Qurneh
Qurneh
Qurneh
EGYPTIAN
RESEARCH
ACCOUNT
F I F T E E N T H YEAR, 1909
QURNEH
W. M. FLINDERS PETRIE
WITH A CHAPTER BY
J. H. WALKER
Le-ND O N
SCHOOL
OF
ARCHAEOLOGY
IN
EGYPT
AND
B E R N A R D QUARITCH
QURNEH.
SITHATHOR TOMB.
XVll DYNASTY 3
DANCERS.
QURNEH
W. M. FLINDERS PETRIE
HON. D.C.L., LL.D., LITT,D., PH.D.
F.R.S., F.B.A., HON.F.S.A. (SCOT.)
MEMBER OF T H E ROYAL IRISH ACADEMY
MEMBER
OF
THE
IMPERIAL
GERMAN
ARCHAEOLOGICAL
INSTITUTE
WITH A CHAPTER BY
DR.J. H. WALKER
LONDON
SCHOOL
OF
ARCHAEOLOGY
IN
EGYPT
BERNARD QUARITCH
11,
PRINTED BY
HAZELL, WATSON A N D VINEY, LD..
LONDON A N D AYLESBURY.
*Prof. ERNESTGARDNER
Prof. PERCYGARDNER
Rt. Hon. Sir G. T. GOLDIE
Prof. GOWLAND
Mrs. J. R. GREEN
Dr. A. C. HADDON
JESSEHAWORTH
Dr. A. C. HEADLAM
* ~ ~ ~ R O BHENSLEY
E R T (Chairman)
D. G. HOGARTH
Sir H. H. HOWORTH
Baron A. VON H ~ . G E L
Prof. MACALISTER
Dr. R. W. MACAN
Prof. MAHAFFY
*J. G. MILNE
Treasurer-*H.
SEFTON-JONES
Honorary Director-Prof.
Honorary Secretaries-Mrs.
Sir C. SCOTTMONCRIEFF
KOBERTMOND
Prof. MONTAGUE
WALTERMORRISON
*Miss M. A. MURRAY
Prof. P. E. NEWBERRY
Dr. PAGEMAY
F. W. PERCIVAL
Dr. PINCHES
Dr. G. W. PROTHERO
Dr. G. REISNER
Sir W. RICHMOND
Prof. F. W. RIDGEWAY
Mrs. STRONG
Mrs. TIRARD
E. TOWRYWHYTE
FLINDERS
PETRIE
T h e need of providing for the training of students is even greater in Egypt than it
is in Greece and Italy ; and the relation of England to Egypt at present makes it the
more suitable that support should be given t o a British School in that land. This body is
the only such agency, and is also the basis of the excavations of Prof. Flinders Petrie, who
has had many students associated with his work in past years. T h e great enterprise of the
excavation of the temples and city of Memphis, which has now been undertaken, promises
the most valuable results. But it will necessarily be far more costly than any other work
in Egypt, and it cannot be suitably carried out without increasing the present income of the
School. Active support is required to ensure the continuance of such work, which depends
entirely on personal contributions, and each subscriber receives the annual volume. T h e
antiquities not retained by the Egyptian Government are presented to Public Museums, after
the Annual Exhibition, during July, at University College. T h e accounts are audited by a
Chartered Accountant, and published in the Annual Report. Treasurer : H. SEFTON-JONES.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER IV
PAGE
SECT.
.
.
.
T H E P A I N T E D TOMBS.
SECT.
CHAPTER I
21.
T H E A N T E F CEMETERY.
4.
5.
6.
7.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
3 1.
II
11
32.
33.
34.
35.
.
.
Statuettes
.
Burials under temple of Nebunnef
Pottery .
Sculptures of Sety I
.
Seals of Sety I
.
Temple of Nebunnef .
Squared drawings
.
.
.
.
12
12
12
13
I3
I4
14
CHAPTER I11
6
6
15
15
15
16
CHAPTER V11
T H E INSCRTPTIONS.
.
.
11
CHAPTER V1
12.
10
T H E CHAPEL O F SANKH-KA-RA.
The position .
13. The pottery in nets
.
14. The furniture.
.
I 5. The basket and contents
16. The coffin and mummy.
17. The wrappings
.
18. The jewellery
.
19. The skeleton .
20. The infant burial .
CHAPTER V
2
CHAPTER I1
8. The position .
g. The chapel .
10. The inscriptions
1 I . The Sed festival
PA6E
By Dr. j . H. WALKER.
.
.
.
8
g
10
10
36.
37.
38.
39.
Discussion of steles
.
The Antef steles .
Other XIth dynasty steles
The statuette of Usi
.
.
.
16
16
17
I7
LIST O F PLATES
WITH
PAGE
REFERENCES
TO THE DESCRIPTIONS
PAGE
PAGE
9,
,)
9,
9,
9,
9,
1,
19
9,
9,
))
. 9
XXIX. Jewellery of XVIIth dynasty.
XXX. Inscriptions, XVIIth - XVI 11th
dynasties .
. 10, 12
.
3, 12
XXXI. Objects from tombs
.
. 12, 17
XXXII. Figure of Usi .
XXXIII. Figure and foundation deposits 12, 14
XXXIV. Tomb of Baka, piper
.
. II
. I1
xxxv. ),
,, weighing
.
SXXVI.
,,
,, wine and ducks . 11
XXXVII.
)l
,, birds and Taro . I I
.
. 11
XXXVIII. Tomb of Amen-mes
.
. 11
XXXIX. Tomb of Piaay
12, 13
XL. Groups of pottery, 632-667 .
XLI. Pottery of XVI I Ith dynasty,668-7 10 1 2
XL1 I.
,l
,,
, 711-757 12
- 13
XL1 I I. Temple of Sety. Rameses I .
XLIV.
V
standards ,
I3
XLV.
,,
,,
Siptah, etc.
. 13
XLVI.
,,
,)
sealings .
13, 14
I4
XLVII. Nebunnef temple plan .
15
XLVIII. Squared drawings .
XLIX. Pottery of XXIInd dynasty, 758-785 I 5
L.
,>
, 786-797 15
LI.
,,
,,
,, 798-81 1 I5
I5
LII. Coffins of XXVth dynasty .
LIII. Burial, XXVth dynasty. Soulhouses, etc.
I5
LIV. Pottery of XXVIth dynasty,814-850 16
LV.
1,
, 851-857 16
.
IS
LVI. Apries tablet. Coptic jar
l)
9,
QURNEH
INTRODUCTION
I . T H E work of the earlier part of the season
was at Qurneh, the northern end of the cemetery
of Thebes on the western side. It was carried on
from g December 1908 to 8 February 1 9 9 , after
which the workmen from Quft were moved down to
Memphis, to continue the work there in the dry end
of the season. On such a site as Qurneh a short
spell of work could not achieve any large systematic
clearance. The main subject was a search in some
of the desert valleys for the possible discovery of
any remote tombs. Two small valleys were searched ;
one by trenching the whole of the likely surfaces,
with the result of finding one fine interment of the
XVIIth dynasty ; the other valley was cleared deep
and wide over the most promising parts without any
result. Another complete work was the clearing of
a new temple site of the XIXth dynasty. An important discovery at the close of the time was the Sed
festival chapel of Sankh-ka-ra of the XIth dynasty;
some more clearance might be made there, but as it
is on the top of the mountain three miles away, we
only spent two days on it. The northern end of the
cemetery in the plain opposite Karnak was searched
as long as anything could be found, with the result
of getting a large collection of pottery of the XIth
dynasty, here published, and an important historical
inscription. And a little was done on the Drah
abul Nega hill, both in copying tombs and finding
objects. Most of the ground we touched will not
need to be looked at again; but two months' work
is as nothing in the exploration of such a site.
2. The structure of the western hills at Thebes is
but little known ; though thousands of persons visit
the Tombs of the Kings, hardly any one has seen
the other valleys, and the usual maps do not include
them. As this was our district, I made a sketch
plan of the valleys, given in PI. IV. The principal
peaks were triangulated from a base in the plain ;
positions at every half-mile or so were fixed by
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 11
T H E C H A P E L O F SANKH-KA-RA, XITH DYNASTY.
CHAPTER
THE INTACT BURIAL OF THE XVIITH DYNASTY.
12. AFTER trenching closely over much of the
sides of the first valley to the north of the road to
the Tombs of the Kings, I noticed a projecting face
of rock in a retired branch of the valley. This is
marked on the plan (Pl. IV), at a little above the
zero of the scales, by the letter B. In the ground
below this were several natural boulders lying close
together. When our men came to clear amongst these
they found that they covered a burial, which was placed
in an open shallow trench in the rock. The plan
of the group is shewn in P1. XXII. The head
was to the west, and the rock scarp overhung the
basket side of the group on the south. The rock
trench held the coffin and the objects a t the sides
of i t ; but the minor coffin, on and beyond the feet,
was above the rock cutting. The photographs of the
objects in position will shew the general arrangement,
Pls. XXIII, XXIV.
13. Beginning on the outer side of the group
there was a stick roughly trimmed a t the knots, but
with the bark on, 50.8 inches long. Upon this ten
nets had been slung containing pottery. At the east
end were three nets, each containing two pans of thin
polished red pottery with black tops (Pl. XXVIII).
Next was a long jar in a knotted string bag (Pl.
XXVIII), then a long jar in an open net-work
(Pl. XXVII). A bare interval on the stick shewed
the space where it had been carried on the shoulder.
Then came two small pots with the netting much
decayed. After two long jars in the ground came
a pot turned mouth down, with good netting, another
hanging with netting decayed, and a drab pot in
netting which had slipped off the end of the stick.
All of the nettings were in a very tender state, and
only the string bag would bear handling. The gravel
was carefully picked away, the dust blown off while
holding the net down, and then collodion was dropped
over the threads to consolidate them. The entire
clearance of this burial occupied about five hours,
though in ordinary antiquity digging it would have
been rifled in ten minutes. The main part of the
interest consisted in these very rare net-works, which
(1)
{
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
115
I4
S
10
176
57
171
58
189
29
328
51
164
50
166
52
711
60
141
56
164 53
170
5s
283
52
182
51
rotted
Threads in inches.
Warp.
Woof.
Bangles
. . 322.7, 324.4, 325.6, 325'8 = 1298'5
Girdle
.
3527
Ear-rings ,
. 133.8, 138.8 = 272'6
Strings of rings . 349.4, 364'9, 394'0, 392'6
= 1585'4
Connecting piece of collar . 39'8,41'4,3'2
Button
I I '7
Total
3520'
I0
CHAPTER IV
THE PAINTED TOMBS, XVIITH-XXTH DYNASTIES.
2r.
1t
12
CHAPTER V
THE XVIIITH AND XIXTH DYNASTIES.
25. THEmost important objects of the XVIIIth
dynasty were figures found in a tomb pit, anciently
plundered, towards the north end of Drah abul Nega.
This pit was in a small court, which had the tomb
of Amen-mes on the south, that of Piaay standing
open on the north, and a plain passage tomb on the
west. In the north side of the floor was a small
unopened pit and chamber with two burials of the
XXVth dynasty, described in the next chapter ; and
in the north-west corner was a deep tomb pit for
which the open court had probably been originally
made. In this tomb pit was a seated black granite
figure, broken in two pieces and some fragments
(PI. XXXII), and the upper part of a figure in
limestone (PI. XXXIII). The granite figure is of
the scribe of the accounts of corn in the southern
cities, Usi, son of Si-amen. It is as good as any
granite work of the New Kingdom. The limestone
figure is of the finest work of that age, with the
suavity and beauty which characterise it. Unfortunately it does not bear any inscription.
26. Beneath the temple of Nebunnef the earlier
tombs had scarcely been touched in modern times ;
we were therefore able to obtain some steles, pottery,
and other objects. The earliest object is a limestone
figure, seated cross-legged, of the king's son Antefmes, called Mes-tesher, the " red child " (XXX, 3).
It is decayed by the damp, but interesting from its
age. A fragment, XXX, 4, appears to be of a stele
of one of the Antefs, Ra-seshes-her-maat or Raseshes-up-maat, adoring Amen. A stele of a man
and his wife, XXX, I , appears to be of about the
XVIIth dynasty. Half of a black granite base,
XXX, 2, was made for the figures of the keeper of
the granary of Amen, Setu, and his sister Usi. A
piece of limestone with large fine hieroglyphs in
relief, XXX, 7, was found in the ruins of the
Nebunnef temple; it seems to be part of a tomb
of a scribe of accounts. The piece of a black granite
sarcophagus, XXX, 5, was bought ; it is of the celebrated architect Amenhotep, son of Hapu, whose
tomb is as yet unknown. Pieces of steles were also
found in the temple of Nebunnef, of Huy, a scribe
of Amen, XII, 22 ; of King Amenhotep I, XII, 23,
singularly like Tahutmes 111 in features ; and of a
priest Huy adoring Amenhotep and Aahmes Nefertari, XII, 24.
There are also some tomb objects from the same
SCULPTURES OF SE'I'Y f
f3
..
14
15
R PERIODS
CHAPTER V11
THE INSCRIPTIONS.
By D;: /. H. WALKER.
THE INSCRIPTIONS
I7
."
INDEX
Aahmes Nefertari,
Collar of gold, 9
Colossi of Ramessu 11, 14
Cones of pottery, 10, 12
Corn-grinders in deposit, 14
Couch and figure, 12
Crispus, T. Domitius, I 5
Cubit of Sankh-ka-ra, 6
of XVIIth dynasty, 7
of squared walls, I 5
Cutter of bronze, 7, 8, 12
13
cattle of, I I
Alabaster vases, Xlth dynasty, 3
XVIIth dynasty, 8
Amenhotep I on stele, 1 2
Amenhotep, son of Hapu, sarcophagus, I 2
Amen-mes, tomb of, I I, 12
Amen-messu, tablet of, 13
Antef cerhetery, 2
steles, 3, 16, 17
Antef, Ra-seshes-up-maat, stele, 12
Antef-mes, seated figure of, 12
Aphroditopolis frontier of Antefs, 3, 16, 17
Armlets of gold, 9
Auab, I I
12,
Baka tomb, I I
Bangles of gold, g
of silver, I 2
Bantanta, house of, 13
Baskets of XVIIth dynasty, 7, 8
Bead pouch, 8
Beads loose on mummy, 8
of XIth dynasty, 3
Bed-frames, 6
Bird vase, 3
Black pottery, 12
Box of XVIIth dynasty, 7
of infant burial, 10
Button of electrum, g
Ear-rings of gold, 9
Electrum girdle, g
button, g
Farshut road, I
Fat buried, 7
Female figure on couch, 12
Flint flakes of XVIIth dynasty, 7
Fly whisk of beads, 8
Forts, 2
Fresco of dancers, I I
Calf weight, I I
Cenotaph of Sankh-ka-ra, 5
Chair of XVIIth dynasty, 7
Cloth on mummy, 8
gauge-of, 8
Coffin of XVIIth dynasty, 7
of pottery, 12
INDEX
Ihet-abu, 17
Intact burial of XVIIth dynasty, 6-10
Jewellery on mummy, g
Ka of temple figured, I 3
Ked-nefer-hemt-mut, I 7
Khauiy, cones of, I 2
Khety of Thinis, 17
Kohl pots of XIth dynasty, 3
XVIIth dynasty, 8, 10
XVIIIth dynasty, 12
Latin inscriptions, I 5
Limestone, black kohl pot,
I2
Mace standard, I 3
Mackay, Mr. E., 2
Marble, blue, bowl, 7
Memphis, name of, I 3
Mentuhotep, Osiris figure of, 6
Mery, I I
Mes, wife of Baka, I I
Mes-tesher, figure of, 1 2
Monkey bowl, 7
Mummy of XVIIth dynasty, 7
wrappings of, 8, 10
Palaeolithic seats, I
Perenbast, coffin of, I 5
Petrie, Mrs., 2, I I
Piaay, tomb of, I I
Pipes, musical, I I
Pit tombs, 2, 3
Plan of valleys, I , 4
Portico tombs, 3
Pottery, dating of, 2, 4
XIth-XI Ith dynasty, 2, 3, 4
XVIIIth dynasty, 12, I 3
XXIInd dynasty, I 5
XXVIth dynasty, 1 6
in nets, 6, 7
shewn in tomb scene, I I
Pyrites, 12
Quarry cutting, I 5
Qurneh, position of site,
Sankh-ka-ra cenotaph, 5
chapel, 5
inscriptions, 5
Scarab on mummy, g
Sealings of Sety I, I 3
Se-ankh-nu, I I
Sed feast, 5, 6
Sen-mut, cone of, 10
Sent-mentui on stele, 17
Sentry walks, I
Serpentine, black, kohl pot,
12
INDEX
Taro, seated, I I
Taurt, sketch of, I 5
Thinis attacked, 17
Threading of seat, 7
Tombs, direction of 2
2,
I,
17
Wainwright, Mr., 2
Walker, Dr. J. H., chapter by, 16
Weighing, scenes of, I I
Weight of eighty grains, g
Weights, forms of, I I
Wildfowl, painting of, I I
Wine sealings, 1 3
store, I I
Wrappings of mummy, 8, g, 10
16,
17
QURNEH.
II.
QURNEH,
STELES OF Z A R A , X I D Y N A S T Y .
QURNEH.
P L A N OF V A L L E Y S .
QURNEH.
OUTSIDE OF CHAPEL.
SHRINE OF CHAPEL.
XI DYN.
V.
QURNEH,
SED-HEB
E.M.
QURNEH.
S E D - H E B C E N O T A P H OF S A N K H - K A - R A .
X I DYNASTY.
1:3
QURNEH.
1: 150
VIII.
-.v-..
R O O M S
QUARRY
ETC.
B E ~ I N DC
G RAFriTI
HAPEL
or
S A N
K H -KA- R A .
~YTY)<W/// L u C b F.-:
QURNEH.
S L A C K TOPPED R E D POTTERY.
POTTERY, ALABASTER,
ALABASTER
B L A C K POTTERY
M A U L S OF XVIII. D Y N A S T Y .
IX.
AND STONE M A U L S .
M A U L S OF X l l
K O H L VASES
91RD.
6.23.
DYNASTY.
QURNEH.
CEMETERY B.
1 : 250
QURNEH.
PLANS OF TOMBS OF X I D Y N A S T Y .
QURNEH.
XI-XVIII
rArN.
DYNASTY.
sour
rmru
~ ~ 0 0 0 0 0 0 3
AGATE
CARN-
M A I M . CARN.
AGATE
XII.
1 :6
QURNEH.
P O T T E R Y OF U A H - A N K H ,
ANTEF,
X I DYN.
1: 6
QURNEH.
P O T T E R Y O F C E M E T E R I E S A,
B.
XI
DYNASTY.
XIV.
1:6
QURNEH.
POTTERY OF C E M E T E R I E S A,
B.
X I DYNASTY.
XV.
Blb
H.P.
1:6
QURNEH.
POTTERY OF C E M E T E R I E S A,
B.
XI DYNASTY.
XVI.
1:6
QURNEH.
POTTERY OF CEMETERIES A, B.
X I DYNASTY.
XVII.
1 :6
QURNEH.
P O T T E R Y OF CEMETERIES A, B.
XI DYNASTY.
XVIII.
1:6
QURNEH.
POTTERY OF CEMETERIES A, B.
XI
DYNASTY.
1:6
QURNEH.
P O T T E R Y O F C E M E T E R I E S A,
B.
XI
DYNASTY.
XX.
1 :6
QURNEH.
OFFERING TRAYS.
X I DYNASTY.
XXI.
QURNEH.
c @A:
FLINT
SANDSTONE
INTACT BURIAL.
XVll DYNASTY.
I N T A C T B U R I A L O F X V l l DYNASTY.
QURNEH.
XXIII.
47.-
W*
L=
.r.--
QURNEH. I N T A C T B U R I A L O F X V l l D Y N A S T Y .
XXIV.
UURNEH.
INTACT
BURIAL
aF XVla D Y N A S T Y .
1:2
QURNEH.
RED POTTERY.
ALABASTER.
N U M B E R S REFER T O P L A T E XXII.
XXVII.
1:2
QURNEH.
I N T A C T B U R I A L O F XVIITH DYNASTY.
N U M B E R S REFER T O P L A T E XXII.
XXVIII.
QURNEH.
2:3
.;
.
...
XXIX.
I N T A C T BURIAL OF X V I I T H DYNASTY.
7 . l . .
I . .
FASTENING OPEN
ELECTEUV
BUTTON.
GOLD
COLLAR.
BAYGLES.
AND
WEIGHTS.
-0-
l;R:~I?Js.
Collar
1585.4
Bangles
322.7
Button
Girdle
- 11.7
- 352
E L E C T R U M GIRDLE.
EAR-RIhG?.
QURNEH,
INSCRIPTIONS X V I I - X V I I I
DYNASTY.
XXX.
I
-
c
*-
N
i
H P
QURNEH.
OBJECTS F R O M T O M B S .
XI-XVIII
DYNASTIES.
H-R
QURNEH.
B L A C K G R A N I T E F I G U R E OF USI. X V l l l
DYNASTY.
XXXII.
QURNEH.
OBJECTS O F XVIII-XIX
-1MESTONE
F O U N D A T I O N DEPOSIT O F N E B U N N E F .
DYNASTIES.
XXXIII.
FIGURE
T R I A L PIECE.
QURNEH.
TOMB O F BAKA, E
W A L L , N. HALF.
XVlll DYNASTY.
QURNEH.
XVlll DYNASTY.
QURNEH.
XVlll DYNASTY.
QURNEH.
TOMB OF BAKA.
--
X V l l l DYNASTY.
TARO.
E. WALL, N. HALF.
W . WALL, N. HALF.
QURNEH,
TOMB OF AMEN-MES.
I
,;
; ;-,
I..L'
'.
H.C.
QURNEH,
T O M B OF PIAAY, N. WALL.
XX? DYNASTY.
QURNEH.
GROUPS O F POTTERY.
1:6
QURNEH.
P O T T E R Y O F CEMETERIES A , B.
XVlll
DYNASTY.
XLI.
QURNEH,
POTTERY OF CEMETERIES A,
B, N.
XVlll
DYNASTY.
XLII.
XLIV.
1:8
QURNEH. T E M P L E OF S E T Y . S I P T A H S T E L E , T E M P L E K A , A N D OFFERINGS.
X LV
QURNEH,
XIX
DYNASTY.
---
:-
'p;
..c;
'\..
1:6
XLVIII.
QURNEH.
POTTERY OF B
C E M E T E R Y , AND S E T Y STORES.
XLIX.
1:6
QURNEH.
P O T T E R Y OF B. C E M E T E R Y .
XXll DYNASTY.
L.
1:6
QURNEH.
POTTERY OF B. CEMETERY.
XXll
DYNASTY.
QURNEH.
X X V T H DYNASTY BURIAL,
COPTIC H E R M I T A G E A N D S O U L HOUSES.
%'
R O M A N GUARD H O U S E ,
COPTIC H E R M I T A G E A N D P I L L A R
DWELLING.
P I L L A R D W E L L I N G F R O M ABOVE.
,-
'.-F
,.l--+.S'
% .
/
'-
.:$
---4
*r 4
:.&
>A- F
M
q
%
LIII.
QURNEH,
POTTERY.
XXIII-XXVI
DYNASTIES.
LIV.
1:6
QURNEH.
STORE-ROOMS
OF SETY 1 ;
GREEK A M P H O R A E .
X X V l DYN.
QURNEH.
QUARRY T A B L E T O F HA-AB-RA
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TRANSLATIONS OF EGYPTIAN TALES. With illustrations by Tristram Ellis. 2 vols., 3s. 6d. Methuen.
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SIX TEMPLES A T THEBES. 2 6 pl., 10s. Quarifch.
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