317 22 16MB
English Pages 239 Year 1915
THE THEBAN TOMBS SERIES NORMAN
Edited by
GARIS DAVIES and ALAN
de
H.
GARDINER
FIRST AND INTRODUCTORY MEMOIR
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET (No.
82)
COPIED IN LINE AND COLOUE BY
NINA,
de
GARIS DAVIES
AND WITH EXPLANATORY TEXT BY
ALAN
H.
GARDINER,
D.Litt.
PUBLISHED UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE EGYPT EXPLORATION FUND
LONDONSOLD AT
The OFFICES OF
THE EGYPT EXPLOEATION FUND,
37,
Great Kussell Street, W.C.
'
and 527, Tremont Temple, Boston, Mass., U.S.A. also kv
KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRUBNER B.
HUMPHREY MILFORD
QUARITCH,
11,
& CO., Broadway House, 68-74, Carter Lane, E.C. Grafton Street, New Bond Street, W.
(Oxford University Press), Amen Corner, E.C, and 29-35, West 32nd Street, and
C. F.
CLAY
(Cambridge University Press), Fetter Lane, E,C.
1915
New
York, U.S.A.
LONDON PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SUSS, LIMITED, DUKE STREET, STAMFORD STREET, S.E., AND GREAT WINDMILL STREET, W.
ROBERT MOND.
Esq., J.P.,
M.A., F.R.S.E., F.S.A., AI.R.L,
OF COMBE BANK, SEVENOAKS,
THIS IS
VOLUME
GRATEFULLY INSCRIBED.
CONTENTS.
..............
Preface
Chapter
I.
Chapter
II.
Amenemhet and
1.
— Architectural
2.
—The
The Decoration
Treatment of Borders, &c.
§ 5.
The
§
5.
.
.
10
10
.
Walls.
the
of
2.
The
§ 4.
The
§
Doorways.
of the
12
Inscriptions.
Wall-Paintings 1.
14
General Characterization. §
§
2.
Selection
and Arrangement
Purpose and Meaning of the Paintings.
3.
Tomb
the
of
4.
Preparation
the
Details:
§ 3.
§
of
Amenemhet
as
compared
with
§ 4.
those
of
of the
The Paintings
Tombs
other
Synopsis of the Paintings in the Tomb.
— Later
History and Destruction of the
Tomb
24
Detailed Description of the Scenes and Inscriptions
III.
1.
—The
2.— The
Entrance
.
.
26 26
.
Hall
3.
— Thickness
4.
— The
5.
26 of
Passage
.....
Doorway
to
Passage
44
44
........ .......
Thickness of Doorway from Passage to Shrine
6.— Shrine Excursus
Excursus
— The
I.
II.
The meaning The
rite
of the formula
culled intrd,
I
hhtpdi
68 nlstvt
(hotp
d
I
II
I
79
XII
"Bringing the Foot"
93
102
8.— The Burial-Chamber
102
The Contents
of the Burial-Chamber.
Conclusion
...........
List of Plates
68
Niche
7.
Indexes
1
of Decoration
Technical
1.
.
Decoration of the Ceilings.
Pictures.
IV.
........ ....... ... .......
Tomb
Features
Scheme
3.— The
Chapter
vii
General Description of the Tomb
§
Chapter
his
PACilO
.
.
.
.....
• I
10
123
131
;
PEEFACE. The
present volume sufficiently explains
introduces,
and
all
that
is
needful here by
encouragement received by us of
New York we
many
in
own purpose and
its
way
To the
quarters.
ways
are indebted in various
of preface
:
is
that of the
new
which
series
it
the acknowledgment of help and
authorities of the Metropolitan
Museum
they have themselves in course of preparation
an extensive series of monographs on the Private Tombs, with Mr. N. de G. Davies as editor that
Davies can
Mr.
nevertheless
appear as co-editor of our humbler English
proof of their generous sympathies, which
make
them
co-operation with
enterprise
is
common purpose
in a
both possible and pleasant.
The
joint authors of this introductory volume, of
the plates
and the other
for the
the
containing
plates
the
to
ceiling-inscriptions, ;
but also
allowed
us
to
the
clearing
from which the half-tone plates have been
its
valuable
of
the
To Mr. Ernest Mackay we
draw on her admirable bibliographical
provided the book with
mainly responsible
and there are few pages or plates
which do not bear the mark of his valued assistance.
has
is
for
him we owe not only the plans and the execution
ihambers, a task neither slight nor pleasant
for the excellent negatives
the one
explanatory text, are under deep obligations to Mr. N. de G.
Davies for constant and untiring help; of
whom
indexes.
To
all
built
collections.
these kind friends
in
the book
are indebted
Miss Porter
up.
Miss
underground
Woodward
has
we here tender our
sincere thanks.
In
dedicating
this
volume
personal gratitude and regard. in recent years will
many Theban
welcome
to
Mr.
Robert
Mond we have done more
For we are confident that a tribute of esteem which
all
those
than
express
who have worked
associates his
name with one
our
at Thebes
of those
notables whose records he has helped to save from oblivion.
N. de G. D. A. H. G.
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET (No.
82.)
CHAPTEE AMENEMHET AND The
by no means one
is
good, of such
though
given to them.
surpassing quality as
make them deserving
to
offices
The choice of
the State.
in
Theban period better suited
there
:
of Egyptian
an object-lesson for the exposition
The text of
thought, not to speak of actual riches. that
were not originally intended,
the
utilizing
periodicals,
of
other
;
or
Dynasty (1501-1447
one of the most
the
though
tomb it
special
is
family
upon
so
this book,
be
industrious bureaucrat
who
was
extant no tomb of the
It
necessary
less
is
for
an expenditure of fore-
great
which has assumed proportions
an exhaustive commentary upon
the
most part published picture
all
Egyptian
of
inaccessible
in
sepulture
as
in the reign of Tuthmosis III of the Eighteenth
feuds
which the
in
is
monarchs
Vizier
User,
to
and
conquerors
The- stele in the Shrine to say only a
(PI.
us he presents
historical
role
who
XXV)
ever
dated
is
few years after the cessation
Queen Hatshepsowet was the
Amenemhet not a hint of these troublous possible that he may have played some active the
now
details of archaeology than to gain
of
favour of
fill
to introduce our series
funerary ideas.
powerful
in the twenty-eighth year of this King, that
the
perhaps
is
complete
occupied the throne of Upper and Lower Egypt.
desperate
of the precedence here
one of the most flourishing moments of Pharaonic history.
classes at
B.C.),
to
for
less
t\ -=® Amenemhet lived
scribe n
of those
paintings,
its
but by the help of certain extraneous evidence and
scholars,
aims at giving a more
by the upper
practised
The
it
researches
meant
not
is
the details to be elicited from the plates
In
tomb
this
understanding of the religious feelings which prompted
an
are
normal scheme of mural decoration or to serve
to display the
students, at the outset, to concentrate their attention
by
Theban Necropolis, nor
owner was doubtless a man of considerable wealth, but he did not
Its
one of the highest
the largest in the
of
determined by considerations of a different kind
as
HIS TOMB.
toml) that has been chosen as the subject of this memoir, no. 82 in the Catalogue recently
published,
best
I.
in
himself
events
central is
found
figure. ;
and
them which gained him as
a
peace-loving
and
inherited his offices from his father and from the father of his wife.
Before considering Amenemhet' s connections and relationships
as
far
rank and dignities as
it
will
be well to study his
they are ascertainable from his
family
tomb and from the B
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
2
The
few other monuments which mention his name. over
entrance the cartouches of Amenophis II;
its
Useramun,
|
^»s|
91
p.
a
Sethe, Urkunden,
too
see
;
and with con-
squeeze,
Ahmose, or
I
this Vizier receives
;
1
who was
often
called
he
as
from
offerings
named
there
is
his son, the Vizier
steward of
the
Amenemhet," who is
need
mention
only
«aaaa
|
~' ^M V
Pn
Denkmaler,
(^
^&
)
I
I
^
Mii
CT^=3
l°l
I
I
very
second figures
the
in
1
op.
Textband, IV,
cit.,
by Griffith,
The above quotations M. Legrain.
to the kindness of
are
90
p.
op.
cit.,
the whole
;
103-105
pp.
aaaaaa
TcZ,
(i^
'
I
k\
I]
T
I
C
^
" the scribe
~==^>
J¥^ ^
A.AAAA
who
[Urkunden, IV, 1049
° reckons
who
zu Berlin,
vol.
1°1
V,
A
genealogical
Father,
%>
X
copy
^w
I
..O 1
III
I
AAAAAA
steward of
the
msi l2l
^ *^ Ml
Amenemhet
The
52.
p.
name
ft)
t^4
t
jh
H
PI.
He
VII.
" master of
**% "revered,"
called
is
and
(J
ceremonies," and
)
" overseer of
ploughed lands." Q
Paternal Grandmother,
l\
Maternal Grandfather,
|\
Maternal Grandmother, Wives:
(1) just possibly
f\
/WWV\
(I
Antef, a "lady of the house," PI. VII.
^
(I
_fl-^
"
Ahhotpe, a y-
l\
PL VII.
Antef,
(1(1
lady of the house,"
Marytamun, a
MAAM \ 11 to be attributed to our
*1* L_
1
if.
the Berlin statuette (4) ii
j\
(2)
mini
;
j*±
is
»
i
r\
Baktamun (once written
|
The name
designated as
PL VII.
p.
50.
Baktamun, elsewhere called
of
fl
£^ X*H ^
only
*""" (
2X
J^, X*H
name Hamash would appear
s=> \\ was the
name
Bobby, J Pis.
Hamashu
(Pis.
XXXVI,
1.
3
XLIV,
;
top
left,
1.
The
2).
be a shortening or pet-name for Ahmose, though one of several such
to
;
another equivalent, and one which might have been used by the Egyptians to transcribe
Amos
of the prophet
Eobert. 2
all variations of
XXXVI, XLIV,
VII,
general
^ \^W
title of " scribe,"
Wife's Mother,
ft
and a third
;
is
^=
Ahmose-Hamash
in addition
to
the
(1 (1
Thebes, tomb no. 224
bore the
epithets "
title
i
nil
~ww\ JfZ> 7
;
"
cf.
English Eob, Bob,
in
steward of the Vizier,"
(2),
fc^ the energetic one who did his bidding " and the i
PL VIE f|
Ahmose, a
"
lady of the house,"
XLIV.
But Baktamun being the
"sister's
in-law,
but at the same time his
sister.
the
mother of Baktamun,
Pis.
VII,
XXXVI,
daughter" of Amenemhet, Ahmose was not merely his motherIn document (1)
"his sister
jti
I
Ahmose"
occupies a
f]
1
Sethe (Urkunden, IV, 1050) appears to think that Baktamun,
when
called
"daughter
of
his sister,"
cannot
yet have enjoyed the position of a legitimate wife. 2
vol.
On
this subject see further
44 (1907), pp. 87-92.
Sethe,
JJber einige
Kurznamen des neuen
Beiches, in Zeitsclirift fur agypt. Sprache,
—
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET. prominent position, no relatives of Arnenemhet being named besides her except Anienemhet's parents, his wife,
and
Whether Ahmose was
his children.
Wife's
(Jrandfatiier,
>rs —sum (fl
who was Baktamim's weavers of Amun."
This man,
V>
(]
yjs
itj
Hamash
refers to
Wife's Paternal Aunt, J5rf
to
is
a^ww
f=^i
be
unknown.
understood.
"head
(I
at the
"steward" and U& "scribe,"
1
of the
PI.
VII, where the
head of the row.
Dhutmose, the "eldest sister"
(fl
Didi
is
L--D
a
title
D
^
Amenemhet
Thuiunofret, a "lady of the house," wife of the preceding.
T
Dhutmose, a
I
Aa — unless
-
father (PL VII), bore the
father's
Wife's Paternal Uncle,
pronoun "his" obviously
Dhutmose, called
I
s=» v\
Wife's Grandmother,
a full sister or only a half-sister of
(\
of
(j
Ahmose,
n
(6)
o
T
^\
Tuiunofret, a sister, PI. VI.
PI.
XVI,
a " brother," with an obscure
title.
ffj
u r\
(7
)|
(8)
(9)
'
/wwv\
m
I
"^^
(11)
^
[!)]
r
p
(13)
^^ A p
(14)
(I 1
(]()
(1)
I
c
o
U
;
r\
"assessor of
l\
as sister,
Amun."
PL XV.
•
•
a sister,
,
»
sister,
PI.
PL XVI. XVI.
a sister, PI.
Maryamun, a
XVI.
brother,
PL XV,
third register.
11
Shere, a brother,
.
lie
•
Teti
\
XVI
I
Baket, a
D
L/WW\A_J £$
Children.
PL XVIII;
I
I")'
r= 1 V
LaaaaaaJ
I
i
PI.
Ainenemwaskhet, described
_LH^
AAAAAA _l
1^^||
(]
q
OT Useronkh,
1\
(1
L
(10)
(12)
'•
r\
T
"
Amenhotpe, a
|\
(1
makes
PL XVI,
=^
upon
this
" scribe,"
PL XVI,
third register.
Amenemhet, a uA "scribe";
offerings to his
director of constructions
third register.
parents, Pis. V,
tomb."
XIV,
occupies
XXXV;
the
first
place
in
and in PL VIII he appears as the
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
6
second in PI. XVIII, but fourth
Amenhotpe, a aiii "scribe"; Q however, he makes the funeral offering opposite (2)
(1
AAAAAA Ci
I
Arnenemhet,
brother
elder
his
fle^Mf]
XXI t
JT\
(6)
(J'^^^zrz^
(^)
I
(y)
I
I
I
A
U
]
document
in
PI.
XVIII, where he
AAAAAA
XVIII,
PI.
(1).
108
p.
making the funeral
;
(1).
XV, XVIII, XXI, and
Pis.
the second daughter;
Pis.
108; not in document
p.
name
the
is
by
of a son as read
some reason
is
doubt
to
it,
document (1);
Griffith in
the
if
would show that document (1) dates from formed. The squeeze utilized in Lepsius,
this
with whose prenomen the name
II,
(1).
XXXV.
(Tl
Amenhotpe
(1).
XV, XVIII, XXI, XXXV, and
a son mentioned only in the Burial-chamber, PI.
Akheprumose
S$
reading be correct, and there the reign of
from document
Amenmose,
t5r r*\
fFl
AAAAAA
KK
XVI, lowest row,
PI.
Amenemhab, A ^J(1^27
AAAAAA
1
Amenemwaskhet,
Sitamun, the eldest daughter,
(1
(^)
named
possibly died young, not being
Tfl l_l
^-^
(5)
1
1
variant writing,
he was
also absent
;
^^ s-t, Proc. S.
the
B. A.,
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
8
man
Vizier was the most important Viziers
in
Egypt about
time
this
kingdom
the
in
but though
;
Pharaoh
after
administrative
his
himself.
There were two
province
did
below Siut, User appears to have been exceptionally rich and powerful,
Ahmose
Vizier
Amenemhet was probably
before him.
have had complete control over the
dictum of the ancient Pharaoh who counselled as to
way
the most certain
very considerable wealth.
and the entrusted, Vizier's
as
his
own
keeping
him
to
;
mainly
but in addition
;
obtained
the
to heart the
laid
honour and enrich
to
his subordinates,
attending
in
account of the
strict
father
and so Amenemhet may have attained the
serfs,
to
to
master's
his
fields,
the
was wont
he
this
Now
but on behalf of the monarch himself.
Amenemhet
that
*
doubt User had
with various building and similar works,
narrates,
stele
behalf,
for believing
in
metals belonging
precious
No
His functions consisted
and
of revenue,
various sources
his son
honesty
of ensuring their
not extend
his
steward of User, for he claims to
sole
possessions.
latter's
like
corn,
to
only on
not
be the
seems every reason
there
important post by the influence of his wife and
this
Ahmose-Hamashu, the man who had married Amenemhet's sister Ahmose, and whose daughter Amenemhet was himself later to marry, was also " steward of the Vizier," his sister
;
for
and had doubtless held
rank under User's father the Vizier Ahmose.
this
Perhaps
was
it
on the death or retirement of Hamashu that Amenemhet stepped into his shoes.
From the same side of the family was derived also the title of "head of the weavers of Amun," the father of Hamashu having held this rank. The Theban god Amfm, among the many craftsmen in the employ of his priesthood, possessed weavers whose task it was to The "head
produce the cloth from which the priestly vestments were made.
had
to superintend their
requisite less a
amount
the
;
and
labours
position
make himself
to
was an honourable one, and
The
dignity
sole
Amenemhet
of
that of " reckoner
of
Amun."
registration of
amounts of corn delivered
the
of
This
official
to
3
We
was a sinecure
is
unknown
affairs
can be ascertained. year of Tuthmosis
;
A III,
"Magnify thy great
him by one term
relative
or
in the
crtrojU-erp^?)
connected with
in the ritual of divine offerings.
the
the
How
external facts of Amenemhet's station
the year from which the stele in his
makes
ones, that they
a, recto,
11.
in
may
it
tomb
is
him
in the twenty-eighth
dated
;
and the position
likely that he lived on into the reign of 4
tomb was complete carry out thy laws; one
Amenophis
II.
and a source of admiration and
who
is
rich in his house has
no partiality,"
42-3.
Sethe, Urlcundcn, IV, 408.
Hieroglyphic Texts
by no
2
must have been
considerable portion of his career lay behind
death, therefore, his
his
Pap. Petersburg, 1116 2
held, for example,
of his individuality and of the accidents of his career next to nothing
of the rock-inscription at Silsileh
before
the production of the
to us.
are thus relatively well informed as to
and family
weavers"
and withdrawn from the particular granary
which supplied the grain for the loaves and cakes used far the post
to
(exactly the Ptolemaic
grain
offerings
1
was
was not transmitted
that
the
granary of divine
Long
it
for
personage than Senenmut, the famous minister of Hatshepsowet.
another was
life
responsible
of the
I take this opportunity of
in the British
Museum, Part V,
drawing attention to the hieratic writing
PI. 29,
which
is
U
gj*
conclusive for the pronunciation
a\
v&,
Senenmut
as against the usually accepted Senmut. 3
Theban tomb
The owner
of
The dated
stele
no. 231, a certain
Nebamfm, bore
this
same
title
at an apparently rather earlier
period. 4
was an afterthought, since
it
is
superimposed on painted scenes.
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET. envy
to
his
Gurnah.
No more
citizens.
that which
chosen than 1
fellow
it
advantageous
site
9
for
it
could
;
extreme beauty.
congregated of
;
In
this
corner
of
and the view over the cultivation
to
Sheikh
company
the best
of
the
hills,
is
one
time were
only a few yards away from Amenemhet's sepulchre was the great gallery-tomb
Ahmose, the father of
his patron
the Vizier User
distant, whether ultimately he was buried
burial-chamber (no. 61)
—
For the position
of the
in
his
;
and User himself was not much farther
higher
tomb
landmark
—that
(no. 82) see
which
has a painted
tomb with the
fine facade
in this part of the Necropolis.
Gardiner and Weigall,
Tombs of Thebes, PI. iii and for the view from the tomb-door see point not more than a hundred yards away. ;
tomb
or whether he elected to rest in the larger
(no. 131), formerly so conspicuous a
1
Amente
the
been el
of
hill
the Nile, and beyond the Nile again to the three opalescent peaks of the eastern of
have
Abd
occupies high up on the front face of the
His tomb-door now overlooks the Ramesseum
possibly
op.
A
Topographical Catalogue of the Private
cit.,
PI. iv,
a
photograph taken from a
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
10
CHAPTER
II.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF THE TOMB. 1.— ARCHITECTURAL Outer Courtyard.
FEATURES
— The
(see the plans
and sections
XXXIII, XXXIV).
Pis.
court, indicative of
was prepared by levelling a considerable
site
facade
and
shelving sides of the court were faced with rubble, which was covered with a surface of
mud
the breadth of the chambers within, and
and
lime-plaster.
faced
at the
A
rock
the
was given to the
slight batter
top with brick, has recently been
lead to no subterranean chambers
Entrance.
— The
.
;
relation
its
Entrance-passage
quite
is
being
quality the
of poorest
facade.
A
burial-shaft in
this courtyard,
cleared
by Mr. Ernest Mackay, and found
to our
tomb
is
to
uncertain.
unusually long, and constitutes practically the
A
only abnormal feature in the plan of the tomb.
number
of inscribed stones, found partly
underground chambers, and partly by Mr. Mackay (Jan., 1914) in clearing the two northern caves, belong to built-up doorways in the facade and at the inner end of the Entrance-passage. (1) The doorway in the facade cannot have been
by Mr. Davies among the rubbish
of the
very noble or very heavy, for the rock
is
not cut to give a level base
Of the limestone
only of thin slabs leaning against the face at a slope. a
very yellow as
slab,
if
long exposed to wind and weather
name and
hieroglyphs at least, giving the
titles of
and the fragments show broad columns (three at belong here
is
indicated
by the
least) of
take the pivot of the door
;
of
that these fragments
embedded
in
it.
A
rough hole
Provision seems to have
been made for ventilation of the tomb when the outer door was shut, as there It
lines
where they would stand
seen in the floor of the Entrance.
mud-plastered excavation in the roof at this point.
there remains
had three
lintel
very large signs
fact that at the place in the facade
is
lintel
The jambs were of sandstone,
Amenemhet.
there are traces not only of lime-plaster but also of sandstone to
the
;
probably consisted
it
;
is
an arched and
has the appearance of being
later,
however, and probably dates from a time of subsequent use of the tomb when, after the ruin of the fagade, a door was affixed farther
in.
(2)
There was a second doorway of some depth
at the inner end of the Entrance-passage, the probable position of the extant fragments being
XXXIII. A very slight indication of the breadth of the door-framing is left in one wall. Below where the reconstructed door-jambs would stand is now an oval hole, only large just enough for a body (see plan) this was probably designed for some later post-Pharaonic burial. Of the outer part of the doorway were found the right-hand portion of the sandstone shown
in PI.
;
lintel,
limestone jambs, also with blue incised hieroglyphs (see below,
1
and scraps of the both lintel and jambs
inscribed with the titles of Tuthmosis III in blue incised hieroglyphs,
In
PI.
XXXI,
limestone doorposts."
bottom
left,
for " limestone
lintel
p.
26)
and sandstone doorposts
1 j
"
read
" sandstone
lintel
and
;
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
11
Parts of the limestone cheeks of the doorway also show the rebate indicated in the plan. A fragment of yet another sandstone lintel, with remain, and show traces of painted figures. fragments of hotp dl nlsut formulae, is thought by Mr. Davies, from whose notes all the above statements are derived, to have formed the inner termination of the doorway. Exactly how
may have
the doorway
looked from the side of the Hall, where there are
painted wall-framing (below,
Hall. the
axis
—From
of the
p.
26),
is
we
the Entrance
mud and
fragments of a
not clear to the present writer.
pass into a broad
but not deep Hall at right angles to
Already at the time when the tomb was excavated there existed a
tomb.
natural fault extending over the middle of the northern wing.
with
left
The rent had
Two rough
stones before the plaster was laid on.
burial
to be filled
chambers have been
hollowed out at some later date in the right-hand wing, and a recess at the end of the
wing seems
a framing
by
have been cut
to
moulded
in the
same
in projecting plaster,
—Through
The doorway
intention.
which
is
up
to the Passage
left
surrounded
is
painted to imitate red granite.
doorway of no great thickness we enter into the Passage, a long narrow chamber somewhat lower than the Hall. There are no specifically architectural features Passage.
a
we may pass without further delay into the Shrine, an almost square room of moderate size, higher than either of the main chambers already described. Half-way across the room a low step raises the floor to a somewhat higher level. In the middle of the desertward wall of the Shrine has been hewn a niche of Niche. considerable size, deep within which were seated the statues of Amenemhet and his wife Baket. These statues, which are now wholly destroyed, were moulded in plaster on a rough core of rock. The well or shaft giving access to the Hypogeum or subterranean funerary chambers Shaft. here deserving of note, so that
—
—
is
sunk at the back of the Shrine not far behind the place where the
warning of
its
Hypogeum
(see PI.
cave probably of later
having a cut
XXXIV). date. On
sandstone
low room access
the
It penetrates
presence.
At
had
and
is
give
28 feet deep.
the bottom of the Shaft, on the riverward side,
is
a little
the desert side one passes into a low room through a doorway
with rebate
threshold
is
into the Niche,
floor is raised to
a
to
for
door.
From
the
second chamber of about the same
north-east
corner
dimensions.
On
of
the
south side of the low room (we throughout use the conventional orientation which regards the Nile as flowing due
north)
access at a lower level to
Burial-chamber, a
of
shallow well, formerly covered with sandstone slabs, gives
the
lair-sized
on the desertward (west)
as a
a
oblong room with walls out of the square.
It
has a niche
side.
The general plan of the tomb having now been described, it is necessary to compare it whole with the plans of other tombs, contemporary and anterior. The scheme consisting
hall,
axial passage,
of the Eighteenth
and shrine with niche,
Dynasty
(e.g.
nos.
is
quite
common
at
Thebes towards the middle
21, 42, 77, 78, 87, 97, 99, 112, 125, 127).
Before
the
seems practically unknown, except in the case of the tomb of Sirenpowet I at Assuan (de Morgan, Catalogue des Monuments, vol. I, p. 153); it is, however, a fairly obvious development of the type with hall and shrine, common alike in the Old and Middle Kingdoms,
New Kingdom
the
it
doorway connecting these two main chambers being extended so as to form a third room
of equal importance. of
tomb not
for such
Doubtless this development was helped by the analogy of another type
rare at Thebes, in which a long axial passage leads into a single interior
T-shaped tombs
cf.
no.
chamber
60 (Twelfth Dynasty), nos. 61, 119 (Eighteenth Dynasty). c 2
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
12
SCHEME OF DECORATION.
2.— THE
Abd all
Technical Details
1.
§
the Preparation of the Walls.
:
Gurnah the limestone was of too poor
el
in the hill of Sheikh
a quality to admit of sculptured relief, so that
exclusively with paintings. 1
adorned
the tombs in this neighbourhood are
—High up
The walls were
prepared for decoration by covering the rough rock-face with a layer of coarsely ground lime-
from half an inch to an inch in thickness
stone, varying
of
very
limestone
fine
The smooth
plaster.
squares of red lines by means of
the help of these squares the figures and
Next the main masses over
outlines with
the
all
of colour were
where
they can
example often
now be
it
where
the
is
red outline.
2
in
case of white
the
or
3
The red squaring and sketching or were originally so
some
in
;
are
lines
places
accompany the
work except that
real incised
scenes.
doorways
of the
in
built
up of quarried blocks of
in the west wall of the Hall
and the entablature above
moulded
Shrine are
no
and
lintel
The doorway
limestone or sandstone. in
there
the
out in
because the superimposed mass of paint has faded, as for
is
Amenemhet
Entrance-passage,
the Niche
it.
in the case of the subsidiary blue inscriptions that
In the tomb of the
seen
by
adjacent to the red outline were cleaned up by a
by the layer of paint covering them,
usually concealed
small
into
which done, the same or another scribe went
being drawn along beside
brushful of white
divided
spaced
particularly conspicuous
line,
Finally the portions
light-coloured objects.
then
laid a thin layer
taut and snapped, and
ruddle, held
hieroglyphs were
laid on,
red
thin
a
was then
this
obtained was
thus
surface
dipped in
a string
on
;
in
door-posts
are
and were intended
plaster,
produce the
to
effect
of sculpture.
The Decoration of the
§ 2.
decorated
planks,
XXXII).
PI.
in
are
— All
As
in
the ceilings were elaborately and tastefully all
the
Theban tombs
the
conception
with
inscribed
of
tomb
the
this
house
the
as
hieroglyphs,
blue
large
of
the
period,
by long bands coloured yellow to
divided into sections
accordance with
These yellow bands
owner.
Ceilings.
the various chambers are
ceilings of
imitate
the coloured
(see
dead
of its
formulae
religious
reading inwards along the axis of the tomb, or in the case of the Hall reading from centre to sides, as
small place.
would be most convenient
white interval
are various
The pattern marked F 4
and
favourite at this period, soffit
1
of the
for
in PI.
is
XXXII
at the foot of the
by
Separated from the bands by a
a visitor.
is
may
hill,
is
fitly
be
used throughout the Hall
found again, for example,
doorway into the Passage
Lower down
perusal
ornamental patterns which
in
tombs
;
83, 85,
dealt with it
tomb
of
Ramose
(no.
this
was deservedly a
On
and 119.
found D, a style of ornamentation that
as for example near the
in
I
the
have not
55), there are
numerous
well sculptured tombs. 2 In making some excavations in tomb no. 20, Mr. N. de G. Davies was fortunate enough to discover part of an Egyptian painter's outfit this included just such a reddened string wound around the sticks used as paintbrushes. See Davies, Five Theban Tombs, pp. 5, 6. ;
3
Tomb
no.
paintings in 4
all
92 (belonging to the royal butler Suemnut) will be found of great interest as exhibiting
Published G. Jequier, Decoration egyptienne, PI. xxvii [41]. The same pattern, whether copied in this tomb is reproduced in Cailliaud, Arts ct Metiers, PL 29a [3] Prisse, L'Art, I, 32 [4] Champollion,
or elsewhere,
;
Monuments,
PL
op.
Birch), vol.
cit.
its
the various stages of completion here described.
(ed.
ccccxxxvii I,
ter,
PL
top left; Wilkinson, viii [23],
Manners and Customs,
opposite p. 363.
;
vol.
II,
PL
vii [23],
opposite
p.
125;
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
13
The Passage has the pattern lettered G in the plate, a common combinaIn the doorway from Passage to Shrine is a simpler variety tion of zigzags and diamonds. The Shrine displays no less than four different designs, A in the of the zigzag pattern (B). noticed elsewhere.
1
Plate representing the right-hand is
and C the left-hand
ornamented with type E, which
Ahmose
Vizier
between the
83,
again
occurs
Lastly, the ceiling of the Niche
tomb
neighbouring
the
in
of
the
breaks
the
pillars).
The Decoration of the Doorways.
3.
§
(no.
F
like
2
pair.
—The
framing
doorways
the
of
continuity of the adjacent wall-scenes, and conforms throughout to a general type, consisting of
two
or three lines of hieroglyphs
which on the
formula
the
either
1
A
or
.-Q-.
the
conventional
assured for the beginnings of the parallel
name
metrically with the
of
On
Amenemhet.
the
parallel
formulae relating to
Amenemhet
> from
two cases by a
Entrance-passage were
different
of stone with
manner
here
lines
is
end sym-
belonging to the door at
Pharaoh was substituted
the reigning
of
the
the
all
symmetry
that
so
,
the sandstone lintel
titulary ;
(1(1
\j
the centre to the
These inscriptions contain
symmetrical
was
effect
by the
given
The contrast between the doorways and wall-paintings
disposition of the cartouches.
heightened in
epithet
In similar
lines.
the inner end of the Entrance-passage the
is
-
[I
of
;
tomb of Amenemhet suggests that Most of the officials in the public
their lives
in
of
a
2]),
rightly restores
visitor.
Amenemwaskhet
III
worthy
to be
recorded on
With Amenemhet
(no. 62),
Y^
c
D
Tj\
*
on the right wall
"the scribe who made
this
(I
was
it
I
^
of the inner
tomb"; there
is,
however, nothing to indicate that the entire scene was analogous to that in no. 82. 2
(PI.
The same word
is
used in connection with
the
offerings
to
the
ancestors
VII). 3
See below,
in the
Excursus on the meaning
of the hip di riiswt formula, p. 91.
shown
in
the
upper register
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
38
apparently not
may have
User,
Amenemhet,
must be made
effort
Egyptians themselves
the
The
ambiguous
less
keep separate, but which none the
regularly found
is
and
tuted
2
false
Theban
door in the
papyrus of a
a
the walls of
rites
offering
less
really distinct.
are
the
Shrine (Pis. XVIII, XXI,
there
performed by /^-servants,
of
The
period.
actual
practised
as
rites,
long
In
probability such
all
material
food-offerings as
moment
were present and available were placed upon the table of offerings at the appropriate the service, but
deceased every
the
before
laid
characteristically avoided
it
mere
a
cannot be imagined that an In representing
day.
elaborate repast was actually
subject
this
Egyptians
the
picture
in
they beheld them
imitation of the rites as
servile
or
by which an elaborate meal was
of spells
series
supposed to be procured for the deceased.
in the course of
older
the
in
pouring of libations, the burning of incense, and the recitation
consisted of the
reading aloud from
on
the false door or the niche with statues that was often substi-
lectors in front of
the
for
periods,
scenes of
two kinds of banqueting scenes 1 which
distinguish between
to
failed to
type
tomb
In the
common
devoted to one of the
is
was
his life
tombs of the Eighteenth Dynasty at Thebes and elsewhere.
XXII[a]), and definitely refers to the daily priests,
patronage and trust of
the
by imperceptible degrees, and that
station
most important wall
therefore, the
feasting that are typical of the
An
and
to wealth
arisen
that he, enjoying
conceive
difficult to
it
is
landmarks which he cared to perpetuate for the benefit of posterity.
lacking in of
nor
so,
on the
;
contrary, they contrived, by drawing on their memories of earthly feasts, also to give expression
meaning and the purpose of those
to the
act of laying a food-offering before the
the
images
lifelike
provisions
children
their
;
guests, musicians,
the
squat
usually
At
and attendants.
of the
figures
deceased and
the
of
various
priestly
Thus, instead of showing us the priest in the
rites.
wife
his
performing
officiants
on
XVIII, XXI, XXII (a) for further
Pis.
of
list
written above the offerings themselves.
is
sumptuous
a
supply
there
too,
of
other
are
same time there are woven into the composition
the
version,
before
seated
them, and occasionally,
before
and so illustrating the tabular menu or
ritual,
draughtsman displays before our eyes
the
door,
false
details
type of banqueting scene as the depiction of
the
principal
made
Eeference must be ;
the
here
acts
it
will
funerary
suffice
rites
funerary
the
of
offerings which, in a longer to the
or
shorter
commentary
to characterize this first
of offering
with
together
the
banquet that they aimed at securing for the deceased?
The second type of banqueting scene reproduction caprice
or
a
of
the
terrestrial
available
feast
space
with
as
on the other hand,
is,
many
of
its
concomitant
rendered desirable or possible.
more numerous, and not confined merely
to the
narrow
the
frank details
and deliberate as
the
artist's
The guests are here usually
circle of the
tomb-owner's family
;
the
musicians often have written above them the words of the songs that they sing or accompany
upon
1
owner under -
their instruments
;
dancers are present and attendants
from the dead man's
terrestrial
In what follows only those kinds of banqueting scenes are considered in which the principal personage of
the tomb.
whom
The complimentary banquets
or scenes showing
Amenemliet making
offerings
is
the
to the Viziers
he served, to his ancestors, or to the artists who worked for him, belong to a different category.
It cannot here be considered
how
far these rites
had become obsolete and were only traditionally depicted
in the Eighteenth Dynasty.
On the side-walls of the Niche belonging to the Shrine and of the second Niche belonging to the Burialchamber are much abbreviated scenes of offering of the same type, the funerary character of which is only deducible from their position, 3
Frontispiece
CO
Q
LU UJ CC UJ
X h
o CC Ll
o Z CO CC
co
Q CC CO
;
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET. household,
who bind
garlands
unguents.
The scene
is
and so
agriculture,
of banqueting scene finds
tomb
part of the
;
appropriate
its
tomb
in the
southern half of the west wall
XIV, XV, XVI).
(Pis.
What
tomb are the scenes of hunting, aim and object, this second type i.e.
the fact that in practice the second variety, exactly like the
is
from allusions
free
of
life
funerary
the
to
may have been
The reason
cult.
they would
purely commemorative
and
prospective
discussed
that
these
is
so,
is
not far to seek.
enjoy precisely
to
This being
first,
it
is
the
obvious that
depicted on the tomb-walls, even though originally and primarily
life
funerary
this
for
continue
they had previously led upon earth.
as
the scenes of every-day
significance.
purpose, could not
in
In
chapter
previous
the
may have been supposed
pictures
the
to
2 speak, called into realization.
hunt
in
the
may, the Egyptian doubtless hoped
to
desert
watch his field-workers as in lifetime he had watched them
Be
this
once he had hunted, to
as
in
;
been
has
possibility
an inherent magical force
possess
to
acquire a secondary
to
fail
whereby the things depicted were automatically, so it
on the
tends to obliterate and disguise the distinction between the two kinds of banqueting
same kind
as
other
and again on the north wall of the Passage
The Egyptians fondly hoped that after death
they
of which
life
and
1
scenes above described
seldom
of daily
scenes of this type arc found here,
Hall
of the
them wine
offer
Hall or at least not in the innermost
place in the
Amenemhet
of
scenes
essential
its
or
visitors
of those
accordance with
In
the
of
chambers of the
outer
the
in
forth.
necks
the
primarily one
fact
in
examples regularly found
round
39
the
fact,
pictures that
he
caused to be painted in the hall of his tomb illustrated not solely his past enjoyments, but in addition also his future aspirations.
mind when considering the scenes of have been almost inevitable 3 that some hint of those funerary Now,
to
if
we bear
of the
Old Kingdom the funerary allusion
In the
word
the life-size figure of a
known
man
him
extended in front of
rites
new custom
he
;
engaged
is
a
who
Needless to say, this figure
none the
less,
is
it
there,
just
we have
to
as
it
be
seen
by which food was
this secondari/ prospective
confined to the writing
rule
bring the food for the
the
his
traditional
feast.
4
arm bent and
right
funerary
formula of
and generally represents one of the sons of the
entirely out of place in a picture of an earthly feast
secondary funerary significance of such pictures,
because of the
will
of depicting in front of the table of offerings
reciting
in
nisut formula,
as the hotjy di
appears
as
usually clad in a leopard-skin and with
deceased.
invariably
is
" Za-servant " over the heads of the attendants
In the Eighteenth Dynasty arose the
offering
feasting,
in
dead should intrusively enter into them, as a result of
secured for the significance.
this
appears
in
the
other
variety
of
it
now almost
banqueting scene
first
described.
To sum up tomb-walls, in
:
make
a
distinction
both of which the deceased
is
the
between two kinds of principal
feasts
depicted upon
The
person honoured.
first
kind
has been shown to be the representation of the daily funerary rites of offering largely coloured
by reminiscences of earthly
On
1
;
Part
;
the second kind consists of the representation of an earthly
the ambiguous character of part of this scene, see below,
Pictures of feasts in which II, PI.
4
feasts
109 (Qawiet
el
there
is
p. 66.
2
See above, pp. 19-21.
no hint whatsoever of funerary application are Lepsius,
Meiten), and Quibell, Ramesscum, PI. 35 (tomb of Ptahhotpe, Sakkarah).
See Steindokff, Grab des
Ti,
Pis.
40-44, together with PI. 55; Davies, Sheikh Said, PI.
4.
Denhmaler,
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
40
hut with intrusive elements drawn from the funerary
feast,
kinds of scenes in practice, that
example belongs.
There
it
is
no certain
is
figure
of the
of the
New Kingdom
offerer
is,
tabular
Possibly the
list
and another indication
to
criterion
too, is
so,
;
may
of offerings
decide
to which variety a specific
judging the matter, though the prepon-
for
sometimes contribute towards a right
been already
as has
onwards
impossible always to
may
derance of earthly or funereal details
So closely alike are the two
cult.
common
said,
the
hotp
di
decision.
The
to
both types from the beginning
nisut
formula which he pronounces.
only occur where the funerary idea
which much importance must be attached
is
is
uppermost,
the position in the
tomb
occupied by the scene in question. 1
IV Amenemhet and his wife are seen prepared for them they are thus described 2
In PI. feast
;
"
The steward
Amun,
The daughter of
'
who reckons
of the Vizier, the scribe
chief of the weavers [of
Amun], Amenemhet,
seated
the
in
customary fashion before the
:
the grain in the granary of the divine [offerings of]
justified."
his sister, his beloved of his desire, the lady of the house, Baket, justified."
The scene is continued in PI. V. Here was originally shown the figure of the eldest son Amenemhet making offering to his parents this figure has, as usual, been erased by the Akhenaton heretics. The hieroglyphic inscription still remains, and reads as follows ;
:
His beloved son the scribe Amenemhet, justified. Recitation An offering-which-the-King-gives to thousands of all things good and pure, offerings of all that grows, 3 libations, wine, milk, that Geb thou mayest be satisfied 4 therewith, and that thy ka may be satisfied therewith." "
:
;
The
picture
now
divides
into
three
registers,
— "the musicians
the
in
two uppermost of which the
first
female singer Khawet" playing the double pipes, "the 5 clapping her Kame(t)" hands, and a third woman, " Mutnofret," dancing with female castanets; then below, a male harper, "the singer Ahroose," performing on a nine-stringed ," 7 harp, and three pink-skinned women marking time with their hands, namely " the singer " her daughter Baket," and " her daughter Amenhotpe." The song they sing and accompany those of
figures are
singer
8 on their instruments runs as follows
V\
I
\J\
/wvw\
J&
6 Jr
1
On
1 I
I
Id
cm
a wall of the main chamber of the tomb of
funereal in its details, like those is
usual.
are published Sethe,
The
The h below hnh-t
4
Htpp-h X V
titles
00
is
^
is
II, PI.
—
\S^.
17,
&k 000
>
at Beni
of the chapel
;
compared with
ibid.,
is
a scene of feasting almost entirely
Pis. 19, 20.)
;
emend
nb.
htp-k.
tnese s ig ns have been erroneously omitted in the plate.
See Wilkinson, Manners and Customs, vol. II, p. 274, no. 207 = edit. Birch, vol. I, p. 464, no. 232; the name Wilkinson, Materia Hieroglyphiea, Pt. II, PI. vii (24) Dumichen, Kalenderinschriften, PI. xli (d).
titles only, '•
Hasan
here the confusion has gone even farther than
UrJcunden, IV, 1050 (n).
an error of the original for
probably a spurious form '
Amenemhet
shown on the walls
Newberry, Beni Hasan,
3
c
and
(See
2
5
:
The
signs
;
R
y
00
[
^000>
which in the original stand to the right of the other two inscriptions, are
wrongly omitted in the Plate. Already published, with some good restorations, by Sethe, wrongly separated the first words from their continuation. 8
'
The sign /www shown
in the plate at the top of the line
is
Urkunden,
IV, 1056
(c)
;
Sethe has, however,
erroneous, and should be omitted.
— THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
"
How
when he
glad
the temple of
is
Amun)
(i.e.
Amun
the mountains by thousands, even for
No theme was more and
New
on
receives its good things,
Amun
Year's Day, at the renewal of
all in its entirety,
oxen are slaughtered by hundreds, its wild game of as his due offerings at the festivals of the seasons."
and
its
popular with the Thebans of those days than the glory of their city
temples with their magnificent and lavish festivals
its
41
similar songs
;
have been found
other tombs, and one dealing with the same subject will come to our notice
Behind the musicians were guests, either through lapse of time or wilful
all
later.
in
1
Amenemhet. Much has perished, but the following names and titles still remain
close relatives of
erasure,
V, VI [a]):—
(Pis.
Top Row. (1)
"
(2)
"
His beloved brother, the
scribe' of the
granary of divine offerings [Amenmose]." "
(3)
His sister, the lady of the house " His beloved brother, the scribe of the Vizier [Amen-
(4)
"His beloved
(5)
"
(G)
"
His
"
His beloved son Amen[emvvaskh]et."
"
His [beloved]
(7)
(8)
"
sister
His beloved brother Userhet." sister Nofretari."
sister Tuiu-nofret."
"
" [His] brother
(9)
]."
2
3
Lower Row. (10)
"
(11)
"His beloved daughter
His beloved son the scribe [Amenhotpe]." (Rest
."
lost.)
The third row represented attendants bringing
Most of the
different kinds of
have been destroyed, but we can
figures
see
still
two male
bringing loaves and a bundle of onions on a mat, and the second,
and holding
bull
in the right
hand a red bowl held
was headed by a son of Amenemhet, palette
The heading
to the scene runs
" Recitation
:
We
3
This
4
For
is
p. 63.
there are in
2
all
things good,
Lower Egypt,
all
things pure, all things
leading a
The procession
scribe
Amenhotpe.
Behind the
to
kind of bowl s^e Petrie, Qurneh,
Amenemhet's Activities as
:
[b],
VI a.)
show that these were devoted
Vizier User.
lady's head,
PL
sweet, which there arc in
"
offerings
One
\\
j\
not in the plate, and was the last figure of the
this
4
first
:
Of the lower registers enough remains of Amenemhet's labours as steward of the
See below,
string.
hand, very possibly the
in
Rear (West) Wall, Southeen Half, Lower Portion Steward of the Vizier. (Pis. VI
1
named Siamun,
network of
the
figures,
5
bring to thee
Upper Egypt and which
in a
provisions for the feast.
to the illustration
scrap of painting depicts a fight
in red outline, erased
and very
faint.
line.
27, no. 22.
5
See Setiie, Urkunden, IV, 105G
G
(c).
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
42
between two
bulls,
1
which the Vizier
may have
man
forward a magnificent
leads
which
reproduced in colours in
is
"
He
bull,
PI.
Farther towards the right a bearded old
with a mat over
much
;
so says the
back
its
VIa, reads as follows
says the bull has grown very
The accompanying-
been represented as watching.
2 inscription reads, " Seeing the [two] bulls fighting."
the
;
text
to
picture,
this
3 :
Governor of the City and Vizier User."
The undermost register probably had similar scenes, and a scrap of inscription, " which had grown for his lord," 4 may well refer to other cattle which Amenemhet bred
for the
Vizier User on the latter's estate.
Doorway The framing of
to Passage, Outer Side.
doorway projects
this
(PI.
XXXI, bottom
beyond the
slightly
are
surrounding walls,
level of the
and has been coloured pink mottled with red to imitate Syene inscriptions
right.)
Its blue
granite.
hieroglyphic
sunk and moulded in a coating of coarse limestone plaster with which the
native rock has been covered
;
they are arranged in the usual symmetrical fashion, and consist
of the customary invocations to different deities
:
Lintel, Eight Side. (1)
corn,
"An
ka of the reckoner of
offering- which-the-King-gives to Geh, heir of the gods, for the
Amenemhet, justified." " [An offering-which-the-King-gives (2)
to]
P[tah
for the
]
ka of the scribe Amenemhet,
[justified]."
(3)
Amenemhet,
"
Lintel, Left Side.
[justified]."
(Destroyed.)
Eight DooRrosT. (1)
An
"
[offering]-which-the-King-gives to
in everything, that they
[good and pure] (2)
"An
may
they
An
[Amenemhet,
on earth
see
to
[Amenemhet,
the
1
PI.
justified]."
[Amenemhet,
Khmun, and
to Ma'et, that they
may
justified]."
(Inscriptions wholly destroyed.)
of
disposition
diagram on
remaining
sun in [heaven] every day, to the scribe who
offering-which-the-King-gives to Thoth, lord of
Ceiling-Inscriptions.
The
exists,
justified]."
give a goodly burial after old age
Left Doorpost.
what
offering-which-the-King-gives to Ptah-Sokar and to Anubis upon his mountain, that
grant to go forth "
lord of
give ^r£-r-/my-offerings of [bread and] beer, [oxen and] geese, all things
to [the ka] of
reckons the grain (3)
may
Amen-re and Atum,
XXX,
the
long bands of
(PI.
XXX.)
ceiling-inscription
in
the
Hall
is
shown
in
the
which also contains hand-copies of the texts themselves.
There was a different painting underneath
this,
for
the colour has scaled
away
in parts, leaving traces of
the earlier work visible.
3
Birch,
The
the bull-fight, 4
by Wilkinson, Manners and Customs, vol. II, p. 444, no. 315 = edit. an early copy in Brit. Mus., Add. MSS. 29,823, fol. 58 (Hay) and, together with 59; the text only, Sethe, Urhunden, IV, 10C1-2 (g).
picture has been already published
vol. II,
p. 75, no. ibid.,
fol.
343
;
;
Published Sethe, Urhunden, IV, 1062 (g
2).
—
;
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET. A.
[The scribe who counts the grain of
"
me among
and place
over me,
thyself
the
43
Amun (?)], Amenemhet,
stars
indestructible
that
he says are
my
:
thee
in
x
mother Nut, spread so
;
I
shall
not die
eternally."
An
"
B.
offering-which-the-King-gives to Osiris iu the Thinite norae, the Lord of Eternity,
Two
the warfare of the
may he
Lands, the again-born, the heir of Geb;
2
grant
who
quelled
to travel in the divine bark
in the train of the great god 3 in his procession of the beginning of the year, for the ha of the scribe
reckons the grain of [Amun, Amenjemhet, justified of U-pekr 4
and
;
to
come in peace and
for the steward of the Vizier, the scribe
An
"
C.
and
to receive a place
which
among
the Underworld,
Amenemhet."
Land
of the Netherworld, which
glorifies
of
Hiding which conceals
envelops the corpse
which conceals corruption, 6 the heart of the noble dead [being established
flesh,
who
his followers in his place
(his) soul to the sky, (his) corpse to
justification,
offering-which-the-King-gives to the Western Necropolis, the
are Yonder, 5
who
those
;
(??)
in]
place,
its
all
his
limbs performing their functions; for the scribe who reckons the corn of Amun, Amenemhet, justified; mayest thou open for him all doors, may he come in and go forth as he listeth, without being turned back from Ko-stau 7 for ever and ever."
D. 8
"
[An offering-which-the-King-gives who came into being of
Places, 9 the living god
to
Lord of Thrones-of-the-Two-Lands in Elect-ofupon truth every day may he grant prt-r-fyrw
Amen-re],
himself,
who
lives
;
all things good and pure, the sweet breeze of the north wind, drink to water from the swirl (of the Nile), for the ha of the steward who reckons the grain of Amun Amenemhet, justified, [born of the lady of the] house, [Antef] Dhutmose, justified."
and
offerings of bread
"An
beer,
oxen and geese,
Anubis in the Divine Booth, who is in Ut, Lord of the Sacred Land, (namely) Up-wawet, presiding over the Two Lands may he 10 grant the opening of the NetherE. 8
offering- which-the-Kins-gives
to
;
world, union with the burial-chamber, 11 to see rays [in the place of] 12 darkness
the
;
for the scribe
Amun, Amenemhet, justified, born of the lady of the house, Antef Amenemhet, justified, begotten of the revered overseer of ploughed
the corn of Vizier],
,
fields,
who
reckons
the steward [of
Dhutmose,
the
justified."
"An
F. 8
offering-which-the-King-gives to Erniitet,
who
is
in the Sacred
Land, the great lady of the
Queen of the City of Eternity mayest thou grant the noble to abound in thy provisions, mayest thou sustain him with the offerings that are in thee, mayest thou feed him from the altar of the Lord of Necropolis,
;
Ceremonies in the course of every day; for the steward of the Vizier, the chief of the weavers of Amun, the scribe Amenemhet, [justified] [may he make] transformations to his heart's content, unhindered ;
in that which he will for ever
and
ever."
"
[An offering-which-the-King-gives to Harakhti (?)], Chief of the Two Lands, dwelling in the Sacred Place, the hawk which makes festive the breast, 13 which inundates the Two Lands with gold when he arises may he grant offerings and provisions, cloth, thread, incense, and oil, gifts of all that groweth, what heaven G.
1
I
am
indebted to Professor Sethe for the correct interpretation of this passage, which
Texts (ed. Sethe), § 580 2
Read
a
0,
is
based on Pyramid
(c).
not _
a
3
as in the Plate.
I.e.
Re.
a corruption for Q, the hieratic form of which is closely similar. W-plcr is that district of Abydos where Osiris was buried (Schafer, Zeitschrift fur agypt. Sprache, vol. 41 [1904], pp. 107-110). 4
III
is
/VW\AA 5 |\=>
6
For
7
A
8
9
\\V
s
nf y w ' im is
a
this phrase cf.
common
periphrasis for
Naville, Litanies du
"the dead."
Soleil,
PI. 17,
1.
80
10
The singular pronoun proves that Up-wawet, the wolf-god,
11
Emend
13
;
Makiette, Abydos,
vol. II, PI. 17.
name of the subterranean world of gates and passages. The inscriptions D, E, F are written from left to right, not from right to left as indicated in the plate. These two names are the name of the temple and that of the sacred territory of Karnak respectively.
D I
^
For the epithet shb
12
"snb-t, cf.
indicated by Urhmden, IV, 117,
Pap. Berlin, 3055,
"May
17, 2;
Cairo
is
here identified with the dog Anubis.
Rest ° re
Hymn
to
[^ J ^ ] ""meaning may
Amun,
11, 1.
The
a torch be kindled for thee in the night, until the sun
rise
possibly be
over thy breast."
G 2
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
44
what earth creates, what the Nile brings; for the Tea of the scribe who reckons the grain Amenemhet, 1 justified, born of the lady of the house, Antef, justified and to be in the train of god in his processions by water and by land, for the scribe Amenemhet, justified." gives,
;
DOORWAY TO
3.—THICKNESS OF No
trace
north side a few words from the
hieroglyphic
(PI.
XXXI.)
superscription
earth,
[Going forth upon earth
by the
scribe
in order to see] his house of the living,
who reckons
the grain,
[Amenemhet,
on the
show that Amenemhet and
wife Baket were depicted in the act of walking towards the entrance of the "
this great
thickness of this doorway, but
the paintings in the southern
left of
is
PASSAGE.
Amun,
of
2
tomb
his
:
[his place of]
being upon
[His] wife [his beloved of his desire,
justified].
Baket, justified]."
Had
the paintings not only of this doorway, but also of the Entrance and of the doorway
Passage from the Shrine, been preserved in their original integrity, they would
dividing the
probably have orientation
illustrated
as
any other scenes
in
;
three peaks of the Arabian
here being considered dead, whence
it
lies
It
side
look
midway between its
the outer
paintings
feeling
fine
the rising, and on the other the valley toward the
The doorway that
and the murky world of
should refer to the passage from the
was one of the most cherished hopes of the Egyptians that
"go forth Amenemhet
in the day," returning to the
thickness
as
tomb
The northern
at eventide.
he proceeded towards the door of his tomb to visit his
to the Shrine, we shall find that a funereal Amenemhet was shown adoring a deity of the dead, on
third doorway, that which leads this,
one
after death
former home, and the southern thickness must undoubtedly have depicted his return.
on each side of
for
may
Entrance we
the
across
sunlit world
they might be able to exhibited
In
beside which the sun rises every morning.
natural that
is
region to the other.
hills,
tomb the
the
designer was imbued.
its
Amenemhet was shown worshipping on one and indeed from this place one may
side the setting sun
the
as
and symmetry with which
conjecture that
is
well
note
is
In the struck
;
the threshold of
whose realm he there stood. 3
4.— THE PASSAGE. East End, the Door-framing.
(PI.
XXXI.)
This door-framing consisted of a single line of coloured hieroglyphs with religious formulae
runniug
from now badly damaged :
—
The text
the centre of the lintel and vertically along the door-posts.
is
Eight Hand. "
[An offering-which-the-King-gives
to
]
the Universal Lord, that he
beside the great [god], to receive the palette and [the for the
may
grant existence
papyrus] so as to write truth every [day] i
;
steward [of the Vizier], the scribe [Amenemhet, justified]."
1
The name
of
Amun
2
Pr n
is
the regular phrase in these tombs for describing the house where the deceased formerly lived
during his 3
A
'nhw life
upon earth;
is
here twice left intact by an oversight of Akhenaton's agents.
cf.
below, PI. 16.
very similar arrangement of the scenes of the doorways
is
found in various other tombs
;
that of
Menna
(no. 69) is particularly instructive in this connection. 4
The thought expressed
however, to be unique.
in this prayer has close parallels in the
Book
of
the
Dead
;
its
exact form seems,
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
45
Left Hand. "
[An oftering-which-the-King-gives
names
[to
to
who
]
that he
begot him,
may
cause
"
endure]
Introductory Remarks on the Paintings of the Passage and Shrine.
As we tomb which
we turn our backs upon
pass out of the Hall into the Passage entirely devoted
is
we
henceforth the. scenes that
the
to
have
shall
of
illustration
dead owner's earthly concerns, and
its
inspect will prove
to
concerned with his funeral and sepulchral existence.
that part of the
There
is
be mainly,
to
not wholly,
if
drawn
a further contrast to be
between the subjects treated in the Passage and Shrine on the one hand and in the subterranean
The former rooms were probably always more
Burial-chamber on the other. to
persons, though
living
Amenemhet's funereal
day of burial perhaps only those directly interested
the
after
cult were allowed access
none ever came to disturb his
;
life
so far as
and subsequent funereal ceremonies).
was inscribed with texts from the Book of the Dead they had found a place
human
further
walls,
—
was
it
by
affected
still
The Burial-chamber, on the contrary, spells that were supposed, when once
to be efficacious
we may
and the Shrine,
it
will be well to call to
mind
his life
the various stages through which
upon
in
(2)
only once, so far as
tomb
am
I
aware, illustrated in an Egyptian
at Sakkarah, where the sudden death of the lord of the
manner,
vivid
a
together with
the
grief
of
his
Between the day of the actual death and the
especially noble or wealthy persons a period of as rites
this interval in the
been borne in state with a
day of
strict ritual,
burial
5
4
their
;
widow and the
final
The event
w ere the
of
rest
as seventy days,
may have
2
labours,
though of a
this
;
in a
is
is
represented
his
household. 1
during which
relio;ious
many
The body
been performed.
hands of the embalmers, to whose place of work
3
it
itself
had doubtless
character and fulfilled in accordance
were but rarely depicted in the tombs. 6
r
tomb tomb
of
interment there elapsed in the case of
much
bearing directly or indirectly upon the funeral
was during
came
(l) First of all
earth,
on the part of the relatives and neighbours assembled round the death-bed. itself is
without
which was doubtless signalized by the outburst of loud lamentations
his physical, bodily death,
death
man
dead
the
benefit
to
gain a right impression of the range to be covered by the scenes
an Egyptian normally passed after the conclusion of
sculptured
human
his
intervention.
In order that in the Passage
upon the
in
Burial-chamber where he was entombed
in the
Correspondingly, the wall-paintings of Passage and
solitude.
Shrine deal only with Amenemhet's future relationships (funeral
open
or less
(3)
The
great funeral procession and the service at the
principal events of the
mouth
of the shaft, both
1
See Bissing-Bruckmann, Denhnalcr agyptischcr Sculptur, PI. 18b, with the text thereto.
2
In addition to the evidence collected by Griffith, Stories of the High Priests of Memphis, pp. 29-30, compare number the passage from unpublished stelae of the Eighteenth Dynasty quoted below, p. 56.
for this 3 4
are
W'b-t, or more fully w'b-t nt Pr-nfr, "the place of purification of the Good House"; ef. PI. XXIX, 1. 47. In the unpublished tomb of Pepionkh at Meir (Old Kingdom), later to be edited b}' Mr. Blackman, there
interesting
/ **$
pictures of
v\
p.
the procession to the workshop of " escorting to the
workshop
of the
the embalmer
;
the superscription
reads
See in Maspero, Memoire sur qnelques Papyrus du Louvre, the essay on the Bituel
cle
G
Only in certain tombs
unpublished,
Amenemope
(no. 41), for
which
cf.
the
Nineteenth Dynasty, as that of Thoy
Cailliaud, Arts
et
i
\\
i
I
n
embalmer."
5
of
:
Metiers, PI. 8.
(no.
23),
I'Embaumement.
and that of
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
46
shown
regularly
the paintings of Theban tombs of the Tuthmoside age
in
together with the
;
former were figured a number of ceremonies, the meaning and occasion of which have not yet
been determined, but which at
marked the beginning of a new phase
burial-shaft
we must never
was regarded
forget,
who
priestly officiants
employer,
events preceded the final interment.
all
and
certain
particular calendrical feast-days.
dead noble, who, as
in the existence of the
The children of the deceased and the had still to nourish their departed parent and front of his false door both daily and on
immortal.
as
acted as their substitutes
accomplish
to
The closing of the
(4)
in
rites
Representations of this subsequent funerary cult are usually
painted on the side-walls of the cult-chamber or Shrine. Such, then, are the events and practices with which the frescoes of the Passage and Shrine
must normally
Besides
deal.
these
there
adoring one or other of the sepulchral
usually
will
deities,
i.e.
Osiris,
separate chambers
— the
rough distinction
may
to,
West
—
in
tombs which have these two
the interment of the
borne in mind, however, that this general statement
;
Anubis, or the Goddess of the
be drawn, that the Passage
preceding, and the Shrine to events subsequent
plan
man
Between the paintings of the Passage and Shrine
(Hathor).
tombs
found pictures of the dead
be
to
is liable
many
and two- chambered tombs are abundant, and
one- chambered
Even
remarks can obviously not apply. circumstances or caprice
may
lead
to
in
exceptions.
It
must be
The Theban
in these, of course, the
the typical Tuthmoside tomb
variations from
the
ideal
1
;
above
with three rooms,
For
scheme here described.
may be unwilling to omit some typical scene of hunting scene, and yet may not find room for it in the Hall in a case in question may be crowded out into the Passage, where its intrusive the artist
:
mummy.
not only in the arrangement of their mural paintings, but also in their
differ greatly,
example
devoted to events
is
daily
life,
such as the
of this kind the scene
presence will dislocate
the normal arrangement of the other paintings.
South Wall, Outer Portion: The Journey by River to Abydos. It frequently
of the Passage
happens
the opposite wall on the right
mummy
XII.)
three-chambered tombs of the ordinary type that the
in
adorned with scenes of funerary
is
(PI.
hand
is
rites
left
wall
and of the funeral procession, while
devoted to representations of the
final
ceremonies in
"Opening the Mouth." 2 Together with the former series of paintings is usually, but not always [e.g. tomb of Menna, no. 69) associated a nautical subject, namely that of the voyage to Abydos so in the tomb of our Amenemhet. Before any attempt is made to explain the meaning of this scene, its details must first be
front of the
known
as the ritual of
;
examined. craft, in
1
In the top register a large sailing-boat has just arrived in port, towing a lighter
which are seen the white swathed figures of Amenemhet and his wife seated under an
For instances
of this see above, p. 31, footnote 3.
Funerary ceremonies and journey to Abydos on left wall, rites of " Opening the Mouth " on right wall see tombs 11, 17, 21, 53, 78, 81, 100, 104. Both series together on left wail: see tombs 42, 84, 147. The tomb (no. 60) 2
:
of the Vizier
for its graffiti
who lived in the reign of Sesostris I (Twelfth Dynasty), may have provided the model, have been much visited and greatly admired at the beginning of the Eighteenth Dynasty and journey to Abydos occur together on the left wall of the long entrance corridor, but
Antefoker,
show
it
to
here the funerary rites
there are no scenes of the ceremonies in front of the
the ceremonies before the
mummy
on the right-hand
mummy. wall.
In tomb 69 the journey to Abydos accompanies
—
—
THE TOMB OP AMENEMHET.
47
awning.
In the foremost boat a couple of sailors are engaged in furling the
the prow
is
them
there
is
leaning over the side
is
The rest of the crew have been by rowing, but they have already dropped their oars one and filling a jug with water to slake his thirst. Midships ;
an ornate cabin, and the elaborate decoration of the rudder
eyes on the latter probably were
placed
the
there for
same reason
is
as
also
eyes
Chinese junks, namely in order to enable them to see where they are going.
Amenemhet and his wife, behind this man is a table
has, besides the figures of
a piece of white cloth
;
1
to a pair of steering-oars. "
Coming
in peace
and prosperous
way
to sail
red bull that "
painted
on
The second boat
A
sailor at the stern
attends
:
seat, his
journey having been successful
has been given justification."
in just the opposite direction, are the
not in use, but the sailors are plyiug their oars
brandishes his
are
the
;
same two boats on
their
Since they are faring with the stream and against the prevailing north wind,
Abydos. is
moving
whom
noticeable
prow who holds outstretched
in the
of offerings.
from Abydos, the god resting on the great
In the second register,
the
man
a
The superscription reads
done by the scribe Amenemhet, to
;
but the reis at
giving orders to the steersman at the helm.
still
assisting the progress of the vessel
of
sail,
flail
obedience to the reis
who
replaced
by a
In the second boat the table of offerings
over their heads.
Here the heading runs
being slaughtered.
is
lustily, in
is
:
Faring northward in peace to Abydos in order to ferry across the god in his festivals and in his sailing
of the beginning of the year
whom
is
done by the overseer, reckoner of the grain, Amenemhet, and his wife Baket, to
;
given justification."
To what
reality
and
what conceptions do these representations correspond
to
?
Until the
anew only a provisional answer can be given to these questions. 2 The inscriptions show that a visit to Abydos was intended, where the deceased should take part in the festivals of Osiris. Looked at from an external point of view, this journey is a sort of pilgrimage to the holiest spot in Egypt, but there are indications that something more than a mere participation in the ceremonies of an honoured god was meant the dead man himself was identified with Osiris, and the purpose may have been to confirm and ratify this identification by causing him to enjoy the same rites as the god. Such an explanation seems suggested by the materials are collected and sifted
;
words, " the god resting on his great seat, his sailing having been prosperous."
wording of the phrase, "to "justified,"
may
whom
has been given justification,"
Note the three
little
when
heads at the level of the deck
;
his title
Also the unusual
instead of the simple epithet
point in the same direction, as "justification" appears here to
tion of Osiris before his judges in Heliopolis,
1
3
mean
the legitima-
was maliciously contested by Seth. 4
they are probably ornamental parts of the boat, like
the similar heads at the ends of the steering-oars. 2
Hitherto the only detailed study seems to have been that of M. Maspero {Etudes egyptiennes, Paris, 1879, 118 foil.). mistaken etymology led M. Maspero into thinking that the purpose of the journey was to
A
vol. I, pp.
enable the soul of the departed to pass into the "West through a cleft in the mountains (pg», pkr) near Abydos. Prof. Schiifer has shown (Zeitschrift fur dgypt. Sprache, vol. 41 [1904], pp. 107-110) that W-plcr, "the region of the tree
ph;" was
really the
name
of the burial-place of Osiris at
3
So again Tylor, Tomb of Benni,
4
The
epithet
suggestion that
it
_
ma'khrow,
lit.
" true
of
voice,"
is
certainly a juridical
term
;
M. Maspero's much-quoted
refers to the correct pitch of the voice in intoning religious formulae is contrary to the evidence.
Further investigation
is,
however, required to determine the reasons for
for the reason stated in the text, but later the expression
before Osiris.
Abydos.
PI. 9.
may have
its
application to the dead;
I fancy
it
is
alluded to the deceased's acquittal at his trial
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
48
It is well
beheld
the
Professor
known
passion
Erman
*
is
of
as
Osiris,
was dramatically represented at
it
at
itself
what moment did
that fares
in
having
festivals.
probably right in seeing in the posthumous journey depicted in the tombs
many
the belated acquittal of a duty or meritorious act which
But
Abydos and the Abydene
that living Egyptians took pride in having visited
down
to
journey take place
this
tomb
In a
?
accomplished during their
Hasan
at Beni
Abydos "to become acquainted with the matters
2
the
it is
mummy
Abydos";
of
life.
in this
and
case the voyage naturally took place after the completion of the process of mummification
mummy
neither the is
Amenemhet and
In the tomb of
before the interment.
nor yet a living personage that
is
Theban tombs, however,
in other
depicted in the wall-paintings
it
is
nor again
;
there any sufficient reason for interpreting the white tightly swathed figures as those of statues.
The
probability therefore
is
that at this period the voyage to
Abydos had no
but was replaced by a mere pictorial representation on the tomb-wall.
objective reality,
3
South Wall, Middle and Eastern Portions Funeral Ceremonies. (Pis. X, XI, XII, and XIII.) :
rites
and comparison of
similar
collection necessity.
and in
and ceremonies next to be described
Equally problematical are the
Meanwhile
all
is
M. Virey's work on the tomb of Rekhmere,
to
here, too, the
the
is
first
a tiresome sequence of conjectures
yet published
series of parallel representations 4
and
which but a few are published,
all that can be offered to the reader
The most complete
queries.
scenes, of
;
which constant reference
will
found
to be
is
be made.
The
comparison of the few representations yet published from Thebes and elsewhere proves that no
which the individual
significance can be attached to the order in clear that in
most
cases,
a selection of the total
The three upper
tomb by
and perhaps even
number
for the
c
West
life.
it
is
further
of Rekhmere, only
rites are flanked
towards the interior of the
(PI. X), the general is
The
movement
of the scenes
indicated as usual by the hieroglyphic fillet
inscription reads
:
—
;
in her
hands are
.
Spoken by the Western Desert steward who reckonest the grain, thou scribe Amenemhet, twice-welcome Verily in peace, that I may embrace thee and enfold thee in my arms, and command life [for thy ]. will be a protection to thy flesh, and my arms shall encircle thee for ever and ever." :
me
In these words the arrival of the
convenient therefore
1
3
p.
complex of
ankh, or symbol of
and
;
tomb
shown.
The identity of the goddess
"
I
is
West, which she bears upon her head attached to a red
the wa.s-sceptre and the
to
this
a large figure of the Goddess of the
being in her direction.
symbol
of ceremonies
registers of
occur
rites
in the extensive series in the
first
Aegyptischc Beligion
2 ,
of
all
mummy
tomb
at the
to pick out those scenes
2
p. 153.
is
clearly foreshadowed,
it will
be
which are definitely connected with the
Newberry, Beni Hasan,
Further points to be noted in this wholly provisional discussion are:
124, note 1) to various nautical scenes in tombs of the Old
and
Kingdom may
(1)
I,
PI.
29 (Twelfth Dynasty).
M. Maspero's
references (op.
eit.,
refer to analogous funerary journeys,
but do not actually depict that to Abydos none of them names Abydos, which at this time was only in course of becoming the sacred city of Osiris that it later grew to be, and a few are clearly secular scenes. (2) In tomb 147 at Thebes a journey to Busiris is depicted beside the journey to Abydos, as also in Newberry, Beni Hasan, I, For more suggestions on this topic see below, p. 57 and p. 116. Pis. 14, 1G. ;
4
Ph. Virey, Le Tombeau
tie
ReJchnara
=
Mem.
Miss. arch, franc, au Caire,
tome V,
fascicule
1.
—
—
—
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
In tombs of a somewhat later date, such as that of Haremhab, 1 the funeral
funeral procession.
procession
depicted more
is
49
consecutively and in greater detail than in the early Tuthmoside
tombs, and from there and elsewhere our description could be greatly amplified.
mummy
The
lies
on a bed under an ornate canopy that has been placed upon a sledge (PI. XII, third row) the " great kite " and the " little kite," 2 as the women impersonating Isis and Nephthys are called, ;
Two
stand respectively at the head and at the foot of the hearse as chief mourners.
draw the hearse
XI, third row), and over them are the words
(PI.
" Praise is given in the sky,
and jubilation in the Underworld.
High
is
red oxen
:
3
thy might, even as great
are thy
4
monuments. Making a [goodly] burial for the scribe who reckons the grain, Amenemhet, justified; causing the god to ascend unto his horizon, conducting him to the shaft of the Necropolis in peace, in peace, beside the Proceeding
great god.
to the hall ssm-t
arms
in peace to the sky, to the horizon, to the Field-of-Eeeds (Sfyt 'Ilrw), to the Underworld,
or to the place wherever (?)
(?),
The driver
5
he
is."
of the oxen holds an improvised
6
whip of leaves
are mourners belonging to the general public, or as the
all the
Behind them again are
mastaba of the
may
lines,
like figure
Old Kingdom. 8 be rendered
Spoken by the
courtiers.
the funeral procession
10
accompanying inscription (PL XII, bottom
in the
;
hands
carries a
(ed.
Birch), i
is
incense and pouring
wand and whose name
is
given as
the inscription, here divided into several sections, each of
;
the tomb, receiving offerings (pwt)
[to]
Amenemhet,
XI and XII
among
the great ones in
justified."
number
are to be seen a
of servants carrying furniture
mummy.
They
too formed part of the
tomb of Haremhab they precede the hearse. Most of the shown upon the painted coffins of the Middle Kingdom, and
scene from the
vol. Ill,
PI. 66, opposite p. 444.
^ V\ ^^
"'
rw ci and
the falcon, but in certain
head, and
of)
from which the funeral procession has been reproduced by Wilkinson, Manners and Customs
no. 78,
a V\
ifr
burning
depicted in connection with the funeral procession in a
is
Proceeding
objects they bring resemble those
Tomb
(a
:
9
Pis.
who
priest
making
and ornaments destined to be buried together with the
1
These
hearse.
7
Behind the hearse were represented various men of high rank,
of the Osiris
In the top row of
procession
with
folk are dragging."
a lector-priest "
first
their staves of office in their
"
common
and second a closely mantled
"the great servant"; a
two
men
followed by two
:
"All the patricians and
libations,"
is
and by others whose hands are on the ropes of the
uplifted in lamentation,
right) says
he
;
Theban tombs,
e.g.
The bird
.
no.
1, it
dryt
is
apparently
Tpe
lacks the characteristic
milvus
;
in form
it closely
plumage and markings
resembles
of the falcon's
painted a reddish-brown colour. n
3
Read
4
For the following words
G
The text
of
7
9
10
JL)
Cf.
Tylok,
Q |
is
Tyloe, Tomb of Paheri (Eg. Expl. Fund),
Amenemhet seems
Probably, however, ntf im
~®~
cf.
is
^3? ty-'
^""^
for sms wd,\ the technical
name
perhaps
is
[r]
jj
bw
pn
im,
PL
13, top left.
Lepsius, Benkm., II, PI. 101
substituted for smr[w], "friends."
of the funeral procession.
ntr
V\ wdL
P>hry pn im. 6
where smsw, "followers,"
5
PI. 2.
(b).
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
50
them have been found in actual burials. The first attendant holds in his hands (PI. XI) two white statuettes of the King with the red crown of Lower Egypt upon his head. Then come two more statuettes with red bodies, white loin-cloths, and yellow maces and batons. A white
many
of
vessel-stand with yellow vessels
hand grasps a green
left
is
next seen, borne on the shoulders of an attendant, who in his Farther along four chests are being brought, the
'Mas-sceptre.
lids of
which arc secured by a sealed string attached to pins on the lid itself and on the adjoining sides. order that the spectator
In
them
what
learn
in the chests, their contents are depicted
is
were two white loin-cloths of the kind known as shendoyet,
in the first chest
;
may
vulture pectorals, one of gold painted yellow and one of lapis painted blue
were an inlaid blue object
circlet for the hair,
above
and two
in the second chest
;
an inlaid gold pair of bracelets, a yellow
flail,
and another
the third chest (PI. XII) was a gold signet-ring with a blue signet, together with
in
;
1
another inlaid bracelet, two necklets of blue, red and green, and a tassel-like pendant of the same colours
the fourth chest contained another loin-cloth as before, a golden hawk-head surmounted
;
by the
two of those curious jointed and
solar disk,
the phonetic hieroglyph
To the
J
for ris, " to awake,"
procession
funeral
immediately below the
who
evident that the central parts of the
by the voyage
left
the
small
lector (PI.
first
rise to
the figures
three registers on Pis.
second
the
in
and thus
;
XI and
register
becomes
it
XII, bounded to the
belong together and were meant to be looked at as a whole.
all
under a canopy which
coffer
which have given
(?)
shields.
funerary furniture
the
carry
wood
Abydos, and to the right by representations of mysterious and pro-
to
blematical ceremonies,
and
two
lastly
undoubtedly belong
also
attendants
tied pieces of
XI) contain the Canopic jars?
Did drawn upon a sledge by three men preceded by a
is
The
probability of this seems considerable, but the
2
The bearers represent the inhabitants of certain cities which were in some way concerned with the mythical burial of Osiris, and are often mentioned in this connection 3 this is proved by the accompanying inscriptions, which are as follows proof
lacking.
is
;
:
Beside the lector "
:
Said by the lector
ye people of Pe
:
4
Dep
(Buto),
Unu
(another part of Buto),
(Behbet), Sais, and Het-urt-kau (unknown), ye thousand of Pe, ye thousand of
comes, do
him reverence
(Hermopolis), Neter
and
all folk
the sledge o are the words
Your hands upon your ropes
This
:
!
man
of a crouching in the
is
of Menthirkhopshef
1
Coptic yeiiTto.
In the tombs of
Paheri
6
Some
4
interesting but highly obscure scenes
suggested to M. Maspero that a primitive
and Rekhmere
this
coffer
is
carried
by means
of
human
poles
sacrifice
was
on the shoulders
of
men.
3 So e.g. already in the Middle Kingdom, Newberry, El Bershch, Antefoker (no. 60).
6
whom
proved by various representations to consist
concealed beneath an ox-hide.
2
several
of
tomb
men
after
dragging on another sledge a black object of ill-defined
the much-discussed tekenu, which
is
the god
"
Behind the sledge are two "courtiers" with long-stalked papyrus blossoms, (PL XII, second row) come other shape.
;
5
!
men who draw
In front of the "
"
,
Read CZZJ See the
©
new
;
CH
is
an error for D
publication of this
tomb
in
5
For the
II,
PI.
last words, cf.
9,
no. 8
Virev,
N. de G. Davies, Five Theban Tombs.
;
and
PI. 23,
in the
Theban tomb
middle register.
—
—
—
:
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET. here alluded
would take us too
much
to
later
age had substituted an ox.
1
evidence proves
the
here to state that
Suffice it
have been a regular feature of the funeral procession.
extremely obscure
It
far afield to discuss afresh this difficult problem, that has already given rise
and ill-founded speculation.
loose
the tekenu to
which the more humane habits of a
for
to,
51
The superscription
is
:
"Dragging the tekenu by the people of Ked(?) and the northern nomes (??) " 2 by the
sl-srkt (7)-priest,
and coming
going forth
in (?) four times
On
tomb the cortege was welcomed by dancers, often depicted with curious conical head-dresses and known as the Muu. 3 These, though without the usual head-dress, are shown in their proper place in the tomb of Amenemhet (PL XI, middle row), the scene being described as " the dance of the Muu." Overhead is the further description entrance to the
arrival at the
its
:
Dancing 4
"
A
him by the people
to
of Pe."
more sedate welcome was given by a
of papyrus (PL XI, third row). "
and
Said by the lector
this is
"
and reads from a long
stands
roll
words :—
half- intelligible
5
:
they have done reverence to the scribe
(?)
who
some but
his head are
Eeceive
:
what he reads
"Arrival after
Over
lector-priest
who reckons
the grain of Amiin, [Amenemhet,
justified].
" Praise
"
The god
how
(?),
to the steward of the Vizier,
and shines as
arises in his Palace
the
him
god, in raising
to thee,
" Prostration is "
Amenemhet, justified. Amenemhet, Ee himself, Amenemhet, justified. Amenemhet, justified.
in joy, for the chief of the weavers [of Amiin],
"Hail(?)
pure unto thee, arising in
Ennead
rejoices
at
justified.
,
thy beauty, to
the
overseer
of
the
ploughed lands, Amenemhet,
justified. "
The gods on
their banners arise for thee in the Broad-hall, for the
scribe of the Vizier,
Amenemhet,
justified. "
Probably these are
the
openings of well-known
transcription of which the wall-space
1
tomb
This of
is
tomb
The
was not
tomb
particularly clear in the
Shetepebre (Quibell, Bamesseum,
Mystvres egyptiens, pp. 42 2
who
great Ennead, for the steward
Hail to thee,
counts the people, Amenemhet, justified."
paeans or hymns of praise, for the entire
sufficient.
Haremhab often quoted above, and For other evidence as to the thiw,
of
9).
also in the
I
(Ahmose) we
Middle Kingdom
references
in
Moret,
foil.
accompanying this scene usually begins with the words st> tlcnw these words alone in the For a close parallel to the corrupt text in our tomb, cf. in tomb no. 112 (Menkheperrasonb)
inscription
of Antefoker.
the
see
/wnaaa g
;
>
VO}
find similarly
(U J
%%
\
g§
I
vr
Vo*
the ,. .,, The second time with) " I open thy mouth
4.)
J
(^v
with the dua'-wer."
open for thee
" I
its
thy mouth with the adze
opened."
is
sem-priest."
to follow the scenes already described,
(Scene
l
scenes at the extreme right end of the preserved portion of the upper
(Scene
:
sera-priest."
The second time with the
" I
The legends read
now
mr-f)."
(si
"Introducing the Beloved Son into the interior of the tomb."
SCHIAPARELLI,
Cf.
Op.
Cit.,
Vol. I,
pp. 125-126.
The Beloved Son now takes the the
mummy
and
later with a finger
(Scene
first
"
6.)
"
(Scene
made
The Beloved Son." The first time with the mdtf-t
SCHIAPARELLI,
op. cit.,
Next four white the lips of the
depicted opening the
of refined gold (shown as yellow).
"
Cf.
is
mouth and eyes
of
with a chisel-like instrument (mdtf-t) with green blade and salmon -red handle,
"The Beloved Son." The second time with
7.)
and
initiative,
vol.
I,
pp. 127
The longer
of iron.
Pressing the
the finger of refined gold.
slab-like objects
mummy.
:i
b-t),
texts
mouth
:
four times."
Pressing the mouth four times."
foil.
c
(
Legends
probably chips of limestone, are held out towards
seem
to associate this action with the
opening of the
eyes and the moving of the mouth, but the next ceremony has to do with " fastening the jaws
1
The meaning
-
Perhaps scene
the instrument 3
A
of 1
vlF here
is
quite obscure to me.
should be numbered scene 2 and
dua'-ioer,
vice versa,
against the general direction of the scenes.
not sib-wer, see Pyramid Texts, 1329.
small lacuna for
\f*\
should be shown beneath
d. I
2
For
THE TOMB OF AMENEMHET.
60
which were severed."
cannot help thinking that the white slabs must be symbolical of teeth,
I
and that the action represents the giving of new teeth (Scene
Cf.
8.)
"
The Beloved Sou."
"
Eeceiving the four slabs
SCHIAPARELLI,
Op.
tit.,
moving the mouth,
('b-t),
139
vol. I, pp.
Beloved Son.
exit of the
the deceased.
First
we
opening the mouth,
rites,
which include the second
now proceed
Various priests
9.)
"
The
all at
once
1
SCHIAPARELLI,
which he
there comes the ?ims-cloth with
Op. tit.,
and anointing of
to the clothing
mummy
:
Horus) clad the gods."
(scil.
At the beginning
This concludes the series of rites belonging to the lower register.
preserved seem clearly out of place
— they
;
and
since the first
are those above described as
much damaged "
representation of the giving of unguent have
[I
Cf. SCHIAPARELLI, Op.
tit.,
Scenes 3 and 4
—
it
is
There
:
thy face] with unguent."
filled
vol. II, pp.
The next scene upon the wall
of the
two that are
impossible to conjecture with any certainty the nature of those that have disappeared.
(Scene 10+ai.)
an ox
sacrifice of
Vol. II, p. 11.
upper register a considerable number of vignettes must be lost
follows a
(?)."
sera-priest."
"
Cf
:
see, or should have seen had not the picture been hopelessly damaged,
the .s^m-priest offering a particular kind of head-gear (nms) to the (Scene
Headings
foil.
The tomb of Amenemhet omits the following and the
to the deceased.
42
foil.
one which in the manuscripts precedes that last described
is
:
a "courtier" presents linen garments to the deceased: (Scene
11+ a.)
"The
courtier."
"Clothing with linen. Cf.
SCHIAPARELLI,
Op. tit.,
The tomb
Amenemhet
of
and passes quickly on
by the courtier
Vol. II, pp.
to the
Horus and the gods clothed him with
23
foil.
dispenses with
banquet
(their) girdle (?)."
further consideration of the
all
The
itself.
first
item of this
mummy's
toilet,
the presentation of bread
is
:
(Scene 12 + x.)
"The
courtier."
"Presentation of bread of the Broad Hall of Re." Cf.
SCHIAPARELLI,
(p.
tit.,
vol. II, p. 159.
The following vignette must have shown the (Scene 13
+x)
" "
The prophet." Making [offering
of incense
?]
;
offering of incense
Horus
[offers ?] to thee
:
>