212 81 12MB
English Pages 224 Year 1905
EGYPTIAN RESEARCH ACCOUNT TENTH YEAR 1904
SAQQARA MASTABAS PART
I
BY
MARGARET WITH DRAWINGS BY
F.
MURRAY
A.
HANSARD AND
J.
MOTHERSOLE;
AND
GUROB •
BY
L LOAT,
F.Z.S.
LONDON
BERNARD QUARITCH,
15,
1905
PICCADILLY, W.
'/
\
EGYPTIAN RESEARCH ACCOUNT TENTH YEAR 1904
SAOOARA MASTABAS PART
I
^^^s^^-^^^' BY
MARGARET
A.
MURRAY
LONDON
BERNARD QUARITCH, 1905
15,
PICCADILLY.
W
.1372
f:
3e>
TO
.20
/
^
LONDON PRINTED BY GILBERT AND RIVINGTON LTD., ST. JOHN'S HOUSE, Cl.KRKEN WELL,, E.G.
/O
EGYPTIAN RESEARCH ACCOUNT. ©cneral Committee.
Lord Avebury,
D.C.L., F.R.S., &t.
Sir
Walter Baily. Henry Balfour. Rt. Hon. James Bryce, D.C.L., J.
Edward Clodd. fW. E. Crum. Prof. Boyd Dawkins,
*J. G.
Milne, M.A.
Sir Colin Scott Moncrieff, K.C.M.G.
Prof. Montague.
F.R.S.
Walter Morrison. Dr. Page May. Prof. H. F. Pelham, F.B.A., F.S.A.
Dr. Gregory Foster.
Dr. Pinches.
G. Eraser.
Alan Gardiner.
Dr. G.
Percy Gardner,
W. Pkothero,
Litt.D., F.B.A.,
LL.D.
William Richmond, R.A. W. Ridgeway, F.B.A. Mrs. Strong, LL.D. Sir
Prof. F.
F.S.A.
George
T. Goldie,
KC.M.G.
Prof. Gowland, V.P.S.A.
fMRS. Tirard.
Mrs. J. R. Green. Dr. a. C. Haddon, F.R.S.
fE.
Jesse
Litt.D.,
F.B.A.
*tPROF. Ernest Gardner.
Rt. Hon. Sir
F.S.-A.
Prof. Mahaffy, D.D., D.C.L., &c.
*MlSS ECKENSTEIN.
Prop-.
[Chainiian).
W. Macan.
Dr. R.
Prof. S. Dill, Litt.D.
J.
Robert Hensley
Sir Richard Jebb, O.M., D.C.L., .M.P.
tPROF. Macalister, F.R.S.,
.\I.P.
B. Bury, LL.D., Litt.D.
*tS0MERS Cl.^rke, F.S.A.
Dr.
F.R.S.
Dr. a. C. Headlam. *SiR
Prof. T. G. Bonney, LL.D., F.R.S., F.S.A. Prof.
Henry H. Howorth, K.C.LE.,
fSiR
Ha worth.
TowRY Whyte,
M.A., F.S.A.
Charles Wilson,
K.C.B.,
F.R.S.
CCrcasurer.
*tF. G. Hilton Price, Director of the Society of Antiquaries.
Sicector.
Prof. Flinders Petkie, D.C.L., F.R.S., F.B.A., &c.
IbonocarB Secretaries.
Mrs. H. F. Pktrie *Dr.
J.
H.
Walker
* Executive Committee.
» )
University College,
Gower
Street,
London, W.C. t Also on Exploration
Fund
Committee.
D.C.L.,
CONTENTS CHAPTER
PAGE I.
......
SECT. 1.
Introductory
2.
Description of cemetery and of work
CHAPTER
.
The West Wall, south
side of stele
PAGE
17.
I
18.
,,
,,
,,
the south side
I
ig.
,,
,,
,,
the north side
H.
9 9 10
....
20.
South, East, and North Walls
10
21.
Outer Walls Construction of tomb
10
22.
10
.
Steles of Seker-kha-bau and Hathor-
CHAPTER
nefer-hetep.
VII.
Tomb of Ptahhetep
3.
Seker-kha-bau
4.
Hathor-nefer-hetep
.
.
.
II.
.
.
tomb 24 Painted chamber 25 Chamber B 26 Chamber C
23
II
Description of
II
.
CHAPTER Tomb
HI.
of the Sheikh-el-Beled.
tomb
5.
Description of
6.
The
7.
Construction of tomb
.
and table of
statues
.
.
.
.
offerings
.
.
CHAPTER
4
tomb
Description of
g.
Construction of tomb
5
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
11.
Use of
Entrance.
I.
13.
and
.
CHAPTER
30
Farm-women and
Ptahhetep and
his son
13 13 their
iffer
.
31
The upper
register
14
32
15
33
East Wall P""arm-w omen North Wall. and their offerings
34
The upper
.
.
.
7
.
17 17 17
VIII.
Tomb of Ateta.
6 .
.
.
CHAPTER
6
.
17
..... .
15 16
register
Doorways
5
Portico and chambers
Construction of tomb
29
Dwarf animals
12
Stele
South Wall.
Chambers D and E 37 Fragments 38 Construction of tcmb
Stele
Portico and chambers
plaster
12. Ptahhettp-desher.
The
35 36
V.
Ptahhetep-desher. I.
27 28
14
Double Tomb of Ptahhetep Ptalihetep
12
IV.
CHAPTER
10.
.
4
...
Tomb of Ka-em-hest. 8.
.
12
tomb Construction of tomb
3g. Description of
18
40.
19
VI.
CHAPTER
Tomb of Sekhemka.
IX.
Tomb of User-neter. 14.
Description of tomb
15.
The West Wall
16.
,,
„
„
.
.
.
north side of stele
.
.
41.
Description of
42.
Chamber A
.
tomb
19
19
CONTENTS.
VI
Chamber
A.
44-
"
"
45-
))
"
4647.
48.
49. 50.
CHAPTER
AGE
SECT.
43.
The
19 20
South Wall East Wall North Wall
»
,,
Stele
21
Doorway Chamber B Chambers C and D Construction of tomb .
Miscellaneous Objects and Inscriptions. I'AGE
SECT.
22
62. Stele
23
63.
^3
64.
......
Coptic remains J,
By W^
Inscription.
24
CHAPTER
X.
Tomb of Ptahshepses
53. 54.
Construction of tomb
I.
24
Stele
25
decoration of the Walls
25 25
.
Hj'aenas
65.
Lotus Papyrus Sacred oils and perfumes
67. 68.
6g. Lists of offerings
55 56 57'
58 59.
....
Description of Stele
tomb
South Wall North Wall Outer Walls and doorway .
.
60. Architrave 61.
Construction of tomb
.
II.
26
.
71.
List of Seker-kha-bau List of Hathor-nefer-hetep
72.
Lists of
XI.
Tomb of Ptahshepses
....
65.
70.
CHAPTER
XIII.
Offerings.
tomb
The The
52.
E. Cruin
23
CHAPTER
51. Description of
XII.
Vth Dynasty
.
.
.
28 28 29
LIST OF PLATES. PLATE I.
II.
III.
Stele of
Sekerkhabau
Stele of Hathor-nefer-hetep
Inscriptions
Ka-em-hest,
of
khun, Sheikh-el-Beled IV. Inscriptions of Ptahhetep
V. Stele of Ptahhetep
I
.
VI. Ptahhetep-desher
VII.
.
I .
.
4,
35
.
•
.
.
6
.
•
II.
Stele
.
South Wall
14 ,,
,,
„
East Wall. North Wall
,,
,,
Akhet-hetep.
,,
,,
Doorways
,,
,,
,,
,,
XII.
woman XIV. XV. XVI.
7
29 12 13
X.
XIII.
6,
8,
IX.
XI.
4> 5
.6
.
Sekhemka
VIII. Ptahhetep
32
Ptah-
.
.
3,
•
.
.
15 15
Farm-
.
.
.
.
13, 16 •
17
Chamber. II, 12 N.S.W. Walls Chamber. Painted .11 E. Wall Doorways. Altar. Painted
.
XVII.
,,
,,
Fragrhents
XVIII. Ateta.
12, 15, 17
19
Stele
XIX. Statue ,, XX. User-neter. Stele
19 .
.
.
-19
SAQQAEA MASTABAS PART CHAPTER
I
House, and to Prof.
I.
Kurt
Sethe for his valuable
translations, to be issued later; also to Miss
INTRODUCTORY.
Slater for help in finishing
Our work during the winter of 1903-4 lay at Saqqara for, owing to two lady artists having 1,
;
volunteered to join the
partj-, Prof. Petrie
obtained
and copy some of the many sculptured tombs which were excavated by
for us permission
to clear
middle
Mariette about the
19th century.
of the
some
Phoebe
of the drawings,
and to Mr. R. A. Yule for his assistance in drawing the plans. It is due entirely to Mrs. Petrie's sugges-
made a
of the colours of the hiero-
tion that
I
glyphs
these early tombs.
am
in
list
sincerely grateful to her.
For
this suggestion
I
Mr. Weigall has given
amount of time and attention to assisting our work in many ways and the thanks of our party are specially due to him on behalf of the Research a large
;
tombs were published
Mariette's notes on these his death
after
title o{ Lcs Masand are the only record of
by M. Maspero under the
tabas de VAncieii Empire,
The
these early monuments.
notes consist of ground-
Account.
The cemetery
2.
of Saqqara dates back almost to
plans of the tombs, and rapid hand copies of the
the limit of the historic period, but the bulk of sculp-
and there a sketch of some
tured tombs belongs to the Vth Dynasty. Through the middle of the cemetery is a slight ridge running
inscriptions, with here
specially interesting piece of sculpture.
publication in iSgS of the
tomb
Since the
of Ptahhetep by the
Egyptian Research Account, followed by Mr. Davis' for the Egypt Exploration Fund, it has been
work
that facsimile
felt
copies of the smaller and less
known mastabas were very
desirable,
and with two
copying it was a good opportunit}' to start the work. We opened and copied nine tombs at Saqqara. and copied one in the Cairo artists to help in the
Museum. Our party
consisted of Miss Hansard, Miss Jessie
Mothersole, and myself; and the division of labour \\as that the
two
artists
copied the figures, animals,
was responsible for It is owing to the steady work and skill of these two ladies that the Egyptian Research Account is able to publish
and
tables of offerings, while
I
more I Vth gently to the south. To the north Dynasty tombs which we copied, though the most northern one of all is of the Vlth Dynasty, dated by the cartouches of Unas and Teta. The valley to the south of the ridge is broad and flat and constantly used by tourists as a road from Mariette's House to the tombs of Mera and Kagemni to the south of the valley is the high ground on which the Step-pyramid stands. It is on the northern slope of the ridge and on the south side of the valley that, with one exception, our Vth Dynasty tombs were found. User-neter is due north of the and west, sloping steeply
east
to the north, lie all
the
facsimile copies often tombs; three of these are not
PtahStep-pyramid, close to the enclosure wall hetep II and Ateta adjoin the great mastaba of Ptahhetep and Akhethetep published by the Egyptian Research Account and the Egypt Exploration
recorded by Mariette, whose records of the rest are, as I said before, only hand copies of the inscriptions.
and
The tombs recorded by A 2, C 6 and 7, C E2.
which looks
all
the hieroglyphs and the plans.
are
My
Mariette which 8,
D
i,
D
62,
we opened
D
63,
and
thanks are due to Prof. Petrie for much kindness and help, to Mrs. Petrie for kindly copying some inscriptions lying in the yard at Mariette's
;
the tombs of Ptahhetep I, Ptahshepses I Ka-em-hest, and the Sheikh el Beled are on the northern slope; but Sekhem-ka's tomb lies north-west of Ptahhetep II and Ateta in ground
Fund
;
II,
httle
if
at all disturbed.
excavations were conducted nominally by Reis Khalifa, working for the Museum authorities, and I was therefore obliged to employ a native reis.
The
B
STELES OF SEKER-KHA-BAU AND HATHOR-NEFER-HETEP. though this is not the custom of the Egyptian Research Account. Under the circumstances, as we were not finding objects, the system worked well, though I must say, having seen both systems, that I prefer working without a rc'is and having the workmen under my own direct control. M. Maspero very kindly gave directions to Re'i's Khalifa to assist me in every way, and as it was difficult to find out which were the best tombs to took the easier course of visiting Rei's Rubi, all the tombs for Mariette, and Reis Rubi, whose memory of asking his advice. these mastabas was still as keen as ever, then gave open,
I
who had excavated
c
SEKER-KHA-BAU.
There
was removed to Gizeh.
is
no record of the
middle piece, Mariette neither publishes nor
men-
and though he presumably found it, there The size of the this point. is no certainty on fragment and its complete similarity in style and workmanship to the stele of Seker-kha-bau make it tions
it
;
that
absolutely certain
Hathor-nefer-hetep.
part of the
is
it
The beauty
of the
stele
of
sculpture
must be seen to be appreciated drawings given here it is impossible to show the delicate modelling which is such a
on these two
steles
:
in the outline
monument.
characteristic feature of this
Seker-kha-bau
the middle portion,
In
Stele of Seker-kha-bau.
represented seated before a table
is
wears a long robe down to the ankles, it is brought under the right arm and over the left shoulder, where it is fastened with a ribbon, the ends of which hang down on each side of the
He
of offerings.
arm and shoulder are left bare. it is a loose cloth is shown by the left arm being so swathed in it that the outline is lost. The garment is so like a woman's dress that had the
arm That
;
the right
head been lost it would have been impossible to say He wears a short if it were a man or a woman. wig elaborately curled, and he also has a slight moustache, like Rahotep, showing that the fashion of clean-shaving
was of
His chair
Dynastj-.
is
later date
than the Hlrd
of the usual design with legs
resembling those of a bull
the framework of the
;
shows the cross-lashing by which the was fastened to the woodwork. Above the
seat itself
seat
lashing there
is
a
just visible
cross-
piece of the
little
His dress consists of a short kilt, of which the upper is "wave-pleated''; one end is fastened under a belt by a buckle, while two small ends fall from below the kilt at the knee. He wears a short, elaborately-curled wig, beneath which the lobe of the The most remarkable part of his ear is just visible. costume, however, is his necklace. This consists of two parts, probably separate from each other. The under part fastens round the throat with a flat piece fold
of metal
this
to
;
are attached
three
zigzag
flat
which reach from the throat to the chest the middle strip is finished by a wide loop, the two Attached to these strips side-pieces by small knobs. and reaching from shoulder to shoulder is another strips,
long piece of metal intended to represent a jackal. The animal has two arms raised in the attitude of worship, and
it
also has six legs placed at intervals
The whole ornament must have been absolutely rigid, judging by the width of the metal strips. Over it comes a necklace of interlaced chains which are threaded through small circular The chains are so arranged disks and ankli-sxgxvs. as to show the zig-zag strips of metal below them at
along the body.
the neck and again on the chest.
On
Pl.
XXXVI
later date.
It
is
a similar necklace, but of
on a broken granite statue
is
much now
being used as a door-stop in the yard of Mariette's house at Saqqara. Mr. 'Weigall suggested to me
would be as well to copy it for the sake of In this late example the rigid part of the ornament is worn above the chains the zigzag that
it
comparison.
;
prominent,
very
are
pieces
but
the
jackal
has
cushion on which he sits. The table of offerings consists of a stand with two spreading legs, over which fits the socket of a wide flat dish, probably
degenerated into a perfectly plain strip of metal which turns at an angle to the shoulders and disappears beneath the wig. The chains are inter-
those of the same period which
laced through circular disks and (Z«M-signs, and a
of alabaster like
Mr. Garstang
Mahasna,
found at Bet Khallaf (Garstang,
pi. \.\i.\).
like objects
On
which Mr.
the dish are laid the leafGriffith
Above the names and titles, and
42) supposes to be slices
p.
(Petkie, Dendcreh,
of bread.
head of Seker-kha-bau are his titles by a horizontal
divided from the list
of offerings.
the stele
is filled
The two
The lower by a long
line
is
a short
part of this portion of
list
of offerings.
sides are precisely similar in
arrangement
though differing in some of the detail. Seker-khabau is represented standing upright, holding in one hand a long staff, in the other the papyrus sceptre. Above him are his titles, which vary on the two Seker-kha-bau and also his names, sides, and Hethes while below is a list of tweh'c offerings. ;
which starts from under the wig and ends nowhere passes through a small cylinder. The back of the statue was kindly copied for me by Mrs.
single chain
Petrie,
which
and shows a number of curious raised I
take
to
be the spots on
his
circles
panther
skin.
As the necklace appears in two instances separated from each other by so great a space of time, it is probable that it was the badge of some office held by Seker-kha-bau and, centuries afterwards, by the In the Museum at Florence (Schiaparelli, Miiseo Egizia di Fireuse, p. 197) there is a statue of Ptahmes, high priest of
original of the granite statue.
Ptah, the
who wears
The Erman, A.Z.,
a similar collar.
XVIIIth Dynasty
(cf.
statue
is
of
1895, p. 22).
TOMB OF THE SHEIKH-EL-BELED. The
4.
of Hathor-nefer-hetep
stele
is
arranged
and two side-pieces. The upper part of the back is broken away, the head, the names and titles, and precisely like that of Seker-kha-bau, with a back
list of offerings having completely disappeared, but enough remains to show the seated figure of Hathor-nefer-hetep, wearing a long and very
part of the
elaborately-curled
wig.
Her
spotted dress in this age, beside Median
The main
the stele of Seker-kha-bau.
though arranged
like
list
xviii.
The
same
as in
of offerings,
that of Seker-kha-bau, differs
named. The side-pieces, which are precisely
alike,
show
Hathor-nefer-hetep standing, clothed in a long dark-
down
and fastened over the She wears no ornaments,
to the ankles
shoulders by wide straps. is
the same elaborate construction as
that of the seated figure.
the wig
is
seen
her
band of incised hieroglyphs, large and
a single
is
boldly cut, which go across the band of the stele (PL. HI,
5).
6.
The
statue of the Sheikh-el-Beled
the recess to the south, and about the centre
in
chamber was found
of the
but states this
it
to be of limestone.
table of
offerings
The drawing
of
has been sorted into the
and elaborate tomb (D 6o). The one which is in the Cairo Museum, and which I have copied (Pl. hi, 4), is of alabaster, and I conclude that really found with the wooden statue, and it was dossier of the very interesting
Across the forehead under hair brushed smoothly
own
that
copy
the
of
impossible to say whether the
It is
Sheikh-el-Beled
is
negative,
and that
one very remarkable point about the personal ornamentation in vogue at the time the face, from the eye-brow to the base of the nose, is painted with a wide band of green, the rest of the flesh being
only one
title,
;
The mummy of Rahotep had green paint, a quarter of an inch wide, round the eyes and green eye-paint was commonly used in prehistoric times. Above the head of Hathor-nefer-hetep are her two names and her only title, while below is a list of six
painted the usual yellow. p. i8)
;
only
name
of the
to be found on the stele or on the
The only
of offerings. is
that the
piece of evidence
owner of the
" Chief Kheri-heb priest," and
is
had
stele
it
is
natural to suppose that he would have been
represented in the distinctive costume of his
but the Sheikh-el-Beled
is
office,
clothed in the ordinary
dress of the time, holding a staff of office in his hand,
which would well accord with belonging to Nekheb." not generally
It is
known
his position as
"Judge
that the head of the
was coloured when found, but it was sent to the Paris Exhibition in 1867, and there a mould was statue
taken from
offerings.
has been misplaced in the
it
Mastabas.
table
Mednm,
also a circular alabaster
with the name Akhet-hetep-her. Mariette figures a disk with the same inscription, of offerings
table
down. The statue of Nefert, which is of this period, shows the hair worn in the same manner. There is
(Petrie,
was found
of Akhet-hetep-her
as to the objects
and her wig
tion
is
chair and the table of offerings are the
green robe
point to its being of the great period of art at the beginning of the IVth Dynasty. The only inscrip-
robe, which reaches
shaped like her husband's, passing under the right arm and fastened on the left shoulder, It is so that the right shoulder and arm are bare. thickly spotted with black, the only instance of a to the ankles,
formed of a single block. The grand proportions, the fine workmanship, and the simplicity of style, all
it
without either
the
permission
The wet
knowledge of the authorities. used for the mould removed
all
dimmed
eyes, apparently
the brilliancy of the
or
material
the colour,
and by
" oxydizing the bronze rims."
CHAPTER
There is a letter extant from Mariette deploring and lamenting the amount of damage inflicted on this unique work of art.
HI.
(Wallon,
TOMB OF THE SHEIKH-EL-BELED.
Vic de Mariette,
Appendix
xiii,
Institut
de France.) 5.
The tomb
of the
" Sheikh-el-Beled "
(Mar.,
The
added a small outer chamber, also in brick. The chamber on the east and south are greatly ruined, but the west wall is in good condition,
wooden statue of the so-called wife was found, Reis Rubi told me, in the doorway leading northward out of the Unfortunately nothing more was distomb. covered, for the tomb must have been plundered
and against
anciently.
Mast.
C
8) is
a huge mud-brick mastaba to which
is
walls of the
it
stands a magnificent red granite stele
beautiful
of the Sheikh-el-Beled
CONSTRUCTION OF TOMB. Black
Walls.
7.
X
15 in.
7
X
mud-brick.
Size
of
bricks,
Not
here and there,
made no
I
but as the plaster lay
5.
systematic investigation
I
;
smooth
without think there could have
perfectly
hollows or irregularities,
Destroyed.
Roof.
5
been nothing under it. The doorway has a round drum, not inscribed. In the roof of the doorway, cut through the lintel stone, are two rectangular holes, for which I can find no reason. They measure 15^ in. X 12, and CHAPTER IV. i5i in. X 13, and are at almost equal distances from the ends of the stone and from each other. TOMB OF KA-EM-HEST. The stone of which the tomb is built is very fine white limestone. The masonry is not particularly 8. The tomb of Ka-em-hest (Pls. Ill, XXXIII) was opened by Mariette, who has, however, left no' good, as the joints do not fit accurately, and the spaces are filled with a pinkish cement. It lies a little north of west from the record of it. Floor.
seen.
and we cleared merely the one small sculptured chamber. There may be more chambers which we left untouched, but Reis Rubi, Reis Khalifa, and my own Reis, considered I was wasting my time if unsculptured chambers were excavated, and these were therefore left severely
tomb
of Ptahhetep
I,
Walls.
9.
South.
The
false
2),
a decoration
commonly. used in the Ilird and IVth Dynasties. There is no inscription whatever in the inner chamber, but on the jamb south of the doorway are two vertical lines of exquisitely-worked hieroglyphs, giving the name and titles of Ka-em-hest. The hieroglyphs are remarkable for the accuracy and vigour of the drawing, and for the delicacy of workmanship, which far exceeds anything I saw at Saqqara, and is only equalled by the work on the stele of
evidently
serdab.
of a single block.
The
false
doors and the inscription
show traces of plaster, and the outer walls leading to the doorway were thickly covered with the characteristic
pinkish plaster of the Saqqara tombs.
Unfor-
had not then realized that plaster might hide inscriptions, and though I scraped the walls
tunately
I
iQf
x if,
in.
of
Single block.
Destroyed.
Roof.
The
Paved.
Floor.
doorway
floor of
10
is
in.
higher than the chamber.
A
small, roughly-cut libation tank of limestone
tomb. Size 20 in. x 15 x 5J inner measurements were 13-^ in. x 8f x 30-. found
in this
CHAPTER
;
was the
V.
DOUBLE TOMB OF PTAHHETEP
I
AND PTAHHETEP-
DESHER. 10.
intended to be the opening to the This still has the original outline marked in red paint, and the slit itself has been only just begun, being cut out roughly to the depth of nearly five The north and south walls are each made inches.
slit,
North.
Seker-kha-bau.
The tomb appears to be unfinished, for on the south wall (Pl. XXXIII elevation) is a long, narrow
Unfinished
block. serdab,
door.
doorway, smaller blocks above.
characteristic of the
lotus-blossoms tied together (Pl. Ill,
to
False
depth, 4I. East. Two blocks on each side
doors have that beauty of proportion
IVth Dynasty. They cover the whole of the west wall, and have a slight The design is simply an batter of if inches in 36. of straight lines, vertical and horizontal, arrangement with nine small panels at the top containing the two is
Single
opening
alone.
which
Two blocks. West. Traces of plaster.
The double tomb-chapel
of
Ptahhetep and
Ptahhetep-desher(MAR., J/rti-/'. 6 and 7) is in the North cemetery, and remains partially open. Mariette places
it
in the
IVth Dynasty, but from the
tions Prof. Sethe dates later
it
to the
dating agrees also
sculpture,
which
is
with
more
Dynasty than of the IVth.
the
like It
inscrip-
Vth Dynasty.
is
style
that
of
of the
built
Prof.
Petrie,
who saw
it,
the
Vth
against the
outer wall of a mastaba, which has a batter of 7.
The
thinks
that
i in
the
mastaba, and the false door which stands against it, belonged to the father, and the chapels opening north and south from the main entrance were built
by
the
two
sons.
Mariette concludes
that
the
DOUBLE TOMB OF PTAHHETEP
6
tomb
southern seen from
The main
is
the more ancient.
As
the plan, the construction
be
will
peculiar.
is
entrance which leads to the false door
open, and has never been roofed.
is
was here that
It
Mariette found the stele (Pl. V) 13'ingon the ground.
This
stele is of limestone, so
roughly worked as to
justify Mariette's opinion that
The
hieroglyphs
are
merelj'
it is
quite unfinished.
hacked
without
in
sharpness or delicacy, and the workmanship of the
shows the same want of
surfaces of the stone
flat
This
care.
stele is
now
in the
Cairo Museum.
Its
tomb is unknown, possibly it belonged to the inner chamber A, or to one of the chambers, now almost level with the ground, which lead westward out of chamber A. exact position in the
I
AND PTAHHETEP-DESHER.
very tedious and laborious. It was probably put on coat by coat when clearing up the tomb every few years. On each side of the main entrance which leads to the false door are two pillars, forming the entrance to two other tombs. On the north side is the tomb of Ptahhetep, on the south that of Ptahhetep-desher. The two sides of this entrance are therefore quite uns3'mmetrical, and must be conis
sidered separately.
Ptahhetep I. The two pillars on the north form the portico of the tomb of Ptahhetep I. This portico was roofed with slabs of stone which rested on the wall and on the stone architrave which was supported by the pillars, overhanging the latter by yh inches so as to form eaves one stone only is in position. The pillars are inscribed from top to bottom with the titles and name of Ptahhetep (Pl. l\'), the only inscription found in this part of the tomb. The large chamber A has been roofed in, and part of the roof still remains in a ruinous and dangerous condition the two pillars which support a massive stone beam also remain. To the west a narrow doorway leads to two other chambers according to Mariette's plan, but the walls are so ;
U. The false door, which faces east, is roughl}' hewn in limestone. The tomb was partially uncovered when I tirst went to Saqqara, and I was therefore able to examine the false door carefull}before the
workmen entered
the tomb.
to be blank, being covered with
what In
I
It
appeared
a smooth coat of
afterwards found to be coats of whitewash.
one place, however,
I
was able
almost obliterated lines of a figure (Pl. the lower band (Pl. IV,
showing traces of a penknife
I
i)
trace
to
I\", 2)
there were a few hollows
brilliant blue below.
gentU' scraped
the
and on
away some
With
a
;
greatly destro3'ed that
was no
as there
we
did not excavate further,
likelihood of finding inscriptions.
of the plaster
of whitewash, and found an inscription below, the
12.
Ptahhetep-desher. To the south is the tomb of Ptahhetep-desher
hieroglyphs being incised and coloured blue. With Mr. Weigall's help I cleared the two inscriptions; it
portico leading to the
then became necessary to try the rest of the false door, but though Mr. \\'eigall and I spent some
stone resting on the wall and on the stone archi-
we found nothing more only rough uninscribed stone appearing when we had dug
of the
time over
it,
;
through the successive coats of whitewash. This system of obliterating inscriptions by whitewash appears to have been not unusual, though the reason for it does not appear. I found plastered-up
and traces of plastering in the tombs Sekhemka, Ka-em-hest, User-neter, and Ptahshepses I and II, as well as in this tomb that is to saj-, in six out of the nine tombs which I opened, whitewash had been used. The whitewash was laid on in successive coats until the hollows of the sculpture were almost filled, and the walls appeared blank. In colour it is slightly pinkish, and though it comes oft sometimes in large flat flakes which bear on the underside a cast of the sculpture which it has inscriptions
of
;
covered, \et, as a rule,
it
breaks off in small pieces,
and the work of scraping an obliterated inscription
this, like
trave,
;
the portico opposite,
which
is
roofed with slabs of
is
supported by the
pillars
;
three out
four roofing-stones remain in position, the
Along the whole length of the wall above the doorway is an inscription carved on a band of stone which projects The hieroil inches from the wall (Pl. VI, i). glyphs, which are incised, are boldly and deeply cut, and are coloured blue. Where the roof remains, the inscription is in good condition, but to the east side where the roofing stone has been removed the hieroglyphs are much worn so much so that it is fourth
has entirely disappeared.
;
only in certain lights that the dcsher bird can be recognized.
The doorway
to this
the opposite one; the
tomb drum
is
more elaborate than
(Pl. VI, 3) is inscribed and the roof of the door-
with the name and titles, way is painted red to imitate granite. Though I did not clear this tomb completely, I found another
chamber
besides
that
on
Mariette's
plan.
In
CONSTRUCTION OF TOMB.
chamber C the west wall was simply the face of the The north wall was greatly original mastaba. destroyed, the best part being to the west, where the rough stones still retain their coat of mudplaster on which had been a painting of the deceased
remains
now
wall has also been covered with
mud-
seated
(Pl. VI,
;
very
of
little
this
Ptahhetep-desher. Portico.
Architrave, inscribed. angular, uninscribed.
Roof. Three out of four stones
still
scribed
and
in position.
Drum,
Doorway.
in-
painted
roof
;
to imitate granite.
Very indistinct traces remained of a scene of donkeys and men, too inand a heavy rainstorm distinct and faint to copy swept away even those few traces. At the west end of both north and south walls is a low mud-brick wall, about j ft. high and 2 ft. Against the north wall it lies imme3 in. long. diately below the remains of the painted figure of Ptahhetep-desher. As to the reason of these mudHad there been walls, I can give no explanation. be the tables on supposed to a stele, they might be preparatory to being which the offerings were piled presented but there is no stele, and I could see nothing to warrant the conclusion that there had
plaster
Limestone, rect-
Pillars.
2).
The south
Limestone.
Wall.
S.
painted.
Chamber
C.
W.
Wall. Face of a mastaba, built in hori-
;
zontal courses, batter
S.
which
built
undecorated.
of rough-hewn
Of the
roof, four out of the five stones
it
I
was digging only
traces
of
painting.
mud-brick wall
Floor.
and not for plans, I did not follow up the doorway which leads southward out of this room. As
on which are at
west end. Roof. Destroyed.
lay at an angle uncomfortably suggestive of a sudden fall.
plaster,
Low
is
mud-
with
covered
quite
kept in position only by the sand underneath, and
of
x 4^ x 2j. end, a low
At west mud-brick wall. Horizontal Wall. E. rough blocks. Limestone Wall. N. blocks, originally
The chamber
are in position, though at the east end the block
Size
mud-bricks.
remains of a coating of white stucco, but no traces itself is
upper part,
;
bricks, loi
Chamber D and the doorway leading to it from C shown in Mariette's plan. The doorway has
is
of
traces
are
painting
are not
blocks and
part,
rough blocks with mud-plaster, on
been one.
painting or inscriptions.
Lower
Wall.
covered
;
of either
i
in 7.
for inscriptions
Not
Doorway
seen.
to D.
originally
Covered
with
white
stucco. 13. Ptahhetepl. Portico. Walls. Limestone,
Chamber
unin-
Roof. Four
on
inscribed
laid
horizon-
tally.
Limestone, rect-
angular,
Rough limestone
blocks,
scribed. Pillars.
D. Walls.
of five
south face. One stone in posi-
Floor.
Roof.
still
Not
stones
out
in position.
seen.
tion.
Floor.
Not
seen.
Chamber A. Walls. Limestone
blocks,
CHAPTER
uninscribed. Pillars.
Limestone,
rect-
VI.
TOMB OF SEKHEMKA.
angular, uninscribed.
Roof.
Two
stones
position.
Floor.
Not^een.
in
14.
Sekhemka is the most important which we copied and which Mariette left
The tomb
of the three
unrecorded.
of
TOMD OF SEKHEMKA. tomb of Ptahhetep II on which Mariette's House stands. It is on the flat ground in a part of the cemetery where there appear to be few tombs. It was impossible to estimate the size of the tomb from the small part of it that we excavated. It may be It lies
north-west from the
at the foot of the slope
Ateta with a small sculptured chapel and
like that of
a large pillared hall
;
or like that of Ptahshepses II,
belo\\- the feet of the large figures. A little scraping with a penknife showed that here was another instance of the obliteration of scenes and inscriptions by whitewash. The registers in the central panels
were sculptured, those at the side were painted. It is a tedious and delicate business to clear the plaster off sculpture,
merely a chapel built at the side of the mastaba; in'in aref? As I have observed elsewhere, vay business being inscriptions and not plans, I did not pursue my investigations be3-ond the sculptured
plaster
part.
places, but
The workmanship
thoroughly good, not up to the standard of Ptahhetep II or Ka-em-hest, but better than any of the others and the inscriptions is
;
Some
remains on the with a little }-elIow the blues and greens have disappeared. The figures and inscriptions are in relief with the are interesting.
hieroglyphs,
chiefly
colour
red
and
still
black
;
exception of the
list
of the offerings, which
is
incised,
and the two lowest registers of the outer columns, which are painted. The tomb, at least as much as I cleared of it, consists of a sculptured chamber, a doorway, and an outer wall along which was the sculptured architrave
The
(Pl. VII). litic
limestone,
stone of the west wall full
of
little
fossils
is
a
which
nummufall
out
where the stone is worn, leaving a hollow, some of the edges of which are so sharp as to make it difficult to determine whether it is a natural hollow or part of an incised hieroglyph. When two or three little fossils, which are close together, happen to fall out, a ridge is left which is soon worn away by the action of the sand, and thus the surface is defaced more quickly than
is
The West Wall (Pl. \TI) with sculpture. The upper part
The
list
panel
offerings
is
is
is
very
When
the
is
entirely covered
is greatly weatherof festivals having almost disappeared.
also greatly
fairly
has suffered very there
more
far
it is
scraping
to scrape a
difficult
too hard, the paint
is
comes off; if not hard enough, the plaster remains and obscures the outlines. The little stone seat was also covered thickly with
down
scraped
I
;
could
must have been placed finished, as
behind
An
the stone in several
to
no
find
on
inscription
it.
It
in position after the wall
was
the painting appears to
be complete
it.
architrave extends right across the wall
;
it
is
quite illegible in the middle with the exception of a
few signs
but at the beginning a good deal of the
;
inscription can be deciphered. figure of greatl}'
It
ends with a seated staff. This is
Sekhemka holding a long
damaged, the upper part of the
figure being
completely destroyed, but enough remains to show what was there originalh-. The middle part is the stele proper,
though the whole of the west wall
sculptured.
Below the architrave
is
ings in incised hieroglyphs, in very
a
of
Sekhemka
seated before a table of offerings towards which he stretching out
hand.
his
Behind
is
of offer-
good condition
Then comes a figure
except at the top.
list
this
is
is
another
Sekhemka seated in his him is his little son Kaa, who with outstretched arm is touching his father in order to call his attention. Below are two lines of hieroglyphs ending in the name of Sekhemka. figure, barely discernible, of
lion-footed chair
;
in
front of
the case with ordinary limestone.
15.
worn, the
but
If the
painting.
little
damaged, but the
The
complete. little,
list
of
rest of the wall
and though worn
in places,
which cannot be deciphered.
tomb was
first
cleared, the decoration
of the wall appeared to end at the feet of the large figures in the central panels below was a blank ;
space the whole length of the wall broken at the south end by a low stone seat. It was not until I
examined the stele ver)- carefull}^ that I discovered traces of what appeared to be a line of inscription
16. The stele now divides into two panels, one on each side of the false door. The false door has a long stripe of red on each side as a border, and the drum has a stripe of red at the top. The panels on each side are occupied by figures of Sekhemka which,
appear gigantic when compared On the right-hand side, Sekhemka is represented standing, he has a short beard and wears a skull cap and a starched
though not
life-size,
with the other figures near them.
and holds a long staff and a rope (?) in his Before him is a diminutive figure of his wife she is dressed in a robe with two shoulder-straps and wears a long wig. Before her is a still more kilt,
hands.
diminutive figure of the
;
little
son Kaa,
the lock of youth and holds his father's
who wears
staff.
THE WEST WALL, SOUTH SIDE OF STELE.
A
register of five bearers of offerings finishes this
man having his name above him, and in front of him the name of the object he is carrying. The first man carries a bird and a spouted vessel the
two pieces of cloth the fourth holds a his arms and the fifth, who from exigencies
pointed nose, but with a tightly curled tail like a pug's. He has a ribbon round his neck, the two
the second
is
uncovering the burning incense
third has
goose in of space in his
Under
her ornaments are a necklace and bracelets.
Sekhemka's chair lies his dog asleep with its head on its paws. It is one of the hunting dogs like that in Ptahhetep (Quibell, Raincsseiim, pi. xxxiii), rather like a greyhound with prick ears and a long
panel; each
;
;
;
much
is
smaller than the others, has a stick
hand and a
on
jar of .water
ends lying
Below
his head.
flat
on his back, and his name
this scene are five registers
is
Pesesh-
four sculptured,
;
the lowest painted. 17. The left panel shows a standing figure of Sekhemka holding a long staff in his left hand and a
cloth
(?)
His wig
in his right.
is
of short curls, and his necklace
He
wears a starched
kilt,
the case of User-neter,
is
is
of the leopard, as in
The
shoulder, though
skin
method
the
shown, and the ends of the the shoulder.
tie
not
is
on each side of
mother
of the
figure figure in the
opposite panel, though not so tiny as that of the
young
brother.
Sekhemka
the Little
dressed like
is
and
his father except for the leopard skin,
offerings, their
say,
are
he, like
five
bearers of in front
of
each one the name of the object he is carrying. The first brings a jar of water the second a bird whose beak and legs he holds firmly the third has a deer ;
;
across his shoulders a
young hyaena with
the
fifth
the fourth carries in his arms
;
its
Sekhemka the Little, or, as we should Sekhemka Junior; he is a grown man wearing a
short curled wig and a starched
He
hind legs securely tied
;
and
is
rest of the wall
on
each side of the stele
sculptured also, beginning immediately below the
On
architrave.
Sekhemka
the
left,
seated on
or south, side
a high-backed
find grandchildren
is
a figure of
chair
with a
with three
tails
;
hand
is a short stick which he twirls in his wears a wig with long straight curls, a starched kilt, and a wide collar. At his feet, with her right arm round his knees, is his wife Khent-
He
is a portrait from life, the from the ordinary type. She wears a wig with long straight curls hanging over I
contains
register
priests bringing birds.
The
first
five
servants
two are
in the
or act
which they carry the third brings a goose in his arms the fourth carries a crane, whose long beak he holds firmly to prevent of killing the
birds
;
;
its
the fifth has three live birds in his' hand, and three dead ones in his right arm.
struggling
left
The
first
;
names, Uashka and Uay, The hieroglyphs are roughly though by an unskilled hand. In many of
two have
their
the tombs at Saqqara one sees these roughly incised or scratched hieroglyphs, giving the name of a servant, side tions.
It is
think that this
face being different
the shoulders, and her dress has two shoulder-straps
;
by
side with finely sculptured inscrip-
evident that the servants wished to have
names perpetuated also, and inserted the names when the artist had omitted them. The third register has unnamed bearers of offerings. The first carries two vases the second has a vase themselves
kaues.
;
are noted.
their
in his left
commemorated in a tomb as a own generation and the
generations immediately preceding and succeeding
him
In his right hand he holds a fingers.
Kaa,
brother
general rule, only a man's
high square arm, over which he leans his right arm. fly flap
his father.
like
;
incised as
18.
kilt
3-ounger
his
inscribed before them.
brings a goose in his arms.
The
by
followed
is
The second
names above them, and
;
comes the
First
eldest son,
his little brother, holds his father's staff.
In the register below there
daughters.
and the amulet of childhood, he carries a bird in his hand. Then come the two daughters, Khenut and Antha and behind them are three more children, the first of the three being " His son's son, Sekhemka." The other two are probably also It is very rare to grandchildren, but are unnamed.
Sekhemka is a small Sekhemka the Little. This
rather smaller than that
two
below the on the left
of fastening fall
Sekhemka
register contains the family of
and
represented as quite a child, with the lock of hair
In front of
of his eldest son, is
is
little
tied
first
down
placed about half-wa\'
the back of the animal, and comes a
waist of the wearer.
most elaborate.
and has a leopard skin
The head
over his shoulders.
of horizontal rows
The
two sons
;
and a tray of fruits and vegetables the third brings two joints of meat, and a tray of figs and loaves the fourth holds a bird in one hand and a vase in the other; the fifth carries a tray of loaves and ;
vegetables on his right shoulder, lotuses over his arm,
and the
ribs of the sacrificed
ox
in his left
hand. c
TOMB OF SEKHEMKA.
10
The fourth register contains a scene of sacrifice. One butcher, whose name Kednes has been roughly incised,
engaged
steady.
removing the
in
membered
hind leg of the ox which The other butcher is
the
fla3'ing
is
his assistant holds
ribs of the partially dis-
victim, while the assistant
is
sharpening
the knife.
meat
one hand, and the
in
The
plastered up
;
one of those that the lower part is hidden by the register
was
is
seat described above.
a scene of sacrifice
It is
little ;
the
figure carries the leg of the victim the second has the heart and some indeterminate object. The first
;
of
whom
The
the right, or north, side the scene at the
register
20.
S.
He
holds a fly-flap of three
while his right
is
tails
in
hand,
his left
stretched out towards the piles
He
accompanied by his dog Pesesh, who in this scene is wide awake, with his head up and the ends of his neckof offerings lying
front of him.
in
is
ribbon sticking out.
Below
this scene there are five registers as
on the
The first register gives seven priests, dressed alike in short-curled wigs and starched kilts, all in the same attitude with the right hand opposite side. all
hanging down, and the shoulder.
left
The name and
The second
hand clutching the
shows
register
right
of each one are given.
titles
five bearers of offerings,
whom
the first one only, Nesua, is named. He two vases balanced on his hands. The second has a bird and a fiat basket of large figs. The third brings meat and a tray of vegetables. The fourth is heavily laden with a vase, lotuses, and a tray containing a trussed goose lying on two large loaves. The fifth carries a haunch in his hand, and a loaf (?) on his shoulder. In the third register none of the bearers of offerings are named. The first bears a vase and a tray of loaves and vegetables the second, a haunch, and a tray of loaves and vegetables the third has a bird and a tray piled with various objects the fourth has a fish and a tray on which the most conspicuous object is a calf's head the fifth carries joints of of
large hole has been
Wall.
E.
rough
This wall
traces of paint were
could
make out
were too
the leg of
off
a third has
;
;
also
with
evidently in search built of blocks
mud-plaster.
more connected, and
of
The
fancied
I
I
a scene of sacrifice, but the traces
The door is
faint to copy.
of this wall
made
is
plastered
stone
its
roof
at the
south end
painted to imitate granite.
is
X. Wall. This is built of rough blocks covered with mud-plaster which shows traces of paint here
and
there.
21.
Outer Wall.
Right across the wall above
the door which leads into the sculptured the architrave (Pl. VII).
It
chamber
is
consisted originally of
three lines, of which the top line has disappeared entirely; the middle line
lowest line with
its
list
is
not
much
better
of festivals
;
but the
practically
is
It ends, like the architrave above the with a seated figure of the deceased holding a
complete. stele,
long
staff.
22.
W.
Wall.
Limestone, 10
ft.
Measurements of Wall. E. Wall. S.
sculptured.
Height
5 in.
seat, 2
ft.
5 in.
x
i ft.
x 6J
in.
Rough blocks. Rough blocks covered with mudplaster, traces of painted scene.
Doorway.
;
N. Wall.
Rough
blocks covered with mud-
plaster, traces of paint.
;
;
firm
plaster has gone, leaving the blocks of stone exposed,
carries
;
it
Wall. This is the only wall that has any great amount of damage. The mud-
chair,
He wears a wig of short curls, a starched and a necklace of which some detail is shown.
was
;
for the serdiib.
kilt,
of those which
painted with a scene of
It is
bowl containing the blood of the victim and the fourth carries a leg which has already been
top shows
arm.
one
is
the animal while another holds
and a
Sekhemka seated in his straight-backed over the high arm of which he leans his left
the assistant sharpening
is
and shows one butcher cutting
sacrifice,
suffered
On
Behind
it off.
fifth
removed.
19.
holds the front leg of the ox while the
covered with plaster.
fellows the fourth sharpens the knife. The hieroglyphs above their heads are in outline, those at the side in solid colour. ;
the butchers, one
his knife.
a large
his
An
sacrificial victim.
named Nefer superintends
official
figure is a butcher who is cutting up the animal, and turning round makes some remark to
third
o.\ in
fourth register, like the one seen opposite,
shows the dismembering of the
other cuts
The lowest
ribs of the sacrificed
the other.
Roof. Floor.
Destroyed.
Paved.
DESCRIPTION OF TOMB.
CHAPTER
The tomb
of Ptahhetep
II.
II.
(D
62) lies to the
north of the great Ptahhetep (D 64) mastaba published by the Egyptian Research Account and the
The two almost
touch, being
only separated by a very narrow passage.
It is quite
Archjeological Survey.
by the plan (Pl. XXXIV) that there is even some communication betvveen the two mastabas the unexplained doorway at the east end of the southern strdab may perhaps be connected with the chapel of Akhethetep or with the pillared hall of possible, judging
;
Ptahhetep. in
To
leading to three other rooms.
VII.
TOMB OF PTAHHETEP 23.
II
Mariette writes with enthusiasm of the sculpture " Ce tombeau se recommande a this tomb.
I'attention par la disposition exceptionnelle de son
the north
is
a
chamber which I did not open, and the door to which has been walled up with mud-bricks in recent times. To the west is the small painted chamber A, and to the south is the sculptured chamber C. On the opposite,
way east
i.e.
the south, side of
leading to an undecorated
C
is
another door-
room D, from the
end of which runs a skew passage leading to E,
room with a This doorway does not Mariette's plan, and, as usual, I would not
a curiously long, narrow passage-like
doorway
the east end.
at
appear in continue the excavation
for the
sake of the plan, but
had to leave it unfinished. Mariette gives a similar chamber, probablj' a serdab, on the north side of the building; the proportions are the same as E, but apparently there is no entrance. There is, however, no explanation in his notes, and nothing to show whether anything had been found there.
plan, et surtout par la perfection des sculptures qui
decorent
chambre
la
further on he says:
And
principale."
— " L'empleur
et
a
little
du
I'elegance
24. Chamber A. Mariette dismisses this chamber few words. " Ouelques traces de peinture se
in a
partie superieure des bas-reliefs n'avait disparu, cette
font remarquer dans le chambre B et dans le corridor " (meaning the doorway) " qui le precede." All
chambre
the walls have been covered with brilliantl3'-coloured
style sont d'ailleurs frappantes.
serait I'une
puisse montrer
aggeration
tomb of
une moitie de
la
des plus remarquables qu'on
comme
anciennes dynasties."
Si
echantillon de I'art sous les
Mariette
is
not guilty of ex-
paintings representing offerings and the bearers of offerings, of
which a certain amount remains. One is still in place, and under this the
when he speaks
in these terms, for the
roofing stone
Ptahhetep
without exception, the
colours are better preserved than at the unprotected
Though
end.
this
most beautiful
is,
Saqqara.
in
the scenes are
not so interesting as in the mastabas of
Thy and
West Wall
(Pl.
XV
This wall, being the
i).
Ptahhetep (D 64), yet in the workmanship and the drawing it surpasses them. For beauty of line, design, and decorative effect there is nothing finer in
roof,
ligypt-
colour remain very often, but where the outline
On
the north and south walls the figures are on an
unusually large scale, as will be seen by comparing
them with the
figures
on the east wall (Pls. IX, X,
XI, XII). This being a large tomb, rated portions
;
most exposed since the
destruction of the has also suffered the most, and the paintings partial
are very indistinct and difficult to follow.
destroyed
Traces of is
impossible to be certain what object
it is
was intended to be represented. where the outlines were certain
I ;
have copied only
patches of colour,
without outline, are not shown. I
excavated only the deco-
the pillared hall and other uninscribed
chambers were left untouched.
Mariette's plan
shows
South Wall
(Pl.
XV
Here again under the
2).
protection of the roof the colours remain to a great extent.
The
blue lotuses, the yellow
figs,
the red
a large pillared hall to the east of the sculptured
vases with black tops, and even the bearers of offer-
chamber C, with an entrance from chamber B. The west wall of the hall must be the original height, for it was therefore cleared it was close to the surface
distinct
destroyed either the stucco
to the depth of a few inches until the corners
paintings have disappeared.
;
were
reached, in order to verify Mariette's measurements.
The main entrance is
to
to the
on the east side of the it is
plan.
B
is
at
birds,
vases,
the eastern end
East Wall
(Pl. XIII).
;
and lotuses are fairly but where the roof is is
broken away or the
Over the doorway the
mastaba from the outside
paintings are in very fair condition, being covered by
immediately opposite
the uninjured portion of the roof, and the objects
hall
;
the entrance to the chamber marked
This room
ings, carr3'ing
in reality a little
B
in
my
ante-chamber
can be distinguished with very little difficulty. The which pale yellow and blue predominate,
colours, in
TOMB OF PTAHHETEP
12
are very harmonious, and contrast well with the dark
red
on each side of the doorway
of the figures
II.
chamber of the tomb
The
are found.
the upper part of
below.
North Wall
XV
On
Like the south and east walls the upper registers are filled with pictures From the patches of red, which still of offerings.
well.
remain,
third
it
is
(Pl.
3).
evident that the lowest register repre-
sented bearers of offerings
the scheme of decoration
;
The
being the same as on the south wall.
cross-
as
and damaged as
the walls greatl}'
all
and south
north
the
here that the sculptures
it is
roof has been entirely removed,
walls
had on the
there
originally been three registers of sculpture
;
north wall, two registers remain and traces of a but on the south side the upper register has ;
been completeh^ removed, and of the middle register there are only fragmentary pieces. The north wall, too, has lost the
westernmost block, thereby making
round the chamber, as it appears on all the walls except the west, on which the painted stucco is
the procession of
women
entirely destroyed at the top.
the
lashing of black appears to have formed a frieze
In the centre of the west wall
all
a rectangular
is
stone block running out into the middle of the room. It lies a.xis
a
little
skew
being slightly
chamber, its As this chamber,
to the walls of the
N.W. and
S.E.
judging by the paintings, was the place where the offerings were made ready before being presented in front of the stele or the y^a-statue, it is probable that this stone block
was the
table
on which the
vessels
containing the offerings were arranged. 25.
Chamber A and B
between
B.
The reveals of the doorway XVII 2, 3) have been painted
(Pl.
with a figure of the deceased on each
side.
He
is
represented standing with a long staff of office in his
hand, and his
titles
and name above and
in front of
him. The stucco and paint have scaled off to such an extent that it was difficult to decipher very much. About the middle of the figure the stucco has been completely broken away, leaving the rough stone visible. This was probably caused by the passage of bearers of offerings, carrying cumbrous loads through the door.
The damage
is
greatest just at the height
The
incomplete.
north, south, and east walls are
same way (Pl. XXXIV): rough
horizontal
blocks of fine
are large upright
not too
all
built in
courses
of
above these white limestone
blocks painted red,
sculptured and painted. it is
three
much
And
of these three walls
to say that they have the finest
and most beautiful sculpture
in
Saqqara.
Acccording to the usual 27. West Wall. custom the stele (Pl. VIII) is placed at the west end of the chamber, facing east. It is formed of a single block of fine limestone, and stands on another massive block which is painted red. It is surrounded, as in the stele of User-neter, with an imitation of a framework lashed together, the cross-lashing being faintly visible here and there. On either side of the stele
is
a
probably a that
it is
A
painted list
inscription
of the sacred
impossible to
saj-
great deal of colour
stele
;
oils,
now
barely visible,
but so
little
remains
with certainty. is
still
to be seen on the
the figures of Ptahhetep are coloured red with
black hair, and
many
show patches Beside the centre column of
of the hieroglyphs
of brilliant colouring. inscription
is
a sign in orange-red paint, apparently
which a load would be if carried by two men with their arms down, in the attitude of the two men in the tomb of Ptahhetep (Ouibell, Rainesseum, pl. xxxviii, 2nd register from the top). The slightest swerve would cause the load to strike the side of the narrow doorway, to the detriment of the painting and the stucco. This room is remarkable as having a door on every wall and though the north-east corner of the wall is greatly ruined every doorway is intact. The doorways between A and B, and between B and C, are
the papyrus-roll determinative
painted, the others are undecorated.
always carefully worked, though the ears are of and the vulture and hawk the conventional size are both rendered with spirit.
at
;
Two
out of three roofing stones
of
it is
C.
This
is
the
(as
the only explanation appears from the east wall) the ;
tomb was copied
in later times, the master sketched papyrus sign on the wall to illustrate the difference between the early and late forms of the The red paint of this sign is, however, hieroglyph. not the same colour as the squares on the east wall,
the
which have a more pinkish hue. The hieroglyphs on this stele are very interesting, and one at least the determinative of the sazfestival
still
remain
in
—
—
is
new
to
me
(Pl.
XXXIX).
The
Iier-s\%n
;
The
Chamber
when
is
position.
26,
that
most important
his
principal titles of Ptahhetep are given, with name, on the drum of the false door, " Judge of
CHAMBER the
High-court,
vizier,
SOUTH WALL.
C.
confidential
Ptah-
friend,
PTAHHETEP AND HIS SON.
13
open with both hands.
held
farm-women
Dividing him from
a vertical line of hieroglyphs
But the costume of the figures at the base of the stele shows the scarf peculiar to the kheri-heb
the
announcing the bringing of
offerings.
Ptahhetep being " the chief k/icri-heb.'" The figures are precisely alike on both sides of the stele, the only difference being that those on the north side are not quite finished, and the middle figure on the north is empty handed, while the middle figure on the south has a roll of papyrus (?). All are dressed alike in starched kilt and scarf of office, with a short beard, long-curled wig and elaborately designed necklace. The first on each side carries a long staff and a papyrus sceptre the second has nothing in his hands on the north, and a roll of papyrus on the south, side the third has a long staff and a piece of
a procession of seventeen
women
cloth.
colour, with the
hetep."
priest,
;
;
The
is
Then
follows
from the on their
farms heads
baskets of produce, and the greater
either
lead or carry an animal
number The name
of the
Ptahhetep,
belonging to
bearing
or a bird.
farm from which she comes is the first five names are compounded each figure with names of kings, the others are preceded by Ptahhetep's own name. The women are dressed in red or dark green
inscribed in front of
;
robes
their necklaces, bracelets,
;
and anklets are of
blue and green beads, and their wigs are black flesh-colour
dark
a
is
brown
yellow.
This
;
the
scheme
of
of the animals, the brilliant
and the dark grey, almost black, background, must have had a rich and
surrounded by an imitation of a framework of reeds lashed together. This lashing has been represented in colour which now appears only as a dark shade, with here and there a tiny
tints of the hieroglyphs,
fleck of the original brilliant blue.
29. The animals brought by the women (Pls. IX, X, XII) are worth studying. Their extraordinarily small size, which exceeds all artistic
is
South Wall.
28. wall
stele
damaged
at
The lowest complete,
practically
is
names
of the priests
the position deceased.
of a
Of
the
only a
The middle
the east end.
greatly mutilated, but
register of this
being
little
register
is
enough remains to give the and servants, and to indicate
colossal
upper
seated
the'
west end of the wall
is
a standing figure
;
the
stone,
that
neither
photograph
nor
drawing gives a quite satisfactory idea of the original. Akhethetep, who holds the title of " First under the King," presents to his father the account of the offerings which the farm-women are bringing. He, also, wears the short starched kilt and the wide collar, and he carries the scribe's outfit two pens, one behind each ear, a writing palette from which hangs a plummet under his right arm, and a scroll :
is
drawn
in proportion to the figures
impossible also to believe that a man,
;
who was
it
so
tomb, could not have made an equally fine design in which animals and human figures were not so utterly disproportionate. It was one of the conventions of art at that period to make the animals slightly
towards him, and considerably larger than the other figures. He wears a short starched kilt, a wide collar, and a chain from which hangs an amulet he has a short beard, and round his head he has a wide ribbon tied in a bow at the bach. In front of him are two rows of hieroglyphs giving his titles and name. Facing him is his eldest son, Akhethetep (Pl. IX). This is evidently a portrait, the features being carefully drawn unfortunately the paint has become so rough owing to the disintegraof
pigeons, are
fragment
of Ptahhetep, facing the procession that advances
tion
cannot have been from want of knowledge The birds, both geese and
or exigencies of space.
great a master of decorative art as the artist of this
of
remains.
At
license,
effect.
the
figure
register, not a
magnificent
human figures with probably in order to make the human figures more important, just as the figure of the owner of the tomb is made larger than any other that it may be the most prominent and smaller in comparison with the
which they are associated
;
On the east wall (Pl. XI) an example of how this particular artist treated a subject where the animals were of the ordinary size the donkeys, though slightly small in proportion, strike the eye at once. is
are not noticeably so.
We
are therefore forced to
the conclusion that the animals in the procession of
farm
women were
a special breed, whose beauty lay
In our times, Shetland ponies,
in their smallness.
and toy dogs, are bred simply for bantam the more diminutive the animal the their smallness more it is admired and as these animals are of no fowls,
;
;
use in themselves it is only people of a certain amount of wealth who can afford to have them.
We
know
that the Egyptians devoted
great attention
TOMB OF PTAHHETEP
14 to the breeding of animals,
and there
is
no reason
suppose that toy animals were unknown, and that then as now it was only the wealthier memAmong the bers of society who possessed them. to
animals in the procession are some quite young
and nth women); these are
calves (ist, 3rd,
easily
distinguished from the full-grown oxen with and without horns (2nd, 5th, 7th, and 14th women), but the calves give the scale of size. Another point to be
noticed
is
that the toy animals are usually led by a
hind leg, the neck, or the horns, animals have the rope fastened
rope round the while full-sized
II.
tail, feet, and ear of another animal. which she holds in her hand, has been fastened originally to the neck of the animal, but now it is partly chiselled away and its direction is changed in order that it may come to the hind leg
are traces of the
The
rope,
The
of the calf.
calf has
the surface of the stone
From
hardly noticeable.
was
cularly interesting, for
woman
30. The first her arms, and on her head an usek/i-ha.sket
young
carries a very
calf in full
of
The second leads a full-grown hornless which has a rope twisted four times round its neck, and from the end of the rope hangs an object which may be a shell (Davies, Ptakhetep I, pi. xvi). She carries a crescent-shaped basket of offerings. The she third leads a young calf by a rope tied to its leg has an «j