The discovery of pharaoh Senebkay's tomb is the culmination
of work that began during the summer of 2013 when the Penn Museum team, led by
Dr. Josef Wegner, Egyptian Section Associate Curator of the Penn Museum,
discovered a huge 60-ton royal sarcophagus chamber at South Abydos. The
sarcophagus chamber, of red quartzite quarried and transported to Abydos from
Gebel Ahmar (near modern Cairo), could be dated to the late Middle Kingdom, but
its owner remained unidentified. Mysteriously, the sarcophagus had been extracted
from its original tomb and reused in a later tomb -- but the original royal
owner remained unknown when the summer season ended.
In the last few weeks of excavations, fascinating details of
a series of kings' tombs and a lost dynasty at Abydos have emerged.
Archaeologists now know that the giant quartzite sarcophagus chamber derives
from a royal tomb built originally for a pharaoh
Sobekhotep -- probably
Sobekhotep I, the first king of Egypt's 13th Dynasty. Fragments of that king's
funerary stela were found just recently in front of his huge, badly robbed
tomb. A group of later pharaohs (reigning about a century and a half later
during Egypt's Second Intermediate Period) were reusing elements from
Sobekhotep's tomb for building and equipping their own tombs. One of these
kings (whose name is still unknown) had extracted and reused the quartzite
sarcophagus chamber. Another king's tomb found just last week is that of the
previously unknown pharaoh: Woseribre-Senebkay.
A Lost
Pharaoh and a Forgotten Dynasty
The newly discovered tomb of pharaoh Senebkay dates to ca.
1650 BC during Egypt's Second Intermediate Period. The identification was made
by Dr. Wegner and Kevin Cahail, Ph.D. student, Department of Near Eastern
Languages and Civilizations, University of Pennsylvania. The tomb of Senebkay
consists of four chambers with a decorated limestone burial chamber. The burial
chamber is painted with images of the goddesses Nut, Nephthys, Selket, and Isis
flanking the king's canopic shrine. Other texts name the sons of Horus and
record the king's titulary and identify him as the "king of Upper and
Lower Egypt, Woseribre, the son of Re, Senebkay."
Senebkay's tomb was badly plundered by ancient tomb robbers
who had ripped apart the king's mummy as well as stripped the pharaoh's tomb
equipment of its gilded surfaces. Nevertheless, the Penn Museum archaeologists
recovered the remains of king Senebkay amidst debris of his fragmentary coffin,
funerary mask, and canopic chest. Preliminary work on the king's skeleton of
Senebkay by Penn graduate students Paul Verhelst and Matthew Olson (of the
Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations) indicates he was a man
of moderate height, ca. 1.75 m (5'10), and died in his mid to late 40s.
The discovery provides significant new evidence on the
political and social history of Egypt's Second Intermediate Period. The
existence of an independent "Abydos Dynasty," contemporary with the
15th (Hyksos) and 16th (Theban) Dynasties, was first hypothesized by
Egyptologist K. Ryholt in 1997. The discovery of pharaoh Senebkay now proves
the existence of this Abydos dynasty and identifies the location of their royal
necropolis at South Abydos in an area anciently called Anubis-Mountain. The
kings of the Abydos Dynasty placed their burial ground adjacent to the tombs of
earlier Middle Kingdom pharaohs including Senwosret III (Dynasty 12, ca.
1880-1840 BC), and Sobekhotep I (ca. 1780 BC). There is evidence for about 16
royal tombs spanning the period ca. 1650-1600 BC. Senebkay appears to be one of
the earliest kings of the "Abydos Dynasty." His name may have
appeared in a broken section of the famous Turin King List (a papyrus document
dating to the reign of Ramses II, ca. 1200 BC) where two kings with the throne
name "Woser...re" are recorded at the head of a group of more than a
dozen kings, most of whose names are entirely lost.
The tomb of pharaoh Senebkay is modest in scale. An
important discovery was the badly decayed remains of Senebkay's canopic chest.
This chest was made of cedar wood that had been reused from the nearby tomb of
Sobekhotep I and still bore the name of that earlier king, covered over by
gilding. Such reuse of objects from the nearby Sobekhotep tomb by Senebkay,
like the reused sarcophagus chamber found during the summer, provides evidence
that suggests the limited resources and isolated economic situation of the
Abydos Kingdom which lay in the southern part of Middle Egypt between the
larger kingdoms of Thebes (Dynasties 16-17) and the Hyksos (Dynasty 15) in
northern Egypt. Unlike these numbered dynasties, the pharaohs of the Abydos
Dynasty were forgotten to history and their royal necropolis unknown until this
discovery of Senebkay's tomb.
"It's exciting to find not just the tomb of one
previously unknown pharaoh, but the necropolis of an entire forgotten
dynasty," noted Dr. Wegner. "Continued work in the royal tombs of the
Abydos Dynasty promises to shed new light on the political history and society
of an important but poorly understood era of Ancient Egypt."
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