Djer in Wikipedia
Djer was the second or third pharaoh of the first dynasty of
Egypt, which dates from approximately 3100 B.C. Some
scholars,
however, debate whether the first pharaoh, Menes or Narmer,
and Hor-Aha might have been different rulers. If they were
separate rulers, this would make Djer the third pharaoh in
the
dynasty. A mummified wrist of Djer or his wife was
discovered,
but has been lost.
Etymology
Djer's Horus name means "Horus who succours".[3]
The Abydos King List lists the second pharaoh as Teti, the
Turin Canon lists Iteti, while Manetho lists Athothis.
Length of reign
While the Egyptian priest Manetho, writing in the third
century B.C., stated that Djer ruled for 57 years, modern
research by Toby Wilkinson in Royal Annals of Ancient Egypt
stresses that the near-contemporary and therefore, more
accurate Palermo Stone ascribes Djer a reign of "41 complete
and partial years."[4] Wilkinson notes that Years 1-10 of
Djer's reign are preserved in register II of the Palermo
Stone, while the middle years of this pharaoh's reign are
recorded in register II of Cairo Fragment One.[5]
Reign
The evidence for Djer's life and reign is[6]:
Tomb in Umm el-Qa'ab, Abydos
Seal prints from graves 2185 and 3471 in Saqqara
Inscriptions in graves 3503, 3506 and 3035 in Saqqara
Seal impression and inscriptions from Helwan (Saad 1947:
165; Saad 1969: 82, pl. 94)
Jar from Turah with the name of Djer (Kaiser 1964: 103,
fig.3)
UC 16182 ivory tablet from Abydos , subsidiary tomb 612 of
the enclosure of Djer (Petrie 1925: pl. II.8; XII.1)
UC 16172 copper adze with the name of Djer (tomb 461 in
Abydos, Petrie 1925: pl. III.1, IV.8)
Inscription of his name (of questioned authenticity,
however) at Wadi Halfa, Sudan
The inscriptions, on ivory and wood, are in a very early
form of hieroglyphs, hindering complete translation, but a
label at Saqqarah may depict the early Old Kingdom practice
of human sacrifice.[7] An ivory tablet from Abydos mentions
that Djer visited Buto and Sais in the Nile Delta. One of
his regnal years on the Cairo Stone was named "Year of
smiting the land of Setjet", which often is speculated to be
Sinai or beyond.
[edit]Family
Djer was a son of a pharaoh Hor-Aha and his wife Khenthap.
His grandfather was probably Narmer, and his grandmother was
Neithhotep. Women carrying titles later associated with
queens such as great one of the hetes-sceptre and She who
sees/carries Horus were buried in subsidiary tombs near the
tomb of Djer in Abydos or attested in Saqqara. These women
are thought to be the wives of Djer and include:
Nakhtneith (or Nekhetneith), buried in Abydos and known from
a stela.[8][1]
Herneith, possibly a wife of Djer. Buried in Saqqara.[8]
Seshemetka, buried in Abydos next to the king.[9] She was
said to be a wife of Den in Dodson and Hilton.[8]
Penebui, her name and title were found on an ivory label
from Saqqara.[1]
bsu, known from a label in Saqqara and several stone vessels
(reading of name uncertain; name consists of three fish
hieroglyphs).[1]
[edit]Biography
Similarly to his father Hor-Aha, Djer was buried in Abydos.
Djer's tomb is tomb O of Petrie. His tomb contains the
remains of 300 retainers who were buried with him. Several
objects were found in and around the tomb of Djer[10]:
A stela of Djer, now in the Cairo Museum probably comes from
Abydos.
Sealings of a king named Khent.
Labels mentioning the name of a palace and the name of
Meritneith.
Fragments of two vases inscribed with the name of Queen
Neithhotep.
Bracelets of a Queen were found in the wall of the tomb.
In the subsidiary tombs excavators found[11]:
Stela of several individuals
Ivory objects with the name of Neithhotep.
Ivory tablets.
From the 18th Dynasty on, the tomb of Hor-Aha was revered as
the tomb of Osiris, and the First Dynasty burial complex,
which includes both this and the tomb of Djer, was very
important in the Egyptian religious tradition.
Manetho indicates that the First Dynasty ruled from Memphis
– and indeed Herneith, one of Djer’s wives, was buried
nearby at Saqqara. Manetho also claimed that Athothes, who
is sometimes identified as Djer, had written a treatise on
anatomy that still existed in his own day, over two
millennia later.
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