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English Pages 198 Year 1905
ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF EGYPT Edited
by
LL.
F,
GRIFFITH
FO UB TEENTH MEMOIR
THE EOCK TOMBS OF
EL
AMARNA
PAET II.-THE TOMBS OF PANBHESY AND MBEYRA
II.
BY
DE G.
N.
DAVIES
FORTY-SEVEN PLATES
LONDON SOLD AT
Thk OE'FICEH of
the EGYPT EXPLORATION FUND,
37,
Gkeat Kussell Street, W.O.
AND PiJSECE Building, CoTley Square, Boston, Mass., U.8.A.
AND BY B.
KECJAN PAUL, TiiENOH, TBUBNBK & CO., Dkvden House, 43, Gerrakd Stkeei, 80110. W. QUARITCH, 15, Piccadilly, W. ASHER & Co., 13, BEOfoKD Street, Oovent Garden, W.C. ;
AND
HENEY
I'llOWDE, Amen Corner, E.G. PJOO
College of
Ar^tectuie Library
OforncU Itttuccsitg atljata,
.
ffitbtatg
Kew ^nrk
A.-'o&i^^- 'o^^ J-j-
Cornell University Library
DT 62.T6D3 V.2
The rock tombs
of El
Amarna
...
3 1924 020 525 352
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original of this
book
is in
the Cornell University Library.
There are no known copyright
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ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF EGYPT Edited by
F.
LL.
GRIFFITH
FOURTEENTH MEMOIR
THE EOCK TOMBS OF
EL AMAENA PAET II.-THE TOMBS OE PANEHESY AND MEEYEA
II.
BY
DAVIES
DE G.
N.
FORTY-SEVEN PLATES
LONDON SOLD AT
The offices OF
THE EGYPT EXPLOEATION FUND, AND PlEKCE
AND BY B.
BiriLDING,
37,
Great Eussbll Street, W.G.
CoPLEY SQUAHE, BoSTON, MASS., U.S.A.
KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TEUBNBR & CO., Dryden House, 43, Gerbaud Street, Soho, W, ASHER & Co., 13, Bedford Street, Covent Garden, W.C. 15, Piccadilly, W. AND HENRY FROWDB, Amen Corner, E.G.
QCTARITCH,
;
MH
1905
.
UUIVI
I
vY
LONDON:.
PRINTED BY GIIBEET AND BITINGTON IIMITBD, ST.
JOHN'S HOtrSE, OIEBKBNWEIiL.
EGYPT EXPLOEATION FUND. ©tesiOent.
SIE
JOHN EVANS,
K.C.B., D.C.L., LL.D., P.E.S., V.P.S.A.
IDiccaipreet&ents.
The Et. Hon. The Eael op Ceomee, G.C.B G.C.M.G., K.C.S.I. (Egypt). Geneeal Loed Gebnfell, G.C.B. G.C.M.G The Hon. Chas. L. Hutchinson (U.S.A.). SiK E. Maunde-Thompson, K.C.B., D.C.L. Peof. G. Maspbeo, D.C.L. (Prance). ,
LL.D.
Peof. Ad. Eeman, Ph.D. (Germany).
The Eev. Peof.
A. H. Sayce, M.A.,
LL.D
Josiah Mullens, Esq. (Australia).
fcon. trreasuters.
H. A. Gbuebek, Esq., E.S.A.
Gaednee M. Lane, Esq.
(U.S.A.).
1bon. Secretaries. J. S.
Cotton, Esq., M.A.
Members T.
H. Baylis, Esq., M.A., K.C., V.D.
0. P. J.
MoBEELY Bell, Esq.
E. Caetee, Esq. (U.S.A.).
SoMEES Claeke, Esq., P.S.A. W. E. Ceum, Esq., M.A. Louis Dyee, Esq., M.A. (for U.S.A. Com"'). Aethub John Evans, Esq., M.A., P.E.S. Peof. Eenest A. Gaednee, M.A. P. Ll. Gbiffith, Esq., M.A., P.S.A.
Albeet M. Lythgoe, Esq.
(U.S.A.).
of Committee.
The Ebv. W. MacGeegoe, M.A. C.
MoIlvaine, Esq. (U.S.A.).
The Maequbss of Noethampton, Peancis
Wm.
Peecival, Esq., M.A., P.S.A.
Hilton Peice, Esq., Die.S.A. SiE Heebeet Thompson, Baet. Mes. Tieaed. Emanuel M. Undebdown, Esq., K.C. John Wabd, Esq., P.S.A. P. G.
TowBY Whytb,
P. G. Kenyon, Esq., M.A., Litt.D.
E.
Peof. Alexandee Macalistee, M.D.
Majoe-Genebal Sie Chaelbs W. Wilson,
Mes. McCluee.
Esq., M.A., P.S.A.
K.C.B., K.C.M.G., P.E.S.
CONTENTS PAGE
List of Plates
Chapter
The Site op the Northern Tombs.
I.
3.
The Site The smaller tombs The stone dwellings
4.
Quarries, surface burials, &c.
4
5.
The roads The chronology
5
1
2.
6.
Chapter
vii
II.
The Tomb
1 1
4
.
.... tombs
of the
6
oe Panehesy.
A. Architectural Features.
5.
The The The The The
6.
Coptic remains
1.
2. 3.
4.
Exterior
9
Hall
9
.
Inner Chamber
11
Shrine
11
Sculpture
.
11
.
11
B. The Sculptured Scenes. 1.
2. 3.
13
16
.
4.
„
South portal
5.
„
S. wall,
6.
„
7.
„
E. wall
8.
„
N".
9.
„
„
W.
side
E. side
N. portal
.
16
.
17
.
C.
The
.
The
19 19
.
W. wall „ 11. The Thickness of the partition wall Shrine, B. wall
15
17
wall
10.
12.
13
The Entrance Portal The Thickness of the outer wall The HaU. Architraves and abaci
20 28
.
28
.
29
Religious Texts.
2.
The longer prayers The shorter prayers.
3.
Burial petitions
1.
30 31
CONTENTS.
Chapter
III.
The Tomb of Meryra
(IL) PAGE
A. Architectural Features 1.
2. 3. 4.
B.
The Sculptured 1.
2.
C.
....
The exterior The HaU The Inner Chambers The Sculpture
33
S*
Scenes.
3.
„
„
4.
„
E. wall
5.
„
N. wall
E. side .
.
34
34 36 38 43
Texts.
44
1.
The longer prayers
2.
A shorter prayer
45
Prayers on the architraves
45
3.
Index
33
.
The thickness of the outer wall The HaU, S. wall, W. side
The Religious
33
.
46
LIST OF PLATES WITH REFERENCES TO THE PAGES ON WHICH THEY ARE DESCRIBED
PLATE I.
II.
III.
IV.
V. VI. VII. VIII.
IX.
X. XI. XII. XIII.
XIV.
XV. XVI. XVII. XVIII.
XIX. 'XX.
XXI. XXII. XXIII.
XXIV.
XXV. XXVI. XXVII; XXVIII.
XXIX.
XXX. XXXI.
LIST OF PLATES. PLATE
XXXII. XXXIII.
W.
S. wall.
,,
.,
XXXY.
„
„
,,
,,
Key
E. wall.
XXXVIII.
The bystanders Meryra welcomed home plate
Tribute of the East
XL. XLII.
5)
N. Wall.
Tombs
Lower registers Meryra rewarded
1a, 1b, &c.
Plans
3a, 3c, 3d.
Plans Plans
XL III.
,,
XLIV.
„
3b, 3e, 6c.
„
3f, 6b.
XLV.
.
Tribute of the South
XXXIX. XLI.
Key plate On the balcony
B. side.
„
XXXIV. XXXVI. XXXVII.
The King drinking
side.
XLVI. *Tomb XLVII. *
Plans
of Meryra „
ii.
The
hall
Sculptures * Photographic plates.
33,
THE
EOCK TOMBS OF EL AMAENA, PART
II.
CHAPTEE
I.
THE SITE OF THE NORTHERN TOMBS. The
As has been
northern group of tombs at El
Amarna
the N.B. side of the desert plain (Plate hills
here are
cleft
down the waters rains,
lies
on
The
i.).
by a ravine which brings
of the
occasional torrential
formerly of enormously greater volume
than now.
The range
at this point
is
not
lofty,
only reaching an elevation of about 280 feet
above the level of the
Tomb
the former volume, the
in
said
The Smaller Tombs.
Site.
plain,
and dipping some-
The earlier tombs of the group are
6c.
those furthest to
(No.
1 of
tombs
6,
for
separate notice.
Near No.
6
presents
it
A
quality,
flint-like boulders,
and contains enormous
which, freed from the rocks
by denudation, cover the level heights above, It
like fallen fruit.
ject to weathering,
is
in
most places very sub-
and many of the rock
have almost disappeared under The stratification of the range approaching the
vertical,
this
has
stelae
process.
a
dip
and the weakness thus
given to the surface of the tomb walls has caused
much
injury to the sculptures.
The
at this
cliff
and a
little to
the
of that
The rock-hewn tombs naturally lie at the meeting of the two, a little more than half-way up (approximately 150 feet for No. 5). The limebad
Panehesy
tomb a small rock-chamber, provided with both doorway and window, has been hewn left
to lash
of
of
a curious appearance
(Plate XXV.), for well above
slope of looser rock (see photograph, Plate xxiv.).
is
tomb
begin,
shall
point tends to a sheer face or even overhangs.
in the unscalable I'ock.
stone
the
Lepsius), leaving this and other large
what on both sides to the wady. It affords, as more or less abrupt face for the upper half of its height, and for the lower a steep footusual, a
We
the east.
No.
therefore, with
As
the
even from the mounds below,
it
sill
is
24
feet
was necessary
two ladders together to effect an entrance.
small irregular chamber some six feet high
was found, devoid (Plate xliv.).
of
There
made
this is probable,
even
who
made
afterwards
or graffiti
nothing to prove that the
is
excavation was
inscriptions
for purposes of burial, if it
be of late date.
Those
a dwelling-place of
a very neat and serviceable
but
it
window with
cut
con-
The need for it may have been due to a partition of the room, of which
verging sides and top.
there are some traces.
Brick houses beneath
perhaps rendered this retreat more accessible
than now, but
it
is
to the full height,
unlikely that they reached
and holes which pierce the B
THE ROCK TOMBS OF EL AMARNA. The
by a rope-ladder or some such means.
shows the cartouches of Aten, flanked by those of the king and queen, and
In any case the place must have been singularly
apparently also by the figure and prayer of the
The excavation seems to have been effected by cutting broad vertical grooves and then breaking away the intervening mass. 6d. Another small and very similar cham-
deceased.
corners of the door- cheek indicate that ascent was
the
secure.
ber
is
found on the ground level a
right of No. affords
It
6.
to the
little
has a window and
also
no proof of use as a tomb.
a
6b, 6a.
short distance westward are two
much
so
below
it.
The
latter (6 a) has
been
altered in later times that its original
and shape are quite
lost. The former has a promising doorway, but the interior is un-
size
finished.
still
king
On
be read,
A recess in the left hand wall
is
a relic
"I give praise to " The open side of the forecourt has been built up with walls of piled stone to The
to consist has not
A
been given
preparation,
shaft
is
full
its
The mouth
finished at the N, end.
W.
was
height or
of the burial
depth of only a few feet admits to a
which
it
cut in a mastaba of rock, and at the
later days.
the Orient, with several
hurried
The transverse gallery of which
vault.
abode, as homes go
rooms, of which the original chamber was the inmost and most secure. part of the dwel-
shows
interior
directed primarily to the provision of a burial
the
Two
little
little
cham-
niches for lamps in
wall are relics of the domestic use to
this
and
3e (Plate
all
the other tombs were put in
xliv.)
the
is
first
of a
series
of
which a
neighbouring tombs cut in a low ledge of rock and facing a little west of south. It is of
(See Plates xxv.
irregular shape, just allowing standing room,
distance separates these from
niche in the wall outside dates from the time
was on an upper
level of rock, in
rude stairway has been
cut.
xlv.).
and contains no provision for burial,
A considerable
—
two horizons the living Aten
of the
"
ber on the east.
and
Life to the father
!
and regularly built walls of piled stone outside. These must have formed an excellent
solid
ling
—"
— the living Ea, ruler
of later occupation, as also are the exceptionally
iri
jamb god and
the upper part of the right
form a house.
other excavations, one in the cliff-face and one in the slope
can
lintel
A lamp-
the next tombs to the west, Nos. -5, 4 and 3 (of Pentu, Meryra, and Ahmes), which follow one another at some interval and without any
the same shape as the last and shows similar
dependent tombs of smaller
signs of incompleteness.
where the
cliff
is
size.
Beyond them,
much reduced
in
height,
a series of small tombs was cut in the slope
below
The
first
of these
(Plate xlv.) was not wholly uninscribed.
decoration of the portal
may
The
even have been
completed, but the weathering of the rock has us
little
3d
the court was (Plate
made
xliii.).
a dwelling-place.
This tomb
is
of
much
Later occupants have
fashioned a shelved recess 39 inches high in the south wall.
A
it.
3f (No. 5 of Lepsius).
left
when
of
it.
The type
ing a portal set in a wall,
succeeding tombs.
sometimes also the
of facade, represent-
repeated in
is
The projecting below
all
the
cornice, as
was often formed of stones cemented into a groove instead of being roll
cut in the living rock.
it,
3c (Plate xliii.). tomb of the corridor type with an inner chamber set transversely. Only the outer hall has been finished. The walls outside are rough, and, like those of its
neighbours, have no trace of inscription. walls inside are well laid out
good surface.
The
and finished to a
The
ceiling is highly vaulted near the doorway, but becomes almost flat at the N. end. There is a rough trench in the parallel to the W. wall and deepening towards the ends, which seems designed (cf. Part
floor,
THE SITE OP THE NORTHERN TOMBS. i.
A rough
pp. 12, 13).
the
W.
recess has been cut in
The doorway to the inner chamber
wall.
of which has
two cups
on the other by two
to hold water-jars
excavated in the floor
pits
The dimensions of only just allow them to
has not been completely excavated, and the inner
to the shape of sarcophagi.
room
these pseudo-cofiins
is
not more than begun, the upper part, as
usual, having been first attacked.
Drill holes
are noticeable at intervals in the floor
down
the
axis of the hall.
3b
(Plate
xliv.).
uninscribed tombs, last,
is
This,
of the
but of much larger
tethering staple has
been formed in the wall at the head of each. This seems accidental, this corner having been the stable of the inhabitants.
same type
doubt, was of
as the
The
proportions.
Again we have the arch
ceiling flattening
of the
A
bodies.
the finest of the
facade has suffered much, but apparently had
never been inscribed.
human
contain
towards the N. end
and
;
The
no
burial,
much later date than the tomb. Tomb of Rudu (Plates xlii., xxiv.).
1a.
This small chamber was never completed, the front and
upper parts being well
finished, while
the lower part of the walls and the back of the
ceil-
room are left in the rough. But although this tomb was abandoned by the owner without
ing for about the same distance, but not exactly
having been furnished with a place of interment,
and a trench near the "W. there
above
is
it.
I
In
wall.
also a corresponding
this case
groove in the
do not doubt that
it is
a construc-
tional error, utilized or concealed in the finished
tomb.
There are recesses on the
W.
side,
prob-
As
ably due to the removal of patching stones.
some usurper to scratch a
or his
name
of the
about six inches wide and narrows to the bottom. As the chamber was still extremely
For
is
no machine of any
and
gift
Two
difficulty
one
in the presence of the
Lord
Lands, and a good burial by the
(?) [of the king ?]^
Akhetaten
memorial of
faint
With
hopes.
deciphers"
room has not been begun. Evidence of the mode of removing the stone is It affbrded by a circular trench in the floor.
in 3c, the inner
him
the smoothed lintel outside enabled either
on the great
any favourite of Ua-en-ra
like
of
clifl"
(?).
the ha of Rudu."^
(?)
Scattered
Tombs.
—Besides
this
series
of
low on this be used, while the rough character of the groove
tombs along the
indicates hand-work,
passing through the gap, a
wady
will
3a (Plate xliii.) is now nothing more than Only a minimum of a tiny cave (uncleared). work can have been spent on it.
directly opposite
and two others Between that on the
to the right
and
left
side,
size
could
The four remaining tombs are on the W. side The two inscribed of the gap in the hills. tombs are hewn some distance beyond these in the
first
available slope
;
will be found
known
hill- side
there are a few of un-
date in the vicinity, within the
left.
ravine
central
is
and
1
two
deep.
by
6 feet
5,
From
It consists of a
is
and the
W.
hills.
a tomb with
chamber some
containing an oblong the E. and
On
be seen
a track ascending the
Slightly to the right of this path
a tiny doorway.
hills.
pit, 8 feet
ends of the pit
smaller chambers, excavated in a low ledge of rock, which is cut back deeply in each case for
two good-sized burial chambers are entered. Another tomb will be found at the first bend of
a width just sufficient to receive the portal. The excavation of the 1b (Plate xlii.).
the central wady, high
interior
is still
unfinished above and below.
seems to have been the intention to furnish
It
gap.
A
third
up the
and fourth
and facing the be found back to
cliff
will
back in a low ridge of rock to the right of the
it
with architraves, though without supporting columns. Evidence of subsequent occupation by two recesses, one is given on the one hand
'
Perhaps
2
Of. L. D., Text,
] ii.
p. 141.
THE EOOK TOMBS OF EL AMAENA.
the other consists of a chamber 7 feet square,
was for some time the abode of a population numbering several Security seems to have been a hundreds.
but only 2
matter of consideration, for some of the
That facing the gap
gap.
large but exces-
is
sively rough, perhaps a natural cave enlarged
;
feet high.
clear proof that this hill-side
colonies
The Stone Dwellings.
are
built
little
like birds' nests on ledges
of piled stone will be found marking out the
summit of the cliff, in spite of Even at the great inconvenience and danger. very end of the range, an hour's walk from the
rooms of what were once tolerable dwellings
river, I
In front of
of rock at the
the tombs just described, walls
all
They are generally considered
(Plate xlii.)
have been built
for
obviously not
convenience of the
the
workmen engaged on
the tombs, but
They would
so.
to
this is
in that case have
been cleared away as soon as the tomb was completed
and while
;
true that every
it is
ruined huts attached to
by a
any
it,
shelter afforded
fallen boulder, a natural cave, or
hanging ledge was built on to
it
also seized
upon
an over-
for a wind-
were
chambers
while roomier
tight retreat,
tomb has
to suit the occupants' fancy
and
Such constructions are found from end to end of this hill-side, and form colonies far
need.
Some
from any tomb.
are even placed on the
summit, notably a group above are
Tomb
by no means of the rudest
6.
They
kind, but occa-
way
found a large cave reached by a
lamps and the remains of coarse pottery showed plainly to have been the lonely
up
to
make a
level platform,
formed in the walls for domestic cases substantial
down
in slabs
;
and recesses In some
uses.
cement pavements were
and in
all
laid
the doorways in the
groups 3a to 3f a step of smoothly plastered bricks or stones terrent
Where
to
was
set,
perhaps
as
a
de-
snakes and scorpions.
wandering
the owner was fortunate enough to have
secured a tomb for his inmost chamber and a
rock-hewn court in which to shelter rooms, he cut holes in
beams, recesses for water-jars staples for tethering his
1
Cf. p. 3.
There
the rock-face between
is
^
and lamps, and
animals.
All this
is
hewn
in
a specially neat recess
Tombs
6 and 6b.
It
found 5.
raised on
retaining walls of natural boulders
and rough blocks of limestone, and covered with a solid pavement of slabs of cement.^
chamber hewn
in
the hill-side
A rough
serves for an
inner room, and a neat stairway, cut in the
summit just The whole is now much broken up. Although I have not found a single Coptic wall of rock, gives access to the above.
do not doubt that the
graffito in these houses, I ;
and
any one questions
if
number
of people living so
from water and in such eyries, he has only to visit the village of Deir Rifeh, near Assiout, far
where the spectacle may
still
be seen, even in
the security and civilization of these days.
sundered from the
life
of
mountain-dwellers that the use of limited to
mud
some buildings outside Tomb
was then their place of worship. according to Prof. Petrie,
is
So
Egypt were these
The
bricks 6,
is
which
pottery,
late Roman.'*
his outer
fa9ade to receive roof-
its
is
from No.
hill
Here, at great labour, a large platform has been
the probability of a
built
some
of
good example of the
on the opposite side of the
having been
walls
home
solid character of these constructions
builders were Copts
retaining
A
anchorite or refugee.
sionally represent a considerable expenditure of
labour, massive
stair-
which staples for pendant
cut in the rock,
forms a
rock-cut sideboard, having cups to hold six jars.
little
Quarries, Surface Burials, Etc.
The one
stela (V.)
on
this site
is so completely weathered away that only a few hieroglyphs remain. There is a small quarry of coarse
Sheikh Said,
3
Cf.
3
Peteie, T. A.,p.6.
p. 4.
THE SITE OF THE NOETPIERN TOMBS. wady behind No. 5, and surface numerous between Tomb ] and the
alabaster in the
quarries are
In one above No. 6 several loose blocks
river.
X
about 24
X
14
10
ins.
remain on the
spot.
In the quarry in which Queen Tyi's cartouche cut there
is
high up on a
also sculptured,
is
a doorway and a figure,
pillar of rock,
both
of the type characteristic of the period.
the
At
cliff.
are
site
on the summit of
burials
Petrie.^
prevented
completion.
several points on both sides of
Plate
hill,
some-
times with buttress walls or appended heaps of smaller
western
Most are wrecked, and one on the
size.
hill T foiind
of burial
open and
debris^ including
with a mass
filled
fragments of wooden stools and bowls
seem
on the
built
solid rock,
shaft,
is
an open
but the large amount of boulders round
seem to have been removed from the
it
and do not presuppose a Still
No.
They
(?).
and certainly merit
Behind No. 3
further examination.
and
leather,
cloth,
6,
more like
interesting
interior
cairn.
a cist-tomb, above
is
a diminutive
cromlech,
of
built
boulders and roofed with pieces of weathered
rock (Plate xxiv.).
by 69
ins,
It
measures only 93
outside, and about 24
ins. in
ins.
height,
only about 18
ins.
it
could scarcely contain a full-sized body.
It
is
built
and
as the interior breadth
on the rock, and
its
is
axis
is
due east and
west, the opening being to the east.
venture to claim an early date for
any case an interesting instance primitive
mode
any reason
fail
of burial
it,
I
but
do not it is
of recourse to a
when implements
and only
in
loose
for
stones are to
A
finely-ground
limestone
picked up at the foot of the
hills
axe-head
was
My own
work on
within the limits
fall
has not the exactness
i.,
certain lights, they
become
of
could wish
I
;
so indistinguishable
near at hand that they are help.
Government
It
will
difficult
to
plan
be hoped that the
to
is
include these roads in their
Survey, and note the points at which they strike the ruins or the river.
The roads are formed simply by the removal of the loose pebbles to one side
but, slight as
;
this
preparation was, millenniums
little
to efface
it.
have done
In some cases they waver or
change their direction, but often, and for long they are ruled as with a pen on paper,
stretches,
and
this is
even true of some which have only
the breadth of a narrow track.
Very few can
be the result merely of continual
traffic
two fixed
points.
from
far
between
Such a path would be very had occasion
straight, as I
to notice.
The track which my water-donkey left on the plain, and which threatens to be the most permanent memorial of my three winters' stay, meanders in a way worthy of the animal and yet was always followed by the natives. The larger roads may have been used for chariots (" wheel roads "
Nearly
bearers or patrols.
tombs or
goals such as
make fore
for the
may
would
stelae.
to
and there-
carefully
laid-out
The roads cannot be traced
the tombs, as they have there been
disturbed or replaced
The
Some seem
be of Christian times, though one
not have expected
to
palanquin
lead to obvious
all
stone-built hamlets,
paths from them.
near Hawata.
the natives stUl call
only by pedestrians,
some
them),
close
hand.
Unfortunately accident
though plainly traceable from above and in
for,
the gap are large round cairns built of the globular boulders which strew the
its
roads which
those
without
Other interesting antiquities of the
some occurrences of
by Professor
by
tourist paths.
laying- out of the roads
is
in good accord
with the priority which will be claimed for
The Roads.
Tombs
The roads which Akhenaten caused to be laid out in the desert of El Amarna have been the
object
of
most
commendable
labour
^
3,
5,
and
6.
Apparently the road
Petbie, T. a., plate xxxv. and pp.
L. D., Text,
ii.,
pp. 136, 137.
4, 5.
N
See also
THE BOOK TOMBS OF EL AMARNA. leading to No. 6 was that site
was one of the
At
priated.
made, showing that
first
first
Tomb
a point opposite
N
roads were led off from
"When Meryra made out the great
to
be appro-
to
3 two short
Tombs
3 and
he
his tomb, however,
avenue K, thirty-one
three mounds, two of
four sides.^
all
down
to the
mound
to
altar,
and
I
Huya with
The
is
to see in
ing off towards
figured in the
four ascents, and as having it
and an
altar
between
relation of these remains.
rest of these roads
A
M.
perhaps in order to avoid the loose sand of the watercourses to right and
The
roads
follows
may
be
102°.
Tomb
6,
Tomb 14
ft.
4,
but bend-
93|^°.
It is nearly parallel
sudden bend away from
Road
0.
and
to
Tomb
to
the original direc-
faint track.
from a different point
6
Direction 93°.
irregular.
Road
Direction
with K, but makes a
it,
by a
tion being continued
5.
broad.
Tomb
6
Fairly broad.
(?).
Direction 87°.
Two narrow paths, diverging from a common track. Q leads towards a collection Q, R.
the top of the
;
R
seems intended to ascend to
hills.
The Chronology op the Tombs.
briefly
B. Road to broad.
Tombs
described
as
K
or C, only trace-
Direction 12^°. 1
(?),
IT.
Not very
foot of the hills
broad.
ft.
Road
E.
(?).
F.
Road
but well
cleared,
Direction 23°.
to the toady
broad.
ft.
straight,
from the
Direction
to stela
V.
in
open to
S.
is
and
1
the
number
who
error, since
even a precise
might
artist
any rate, the regulai'ly Akhenaten seems to have
increasing family of
tombs
(?),
2°.
Scarcely visible.
The
case of failure in the
tomb of Huya, which I cited in Part i, p. 42, is much ameliorated by my subsequent discovery of scenes in which four daughters appear but the royal tomb seems to ignore two children. The sequence of the tombs on this basis, so far as
my
information goes,
is
as follows
:
(N = North group S = South group of tombs) One daughter. S9 (Mahu); S 11 (Rames). ;
4th and 6th years. Two. S 23 (Any) stelge of 6th and 8th years. Three. S 10 (Apy) S 25 (Ay. Nezemet-mut shown); S 8 (Tutu); N 3 (Ahmes) N 5 Stelge of
'
Petrie, T. A., plate
The
xlii.
which runs
parallel to the river from a bay in the hills, just outside the " North Town " in Petrie's ^
line
not a road but the remains of an outer dyke or wall of the town.
map,
is
2,
accompany the King and the various tombs. Although this is
of daughters
been faithfully noted.
D. Road to the wadij from far across the plain.
Tombs
well ignore infants at
and 2 from the avenue
Direction
Road along the
C.
dates are specified only in
Queen
A. Road to 1a, 1b from
ft.
As
the clearest evidence of sequence
left.^
:
able a short distance.
12
Tomb
Direction
3.
similar road to
N. Road to
directly for the river to the north of the city,
16
Tomb
at
from converging to one point, but make
far
12
3c.
with N.
of stone huts
from the tombs are
tombs round
K. Avenue above described. Direction 104°. L. Broad road to Tomb 4, from the junction
P.
is
off to the
H. Narrow path aiming
where Akhenaten's public This
but bending
3,
path aiming at
ill-defined
Direction 92°.
faint
a raised shrine opposite
—the exact
am tempted
Tomb
site
appearances were made. of
eastern side
which the avenue leads the
of a great rostrum
tomb
its
Only the central one
the avenue.
shaped like an that
mid-way
hills
them approached by ramps The northernmost has a
square brick foundation, and faces
in
In this square Professor Petrie found
river.
on
laid
feet
breadth and stretching from the foot of the to a great clearing in the plain
5.
Narrow and
G.
;
;
;
(Pentu).
THE SITE OP THE NOETHBEN TOMBS. Three and
met-mut shown
N
S 7
four.
N
;
Neze-
6 (Panehesy.
were:
verse chamber, (b)
in both).
N
tomb with narrow transthe tomb in which this was
small
the
(a)
Baket-
placed at the end of a long corridor, (c) the
Three daughters seem to have been born in
tomb with a more spacious hall crowded with columns. The first type was retained in the N. groups only for smaller tombs the third was found too elaborate, till the columns were
Four.
4 (Meryra)
;
1
(Huya.
aten shown).
Five and
N
six.
2 (Meryra
ii.).
Seven. (Four?) Royal Tomb.^
;
the latter part of the 4th, 6th and 8th years
and
if
we suppose
this regularity to
tinued, the youngest and seventh
who was
of Nefertiti,
in
arms
have con-
(?)
daughter
at the funeral of
reduced to two or four, when
The economical corridor tomb
model type.
alone was taken over, with tion,
became the
it
from the
mode
its
of decora-
groups, and employed for the
S.
Ahmes and Pentu.
Meketaten, would be born in the 16th year of
burial of
Hence we may assign the tombs of Ahmes and Pentu to the 9th year, Panehesy to the 10th, Meryra to the 11th, Huya to the 12th
The tomb of Panehesy, which modified the form of the columned hall, has elsewhere the
and 13th
them being the decoration
the reign.
an event of the mid-twelfth
(since
recorded in
it
just born, but to the 14th
probably the
;
fifth
daughter was
not depicted), and Meryra
is
and 15th, with a
is
ii,
their character, (3) the form of the cartouches
We
of Atea.
find that the
tombs of the
group belong to the three-children period at most,
may be
a
little later.
The
;
S.
one,
burial-place,
then, was shifted at this period to the opposite side of the desert,
better
sites.
naturally be sideration
where the bold
cliffs
afibrded
would
The
steepest faces of rock
first
appropriated, and this con-
marks out Pentu, Ahmes, and Pane-
hesy as the
These three were perhaps
earliest.
begun simultaneously, though that of Panehesy took much longer to construct. But we cannot see the reason for
near Panehesy latest
(2)
tombs
;
and
abandoning the good still
less for
sites
removing the
of
tomb
in
vogue in the south
The eldest four children are shown and a suckling whose name ended in '
in the royal tomb, t.
It
must there-
fore either be the fourth daughter, who elsewhere is seen walking with Meketaten or weeping at her bier, or a
seventh.
I do not think the lacuna can possibly admit
Neferneferuaten-ta-sherat.
King and Queen as
well as the deceased, the provision of a winding
shrines in the hall. (3)
One
the latter
of the
half
features
that
distinguishes
Akhenaten's reign
-of
is
the
changed form of the cartouches of the god.^
The
earlier
form
almost invariable in the S.
is
tombs,^ and on the
N. group
also,
but
stelss.
it
is
It
appears in the
precisely to the
Ahmes, Pentu, and Panehesy* that
of
fined.
It fell into
it
tombs is
con-
complete disuse then, with
the 10th year of Akhenaten's reign.
The uninscribed tombs
3a
—
3f, are
small T-shaped and corridor types
of the
common
in
the earlier tombs, but the form of the cartouche
tomb later than the three just mentioned. The two tombs 1a, 1b, belong no doubt to the same period as Nos. 1 and 2. in 3f puts this
It will be seen that the 9th year of
far to the west.
The forms
of the entrance with
figures of the worshipping
(1) the position of the tombs, (2)
:
with the southern tombs, among
stairway to the burial vault, and the naos-like
later addition.
This order coincides well with three other lines of evidence
closest afiinities
aten
^
is
Part
Akhen-
one of exceptional activity and inventive-
i.,
pp. 9, 45.
The only exceptions I know are in the tombs of Mahu (early ?), and on the columns of Tutu. * This tomb perhaps shows the transition, like that of Tutu, but the cartouches that seem of the later form 3
are scarcely legible.
THE EOCK TOMBS OF BL AMARNA. and no doubt represents the high-water
ness,
mark
of prosperity in Akhetaten.
The public
buildings had been completed, and the
officials
spare a chisel.
Meanwhile, when hopes were
who
Aten had the post of power and favour at court, usurped
high, Meryra,
having been provided with suitable buildings
all
in the city, could, plan ambitious
Pentu, Ahmes, and
eternity " in
the desert.
"houses of
But the craftsmen
of
Akhetaten could not keep pace with the lavish projects
of the
King or
his
courtiers.
Not
the
as high-priest of
talent for his splendid
tomb and
many more lamenting
left
their
half-executed decorations, or halls which had
only half emerged from the rock.
The days
of
prosperity and leisured luxury were never to
one of these splendid tombs was quite finished.
return, either to
The
Akhetaten, and the tombs have come down to
walls were prepared and the hard- driven
artist
pacified all his employers
by making a
brave beginning in paint where he could not
them or
to
new
favourites in
our day as the downfall of Aten-worship them, a few years after
its
inception.
left
CHAPTEE
II.
THE TOMB OF PANEHESY
tomb of Panehesy having evidently been taken
A. Architectural Features.
The Exterior
as a general model.
(Plates
ii.,
v., vi.).
was a room whose breadth little exceeded the depth, but a rough enlargement
The
Previous plans are
:
Hay, MSS. 29,847, foil. 12, 13 (complete). L'H6te, Papiers, iii. 279 (unplotted).
The tomb
is
excavated at the foot
full effect is lost
greatly altered the dimensions
the
of
changed the appearance of the
by the base being buried under
tomb was
at
some period a place of
Christian worship, there has been a consider-
amount
able
The wall
of Coptic building round
door.
of rock has been dressed to a fairly
smooth surface left
its
for
being the removal of the two western columns and '
the substitution of an ecclesiastical apse for the false
This violence,
east side. injuries
is
adorned by
Both
bats, that
iv.).
When
purposes. ideal
by
.The interior
fulfils
false
S.
be compared with those of Meryra it will be seen that, but for the addition of an ante-
of
its
iand the unfinished state
inner rooms, the two are closely alike, the
of
Ahmes
for
This latter
any other of these
uncut
doors
false
represent
free
where two
side,
doors occupy half the space.
ante-chamber and the
place of interment, and a smaller shrine as a
tomb
but the north
tombs, unless the
room
to that
all
feature does not recur in
If the plans
two columns
The walls were
them.
the Egyptian
chambers,
of
each, leaving about half the area of the hall
the outer hall as a place of public gathering and worship, an inner chamber containing the
chamber
by two rows
the hall was divided
for decorative
aiFording a suite of three
place of privacy for the deceased.
of Egyptian tombs, have, on
fresh from the hands of the designers'
sculpture on
of the customary solidity,
and the thickness has been used
pest
their part, not spared.
between
is
plaster with
given a very sorry aspect to a hall which the
ii., iii.,
exterior wall
wash of grey
and the
left
and jambs are sculptured, but the latter are half cut away, and on the right an apseshaped niche has been cut out by the Copts.
The
fellow
its
bank of rock being
lintel
(Plates
on the combined with minor
door which once balanced
and
a portal of the type already familiar.
The Hall
the chief
to right
The entrance
along the foot.
hall,
which the Copts obliterated the sculptures, has
some distance
of the doorway, a
ground
of the
Other disfigurements too have greatly
plan.
several feet of debris (photograph, Plate xxv.).
the
first hall
of the lower part at the hands of the Copts has
boldest of the rock-faces hereabout, though the
As
)
for
in
Meryra's
doors in the inner
it.
Such doorways
are found, however, in the large haUs of the
group and contain
deceased,
intended
sitting
apparently
the
mark
his
to
room as Whether the
presence in the reception his private retreat.
statues of
well portal
as in
now
destroyed contained such a figure cannot be determined.
Its fellow
had been only partially
THE ROCK TOMBS OF EL AMARNA..
10
excavated when
was found that a natural
it
with the work, and in disgust
fissure interfered
at this mischance the designer
abandoned the
whole corner, including the sculpture on the adjacent walls, so that
remains a monument
it
only to his ill-temper. this part of the hall
with
Dissatisfaction
led,
then or
later, to
a
by the construction of a flight of steps descending to a rough burial chamber just below floor level. further disfigurement,
The columns good deal
shown
which
in paint
They
chisel.
ance,
in appearance,
from those in
for in the latter that detail
(I. ii.),
though a
diff"er little essentially,
is
4
was probably
here marked by the
much more
are
Tomb
squat in appear-
being greater in girth though
of papyri which the column represents
to coincide with
represents
capital
As
them.
seen not
swelling
the
heads of the papyrus,
the
calyx are represented like
of the
leaves
the
is
any of the thirty-two, but with
a division between
on yellow) on the eight
sheathing (red lines
underlying stems which are visible just above
That the inserted stems consist of
the bands.
eight bundles of three
bands which tionally
green,
red,
blue,
The colouring
plain from the four
is
them
imite
band of the column
itself is
conven-
(coloured blue,
whereas the
a natural yellow).
of these overlaid stems
and their
bands suggests that the architect was ignorant of their raison d'etre.
The
in
less
Here, too, each of the eight bundles
height.
that stem which was left uncovered
details of the
columns on the
W.
face are
by a blank space representing an The device on these tablets is
interrupted
is
again
broken up above the sheathing
leaves
(not
similar to that on the lintels of the doorways,
sculptured here) into four stems.
About
half-
except that here a space below the cartouches
way between
the foot and the bands under the
capital there
is
a break, the thirty-two stems of
which the column
is
now
built
up seeming
to
be shifted round by half a stem's breadth (see
drawing of east
side).
due
This, however, is
in reality to the customary insertion of shorter
papyrus stems, three
Each
bundles.
to
each
of
of these inserted
the
eight
stalks
lies
affixed placard.
occupied by a design representing the union
is
of
and
Southern
the
The sign
for "
union
tiated
and
visible
dififeren-
by being coloured yellow, while
the
inserted stems are painted conventionally, blue, red, blue.
Thus there are thirty-two
divisions,
above as below, twenty-four of them representing the overlaid stems and eight those underlying.
The
congruous division
representation,
however,
with the conditions
;
for
not
is it
is
a
between two stems, and not the surface
is
iv.
the
left
The shown on
occupies the centre.
and the ends of that on the S. column. (See p. 30 for the translations of the prayers.) It may be well to compare at this point the Plate
One out
is
"
whole device on the N. column
picture of a papyrus
bundles, however,
kingdoms,
under the symbol of their representative plants.
between the original stems and covers them. of the four stems in each of the eight
Northern
W.
A¥all
that the
very
tomb.
typical
difi"erent
It
column of the
be seen
will artist
proportions from those
when may have approached this
In reality the columns
excavated,
As
column from the temple on
(Plate iv.h)}
was of in
biiiU,
the
not
pattern.
from the photograph (Plate xxvi.), even the remaining columns have been will be seen
A
number of cups have been cut in the base of the S. column, to hold porous water-jars, with ducts for draining off greatly mutilated.
of one stem, which forms the centre of a bundle of four and would be left uncovered inserted stems.
by the
This error appears plainly on
the upper part of the capital, where the thirty-
two
original
stems again become visible
;
for
'
The Plate
is
inexact.
tablet is correct in the right
'
The colouring below the hand column, thus showing
the apparent twist of the bands noted above, but in its fellow.
is lost
THE TOMB OF PANEHBSY. the overflow into a basin in the
Of the
floor.
destroyed columns only the abaci remain. floor of the
W.
The gloom
half of the hall
The
very rough.
is
was once relieved by
of the hall
11
according to custom, a sitting statue of Panehesy, but
has been completely removed.
it
The Sculpture. must be
—The work
in the tomb,
it
was not good, and was,
confessed,
The
the brilliant colouring of the walls, the columns,
therefore, less able to bear injury.
the frieze of cartouches, the pediment and the
have been executed for the most part in the
ceiling.
Of
this
possible
but
little
now
remains, but the
have been recovered as
ceiling designs
L'Hotb, Papiers
(cf.
iii.
scheme can be gathered from Plate
281). iii.,
far as
The
and the
Pattern B B of I. xxxix.,
stone
itself,
figures
away
despite the falling
so that,
of the thin coating of plaster,
the
sculpture
retains the general outline and, in places,
still
almost the
full
measure of the original outline.
patterns identified from Plate ix.
Scarcely any plaster
seems to be identical
of the outer walls, for instance, yet the scenes
the
blue
Avith pattern
perhaps,
centre,
excepted.^
What
is
on the thickness
left
The
there are the best in the tomb.
plaster
must
remains of the columns of hieroglyphs between
have been a mere overlay, giving smoothness to
the patterns will be found on Plate xxi., and an
the whole and filling
attempted translation of these on pp. 30-31. Innek Chamber. This is of the same shape
as enabling details to
in colour.
and almost the same
size
also detracts
The
be supported by four
—
feigns
ceiling
to
as the
outer hall.
These columns
columns, carrying architraves.
are of the papyrus-bud type like those of the hall,
but no detail at
contracting foot
is
all is
shown, and even the
not represented.
pit in the centre of the
room
is
A
small
obviously a
of burial
reached by a stairway
is
of forty-three steps, which descends along the E.
wall of the room.
After reaching a landing
some distance below, to the
left,
it
turns at a sharp angle
and descends
with a sharp return upon
merely a
as a curving stairway itself at
the end.
The
level length of passage.
chamber The depth below floor-level The winding stairway iii. is
the earlier tombs, and
is
shown on Plate
is is
borrowed from
not repeated in this
is
(theoretically is
shown
has been their salvation,
in Plate vii. being the only
modern mutilation.
As also
the architecture, so the scheme of subjects
was taken over
for the hall of
—The
show hoAV varied was the
r.l.
walls),
individuality
The two
efforts
of the artists, or
the success of their methods of working in plaster.
Coptic Remains.
—When
the Copts sought a
W, false door, which they saw could be adapted to their needs with but little labour, seems to have drawn them to this place of assembly, the
tomb.
Retaining the cornice of the original
construction, they fashioned an apse having a
moulded arch resting on
pilasters
with decorated
on Plate xxvi.).
The apse
inscribed, while the second hall
baptismal immersion, for a font five feet deep
only a passage
occupies nearly the whole space.
The
little
to
the
burial
chamber contained,
dr. signifies drab, b.
or r.p. indicates that the line
red paint.
skill
W.
seems to have been designed with a view to
not.
In the plates
much
and greatly superior technique.
steps
would enable a person
the edge into the inner 1
Meryra (with
an exchange between the E. and
third room, conformably
The Shrine.
chamber)
from the value of the scenes, but
capitals (photograph
necropolis.
to practice,
treatment of the designs
stiff
this unattractiveness
the injury
irregularities, as well
but carried out there with
subsequent addition.
The place
The
up
be elaborated or supplied
is
= blue, bk. = black not cut, but only in
Two rough
to scramble
from
room through a narrow
aperture which has been cut in the back wall.
But
it
is
immersed
not easy to see in,
how any one
could be
or himself emerge from, the font
THE ROCK TOMBS OP EL AMARNA, with any dignity.
Thei'e
is
a shallow niche in
spray of leaf and fruit
The
{d).
latter design is
The
the walls of the apse on each side.
also applied to the sofl5t of the arch {a,
The apse having been made, it was impossible to leave the pagan sculptures close by it in
moulding of the arch
band of white splotches on a black background.
naked
The dome
Yet
assertiveness.
the
earliest
shippers seem to have thought
daub the sacred
cross
wor-
enough to
it
and an Alpha and Omega
in red paint over the figure of the Queen. later generation, however,
was more
A
particular,
and, having covered the whole wall with plaster,
(now largely
fallen
away
again), decorated the
surface with the picture of a saint designs.
The decorations
^
and
floral
in the apse, too, are
not original, but have been renewed on a second
eagle
(?)
is
occupied by the figure of a soaring
sketched in browns of various shades.
wings are tripartite
Its outstretched
the seraph of Isaiah's vision
to
head
and none of the
and on
?),
the
to
singular
left
of the
decoration, viz.
about
It
is
much
its
broken,
here can be read.
graffiti
lower of the two borders
glass
(in allusion
a halo or disc (perhaps also a reminis-
is
cence of the solar hawk).
wall
b).
coloured yellow with a
is
The
continued on the
is
Below
apse.
a
a
deep blue
disc of
five inches across,
this
was added,
set in
a bedding of mud-plaster, but at a later time
was covered over again.^
A
cupboard has been
cut out in the wall hard by.
Having
made
corner of the
their
hall,
the unsuitability of such a
became evident, and
position
extreme
apse in the
to
make
it
central
tomb was considerably its height, and the two columns broken away to admit light. Several grooves in the wall and floor suggest that a partition was erected outside the line of to the congregation the
enlarged on this side for half
the architrave.
Other
relics of this
occupation
are the arched recess in the S. wall near the
coating of plaster from very similar designs.
entrance and a similar one outside.
All the walls on this side of the hall have been
by the putlog holes and a deep recess in the E. wall, the stairway was bridged over and the
covered in like manner with a thin wash of plaster,
which on the W. wall has adhered with
Above the
deplorable tenacity.
seems to have been a bird
cornice there
with
outspread
wings, not, perhaps, without reminiscences of the winged
scarab, disc, or vulture.
side of the apse are decorated staves
The wall
of the apse
darker marbling.
is
On
each
it
use.
some
special
may
be added that the spectacle of a Christian church thus quartered in a heathen It
tomb may
still
be seen under very similar con-
ditions at Deir Eifeh.
On
(?).
painted gray, with
Separating
space behind the columns put to
To judge
two
the S. wall of the inner
crosses with the
room
are painted
Alpha and Omega
in the
from the dome
are two borders, the lower showing two inter-
twisted bands (Plate
vi. c),
the upper a branching
now
gone. When it vyas perceived under the guard was specially charged with its preservation, but it disappeared before my return. It can be guessed what measure of safety antiquities enjoy which are not under lock and key It is
plaster, the
Plate XX.
The name
been very short (Plate
(or
iv. a).
merely apa
?)
seems
to
have
1
THE TOMB OF PANBHESY. corners,
and one or two indecipherable words or
To
symbols.
the Copts
is
probably also due a
strange squaring out of the wall,
and a
W.
the
still
more
irregular
All this
wall.
W.
is
side of the S.
marking out of
eldest princesses shake sistra
but here unnamed
1.
The Sculptured
The Entrance Portal Cf.
L'HoTE, Papisrs,
xi.
sister of the
Two
younger, is
also in
who
misshapen female
are of the party seem, also
among
vii., viii. and twice in tomb of Ay). Their names, which in this tomb are greatly damaged, can fortunately be recovered from the tomb of Ay for no little satirical humour has been shown in the nicknames given to these ill-favoured favourites. " One is the " The Queen's Vizier (?), For ever,' and the other " His mother's Vizier (?) The Day (or The Sun ') "' " His mother" would seem to mean the King's mother Tyi, and " the Queen " may also designate Tyi or some other Queen of Amenhotep III.
her attendants (Plates
Scenes.
A
Queen
the train, attended by two shade-bearers and
two female fan-bearers.
in black paint.
behind the Queen
under the care of their nurses.
dwarfs B.
13
;
the (Plates
v., vi.).
36.
;
The decoration here is somewhat out of the common. Instead of columns of prayers and the divine and royal cartouches, scenes of wor-
by the royal family are exclusively portrayed. On e'ach of the broken jambs are two ship
pictures of the royal family worshipping the sun,
with a border below of the symbolical
relchyt
The upper panels exhibit the King with the crown of the North (on the left, i.e., more northerly jamb), and of
birds
(cf.
L. D,
iii.
109),
the South (on the right).
up
'
'
'
!
for as the sister of Nefertiti
in
tombs of
this period,
shown
in her
The royal pair
at this
time on a lengthened
from the
offerings of food to the deity
tables or stands of provisions
which are before
They seem to have been accompanied in these scenes by Merytaten alone. The lintel shows the same subject in a design which for purposes of symmetry is repeated
company,
is
only mentioned
and the dwarfs only
In the lower panels
he wears the Jchepersh helmet. lift
'
it is
likely that she
was
Akhetaten,
visit to
and had brought these attendants from the Theban court of Tyi.
them.
with slight variation on both sides of a central table of offerings, on which the rays of the Aten
The King and Queen stand beside the materials for the ceremony being
stream down. the table,
on stands near them. On the left they are engaged in burning incense to the god, throwing aromatics with the right hand into the flaming
The Thickness of the Outer Wall.
2.
Plates
vii., viii.,
xxvii.
Previous copies are
:
BuBTON, Exoerpta, plate vi. (upper part of W. side). L'HoTE, Papiers, xi. 35 (the B. side is reproduced Am^lineau, Sepulture, plate Ixxxiv., p. 610). Lepsius, D.
91 (E. side, upper part).
iii.
laid
bowl of the censing-spoon, which
is
held in the
left.
On, the right the censers have been laid
aside,
and
libations are being
poured from the
spouted vases taken from the stands.
The
titu-
Aten and of the royal pair are inscribed above them. The long laudation of the Queen laries of
(most of the phrases of which may be restored from Plate vii.) shows the position which was
accorded to her as the royal heiress.
The three
West
in
Side
(Plates
vii.,
xxvii.).
surfaces in the entrance to the
tomb
—The
wall
are fittingly
reserved for representations of the worship of the sun.
As
town or
village
and evening
naturally as the
comes to
to see the
his
sun
dweller in the
doorway
at
dawn
rise in fresh bright-
ness or set in splendour, the occupant of the
1
o
ft
O
fi
and
THE ROOK TOMBS OF EL AMARNA.
14
dark recesses and greets the
burning spices in the hawk-headed censing-
appearing or departing deity at the entrance.
spoon towards the sun, while the Queen presents
tomb
leaves
its
But
here, as often in the earlier tombs, the
and
his household also are seen
This
ship.
may
King
Both wear an elaborate
a bouquet of flowers.^
engaged in wor-
variety of the Atef crown, into which, as in a
be due, not only to the impulse
coat of arms, forgotten history and symbolism
King
of the Egyptian
to self-commemoration,
Two
are crowded.
somewhat
or three shocks,
but also to the need to create traditions for the
resembling those familiar to us in the khelcer
new form
to the
ornament, and each flanked by two plumes,
example of the Court. Therefore the figure of Panehesy and his prayer are relegated here to
occupy the centre, standing upright on the combined horns of the bull and the ram. In the
the lower part of the walls (for a translation of
King's head-dress each
both texts, see pp. 29, 30), while the upper part shows the royal family offering to the radiant
solar
The King and Queen are extending their sceptres towards the god as if in acknowledgment of their delegated power (cf. I., xxvii.). Before them is a loaded table, having little figures holding ofFering-bowls at the two front comers. The table having first been spread
side,
by giving prominence
of faith
Disc.
with
jars, flat
their mouths,
cult
hawk,
were probably inserted
in
light jewellery
or
Erect on either
from
also
are
the horns,
The whole
crowned uraeus.
is
attached to the head by a broad base, adorned
The King has thrown a flowing
with uraei.
mantle over his shoulders, and his tunic shows a flap adorned with uraei and the attachment of
him).
These
god of the A.ten
figures of the
the bull's
as often, with the cartouches of the god.
identified with the
and pendant
round loaves have been placed on rest of the offerings laid
crowned by the
by the double cartouche.
and the
on top and crowned with flowers and bowls of burning spices. The King's person is adorned,
also
is
behind (not often assumed by
tail
The Queen encomium :
is
" The heiress, great of when she saith anything
the King
again distinguished by an
—
whom
favour, mistress of all it
done*
is
—the
women
great wife of
he loveth [Nefertiti] living for ever and ,
ever."
fastened
on ribbons
;
for they always
occupy
The
the place of armlets and pectorals, though the
attachments are rarely shown.
The
Queen written
elaborate titulary of the
over her head reads
:
register beneath this scene
on the two
in duplicate
—
interest
is
The
and gay with the King at home (?),' two pleased at all that is said, the great and beloved wife of the King, Lady of the Two Lands [Nefertiti]."
and North,
fair of
face
feathers, soothing the heart of the
The three
of
centre, at-
tended by two dwarfs of her sex, and identified
heiress, great of favour, mistress of the district
of the South
practically
The point
walls.
a female figure in the
by this as the "
is
eldest princesses shako the sistrum
sister of
Queen
seen on the lintel outside.
Nefertiti, already
This interpretation
supported by the broken inscription which
is
evidently ran, " the sister of the great wife of the King, Nefertiti,
Nezemet-mut."
who
She
^
is
lives for ever
and
ever,
attended by two shade-
behind their parents.^
East Side
(Plates
on
in the royal attire
prescribed
by the
fl
/VWWi
'If
xxvii.).
viii.,
wall
this
ritual
;
—The change
may have been
for the
King
is
here
is
intended.
n 2
The
The drawing
of the figures in the
Denkmaler utterly
* This phrase is applied to a queen in the very earliest times (Peteib, Boyal Tombs ii., pi. xxiv., seal 210), and again to Queen Hatshepsut (Naville, B. el Bahari ii.,
p. 16).
Q
(injured) sistrum of Merytaten has been omitted
by error in Plate
s
misrepresents the original.
viii.
=
Eestore
"^ ^ |
"^
|
3*
^^-
^-
-^- "^-
^°^-
^^^
appears also twice in the tomb of Ay, and apparently in that of
Tutu
(L.
D.
iii.
106i).
THE TOMB OF PANEHBSY. bearers, four
and a
fan-bearers, three nurses,
detachment of police, and is being received byone or two officials, including, no doubt, Pane-
On
hesy himself.
The row
seen to be mistaken.
forms part of the scene
homage
is
of figures really
above, so
that
thus
Lord
stands aloof from the act of worship, and thus
Ea-Horakhti, rejoicing on the horizon the Brilliance which ever and ever,
the
seems to belong to the adherents of the old polytheism, as her name, " the pleasant one of
the temple of
older than her nieces, as might be expected,
Aten
in the
J
,
in the
who
name
gives
life
abiding in
the great living Aten,
Lord of Heaven, Lord of Earth, within Aten in Akhetaten (and to) the King, ;
Akhenaten, great in his duration
wife of the ever
She appears to be
is
(
I
se
VII.
El Amarna
II.
PANEHESY-
CO LU
I
LU
Z
CO UJ
I UJ z < Q,
o
17.
,18;'L
Py HnorARV^
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