Ninetjer (Nynetjer) in Tour Egypt
NINETJER (NYNETJER)
THE THIRD KING OF EGYPT'S 2ND DYNASTY
BY JIMMY DUNN
As we descend into the murky far past of Egypt's history,
there is no surprise that historical details become blurred,
and this certainly applies to the period between the death
of Qaa at the end of the 1st Dynasty and the accession of
Netjerikhet Djoser in the 3rd Dynasty. Most of the kings of
the 2nd Dynasty remain obscure, and we frequently know
little more about them than Egyptologists of a generation
past. However, the identity and order of the first three
kings is certain, thanks to an inscribed statue in the Cairo
Museum, and other contemporary monuments and later kings
lists can be reconciled with reasonable certainty for the
first five rulers.
However, the Palermo Stone records a significant drop in the
average height of the annual inundation of the Nile River,
and therefore it is possible, if not likely, that ecological
factors may have produced tensions and for a while, at least
towards the end of the Dynasty, Egypt may have even been
divided. Yet, up until and through the reign of Ninetjer,
the Two Lands seems to have been ruled as one.
A granite statuette of the mortuary priest named Hetepdief,
implies (because their names are listed on his shoulder)
that there was continuity between the first three kings of
the 2nd Dynasty, for their mortuary cults were served by
only one individual, and it is known that Ninetjer
maintained the mortuary cult of at least one predecessor.An
inscribed stone vessel discovered in the Step Pyramid
juxtaposes the serekh of Ninetjer and the ka-chapel of
Hetepsekhemwy.
Ninetjer (Nynetjer) was this kings Horus name, and simply
means "godlike", or "He Who Belongs to the God". The term
god probably in this instance references Re, the sun god.
Ninetjer is actually by far the best attested king of the
early 2nd Dynasty. Given the position of his titulary on the
Palermo Stone, he must have ruled Egypt for at least thirty-
five years, though Manetho gives him forty-seven. In fact,
most of what we know of this king is derived from the annals
recorded on the Palermo Stone, where the whole fourth
register records events between his fifth or sixth year
through his twentieth or twenty-first. However, the king is
also evidenced by three fine tombs in the elite cemetery at
North Saqqara containing sealings of Ninetjer, as well as
one across the Nile in the Early Dynastic necropolis at
Helwan. There were additionally five different jar-sealings
of the king discovered in a large mastaba near Giza.
However, more sealings of Ninetjer eventually led to the
identification of the king's own tomb at Saqqara (though
some scholars doubt that this is clearly his tomb).
From the Palermo Stone, we learn of the foundation of a
chapel or estate named Hr-rn during the king's seventh year
on the throne. Otherwise, most of the events evidenced on
that record are regular ritual appearances of the king and
various religious festivals. A festival of Sokar apparently
was held every six years during his reign, and the running
of the Apis bull was recorded twice during years nine and
fifteen of his reign. Most of the festivals recorded during
his reign were held in the region of Memphis, with the
exception of a ceremony associated with the goddess Nekhbet
of Elkab during year nineteen.
The fact that most activity associated with this king
occurred in the region of Memphis may be important. Little
evidence of the king is found outside of this region and it
may be that his activities was largely, if not completely
confined to Lower Egypt. Towards the end of his reign, there
was a good deal of internal tension in Egypt, perhaps even
civil war. The Palermo Stone tantalizes us with the
possibility of this beginning in Ninetjer's thirteenth year.
It records the attack of several towns including one who's
name means "north land" or "House of the North" (the other
city was Shem-Re). Some have interpreted this entry in the
Palermo Stone to mean that Ninetjer had to suppress a
rebellion in Lower, or Northern Egypt.
Unfortunately, the Palermo Stone ends with the nineteenth
year of his reign. However, inscriptions on stone vessels,
which probably date to the latter part of his reign, appear
to record several other events, such as a four occurrence of
the Sokar Festival, which probably took place in year
twenty-four, and the "seventeenth occasion of the [biennial]
census", which may have occurred in his thirty-fourth year
on the throne.
Other than the various inscribed stone vessels, only two
other artifacts have been unearthed that bear the king's
name. One of these is a small ivory vessel from the Saqqara
area, but the other is a small statue of considerable
significance, both to the king's history and especially
Egyptian art. The statuette is made of alabaster, depicting
the king on his throne and wearing the close fitting robe
associated with the Sed-festival. Upon his head rests the
White Crown of Lower Egypt. This crude stone statuette of
unknown provenance, now in the Georges Michailides
Collection, represents the earliest complete and
identifiable example of three-dimensional royal statuary
from Egypt.
It also provides evidence that the king celebrated at least
one Sed-festival, which would have been likely given the
apparent long reign of Ninetjer. While no contemporary
inscriptions evidence this celebration, there was also a
stock of stone vessels discovered in the Step Pyramid
galleries that may have been prepared for this event. Some
scholars theorize that this further evidences the
difficulties late in the king's reign, suggesting that these
were never distributed due to domestic unrest which
disrupted communications and weakened the authority of the
central administration. Hence, the stone vessels were later
appropriated by subsequent kings of the late 2nd and early
3rd Dynasties.
The name of Ninetjer's successor to the throne, Peribsen
(Seth-Peribsen), unusually referencing the god Seth, is
another piece of evidence indicating unrest. However, it is
likely that Peribsen did not directly replace Ninetjer. It
is likely that as many as two or more shadowy rulers (Weneg,
Sened and Nubnefer) took the throne of perhaps a divided
Egypt. in the interim. However, most modern kings' lists do
not reference all of them, and some list only one or two.
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