djedkare's names on it, Djedkare Isesi being Nyuserre's second successor.[177][176] Taken together these seals reveal that, at the very least, Menkauhor and Djedkare did not perceive Nyuserre as an antagonist.[178][179][180]

Legacy edit

 
Statuette of Nyuserre Ini of uncertain provenance, now in the Egyptian Museum[note 23]

As pharaoh, Nyuserre Ini benefited from a funerary cult established at his death. Under the umbrella of the term "funerary cult" are grouped various cultic activities of two different types. First, there was an official cult taking place in the king's mortuary complex and which was provided for by agricultural domains established during Nyuserre's reign. This cult was most active until the end of the Old Kingdom but lasted at least until the Twelfth Dynasty during the Middle Kingdom,[182] at which point is the latest known mention of a priest serving in Nyuserre's funerary complex.[183] In later times, the official cult of Nyuserre was essentially reduced to a cult of the royal ancestor figure, a "limited version of the cult of the divine" as Jaromir Malek writes,[184] manifested by the dedication of statues and the compilation of lists of kings to be honoured.[185]

In parallel to that official cult were the more private cults of pious individuals venerating Nyuserre as a kind of "saint", an intercessor between the believers and the gods.[184] This popular cult, which developed spontaneously, perhaps because of the proximity of Nyuserre's pyramid to Memphis,[184] referred to Nyuserre using his birth name Iny,[186] and likely consisted of invocations and offerings to statues of the king or in his mortuary temple.[184] Therefore, archaeological traces of this cult are difficult to discern,[187] yet Nyuserre's special status is manifest in some religious formulae, where his name is invoked, as well as in the onomastics of individuals, notably during the Middle Kingdom, whose names included "Iny", such as Inhotep, Inemsaf, Inankhu and many more.[188] Although the veneration of Nyuserre was originally a local phenomenon from Abusir, Saqqara and their surroundings,[184] it may have ultimately reached even outside of Egypt proper, in Sinai, Byblos and Nubia, where fragments of statues, vessels and stelae bearing Nyuserre's name have been discovered in cultic contexts.[189]

Old Kingdom edit

During the Old Kingdom, provisions for the official funerary cult of Nyuserre Ini were produced in agricultural estates set up during his reign.[190] The names of some of these estates have been found inscribed on the walls of tombs in Saqqara or in Nyuserre's mortuary temple,[190] such as "The track of Ini"[note 24] and "The offerings of Ini".[note 25] Several Ḥwt domains of the king, which comprise the land holdings[193] of the mortuary temple of Nyuserre, are known: "Hathor wishes that Nyuserre lives",[note 26] "Horus wishes that Nyuserre lives",[note 27] "Bastet wishes that Nyuserre lives",[note 28] and "Ptah desires Nyuserre to live".[note 29] Several priests serving in the pyramid complex and sun temple of Nyuserre are known from their tombs until the end of the Sixth Dynasty, showing that the official mortuary cult endured throughout the late Old Kingdom.[187]

Nyuserre furthermore received special attention from at least two of his successors during this period: Djedkare Isesi either restored or completed his funerary temple,[note 30][199] and Pepi II Neferkare erected a door jamb bearing an inscription mentioning both his first Sed festival and Nyuserre in the latter's valley temple, a close association meant to "evidence the pretended association of the king with his forefather".[199][note 31]

First Intermediate Period edit

 
Head of king, probably Nyuserre[3]

Nyuserre is one of the very few Old Kingdom kings for whom there is evidence that the funerary cult continued uninterrupted during the First Intermediate Period,[note 32] when the central authority of the pharaohs had broken down and the Egyptian state was in turmoil.[186][201] The tombs of two priests Heryshefhotep I and II, who lived during this period,[note 33] mention their roles and duties in the funerary establishment of Nyuserre, witnessing to the continuing existence of the official mortuary cult.[205]

Nyuserre's effective deification and popular veneration flourished in parallel to the official cult throughout the period, as revealed for example by inscriptions in the tomb of an individual named Ipi, who desires to be "honoured before Iny",[note 34] a terminology in which Nyuserre plays a role normally reserved to the gods.[206] Similar qualifications denoting Nyuserre's status are found in tombs dating to the subsequent early Middle Kingdom, such as the mummy chest of an individual named Inhotep, on which he says he is to be "honoured before Osiris, lord of life, and Iny, lord of reverence".[note 35]

Middle Kingdom edit

The Middle Kingdom saw the decline of the official cult of Nyuserre. Evidence from this period come from works undertaken in the Karnak temple by Senusret I, who dedicated a number of statues of Old Kingdom kings[185] including at least one of Nyuserre,[note 36] to a cult of Amun and of the royal ancestors.[209] At the same time, the 12th Dynasty saw the widespread dismantling of many Old Kingdom funerary temples for their materials, which were notably reused in the pyramid complexes of Amenemhat I and Senusret I.[184] These events are contemporaneous with the life of the last priest serving the official cult of Nyuserre, a certain Inhotep.[205] Both of these facts hint at a lapse of royal interest in the state-sponsored funerary cults of Old Kingdom rulers.[184]

New Kingdom edit

 
Section of the Karnak list of kings to be honoured by Thutmosis III. Nyuserre is the fourth seated king of the top row.

The popular veneration of Nyuserre during earlier times continued to influence the cults performed during the New Kingdom. This is best exemplified by the Karnak king list, composed during the reign of Thutmosis III, with the purpose of honouring a selection of royal ancestors and which includes the cartouche showing "Iny" for Nyuserre. This choice is unusual, as cartouches normally include the king's praenomen rather than a birth name, "Iny" being likely chosen here because it was under this name that Nyuserre was venerated and had become deified.[33]

Later, during the Ramesside period, statues of Old Kingdom pharaohs including one of Nyuserre Ini were placed in a cachette (a hiding place) in the temple of Ptah in Memphis, suggesting their continued use for cultic purposes until that point.[210] Concurrently with these activities, extensive restoration works in Abusir and Saqqara were undertaken during the reign of Ramses II under the direction of prince Khaemweset. The sun temple of Nyuserre was among the monuments benefiting from these works.[211]

Third Intermediate Period edit

During the late Third Intermediate Period, Old Kingdom mortuary temples enjoyed a revival of interest due primarily to the archaizing style favoured by the kings of the Twenty-fifth Dynasty of Egypt (c. 760–656 BCE).[212] In particular, Taharqa (fl. c. 690–664 BCE) had reliefs from the temples of Sahure, Nyuserre and Pepi II reproduced in the temple of Amun of Gem-Aten in Karnak during his restoration works there.[212]

Notes, citations and sources edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Proposed dates for Nyuserre's reign: 2474–2444 BCE,[1][2][3] 2470–2444 BCE,[4] 2465–2435 BCE,[5] 2453–2422 BCE,[6] 2453–2420 BCE,[7] 2445–2421 BCE,[8][9][10] 2445–2414 BCE,[11] 2420–2389 BCE,[12] 2402–2374 BCE,[13][14] 2398–2388 BCE.[15] In a 1978 work, the Egyptologist William C. Hayes credited Nyuserre with 30+2(?) years of reign, starting c. 2500 BCE.[16]
  2. ^ The only date known reliably in relation with Nyuserre Ini comes from radiocarbon dating of a piece of wood discovered in the mastaba of Ptahshepses, a vizier and son in law of Nyuserre. The wood was dated to 2465–2333 BCE.[17][18]
  3. ^ Numerous artefacts and architectural elements either bearing Nyuserre's nomen, prenomen or serekh or simply contemporary with his reign have been unearthed. These are now scattered throughout the world in many museums including the Boston Museum of Fine Arts,[24] Brooklyn Museum,[25] Los Angeles County Museum of Art,[3] Metropolitan Museum of Art,[26] Petrie Museum,[27][28] the Egyptian Museum of Cairo and many more.
  4. ^ Neferefre was the eldest son of Neferirkare with queen Khentkaus II,[43][1][4] as shown by a relief on limestone slab depicting Neferirkare and his wife Khentkaus with "the king's eldest son Ranefer", the future pharaoh Neferefre.[43] At the same time, Nyuserre Ini undertook numerous construction works in the mortuary temple of Khentkaus II, who bore the title of "Mother of Two Kings of Upper and Lower Egypt", indicating that two of her sons ascended the throne. See below for a detailed discussion.
  5. ^ That is, Neferefre and Nyuserre Ini.
  6. ^ Verner proposes that he received the title upon marrying Nyuserre's daughter.[50]
  7. ^ During the Old Kingdom, Ancient Egyptians did not have a system of absolute dating as we do today, rather they counted years from the beginning of a king's reign and gave them names relating to important events that occurred or would occur during this year. The most important such event was the cattle count, and many documents and inscriptions thus mentions the year of the Xth cattle count under king Y. In the case of Nyuserre, the latest such event attested in a document contemporaneous with his reign is the 8th cattle count, that is at most Nyuserre's 16th year on the throne.[55]
  8. ^ Between his 1985 book on the Egyptian administration and his 2005 book on Egyptian texts of the Old Kingdom, Nigel Strudwick has changed his opinion on Nyuserre's reign length and now credits him with 31 years on the throne.[11]
  9. ^ Ryholt writes "Nyuserre's reign is damaged. There is a distinct trace of a 10, 20 or 30, followed by a stroke after which the papyrus breaks off. Accordingly, the possibilities are 11–14, 21–24, and 31–34 years [for Nyuserre], and not just 24 years" as is conventionally assumed.[34]
  10. ^ Verner writes that such scenes are part of a standard decoration program for the funerary complex of the king: "Beautiful reliefs with the scenes of the sed-festival from this sun temple are occasionally considered as indirect evidence of a long reign for this king. Generally, the historical authenticity [...] of such reliefs is doubted since the sed-festival scenes very probably belonged in the Old Kingdom to the standard 'Bildprogram' of the royal funerary monuments.[17]
  11. ^ Joyce Tyldesley instead sees the reign of Djedkare Isesi as the very beginning of the decline in the importance of the king,[67] given the decentralisation stemming from his reforms. Yet for Nigel Strudwick and Klaus Baer, these reforms were precisely undertaken as a reaction to the rapid growth of the central administration[68] which had amassed too much political or economic power[69] in the eyes of the king.[70]
  12. ^ Catalogue number Cairo JE 38570.[79]
  13. ^ Egyptian Mnṯjw
  14. ^ The primary example of Old Kingdom gneiss statue is the Khafre Enthroned
  15. ^ Transliteration Mn-s.wt-Nj-wsr-Rˁ.[98]
  16. ^ Ancient Egyptian transliteration: rś mrwj, variously translated as "The two are watchful / vigilant / alert".[107]
  17. ^ Transliteration Šsp-jb-Rˁ.[98]
  18. ^ As noted in this article, Lehner states that Userkaf's sun temple underwent a similar transformation,[114] albeit less total, while Grimal and von Beckerath emphasise the uniqueness of the Shesepibre in this respect.[112][111]
  19. ^ Often translated as "Hereditary prince" or "Hereditary noble" and more precisely "Concerned with the nobility", this title denotes a highly exalted position.[152]
  20. ^ The statuette is now in the Egyptian Museum, Berlin, under the catalogue number 17438.[157]
  21. ^ Known more completely as Khamerernebty A in modern Egyptology, a denomination aimed at distinguishing her from later Khamerernebtys. For the same reason, Ptahshepses is known as Ptahshepses B.[161]
  22. ^ In Egyptian sm3-Mnw, meaning Sema priest of Min.[169][170]
  23. ^ Catalogue number CG 38, the statue is 65 cm (26 in) high.[181]
  24. ^ Ancient Egyptian Mṯn-Ini.[191]
  25. ^ Ancient Egyptian Ḥtpwt-Ini[192]
  26. ^ Ancient Egyptian ḥwt Ny-wsr-Rˁ mr Ḥwt-Ḥr ˁnḫ Ny-wsr-Rˁ.[194]
  27. ^ Ancient Egyptian ḥwt Ny-wsr-Rˁ mr Ḥr ˁnḫ Ny-wsr-Rˁ.[195]
  28. ^ Ancient Egyptian ḥwt Ny-wsr-Rˁ mr B3stt ˁnḫ Ny-wsr-Rˁ.[196]
  29. ^ Ancient Egyptian mr Ptḥ ˁnḫ Ny-wsr-Rˁ.[197]
  30. ^ This is witnessed by a fragmentary inscription where Djedkare claims to have undertaken works in Nyuserre's temple. The block bearing the inscription is currently housed in the Berlin Museum, under the catalogue No. 17933.[198]
  31. ^ The fragmented jamb is now in the Berlin Museum, catalogue No. 17934.[200]
  32. ^ The Old Kingdom kings whose funerary cult continued to exist during the First Intermediate period are, according to Jaromir Malek, Nyuserre and Teti.[201] Antonio Morales adds Unas to this list,[186] but this is contested by Malek, who sees Unas' funerary cult during the Middle Kingdom as a revival rather than a continuation of existing practices.[202]
  33. ^ Malek states that these priests date "probably" to the late Eleventh Dynasty, that is early Middle Kingdom,[203] but does not exclude the possibility of an earlier date, in the First Intermediate Period.[204]
  34. ^ Ancient Egyptian jm3ḫw ḫr Jnjj.[206]
  35. ^ Ancient Egyptian jm3ḫ(w) ḫr Wsir nb ˁnḫ Jnj nb jm3ḫ.[207]
  36. ^ The statue in question is fragmentary, the lower half being now in the Egyptian Museum of Cairo under the catalogue number CG 42003 and the upper half in the Rochester Memorial Art Gallery, catalogue no. 42.54.[208] The lower part of a black granite statue of Nyuserre, now in the British museum under the catalogue number BM EA 870, may come from Karnak as well.[209]

Citations edit

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  2. ^ Hawass & Senussi 2008, p. 10.
  3. ^ a b c LACMA 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Altenmüller 2001, p. 599.
  5. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica 2016.
  6. ^ Clayton 1994, p. 60.
  7. ^ Ziegler 2007, p. 215.
  8. ^ Malek 2000a, p. 100.
  9. ^ Rice 1999, p. 141.
  10. ^ Van de Mieroop 2011, p. 55.
  11. ^ a b Strudwick 2005, p. xxx.
  12. ^ a b von Beckerath 1999, p. 283.
  13. ^ a b Hornung 2012, p. 491.
  14. ^ a b c Nolan 2012, p. 3.
  15. ^ a b Strudwick 1985, p. 3.
  16. ^ Hayes 1978, p. 58.
  17. ^ a b c d e Verner 2001a, p. 404.
  18. ^ von Beckerath 1997, p. 56.
  19. ^ a b Leprohon 2013, p. 40, see also footnote 58.
  20. ^ a b Leprohon 2013, p. 40.
  21. ^ Clayton 1994, p. 61.
  22. ^ Leprohon 2013, p. 40, see also footnote 59.
  23. ^ von Beckerath 1999, p. 59.
  24. ^ Boston Museum of fine Arts 2016.
  25. ^ a b Brooklyn Museum 2016.
  26. ^ Metropolitan Museum of Art 2016.
  27. ^ Petrie Museum 2016, UC11103.
  28. ^ Digital Egypt for Universities 2016.
  29. ^ Mariette 1885, pp. 294–295.
  30. ^ de Rougé 1918, p. 89.
  31. ^ Mariette 1885, pp. 242–249.
  32. ^ de Rougé 1918, p. 88.
  33. ^ a b Morales 2006, p. 320.
  34. ^ a b c Ryholt 1997, p. 13.
  35. ^ Mariette 1864, p. 4, pl. 17.
  36. ^ a b Waddell 1971, p. 51.
  37. ^ a b Verner 2001a, p. 401.
  38. ^ a b Baker 2008, pp. 427–428.
  39. ^ von Beckerath 1999, pp. 56–59.
  40. ^ Verner 2000.
  41. ^ Verner 2001a.
  42. ^ Verner 2001b.
  43. ^ a b Verner 1985, p. 282.
  44. ^ a b Verner 2000, p. 589.
  45. ^ Krejčí, Arias Kytnarová & Odler 2015, p. 40.
  46. ^ Verner 2000, pp. 596–597.
  47. ^ Verner 1980b, pp. 266–267.
  48. ^ a b c d e f Lehner 2008, p. 146.
  49. ^ Baud 1999b, p. 451.
  50. ^ Verner & Zemina 1994, p. 189.
  51. ^ a b c Strudwick 1985, p. 89.
  52. ^ Verner & Zemina 1994, p. 180.
  53. ^ a b Verner 1976, p. 672.
  54. ^ Brovarski 2001, p. 12.
  55. ^ Verner 2001a, p. 416.
  56. ^ a b Hornung 2012, p. 484.
  57. ^ Gardiner 1959.
  58. ^ Grimal 1992, p. 77.
  59. ^ Borchardt 1913, Blatt 45.
  60. ^ Richter 2013.
  61. ^ Rice 1999, p. 173.
  62. ^ Bissing, Kees & Borchardt 1905–1928, vol. 2: pl. 15 p. 38; vol. 3: pl. 9 p. 193, pl. 10 pp 198 & 201–204.
  63. ^ a b Brovarski 2001, p. 98.
  64. ^ Strudwick 1985, p. 338.
  65. ^ a b Altenmüller 2001, p. 597.
  66. ^ a b c Strudwick 1985, p. 337.
  67. ^ Tyldesley 2005, p. 238.
  68. ^ Strudwick 1985, p. 340.
  69. ^ Strudwick 1985, p. 341.
  70. ^ Baer 1960, p. 297 & 300.
  71. ^ Strudwick 1985, p. 339.
  72. ^ Wilkinson 2000, p. 1.
  73. ^ a b Grimal 1992, p. 58.
  74. ^ Van de Mieroop 2011, p. 65.
  75. ^ Dunand 1939, p. 280.
  76. ^ Porter, Moss & Burney 1951, p. 390.
  77. ^ Hayes 1978, p. 67.
  78. ^ Mumford 1999, pp. 875–876.
  79. ^ a b c Strudwick 2005, p. 136, text 58.
  80. ^ Tallet 2015, pp. 41 & 60.
  81. ^ Tallet 2015, p. 39.
  82. ^ Shaw 2003, p. 451.
  83. ^ a b c Smith 1949, p. 58.
  84. ^ Hayes 1978, p. 115.
  85. ^ Hayes 1978, p. 66.
  86. ^ Verner & Zemina 1994, pp. 146–147 & 148–149.
  87. ^ Porter, Moss & Burney 1981, p. 424.
  88. ^ Porter, Moss & Burney 1981, p. 421.
  89. ^ Porter, Moss & Burney 1981, p. 394.
  90. ^ Porter, Moss & Burney 1981, p. 422.
  91. ^ Smith 1949, pl. 126d & e; fig. 130b.
  92. ^ Brovarski 2001, p. 158.
  93. ^ a b Verner & Zemina 1994, p. 141.
  94. ^ Verner 2000, p. 586, footnote 15d.
  95. ^ Verner 2000, p. 586, footnote 15.
  96. ^ a b c d e f g Lehner 2008, p. 148.
  97. ^ Verner 2012, p. 407.
  98. ^ a b Zibelius-Chen 1978, pp. 97–98 & 232–234.
  99. ^ a b Grimal 1992, p. 116.
  100. ^ Grimal 1992, p. 117.
  101. ^ a b c d e Lehner 2008, p. 149.
  102. ^ Verner 1997a, p. 316.
  103. ^ a b c d e Verner 2007.
  104. ^ a b c d Verner & Zemina 1994, p. 83.
  105. ^ a b c d e Krejčí 2005.
  106. ^ Strouhal, Černý & Vyhnánek 2000, pp. 549–550.
  107. ^ Magdolen 2008, p. 211.
  108. ^ Magdolen 2008, p. 205.
  109. ^ Bissing, Kees & Borchardt 1905–1928, Band 1: Der Bau.
  110. ^ Janák, Vymazalová & Coppens 2010, pp. 441–442.
  111. ^ a b c von Beckerath 1982, pp. 517–518.
  112. ^ a b c d Grimal 1992, p. 78.
  113. ^ a b Goelet 1999, p. 86.
  114. ^ a b c d e f g h Lehner 2008, p. 151.
  115. ^ Reliefs in the Petrie Museum 2017.
  116. ^ Lehner 2008, p. 152.
  117. ^ a b Verner & Zemina 1994, p. 110.
  118. ^ Bissing 1955, pl. I–XXIII.
  119. ^ Lehner 2015, p. 293.
  120. ^ a b Verner & Zemina 1994, pp. 77–79.
  121. ^ a b Verner & Zemina 1994, p. 79.
  122. ^ a b Verner 2001a, p. 400.
  123. ^ Lehner 2008, p. 147.
  124. ^ Verner 1997b, p. 111.
  125. ^ a b c Verner & Zemina 1994, p. 123.
  126. ^ a b c Baud 1999b, p. 553.
  127. ^ Verner 1980b, pp. 250–252 & 265–267.
  128. ^ a b Baud 1999b, p. 554.
  129. ^ Roth 2001, p. 317.
  130. ^ Verner, Posener-Kriéger & Jánosi 1995, pp. 143–163.
  131. ^ Verner, Posener-Kriéger & Jánosi 1995, pp. 133–142.
  132. ^ Posener-Kriéger 1976, p. 532.
  133. ^ a b c Lehner 2015, p. 292.
  134. ^ Nolan 2012, p. 4.
  135. ^ Lehner 2011, p. 13.
  136. ^ Nolan 2012, pp. 4–5.
  137. ^ Lehner 2015, p. 306.
  138. ^ Lehner et al. 2011, pp. 175–176.
  139. ^ Lehner 2011, pp. 12–13.
  140. ^ Verner 2001a, p. 390.
  141. ^ a b Lehner 2008, p. 150.
  142. ^ a b Dreyer 1986, pp. 93 & 148–149, no. 426.
  143. ^ Verner 1980a, p. 161, fig. 5.
  144. ^ a b Baud 1999a, p. 234.
  145. ^ Verner & Zemina 1994, p. 126.
  146. ^ Baud 1999a, p. 335.
  147. ^ Grimal 1992, pp. 77–78.
  148. ^ a b Dodson & Hilton 2004, p. 64.
  149. ^ Roth 2001, p. 106.
  150. ^ Schmitz 1976, p. 29.
  151. ^ Verner, Posener-Kriéger & Jánosi 1995, p. 171.
  152. ^ Strudwick 2005, p. 27.
  153. ^ Baud 1999b, p. 418, see n. 24.
  154. ^ Verner, Posener-Kriéger & Jánosi 1995, p. 70.
  155. ^ Baud 1999b, p. 486.
  156. ^ Borchardt 1907, p. 25, 109, fig. 88.
  157. ^ a b Baud 1999b, p. 485.
  158. ^ a b c Baud 1999a, p. 233.
  159. ^ a b c Callender 1992, p. 115.
  160. ^ Verner 2001a, p. 403.
  161. ^ a b Dodson & Hilton 2004, pp. 68–69.
  162. ^ Verner & Zemina 1994, p. 183.
  163. ^ Vachala 1979, p. 176.
  164. ^ Dodson & Hilton 2004, p. 69.
  165. ^ Bárta 2018, Youtube video of a presentation on the excavations.
  166. ^ Baud 1999a, p. 326.
  167. ^ Baud 1999b, pp. 621–622.
  168. ^ Baud 1999b, p. 621.
  169. ^ a b Baud 1999a, p. 297.
  170. ^ Baud 1999b, p. 665.
  171. ^ Baud 1999b, p. 622.
  172. ^ a b Discovery of the tomb of Khentkaus III 2015, Charles University website.
  173. ^ The Express Tribune 2015.
  174. ^ Verner 2014, p. 58.
  175. ^ Verner, Posener-Kriéger & Jánosi 1995, p. 121.
  176. ^ a b Baud 1999a, p. 9.
  177. ^ Verner, Posener-Kriéger & Jánosi 1995, p. 129.
  178. ^ Munro 1993, pp. 17–19.
  179. ^ Altenmüller 1990, pp. 1–2 & 5.
  180. ^ Baud & Dobrev 1995, pp. 57–58.
  181. ^ Borchardt 1911, p. 36, num. 38.
  182. ^ Morales 2006, p. 314.
  183. ^ Morales 2006, p. 340.
  184. ^ a b c d e f g Malek 2000b, p. 257.
  185. ^ a b Grimal 1992, p. 180.
  186. ^ a b c Morales 2006, p. 313.
  187. ^ a b Morales 2006, p. 333.
  188. ^ Morales 2006, p. 337.
  189. ^ Morales 2006, pp. 339–340.
  190. ^ a b Morales 2006, pp. 318–319, footnote 26.
  191. ^ Brovarski 2001, p. 55.
  192. ^ Brovarski 2001, p. 70.
  193. ^ Brewer & Teeter 1999, p. 52.
  194. ^ Jacquet-Gordon 1962, p. 157, num. 25.
  195. ^ Jacquet-Gordon 1962, p. 156, num. 18.
  196. ^ Jacquet-Gordon 1962, p. 155, num. 16.
  197. ^ Morales 2006, p. 319, footnote 26.
  198. ^ Borchardt 1907, pp. 157–158, fig. 131.
  199. ^ a b Morales 2006, p. 317.
  200. ^ Borchardt 1907, pp. 158–159, fig. 132.
  201. ^ a b Malek 2000b, p. 245.
  202. ^ Malek 2000b, pp. 250 & 256.
  203. ^ Malek 2000b, p. 248.
  204. ^ Malek 2000b, p. 246.
  205. ^ a b Morales 2006, p. 336.
  206. ^ a b Morales 2006, p. 318.
  207. ^ Morales 2006, p. 326.
  208. ^ Bothmer 1974.
  209. ^ a b Morales 2006, p. 321.
  210. ^ Morales 2006, p. 322.
  211. ^ Wildung 1969, p. 170.
  212. ^ a b Grimal 1992, p. 348.

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External links edit

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Nyuserre Ini also Niuserre Ini or Neuserre Ini in Greek known as Rathures Ῥa8oyrhs was an Ancient Egyptian pharaoh the sixth ruler of the Fifth Dynasty during the Old Kingdom period He is credited with a reign of 24 to 35 years depending on the scholar and likely lived in the second half of the 25th century BCE Nyuserre was the younger son of Neferirkare Kakai and queen Khentkaus II and the brother of the short lived king Neferefre He may have succeeded his brother directly as indicated by much later historical sources Alternatively Shepseskare may have reigned between the two as advocated by Miroslav Verner albeit only for a few weeks or months at the most The relation of Shepseskare with Neferefre and Nyuserre remains highly uncertain Nyuserre was in turn succeeded by Menkauhor Kaiu who could have been his nephew and a son of Neferefre Nyuserre IniNiuserre Ini Neuserre Ini Nyuserra Newoserre Any RathorisDouble statue portraying Nyuserre as both a young man and an old man Museum of Egyptian Art in MunichPharaohReign24 to 35 years in the late 25th century BCE note 1 note 2 PredecessorShepseskare most likely or NeferefreSuccessorMenkauhor KaiuRoyal titularyHorus nameSetibtawySt jb tȝwjThe favourite lit place of the heart of the two lands 19 Nebty nameNebtisetibNbti st ibThe favourite lit place of the heart of the two Ladies 19 Golden HorusBik Nebu NetjeriBjk nbw nṯr jThe divine golden falcon 20 Prenomen Praenomen NyuserreN wsr RˁPossessed of Ra s power 21 He who belongs to the power of Ra 20 NomenIniIn n jTranslation uncertain possibly a nickname 22 The delayed one for an overdue baby The one with bushy eyebrowsHieroglyphic variants 23 ConsortReptynub at least another queen whose name is lost possibly twoChildrenKhamerernebty Reputnebty Sheretnebty Khentykauhor Okpo Unlikely Menkauhor Kaiu FatherNeferirkare KakaiMotherKhentkaus IIBurialPyramid of Nyuserre IniMonumentsBuilt ex nihilo Pyramid of Nyuserre IniPyramid Lepsius XXIVLepsius XXVSun temple ShesepibreCompleted Pyramid of Neferirkare KakaiPyramid of NeferefrePyramid complex of Khentkaus IISun temple of UserkafRenovated Mortuary complex of MenkaureUncertain Temple of SatetDynastyFifth Dynasty Nyuserre was the most prolific builder of his dynasty having built three pyramids for himself and his queens and completed a further three for his father mother and brother all in the necropolis of Abusir He built the largest surviving temple to the sun god Ra constructed during the Old Kingdom named Shesepibre or Joy of the heart of Ra He also completed the Nekhenre the Sun temple of Userkaf in Abu Gorab and the valley temple of Menkaure in Giza In doing so he was the first king since Shepseskaf last ruler of the Fourth Dynasty to pay attention to the Giza necropolis a move which may have been an attempt to legitimise his rule following the troubled times surrounding the unexpected death of his brother Neferefre There is little evidence for military action during Nyuserre s reign the Egyptian state continued to maintain trade relations with Byblos on the Levantine coast and to send mining and quarrying expeditions to Sinai and Lower Nubia Nyuserre s reign saw the growth of the administration and the effective birth of the nomarchs provincial governors who for the first time were sent to live in the provinces they administered rather than at the pharaoh s court As with other Old Kingdom pharaohs Nyuserre benefited from a funerary cult established at his death In Nyuserre s case this official state sponsored cult existed for centuries surviving the chaotic First Intermediate Period and lasting until the Twelfth Dynasty of the Middle Kingdom In parallel a spontaneous popular cult appeared with people venerating Nyuserre under his birth name Iny In this cult Nyuserre played a role similar to that of a saint being invoked as an intercessor between the believer and the gods It left little archaeological evidence and seems to have continued until the New Kingdom nearly 1000 years after his death Contents 1 Sources 1 1 Contemporaneous sources 1 2 Historical sources 2 Reign 2 1 Accession to the throne 2 2 Reign length 2 2 1 Historical and archaeological evidence 2 2 2 Nyuserre s Sed festival 2 3 Domestic activities 2 4 Activities outside Egypt 2 4 1 Trade and mining expeditions 2 4 2 Military activity 3 Main building activities 3 1 Pyramid of Nyuserre 3 2 Pyramid Lepsius XXIV 3 3 Lepsius XXV 3 4 Sun Temple 4 Completion and restoration works 4 1 Pyramid complex of Neferirkare 4 2 Pyramid of Neferefre 4 3 Pyramid complex of Khentkaus II 4 4 Valley Temple of Menkaure 4 5 Sun Temple of Userkaf 4 6 Temple of Satet 5 Family 5 1 Parents and siblings 5 2 Consorts and daughters 5 3 Sons 6 Legacy 6 1 Old Kingdom 6 2 First Intermediate Period 6 3 Middle Kingdom 6 4 New Kingdom 6 5 Third Intermediate Period 7 Notes citations and sources 7 1 Explanatory notes 7 2 Citations 7 3 General sources 8 External linksSources editContemporaneous sources edit Nyuserre Ini is well attested in sources contemporaneous with his reign note 3 for example in the tombs of some of his contemporaries including Nyuserre s manicurists Khnumhotep and Niankhkhnum the high officials Khufukhaf II Ty Rashepses Neferefre ankh and Khabawptah 29 30 and the priests of his funerary cult Nimaatsed and Kaemnefert 31 32 Historical sources edit Nyuserre is attested in three ancient Egyptian king lists all dating to the New Kingdom The earliest of these is the Karnak king list which was commissioned by Thutmose III fl 1479 1425 BCE to honour some of his forebears and which mentions Nyuserre in the fourth entry which shows his birth name Iny in a cartouche 33 Nyuserre s prenomen occupies the 30th entry of the Abydos King List written nearly 200 years later during the reign of Seti I fl 1290 1279 BCE Nyuserre s prenomen was most likely also given on the Turin canon third column 22nd row dating to the reign of Ramses II fl 1279 1213 BCE but it has since been lost in a large lacuna affecting the document Fragments of his reign length are still visible on the papyrus indicating a reign of somewhere between 11 and 34 years 34 Nyuserre is the only Fifth Dynasty king absent from the Saqqara Tablet 35 Nyuserre was also mentioned in the Aegyptiaca a history of Egypt probably written in the 3rd century BCE during the reign of Ptolemy II fl 283 246 BCE by the Egyptian priest Manetho Even though no copies of the text survive it is known through later writings by Sextus Julius Africanus and Eusebius In particular Africanus relates that the Aegyptiaca mentioned a pharaoh Ra8oyrhs that is Rathures reigning for forty four years as the sixth king of the Fifth Dynasty 36 Rathures is believed to be the Hellenised form of Nyuserre 37 Reign edit nbsp Neferefre Nyuserre s elder brother died unexpectedly in his early twenties after a short reign Accession to the throne edit Two competing hypotheses exist in Egyptology to describe the succession of events running from the death of Neferirkare Kakai the third king of the Fifth Dynasty to the coronation of Nyuserre Ini the sixth ruler of the dynasty Relying on historical sources where Nyuserre is said to have directly succeeded Neferefre many Egyptologists such as Jurgen von Beckerath and Hartwig Altenmuller have traditionally believed 38 that the following succession took place Neferirkare Kakai Shepseskare Neferefre Nyuserre Ini In this scenario Neferefre is the father of Nyuserre who would have become pharaoh after Neferefre s unexpected death 4 39 Neferefre would be the successor of Shepseskare credited with seven years of reign as indicated in Manetho s Aegyptiaca 36 This view was challenged most notably by Miroslav Verner in 2000 and 2001 40 41 42 following excavations of the Abusir necropolis which indicated that Neferefre s purported predecessor Shepseskare most likely reigned for only a few months between Neferefre and Nyuserre Ini Verner proposes that the royal succession was Neferirkare Kakai Neferefre Shepseskare Nyuserre Ini In support of this hypothesis is Verner s observation that Neferefre and Nyuserre were very likely full brothers both sons of Neferirkare Kakai note 4 There is also evidence that Neferefre was Neferirkare s eldest son and in his early twenties at the death of his father and thus would have been likely to inherit the throne 44 These observations in addition to further archaeological evidence such as the lack of a pyramid of Shepseskare and the position of Neferefre s own convinced Verner that Neferefre directly succeeded his father dying after a very short reign of about two years 44 Nyuserre was then still a child and in this hypothesis his claim to the throne faced a serious challenge in the person of his possible uncle Shepseskare who might have been a son of Sahure Alternatively Shepseskare may have been a short lived son of Neferefre 45 or less likely an usurper from outside the royal family 46 In any case Shepseskare apparently succeeded in holding the crown for a short time Nyuserre ultimately prevailed however either because of Shepseskare s own premature death or because he was backed by powerful high officials and members of the royal family 47 foremost among whom were his mother Khentkaus II and Ptahshepses 1 This latter hypothesis is motivated by the exalted positions that both individuals seem to have enjoyed The mortuary temple of Khentkaus II was designed to imitate that of a king for example by incorporating its own satellite pyramid and having an alignment on an east west axis 48 These features together with Khentkaus II peculiar title of Mwt Nisw bity Nisw bity originally translated by Mother of the king of Upper and Lower Egypt exercising office as the king of Upper and Lower Egypt led some scholars including Verner to propose that she might even have reigned in her own right 48 This hypothesis is now deemed unlikely and her title is rather translated as Mother of two kings of Upper and Lower Egypt note 5 Ptahshepses became vizier under Nyuserre 49 whose daughter he married received the honorary title of King s son note 6 and was buried in one of the largest private tombs in Egypt 51 According to Verner and Nigel Strudwick the architectural elements 52 of this tomb such as its lotus bud columns similar to those used in Nyuserre s own temple boat pits and layout of the burial chamber 53 51 demonstrate the favor shown by that king to his son in law 53 51 54 Reign length edit nbsp Fragmentary statue of a Fifth Dynasty king likely Nyuserre 25 Historical and archaeological evidence edit Manetho s Aegyptiaca related that Nyuserre reigned for 44 years a figure which is rejected by Egyptologists who rather credit him with about three decades of reign 37 owing to the paucity of secure dates for his rule note 7 56 The entry of the Turin canon pertaining to Nyuserre is damaged and the duration of his rule is difficult to read with certainty Following Alan Gardiner s 1959 study of the canon 57 scholars such as Nigel Strudwick credited Nyuserre with 11 15 years of reign note 8 Gardiner s reading of the canon was then reevaluated from facsimiles yielding a 24 to 25 years figure for Nyuserre s reign This duration is accepted by some scholars including Nicolas Grimal 58 More recent analyses of the original papyrus conducted by Kim Ryholt have shown that Nyuserre s reign length as reported on the document could equally be 11 14 21 24 or 31 34 years note 9 34 The later figure is now favoured by Egyptologists including Strudwick and Verner 56 The view that Nyuserre reigned in excess of twenty years is furthermore supported by archaeological evidence which points to a fairly long reign for him Verner who has been excavating the Abusir necropolis on behalf of the University of Prague since 1976 points in particular to Nyuserre s numerous constructions amounting to no less than three new pyramids the completion of a further three the construction of the largest sun temple built during the Old Kingdom 17 Nyuserre s Sed festival edit nbsp Relief of Nyuserre celebrating his Sed festival Egyptian Museum of Berlin The hypothesis of a reign more than three decades long for Nyuserre Ini is supported albeit indirectly by reliefs discovered in his solar temple showing him participating in a Sed festival This festival was meant to rejuvenate the king and was normally though not always first celebrated after 30 years of rule Representations of the festival were part of the typical decorations of temples associated to the king during the Old Kingdom 17 and mere depictions of it do not necessarily imply a long reign note 10 For example a relief showing Sahure in the tunic of the Sed festival has been found in his mortuary temple 59 60 although both historical sources and archeological evidence agree that he ruled Egypt for less than 14 full years 61 12 13 Yet in Nyuserre s case these reliefs taken together with the archaeological evidence have convinced most Egyptologists that Nyuserre enjoyed over 30 years of reign and that the sed festival scenes from Abu Gurab most probably reflect the 30th jubilee of the king s accession to the throne 17 The reliefs of Nyuserre s Sed festival offer a rare glimpse into the ritual acts carried out during this ceremony In particular the festival seems to have involved a procession in a barque over a body of water 62 63 a detail either not represented or lost in all subsequent representations of the festival until the reign of Amenhotep III fl c 1390 1350 BCE over 1000 years after Nyuserre s lifetime 63 Domestic activities edit nbsp Ptahshepses vizier and son in law of Nyuserre Ini The reign of Nyuserre Ini witnessed the unabated growth of the priesthood and state bureaucracy 1 64 a phenomenon which had started in the early Fifth Dynasty 65 in particular under Neferirkare Kakai 66 Changes in the Egyptian administration during this period are manifested by a multiplication in the number of titles reflecting the creation of new administrative offices 66 These in turn reflect a movement to better organise the administration of the state with the new titles corresponding to charges attached to very specific duties 66 The king s power slowly weakened as the bureaucracy expanded note 11 although he remained a living god in the eyes of his subjects 1 This situation went unchecked until the reign of Nyuserre s second successor Djedkare Isesi who implemented the first comprehensive reforms of the system of ranking titles and thus of the administration 71 There are two pieces of direct evidence of administrative activities during Nyuserre s reign The first is that the Old Kingdom royal annals of which only fragments survive are believed to have been composed during his reign The annals which give details on the reigns of kings from the First Dynasty onwards on a year by year basis 72 are damaged and break off following the reign of Neferirkare Kakai The second piece of evidence for administrative activity relates to the provincial administration During the Old Kingdom the Egyptian state was divided administratively into provinces called nomes These provinces were recognised as such since the time of Djoser founder of the Third Dynasty and probably harked back to the predynastic kingdoms of the Nile valley 73 The earliest topographical lists of the nomes of Upper and Lower Egypt date back to the reign of Nyuserre 73 a procession of personified nomes being depicted on reliefs from Nyuserre s sun temple 74 It is also around this time that the nomarchs started to reside in their province rather than at the royal residence 65 Activities outside Egypt edit Trade and mining expeditions edit nbsp Relief of Nyuserre from the Wadi Maghareh To the north of Egypt trade contacts with Byblos on the Levantine coast which existed during much of the Fifth Dynasty were seemingly active during Nyuserre s reign as suggested by a fragment of cylindrical alabaster vase bearing his name uncovered in the city 75 76 East of Egypt Nyuserre commissioned at least one expedition to the Wadi Maghareh in Sinai 77 where mines of copper and turquoise were exploited during much of the Old Kingdom 78 This expedition left a large rock relief now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo note 12 The relief shows Nyuserre smiting the Bedouins note 13 of all foreign lands the great god lord of the two lands 79 At the right of Nyuserre is a dedication to Thoth lord of the foreign lands who has made pure libations 79 This expedition departed Egypt from the port of Ain Sukhna on the western shore of the Gulf of Suez as revealed by seal impressions bearing Nyuserre s name found on the site 80 The port comprised large galleries carved into the sandstone serving as living quarters and storage places The wall of one such gallery was inscribed with a text in ink mentioning the expedition to Sinai and dating it to the year of the second cattle count possibly Nyuserre s fourth year on the throne 81 To the south of Egypt in Lower Nubia Nyuserre exploited the gneiss quarries of Gebel el Asr near Aswan which provided material for buildings and statues note 14 as shown by a fragmentary stone stela inscribed with Nyuserre s Horus name that was discovered in a settlement adjacent to the quarries 82 Military activity edit There is little evidence for military action during Nyuserre s reign William C Hayes proposed that a few fragmentary limestone statues of kneeling and bound prisoners of war discovered in his mortuary temple 83 84 possibly attest to punitive raids in Libya to the west or the Sinai and Palestine to the east during his reign 85 The art historian William Stevenson Smith has pointed out that such statues were customary 83 elements of the decoration of royal temples and mastabas suggesting that they may not be immediately related to actual military campaigns Similar statues and small wooden figures of kneeling captives were discovered in the mortuary complexes of Neferefre 86 Djedkare Isesi 87 Unas 88 Teti 89 Pepi I 90 and Pepi II 83 as well as in the tomb of vizier Senedjemib Mehi 91 92 Main building activities edit nbsp Tomb relief of Iny excavated at Saqqara Assuming Verner s reconstruction of the Fifth Dynasty royal family Nyuserre Ini faced an enormous task when he ascended the throne his father mother and brother had all left their pyramids unfinished 93 his father s and brother s sun temples were unfinished too and he had to construct his own pyramid as well as those of his queens Nyuserre met this challenge by placing his pyramid in the immediate vicinity of the unfinished ones on the north eastern corner of that of Neferirkare Kakai and next to that of Sahure thereby concentrating all pyramid building activities in South Abusir 93 in an area of 300 m 300 m 980 ft 980 ft 94 This meant that his pyramid was out of the alignment formed by the preceding ones limited its size and constrained the layout of his mortuary complex 95 96 This would explain why despite having enjoyed one of the longest reigns of the Fifth Dynasty Nyuserre s pyramid was smaller than that of his father and closer in size to that of his grandfather Sahure 96 Builders and artisans who worked on Nyuserre s constructions projects lived in the pyramid town Enduring are the cult places of Niuserre which was very likely located in Abusir between the causeways of Sahure and Nyuserre 97 Pyramid of Nyuserre edit Main article Pyramid of Nyuserre nbsp The pyramid of Nyuserre Ini in Abusir Nyuserre built a pyramid for himself at Abusir named Mensut Nyuserre note 15 meaning Established are the places of Nyuserre 99 or The places of Nyuserre endure 4 The completed pyramid was entirely covered in fine limestone It was about 52 m 171 ft tall with a base of 78 8 m 259 ft along each side 100 a slope of 52 degrees and a total volume of stone of about 112 000 m3 4 000 000 cu ft The burial chamber and antechamber were both lined with fine limestone as well and roofed with three tiers of gigantic limestone beams 10 m 33 ft long weighing 90 tons each 96 The pyramid complex is unusual as the outer sections of the mortuary temple are offset to the south of the eastern side of the complex This allowed Nyuserre to intercept and complete his father s causeway which led from the valley temple close to the Nile to the pyramid itself on the desert edge The valley temple of Nyuserre was thus built on the foundations laid by his father for his own unfinished valley temple Once completed it consisted of a portico with eight papyriform columns its floor was of black basalt and its walls were made of limestone with painted reliefs above a dado of red granite 96 The back of the portico led to the causeway the base of which was entirely covered in basalt while its upper portions were decorated with numerous reliefs some showing the king as a sphinx trampling over his enemies 101 The causeway was roofed by limestone blocks painted in blue with golden stars 101 Arriving near the pyramid the causeway led into a columned courtyard preceded by storage rooms and succeeded by the mortuary temple itself which housed statues of the king and depictions of the royal family and Nyuserre in the presence of the gods 101 The wider pyramid complex was enclosed by a wall with two large rectangular structures on its north east and south east corners Both Lehner and Verner see these as the precursor of the pylon characteristic of later Egyptian temples 102 101 Beyond the main pyramid was a smaller one for the Ka of the king 101 Pyramid Lepsius XXIV edit Main article Lepsius XXIV nbsp Ruins of the pyramid Lepsius XXIV South of the pyramid of his mother Khentkaus II Nyuserre built a pyramid for a queen either a consort of himself or of his brother Neferefre 103 The pyramid is known today as Lepsius XXIV after its number in Karl Richard Lepsius pioneering list of pyramids 104 It originally reached about 27 m 89 ft high with a base of 31 5 m 103 ft its core made of limestone and clay mortar organised in horizontal and accretion layers 105 Today the pyramid is heavily ruined its outer casing of fine white limestone long gone and it stands only 5 m 16 ft tall While graffiti left by the builders indicate that the construction of this pyramid dates to the later part of Nyuserre s reign and took place under the direction of vizier Ptahshepses 105 the name of the queen for whom the pyramid was intended is lost 104 Reptynub has been cited as a likely candidate In the burial chamber which is reached via a straight north south passageway the broken up mummy of a young woman was discovered She stood around 160 cm 5 2 ft tall and died between 21 and 23 years of age 106 It is unclear whether the mummy is that of the original owner of the pyramid or dates to a later period as the mummification method employed could suggest 105 Excavations of the burial chamber yielded fragments of a pink granite sarcophagus as well as pieces of large calcite canopic jars and smaller funerary equipment 105 On the eastern side of the pyramid the ruins of a small satellite pyramid as well as of a mortuary temple have been discovered Both were heavily affected by stone robbing which started as early as the New Kingdom and reached a climax during the Saite 664 525 BCE and Persian 525 402 BCE periods making a modern reconstruction of the temple layout impossible 105 Lepsius XXV edit Main article Double Pyramid nbsp Ruins of Lepsius XXV in Abusir The ruins known today as Lepsius XXV constitute not one but two large adjacent tombs built as a single monument on the south eastern edge of the Abusir necropolis The peculiar construction which Verner has called a double pyramid was known to ancient Egyptians as The Two are Vigilant note 16 The pyramids both truncated had rectangular bases of 27 7 m 21 5 m 91 ft 71 ft for the eastern one and 21 7 m 15 7 m 71 ft 52 ft for the western one their walls reaching an inclination of about 78 degrees This means that the construction resembled a pair of mastabas more than a couple of pyramids 103 in fact so much so that Dusan Magdolen proposed that Lepsius XXV is a mastaba 108 A further peculiarity of the structure is the lack of associated mortuary temple 103 Instead the eastern tomb boasts a small offering chapel built of undecorated white limestone and situated within the tomb superstructure Its ceiling reached 5 m 16 ft high Excavations revealed small pieces of papyrus inscribed with a list of offerings as well as fragments of an alabaster statue of a woman clothed in a simple robe The burial chamber revealed scant remains of the female owner and a few pieces of funerary equipment 103 The western tomb was built subsequently to the eastern one and seems to have served to bury another woman Builders graffiti uncovered during the Czech excavations demonstrate in all likelihood that the monument was built under Nyuserre its owners possibly amongst the last members of the broader royal family to be buried in Abusir the necropolis being abandoned by Nyuserre s successor Menkauhor 103 Sun Temple edit nbsp Ludwig Borchardt s reconstruction of the Shesepibre 109 nbsp Red granite entrance portico bearing Nyuserre s titulary likely from his sun temple Egyptian Museum Nyuserre was the penultimate Egyptian pharaoh to build a sun temple In doing so he was following a tradition established by Userkaf that reflects the paramount importance of the cult of Ra during the Fifth Dynasty Sun temples built during this period were meant to play for Ra the same role that the pyramid played for the king they were funerary temples for the sun god where his renewal and rejuvenation necessary to maintain the order of the world could take place Cults performed in the temple were thus primarily concerned with Ra s creator function as well as his role as father of the king During his lifetime the king would appoint his closest officials to the running of the temple allowing them to benefit from the temple s income and thus ensuring their loyalty After the pharaoh s death the sun temple s income would be associated with the pyramid complex supporting Nyuserre s funerary cult 110 Located in Abu Ghurob north of Abusir Nyuserre s sun temple is the largest and best preserved of its kind 4 leading some Egyptologists such as von Beckerath to see Nyuserre s reign as the peak of the solar cult 111 an assertion which according to Grimal is exaggerated 112 The temple was known as the Shesepibre by the Ancient Egyptians note 17 which has been variously translated as Joy of the heart of Re 4 Re s Favorite Place 113 Delight of Ra 114 or Place agreeable to Ra 99 Curiously 114 Nyuserre s sun temple was first built in mudbrick only later to be reconstructed entirely in stone 114 It is the only such structure to receive this treatment note 18 112 111 thanks to which much of the architectural elements and reliefs have survived to this day 112 115 While the reason for this renewal remains unclear Lehner has proposed that it may be related to Nyuserre s Sed festival or to some evolution in the ideology surrounding sun temples 114 nbsp Altar of the sun temple of Nyuserre The temple was entered from the eastern side following a long causeway which departed from a valley temple located closer to the Nile This temple mostly served as a gateway to the upper temple and housed a pillared portico of mudbrick encased in yellow limestone 114 The upper temple comprised a large rectangular courtyard entered via five granite doorways located on its eastern side An altar was located in the center of the courtyard which can still be seen today It was constructed from five large blocks of alabaster one shaped like the hieroglyph for Ra and the others shaped like the glyph for hotep They were arranged so as to read Ra Hotep that is May Ra be satisfied 116 from the four cardinal points 113 The sign for Hotep also means offering or offering table in Ancient Egyptian so that the altar was literally an offering table to Ra 117 At the western end of the rectangular court was a giant obelisk a symbol of the sun god Ra It was built on a pedestal with sloping sides and a square top like a truncated pyramid which was 20 m 66 ft high and was constructed of limestone and red granite around the base The obelisk topping it was another 36 m 118 ft high 117 built entirely of limestone 114 The temple was adorned with numerous fine reliefs depicting Nyuserre s Sed festival as well as a chapel of seasons attached to the obelisk pedestal decorated with representations of human activities throughout the seasons 118 114 Completion and restoration works editPyramid complex of Neferirkare edit Main article Pyramid of Neferirkare nbsp The pyramid of Neferirkare in Abusir The pyramid of Neferirkare was planned to be significantly larger than that of Neferirkare s Fifth Dynasty predecessors with a square base side of 105 m 344 ft and a height of 72 m 236 ft Although well underway at the death of the pharaoh the pyramid was lacking its external limestone cladding and the accompanying mortuary temple still had to be built Neferefre had begun covering the pyramid surface with limestone and had built the foundation of a stone temple on the pyramid eastern side Nyuserre completed their father s pyramid complex 119 though he did so more parsimoniously than his brother He abandoned the task of covering the pyramid altogether and finished the mortuary temple with cheaper materials than were normally used for such buildings Its walls were made of mud bricks rather than limestone and its floor was of beaten clay 120 The outer part of the temple was built to comprise a column portico and a pillared court all columns being made of wood rather than the usual granite 120 The temple and pyramid were also surrounded by a brick wall Likely for reasons of economy the causeway leading to the mortuary temple at the foot of the pyramid was never built no satellite pyramid was added to the mortuary complex and the valley temple was left unfinished 121 Consequently the priest of the mortuary cult of Neferirkare lived on the temple premises in dwellings of mud bricks and rushes rather than in the pyramid town closer to the Nile valley 121 Pyramid of Neferefre edit Main article Pyramid of Neferefre nbsp The unfinished pyramid of Neferefre Construction works on the pyramid of Neferefre had just begun when Neferefre died unexpectedly in his early twenties At the time of Nyuserre s ascension to the throne only one step of the core of Neferefre s pyramid had been completed The substructures built in a large open pit at the center of the pyramid were possibly unfinished as well Nyuserre hastily 122 completed the pyramid by transforming it into a stylised primeval mound 122 resembling a mastaba the walls of the core layer already in place were covered with limestone and the top was filled with clay and stones drawn from the local desert 123 The accompanying mortuary temple which then comprised only a small stone chapel possibly built by the ephemeral Shepseskare 38 was finished by Nyuserre 96 Extending over the whole 65 m 213 ft length of the pyramid side the temple was built of mudbrick and comprised the earliest hypostyle hall of Ancient Egypt its roof supported by wooden columns The hall housed a large wooden statue of the deceased king 96 Nyuserre also built storage rooms to the north of the hall and east of it the Sanctuary of the Knife where animals were ritually slaughtered A column courtyard completed the temple entrance adorned with two stone columns and 24 wooden ones 96 Pyramid complex of Khentkaus II edit nbsp In the foreground Khentkaus ruined mortuary temple Work on the pyramid and mortuary temple of Nyuserre s mother Khentkaus II had begun during her husband s rule but was stopped in the tenth year of his reign 48 at which point only the pyramid core was still uncased 124 After a delay of 12 years 125 Nyuserre Ini restarted the building work and expended much effort 126 in completing the majority of the construction 127 128 The motivation for this might have been to legitimise his rule following the premature death of Neferefre and the possible challenge by Shepseskare 129 The pyramid is located in Abusir next to that of Neferikare Kakai who was Khentkaus husband and under whose reign the construction of Khentkaus s complex had started 126 Once completed the pyramid stood 17 m 56 ft high with a side of 25 m 82 ft at the base and a slope of 52 degrees 48 Its sepulchral chamber likely housed a sarcophagus of red granite Today the pyramid is a 4 m 13 ft high mound of rubble 125 The mortuary temple of the queen at the eastern foot of the pyramid 125 was the object of successive completion works during Nyuserre s reign the earliest one used stone while the latest used only mudbrick 126 Completely ruined today the temple seems to have been designed in imitation of the mortuary temples of kings 128 incorporating for example a satellite pyramid 130 and being aligned on an east west axis 48 The temple was administratively at least partially independent 131 from the temple of Neferirkare Kakai with which it nonetheless shared some religious services 132 and it continued to function until the end of the Sixth Dynasty some 300 years after Khentkaus lifetime 48 Valley Temple of Menkaure edit Main article Pyramid of Menkaure Archaeological excavations in 2012 2015 revealed that Nyuserre Ini undertook building works on the valley temple of Menkaure as witnessed by numerous seal impressions bearing his serekh discovered on the site 133 14 These works ended a long period from the reign of Shepseskaf until his reign during which the Giza necropolis was not the object of royal attention 14 Beyond Menkaure s valley temple Nyuserre apparently also took a wider interest in the administration of the pyramid town of Khafre and revived the cult of both Menkaure and queen Khentkaus I 134 According to Mark Lehner this queen who bore the same name as Nyuserre s mother and like his mother bore two pharaohs provided Nyuserre with a genealogical link relating him to his Fourth Dynasty forebears 135 John Nolan believes that the mirroring position and names of both Khentkaus queens was emphasised so that Nyuserre could legimitise his rule after the troubled times surrounding Neferefre s death 136 In the valley temple of Menkaure Nyuserre extended the eastern annex where he added two sets of alabaster columns 133 rebuilt the main entrance and refurbished the limestone causeway leading from the valley temple to the high temple 137 There Mark Lehner suggested that Nyuserre expanded the inner part of the high temple 138 139 notably adding to it a square antechamber with a single central pillar 133 Sun Temple of Userkaf edit Main article Sun temple of Userkaf Userkaf founder of the Fifth Dynasty was also the first pharaoh to build a temple to Ra in Abu Gurob The temple was called Nekhenre by the Ancient Egyptian which means The Fortress of Ra and built in four phases by three pharaohs Userkaf first constructed a rectangular enclosure with a mound in its center Sahure 140 or Neferirkare Kakai 141 then transformed this mound into a granite obelisk on a pedestal adding two statue shrines near its base The last two phases of construction were undertaken during Nyuserre s reign Nyuserre first added an inner enclosure of limestone in the pre existing court extended the outside enclosure and either completed or built entirely the valley temple In the last construction phase Nyuserre encased the inner enclosure in mudbrick added an altar and five stone benches to the central court and built an annex to the temple 141 Temple of Satet edit Main article Temple of Satet A temple dedicated to the goddess Satet personification of the Nile floods had stood on the island of Elephantine to the south of Egypt since at least the late Predynastic Period around 3200 BCE The temple was enlarged and renovated several times from the Early Dynastic Period onwards and was again rebuilt in the course of the Fifth Dynasty possibly during Nyuserre s reign A faience plaque bearing Nyuserre s name was discovered in a deposit of votive offerings located under the floor of the sanctuary 142 Unfortunately this deposit does not represent the original context of the plaque which could have once adorned the walls of the temple or could equally have been deposed in a foundational offering made in anticipation of the temple reconstruction 142 Family edit nbsp Glazed relief showing Khentkaus II enthroned Naprstek Museum Parents and siblings edit The identity of the mother of Nyuserre is known with certainty it was queen Khentkaus II in whose mortuary temple a fragmentary relief showing her facing her son Nyuserre and his family has been uncovered 143 144 145 On this relief both Khentkaus and Nyuserre appear on the same scale 144 As a corollary Nyuserre was almost certainly a son of Neferirkare Kakai as Khentkaus II was Neferirkare s queen 146 This relationship is also indicated by the location of Nyuserre s pyramid in Abusir next to that of Neferirkare as well as his reuse for his own valley temple of materials from Neferikare s unfinished constructions 147 At least one sibling of Nyuserre is known with near certainty Neferefre who was a son of Neferirkare and Khentkaus II was Nyuserre s elder brother 148 Since the relation between Shepseskare and Nyuserre remains uncertain it is possible that the two were brothers too as suggested by Roth 149 although the dominant hypothesis is that Shepseskare was a son of Sahure and hence Nyuserre s uncle Finally yet another brother 150 possibly younger 151 than Nyuserre has also been proposed Iryenre a prince Iry pat note 19 whose relationship is suggested by the fact that his funerary cult was associated with that of his mother both having taken place in the temple of Khentkaus II 153 154 Consorts and daughters edit nbsp Entrance of the pyramid Lepsius XXIV believed to belong to a consort of Nyuserre Nyuserre Ini seems to have had at least two wives as witnessed by two small pyramids located at the southern end of the pyramid field of Abusir 104 Known today under the names of Lepsius XXIV and Lepsius XXV given to them by Lepsius in his list of pyramids both monuments are heavily ruined and the names of their owners cannot be ascertained 104 One of these two queens might have been Reptynub 155 the only known consort of Nyuserre Her existence and relation to Nyuserre are attested by a fragmentary alabaster statuette 156 note 20 of her discovered in the valley temple 157 of Nyuserre s pyramid complex 158 Pieces of relief from the tomb of vizier Ptahshepses give the titles of a queen and while her name is lost these titles are the same as those that Reptynub bore 159 leading Egyptologists to propose that these refer to her 160 158 Nyuserre and Reptynub likely had a daughter in the person of princess Khamerernebty 148 4 note 21 as suggested by her title of King s daughter as well as her marriage to the powerful vizier Ptahshepses 161 162 This remains conjectural until direct evidence of this relationship can be discovered 159 In particular the only known connection between Reptynub and Khamerernebty are the reliefs from Ptahshepses s tomb the presence of which would seem natural 163 159 if Reptynub was Khamerernebty s mother 164 Hartwig Altenmuller goes further and hypothesises that Nyuserre had two more daughters who he believes were buried close to Nyuserre s pyramid 4 In 2012 the tomb of Sheretnebty an hitherto unknown daughter of Nyuserre was excavated in Abusir south by a team under the direction of Miroslav Barta She was married to an important Egyptian official whose name is lost According to Barta this type of marriage reflects the growing nepotism in the Egyptian elite and the progressive dilution of the king s power 165 Sons edit Nyuserre Ini is known to have had at least one son his first born whose name is lost is represented on several 166 167 relief fragments from the high temple of his pyramid complex 158 Beyond the title of Iry pat and eldest king s son he likely held two priestly titles lector priest 168 and priest of Min note 22 169 Although the name of Nyuserre s eldest son is lost Michel Baud observes that one relief fragment comprises a r e possibly part of the prince s name If so then he would be distinct from Menkauhor Kaiu Nyuserre s successor 171 The precise relationship between Nyuserre and Menkauhor remains uncertain but indirect evidence from the mastaba of Khentkaus III discovered in 2015 favors the hypothesis that Menkauhor was a son of Neferefre and thus a nephew of Nyuserre rather than his own son 172 Khentkaus is called king s wife and king s mother in inscriptions left by the tomb builders Given the location of the mastaba close to the pyramid of Neferefre her husband was likely this pharaoh 173 174 Since she was also the mother of a king and since Nyuserre was a brother to Neferefre the son in question is most probably the future Menkauhor Kaiu who would thus have succeeded his uncle 172 In any case the succession of Nyuserre seems to have gone smoothly A seal bearing both Nyuserre s and Menkauhor s names has been uncovered in the mortuary complex of Nyuserre s mother Khentkaus II 175 176 A further seal is believed to have both Nyuserre s and Djedkare s names on it Djedkare Isesi being Nyuserre s second successor 177 176 Taken together these seals reveal that at the very least Menkauhor and Djedkare did not perceive Nyuserre as an antagonist 178 179 180 Legacy edit nbsp Statuette of Nyuserre Ini of uncertain provenance now in the Egyptian Museum note 23 As pharaoh Nyuserre Ini benefited from a funerary cult established at his death Under the umbrella of the term funerary cult are grouped various cultic activities of two different types First there was an official cult taking place in the king s mortuary complex and which was provided for by agricultural domains established during Nyuserre s reign This cult was most active until the end of the Old Kingdom but lasted at least until the Twelfth Dynasty during the Middle Kingdom 182 at which point is the latest known mention of a priest serving in Nyuserre s funerary complex 183 In later times the official cult of Nyuserre was essentially reduced to a cult of the royal ancestor figure a limited version of the cult of the divine as Jaromir Malek writes 184 manifested by the dedication of statues and the compilation of lists of kings to be honoured 185 In parallel to that official cult were the more private cults of pious individuals venerating Nyuserre as a kind of saint an intercessor between the believers and the gods 184 This popular cult which developed spontaneously perhaps because of the proximity of Nyuserre s pyramid to Memphis 184 referred to Nyuserre using his birth name Iny 186 and likely consisted of invocations and offerings to statues of the king or in his mortuary temple 184 Therefore archaeological traces of this cult are difficult to discern 187 yet Nyuserre s special status is manifest in some religious formulae where his name is invoked as well as in the onomastics of individuals notably during the Middle Kingdom whose names included Iny such as Inhotep Inemsaf Inankhu and many more 188 Although the veneration of Nyuserre was originally a local phenomenon from Abusir Saqqara and their surroundings 184 it may have ultimately reached even outside of Egypt proper in Sinai Byblos and Nubia where fragments of statues vessels and stelae bearing Nyuserre s name have been discovered in cultic contexts 189 Old Kingdom edit During the Old Kingdom provisions for the official funerary cult of Nyuserre Ini were produced in agricultural estates set up during his reign 190 The names of some of these estates have been found inscribed on the walls of tombs in Saqqara or in Nyuserre s mortuary temple 190 such as The track of Ini note 24 and The offerings of Ini note 25 Several Ḥwt domains of the king which comprise the land holdings 193 of the mortuary temple of Nyuserre are known Hathor wishes that Nyuserre lives note 26 Horus wishes that Nyuserre lives note 27 Bastet wishes that Nyuserre lives note 28 and Ptah desires Nyuserre to live note 29 Several priests serving in the pyramid complex and sun temple of Nyuserre are known from their tombs until the end of the Sixth Dynasty showing that the official mortuary cult endured throughout the late Old Kingdom 187 Nyuserre furthermore received special attention from at least two of his successors during this period Djedkare Isesi either restored or completed his funerary temple note 30 199 and Pepi II Neferkare erected a door jamb bearing an inscription mentioning both his first Sed festival and Nyuserre in the latter s valley temple a close association meant to evidence the pretended association of the king with his forefather 199 note 31 First Intermediate Period edit nbsp Head of king probably Nyuserre 3 Nyuserre is one of the very few Old Kingdom kings for whom there is evidence that the funerary cult continued uninterrupted during the First Intermediate Period note 32 when the central authority of the pharaohs had broken down and the Egyptian state was in turmoil 186 201 The tombs of two priests Heryshefhotep I and II who lived during this period note 33 mention their roles and duties in the funerary establishment of Nyuserre witnessing to the continuing existence of the official mortuary cult 205 Nyuserre s effective deification and popular veneration flourished in parallel to the official cult throughout the period as revealed for example by inscriptions in the tomb of an individual named Ipi who desires to be honoured before Iny note 34 a terminology in which Nyuserre plays a role normally reserved to the gods 206 Similar qualifications denoting Nyuserre s status are found in tombs dating to the subsequent early Middle Kingdom such as the mummy chest of an individual named Inhotep on which he says he is to be honoured before Osiris lord of life and Iny lord of reverence note 35 Middle Kingdom edit The Middle Kingdom saw the decline of the official cult of Nyuserre Evidence from this period come from works undertaken in the Karnak temple by Senusret I who dedicated a number of statues of Old Kingdom kings 185 including at least one of Nyuserre note 36 to a cult of Amun and of the royal ancestors 209 At the same time the 12th Dynasty saw the widespread dismantling of many Old Kingdom funerary temples for their materials which were notably reused in the pyramid complexes of Amenemhat I and Senusret I 184 These events are contemporaneous with the life of the last priest serving the official cult of Nyuserre a certain Inhotep 205 Both of these facts hint at a lapse of royal interest in the state sponsored funerary cults of Old Kingdom rulers 184 New Kingdom edit nbsp Section of the Karnak list of kings to be honoured by Thutmosis III Nyuserre is the fourth seated king of the top row The popular veneration of Nyuserre during earlier times continued to influence the cults performed during the New Kingdom This is best exemplified by the Karnak king list composed during the reign of Thutmosis III with the purpose of honouring a selection of royal ancestors and which includes the cartouche showing Iny for Nyuserre This choice is unusual as cartouches normally include the king s praenomen rather than a birth name Iny being likely chosen here because it was under this name that Nyuserre was venerated and had become deified 33 Later during the Ramesside period statues of Old Kingdom pharaohs including one of Nyuserre Ini were placed in a cachette a hiding place in the temple of Ptah in Memphis suggesting their continued use for cultic purposes until that point 210 Concurrently with these activities extensive restoration works in Abusir and Saqqara were undertaken during the reign of Ramses II under the direction of prince Khaemweset The sun temple of Nyuserre was among the monuments benefiting from these works 211 Third Intermediate Period edit During the late Third Intermediate Period Old Kingdom mortuary temples enjoyed a revival of interest due primarily to the archaizing style favoured by the kings of the Twenty fifth Dynasty of Egypt c 760 656 BCE 212 In particular Taharqa fl c 690 664 BCE had reliefs from the temples of Sahure Nyuserre and Pepi II reproduced in the temple of Amun of Gem Aten in Karnak during his restoration works there 212 Notes citations and sources editExplanatory notes edit Proposed dates for Nyuserre s reign 2474 2444 BCE 1 2 3 2470 2444 BCE 4 2465 2435 BCE 5 2453 2422 BCE 6 2453 2420 BCE 7 2445 2421 BCE 8 9 10 2445 2414 BCE 11 2420 2389 BCE 12 2402 2374 BCE 13 14 2398 2388 BCE 15 In a 1978 work the Egyptologist William C Hayes credited Nyuserre with 30 2 years of reign starting c 2500 BCE 16 The only date known reliably in relation with Nyuserre Ini comes from radiocarbon dating of a piece of wood discovered in the mastaba of Ptahshepses a vizier and son in law of Nyuserre The wood was dated to 2465 2333 BCE 17 18 Numerous artefacts and architectural elements either bearing Nyuserre s nomen prenomen or serekh or simply contemporary with his reign have been unearthed These are now scattered throughout the world in many museums including the Boston Museum of Fine Arts 24 Brooklyn Museum 25 Los Angeles County Museum of Art 3 Metropolitan Museum of Art 26 Petrie Museum 27 28 the Egyptian Museum of Cairo and many more Neferefre was the eldest son of Neferirkare with queen Khentkaus II 43 1 4 as shown by a relief on limestone slab depicting Neferirkare and his wife Khentkaus with the king s eldest son Ranefer the future pharaoh Neferefre 43 At the same time Nyuserre Ini undertook numerous construction works in the mortuary temple of Khentkaus II who bore the title of Mother of Two Kings of Upper and Lower Egypt indicating that two of her sons ascended the throne See below for a detailed discussion That is Neferefre and Nyuserre Ini Verner proposes that he received the title upon marrying Nyuserre s daughter 50 During the Old Kingdom Ancient Egyptians did not have a system of absolute dating as we do today rather they counted years from the beginning of a king s reign and gave them names relating to important events that occurred or would occur during this year The most important such event was the cattle count and many documents and inscriptions thus mentions the year of the Xth cattle count under king Y In the case of Nyuserre the latest such event attested in a document contemporaneous with his reign is the 8th cattle count that is at most Nyuserre s 16th year on the throne 55 Between his 1985 book on the Egyptian administration and his 2005 book on Egyptian texts of the Old Kingdom Nigel Strudwick has changed his opinion on Nyuserre s reign length and now credits him with 31 years on the throne 11 Ryholt writes Nyuserre s reign is damaged There is a distinct trace of a 10 20 or 30 followed by a stroke after which the papyrus breaks off Accordingly the possibilities are 11 14 21 24 and 31 34 years for Nyuserre and not just 24 years as is conventionally assumed 34 Verner writes that such scenes are part of a standard decoration program for the funerary complex of the king Beautiful reliefs with the scenes of the sed festival from this sun temple are occasionally considered as indirect evidence of a long reign for this king Generally the historical authenticity of such reliefs is doubted since the sed festival scenes very probably belonged in the Old Kingdom to the standard Bildprogram of the royal funerary monuments 17 Joyce Tyldesley instead sees the reign of Djedkare Isesi as the very beginning of the decline in the importance of the king 67 given the decentralisation stemming from his reforms Yet for Nigel Strudwick and Klaus Baer these reforms were precisely undertaken as a reaction to the rapid growth of the central administration 68 which had amassed too much political or economic power 69 in the eyes of the king 70 Catalogue number Cairo JE 38570 79 Egyptian Mnṯjw The primary example of Old Kingdom gneiss statue is the Khafre Enthroned Transliteration Mn s wt Nj wsr Rˁ 98 Ancient Egyptian transliteration rs mrwj variously translated as The two are watchful vigilant alert 107 Transliteration Ssp jb Rˁ 98 As noted in this article Lehner states that Userkaf s sun temple underwent a similar transformation 114 albeit less total while Grimal and von Beckerath emphasise the uniqueness of the Shesepibre in this respect 112 111 Often translated as Hereditary prince or Hereditary noble and more precisely Concerned with the nobility this title denotes a highly exalted position 152 The statuette is now in the Egyptian Museum Berlin under the catalogue number 17438 157 Known more completely as Khamerernebty A in modern Egyptology a denomination aimed at distinguishing her from later Khamerernebtys For the same reason Ptahshepses is known as Ptahshepses B 161 In Egyptian sm3 Mnw meaning Sema priest of Min 169 170 Catalogue number CG 38 the statue is 65 cm 26 in high 181 Ancient Egyptian Mṯn Ini 191 Ancient Egyptian Ḥtpwt Ini 192 Ancient Egyptian ḥwt Ny wsr Rˁ mr Ḥwt Ḥr ˁnḫ Ny wsr Rˁ 194 Ancient Egyptian ḥwt Ny wsr Rˁ mr Ḥr ˁnḫ Ny wsr Rˁ 195 Ancient Egyptian ḥwt Ny wsr Rˁ mr B3stt ˁnḫ Ny wsr Rˁ 196 Ancient Egyptian mr Ptḥ ˁnḫ Ny wsr Rˁ 197 This is witnessed by a fragmentary inscription where Djedkare claims to have undertaken works in Nyuserre s temple The block bearing the inscription is currently housed in the Berlin Museum under the catalogue No 17933 198 The fragmented jamb is now in the Berlin Museum catalogue No 17934 200 The Old Kingdom kings whose funerary cult continued to exist during the First Intermediate period are according to Jaromir Malek Nyuserre and Teti 201 Antonio Morales adds Unas to this list 186 but this is contested by Malek who sees Unas funerary cult during the Middle Kingdom as a revival rather than a continuation of existing practices 202 Malek states that these priests date probably to the late Eleventh Dynasty that is early Middle Kingdom 203 but does not exclude the possibility of an earlier date in the First Intermediate Period 204 Ancient Egyptian jm3ḫw ḫr Jnjj 206 Ancient Egyptian jm3ḫ w ḫr Wsir nb ˁnḫ Jnj nb jm3ḫ 207 The statue in question is fragmentary the lower half being now in the Egyptian Museum of Cairo under the catalogue number CG 42003 and the upper half in the Rochester Memorial Art Gallery catalogue no 42 54 208 The lower part of a black granite statue of Nyuserre now in the British museum under the catalogue number BM EA 870 may come from Karnak as well 209 Citations edit a b c d e Verner 2001b p 589 Hawass amp Senussi 2008 p 10 a b c LACMA 2016 a b c d e f g h Altenmuller 2001 p 599 Encyclopaedia Britannica 2016 Clayton 1994 p 60 Ziegler 2007 p 215 Malek 2000a p 100 Rice 1999 p 141 Van de Mieroop 2011 p 55 a b Strudwick 2005 p xxx a b von Beckerath 1999 p 283 a b Hornung 2012 p 491 a b c Nolan 2012 p 3 a b Strudwick 1985 p 3 Hayes 1978 p 58 a b c d e Verner 2001a p 404 von Beckerath 1997 p 56 a b Leprohon 2013 p 40 see also footnote 58 a b Leprohon 2013 p 40 Clayton 1994 p 61 Leprohon 2013 p 40 see also footnote 59 von Beckerath 1999 p 59 Boston Museum of fine Arts 2016 a b Brooklyn Museum 2016 Metropolitan Museum of Art 2016 Petrie Museum 2016 UC11103 Digital Egypt for Universities 2016 Mariette 1885 pp 294 295 de Rouge 1918 p 89 Mariette 1885 pp 242 249 de Rouge 1918 p 88 a b Morales 2006 p 320 a b c Ryholt 1997 p 13 Mariette 1864 p 4 pl 17 a b Waddell 1971 p 51 a b Verner 2001a p 401 a b Baker 2008 pp 427 428 von Beckerath 1999 pp 56 59 Verner 2000 Verner 2001a Verner 2001b a b Verner 1985 p 282 a b Verner 2000 p 589 Krejci Arias Kytnarova amp Odler 2015 p 40 Verner 2000 pp 596 597 Verner 1980b pp 266 267 a b c d e f Lehner 2008 p 146 Baud 1999b p 451 Verner amp Zemina 1994 p 189 a b c Strudwick 1985 p 89 Verner amp Zemina 1994 p 180 a b Verner 1976 p 672 Brovarski 2001 p 12 Verner 2001a p 416 a b Hornung 2012 p 484 Gardiner 1959 Grimal 1992 p 77 Borchardt 1913 Blatt 45 Richter 2013 Rice 1999 p 173 Bissing Kees amp Borchardt 1905 1928 vol 2 pl 15 p 38 vol 3 pl 9 p 193 pl 10 pp 198 amp 201 204 a b Brovarski 2001 p 98 Strudwick 1985 p 338 a b Altenmuller 2001 p 597 a b c Strudwick 1985 p 337 Tyldesley 2005 p 238 Strudwick 1985 p 340 Strudwick 1985 p 341 Baer 1960 p 297 amp 300 Strudwick 1985 p 339 Wilkinson 2000 p 1 a b Grimal 1992 p 58 Van de Mieroop 2011 p 65 Dunand 1939 p 280 Porter Moss amp Burney 1951 p 390 Hayes 1978 p 67 Mumford 1999 pp 875 876 a b c Strudwick 2005 p 136 text 58 Tallet 2015 pp 41 amp 60 Tallet 2015 p 39 Shaw 2003 p 451 a b c Smith 1949 p 58 Hayes 1978 p 115 Hayes 1978 p 66 Verner amp Zemina 1994 pp 146 147 amp 148 149 Porter Moss amp Burney 1981 p 424 Porter Moss amp Burney 1981 p 421 Porter Moss amp Burney 1981 p 394 Porter Moss amp Burney 1981 p 422 Smith 1949 pl 126d amp e fig 130b Brovarski 2001 p 158 a b Verner amp Zemina 1994 p 141 Verner 2000 p 586 footnote 15d Verner 2000 p 586 footnote 15 a b c d e f g Lehner 2008 p 148 Verner 2012 p 407 a b Zibelius Chen 1978 pp 97 98 amp 232 234 a b Grimal 1992 p 116 Grimal 1992 p 117 a b c d e Lehner 2008 p 149 Verner 1997a p 316 a b c d e Verner 2007 a b c d Verner amp Zemina 1994 p 83 a b c d e Krejci 2005 Strouhal Cerny amp Vyhnanek 2000 pp 549 550 Magdolen 2008 p 211 Magdolen 2008 p 205 Bissing Kees amp Borchardt 1905 1928 Band 1 Der Bau Janak Vymazalova amp Coppens 2010 pp 441 442 a b c von Beckerath 1982 pp 517 518 a b c d Grimal 1992 p 78 a b Goelet 1999 p 86 a b c d e f g h Lehner 2008 p 151 Reliefs in the Petrie Museum 2017 Lehner 2008 p 152 a b Verner amp Zemina 1994 p 110 Bissing 1955 pl I XXIII Lehner 2015 p 293 a b Verner amp Zemina 1994 pp 77 79 a b Verner amp Zemina 1994 p 79 a b Verner 2001a p 400 Lehner 2008 p 147 Verner 1997b p 111 a b c Verner amp Zemina 1994 p 123 a b c Baud 1999b p 553 Verner 1980b pp 250 252 amp 265 267 a b Baud 1999b p 554 Roth 2001 p 317 Verner Posener Krieger amp Janosi 1995 pp 143 163 Verner Posener Krieger amp Janosi 1995 pp 133 142 Posener Krieger 1976 p 532 a b c Lehner 2015 p 292 Nolan 2012 p 4 Lehner 2011 p 13 Nolan 2012 pp 4 5 Lehner 2015 p 306 Lehner et al 2011 pp 175 176 Lehner 2011 pp 12 13 Verner 2001a p 390 a b Lehner 2008 p 150 a b Dreyer 1986 pp 93 amp 148 149 no 426 Verner 1980a p 161 fig 5 a b Baud 1999a p 234 Verner amp Zemina 1994 p 126 Baud 1999a p 335 Grimal 1992 pp 77 78 a b Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 64 Roth 2001 p 106 Schmitz 1976 p 29 Verner Posener Krieger amp Janosi 1995 p 171 Strudwick 2005 p 27 Baud 1999b p 418 see n 24 Verner Posener Krieger amp Janosi 1995 p 70 Baud 1999b p 486 Borchardt 1907 p 25 109 fig 88 a b Baud 1999b p 485 a b c Baud 1999a p 233 a b c Callender 1992 p 115 Verner 2001a p 403 a b Dodson amp Hilton 2004 pp 68 69 Verner amp Zemina 1994 p 183 Vachala 1979 p 176 Dodson amp Hilton 2004 p 69 Barta 2018 Youtube video of a presentation on the excavations Baud 1999a p 326 Baud 1999b pp 621 622 Baud 1999b p 621 a b Baud 1999a p 297 Baud 1999b p 665 Baud 1999b p 622 a b Discovery of the tomb of Khentkaus III 2015 Charles University website The Express Tribune 2015 Verner 2014 p 58 Verner Posener Krieger amp Janosi 1995 p 121 a b Baud 1999a p 9 Verner Posener Krieger amp Janosi 1995 p 129 Munro 1993 pp 17 19 Altenmuller 1990 pp 1 2 amp 5 Baud amp Dobrev 1995 pp 57 58 Borchardt 1911 p 36 num 38 Morales 2006 p 314 Morales 2006 p 340 a b c d e f g Malek 2000b p 257 a b Grimal 1992 p 180 a b c Morales 2006 p 313 a b Morales 2006 p 333 Morales 2006 p 337 Morales 2006 pp 339 340 a b Morales 2006 pp 318 319 footnote 26 Brovarski 2001 p 55 Brovarski 2001 p 70 Brewer amp Teeter 1999 p 52 Jacquet Gordon 1962 p 157 num 25 Jacquet Gordon 1962 p 156 num 18 Jacquet Gordon 1962 p 155 num 16 Morales 2006 p 319 footnote 26 Borchardt 1907 pp 157 158 fig 131 a b Morales 2006 p 317 Borchardt 1907 pp 158 159 fig 132 a b Malek 2000b p 245 Malek 2000b pp 250 amp 256 Malek 2000b p 248 Malek 2000b p 246 a b Morales 2006 p 336 a b Morales 2006 p 318 Morales 2006 p 326 Bothmer 1974 a b Morales 2006 p 321 Morales 2006 p 322 Wildung 1969 p 170 a b Grimal 1992 p 348 General sources edit AFP 4 January 2015 Tomb of previously unknown pharaonic queen found in Egypt The Express Tribune Retrieved 4 January 2015 Altenmuller Hartwig 1990 Bemerkungen zur Grundung der 6 Dynastie Hildesheimer Agyptologische Beitrage Festschrift Jurgen von Beckerath zum 70 Geburtstag am 19 Februar 1990 in German 30 Hildesheim Pelizaeus Museum 1 20 Altenmuller Hartwig 2001 Old Kingdom Fifth Dynasty In Redford Donald B ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt Volume 2 Oxford University Press pp 597 601 ISBN 978 0 19 510234 5 Baer Klaus 1960 Rank and Title in the Old Kingdom Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 03412 6 Baker Darrell 2008 The Encyclopedia of the Pharaohs Volume I Predynastic to the Twentieth Dynasty 3300 1069 BC Stacey International ISBN 978 1 905299 37 9 Barta Miroslav 2018 Egypt s Old Kingdom The Latest Discoveries at Abusir South Presentation given at the Harvard Semitic Museum Archived from the original on 14 November 2021 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 on 2 April 2015 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Baud Michel 1999a Famille Royale et pouvoir sous l Ancien Empire egyptien Tome 1 PDF Bibliotheque d etude 126 1 in French Cairo Institut francais d archeologie orientale ISBN 978 2 7247 0250 7 Baud Michel 1999b Famille Royale et pouvoir sous l Ancien Empire egyptien Tome 2 PDF Bibliotheque d etude 126 2 in French Cairo Institut francais d archeologie orientale ISBN 978 2 7247 0250 7 Archived from the original PDF on 2 April 2015 Bissing Friedrich Wilhelm von Kees Hermann Borchardt Ludwig 1905 1928 Das Re Heiligtum des Konigs Ne Woser Re Rathures I II III in German Leipzig J C Hinrichs OCLC 78854326 Bissing Friedrich Wilhelm von 1955 La chambre des trois saisons du sanctuaire solaire du roi Rathoures Ve dynastie a Abousir Annales du Service des Antiquites de l Egypte 53 319 338 Borchardt Ludwig 1907 Das Grabdenkmal des Konigs Ne user re Ausgrabungen der Deutschen Orient Gesellschaft in Abusir 1902 1904 in German Leipzig J C Hinrichs OCLC 6724337 Borchardt Ludwig 1911 Catalogue General des Antiquites Egyptiennes du Musee du Caire Nos 1 1294 Statuen und Statuetten von Konigen und Privatleuten Teil 1 PDF in German Berlin Reichsdruckerei OCLC 71385823 Borchardt Ludwig 1913 Das Grabdenkmal des Konigs S aḥu Re Band 2 Die Wandbilder Abbildungsblatter in German Leipzig Hinrichs ISBN 978 3 535 00577 1 Bothmer Bernard V 1974 The Karnak statue of Ny user ra Membra dispersa IV Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archaologischen Instituts Abteilung Kairo 30 Mainz am Rhein Philip von Zabern 165 170 Brewer Douglas J Teeter Emily 1999 Egypt and the Egyptians Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 44518 4 Brovarski Edward 2001 Der Manuelian Peter Simpson William Kelly eds The Senedjemib Complex Part 1 The Mastabas of Senedjemib Inti G 2370 Khnumenti G 2374 and Senedjemib Mehi G 2378 Giza Mastabas Vol 7 Boston Art of the Ancient World Museum of Fine Arts ISBN 978 0 87846 479 1 Callender Vivienne 1992 Volume III A prosopographical register of the wives of Egyptian kings Dynasties I XVII The wives of the Egyptian kings dynasties I XVII PhD Macquarie University OCLC 221450400 Retrieved 25 October 2016 Clayton Peter 1994 Chronicle of the Pharaohs Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 05074 3 Czech expedition discovers the tomb of an ancient Egyptian unknown queen Charles University website 21 January 2015 Retrieved 8 January 2017 de Rouge Emmanuel 1918 Maspero Gaston Naville Edouard eds Œuvres diverses volume sixieme PDF Bibliotheque egyptologique in French Vol 21 26 Paris Editions Ernest Leroux OCLC 39025805 Dodson Aidan Hilton Dyan 2004 The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt London Thames amp Hudson Ltd ISBN 978 0 500 05128 3 Dreyer Gunter 1986 Elephantine VIII der Tempel der Satet die Funde der Fruhzeit und des alten Reiches Archaologische Veroffentlichungen in German Vol 39 Mainz am Rhein Zabern ISBN 978 3 8053 0501 3 Dunand Maurice 1939 Fouilles de Byblos I 1926 1932 Direction de l instruction publique et des beaux arts Etudes et documents d archeologie in French Paris P Geuthner Librarie Adrien Maisonneuve OCLC 79292312 Gardiner Alan 1959 The Royal Canon of Turin Griffith Institute OCLC 21484338 Goelet Ogden 1999 Abu Gurab In Bard Kathryn Shubert Stephen Blake eds Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt London New York Routledge pp 85 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 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 Head and torso of a king Brooklyn Museum Retrieved 30 October 2016 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 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Jacquet Gordon Helen 1962 Les noms des domaines funeraires sous l ancien empire egyptien Bibliotheque d etude in French Vol 34 Le Caire Imprimerie de l Institut francais d archeologie orientale OCLC 18402032 Janak Jiri Vymazalova Hana Coppens Filip 2010 The Fifth Dynasty sun temples in a broader context In Barta Miroslav Coppens Filip Krejci Jaromir eds Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2010 Prague Charles University Faculty of Arts pp 430 442 Krejci Jaromir 2005 Pyramid Lepsius no XXIV Czech Institute of Egyptology Retrieved 24 November 2016 Krejci Jaromir Arias Kytnarova Katarina Odler Martin 2015 Archaeological excavation of the mastaba of Queen Khentkaus III Tomb AC 30 PDF Prague Egyptological Studies XV Czech Institute of Archaeology 28 42 Lehner Mark 2008 The Complete Pyramids New York Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 28547 3 Lehner Mark 2011 A Hundred and One Years Later Peering into the Menkaure Valley Temple PDF AERA Working Through Change Annual Report 2010 2011 Boston Ancient Egypt Research Associates Archived from the original PDF on 14 August 2020 Retrieved 30 October 2016 Lehner Mark Jones Daniel Yeomans Lisa Marie Mahmoud Hanan Olchowska Kasia 2011 Re examining the Khentkawes Town In Strudwick Nigel Strudwick Helen eds Old Kingdom New Perspectives Egyptian Art and Archaeology 2750 2150 BC Oxford Oxbow Books ISBN 978 1 84217 430 2 Lehner Mark 2015 Shareholders the Menkaure valley temple occupation in context In Der Manuelian Peter Schneider Thomas eds Towards a new history for the Egyptian Old Kingdom perspectives on the pyramid age Harvard Egyptological studies Vol 1 Leiden Boston Brill ISBN 978 90 04 30189 4 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 Magdolen Dusan 2008 Lepsius No XXV a problem of typology Asian and African Studies 17 2 205 223 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 during the Old Kingdom In Barta Miroslav Krejci Jaromir eds Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2000 Prag Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Oriental Institute pp 241 258 ISBN 80 85425 39 4 Mariette Auguste 1864 La table de Saqqarah Revue Archeologique in French 10 Paris Didier 168 186 OCLC 458108639 Mariette Auguste 1885 Maspero Gaston ed Les mastabas de l ancien empire fragment du dernier ouvrage de Auguste Edouard Mariette PDF Paris F Vieweg OCLC 722498663 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 Mumford G D 1999 Wadi Maghara In Bard Kathryn Shubert Steven Blake eds Encyclopedia of the Archeology of Ancient Egypt New York Routledge pp 875 876 ISBN 978 0 415 18589 9 Munro Peter 1993 Das Unas Friedhof Nord West I topographisch historische Einleitung in German Mainz am Rhein Philipp von Zabern ISBN 978 3 8053 1353 7 Neuserre Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 October 2016 Nolan John 2012 Fifth Dynasty Renaissance at Giza PDF AERA Gram Vol 13 no 2 Boston Ancient Egypt Research Associates ISSN 1944 0014 Archived from the original PDF on 1 August 2019 Retrieved 29 October 2016 Niuserre BMFA catalog Boston Museum of Fine Arts Archived from the original on 22 November 2021 Retrieved 30 October 2016 Nyuserre on the MMA online catalog Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 29 October 2016 Nyuserre Ini Digital Egypt for Universities Retrieved 28 October 2016 Petrie museum online collection Petrie Museum Retrieved 28 October 2016 Reliefs from the Shesepibre in the Petrie museum online collection Petrie Museum Retrieved 17 January 2017 Porter Bertha Moss Rosalind L B Burney Ethel W 1981 Topographical bibliography of ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic texts reliefs and paintings III 1 Memphis Abu Rawash to Abuṣir PDF second revised and augmented by Jaromir Malek ed Oxford Griffith Institute Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 900416 19 4 Porter Bertha Moss Rosalind L B Burney Ethel W 1951 Topographical bibliography of ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic texts reliefs and paintings VII Nubia the deserts and outside Egypt PDF Oxford Griffith Institute Clarendon Press OCLC 312542797 Posener Krieger Paule 1976 Les archives du temple funeraire de Neferirkare Kakai Les papyrus d Abousir Tomes I amp II complete set Traduction et commentaire Bibliotheque d etudes in French Vol 65 Le Caire Institut francais d archeologie orientale OCLC 4515577 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 Archived from the original on 24 February 2015 Retrieved 24 February 2015 Royal Head Probably King Nyuserre Los Angeles County Museum of Art Retrieved 16 December 2016 Roth Silke 2001 Die Konigsmutter des Alten Agypten von der Fruhzeit bis zum Ende der 12 Dynastie Agypten und Altes Testament in German Vol 46 Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3 447 04368 7 Ryholt Kim 1997 The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period c 1800 1550 B C CNI publications 20 Carsten Niebuhr Institute of Near Eastern Studies University of Copenhagen Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 978 87 7289 421 8 Schmitz Bettina 1976 Untersuchungen zum Titel s3 njswt Konigssohn Habelts Dissertationsdrucke Reihe Agyptologie in German Vol 2 Bonn Habelt ISBN 978 3 7749 1370 7 Shaw Ian 2003 New fieldwork at Gebel el Asr Chephren s diorite quarries In Hawass Zahi Pinch Brock Lyla eds Egyptology at the Dawn of the Twenty first Century Archaeology Cairo New York American University in Cairo Press ISBN 978 977 424 715 6 Smith William Stevenson 1949 A History of Egyptian Sculpture and Painting in the Old Kingdom second ed Oxford Oxford University Press for the Museum of Fine Arts Boston OCLC 558013099 Strouhal Eugen Cerny Viktor Vyhnanek Lubos 2000 An X ray examination of the mummy found in pyramid Lepsius no XXIV at Abusir In Barta Miroslav Krejci Jaromir eds Abusir and Saqqara in the Year 2000 PDF Prag Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Oriental Institute pp 543 550 ISBN 80 85425 39 4 Archived from the original on 1 February 2011 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Strudwick Nigel 1985 The Administration of Egypt in the Old Kingdom The Highest Titles and Their Holders PDF Studies in Egyptology London Boston Kegan Paul International ISBN 978 0 7103 0107 9 Strudwick Nigel C 2005 Texts from the Pyramid Age Writings from the Ancient World book 16 Atlanta Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 978 1 58983 680 8 Tallet Pierre 2015 Les ports intermittents de la mer Rouge a l epoque pharaonique caracteristiques et chronologie NeHeT Revue numerique d Egyptologie in French Vol 3 Tyldesley Joyce 2005 A la decouverte des pyramides d Egypte Champollion in French Translated by Nathalie Baum Monaco Editions du Rocher ISBN 978 2 268 05326 4 Vachala Bretislav 1979 Ein weiterer Beleg fur die Konigin Repewetnebu Zeitschrift fur Agyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde in German Vol 106 p 176 ISSN 2196 713X Van de Mieroop Marc 2011 A history of ancient Egypt Blackwell history of the ancient world Chichester West Sussex Malden MA Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 4051 6071 1 Verner Miroslav 1976 Czechoslovak Excavations at Abusir Abstracts of Papers First International Congress of Egyptology October 2 10 1976 Munich pp 671 675 Verner Miroslav 1980a Excavations at Abusir Zeitschrift fur Agyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde Vol 107 pp 158 169 Verner Miroslav 1980b Die Konigsmutter Chentkaus von Abusir und einige Bemerkungen zur Geschichte der 5 Dynastie Studien zur Altagyptischen Kultur in German Vol 8 pp 243 268 Verner Miroslav 1985 Un roi de la Ve dynastie Reneferef ou Renefer Bulletin de l Institut Francais d Archeologie Orientale in French 85 281 284 Verner Miroslav Zemina Milan 1994 Forgotten pharaohs lost pyramids Abusir PDF Praha Academia Skodaexport ISBN 978 80 200 0022 4 Archived from the original on 1 February 2011 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Verner Miroslav Posener Krieger Paule Janosi Peter 1995 Abusir III the pyramid complex of Khentkaus Excavations of the Czech Institute of Egyptology Praha Universitas Carolina Pragensis Academia ISBN 978 80 200 0535 9 Verner Miroslav 1997a The Pyramids the mystery culture and science of Egypt s great monuments New York Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 3935 1 Verner Miroslav 1997b Further thoughts on the Khentkaus problem PDF Discussions in Egyptology Vol 38 pp 109 117 ISSN 0268 3083 Verner Miroslav 2000 Who was Shepseskara and when did he reign 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 581 602 ISBN 978 80 85425 39 0 Archived from the original on 1 February 2011 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 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 2007 New Archaeological Discoveries in the Abusir Pyramid Field Archaeogate Archived from the original on 23 February 2013 Retrieved 26 November 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Verner Miroslav 2012 Pyramid towns of Abusir Studien zur Altagyptischen Kultur 41 407 410 JSTOR 41812236 Verner Miroslav 2014 Sons of the Sun Rise and decline of the Fifth Dynasty Prague Charles University in Prague Faculty of Arts ISBN 978 80 7308 541 4 von Beckerath Jurgen 1982 Niuserre In Helck Wolfgang Otto Eberhard eds Lexikon der Agyptologie Band IV Megiddo Pyramiden in German Wiesbaden Harrassowitz pp 517 518 ISBN 978 3 447 02262 0 von Beckerath Jurgen 1997 Chronologie des pharaonischen Agypten die Zeitbestimmung der agyptischen Geschichte von der Vorzeit bis 332 v Chr Munchner agyptologische Studien in German Vol 46 Mainz am Rhein Philipp von Zabern ISBN 978 3 8053 2310 9 von Beckerath Jurgen 1999 Handbuch der agyptischen Konigsnamen in German Munchner agyptologische Studien Heft 49 Mainz Philip von Zabern ISBN 978 3 8053 2591 2 Waddell William Gillan 1971 Manetho Loeb classical library 350 Cambridge Massachusetts London Harvard University Press W Heinemann OCLC 6246102 Wildung Dietrich 1969 Die Rolle agyptischer Konige im Bewusstsein ihrer Nachwelt Teil I Posthume Quellen uber die Konige der ersten vier Dynastien Munchner Agyptologische Studien in German Vol 17 Berlin Verlag Bruno Hessling OCLC 635608696 Wilkinson Toby 2000 Royal annals of ancient Egypt the Palermo stone and its associated fragments Studies in Egyptology London New York Kegan Paul International distributed by Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 7103 0667 8 Zibelius Chen Karola 1978 Agyptische Siedlungen nach Texten des Alten Reiches Beihefte zum Tubinger Atlas des Vorderen Orients in German Vol 19 Reihe B Wiesbaden Reichert ISBN 978 3 88226 012 0 Ziegler Christiane 2007 Le Mastaba d Akhethetep Fouilles du Louvre a Saqqara in French Vol 1 Paris Louvain Musee du Louvre Peeters ISBN 978 2 35031 084 8 External links edit nbsp Media related to Nyuserre Ini at Wikimedia Commons Preceded byShepseskare orNeferefre Pharaoh of EgyptFifth Dynasty Succeeded byMenkauhor Kaiu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nyuserre Ini amp oldid 1192412904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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