Shepseskaf in Tour Egypt
KING SHEPSESKAF AND HIS MYSTERIOUS TOMB AT SAQQARA
BY JIMMY DUNN.
Ultimately, we know very little with any certainty about the
last king of Egypt's 4th Dynasty. His birth name was
Shepseskaf, meaning "His Soul is Noble", and like everything
else about him, seems out of place. Most kings' of this (and
most other) periods made some sort of reference to a god in
their name, with all but his immediate successor, Userkaf,
who founded the 5th Dynasty, giving that honor to the sun
god Re.
We do believe with much certainty that his father was
Menkaure (Mycerinus), the builder of the last great pyramid
on the Giza Plateau. We also believe with considerable
certainty that he was responsible for completing his
father's pyramid. His mother is unknown, but was probably
one of his father's minor queens. We also believe that he
had at least one wife, named Bunefer. Egyptologists mostly
seem in agreement that he ruled Egypt for a very short
period, probably four years. Here, our knowledge of this
king seems to end and speculation begins, for scholars
appear to have many disagreements about the other aspects of
his reign, which mostly hinge on the interpretation of his,
and a few other tombs. Therefore, we must explore these
prior to presenting other questions about Shepseskaf that
beg for answers.
The Tomb of Shepseskaf
Unlike his immediate predecessors and his successors,
Shepseskaf chose the form of a Mastaba rather then a pyramid
for his tomb, and perhaps for various reasons, built it in
South Saqqara rather than on the Giza Plateau. Called by the
locals, Mastaba Fara'un, (Pharaoh's Bench), it has always
been one of the most enigmatic tombs of the Old Kingdom and
therefore it much investigated by archaeologists. Perring
was the first to describe it and though the Lepsius
expedition spent little time investigating the tomb, Lepsius
did note that it reminded him of a large sarcophagus.
Mariette was really the first to truly investigate the
structure in 1858, examining its underground construction,
but regrettably, only a few of his sketches survived. They
were later published by Maspero.
However, through all the early years of Egyptology and up
until the time that Gustave Jeuier carried out a systematic
investigation of South Saqqara between 1924 and 1925, the
tomb was ascribed to Unas, the last of the 5th Dynasty
kings. Though Jeuier had a difficult time proving directly
that the tomb belonged to Shepseskaf, there were several
items evidencing its builder. First of all, a stela was
found at the site that, while very fragmentary, contained a
part of the sing for the last letter of the king's name.
Independent of the site, he also discovered that the name of
the king's tomb was "Shepseskaf is [ritually] purified",
which concluded with a determinative (an explanatory sign)
in the form of a mastaba, suggesting that Shepseskaf's tomb
should take that form. Finally another stela dated to the
Middle Kingdom showed that during that period, Shepseskaf's
cult was still active on the site of Mastaba Fara'un.
Certainly there was a valley temple connected with this
tomb, but its remains have never been unearthed. The
causeway that normally connected valley temples with their
mortuary temples directly did not in this case, but rather
led to the southeast corner of the temple before running
along the south wall into the open courtyard surround the
mastaba. It was built entirely of mudbrick, and seems to
have taken the form of a corridor with a vaulted ceiling.
As much an aberration as everything else about this complex,
the mortuary temple varies significantly from its
predecessors. It stood in front of the east wall of the
mastaba and just as the mastaba, was oriented north-south.
It was small, but even so we may distinguish two different
phases in its development, based on the material employed
for its construction.
The oldest section is built of stone and had three
entrances. One of the entrances was in the middle of the
east facade, while another was near the southeast corner.
The third entrance was placed in the middle of the south
facade. An open courtyard took up the eastern half of the
temple. It was paved in limestone, and in its northwest
corner once stood an altar. The inner part of the mortuary
temple took up the western section of the temple and
consisted of an offering hall shaped like an inverted letter
T. In its west wall there was originally a false door in its
west wall. Significantly, there were no statue niches in
this inner sanctuary, though part of a statue of the king
was found in the temple. The northwestern part of the temple
was taken up by a cluster of smaller chambers that were
probably storage annexes.
Later, a large, open courtyard made of mudbrick was created
to the east of the mortuary temple with niches that adorned
its inner walls.
Shepseskaf's mastabas was huge, measuring some 99.6 meters
(327 ft) long by 74.4 meters (244 ft) broad, and oriented
north to south. The core of the mastaba was built in two
levels of large, grayish yellow limestone blocks that
originated in the stone quarries west of the pyramids at
Dahshur. In the early years of Egyptian exploration, it was
still possible to find remnants of the pathways over which
this stone was transported. The mastaba was encased with
fine white limestone except for the very bottom course of
red granite (which makes us wonder if it was left over from
his father's complex). On some of the casing blocks may be
found inscriptions of Prince Khaemwese's later restoration
of this monument. The outer slope of the casing was 70o and
it had a vaulted top between vertical ends, taking the shape
of a Buto shrine (according to some Egyptologists, such as
Mark Lehner)..
On the axis of the north wall about two and one half meters
above ground level, the entrance to the substructure seems
more like that of a pyramid rather than a mastaba. Within, a
small vestibule communicates with a corridor lined in pink
granite that descends at an angle of 23o 30' for 20.95
meters (69 ft) to a corridor chamber immediately followed by
three portcullis slots for plugging blocks. Afterwards, the
corridor becomes horizontal and eventually terminates in an
antechamber with a pink granite ceiling. From there, a
narrow corridor leads out from the southeast of the
antechamber connecting with six niches (some references
state five) that may have functioned as small storage
annexes. These may be seen as the equivalent of those found
in the pyramid of his father and that of Khentkaues
(pyramid), and may foreshadow the three small magazines that
would later become standard.
Another short passage descends out of the antechamber to the
west allowing access to the burial chamber. Its pink granite
ceiling, like that of the burial chamber of his father,
Menkaure, was sculpted into a false barrel vault. Indeed,
even the fragments of his dark, basalt sarcophagus unearthed
in the burial chamber was decorated very similarly to that
of his father.
Surrounding the mastaba/mortuary temple complex was a second
perimeter wall made of mud brick. Unlike other royal tombs
of this period, there appears to have been no tombs for
Shepseskaf's family members and officials within the area
around his tomb.
Speculation
The aberration of Shepseskaf's name, his tomb and the tomb
of his possible daughter, consort or/and half sister all
stand out like sore thumbs, awaiting the theories of
Egyptologists that may perhaps never be proven. All we can
do here is present the current speculation, and possibly add
a little of our own.
Jequier offers an initial explanation that other
Egyptologists, such as Jaromir Malek, who provided the Old
Kingdom component of the Oxford History of Ancient Egypt,
find tempting. He was rather convinced that Shepseskaf
choose the mastaba style tomb as an intentional protest
against the priesthood of the cult of Re, the sun god, which
was gaining considerable influence. Jequier believed that
the ancient Egyptians considered the pyramid a symbol of the
sun, as do many modern Egyptologists. Certainly the rise of
the pyramid coincided with the growing influence of Re's
cult. He also believed that Shepseskaf's move away from the
Giza Plateau and hence, the traditions of his immediate
predecessors, supported his position, but perhaps even more
important to his argument was Shepseskaf's abandonment of
Re's reference within his name.
This theory, along with several of its components can be
easily attacked, and have been from a number of different
directions. One of the easiest elements to overcome in
Jequier's theory is Shepseskaf's move away from the Giza
Plateau. His father, Menkoaure was required, due to spatial
restrictions, to place his pyramid far away from the Nile,
and it is relatively clear from his valley temple placement,
blocking the principal conduit for construction materials
into the necropolis, that he intended no more major
monuments to be built there. In fact, there was simply no
more room for such a major construct on the Plateau. This
undoubtedly prompted Shepseskaf to look for another
location, and in doing so, he chose a place that not so very
far from the pyramids of the dynasty's founders. In fact,
the stone for his mastaba came from Dahshur, the location of
Snefru's Bent and Red Pyramids. Saqqara was also a very
ancient necropolis, that in fact relates somewhat to his use
of a mastaba rather than a pyramid.
Regarding Shepseskaf's use of a mastaba rather than a
pyramid as a protest against the priesthood of Re, Ricke
believed that the obelisk, rather than the pyramid, was
considered by the Egyptians to be the symbol of the sun.
After all, the 5th Dynasty kings who we believe constructed
the sun temples, mostly at Abu Ghurob, with a short obelisk
as a focal point, did so in addition to their pyramid
complexes mostly at Abusir. In his opinion, which seems to
be mirrored by one of modern Egypt's great scholars, Mark
Lehner, he was, rather than rejecting the cult of re,
honoring his religious heritage in the form of the Lower
Egyptian "Buto-type" tomb. It was really not very uncommon
at all for Egyptian pharaohs to display such archaic tastes.
Similarly, Hans-Wolfgang Muller (1907-1991) felt that
Shepseskaf's mastaba was a huge version of a hut hung with
matting. Indeed, Stadelmann, drawing on the arguments of
Ricke and Muller, pointed out that Shepseskaf's use of
niches in the courtyard of his mortuary temple, as well as
in certain elements of his father's pyramid complex, was, an
archaizing element from Egypt's earliest architecture.
In addition, it must also be noted that Shepseskaf faced the
difficult task of completing his father's pyramid at Giza.
This must have certainly created a considerable
administrative and financial burden, at a time when the
Egypt was apparently suffering some economic hardship. This
may have led him to downsize his own tomb. Other
possibilities exist. It is possible that the mastaba was
initiated prior to his ascent to the throne, for example, or
that it was a provisional tomb created with the possibility
that if time permitted, another once could have been built.
We question whether many of the issues will ever be
answered. This tomb has been considerably investigated, as
has the Saqqara Necropolis in general, so perhaps there will
be no new answers. But the possibility always exists that
future discoveries may, at least, provide answers to at
least some of the questions surrounding this mysterious man
and his tomb.
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