The tombs of Ptahemwia and Sethnakht at Saqqara /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Raven, Maarten J., author.
Imprint:Leiden : Sidestone Press, [2020]
©2020
Description:427 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), plans ; 29 cm
Language:English
Series:Papers on archaeology of the Leiden Museum of Antiquities ; volume 22
Papers on archaeology of the Leiden Museum of Antiquities ; 22.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12566400
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Hays, Harold M., writer of supplementary textual content.
Beex, Willem F. M., contributor.
Bleeker, Annelies, contributor.
Schulz, Dorothea, contributor.
Schenck, William, contributor.
Brock, Lyla Pinch, 1944- contributor.
Bomhof, P. J., photographer.
Kemp, Anneke de, photographer.
ISBN:9789088908101
9088908109
9789088908095
9088908095
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
Summary:The two tombs dealt with in this book were discovered in 2007 and 2010 by the Leiden Expedition in the New Kingdom necropolis of Saqqara. Both date to the transition period between the reign of the heretic Pharaoh Akhenaten and the return to orthodoxy under his successor Tutankhamun. They are valuable additions to the growing corpus of funerary architecture from the Memphite cemeteries, yet they are quite different. Ptahemwia was a royal butler, presumably in the Memphite palace. The wall-reliefs and inscriptions of his tomb illustrate aspects of his professional life. Yet the career of the tomb-owner preserves some mysteries, such as the assumed change of his name, his potential foreign origins, and the reason why his tomb could not be finished according to plan. Sethnakht is an even more elusive person. This simple scribe of the temple of Ptah can hardly have been the main owner of the tomb next to Ptahemwia's, which was started in the same lavish style and then remained undecorated. There are reasons to assume that Sethnakht was just one of the relatives of the owner, who like Ptahemwia seems to have suffered from the political vicissitudes of the period. This publication presents the results of the recent excavations, with an introduction on the biographical data of the tomb owners followed by detailed discussions of the tomb architecture and wall decorations, as well as the objects, pottery, and skeletal material found in the area. Thus it is aimed at an audience of professional readers with an interest in funerary archaeology.

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Call Number: DT73.S3 R39 2020
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