Sanakhte (Nebka) in Tour Egypt
SANAKHTE, A MYSTERIOUS KING OF EGYPT'S 3RD DYNASTY
BY JIMMY DUNN.
Uncertainty swirls around the placement, and also the events
of the 3rd Dynasty king known as Sanakhte (Sanakht). He may
have been Nebka, who was known to manetho, and listed on
both the Turin Cannon and the Abydos king list as the first
king of this dynasty. However, this is problematic to say
the least, for we base our belief that he was Nebka on a
source that lists his Horus name, Sanakhte, together with a
second name that ends with the element "ka" Most of the
information we have on this king refers to him as Nebka. In
fact, some sources list the two as separate kings, with
Nebka founding the 3rd Dynasty and Sanakhte ruling later,
perhaps after Khaba.
However, despite this, mud seal impressions bearing the name
of Nethery-khet Djoser from the Abydos tomb of the last king
of the 2nd Dynasty Khasekhemuy and connected with the burial
seem to suggest that Khasekhemuy's widow and her already
ruling son Djoser were in charge of the king's burial. On
the basis of sealing from the tomb of Khasekhemwy, which
name her as "Mother of the King's Children," the wife of the
last ruler of the 2nd Dynasty seems to have been one
Nimaethap. The latter name was also found, with the title of
"King's Mother", upon seal impressions from Mastaba K1 at
Beit Khallaf, a gigantic monument dated to the reign of
Djoser. Hence, on the basis that Djoser was succeeded by
Sekhemkhet and of indications pointing to Khaba as the third
in line, Nebka may have been the fourth king of the dynasty,
to be equated with the Nebkara following Djoser-teti and
preceding Huni in the Saqqara king list.
Many theories regarding the rule of Sanakhte have been
advanced, including the possibility that Sanakhte, as a
member of a former ruling family, usurped the throne from
the ruling family at the beginning of the dynasty. Hence,
Djoser could have indeed buried his father, Khasekhemuy, and
won back the throne from the usurper, Sanakhte. However, we
are told that today, most Egyptologists do believe that he
was a latter king of the Dynasty, even though most current
documentary resources continue to equate Sanakhte with
Nebka, as the 1st King of Egypt's noteworthy 3rd Dynasty who
probably ruled from This near Abydos.
Little is known of this king, despite a reign of some 18 or
19 years (others might attribute a much shorter reign of
from five to seven years, which would allow a better fit for
him ruling before Djoser), for his reign is missing from the
Palermo Stone, and important source of information on this
period of Egyptian history. However, Nebka is mentioned in
Papyrus Westcar. The only large scale monumental building
that can possibly be attributed to him is at Beit Khallaf
(mastaba K2). His name also appears on the island of
Elephantine in southern Egypt near Aswan on a small pyramid.
Another of the few sources we have evidencing this king is a
fragment of a sandstone relief from Wadi Maghara in the
Sinai. It would seem that he, along with Djoser, began the
exploitation in earnest of the mineral wealth of the Sinai
peninsula, with its rich deposits of turquoise and copper.
It shows the king's name in a serekh before his face. The
relief depicts Sanakhte, who is about to smite an enemy,
wearing the Red Crown of Lower Egypt. We also know of a
priest of Nebka's mortuary cult who appears to have lived in
the reign of Djoser.
Some Egyptologists continue to believe that he may have been
the brother of his famous successor, Djoser (or Zoser), or
if not, perhaps his father, but apparently current thought
among Egyptologists leans against this. It has been
suggested that his tomb at Saqqara was incorporated into the
Step Pyramid of Djoser, though little real evidence for this
exists, but it has also been suggested that his is a little
known monument that seems to nicely fill the typological
lacuna between the Shunet el Zebib and the Step Pyramid at
Saqqara.
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