Sekhemkhet in Wikipedia
Sekhemkhet was a Pharaoh in Egypt during the Third dynasty. According
to the Manethonian tradition, a king known as Tyris (which may be
compared to the Turin Canon's "Djoser-ti") reigned for a relatively
brief period of seven years, and modern scholars believe Djoserty and
Sekhemkhet are the same person. While the Turin Canon gives Sekhemkhet
a reign of 6 years.[1] , Toby Wilkinson's reconstruction of the Dynasty
5 Palermo Stone Annal document assigns a reign of 7 years to this king
based on the number of year register preserved for him in Cairo
Fragment One, register V.[2] Wilkinson states that "this figure is
fairly certain, since the [king's] titulary begins immediately after
the dividing line marking the change of reign."[3] Hence, the
Manethonian tradition appears to be correct. His reign is thought to
have been from about 2648 BC until 2640 BC.[1] Sekhemkhet's name means
"Powerful in Body."[4]
Sekhemkhet's wife was Queen Djeseretnebti.
Pyramid
While there was a known successor to Djoser, Sekhemkhet's name was
unknown until 1951, when the leveled foundation and vestiges of an
unfinished Step Pyramid were discovered at Saqqara by Zakaria Goneim.
Only the lowest step of the pyramid had been constructed at the time of
his death. Jar seals found on the site were found inscribed with this
king's name. From its design and an inscription from his pyramid at
Saqqara, it is thought that Djoser's famous architect Imhotep had a
hand in the design of this pyramid. Imhotep's name appears in a
graffito on the enclosure wall surrounding Sekhemkhet's unfinished
step-pyramid which suggests that this official outlived Djoser and went
on to serve under king Sekhemkhet.[5]Archaeologists believe that
Sekhemket's pyramid would have been larger than Djoser's had it been
completed. Today the site, which lies southwest of Djoser's complex, is
mostly concealed beneath sand dunes and is known as the Buried Pyramid.
A shell shaped container made of gold was found in Sekhemkhet's
unfinished pyramid by an Egyptian Antiquities Service excavation team
in 1950.[6] The object has a length of 5.3 centimetres and is currently
located in Room 4 of the Cairo Museum.[7] - Wikipedia
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