Lexicografia
Lexicografia
Lexicografia
Studies 'Ancient
in
of
and their
parts.
ratricia
Ann Spencer.
Submitted University
for
the
d6gre-e"'of London.
-Ph*D*
College
7zil3L. tLO1N.
Abstract the meanings of the The aim of this study is to attempt to clarify the architectto describe terms used by the ancient Egyptians various temple* It consists ural elements which constituted of an Egyptian of a total of fifty-seven nouns which havet in the pastp been translated by general terms such as 11shrinelly "hall"t "column't Each of the terms is discussed individually, ' and "wall". and the entries are arranged-according to the order of the Egyptian alphabet. Each entry consistsof-adetailed review of the evidence for the history of the meaning of the term, comparing, and'development the textual where possiblep evidence with the plans of surviving temple-remains. The etymology of each termp, if knownp is noted togit may have had to'a similar term in with any relationship another language. Each discussion is preceded by examples of the hieroglyphic various of the term at different writings periods. Most of the terms studied in this work have never before been thoroughly investigatedg and even those which had been studied , previously were often still poorly understood and, in some caseso mistranslated. The main result of this study has been to trace the developments and changes in meaning of the terms includedv and for some terms it has been possible to suggest new transeither lations or to produce further evidence in support of a previouslysuggested translation which had not gained general acceptance. ether discussions
3.
Table of Contents.
Abbreviations. Introductiong Dictionaryq Bibliography, Eg. ti an Index vp Index of Architectural Topographical Indexq Signsp
4
7 10
295
324 327 328
Abbreviations ASAE Barguet, Annales Templ du Service Barguetq des Antiquites de L'Egypte. a Karnak
(Cairop
kunde.
BIPAO Borchardt, Bulletin de 11Institut Francais Borchardtq (104zigv d'Archeologie Lq 1905)Zur Baugeschichte
Amonstempels
Notices
Descriptive
de IIEP-Tpte
et de la Nubieg d'Egypte.
. Notices
Chappolliong Descriptive
J. F. 9 YonumeAtp 92 volumes,
de Recherches
de 1ille. Damichen, Wilhelm Jop Resultate I von Preussen der auf Befehl im. Sommer 1868 na-ch Expedition,
Dictionary
(Oxford,
1962)e A. H. p The Admonitions of an E papyrus in Leiden (Pap. Leiden 344 A. H*p Egyptian Grammarp 3rdo editiony Onomasticat 3
Gardiner,
(Oxford, Gardiner, Onom.. Gardiner, 1947)Dictionnaire des noms geogTaphiques Ig (Cairov 1925)U. 9 The Excavation Center in Egypt, contenus A. H., Ancient Egyptian
volumesp Gauthier, dans les E61scherv JARCE LFA Jequierg ienne JNES
KRI icalp
(Oxford, Geog,.
Diet. Exc.
textes
Med. Habu. (Chicagov Habug II-vv Journal The Journal Architectureg Egypt Journal
Kitchen,
of Medinet
Research Archaeology.
et la decoration 1920-1924)historical
dans llanc-
93 of Near EaAern
K*A., (Oxford,
Studies.
and biograph1975
RamessideInscriptionst continuing).
7 volumes,
ED
Lepsius, (Berlin,,
LDT
Lepsius, volumes,
MDAIK
Mitteilungen in Kair
tumskunde M10
Fiehly
Mitteilungen
Inscriptions,
des Instituts
Piehlq et)
Orientforschun
Inscriptions 3 series, Recueil (Parisq
.
rec1686-1903)inedites (Leipzig,
hi6roglyphiaues
d1inscriptions 1874-1878)-
2 volumes,
Bibliography
of
Anc-
Egyptian
Texts, editiong
2nde
papyru 1976),,
Society
Texts. (Leipzigg
Sethev
Kov Die
Altaegyptischen Faulkner,
o Pyramidentexte,
1908-1910)o Supplement
Pyramid
Texts.
Rankeg Personennameng,
Rankeg H. p Die Agyptischen 3 volumes, (Gluckstadt/Hamburgg 1935-1977)Recueil de Travaux Relatifs 6gyptiennes fran2aise
Parsonennmen,
et a
et assyriennes
de bulletin
du Caire.,
Revue d'Egyptologie. zur Altgyptischen Sauneron, A. 11.9 Middle Urkunden 1968). Blackman, Egyptian Storidso (Brussels, 1932), Kultur. S*, Le Temple d'Esna (Esna, III),
1-41.
irket Irk-t It II, Sethe, K., des Alten Reichst Urkunden (LeiPzigt 1903-1933). X. p Hieroglyphische (leiPzii; 1904)p
11. and Steindorfft
der Griechisch-Ii6mis-
Urkei,
Schlfer,
G. 9 Urkunden
der
lteren
6
Athiopenknige, I., (Leipzigt 1905)der 18 Dynasti lieft 1-16, (Leipzig, 9 Heft 17-22, der 18 Dynasti , Ig (leiPzigt Inhalt 1915)Ig , (leipzig,
Berthey K., Urk=den Urke 9 IV. 1906-1909)o Helck, Weg Urkunden (Berling rkel, 2rk, Vy vit 1929).
122ice 'Viit 9 leren Sethe, Reichesq Ig K.
Mythologischen
TJrk=den
des Mitt-
rket
VIIIP
Firchow,
0.,
Thebanische Ig (Berling
Tempelinschriften 1951)-
aMs Grie-
chisch-Rmischer
Zeitp
Tieg
E=ang As and Grapowg Ho, Wdirterbuch der Aegyptischen 5 volumes, (Leipzig, 1926-1931)-
Sprach 9
Wb. Belegstellen,
Ermang A* and Grapowg Reg Wrterbuch der Aecmt (LeiPzigg ischen Spracheg Die Belegstellen, 5 volumest 1937-1951)gyptische ZS Zeitschrift fur Sprache und Altertumskundee
Introduction into the language of the ancient lexicographical The value of studies to his Onomastical by Gardiner in the preface Egyptians was stressed 2 5rterbuch. two pages of the W! the first in a review-article on and also twenty words Gardiner found "all but three In the latter study of only 3 "In my comrfor further stated; and elucidation,, urgently calling tasks still is among the most important lexicography sidered opinion confronting 4 phases,,. Despite taken Harris's Graefels duction since, the student very of the Egyptian few lexicographical two major in language in its various
this,,
and only
have been publishec4 works 5 Minerals" Studies in Ancient Egyptian and 6in the introbih. 11 Harris, W8rtfamilie zur the continuing terms for need for further lexic-
ographical
research.
stresses
There are many categories This would be of great value, were applied The original to all secular would far history to the elements intention
of
which
a comparative
study
the different
a review of terms relating in ancient Egyptv religious, soon became apparentp howeverv that this of almost five-hundred terms; a number
too great
to be studied in the detail to trace the required its meaning* The nouns applied of each term and elucidate in temple architecture to provide There were selected rewarding deal as they appeared most likely The reasons 17hich
results. houses
than which
temples than any other and there are more surviving 8 ing, It has, therefore, been possible to compare contemporary descriptions of temples with the standing monuments, showing a far degree of accuracy in the application greater of the terminology than might Partshave been expected. There have been several valuable studies on terms for templehere are discussed in Gardiner's te=s, of architectural by Badawyolo Christophe
Some of the nouns included commentary to the Onomastica9 and a list with their usual translations, is given
those
terms
which
occur
in Papyrus
which are found in the Abusir work is Barguet's study of the temple of Amun at Karnak*13 In additiong there are many detailed discussions terms to be found of individual in commentaries to be listed on the texts here but in which they occur* in These are too zn=1-r the appropriate place. One main problem confronting particularly when any lexicographerg dealing languagep the knowledge of which was lost with an ancient for many centuries, is the varied nature of the textual evidence that is available for study. Although mata large amount of written erous each is noted erial has survived what once existedp been in use at a particular in which it occurs simply from ancient Egypt, it can only be a fraction of that a term may seem not to have with the result period when,, in fazt, true the type of text has not survivedo this is particularly that it is necessary For the temple-terms
those
under Middle
discussion Kingdoms,
hereg
Another did
problem
is
meaning
originally
and that
usuallyp
it correctly* alwaysp applied the caseq but without these basic assumptions study would be impracticable.
language subsequent to the New words which entered the Egyptian Dynasty have been excluded from this studyg although Twentieth the history terms has been traced down to the Ptolemaic of pre-existing period* artments9 omitted, nature* Words which rather since they came to be used to describe actual built structures, a separate administrative have also study of a different could not they depthan
been largely
would
require
The main exceptions to this are pr and 1wt which be excluded from a work on temple-terms. Since the terms to this discussed here are arranged Index. from the Egyptian
The only
hieroglyphs
1 2 3 4 5 6 'I 8
Gardinerp Gardiner,
Onomey It
ix-xxio 12-18.
LA_ 34 (1948)t
Lbid. t 17. Ibidot 12. (Berlint 1961). (Cologne, Harrisp 1971). Lexicographical Studies in Ancient Egyptian Minerals, 9-18.
The exception funerary to this is, of course, Egyptian monuments, tombs and pyramids. to such structTerms WhIch relate specifically from this study since they to be omitted ures were among the first form a distinct Mortuary group and require separate investigation. temples, of since they9 by and larget conform to the standard plan
have been included. cultus-templeg an Egyptian 9 Gardiner, Onom, v 11,204*-219** 10 Badawyt A History Architecturep 257-260. of Egyptian 11 Christopheq Melanges Masperop I, fase-417-29. 12 Posener-Kri6gerg 13 Barguett Templet Archives passime Neferirkare$ passimt esp. p UP 429-450-
10 vw
Dyn. VI
This
word occurs
twice
inscription is
of "Teil
Dynasty.
The translation
by the W6rterbuch
Tempels? oder ein GerAt? "t and the suggestion is made that it may 2 be connected with a verb 3" "to build" which isp howeverv found bettexts*3'There only in Late Egyptian could also be a connection for Vw and another rw which seems to have been a container 4 This second 3, w was current in the Old and Middle writing Materials. Kingdomst and wasp thereforep contemporaneous with the term under discussion. In ablished (but Icw is the Fifth-Dynasty under I) did the inscription mention is made of; "////, estthe In:ad" ween this
acw of this 4wt-ntr/////" and "/////XI)'built 5 Since the verb kd "to not lay the Wt/////"o does refer
"flooring" a ceiling or
hr and the comparison -x-1 Lw may have been a term a connection with jw
so then
11box or
container'l
would
be indicated*
I Urkop 2 Wb9v It
It
181v 9; 10 (Quibellp 3p 9-
Saqqarap
1907-8,
Pl-1XI9
3-)
3 Ibid-t
It
2v 13Con* Diet*, 1.
213-214-
3htywt
known only
in
the plural,
occurs
twice
in Pap.
Reisner
One the fall is not preserved. writing although example shows the form quoted above while the other is completely 2 lost except for the 3h hieroglyph. The word was discussed by 3 Simpson in his publication of the papyrus where he decided that 4 it was not the same word as the singular 3hyt which has been 5 translated Simpson then suggestas "stockyard,, and I'stillroom". the innermost part ed that. 3htyw was a term used to describe in this casep the rooms ct '13t, ct a templey which includedg and k311 113bty. Only the last of 9p,
in the named is linked with :5t 13bty n 3htyw. 7 papyrusq in the phrase ksl . Further decision can be evidence is needed before a definite made on the meaning of this te= buto since. 3t was used to des8 temples cribe Egyptian namesj9Simpson's and was also used in their may well be correct. suggestion
Reisner 4-
It
P1-131
Gq 6.
The City
of Akhenatent
IIIP
Ko- 245; -Smith H. S. 9 The rortress , LI (B. M*65739)* pl. 5 Hayesp JXES 10 (19501y 92. 6 Pendleburyp op. cit
of Buhen,
4-
1,6-10.
12,
lwn 2 3
6
Dyne VI
Dyne XVIII
5
AA
Dyne XVIII
Al: j
7
non
HA
Dyn.
Dyne XVIII 9
10 Ptol.
I)yn.
XVIII
XIX
Althou4zh
1wn is the
not
often
found the
in
particular is of
col-
New Kingdomp
fo=
depicted value
The sign
was used
with
least as the Fourth as early 11 dum where the hieroglyphs a reddish-browng expected, be used and"'Iwnt. indicating
tomb of detail
Rahotep,
great columno
as one would
to was originally made of wood. The column sign continued 12 1wnp for example in place-names , 1WnW such as as phonetic 13 1wn was also original used in of contexts "column". 1wn n fnd titlep15 16 which It to were logical extenfigurof of
meaning
such expressions as; 1wn knmt, nosev14 a priestly and also a priestly title
bridge
Imn mwt. fv
an epithet
and alone to describe a man as 1711wn thenpillar" being of his family. was also used in one papyras 18 of an obelisk, as the name for the shaft The type of column represented by 1wn was described by Gardiner 19 by Petrie a tenon at the top" as a "column with and, more fully., the column with eight-sided as a "fluted a tenon on the top to fit 20 lintel". The chapacteristic lines vertical which are found on d6tailed the 1wn would support depictions Petrie's theory that of it applied indicate occur the to fluted columns, 02 polygonal although types. enclosure reeded variety these Both of lines reeded the did Step not and
reeded
columns of King
recur 22 the fluted to be popular into the Middle column continued Kingdom. 23 In the New Kingdom the fluted in Nubia, column was used mainly the polygonal increased while in popularity variety Egypt within 24 proper* Since the fluted type than the column is a more ancient
13
polygonal fluted both the original Iwn columns from would relate 25 the columns are must very have been in fluted. appearance It is thus columns However and are to be where
similar
plant-form fluted
columns.
expected it is
or polygonal
possible the
Neither volved.
Wo"rterbuch
1wnw do not refer The earliest to specific texts which mention 27 buildings it is not possible the forms of the to identify so that However 1wnw has been found in a number of building inscripcolumns. tions to columns which can be identof the New Kingdom which refer ified. Architrave in Sinai mention the fragments sandstone of from the temple of Hathor 28 1wnw. The architraves Kings" in which at Serabit el-Rhadim have
would
seem to architravet
"Shrine
the
a similar in this
mentioninglMwg by Petrie 30
The columns
"shrine"
are
described
11.29 columns of jw., jw 31 as are are the the Eighteenth-Dynasty polygonal columns stela of from plan
temple 1,33
end on one of the lwnw also mentions andyalthough architectural Amenhotep II fragmentsp were
stelap temple
survivedp the
including
drums, oA from
name of 6f
islands
Elephantine polygonal
re-used were
Tathmosis to this
refers of
the
Third
found
has been
Fourth
situated
There pylon
in
blocks
found
which square to
Barguet pillars8jt
estimated is
between
a "column"
a "pillar"*
IITwo descriptions ly use 1wnw in this 39 The halls within., the which of the temple way to Osiris cylindricalp of Hathor column rather in demotic of Seti I at all are are at 41 Abydos the almost certain-
include suite
called not
themselves Iwn is
Ptolemaic
Dendera
general
than of
origin
into Coptic. survive Iwn mast have been used inscriptions would as surely Iwnw, of have Within
to the
describe Old
a fluted
and Middle
been Egypt
where
variety polygonal
the
which in
similar
and parta
periods#
general
pl*LX=p
in the Hieratio
7 8 9
The New Kingdom Temples of Buhen, It P1-95v 4; Urk. IV9 q 819-7; 1296.1; 2; Cernyq ope ci .9 pl*LXXIVv 3109 a. ASAE 51 (1951)t 572v fig*8. Chevfierp Caminos, KRij it 1869 10. La prande inscription dedicatoire d'Abydo. R9 5P line Pl-XILP 332 Gauthiert
des Denderatempels
and frontispiece, 12 Gardinerp Cnom. t 119 144*9 1-4-0-01 13 Ibid. 9 30*9 Mn14 Breastedy The Edwin Smith Sargical 13541 (1904)v 8874P 4Papyruep II, pl. VP 10. PSBA 16 (1894)t 53P 16; CaparttlZAI-S
15 Crum, 16 Wb-P It 17 E. g.
Bethel
Aegyptische
Lesestuckep
69v 23;
is
Texts 0.28.
54P 5-
(Ln-I,
15,3-)
IXVIII;
IXIX,
Newberryp 12, It
XXXIX. Beni Hasan , I, pls*IV; (Semna and Kumma); 115 (Sedengal 113 Roedert Der Felsentempel It Pl-39; less
with
Hathorpls* Pl-39-
(DdUd el-Baha=i); It Plo-30-32 Architecture, 24 E!- Jequierq festival Tuthmosis 111); 53 (Ka=ako inet Habuq temple of (Karnakt 73 (El-Kab, temple of Ptah); Tuthmosis 111); 54 Hathor-headed 25 Wb-, It capitals). 539 10Con. Dict, Pragments within in
13q 27 EZE-9 524d; Sinuh , B. 196; Caminosq Literary Hieratio Script, Pl-109 3t 1J-. An inscription 26 Faulknerp Ankbtifi presumably describing at Moallat fvnw. (Vandierg Moallaq 232, Insc. Noollp icult text, full
to
the
of obscure
mythological
and it
(op. Vandier be certain to what was intended. as not possible lwnw ) suggested that of a compound was part 2it. v 236, note g. lwnw designe 1wnw-prw, de R..... lea montantsp en pierre, noun, lea pi; ces dede la porte iteneadrement peut-etre, et prw ...... lea battants de la porte bois verticalzmeAt et qui qui bordaient 1waw describes the rock-cut " Possibly lea consolidaient. pillars of of the tomb which, although very roughly and cut, arep in have the majority called
cross-seotion pl. I
so could ibid,
been
and photographs
V. ) q pl,
28 Cerny,
Pla-UXIV9 cit-; -cop. IXXIX9 317y a; 317At a (exact Kings"); recorded). in Sinaiq Researches
It
310,
(found a
in
the at
provenance
84 and fig-97
30 Caminosp The New Kingdom Temples of Buhen, 31 Ibidop Pl-95t IVP 8199 7-) 4- (Also Urk., 32 Barguet and Dewachterl
16 33 Urk-9 IV9 1296.1. 34 Barguet and Dewachterv op. cit-P pl-XXXIVY 7535 Borchardt, BeitrAge Bf. 2. A"gyptische Tempel mit Umgangt 44-45 with abb. 13; De Morganv Cat. Mon 9 It 11336 Chevrier, ASAE 51 (1951)t 5729 fige8; Chevriery AM 52 (1954)9 pl. VIII. 37 Barguetv Templet 94-96. For the latest views on the nature of this 9 building Letellierv HommaCes Serge Sauneronp It 51-71. see; 1 38 See further under 3. wnytj, p*18-19. 39 Ydat It 186,10; Gauthierp loco cit.. 40 Kul it 162y 12; 162p 14; 165P 14; 169P 5cit. t Demotisches Glossarv 23 (citing Griffith and Thompson, 119 Pl-XIIIP 3-) 41 Damicheng loc. 42 Erichsenj
III
lwnyt Dyne Xl nn0 C-3 Dyne XV1114 Dyne XVIII7 Dmo X3X!
2CAq
fwv. ^^
Dyne XVIII
4rn.
XV1113
8144 C-3
Dyne
26z; xviii
Dyne XIX9
93
C-3
1wnyt as a "pillared baitat" or "columned translates The WO"rterbuch 12 11 Neither hall". it as a "pillared describes hall" while Faulkner one would the type of column concerned although dictionary specifies the 1wnyt to have been, a prior hall or court containing expect a ,a iwn columns. 13 As has been noted previously the polygonal or fluted the word has not surtypet although 1wn column was a very ancient vived in many texts Apart earlier isolated than the New Kingdom. The same is true of from the TehtL- Dynastyq all example iwnyt from the New Kingdom* It can be assumed the known occurrences of are the Middle Kingthat the word was in use in the intervening periodt have the building of &. Irtyt domp although no texts which describe from the been preserved. The earliest in known 1wnyt can not be identified. at Siut where the deceased is The word occurs promised that his the tomb of Kheti be forever in the Innyt.
temple
in the temple of Wepwawet and his memory will 14 This was presumably a hall o3 court in the is possidentification of Wepwawet but no more positive Dynasty lwnyt. was used by Tathmosis behind survives the Fifth I to describe at Karsixteen-
In the Eighteenth
Pylon
on one of the
16
shepsut and Tathmosis III, by a colonnade of poly9ohal columns and Osiride 1wn columns. true 1wnytq containing a
being "a noble iwnyt which adorns the as 17 " Before this area was altered by Hatthe 17wnyt was a large open court encircled statues. It wast thus,
19
is not
true
of another
hall
between
the Fourth
and Fifth
by Hatshepsut
the base of one of the obelisks which she as a 1wnyt on The text tells of of the erection in the middle of the hall. erected "in the noble iwnyt between the two great pylons the two obelisks 18 by Tath(bb.nty wrty) built This hall was originally the king". of to this hisp refe=tg inscriptions I, although no dedication of mosis 19 hallp have survived intact. The biography of Ineni is, unfortunatelyp damaged 0 the point where one would expect the description of the 1wnyt to occurt immediately 2D before that of the pylons which are said to be "on its damaged text corrSt two sideull. [2'h to read the Sethe, in Urkunden IV, has restored 21 ILwnyt 'spsst m This could be w>dw]. 22 but both W3lyt and noun is certainly required
as a feminine
the same hall Of these wsht were also used to describe and either X_ Imnyt. The in place of could be restored name of the hall in the reign by this text of Tuthmosis I could noto in any case, be established since Ineni lived on into the reigns of Hatshepsut was not and Tuthmosis hall III and may have used a contemporary ally given to the hall when it term which was erected* the name originwas
However this
so one can only conclude that it imnyt by Hatshepsut as a as the columns was then taken to be a general word for a columned hall 24 not polyg6nal or fluted. of this hall were papyriformt regarded The Speos Artemidos describes plural) temple. Dynasty. inscription of Hatshepsutj where their part of her benefactions for the gods, mentions 25 implying that a iwnyt was a characteristic The word also 26 occurs on two building the queen (in the :? Lwnyt of'each the Eighteenth
Ostraca
stelae
of Amehhotep II
from Amada
At Amada this refers to the colonnaded court immedand Elephantine. 1wn iately behind the pylon which contained polygonal columns and 1wnyt. 28 The temple was, therefore, a of Amenhotep II at Elephantine parts of which were later reused 29 the plan of the on the same island and on Philaep so thatt although Eighteenth-Dynasty temple has not yet been recovered, it is not un1wnyt to assume that the reasonable at Elephantine was a colonnaded to that at Amada. court similar also contained poygonal columns, The sandstone blocks of Tuthmosis IV which were found in the fill of the Third Pylon at Karnak also bear the term imnyt on certain
19
inscriptions, These blocks mast have come from an edifice the temple proper or a within
architrave of
whether it was a hall 30 The texts describe it as a wsht separate building. jt3l and a wsbt dic Inr 1wnw 32 11wnyt. 33 The bft-hr m mnb n rwdt pLirw m repas well as a o ts of the recovery that there of these blocks give no indication some sizeq were any polygonal umns which that the blocks columns, or parts are square thereof, in were discovered which found; the only col34 It is possible section.
the 11wnyt and the 17wnware not from the same building as the square columns but, as the blocks have not yet been adequately the nature of the iwnyt can not be pAblishedt mention ascertained. of the Osiris suite of the temple of 35 Seti I at Abydos are both described The columns in these as 17wnyt. halls but are circular are not polygonal in section with or fluted 36 flattened faces for hieroglyphic inscriptions and aret therefore, 1wn in appearance to the original not dissimilar column. Such columns, which do not have capitals, ) the polygonal of wn. lyn Since the column, could be regarded as a simplified form Finally the columned halls
and consequently
halls
such columnst ceases to be common in Egyptian Kingdom, one would not expect 31. in use* This wnyt to continue indeed, to be so. 2Iwnyt is found in neither seem Ptolemaic demotic and does not recur in Coptic. On the present current although 7 the-1wn only it in evidence that the period 1wnyt can be regarded as having ' from the Tenth tp the Nineteenth it
or courts containing temples after the New does, nor been Dynastiesq
is probable used in
column certainly
was in use from the Old Kingdom as then. It is, also likely existed that it Kingdom than can be proved at
the Middle
7 hall or court containing 1? a wnyt was a iwn columns. The main exception to this is the hall between the Fourth and Fifth pylons design at Karnak in w.hich, although Dynasty, therefore, hall it underwent never several changes in the Eighteenth seems to have contained be assumed that the term could of the column-type
regardless
also 37 involved.
of
P1-13t
24-
20
3 Lr-k-, IV, 365,34 Ibid-, 384,5 (see also Gardiner, JEA 32 (1946)9 pl-VI9 5)5 5 Erk. t IV9 1174,15; Gardiner and Cerny, Hieratic Ostracal 1, pl-XXII, 1, recto, 6. 6 Urk., IV, 1295,157 Unpublished architrave from the sandstone building, blocks from which were found in the Third Pylon of the Amuntemple at Karnak and are now in the north-east corner of the enclosure. Barguet bob 4z 173 4--= (Temple, 95) notes that this building was called q a writing which I, during a brief inspection of these blocks, was unable to find (see further under note 33 below). For details of the blocks so far published see PM, 11,72 which, howeverwrongly equates the sandstone building of Tuthmosis IV with the woodenroofed porch before the door of the Fourth Pylon. 8 As note 7. 9 KRI, 1,1659 14; 169,510 Ibid,, 16?, 12 and 1411 Wb,, I, 54t2. 12 Faulkner, Con. Dicte, 1313 dsing, Nomina2lAldung, 290o 14 Griffith, loc. cit.. 15 For a plan of the temple in the reign of Tuthmosis I see; Borchardt, Baugeschichte, 9f abb-7. 16 A photograph of this column is published by Borchardt, op. cit*, 8, abb. 6 where it is wrongly labelled as "hinter Pylon 4% 17 Urk., IV, 92,10. 18 Ibid., 365,319 Traces of original texts of Tuthmosis I can be seen on someof the columns which were reused by Tuthmosis III (Borchardtg op. cit. y 10-11; Barguet, op. cit. t 98)0 20 Urk-Y IV, 56,1. 21 Ibid., 55,1122 Ibid*, 157,13; 158,8; 374,11; 1328,1-* 23 LbLid-t 1331,1124 Borchardt, op. cit., 11. 25 11-rk-, IV, 3849 526 Ibid., 1174,15; Gardiner and Cerny, loc. cit.. 27 Irk IV, 1295,15 and 16.
21
28 Barguet and Dewachter, Le Temple d'Amadaq Jig pisXxXjj-XXxIV,,
29 Borchardt, 46;
Beitrage
Tempel mit
Umgang 45, It
abb. 13; it
see also
De Morgan,
des Monuments,
but Borchardt, druln appears to be cylindrical himself, states that it is polygonal* 30 Barguet, Temple, 94-96. For the latest views edifice 31 Barguet, 32 Chevrier, see; Letellier, OP- cit-, 95572, fig. 8;
havinIt
of
this
36 Calverley,
The*Temple'of
22
iwm
pto, 07
Mc-a
Ptole
Ptol.
.an
'Iwnn If it
is
essentially
Dynasties* term of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth a the New Kingdomy then the before and after use Cne isolated example is little known from the howeverg indication
Middle
as to the meanKingdom whichg gives text which in a hieratic ing of the word. It occurs on a leather roll including describes Sesostris I in the temple of Heliopolis, work of 10 is used to help No determinative in the 17wnn of the gods. statues the identification the type of temple or shrine involved. with of Unfortunately instructive. In few of the the majority occurrences of this term are at all the 1'w= is described as belongof cases ing to a god or gods so it must have been some kind of cult-place further information the nature of the irnn is lacking although about 11 There are, however, a small number of examples which in such texts* the 1'wnn,. more detail concerning a little can provide Several which texts suggest that 1wnn could be used for a small shrine image of a god could sit, In only one text is determined the with such a shrine and, in factv 12 the only sign preserved. The rest of the word has lwnng although been restored this restoration is not absolutely as [31wnn] in Nubian ebony" 13 has been identified14 This "great certain. with the ebony shrine from the temple of Hatshepsut at Deir El-Bahari i6 describes it as a sJi-ntr. It although a text on the shrine itself is possible that this one shrine could have been called by both names. 17 StL-ntr was often used for the cult-shrine of a temple. Another text in which Ivnn may refer to a shrine for a cult-image 18 'Lwnn mentions each god being "in the : which he has desired. " In other contexts9 however, lynn is certainly equated with an This is particularly entire cultus-temple. so with the temple of Aman. within the term actually is determinative the cult
23
the entire Karnak where 11wnn is used to describe at 20 the temple of Seti I at Abydos where the "Osiris 21 called a 1'wnn.
ntr the Eighteenth 22 is described mnw III from In Dynasty
with
temple or shrine called an unidentified 23 1T;nn inscription in a building of as a whilep the is on a block from listed the within 25 . 1wnn could with sanctuary of
Tuthmosis
Karnak
Hatshepsut, of a building 24 The same shrine osure. Further of the texts would
a. ]Xwt-encl-
bwt-nt that
seem to since it
also wild
temple-complex with
property that
and offeringst
be used 26 fowl
likely to
shrine that,
which
indicate
onwards "temple"
was used
primarily
as a synonym translation
words
terms
specific
'texts found
by which in either
time
it
has or
acquired Coptic
an texts,
demotic
Stern,
2 Urkoj
3 urk.,
2; KRIt Ij, 42P 3-41669 3 (partially 2999 3; 6189 12; 834p 2; Abydosp 1119 pl. Iq 1319 2; 154t 5; 8549 9; 1259v 18; Arytonp XXIq Noel; 155,8; Mariette, and Wegallp
203,5;
El-Hennehq Inschriften, 4 ILr-k-P IV, 12). 5 6 7 6 9 Lbid., Mariette, Up t Chassinat, Urk., VIII, loc. Urk., Ibid. IV,
Cq 2; Berlin (only
1957t IIP
12. ao
Pl-349
1,18,44-
16, d; 30P ccite* IV9 16,1; 2799 11; 2999 3; 16739 6; 19579 12; 2107,,
10 Stern, 11 E. g.,
2+ 2; Ayrton et al. v et loc, cite; Berlin Necropolis, K6nigliche Museen, loc. cite,
12 Northampton
al*! p Theban
frontispiece.
op.
cit-9
15; Breasted,
Ancient
Records
of Egypt,
119
Pl-XXVII-
17 See below, 18 19 20 21
sb-nt P P*252ff. Urk, v IV, 384,2o 8349 2; 854,9; Ibid. p IV, 612t 5; 618,12; Mariette, Abydos, 1, pl*XIX, ea 164,11M. I. 155,8;
the evidence
KRI, 1,203,5-
22 For discussions
shrine or temple, of relating . Karnakq IP lacau and Chevrier, Une Chapelle d'Hatshepsout see; 182o 849 1138; Nims, JNES 14 (1955), 114; belowt 4wt-ntrp p, to this
23 Irk.,
24 Lacau and Chevrierv 25 Urk-, IV, 4769 726 Ibid.,, IV, 1259P 1827 Ll! Ld- 9 Up 20299 328 Wb*9 1,55,12 while 29 Mariette, The last (ref-55,13)) temple Grammar, and couldp text in rooms. Sign Faulkner
(oao)
eines
G6ttes"
Denderahp example is
a; Pls, -349 a; by the Wrterbuch quoted only is writing written instead of with of of iwnn the the wnt
as the
E-34)
(Lbidep 1,315,1)e
thereforev refers
be a writing to "every
question
17wYM/wnt of
the
lawt-ntrlle
26
7
inb Dyn. II 2 Dyn. IV3 Dyno 111 up XVIII, 5 Dyn. XIII XVIII 9 X11VI 6 Dyn. V4 Dyn o XVII 17
Ptol.
-11%II
Dyn. XVIII
XVIII
Dyn.
114
AAM
XVIII 2
A
XVIII10
ff
AAO'.%
Dyn.
I
11
Dyn.
XIXl
3 Dyno XX1
-=I C-3
Dyno XXV1
16 Dyn * XXX
Inb is an As can be seen immediately from the writings quoted abovey language, is found in all stages of the Egyptian ancient word which 19 including in the demotic script. It does nott howeverg occur in 20 from derived COB"r Coptic in which the main words for "wall" are 21 22 23 from d tz. obt and XOG Inb "wall" to be derived from a Etymologically one would expect or "to wall in" and such meaning "to enclose" verb same stem is known, butg unfortanatelyg so far only in a text of the a verb 24 There is also a feminine Dynasty. Eighteenth nbt which was noun i? 25 term for some kind of fortress. a 7 The earliest enclosure writings of inb seem to show a buttressed been suggested that the than a wall and it has, aocordinglyp rather 26 Later "wall" enclosure. represented a rectangular sign originally in less detail writings which use the ideogram were depicted and of the seem to have been interpreted as walls.
Since the same hieroglyphic sign was uded as the determinative for other wall-nouns27 (and also of related tez!msp such as the verb 28) ], "to build" d when the sign is used as an ideogram it is often impossible to be certain as to which te= is intended. This can be illustrated by an Eighteenth Dynasty example in which the seige-wall built by the army of Tuthmosis III around the town of Megiddo is 29 7 described in one text as an inb wmtt in others as a sbty30 or a 01 1. 11 32 In text uses obty n wmtt3l while a final view . glin .
26
of the fact that to take the adjunct is n wmtt of is and not ebty unique. just vmtt it would of the seem Inb term
this
as a writing at of Megiddo or
n wmtt. More
a town
a temple* 17nb was used houses around to for the or all kinds walls of of
would from
stone temple.
a town relates
Howeverv to mondescribe
surixiving
evidence several in
to
once
town
enclosure a garden35
sbty.
be used
around
a storehouse.
name of
a townwall the
at
a very
early the
The
known
Memphisp Other
the to at
name of the
refers
walls
town.
Lisht38
erected for
beseiging at all
possgbt Dyn-
a town-wall particularly
seems to asty
p=efe=edv
from
onwards. "Inb was most frequently used to refer to the walls walls of of templesp the to temple be
the large brick enclosures4l and the 42 In the case of some examples it proper. certain as to which also of these was intended.
both
possible
in the names of occurs 44 "Walls of the Faler"I which was a fort thbw "Imn-m-li3tv IlWalls and of Amenemhat 46 the name of a fortress in Vubia. There 'Inb is little most that can be usefully for a wall use of until "wall"
The term
such
as'Inbw
4ks,
on Egypt's 45
eastern which
frontierp
was probably
added
concerning in
this the
term.
was the
common word
particularly the
periods
and it
was in Its
continuous meaning
hieroglyphic be doubted,
basic
cannot
which
was later It is
an enclosure. ideogram of
here
as writings
been other
treated wall-nouns
21
but, wallp since this I inb is is the most ancient and also the most common word for a
unlikely.
Petriev inbw
Royal
Tombsp Jjt
pi. Xxiiit
193 (in
2 3 4 5
Ma4asna and Bet Khallafp pl*IX 63; pl*XLt be 2lzaq 1,2529 abb. Iq pl. XIII N[ormanj de Gq Ptahhotep, Insc. Louvrep Urk., 119 29 (Louvre 67,6;
240Sethel Aegyptische
C-15);
Lesestucke, 6
text); Urkeq IV autographed 18649 11; LD-P IIIP 1949 24; Maoadan, The Temples of Kawal Iq ple 149 2; Traunecker, in Karnakp Vt 1970-197 142, fig. 1; Urkeq 1119 t Caminos, Litorary Fragments 44-45; in the Hieratic PLXIIP Scriptq P1-10P 39 4Urk, v IV9
llayesp Ndvillef
Todtenbuch,
1235v 14 (omitting 10 (In 11 Ibid., 12 KRI9 It 13 Gardinerg 14 Erichsenq added). plural)p IV,
186P 4Onomeq pl*XI3: A, 14o Papyzus Harris., I, 69,7 (with 259 7 (with-=,
c--3 added);
15 jjrk. 9 1119 26v 1516 E=an and Wilcken, US 38 (1900)t 129, 17 Chassinato Edfoup 1.328. 18 Fakhryp AUE 34 (1934)v 89 (see also; Trauneckerv No. 19 and 1499 note 7)19 Erichsen, Demotisches Glossars 20 Cnim, A Coptic Dictionmyt 21 derny, Coptic Etymological 238ffp. 22 CnImp op. cit-9 7-55b-754a. 23 6erny, op. cite, 309. 24 Met 19 959 11 (untranslated). 35, 323a. 148-
ope cit-,
147,
Dictionaryt
See also
sbtyp
below
Faullmerv
(Con. Dict-I
23) translates
is
as "to
wall
off
occurs
in
the Karnak
decree
in which
the king
describes
the inspection
and or6-
95v 10Archa6logische BeitrBZe 18-19; writings zar Frage der Entstebung der 0-36. Ga=dinerq of sbtyp Grammarq Sign 'List, sit, tsmt, etc*. 12549 9)(sbty to the ). swm
Hieroglyphonschrift, example,
28 Wbop V9 7429 Ga=dinerq 30 Ibidol, 31 Ibid*v further LE-A '38 (1952)9 17For IVp 14 (ILrk--9 Ivi, pl. 1849 16; 894t IV,
6619 4- See also; Lbidy 758,12-13 discussion of these terms with regard
seige-wall des
see; Grapow, Studien zu den Annalen 56-57j, and sbtyq below p. 239Dritten, 32 Urk*p IV, 7679 11at Megiddoy 33 Pierret, loco cit*; Habackiq The Second Stela
Thutmosis
of Kamosep ploVIp
9.
34 1jrk. p 1119 26,1535 Ibidop IV9 10471 1536 Ibide, IV9 1330P 3 and 4; Wreszinskit Der Papyrus Scharffy ZIS 59 (1924)t 11, P. 10096,12o loc-ci Ebersq 203,17;
37 Petrie,
Garstang, loc, .0 Ga=dine=,, Onom. 9 II, 122*-123*p Agyptensp loc. cit.. 88; pl*XXIV* 121ff.
See also; Kb-p Iv 95P 6-7; cit*. 139410 Sethep Beit3Fage zu= Altesten
Montuemhaty
IV9 12359 14IV, cito; 1739 17; 7659 16; 1295Y 3 and 4; 18649 11; Christophop KRIO I, 186Y 4; LDoq 1119 152, b; Traunecke=p op. cit., 1; Fakhryp 124cito; Enaan and Wilckenp opo cit*, ZIS 23 (1885)v 5; Daressyt ASAE 19 (1920)9 164Urk, q IV,, 1650Y 15; LD*p IIIp 170; 171-F 699 7; Macadam, loc. Harris Iq 299 14; 68,16; op. cit*, 129; Monte, Kgmi 8 (1946), pl. loc.
142 fig.
cit.,; Papyrus
cit,; Erman and Wilcken, V (after P-40044 Sinuheq B, 1745 Reisne=9 46 Hintze, Excavations
NO-30at Kerma W-Vq 5099 fig-3439 248ZiS 91 (1964)9 84- See further belowv snb(t , p.
29
47 'Inb (spelled (spelled Inbt) occurs in the Onomasticon of Azenemopej after
tsmt (Gardiner, Onom., pl. XIIA, J)* Gardsbty sbtt) and iner (Ibid., 119 213* F4-41) expressed some doubt as to whether Inb "wall" this was a writing but in view of or 17nbt "fortress", in the listt of its position and also taking into account the fact that sbty also has an extra tq it is almost certainly to be Inb. understood as
30
cz Dyn - XII Dyn - XII 23
xviii,
xx
Dyn. XII4
Dyn. X115
t..
.o_ c?3
7 NX. Ptol. 9
0-. = w--4
== C. e :, Ptol. e -BZ,
15: 77
10
Dyno X2
the architravel-The exact both as the hieroglyph value 413 with the phonetic M These "tent-pole" column of the booth and as the supporting '12 to support light columns were used principally such as the structures the term covering cabin13 or a kiosk14 and, consequentlyp of a shipts only rarely in hieroglyphic building inscriptions. This column-type
a tenon form is
occurs
must be a very ancient one since the sign is used 13 on a jar-seal Period15 and the of the Early Dynastic as phonetic from the Old Kingdom onwards, in column Uself was often depicted, representations of cabins and kiosks. In a mythological '3W occurs in Spell 60 of the Coffin context 16 Texts, in a very corrupt passage, and also in Chapter 159 of the 17 'a Book of the Dead in the New Kingdom. Jequier thought that `3 in the latter to the W3! -amulet which is depicted example referred at the head of the chapter* However, this is referred 19 to throughout this as 113 as to have had two names. Budge w3d and is unlikely the word for a door-leaf than the column, rather
Fortunately The earliest ator more this and it is there are also more tangible
regards
examples
of
the
term.
Kingdom, "the a title of the Middle decorss- -3w, 20 These could have been made of stone but of 113-columns". are likely to have been of wood. The only known stone columns of 21 type occur in the festival hall III Of Tuthmosis at Karnak is gratifyihng to find
of
that
the of
these
columns the term
are
described
that which the c3
as
the is form.
"aw.
king used 23 erected for These the
A damaged text on one 22 c3w and the determinative festival hallp shows that
records hrt-lb of
the
columns
were
as t_3W
24
although
this
reading
31 is not certain.
Although foundq hymn to made for the temple 27 were it is these possible in the 1111tt are all the the or are the that king's in only others monumental were at stone tiw which have III. been In a erected Karnak by Ramesses
temple stone //
itself
/., in ypur 26 Osiride or stylised m wb3. k indicates Amun so that taken in they its
to have Ramesses claims 25 The columns of wb3-11 papyrifor-monly could widest that have senset the been on
However, within
of
at Karnakp 28 bank.
even,
if
wb3 is
Papyrus as the
Harris
I records
in
supports
was
of a shrine
still In must
example
of
use
period,, c3w is
occurring
determined has
be assumed of
the
term
come to
general
meaning
"columns".
a pillar perhapsv primxilyof wood be or stonev accurate ship's as to part define cabins of
W6rterbuch or a ship.
defined 32
13 as It WOuldl used
more to
a wooden
column
support
or shrines This of I 2
since
the
stone recur
examples in
are
either
the Egyptian
language.
Griffith, Be Buck,
Hieratic
Papyri
The Egyptian
from Kahun and Gurob pl, XII9 1,1, Coffin Texts, 1,2531, d and f; Urk., IVv Oriental Institute, Ramses III's Aq 18; 23, A, 18 of Amm, pls*229
University,
the Inclosure
3 4
6 7 8
2539 d.
5 Loco ci
Ibidot Lepsiusy Erichsenv
,
253, fDas Todtenbuch PAPYrUs Harris 1 der AgYPtert 1,51,15; P1-76. 51,16 (with o i instead -. of
9 'Mari'ettev 10 Chassinat,
pLindar Edfoug
i.
3Z
11 Petriev H[o=an] 12 Petrie, 13 Jequier, actual Ile Grammarg Sign List, Gardiner, pl. XIII; , 250I, pl. XII, do G1, Ptahhotep, cit. 69-70; 'Id, 0.29; Davies,
loc.
* BIFAO 9 (1911),
examples
BIPAO 19 (1922)9 8-10. For p used in this way, in the Khufu boatq Bf. 9 12, Festschrift Sheikh Said, Rieke, pl.
N[o=anjde
4Beitr, o Bf. p 129 Festschrift Rickel, Falttafelg X der Agyptischen Prhzeit, Kaplonyg Die Inschriften 15, 1119 Pl-919 bis. 16 De Buckg op. citv 17 Lepsius, 18 Jequier, loc. cit.. 9e the Dead, (1898)v Translation volumep 287253-
346,
21 For photographs
I'architecture,
Iq
Studies
Pe
fig-7,
284-285Universityp cit.,
25 Chicago 26 Ibid.
9 P1-3wb's pe 68.
29 Erichsen, 31 Mariette,
33
Ifl
ideogram for c! and as a The hieroglyphic sign which was used as an termsp is for other related itselft for c! determinative as well as 10 Such leaves viere door-leaf. Egyptian typical of a a representation by the horizontal is indicated planks shown made of wood, as usually depictionsp although on the more detailed architecture, when employed in religious they couldp particularly also be plated with metal. in both into 1ndentations turned on pivots door-leaf An Egyptian set 11 Examples of such doors the doorway. lintel the threshold of and 12 that there can be no doubt as to the interpret.., -have survived so tomb-scenes show men at of the hieroglyphic sign. In addition ation 13 dooi-leaves the manufacture of the same form as the of work on hieroglyph. The term is Ptolamaic written in periodp either attested from the beginning does not or Coptic of dyn&tjticjilgypt to the in texts it although the demotic seem to have recurred scripts, not have existed until
a door-leaf dwellings
could
practicep
presumably in the late predynastic the torm is found most frequently doubtedlyp erial merely a reflection
dynasties In the earliest period. in titles14 this is, un, although of the nature of the inacribed mat-
from the early dynastic which has survived period* In texts f=m the Old Kingdom, however, I's is used with its houre15 or regular meaning of "door-leaf"g made of wood in a private 16 17 In the same period a palace and of stone in a royal pyramid. 18 the term came to be used for the lid of a sarcophagast a logical wxtension This of Its term is original meaning. "door-leaves', a private in tombs of)the Pirst of found meaning 19 Intermediate Period and for 20 the Middle Kingdom.
31In greater hotep while texts detail. at Beni two from the Middle of the of Kingdom first cedar onwards door of (Ebs) c3w are of the six tell described tomb of in Khnum21 high
Thec3 Hasan of
Nega
cubits
stelae had
Second rain of
how temple
fallen
building large
the
New Kingdom in
most temples.
often
to
These monumental 23 doorways and could be the leaves of the pylons at Karnak and major 25 24 like that temples of Pakht at Speos Artemidos elsewhere, of rock-cut 26 belonging to various gods. or of smaller shrines the door-leaves Temple door-leavesp like decorated with described those with sheets in smaller various of beaten buildings, were normally 27 The leaf metals* could metal* usually copperg 28 It is possible copper. cast metal, but doors this of method
be covered led to it
some of
these
door-leaves
of manufacture reserved was probably 29 The usual wood employed and naoi. although electrimy34 Most found example After and also since in Nile acacia gold35 Egyptian the all dual the the those was also and copper36 doors form were clwy37 of c! used.
shrines 31 SP30 a coniferous woodp was e. 33 32 be bronze, The metals could smaller is the most common. %3is -sw 38 temple latter found, demotic or original has often for 39 door-leaves are rare
the
which
wheng
door-leaves
are
to be used continued 40 houses. References to dwellings not are into suggest 42 not
texts
regard
the
as the
ever leaves.
been
used
for
any
other
a doorwayv
Cf.,
Petrieq
Royal
Tombsp It
Die Inschriften
der
Lgyptischen
Prdhzeitp
1119 Pl-97Y
391-
36
4 This is the simplest Egyptian forrA of history. here the hieroglyph it is, however, and it is found that is many
throughout
of the writings
dual and singularg in writing 1119 Pl-89P 388; Urk. 9 19 107,3; forms. Kaplony, op. ci -9 plural 232, Vgc,. 1; pl* (with t); Vandierg Moal cg 237v 3; PYT-9 1266c 9 Urk. 9 IVP 539 15; 3879 3; 3889 11; 12,3; 20; Petrieg Koptos, pl. occurs in 476,1; 4; Nims, Studies in Honor of John 1249,14; and 1419 8; Mariette, KRI, 19 43,2; fig-7, A. Wilson, x+16 and x+17; 47; b; Caminos,, JEA 38 (1952), Pl-XIII9 11, a and Abydos, II, pl. Daressyq ASAE 18 (1919), 49 (1950)9 pl-III; Vercoutter, BIPAO 1295,3 145,7; 5 Petrie, i4re Urk-, Periode 11,68,3; VIII9 33; 39/409 2; 115,1439 1Deshashah, pl. XXI; Textes de la premCle're and Vandier, 46,11; Helck, de la Xleme Dynastieo 10 (with 424,17; i) and 12; Urk,, Ivt 56,
show greater
indicated
intermediaire7et
199; pl*XVII,
168p 2; 422,10;
1233,4-
6 Urk.,
1,121,14;
22- ci -, 46,10;
Gardiner,
pl-14,3; 7 James, The gekanakhte Rapers and other early Middle Kingdom DocDe Back, Egyptian Reading Book, 71,16. uments, pl. 26,9; 423,2169,17; 8 Urk. 9 IV9 159t 11; 168,16; 9 Abd El-Razikv jEA 60 (1974)9 1479 4; Gardinery Chester Beatty 1, XXIV, 10 (with I ); Erichsenq Papyrus Harris, iq 69 9 (Pl- ); 3.0, pl. 12 (dual). P1-5p 10 Gardiner, Gra=a: r, Sign List, 0-3'1details 11 For constructional of ancient Egyptian door-leaves see; Koenigsberger, Die Konstruktion der A'gyptischen Ti1r, 13-24. liebespoesie, 12 See, for leaves from a shrine of example, the well-preserved Toueris, now in Moscow in Monuments of the Alexander II museum Fine Arts in Moscow, pl, XIII (no author or editor is given, of for the Russian title of the book see Bibliography, P-315). 13 Petrie, 100. cit*; Hassan, (iliza, 119 fig*219 (facing p*190) 14 Kaplonyp op. cit., 1119 pls. 89t 338; 979 389; 3919 399; 1099 570; 47t 176 (this last is interpreted by Kaplony as a part of (Ibid, (12)r(y) 11,1115) but could it be a title name, Iry-c, 3 a Iry-113 (Wb., 1,164,17). ! Lwy? Compare the commontitle 15 Urk., 16 Ibidep 1,121,14I, 237P 315 (pl. ); MAller,
Admonitionsq
36
17 Lbid-v
18 Wb.,
19 Clere
It
1079 3E-g-v
op.
1,164,22.
and Vandierv P1.20.
Urk-9
cit.,
It
46j-, 10-an4
V, cK, 1;
20 James,
loc.
cit.. cit.. pl. 12,3; 1689 2-5; loc. cit., Helckj 169,17; loc. * 170P 1-2; cit. 423,2; 424t 17;
Nims,
422,10; 1249P 1424 Urk, j IV9 388,11; 2. 25 Lb_id. v IVP 3879 3; KRIP 1.439
26 urk., 6,9;
28 E4'9-t
iv,
loc*
cit.;
Erichsen,
op.
cit.,
309 15 ,
27 Koenigsberger,
24j 30 urk-9 IVY 1689 2-5 amd 16; 4239 2; 12959 3 and 4; gLomej It 8t. note 1, 31 Gardinerg 32 Urkeq 33 Ibid-P 34 Lbid-P 379 387P 3423t 170t 2; 12499 142; 422t 10*
et al. *
30P 6 :21id. 9 168Y 4; 4769 1; Erichsent 35 OP* ci -, op. 36 Urk-9 IV, 3879 3; 422p 10; 388p 11; Erichsen, 15; KRIP It 141,8; Mariettev OP- cit-P KRI, loc cit.; 3,4; et et al.. loc. cit.; 37 E. E;. t Mariettev 388,11; 38 Urk-t IVP 424,17; 39 Caminosq loc. 40 Gardiner, IV9 1233,441 Westendorf, Silbenstiuktur, Koptisches 103-105Handw8rterbuch,, 251; Fechtv cit.; Beatty
cit. al*.
6,9;
309
cit.;
Daressy, loc.
loc. cit.;
Chester
Wortakzent
443b. 42 C: nimv A Coptic Dictionaryp 63543 Osingp Nominalbildung, 44 See belowq Lw3, p. 276-277.
81
03wy-r
2nd.
Int.
Dyn. XIX5
6 Dyn. XX
of the dual form of I's1fdoorThis carious a compound clearly true meaning of which was "mouth" but which could also leaf" and rq7the 8 thereforeq logicallyq one be used to mean "opening" or "entrance". entrance". a "double-leafed cjwy-r to describe would expect term is the term would certainly seem to indicate example of this. It comes from the description of the tomb of Khnumhotep II at Hasan. "An ts of cedar of Nega to be the first Beni of cubits six the tomb. An c3wy-r of five cubits and two palms for the k3r sbi of 9 this tomb, " the `t sst which is within of sp is the doorway between door" with an's of cubits The "first six The earliest This had only one pivot of the tomb and its main hall. 10 The k3r is the name of the "shrine" door (1s). for a single-leafed to which from the main hall the rear of the tombt the entrance at that through a doorway which had pivots on either side, proving war, 11 door (c3,wy- ), double-leafed this was a the portico A further the Dead, proceeds eenth Period fine This example from this sb3t the Middle it is Kingdom occurs in the Book of "As for Atum, anc&wyr by which my father, 12 The text has an Eightof heaven. " Second Inter-mediate cubits ....... in 04
Dynasty
horizon 13
of the lebanon,
gold
by writings
of ! %wyq showing that the two terms are synonymous. These the first hall of the temple double-doors were between the portico and 15 texts on the door-4ambs The vertical of Ramesses II at Abydos. describe the doorway as "a sb3 in black copper, c!, wy-r banded with 16 texts have, copper and gilded with electrum" while the horizontal
38
"a in black c3wy of ciwy-r in 11 from 17 Papyrus as Harris 3wy-r I, in made which from
sb3 The
coppert exazple at 18
electrum. comes is
final shrine
" "
Heliopolis
described
having
there that
are its
so
few
examples was
of
this
term,
be
any
doubt
meaning
"doub&e-leafed
there 19 door"
can and
not it was
in use
fact of
of'swy. the
This simple
reason
for
the with
be employed
same meaning.
1 2 3
De Buck, Urk?
Egyptian
Reading
Bookp
72,1.
199;
pl. XVII,
10.
4 5 6
Urk-,
Vq 28,1. Abydost Papyrus III 11, a and b (vertical pl, It 52P 13texts).
Mariette, Erichsen,
Harris
7 8
Wb-t UP 389-392* Although as "entrance" r can often be translated meaning of "mouth". an extension of its original
employed to describe and hasp thereforeq
this It
an actual doorway or any of its components been omitted from this study. One text in
meaning than usual which r does seem to have had a more "concrete" is from the regency of Philip Arrhi3aeus when work was carried out including on the w'bt of the Falcon at Athribin six c4wt which had sit ASAE 18 (1919),
9 De Buck, loc. Beni 10 Newberryq 11 Ibid., 12 Urk. 13 Ibid*, 14 Helck, 15 Por plan p 53; V, V, loc. see;
11
and..... In this
c5wy in
true
cedar"
(Daressy,
1,52; (doorway
Pl-XXIIIA9
16 M-ariettep loc.
17 Ibid, II, pl. loc. is 18 Erichsen, 19 The term Flilgel of the
cit..
b (horizontal a and texts)* cit.. by LVb. 1,1649 t (Con. by Paulkner and 15; Dict-, IIP 390,11 37) as "the as "die two leaves
11,
translated Tilr"
der door".
3q
Crt
Dyn. XIX' C3 :1 Dyn. XX3 Dyne XX 2
Dyne XX4 6
D-vno XX5
v -C-V: " &Z M -C=P
.6-=
Dyne
It
is generally agreed that this termg which is found in only a few texts of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Dynastiesp is a loan-word of 7 it in Papyrus Harris I
semitic origin. It occurs most often where tkrw and tsmwt. of the description
is
given as a part of an enclosure wall9 along with from this text is in the The most useful occurrence (obty) of the temple of Ramesses III wall enclosure 8 This is the which had 11'rwt and t-krw in sandstone"* described in the papyrus which does not have tsmwto temple of Ramesses III than had two brick the inner enclosure wallop of which was lower
at Medinat Habu only temple wall The mortuary the outer one
and was faced with stone on the side facing the cultivation. It was surmounted by turrets which straddled 9 the wall. therefore that these turrets It would seem likelyl are the Irwt or the tkrw. either The other descriptions 10 are of temple enclosure walls which have
not
survived.
In the account of the travels tells how of Wenamun, the Egyptian he found the ruler Byblos "seated (in) his Irt, his back turned of " to a window". This is the only writing of "rt in the singular and is usually to refer to an "upper chamber'le understood Finally "Beautiads turquoise. "halls". 13 the term occurs in a description of the city of Pi-Ramesseq (Esdw)p radiant lazuli of windows with Irwt of lapis and 12 " Caninos has translated the word in this passage as
Both Borchardt its this well that relationship it connection be the turrets
14
and Helck
15 translate
verbal
to the would
semitic,
crt
seem that
the Irwt
the wal, It can only be assumed the other enclosure walls which no longer exist had similar turrets. 'When used in other contexts an Irt could have been either
on the top of
1+0 a balcony 1 2 3 4 5 or a chamber situated Late Egyptian Harris at a height within a building.
Miscellanieso It
289 133-4-
Papy=s
4# 10-11'689 132 BIFAO 64 (1966), relating pl-IIP x+5This writing work ot 15occurs in a damaged textv to restoration Por Sauneron's 'rtp see Ibidtp 66v 4the High Priest of this
Sauneron, badly
discussion
8
9
Ericheen,
R61scherq
op. cit-9
4v 10-Ile
' 669 18; 67t Stories, pl*2* 12; 68v 3-4; 66v 46et 13-
10 Erichsenq 11 Gardiner,
Miscellamies, 28,13-12 Id. 9 late Fgyptian 101* Miscellaniesp 13 Caminoss, Late Raptian
15t 279-16,279.
4-1
cryt
Dyn. XVIII, XX 1
=> C:: C-3
Dyn" XVII12
Dyn. XV1113
Dyn., XVII14
term,
cryt, ought not to be confused with the more common nouns (qev. ), although both hadv no doubts a similar in the origin crAr r "to approacho to rise up". term is only small found building in New Kingdom element, thatq texts and clearly did the not refers Gardiner distinguish elements on The des-
This
when used of
small
suggestion
primarily
the plan
Ramesside tomb cription on the verso seems to belong to a different to those of the tomb of as the measurements given do not correspond 6 Ramesses IV. Whichever tomb is concernedp the figures quoted show that the height of the IMt could be added to the height of the doorjamb (hns) to give the height of each chamber. Por this reason Gardiner proposed that cryt be translated as "lintel". is; "thickness cubits9 of the bn-s A typical example of the measurements
of one cubit and three palms., breadth of five two digits, height of the bn's of seven cubits 7 two cubits ten". and six palmst total;
Gardiner associated. number include of cites This workmen 4r is another text in which Dynasty the an Eighteenth on the
ostracon of
employed
nty
construction 8 m t3 Iryt.
a building,
also
occur
together is
in
Chapter
125 of
sb3 and then the left and right division of an cryt into two halves led Gardiner term was originally to a "half-lintell1*10 applied I cannot offer although any other interpretation "rightt, Iryt.
of the evidence since it would tend to The balance an Iryt
to suggest for
support of
was a lintel,
was clearly
a part
door-frame
in
association alone
with
the
(tn5w). El-Bahari on
on an ostracon
are 11
described who worked on the outer as "those 12 translates Haye a doorIlryt here as "the outer cited have by Gardiner referred to and quoted a lintel. above shows that
evidence to
more
likely
11aest -EA46 (1960), Pl-IX9 49 rect (1917), 146-1489 passim. -4 2 Ibid. v 146 (Osto Gardiner 46).
I
4; Carter p
and Gardinerg
JEA
Budgeq The Book of the Deadp(1898)9 Text volumep 264; Naville, Aegyptische Todtenbuch UP 326. Carter Ibid., rbid., Did., and'Gardinerv 157-158* 146 (3)146 (Ost.
cit.;
Das
Gardiner 46).
Navillet op. loc. cit-v cit.,, 147-
9 Budgep loc.
10 Carter
33-
4-S
c=7t
Dyne V VI
ti: 3
Dyne V2
ak
Dyne V3
5 -- ",
<=I. 1 40
ffDyne
13
Dyn* V,
=m VI
Dyne VI
1 -C=>
44 Dyne
Dyne VP mll
=: =a
Dyne VI
10
r '1
Dyne
VI
13
16
19 -11 C=>
Dyne VI
14
17
20
m "& . -.
I)yn. VII
AC - 3 Dyne XI
5
18
Dyne VI
ell 11 Ist
Intep
23 26
Dyne XVIII24
Dyne XIX27
mil
gh r-3
Dyne X 3? 9
30
34 ptol.
2---m C. -a e--> V--3
35 ptol.
number of problems connected with this word which have to are a before an attempt can be made to elucidate the meaning. be resolved Tilere First writings of allp given it must be recogaised that all the different of one word. above are to be understood 41
as variants
entries
thesep
under;
with
c rwt,
36,
37 c 17tr rrwt,
of n1lyt together
Egyptianp
by Faulkner interpretation.
under
an entry
and this
The reason
to be the fact that this term has its etymological in the verb origin 43 i'r/Ir "to rise upy to approach.. Another noun from the s=e verbal
41
"uraeas many different formsj, such as; could also show steml 11rt 45 it is that r rrYt ,,, r, tg ,, t, Ercrt, ic,,,, t not surprising so Ir"t, 1 have so many variants. The earliest texts9 of the Fifth Dynastyp should ' rrt (once crt) but later in the Old Kingdom the write the word as Irrwt, less--dften Irwt. In the Middle Kingdom the usual form was crryt and this has been adopted here as the most frequent writing was form of the word for this entryq since it is the most common heading the NewKingdom the spelling Ir'yt occurs as Egyptian. in Middle -In because of the reversal of c and r9 and n9yt do the variants rytt of r and n. reflects the phonetic similarity which It has--also been suggestedg proviouslY9 that the writings r-3 46 There isp howeverg no evidence to be read as rryt. are and be interpreted as r47 and both of these initial that either sign could (q. v. ); the ploughshare having areq in fact9 variants of the word rryt been substituted for the lion through the confusion or two similar 48 hieratic signs. The torm 'rryt must also be distinguished from the noun cryt49 elementp althoughq undoubtedlyp which described a smaller architectural in the verb 1"r/cr. have had a common they must origin One further problem is the form of the determinative of crryt in the Old Kingdom. From the Middle Kingdom to the Ptolemaic period the , frequently used determinative was E-3 but in the Old Kingdom and most the First Intermediate Period the determinative was entirely diffas the sign CP "corner of a erent 51 , co=er, t hbt 11.50 This is the determinative and other ibf wal, 52 When used for words with the stem related words from the same stem. nb the sign seems to have been usually a right-angle with sides of of equal length. - Howevert the Various fOXMS of the deterninative and has usually been interpreted 'Irryt in the Old Kingdomp longer than as demonstrated and alsop descends abovet in consistently cases, angle is mra show show a to the after the other side this
I,
44
several
in which
the vertical
at an obtuse
The use of
particular
determinative
the Old Kingdom although there ara a small number of examples from the Middle and New Kingdoms. The nature of this signp which is distinct from that used to determine nbtq will be discussed below. further have been suggested and the word has been discuesdd often. The WSrterbuch includes such translations 4 for both crwt53 and rrwt? as; "door" and "seat of administration" meanings Various for '=7t
46 Faulknert under I =wtv "house" for ncyt. "hall" and "gatep leaf of a double doort list of possible translations; gives a 57 Gardinerv discussing hall of judgement, 1wellingp home". lintelg the use of cryt on the reverse of the Turin papyrus with the plan meaning of of the tomb of Ramesses IV suggested that the original then a door and finally later a full lintel, crryt was a "half-lintelllp 58 justice. The word which occurs in this text is, in fact, a court of for crcyt55 the small architectural element 1cryt whichy as was noted abovep is from the term under discussion here. Gardinerl to be distinguished the usual meaning of crryt to have in later publicationsp considered been "gate" that it was :Later extended in meaning to refer to a and 59 place of judgement* Helck has suggested that the crryt was the building at the door 60 through which access was gained to the'royal palaceg "Die Wache". 61 He also noted that documents could be deposited within the "rryt tried there62 and that the importance of the '-rryt is officials and indicated by the fact that it was the Vizier himself who was respon6P Helck then disfor appointing the officials of the crryt. sible of the Mache'1*64 cusses the other officials This summary of the functions of the (rryt is certainly valid for the New Kingdomp however it is generally recognised that the to describe a hall or c6urt attached to the palace use of (rryt and more specific use of evolved from an original administration featurev in the same crryt as the name of a particular architectural 65 for 3nbt grew out of its original way as the meaning "council. 66 Irryt is usually "corner". This original meaning of meaning understood to have been a "gate" or "door" at the entrance to the palace. However, if to describe an had been used, originallyt entrance of any kind it could have been expected that some writings, in the Old Kingdomf would have indicated this by the particularly choice of detemminativesp since the Egyptian language was wellprovided signs which were regularly used to determine words such as sb3 or 13.. This is not the case. In the Pyramid Texts a sign R in various forms but which is basically is used which appears with (rryt, *67 This detexminative was used principally for the term (q. v. ), which was the name for af alse-door. rwt It depicts the with complex niche-structure of the door in section. The use of this ', rryt 56
4-6 sign crrwt. of to deteraine. Irryt is probably due to the confusion an error (in its Old Kingdom spelling) and which could 68 text. the support of
words rwt
determinative
determinative
to describe some kind of hallp ative of the extended use of crryt determinatives do not suppbut, in the Old Kingdomp the dietinctive ort a primary meaning of "door" or "gate". to examine the textual It is now necessary for 4rryt uses in
evidence original
before
its can be drawn concerning any conclusions known exopples of frryt The earliest occur, in
the archives Most temple of Neferirkare of the mortuary at Abusir. often crrt is used as the name of a part of the temple to which 69 1 These places can not be various officials are assigned for duty* identified icient. identified mentioned suggested. Posener-Krieger the '=t 43t, has already pointed between out the connection 70 the pr wrw and the 'Irrt hntt. The pr wrw can be any doubtp as the columned terrace is less "vestibule" that at the the 'rrt the aland Posener-Krieger any degree of certainty However it is possible that in with with in either the I rrt and for the papyri as the evidence is insuffis to be some cases the Irrt b.3t or the ' rrt hntt which which identifications
suggested
facade though
which
ran along
was clearly
the vicinity
Posener-Krieger does not commit herself to a firm 73 this crrt. In two placesp at leastp the pr wrw appears to be a subdivision be claimed that of the 'rrt74 so it can not positively _While assumimg that the all three elements were separate entities. Posener-Krieger general meaning of Irryt was "une portal' suggested that, ratif designe in these papyrit qularchitectural., pas un element 'Ile mot parait 75She l later un sens plus administ-: t, added 11crrtv on le voitp ne mais les abords d1un edifice avoir the name crrt adjective, which it temple could it appear itself in must have be be subdivided
alone,
to a particular
could could
same time,
4: 1
for this This hntt greater administrative temple, I rrt referred the vestibuley conv*enience to the entire pr wrwp while specify Possiblyp area in in front the of context the wetit. 4st areas and of of
included
have been used to would Other crrt were named in with existing
the outer
the crrt. the papyri of the an crrt the site of which has not yet St-lb-rg, solar temple of Neferirkarev 77an c =t been discovered; of the w3-barque78 which Posener-Krieger to identify these suggested was an area where grain could be stored after being unloaded to the temple79 and an to its transportation from the barque prior 60 errt nhp where which may have been an area close to the river 81 for use in the temple was made. pottery was certainly neither a door n= a gate, nor had it yet acquired a link with the palace adminthat the basic It is most likely istration or the courts of justice. less specific than has been previously meaiipg of 'rryt was rather that Irryt The suggestion !cecognised. was the of Posener-Krieger "abords d1un 'edifice" would seem to be correct. origin This would of the word in the verb which can mean "to approach" as well as "to rise up"# The true meanto a building. This could mean the ing of crryt was thev"approaches" agree with the etymological area immediately temple mortuary It see if remains this in front of the entrance, the front texts or event portion in the case of the of Neferirkaret of the building. in which crryt occurs to in the the decrees Old Kingdom set up by certainly 1'r/Ir In the Fifth Dynastyo thereforel crryt it is although These include remains. not possible
now to examine other can be upheld. most important Intermadiate in the temple
conclusion
The other and the First kings various described Since these
examples Period
of 'rryt
come from
as being decrees
placed would
of Min at Koptos. Most of these are "at the c-rrwt of the pr of Min of Koptos. 1182 to be accessible to as
they must have been at the front many p(gople as possibleg of the temple to which the greatest number of people would have been admitted. (which were not found in situ), Hayes has noted that these decrees, had been originally set in brick walls butt as they were not very weatheredg, elements. into they could not have been too openly suggested that they exposed to the set Hei therefore had been originally of a deep vestibulev
the reveal
+13 similar to those found in contemporary pyramid temples. is 83 still a matter to the temple suggest
plan
of an Old Kingdom cultus so few early possible remains to reconstruct of to the front crryt does not
temple
since not
on any site*
would
In the Pyramid
occur
two examples would again suggest that it was situated at although 85 the entrance to a building. the use of1rryt from the Old Kingdom include Further occurrences 86 Imy-r trrwt87 iry crrt invocin the titles and in the funerary and (I) will "(I) their destroy not upon earthp will survivors ation; 88 crrt to be established. their " allow In the Middle Kingdom crryt is first found in the title whmw n 189 Crryt which recurs in the New Kingdom. It is also used in the titles 93 92 C 1my-r ksw Irryt C crryt. tV91 the
S3 rry sS crryt an& unusual wn
in particular, crryt in
on the
and function
connection
the palace
The "herald" the administration. would greet the petitioners outside entrance to the palacep or the office concernedo and would guide the (q. v. ) where he would await the wimmons inside to the rryt visitors into the inner apartments. It is Possiblet in the Middle particularly Kingdomp that term applied to the area,, -immediately before the entrance to a private house or a palace. This area can be those of Meketre94 or from soul-houses#95 to seenp from models like have been lightly roofed with a wooden canopyp usually supported by two wooden columns. in the determinatives Other was the the High the I-rryt". rr. yt is between not the texts It may be this found with light crryt in wooden roof which that the Old Kingdom. the view of "at the date the is 96 depicted crryt was the
of the Middle
Kingdom In
"approach"
to a building. that
the peasant
Steward
an indication
of a connection
a-ad the administration of justicep as the peasant Rensi wherever he happens to find him. The use of pg. 3 for petitions the entrance to thecrryt iEof interest that as this would indicate crryt is being used of the "portico" at the front of the house. This to the courtyard so thats if the peasant was
4-9 standing term for imply that A private ion therey making his speechy while sung then pgi the Steward stood under the
from the
the entrance
than words
such as rwt
was an actual doorway or gate involved. Wepwawet-aa describes stela of the official
recept-
"the seal-bearers at the palace; who are in the pr-nswq the (cnhw) who are at the 'Irryt to the pr-nsw, "' people see my admittance Increabingyp from the Middle Kingdomp the '-rryt became an administrative department. This is showa by the fact that the (rryt could 99 transport-barges. function The administrative own and control of the_lrxyt is indicated in the New Kingdomy particularly most clearly in the that texts the Irryt legal relate Apart texts from is very that the tomb of Rekhmire 100 Similarly evident* could be deposited could the nbt-council use of crryt there where the in judicial aspect of the Inscription the crryt9101 the of Mes shows while other 102 crryt. or an the word
documents
meet in
from this
a courtroom that
department, original
indications
meaning.
A stela of king Ahmose describes defeated foreigners in standing "at hie humility textq of the reign of Tanrryt,, 9103 while a later description utamun, gives a detailed of a similar scene when the king, ing at within the his rryt. palacep is told that. the Delta-chieftains 104 The king leaves the palace building themselves. for occurs taxes'05 in The palace and other crryt produce* are waitand finds was also 106
the Underworld. "gate, " or inaccurate. the crryt of icating that 107 itself.
the Dead where it is one which the deceased must pass in order to enter into Usually, in such contextsyl is traniated rryt as butt as with sbbt, that the conrenient some vignettes translation is show the guardians
the Book of
is noteworthy
than withinp sitting outside indof the doorway rather the crryt was the approach to the door and not the door
accepted translations of "door" or "gate" are therefore unsuitable for crryt The original and should not be retained. meaningg and one which seems to have been preserved throughout Egyptian historyp to a building. Basically was the"approach" this described the area immediately before a doorv whether of a templeg palace or
The generally
60 private roofed house. In the latter two cases from light this atea could for is be lightly awaiting in is the only by C-3 a
to prbvide and it
admittancep determinatives
of the Old Kingdom. later periods# of the extension or a "courtroom". original meaning. around
this
having
replaced
to describe
This use of the word easily develIt is a customp in many countriest of buildings in order to In an ancient to meet would be the court-
to gather
the entrances
or to resolve
shade of the canopied portico vhere mastabas could be situated the name of the out of the sun's heat. Consequently to be used for such a meeting-place, portico continued even when it had acquired a more permanent form as a part of the official administration. This development in the use of 'rryt is well illustrated under by a Nineteenth council great It which trl isq "(6t) I)ynasty the 13'yt text which describes beside a meeting of the I; nbtthe of Pharaoh ..... 108 It of Ramasses-Mismin.... thereforep impossible Hrw-1b-hr-m3<t,
to suggest
one translation
forc
rryt
for every occasion on which the word is would be acceptable foundt so each text must be judged individuallyp taking the context into accountl and a decision made as to whether "approach, 119 "portico" or 1 Itneeting-place" would be the most appropriate and De Cenivall remaining The Abu Sir of this translation.
Posener-Kr16ger c; XCVIIA,
Papyriq
A4; the
writings
3 4
and De Cenivalp op. cit-P pls-IVA9 9 and h; IXXXVIAq A2 and B; XCIIAt B (this last in the plural). Ibid. 9 pl. XIAO 1 and 2. The Pyramid occurs in of Unas, the pyramid 16 (Pyr. pl. of Tetit by Sethe (Die 292d. the texts This spell (No. 254) also from which Altaegyptischen Pyrin Teti
Piankoffp
the fona
of the deteminatives
as he also gives this fo=a for the writing it can not be relied upon for accuracy. Piankoffq op* citop pl*26 (PYZ- 392a. This text also
in Unast
occurs
in
61
6 7
the pyramids of Teti and Pepi II (see note ihe determinatives are again in doubt. Pyr-t 1740b. Pyr-P that 952a. (This writing occurs
1) where
the forms
of
of Pepi
I while
in
8 9
Pyr-t
by Faulknert The Ancient 2263b (published -'Pyrp 9` Texts. Sapplement of Hieroglyphic Textst 79); 306,10. (Pepi II).
Egyptian _Erk. It p
Pyramid 292t 9;
10 Pyr. 9 1869b.
1gyptischen
in Samm1ungen Schweden,
Gilzaj XIP 71, abb. 40 and pl. VIIr a. de la sixieme DynastLeq Chambre fanbraire 218t 143; Lutzp Tomb Steles 282y 11. Egyptian
pl*V.
1,2869
and Offering
Stones
pl,, 249 NO-46. and Vandiert 107 (spell Textes do la XIeme Dynastie, 901). Letters to the Deady Pl-VIP Pl-15; 4-5Simpsony Papyrus de la premiere Periode intermed: Laire et TexLsL, 11t 3; De Buckt The Egyptian_Coffin
and Sethet Egyptian 19 Koefoed-Petersenq Les Steles Reisner 20 Newberry, 21 Pierretq II Pl-104i Inscv (it 3Beni Hasany It Louvret II,
18 Gardiner
Egyptiennest
Denderah, 239 10; 729 3; Mariettep 1; Urk. 9 My IIIP Pl-839 9; et al, Up Part IIp 91, fig-42'A 22 Fakhry, The Monuments of Snefera atBahshurt (ibid. 72y fig-392 damaged text of the same official. and pl. IXX) t [, =Iyt. ); has be restored to is probably as which Newberryt El-Bersheh, It pl*XX* 5; 11149 5; 1684t 23 Griffith, The Inscriptions 24 Lange and ScUferg IIP 939 3- (The copy given by Marlette generale d'Abydosy 96, NO-544) has T pl. 16,7and Dgr lAfeh des Mittleren Reiches Grab- und Denksteine of Sfut of in this fount. text(Catalogue Although originSee
to the Middle Kingdom this textp which ally ascribed to the reign of Intef-sap belongs to the Seventeenth
52
wII3, p. 8'19 note 4-
25 Lr_k.t IVp 1073P 3; 2155,18; 2160p 17; Erman, ZIS 17 (1879)v 72. 26 British Museumv Select Papyri, Ij pl. XX9 2; XXIq 8. 27 Zivie, C.M. p Giza au deuxremeMillenaireq 20428 Budge, The Book of the Dead (1898), Texto 327 (Budge gives the 9 but it is in fact as shown here. form of the dete=inative as See B. Me 104772 26. ) 29 Chazpollionv Notices Descriptivesp 1.70130 Spiegelbergq Hieratic Ostraka and Papyri found by J. E. Quibell-Lin the Ramesseum, 1895-6, pl. IXA, 80. 31 Korostovtsev, BIFAO45 (1947), 157 and plj-q 8. 2 Chicago Universitys Oriental Institu6ep The Bubastite Portalp pl. 16,9.
33 Bergmaung Eine 34 Damichen, 35 Chassinatt Sarcophaginschrift Altaegyptische Edfoup 9p 1. aus der Ptolemierzeit Kalenderinschriftenp pl. IX, cp 9.
Is 87, bottom.
36 wbi. I It 2109 12-178-1437 n. 9 1,2119 38 Wb, j It 39 M?. V It 40 Wb., III 41 Wb. 9 III 42 Faulknerl 43 Wb-t It 209,6. 2099 13-14207P 16. 403t I45-
44 T! - 9 It 42p 1-445 Ermanp ZiS 46 (1909-1910)t 46 Erman, Studien 47 Gardinerg ZAS 20, (1892-A' 2,1; und Materialen
zum Rechtswesen
des Pharaonenreiches
48 Ibidt
43.9; Gardinerv
JEA 15 (1929)9 54; Compare M6,11erv HieratI-III No. 125 and 468-
ische Palaeographie
49 Tj. I It 209P 5- See above P-41-42, 50 Gardinerg Grammart Sign Listt 038* 51 Wb-v Vt 539 5-6. 52 Wb. p Vt 53-5453 Wb.9 It 210,12-17-
54 Wb-t It 55 n. i It
63
56 Wb-, 119 207P 16. 57 Paulknerg Con. Dict. P 4558 Gardiner and Carter# JEA 4 (1917), 14759 Gardinerg, ZIS 60 (1925), 65; Gardiner and Sethev op* cit. p 22; Gardinert Grammart 558; Sign List, 038.
60 Helckt 61 Qualring 62 Quoting 63 Quoting Zur Verwaltung Gardinerp Urkp des Mittleren The Inscription und Neuen Reichs, of Mest_S, 6. 65-
IVO 1107Y 5-
Urk. p IV9 1114P 566ff. 64 Helck op. cit., ' 65 TI-P VP 539 9-21; 54P 1-1166 Wb. V9 539 5-6. j 67 Pyr952a; 1740b. 9 68 Bergmann, loc. cit.. VAp h; VIIA, Do Cenivall op. cit. p pls. 3: and 1; XIAt 1 and 2; LUVAy N. 70 Posener-Kriegert Archives Neferirkare, 27-29; 51169 Posoner-Krieger 496-499* t 72 1bid. P 51173 rbid., 28-29,5119 and De Cenivalp op. cit. 28. p cit, pl. XCIIA, t B. op. cit. pl. IVAj p 9; VITAt jo 74%Posener-Krieger 75 Posener-Kriegerg 76 Ibid*P 51171 Ibid. J; IXA9
and De Cenivalp op. 78 Ibid. 9 pl. XCVI3:Ap A4512-51479 Posener-Kriegert OP- cit-P 77 Posener-Kri6ger 80 Posener-Krieger 81 PosenerKrilegerf It
9 pl-XIAv
It 306t 282p 11; 286P 3; 2929 9; also ibidot 82 Urkol [every 'rrwt. of in which your moniiments are-ft r-prj 83 Elayest JEA 32 (1946)p 6-784 Pyr-t 85 PYror 86 Lugnt 87 Lutz, 392a; 1740b; 1869b; 2263b.
cit.
88 Capartq
It 2189 14o Compare also cit., o Papyri from Kabun and Gurobq 119 Pl-XV9 34; Hieratic 89 Griffithp V 79 and 80; KoefoedSinaig It pl-XXIIP Inscriptions Cernyp The of
o Urko,
5+ Petersen, lyphiques IV, loc. cit*; Couyat and Montet, Les Inscriptions hierog-
90
It 1039 s; Newberryl loc* cito., Lange and Schitferv op. cit-t 91 Griffith, op, cit, v pl-XXXP 43Hatnub, ple. 19p (15v 8); 209 92 Anthest Die Felseninschriften von (19t 1); 26, (25Y 19)93 94 95 96 1,249Lange and Schhferv op* citot Winlockp Models of Daily Life in Ancient Petriev Egyptt Plo-11-15, on ple
Gizeh and Rifehv plselr-= Comparep for examplet the form of the canopy over the Rierakonpolis, the Narmer mace-head in Cbcford (Quibellp Gallery Bulletin of sunshades 24 (1958)p 29ffo Bookt 95,13-749 14cit** (Fischer,
throne It
XXVI9 B) and the profile Art 97 98 99 De Buckv Egyptian Sethey Aegyptische De Buckv op. cit.,
Yale University
Reading
Simpsong loc.
100 Urk,, t IV9 11079 5; 11089 4; 11149 5; 1115Y 1 and 11; 21559 18; 2160,17See also; Ibid*p Mest S, 6. 101 Gwdiner, The Inscription of 102 Ermang loc, 103 Urk-P 104 Ibid. 90 105 Ujck. q 111,239 10106 Chicago Universityp pl. 16,19. 107 Budge, The Book of the Deadq The Papyrus Todtenbuchp of Aniq It I, cit.; 72t British Museump Select Papyrip It IV9 189 4IIIY 9 3- Compare alsop Mariettep Denderahq
11179 1-
P1-83t
Oriental
Institatet
The Bubastite
Portalt
p1soll
and
pl. CLIV.
66
W34t
Dyn. XVIII'
C-3
Dyn. XV1112
This
term
is
known
only
from
blocks
of
the
red
quartzite
sanctuary
from the temple of Almin at Karnak. Hatshepsut of the list of temples in the Theban area. The first name of the w3tLt tptt enclosed have suggested that this "first within wa4t" a bwt-sign. was the first 5
It
occurs
twice
in
the processional
The"second if the
That of the the
to that
of Karnak,
is also named W3ht" W3bt snnwtp *91 sanctuary had been found intact.,
a w34t sanctuary was a way-station blocks and the is certain
evidence term in
etymological
verbal
stem w34.6
Another
various other. within that were 7
series
of blocks
show that
shows the
sacred
barque
resting
from one
in
to an-
w3bwt
when in
Processiony a wilit
and being
carried
on which with
these
permanent
structures. suggested
would
the this
origin term
no etymology
Coptic 6erny. 12 by of
the
a Karnak,
It
82,
2 Ibid. v 1,161,1207; 163y 214; 164,1216; 165,1217; 165,1218; 166t j 219; 167 220; 167 j 221; 168,1222 (see al so Urk. IV, 379). vj p 3 Lacau and Chevrier, op. cit., 1,82,11344 Loc. cit.. 5 LbLd- P 83t 11356 Wbet It 253-257. For w-34t, see; Ibidop It 2589 4; Faulkner, Con. Dictey 547 Lacau and Chevriery op. cit., 1,161-168.
a At the time of writing, volume II of Lacau and Chevrier's publication has not appeared. Photographs of two of these blocks showing the W34Wt can be seen in legrain and Navillep Vaile nord du Pylone d'Amenophis III a Karnakq pl. XI7.
66
10 Westendorfv
Koptisches
S'I W311
Dyn. XII
T&
-? -
All
singe
writings
of
w34
are
found
the
plural
unless
stated
otherwise.
papyriform
column is
first
found
in Egypt
in
the enc-
of the Step ]Pyramid of Djoser at Saqqaraj where the slender the the type was not common until thiss columns axe engaged-9 After there is evidence that it did occur in the Middte New Kingdom although Kingdom. A,scane in tomb 5 at El-Bersheh clearly shows a single-stem 10 papyriform column and there is also evidence that such columns 11 in the town at Kahun. However this type of column does not existed 12 seem to have been popular in Egypt before the New Kingdom. The papyriform cluster column first appeared 14 in the Fifth Dynasty13 By the Now Kingdom and examples are known from the Middle Kingdom. this typu had virtually the lotiform column, to which it replaced 5 bears a strong resemblencepl, been more popand which had previously ulVX. Essentiallyq column Dynasty papyxusv 3d. This w, types therefore, was the the development both of the two papyriform prior to the New the Eighteenth the same. Although increased types both axe found the
greatly
in number from
represent
same plant-form,
certainly
by the were described by the earliest seems to be indicated cluster columns are described primarily depicts. to have been applied bf various
ample where papyriform which one would expect is as this The text is
columns
papyriform (Medinet
cluster
col-
umns found
on the
described
work
16
68
to the columns on there can be no doubt that the text refers made so The copy of the text given by Habachiq which it is inscribed. which the standard papyrus plant hieroglyphs is in fouht, as does shows the copy, given by Lepsius, of a part of one of the columns which he 17 However the in Medinet el-Fayum. found being used as a threshold ograph reproduced by Habachi which is clear enough to allow only pho; the w34-signs form given in is intended to be distinguishedleshows the first of the writings the columns that above. the signs are of the plant The opan papyrus are of cluster-forme
even though
themselves
the ideoIn the New Kingdom, when such columns were often erectedp 19 19 theme The in the pluralp gram usually was used to describe If both papyrdkfora columnreading of this sign is problematical. in texts one would have to assume thatt Hall in the temple of Amun at Karnak such as those of the Hypostyle Ila r IRIJ O both the hall groups are to pbr. tl m which describe as be read as w4w. The papyriform columns of JUnenhotep III at cluster types were called wjwt then Luxor seem to have been called lotiform n#bwt (q. ve) which was originally the that the ideogram was columns and it is possible 21 to be read as 4bwt. However this is an isolated case and actual ws#. papyrifoxm cluster columns arep more frequentlyp called name for In there is of the second hypostyle rows of hall of with the temple twelve in of Seti are three I at Abydos The front row
columnsp cylindrical
each.
columnsp while the other two rows 22 A damaged coiling inscare stylised papyriform cluster columns. )2 , $Rt 3 in the hall the group ription contains whichp presumablyp to the columns in the hall. Possibly refers W34 was used here as a term for a column asq indeedv was the word 1wn in the same general 24 temple. Cn the other hand the columns may have been described as etraight-shafted w3dw because them were papyriform. The columns of the forecourt of the temple of Khonsu at Karnak 25 in are also stylised papyriform cluster columns and are described 26 the dedication inscription A possible third of Herihor as WS1w of example comes from where a text forecourt, with its the Ramesside forecourt east of the tepple of Luxor describes the on the back of the stylised the pylon the majority
wing of cluster
27 ti m w3dw(? ) The form of the signs is uncertain pbr. as the text is . damaged and the-capitale However of the coluran hieroglyphs are lost. the bases of the signst as publishedq would suggest that papyriform
papyriform
columns, as a wsht....
in it
all
these
examplesp that
I
used to column
this in
is more likely
the ideogram
papyrifo3n
be read
way. There can, however, be no doubt referred III in the hall that the cingle-stem is true of Pylons papyrifo= the coltemple to as W3d. This butween the columns
4 and 5 in
of Amun at Karnak, where the king added to the number of columns erected the columns of the has demonstrated, by Tuthmosis 1.28 As Borchardt but both king differed from those of Tuthmosis IIIp earlier slightly 29 belonging to No capitals columns. sets were single-stem papyriform these columns have been found but they would have been campaniform. Columns in leted the the same hall decoration were also called w3dw by Amenhotep II 30 by his father. In the Nineteenth started who compDynasty
W3dWwas used of
the aisle in the Hypof campaniform papyrus-columns ?2 in the Rameaseum ostyle Hall at Karnak3l aisle and also of a similar In the Twenty-Fifth for Mut, Dynastyp Montuemhat recorded building, 33 Karnakq a h3yt (q*v*) W3d-columns in sandatone. at with twenty-four Both Wreszinski have zaggested that this was a "porch'19 and Leclant 34 t6 those erected by Taharqa in the Amun temple enclosure. similar A text of Nectanebo II over the north colonnade of the portico of the temple "beautiful were of of Hibis W3dw in three in El-Kharga oasis, records that 35 The engaged columns sandstone". lotiform assume that refer the king of thi's constructed portico
types; palmiformy open-flowered 36 In this case One can only papyrus columns. as d., term for columns in general and did not examples Dynasty headed alone. An interesting building sistrim forms
at Hermopolis to dmcribe
of the Ptolemaic
period
the columns
areof
many
and the papyri64rm column wsd occurs along with other detailed ideograms038 W3d is not found in either demotic or Coptice Although W3d_ to describe the aingle-stem was used primarily papwas also the name of the papyriform-cluster from the Thirtieth Dynastyp it could be used of other columnt it column types.
yriform and,
60
1 2 Habachi, Urkep IV, ASAE 37 (1937)9 933,7 (these 88; LD., II, 118g. in a text from tomb 86 at
w3d columnsv
green on the shaft and white axe coloured De Wit, Cho d'Eg* 36 NO-72 (July 1961), IVo 642,1; 1328,1-3; Oriental 1331,11 and 12; LD*, Rameses III's
Institute,
Temple within
Orof Amun, p1s. 22f A, 18; 23, A, 18; Wresilnzki, (19109, pl. II (after ientalistis9he 13; Literatar-zeitung 13 P-387), Hoederv ASAN 52 (1954)9 79, Dy 12* 4 5 6 7 KIT, Ibid*, (January Yoyottev 1,141,9 202,9; 1961), 2031 8; 87. 28 NO-55 (January 19530,34Expeditiont The Temple pl. 64, middle,
LXXXII-IXXXIII. pl. XVII.
205,2
and 9; De Wit,
Ch* dlEge
The Metropolitan
The Egyptian
of'oHibis 1. 6 Daressy,
9 Lauer,
a degr8s,
10 Griffith
El-Bersheh,
11 Petrie,
12 For types 13 Id.,
Illahun,
pl-VIt
of
5.
both papyriform column 25-43abb-5; Ldo, Das
Aegyptische
Pfltanzenshule 11,
Das Grabdenkmal des Konigs (columns ( also Pote op. 118g. opo citot I, 201t cit., 14-
of of
Habachiq
on. L. z &.
El-Fayum).
88.
91, 5;
205o
1,202,9, 4bwt to and w3dw are decide in in the on the which the this of of different of of gender the the it may, if one day, a text be were Cne Some Aucof to
reading gender
indicated. (Budge,
which
Collection Theobalds
the has
Meux of
Parkv
61
wrongly to hy Budge. copied J (Raffle be. tead KRI, IIIt of Templeo 197t these 330, The signs reproduced Glimpses any as of III Ancient areq in fact9 70,
example 73)-
The Temple
Sethos
57.
23 LbLid. IV, pl. 629 Do j 24 KRI, 1,186,10. 25 Capartp which inet 26 LD, Thebes, were Habu, III, fig-45. These to columns from Med. were the made up temple II, 79t in of from older drums at Med-
Karnak Exc.
Horemheb
Habu,
243a
published
by Chappollion
Notices
11,222. 27 Abd El-Razik, 28 Urk. IV9 9 29 Borchardt, 30 Urk-9 321MI, IV, 842t JEA 60 (1974)t le 147,3-
1r")? 029
2059
similar
at
see;
of Montu);
Museum of Art, opo citot by Badavy (ZiS 102 (1975)9 the porch see;
Museum of columns
Artq
ope Ibid.,
ai_t-, 1,
19 pl. XXXIII
and for
photographs
see;
pls,, IV+VIII, loc. III, No-72 cit.. 285a; (July De Witv 1961), Ch. 285d1Hg36 No-71 (January 1961),
37 Roeder, 38 E. 87;
go LD., Ibid.,
62
w3 dyt
XXII Ik 44 C-3
Dyn. XVIII9
Ptol.
2 r-3
Dyn. XXI,
Like wsdyt
names for
temples case
In the this
of most words this is not be trae of w5Vt. primarilyp particularly often before reasonable It was only the
may
described,
papyriform column which did not occur the New Kingdom (see above P. 57 ) it would not be to expect w3dyt to be found in texts of earlier date. in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Dynasties that the hall
with
vs4 columns became popular. In particular that w3dyt seems to have been used of one hall; between the Fourth and Fifth Pylons in the temple of Amun situated
the plan of this hall was changed extensively at Karnak. Although between the reigns of Tuthmosis I and Amenhotep, IIf it always contained w3d columns. In the original hallp as erected by Tuthmosis Ip there further text were four nine or ten or five columns to which Tathmosis III 6 added a The earliest to make their number up to fourteen.
to call this hall a w3dyt is of the reign of Hatshepsut who, the Third on a block from her sanctuary which was found within (m bnt) the Pylon, described the erection "within of her obelisks 7 noble w:&dyt. #, At the time when this work was carried out the hall consisted of which erection of a Bingle central row of papyriform collimnst would have had to have been removed to facilitate of the obelisks. of Tuthmosis 1119 also at least the two
in the "northern was standing chosen to be king by Amunp while the god was processing around 9 This usep by Tuthmosis IIIp 6f the expression W3dyt. "nortlern Wdy 11to mean the northern "southern columns of decorated survive the half of the hall the reign half that is paralleled the hall the king
by the This
of Amenhotep II. of
southern record
on three
which
63
the but
w:sdvt
in fact, from
erected claiming
did not
deter
decorated 11
also
sanctuary
of Hatshepsut
which, st m w3_dyt of Tuthmosis I. Dynasty the Eighteenth After the Twenty-seconddDynasty. quarry at Silsila Amun at Karnak. In
at Karnakv
been found
again
the reign
sandptond of
the temple
by statues and a W3-dYtt all 12 the king Although quarry. in his last known regnal yearp
bbnt and a ws1jt-tbyt surrounded a on a stela in the of which he described the stelaq erected himself died soon after
the original plan seems was inscribedp forecourt the existing to have been followed with its colonnades and These colonnades do not to the wsht-4by with a w3d corresponds _yt. _ the hall have siAgle-stem of Tathmosis 1, columnst like papyriform but consist be called an accurate columns which can also cluster papyriform stylized (see the entry on w3ij p. 58) so that w3_dyt is still w3qw of name for these colonnades.
Two statues
with is reasonable
the same dynasty mention a w3dyt in connection of 13 Since both the god Amun. at Karnak it came from the cachette
to assume that the W3dyt in question was in once again the. hall between the Fourth was used to nor Coptict of w3c-1columns is not It Of the word. describev the Amun and Fifth
period in
wsdyt
of the Hathor
temple
demotic
meaning the
I at to the its
In Ptolemaic
meaning
word for
Urk- IVt 374-11; 158.8;, 1328.1-3; Legrain, 8 (1952)v IIIP 60A*Caminosp LEL PLxIllt48. 2 Urk. IVP 157-13- Mariettep Denderah, II,
6+
3 4 5 6
80,1 and pl*XLI. 9 Dilmichen, Resultate pl. 50p 8, (Cono Diets Wbeq 19 269,6-9. Faulkner op. cit. "hall of colilmns" without specifying
Legraing
w3dyt involved.
as
of this P-10-14-
see; Borchardt,
Urk, j IV, 3749 11. This text is also publishedq in fountp by Lacam i Karnakp 232P 369. Chevrierp La Chapelle dillatshepecat and Urk-P Ibideq IV9 1579 131589 8.
8 9
1328p 1-3 (column 2 Omits rsYt). 9 11 Lacau and Chevrier, op- cit. 9 100; 104 note ac. See also Helckt Die Ritualszenen auf der Umfassungsmauer Rameses' II in Karnak, 7710 Ibid. 12 Caminosp loc. 13 Legrainp 14 Barguetv 15 Bergmann, 16 Wb. 9 It Addendum. Anpther from 4ry writing of w3dyt, -IL occurs The writing on a wsh-collar is found in amLilet cit.. 1119 60p d; 80f 9 311i and pl. XLI. 21. loc. cit.. op. cit. Templet
269,8
D4michenq loc.
and Marietteg
the title
wsd-yt of an official named Ray, and is dated to the New Kingdom (Gout-Minaultl Hommages a Berge Sauneronj Ip 33; Vercoutterg CRIPEL 3 (1975)9 13-)
5
wb3 Dyne XIq
C-j XIX
Dyne XVIII
2
Ij 'k-
Dyne As.
r-3
XIX3
QC-3
Dyne
XIX4
Dyne XIXI, XX7
Dyne XIX5
-=L
C73
3X"
Dyn* XIX C-310 UI ABL Dyne X IX 11
Dyne XIX9
Up-
V-j
TjArl4c-. l 15 110K.
12 Dyne XIXt
XX
Tmj
T
18
C-3
Dyne XX
1 C-3 Tj
Dyne XXl
Dyne XX 22
,,. c E-3
Dyne XX
Dyn., XX25
Dyne XX1128
31
TI C-3
Dyne XXV,
29
Ptol.
C-3
3at .
OEIZM
ptol.
32
C-3
Roman33
34
j 'a
, a,.
These writings as it is
of wb5 do not
include
all
of
known
in an almost infinite number could g written t 36 I and many was often confused with of ways. The initial sign &could be used unusual forms of these two signs were employed. The DX Dynasty,. the IS. andq from the Hineteenth wax withp or withoutq 37 In Late Egyptian through phonetic various confusion. often written a word which semi-consonants to give all were added. Consequently of it has not been practicable those quoted the possible the termv
spellings
although
above are a representative selection. Etymologically is related to the verbal stem wbs "to bore, to wb3 38 to the in the past, this has undoubtedly open,, contributedt and
bl
tendency
to
translate also
forecourtt, meaning of
39
or
"open
'qIeiligtum"
courtt, 41 The . hu
40.
translation to the
challenged Harris I
by 'Christophe in which
only should
He suggas
do "temple" 11sanctuairep dans son sens large ou memo do I'domaine pris 43 42 by Otto. Since A similar meaning has also been suggested sacrell.,, wb3 is to derived of from the verb wb3 "to which open" could it ought have that to been have refeired as
a temple
complex is
regarded
However
there
no evidence
this the
which with
lined pylon.
immediately used to
describe
than
as having
temples
seem to earliest
have
be the
occurrence
word
Oredate in
the the
appeared
often
the
Nineteenth
and wasp
As with does
absence
was not
papyri)
rarely occurs
writing up for
Theban
official
these
deal
livestock
wood,
a location
pieces be the it
willow-wood part of
are
I'm pr-
has
out-house
Tanutamun47 of Amun at
(q*vo) also
Napatae
James
example
61 wb3 "demonstriLtes than those that or both that of that in origin 48 There termso it is, was used indeed, to describe courts evidence refer in view to other to of
parts of the it
Hekanakhte only
are
known
elsewhere items
possible
stored
an interis recorded
esting
papyrus
in
which is
there
a mast individual
which
possession 49 bwt.,. In of
this
Ramesses wall.
which that
impossible
a temple-precinct to a part
though ate of or
of
have
a mast 51
usualp to many
translation in which
can number
not
be and
both
buildings wb3
activities be entire
as is
being under6-
the to land
temple
only the
have sacred
referred to
temenoo
extension,
can be the
seen
with
regard at that
to Karnak it
the
single
obelisk
of
Eastern
Temple
(the
Lateran be erected
was to
unfinished
by IV r earlier
n"Ipt-owt to
jjims55has stand of in
Temple, 03
this
Tuthmosis obelisk It
IV9
that
belatedly,
erected.
this
69 could of have been III 57 the regarded as the "forecourt" of the temple in the to reign the partwhich
Tuthmosis
must tLry at
temple icular
temenos, part of
enclosurep
the
the
main
was intendedo Cnce again no further muat been in all In provided isks stood there is have a break been of the in found survival roign of the known the since Seti history Eighteenth the word of this term as This still
examples
from
an accident from
I wb3 occurs
frequently
Luxor
described
with
how he made a wb3 58 The obelAmun-Re Atum* and were yll which not within to the the been en-
before forecourt,
temple therefore,
caseq the
referred
of
temple has
pylon
may have
which of
since
a Thirtieth one.
destroyed, completely 59 Dynasty wall which could been the Karnak temple of Luxor
However at
the
tween ing to
two building
been
as the
wba of
broadest case
must
the
temple
of
Seti 60
at This 1b3
Gurna
which
described also
situated
particular as "fore-
example courtN
the
impossibility
Cne curious
use
of
rb3
is
found
in
the
Hypostyle
Hall
at
Karnak
is namedg on an architrave inscription, where the hall as tLwt-ntr (Sti )Ipt-swt SPSS M W3W WrW Imn m bft-tLr mr-n, -mnj m pr,! 3h_ n wb3 Ett (called) "The bwt-nJr "Glorious is Seti Merenamun" p4retl m Amung in front wb:3 with of Ipet-satv great w:sda xoble 61 JEB text to In this columns and Wb3 can only be in apposition e bwt-ntr being itself. Hall and is therefore used of the Hypostyle 62 Christophe translated 11sanctuaire . but in an, text wb3 in this as pr of other damaged as "avant-cour" text from the 63 aszaming same hall that in he preferred this 64 example to the translate text was wb3 in the
69
referring erected. stood* of the In to This this the is unfinished hall before the smaller if columns properly in were underfront
wbs is
case
main
entrance wb51-1 at
existing
As Christophe front it of it
temple the
name of
before
entrance the
could use
been term
transferred to describe
hall
itself. hall
Alternatively
og this
called Hall;
the same hall since may be an example of hyperbole, 66 the text tLwt-ntr. Cne further also uses yj) for a /, 1311a noble wb3 with wba spas m mnw nfrw wrw wsdwr'*//
great
if the
and beautiful
Obviously example true the the
monurnentsp wad-columnsLZ
meaning of wbs in to any text can only
7
be confirmed This is part-
can be related of the of temple Ramesses is described the the "in the the
a surviving at Karnak.
monument.
complex II the
reign
Eastern back
and
on the
building
obeliskd,
flagstaffs noble
erected his
front area
of before
Luxor,
sug&ested use of
temple of
state
people the
was "an edifice 69 The fact Thebes. " Amun to latters, the wb3 of petition
ordinary is shown of
could
come to of
a series
family
a sick
man to
the instructing 70 When thO7, Amun. the god himself. wallg to there pet-
he is
supposed all
go to land
thank
wb,-- could was no heed for ition which the the god.
include the
general
enter be
Shrines
could
wb-111 to
petitions origin of
Amenhotep "in
a status
cult
a shrine 6n the
was established
West
10 74 and provided have Seti been I at with anywhere Gurna a priesthoode in the area of The original Karnak in or the site eveng of since the the statue temple Bank could of at
as Igeing
wb39 on the
West
Thebes,
on land
Amun. in Papyrus Harris n wb3. k I. 75 The temple of Ramesses also from notes for-
is
described
as )jft-]r
for the wb3 of Amunp of a jar-stand, providin& 8 77 aand a black campaigns, sycamore-trees eign Heliopolis instituting providing built wbi for of the the king carried out 81 building and works in the
offerinSs men to
a storehouse the
At shrine*79 60 including wb3 of Atum 82 fpr offerings and At Memphid Ramesses in the
police
sanctify
03083
building Ptah94 as a similar as well 85 describes Rinally the king what the "I
he did )
and r-pr
South and North of and goddesses 86 ) in (kir) " their wbi(w), common term buildings which in the were Nineteenth
Dynasty
and later
Amun temple II at of Seti 88 The wb3 formed at Memphis. complex of Ramesses a pext of the temple EN Habu III in the at Medinet and at Heracleopolis was erected a bntt go Other works carried the erection out in wb3w include wb3 of Horshefe 02 91 of an obelisk at Heliopolis, columns offering 95 at Thebest" a great 94 93 table and gold at Karnakj of silver of copper statues and wood Thebes 96 Period. at Various and several and a h3Yt in the enclosure at Dendera in the Ptolemaic 97 officials scribes. of the wb3 are known including 8 In the Twentieth Dynasty the in to the great wbi a w1b priest High of and Priest 99 4j=n . glorified of when in
Amun-Re. the script word but was not retained connected operated. to of the Eleventh It the this temple may have writing in by no into with
becatipe were
evidence
the
period the
trace
origins architecture
wba, if
used
the
Hekanakhte certain,
means
was derived
11
from it
the basic
house-plan that
is possible walls
osure
of both Dynasty,
was the home of the god, so since the area bounded by enclto describe wb3 was used Howoverv by the estates. and private religious the temple even by the Eighteentht architecture alone and it the term had did not land Thus
Nineteenth
context. a secular From the New Kingdom onward wbi to the god outside be used of the of
sacred it temenos,
to all that seems to refer itself. temple building the actual the enclosure take wall, in Papyrus place Hartia
could
area within
and this can be seen particularly the building which activities and offering be best understood texts as having also losu=e. temenose Other building clearly
can all
occurred
within
There are other cases, howeverv where a translation of "temenos" texts wb3 is used specifically In several is inadequate. of the area kin temple entrance "in front immediately and in of" or "outside" a m: the case of the temple of Seti I at Gurna wb3 was extended land on the West Bank which belonged to Amun. to include There is no one word which on all context, is occasions The one translation can be used will id to translate in meaning
wb3 correctly
inaccurate
of accepted "forecourt" andq for the majority 11temenos" would be a suitable rendering, Since wb3 could be extended in meaning to include all land the generally
sacred
to a godq it is important not to confuse its meaning with that of the term pr (qov. ) which, in the context temple, could of an Egyptian to a particular g6d. Prq however, all the land belonging also designate has an administrative connotation which is entirely lac4ing for in wb-i. the When a m prImn, of the temple sitThe pr of a god could include land which was administered temple but was situated far away from the main cult-centre. temple on the West Bank at Thebes was described as being this implied that it was under the administrative indicated control of Amun while uation of In actual the expression factv
m wb3 simply
the physical
the temple, any temple which was erected control on the wb" of Amun of the main Amun also as
would have been under the administrative temple at Karnakv and couldv thereforep
12m pr Gurna. This * 102 can be seen in the case of the temple that of Seti I at
between
is
m wbi described
that of
Middle
3; KRI9
1,216,5-
IV,
KRI. ) Is
Erichsen, al*o
PaPYrus
Ha=is
1,39
11;
6,14-15;
8 9
KRI, Baud
25,
fig.
12.
10 Abd El-Razik,
11 Roeder, ASAE
JEA 60 (1974),
52 (1954)9 345;
4V; VI.
12 Gardiner, Letters,
Late 311,11-
Egyptian
Miscellanies,
10,9;
denly,
Late
Ramesside
13 Berlin
K6niglichen
158,7.
14 Cerny and Gardiner, Rec. do Tr 15 Virey, V 16 Cerny and Gardinerv 17 ERI, V, 250,2* 18 Ibide, 19 Chicago V, 237,7Universityl, Inclosure
plate.
Oriental
Institutep
Ramees III'a
Temple within
the Great
20 Id, q Madinat Habu 21 Peet, The Great Tomb Robberies II, pl. XIX, pl. It 101; les b, 6, recto, 2p 8. 218, b (with 4-
of Amon, Iq pls. 22, A, 18; 23# A9 18(this last without 184,5 III, 182,2; pls. of the Twentieth Egyptian Dynasty,
22 Ibidpq 23 UT, Mv
T instead
of
Lefebvre,
Inscriptions 63?
concernant Insc*XV,
%0
1119 80&J-
24
Cerny,
Op- Cit-,
is
25 Cerny,
JEA 31 (19409
46 (wb3 is
written
like
this
in lines
2,6
9 of the stela (BM 278). In line 5 an. 3 is and 2,10o 26 Cerny, Late Ramesside Lettersq 27 Hamada, ASAE 47, 28 Badawi, (1947)9 18, (6). 204ASAE 44 (1944), BIFAO 49 (1950), 29 Vercoutter, pl. IIv prefer 30 Ibidep to date this to the Thirtieth
) added.
2; 111,2 Dynasty*
(Vercoutter
would 59)-
Roe. de Travo Pl-Vv 3; ahassinatv Los St; les Egyptiennes, 31 Koefoed Petersen, 32 Daumas, BIFA Manges 50 (1952), 14933 Saunerong Esnap 1119 109 197P 1434 Ido, Mariette 245U. 26 (also Grammcx, Sign List, Sign List, U, 2452* See alsop Homographic
JEA 15 (1929)9
291,1-7,
now, Ward,
Con. Dictep 58.1 Iv 2919 14- (The W6rterbuch 41 Wb. 9 also lists occurs which is feminine,
"Vorhof don Tempols" for which the Wbo gives the translation and (LVb. 19 291t 15)o The writing comes from BIJ Octracan 5656a which r in the HierInscriptions is a New Kingdom hymn to Azun-Re (Bircht atic Museum, p1*26,5656av first three by M0"ller the it and Demotic Character versop from the Collection of the British forms of does the 9),, However the hieratic
to their equivalents signs bear no resemblance (Hieratische Palalographiev 119 487 (jb3, neither bmt,, 486); 124 (b); ))* 208 (IL% In view to be taken writing as a feminine 2419 fasc-49 Gauesp 47-48-
as given
of this ) of wbrs,
42 Christophe, 43 Otto,
44 Wb-9 1,291.
the Now Kingwas unknown before vb3 dom led Roeder (ASAE 52 (1954), 348v (a)) to asoume that it must in earhave referred to a part of the temple which did not exist lier I 2A., ) exazples. ope cit. ) pl. 120 V, versor t 3 (for the transcription see pl.
45 James,
114
50 6ernyj,
op- cit-v IIP Pl-XXrIt passage see Ibid. 9 Iv 125)JEA 26 (1940)t the court of 5849 10127-130-
an Amarna
house
(Lloydq
JEA 19 (1933)9
1-7)-
53 Ibid-v
15509 18-
54 PM9 11,21355 Nims, Beitrhge Bf. 12t gate of of Festschrift temple II of Ricke, Amun is 109 and note again called op. 15llsb's liry" citep Abb. 1,
the
Ramesses
(Plantikow-Mmster,
enclosure have
of
the
in
the
Eighteenth of which
on the Bargue-Us
Eastemn ition
temple with
so that to
can not
be certain
as to
exact
regard
the
obelisk. 147,4-
58 Abd El-Razik,
59 Ptdv 119 pl. XXIX. 60 KRIf 61 ]Rlt 62 Ibid., It Iv 2169 2019 also; (Christophet Christophep op. cit-9 BIPAO 73) 60 (1960)9 78-79-)
78.
(KR-Tv Iv op*
2059
4)-
65 Christopheq
cit-P
78-
2029 8;
203# 7;
6.
31'11-
729 7Amenophis citev II, 1,117-1181 pl. lp Cerny, 2,8. BIPAO 27 (1927)9 162-164-
Abbottv
Is 74 Borchardtq cit., 75 76 77 78 79 80 61 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 Statuen Baud und Statuetten, 1119 loco 136, No-884; Legraint opo
1119 80;
cit-*
Erichsen, Ibid*, Ibid., Ibid., Ibid., Ibid., Ibid., Ibid., Ibid., L1jLd. Ibid*, Ibid., Roederq KRI, V, ,
Harris
345;
346;
pls.
V;
VI.
250,2. University, BIFAO 49 Oriental (1950), Institute, 88; pls. in II, loc. 2; cit-, 111# V, Pl-355, B. A. 88);
2 (Louvre
Pl-V,
3 (unrmmbered
statue
Alexandria)*
91 92 Chicago the 93 94 95 96 97 98 LRI, Peet, Ibid., Daumas, Koefoed Universityt Inclosure 231,7cit-, Pl-XXI, 50, II, PLVII, 4, vers , 3,1720o Oriental of Amun, Institute, pls. 22, A, Rameses 18; 23, III's A, 18Temple within
Great V,
opII,
BIFAO
(1952)1,149loc. cit.. Inschriften aus dem K*K,, 79; Parker, Hofmuseum A Saite in Wien,
Petersen,
de Trav. 33;
Orac-
Tliebes,
and K*12*
99
Lefebvreq 63,
op.
cit.,
63,
3; Pl-II-
100 Ibid*,
101 Erichsenq
Glossar,
85-
16 wmt Dyne Ml
V- 3 C-3
Dyne xii
2 5
Dyne
Dyne XXVIIP =: U
I r-73
1 n
TT
r"
translates of a door" and also vmt as "the thickness 13 the noun was in Late Egyptiang I'doorwayp portico,, and notes that, (gateway) is given treated A similar translation feminine word. as a '14 Gardinerg by Faulknero of "gateway', ' while suggesting a translation The W6rterbuch noted the inner part of the gatep 15 the gateway rather than the entire structureg" and Christophel discussing the occurrences Ip takes wmt to of wmt in Papyrus Harris be the entire length of the passage in the thicknesg of the wall be1 tween the exterior faces of the door. Hayes has noted and interior that the gender of This of wmt seemed to change from masculine the final gender consonant t with the feminine to feminine te=ination*17' by confusion that the real meaning was "rather
change in
commentary on the `6s to have been the name of a departmentp wmt office or inatitutio: its main architectural feature, named after an alabaster gateway. Wmt seems originally to have been a masculine wordq the final of which came to be mistaken Ostracon Petrie for the feminine ending. With-the
was also remarked upon by Caminos in his 16 Chron: cle. of Prince Osorkon where he takes t3 4
exc-
in Sinahe show no final to 599 'the writings eption-of 15 Barns thought he could make it out in the Ashmolean Ostracont One 20 in this text is in the phrase wmI nt d, m, of the writings showing thatq even at this early datd, the masculine noun was mistaken for a feminine one. ChronoloUj6dljy. IIthe next writing of wmt is on a hieratic from the tomb of Senimit at Thebes. This also does not show ostracon 21 the terminal t and the noun ispreceded by the masculine pz. article Most examples of the termp howeverg have no indiciLtion of ganderg 22 in Papyrus Harris I wmt is once treated although while as masculine
117
in the Chronicle of Prince Osorkon24 the and feminine t3 is used before wmt. Inscriptions of Darius at article 25 the term as feminine., the temple of Hibis also treat 2-6 from wmt "to be thick" Etymologically and it is wmt is derived in B. M. PaPYrus 10053 often difficult '27 to distinguish since wmtp the building are usedt elementq from wmt so 11thickness#q similarly. of Sinuhe, ' above, the earliest extant of the text version writinge of wmt are in dates later from the story the two words and can be spelledt
23
of which
surviving
returns
to Egypt 28
sphinxes
the vm<t)w to greet to the palace. of wmt was the doors this
Presumably of
a clear
"thickness" entail
of a gatemerely
or doorwayp of the
would
the width
but in the monumental doorways which were constructed reveal, temples and palaces the vmt would be the passage through Egyptian thickness of the wall or pylon into which The other the door was sets of Sinuhe is less
example of vmt in the story straightforward and both Sethe and Gardiner viewed this writing of wmt as an 29 The occurrence is in the errorp copied from the previous example., When Sinuhe goes into the palace same passage as the former writing. he finds the king seated on his throne* The most complete text has; 39 1 4m. f kLr Gardiner gm. n. st wrt m wmOnt Im. suggested that the text . dm since it would not be natural should be amended to read at wrt nt -=Zfor the king to sit, on his thronep, in a doorway. In support of the suggestion has since he cited a further example 4 of of at wrt nt dLm-31 This view been challenged by both Rossenvasser-P as this the text. and Barna-33 who
to re, tad at wrt m vmt nt prefer the publications of new versions ment of papyris although in Buenos Airest
4VX], the dotdamaged, clearly reads; m w[4A/d, d'M, I,,, 9 being still erminatives This papyrus hats of preserved. been assigned a date similar to that of the Berlin version and is, therefore, not far removed in time from the date of the original
containing V? st wtt ]
-is composition. The, Ashmolean Baxns could not This reading has is If the also st supported wrt M between by two hew Kingdom ostraca. 35. and, although [t] 'n with WML and a read-
Ostracon reconcile
traces
ing
of nt
*36
59 shows
the
be doubted.
Ostracon
Petrie
wmtv in
context9
a recess in which the throne This would agree well with the etymological origin of the tem since the throne would be set in the "thickness" of the recess. It is almost therefore that the text of Sinuhe does not need to be amendcertainp ed at this point. An interesting ostracon indication of the meaning of wmt is given on an from the tomb of Senmut at Thebes, describing work on the 40 39 tomb itself. According the wmt to which reference to Hayes is twice made could only be the "inner doorway" of the tomb, as the propof Since this three door approximate dimensions closely to those given on the ostrainner are quoted for the wmt, the entire surface of the doorway must have been intended. %b It is interesting to note that, in this case, rAdt con. "depth" jamb, is used for the actZral which thickness of the L the measurement originally gave the wmt on the verso the has not th 1 Tur'. The been no doubt
ortions
name vmt to the reveal. The reveal papyruav identity established that In his of the doorway is of which called of the recto of but describes tomb of Razesses IV. yet the doorways is this leave
the royal
the"thickness" translajonq
regards
of deciding the
Both
teims
same meaning,
of which irrelevan&
of the
two was actually intended isp to a certhe speaLling sincep in this casep neither in which it is found can distinguish the true be-
the context
of the reign
of Ramesses II
illustrates
meaning
of wmt. A womang concerning whom prognostications 43 told to stand m wmt nt sbs. In Papyrus Harris 44 obviouslY a part of the door-frame.,
Although
vmt originally
referred
6 ao6rp which of
in monumental
became a "passage"t
it came to be to have acquired term does seem a wider meaning and frame of the doorway. An early example of this for the entire used desczibing in a damaged text of the reign of Amenhotep III, may occur tLwt nt %LtLw rnpwt at Memphis which contained wsbwt wmtw, the king's m [////. 45 The fact that the with the wsbwt would wmtw* mere listed m This than reveals. doorways were intended that entire rather suggest to be so in the papyrus B. M. 10053 where mention is would also seem 40 from which 4J deben twice of the sb3 1ry n t3 wmt n Inr sbw made to the door-leafg Sb3 here is used to refer a of copper was removed. Dynastyq with meaning which the term had acquired by the Twentieth wmt used to describe Similarly the door frame. mentioned on the Bubastite gate the wmt of alabaster
Karnak47 and the granite wmt of the temple of Horshef at Heracleoat 48 have been doorwaysp not just reveals. would polis the gate of the pylon of Darius at the temple of Hibis Finally [Sand)stone is aalled with as being made of a wmt and is described 49 The text is inscribed on the front and back reveals coppAr. sb3w of 50 the gate so thatt gateway the must mean the entire of although wmt texts themselves From its the reveal during the reveals. are on the true wmtW-p, in the Middle Kingdom wmt was used of apparent origin
Howeverg Dynasty at least* of a door down to the Twentieth the entire the New Kingdom the meaning was extended to include This was probably underway in the Eighteenth Dynasties. Petriev 599 1 (NO-71 Dynasty and so in B*250: the Twentieth and later
B. 252.2
Hayeap Ostraca
the Tomb of
Ben-mut
at Thebes pl-XV9 NO-75Rrk-9 IVP 17129 1. This damaged writing is restored by Helck (jrkunden der 18 Dynastie Ubersetzang zu den Heften 17-22 224) as
<X 4-=: m
as 'IT6rlaibungen".
include that probably these This borrowed
5 Urk- 9 IVP 1795P 136 KRIt The determinatives (see P-82 reveals which ). from wmt "wall" would other indicate writing The fact vmtw are of granite to analso applies word. See further
rather
than walls.
could
be taken
to be either
so under 7 (3038)t vmt p. 82. Der 47,4; Grosse Erichsenq of the 15JEA 4 (1917)v Oriental 147; 148The Bubastite Portaly pl, Medizinische Papyrus Twentieth Papyrus Harris Egyptian I, des Berliner 67v 1; Peetp Ijq Museums The Great pi. Xx, BM,
Wreszinskit
Dynastyq
Institutev
14 Faulkner, 15 Gardiner, 16 Christophep 17 Hayesq 18 Caminos, 19 Barnsq, 2D Sinuhet 21 Hayes, 22 Erichsen, 23 Peetp 24 Chicago loc.
Con. Notes
Kelanges 32.
Maspero,
19 fasc-4t
OP9 cit-t
The Chronicle The Ashmolean B,, 250. op. cit., op. cit.. cit.,
of
Prince Of textso
Osorkon, Sinuheq
64-65verso, 44-45-
Ostracon
No-75-
50p 11.
Universityt
Oriental Art,
Institutev Egyptian
loc* Expedition,
2 Metropolitan Museum of 6 'Wb., It 306,9-1427 Ibid. 1,306,15, 28 Sinuhe, B. 25029 Gardiner, 30 Sinuh 31 Urk-t op. cit. p 96.
B. 252. , IV, 349P 11JEA 20 (1934)t cit. 28. f Opq cit-# cit j versot Egyptian 47-P fig44-45It 3; PLIX, 148, t
Middle cit**
Stories,
36,15-
81,
39 Hayes, loc- cit. 40 Ibid- 9 32. 41 Carter and Gardinerv loc. cit.. loc. cit 42 Loc. cit.. 43 Wreszinskiv
679 144 Erichsenq op. cit. p 50,11; , 45 Urk. 9 IV, 17959 13. 1rY) 39 15; (omitting 46 Peet, XX, B. M. 10053,2, versoo pl. cit., -op. verso, 3. loc. cit.. 47 Chicago University, Oriental Instituteg 48 Vercoutter, loc. cito. loc. cit.. 49 Metropolitan Museum of Artq Egyptian Expedition, . 50 Ibid. 9 111, Pls- 1; 58-59-
Dyne XX3
m H C. 0-:; -. 3
NOK04
Dyn. XX5
that indication of wmt is a certain as the determinative Unfortunately the term refers to some kind of wall. none of the occ- 6 is in a useful One is a component of a private namep urrences context. 7 The two remof the king. epIthets while two others are descriptive to actual buildings* One aining examples are from texts which refer 8 is on an ostracon mentions work on "the vmt of 'The Tombl". and and the other is in a text describing work on an 1-t w'-bt at Karnak in the 9 reign of Ramesses IX, Obviously a wmt will have had no more specific the adjectival adjunct n wmtt in the Eighteenth Dynasty. have been a "thick meaning than this. sbty n wmtt wall" It 10 and the term may p1robably evolved from Inb(n)wmttli in and
The use of R
1 KRI-9 It 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
79 11-
LeDot 111,166.
In a man's name p-a n t3wmtv Gardinerp Ramesside Administrative Documentb, 67,1; Rankep Personermamen I, 111,16. Spiegelbergg Marietteg Rankep loc. KRI*q It Orientalistische PI-409 4Literaturzeitung 5j(1902)j*325-
Karnakq cite.
166.
Spiegelberg, Marietteg
P*239p. 25-26.
83
wnbwt Dyn
only
in not
of
the reign
of Tuthmosis
III
and is
the W8rterbuch
or Faulkner's
the writing
the determinatives are well preserved. although the text immediately Unfortunately of the precediiS, 7 the description is completely lost and the inscriptionj as it now standsp reads; wnbwt 2 Iryw m nbwy in gold. " lacsup31n his discus"their wnfbwt] the texti suggested that the wnbwt were the bases of columnst sion of the leaf-design which was character4 the word with wnb Lacam linked istic of the papyriform colllmns. 5 "part of the eye,, "root" or "root of a tooth or eye ,6 and and w3b suggested that the columns under discussion were those immediately showingg in the determinatives, behind the Sixth Pylon of cluster textp that the temple columns. of 7 Amun at Karnak. These are One would then have to assume the columns themselves. has to be largely restored would suggest This part that of it the is
sandstone that In
papyriform
now lost,
described
the column
was intended.
of the vnbwt
comply with
the des-
1 Lacaup ASAE 53 (t95A)i 228. Lacau reads the groupt';21" as 83WY but Harris has pointed out that there is no reason not to read the group as pM (Mineralst 39). This text is also published in Urk., IV9 168.9 where the word has been restored differently. 2 lacaut loc. cit.. 3 Lacau, op. cit. v 227-9. 4 e. g. Borchardt, Die Ae&Mtische Pflanzensa"ule 32 (papyriform41 (single-stem papyriform column). cluster column); 5 n-9 It 3191 2.
6 Wb-P It 7 8 250P 9-11Lacaup op, cit v pl. II. ibid 9 221-234s
TH 0 XVII(? )4 D. vn.
Dyne XVIII
'S
t !!
Dyne XVIII
Dyne XV1119
ell,
&XX7
sic Dyne XVIII Dyn. XIX
", -*,
10 %! = Wn. XX1 Dyne XIX 11
II?
R2 G (17 4
v
Dyne XIX 12 or Xx Yn. XX1 5
16 Dyne XX
3a Ilk or XX1
44
Dyne XXII 17
cly,
18 Dyno XXV III 131 OA Dyn 9 XXVI 21
Dyne XXV'
9 01
,S_j V
T TT olG%C
point history
Dyne 22 xxv,
IIII
%it Ptole
w743 is
23
PtO1,24
to note
regardino;
that
the word has a much was compiled. Kingdom25 containing of by barge the Middle
of the Fifth
has since
been publishedp
for showing palm-columns describes of the pyramid complex. The inscription 26 them ast"w: h'sw of granite" and the columns of the pyramid-temples 27 Unfortunately no further expalm-columns. werep in factv granite of the word from the Old Kingdom have yet come to light. amples In the Fifth This of that is also true Dynasty of writing is the word is wLA. In spelt wbp without while these the 341 one the one known Middle spelt Kingdom writing spite of
beingvtransported
the
Seventeenth
Dynasty
indications
been wh or wh1j it is probably . W- -Adto rad the word as wh3 sincep from the Second Intermediate preferable VPeriod onwardp this is the usual spelling, With only two exceptionsq both of the reign of Taharqa from Kswa in Nubiaq "A was co"istently 1 b3.28 written with the biliteral the word may have originally
95
The 10"rterbuch stone), ively in Faulkner Apart cribe a pole ible also
(of wood or of "columnp pillar translated wh-, as a 29 " tent-pole. and added that it could be used figurat"column it that the King or a god. of heaven" to describe 31 could mean "column" or "tent-polett. 30
been used in building contextsp wh3 was used to desNL- 33 32 tent-poles but also a part of a shipp presumably the writings given abovep it be imposs-
would
to which column-typey if anyp whs originally referrda, on the basis of these writings alone. Virtually all types were used, at one time or anothery as determinativeo of the word. The evidence from actual buildings while is identifiedp those aldo inconclusive that can are not as most wb3w can not be , all the same column-type.
the palmas detailed abovep describes complex. lkl*-' was also used as a term for to the a palm-column on a Ramesside stela which shows a man offering god Ptah who is described as hry p3 wLi-3 and behind whom stands a 34 A palm-column is also used as the detquite distinct palm-column. inscription erminative in of wh3 on the pedestal of Amenhotep III 35 the temple of Luxor. In this case wb3 was used as a general torm for the temple columns which were described, more specificallys as (qov. ). a3w was the name given to the 4bwt columns of the temple (T) of Taharqa at Kawa36 where the majority of the columns were palmfozm although It
,j
there
columns possible
would
seem then
that
There does notp was, originally., a palm-column. be any etymological evidence to support such a theory. In the GraecoRoman period the word for a palm-column was bnrt38 which was a 39 logical term for a palm-columnt in bnrt "date-palm,,. originating It isp thereforet that all palm-columnsp possible even in dynastic Egyptt ings were called by this namey despite the fact that no such writof different have survived. Other wb2w can be identified In the temple the temple thettemple betertain built in of Ptah
with
existing
columns
one cannot
describes how he at Karnak Tuthmosis III of brick with W741W and sbiw of wood4O and he stone. The wh3w are. not mentioned again so that , that this term was also applied to the only
86
remaining ever
Tuthmosid
columns that
in
the
temple.
41HOw_
Amenhotep III
inscription of a dedication 42 to the does refer the temple of Montu at Karnak 43 as, for oncep particularly columns of the temple, to the actual colurnngiven to the word corresponds whiw in
of Amenhotep III abovep wh-bw in the Luxor inscription term for all the columns of the temple, where seems to be a general As mentioned those erected by this king were either 44 columns. linkedp in textsp papyriform-clusters or single-
elements which went to make 48 47 In the case up doorwaysp such as; sb3wp45 sbhwtj46 a5 and htrw. Dynasty by the out at Karnak in the Twentieth of the work carried with Migh Priest of Amung Amenhotep, Sauneron suggested that the WSw were la porte"19 'Iles supports d1un toit In view of the strong pAeSdant between the wbaw and doorways this was pnobably also the connections case in many of the whiw with texts remains. where it is not possible to identify the
WM-colilmns could have been made of wood or stone5l and, in one casep a man was likened to a wh,, of reeds under which was a ant X52 Of the types )of (q. building in
v. copper. of which
V-
existing
50
associated
set up in
buildings
a palace#
al-
and an unspecified
period
other
was used in
added to indicate The word occursp at Philaep in a demotic 57 This columns of the Western colonnade. in factt inscriptionj refers It to this is a palm-colilmn58 carved tempting
determinatives
all kinds of columnq with 56 the column-type involved. on one of the is,
inscription
and there Me no reason to doubt that the by the stone-masoia in a formal demotio scriptj in view than there of this originallyp its is earliest last
palm-coltimn. to suggest, that and also S9 a palm-column. attested for refa palmone example
evidence, is
a wb3 was,
always Egypt
no known term
column in
ancient
87 in constant However, did not indicate refer use from the Old Kingdom to the Ptolemaic period.
term for a column and whs was a general .V--typep although the determinatives could
the actual form. Whs was used not only for largepstone . -V. columns but also for lighter wooden onesy both in temple architecture for porches and in the context of a ship or a,, tent. On present this evidence it is not possible to be more specific than about the meaning of wh-s. It was, howeverv a very long-lived wordo Dynasty to the Ptolemaic examples being known from the Fifth period in hieroglyphic in demotice In spite of the and to the Roman period fact that wt3 was still from have disappeared in general use* used at such a late datep it seems to the language by the time the Coptic script was being
1 Hassant ZAS80 (19509 137P fig-12 Newberryp Beni Hasanp 19pl. xxv'I, 196. 3 Gardinert Admonitions, pl, 2p 10.
4 des Mittleren Ralchnj II, Jange and Schaferv Grab- und Denksteine (Catalogue by-Mariette 94. This block is also published general des monuments d'Abydo 9 97P NO-545) and the writing of wb-b is quoted (Con. Diet* 99p note*) by Newberry QPSBA 22 (1900)t Faulkner and 67)Mariette reproduces the form of the dete=inative asZ while Faulkner does not and Newberry both column. There the block (Cairo of
show a papyriform-cluster
photograph appear to be a published 20503 see IMP Vp 73) so that one cannot be certain of the exact form Of the signt but as neither Faulkner nor Newberry claim to have the text with the original there is no reason to suppose collated that the sign is a papyrifom-cluster column. The block was originto the Eleventh Dynasty on the grounds of its simally ascribed ilarity to another block from Abydos (Cairo 20502 see Lange and Sch&ferp OP- cil 93) which mentions the king Intef-aa who wasp p to have belonged to the Eleventh Dynasty at that time, believed (Gauthierp le livre des Rois dligypt Ip 227)- However it has I since been shown that this king belonged to the Seventeenth Dyn(Winlock, JEA 10 (1924)p 234-237-) asty and these blocks from Abydos should be re-dated accordingly*
83 6 7 Rims, Heyes, V Cerny, Studies in Honor of John A. Wilson recto 2,6 fig-79 7 (also x+16. 3P without
8 9
pl. XIIIA9 9 LEA 15 (1929)p pl. XLIIIP ! Urk. 9 IVY 7659 137It pl-XVIIP Varillaq Karnakp IVY 1712v III in 2. This is the of
JEA 46 (1960)
21, recto
(BeM, 10055)*
10 Urk-9
damaged Luxor.
pedestal For
inscription of the
Amenhotep of the
the
temple here
dete=inative a determinative2
note
without 17119,9).
on the
writing (Urk.,
5 (1902)9 of the
319-320t hiera-
61 (1926), des
pl. IVj
Catalogue IIP
Ostraca, 12179 It
hieratiques 2.
P1-49tOstrHarris
Papyrus 16,13-
59 10-
Karnakv
of Osorkon II frag11-
in
the
Great
18 Macadam, The Temples of Kswaq It Pls-71 23; 8t 23 (Inse- NO-43)19 pl. lip 17; 129 17 (Insc. No. 6). 19 Ibidj 20 Ibid. p It P1-13P 3; 14t 3 (Insc- NO-* BIPAO 49 (1950)p 889 3j 2 (louvre A88). 21 Vercouttert 22 Ibideq 101. This statue (now in the museum in Alexandria) was found in the East Harbour at Alexandria and has been ascribed to the Twenty-Sixth Dynasty by comparison with louvre A88 (Daressyq ASAE 5 (1905)t 23 Do Witt 24 Pii-d- P 28525 n-P It 352* 26 Hassanp loc. cit.. of one of these columns see Jequier, M12, Architectural 27 For a photograph It pl*69 le 28 Gardinert 29 Wb,, It 9 127-128)Ch. d'Eg. However see further below note 5936 NO-72 (Ju3.v 1961)t 300-
Set
30 W-b-t It
5329 15-16. Ma was also used to describe some kind of Xcolumn or pole which seemed to serve as a divine totem (Erichsen, loc. cit.. and Roeder, 16,13- Possibly also Spiegelberg, op. cit., loc. cit.. ) This may be connected with the jh -column of Cusae (Mb-t It 352,2) but is outside the scope of this study* 6731 Faulkner, Con. Dict., 7059 1332 Urk, I IV, 664,7; 7079 1333 urk., IV, 23,14; 34 Roeder, loc* cit** 35 Urk- Y IVP 1712p 2* 36 Macadam, op. cit 9 It plso8j 23; 12y 17; 149 337 Lb-id-t IIP 99; 107-9; Pls-XIV, IXt 038 Wallerty Die Palmen im Alten Agypten 35-3739 M2-t It 4629 1-3-
40 Urk-P IV, 765,13* This particular part of the stela was restored in the reign of Seti I but there is no reason to suppose that wbtw did not occur in the original text. I, Pl-54,2, 41 For a photograph see J6quierv Architecture 42 Varillep loc. cit.. 43 Lbid., pl. XI. 44 i6quier, op. cit t I, pis. 62-68. 45 11-rk-t No 765,13; 1379,8; Sauneronp op. cit-t Pl-II, x+5; Erichsent loc. cit*. 46 Gardinerg Admonitions, pl. 2p 10. 47 Lange and SchAfer, op- cit r 11,94; Hims, loc, ci oe 48 Erichsen, loc. ci .; Mariette, loc. ci .; Sauneront op. cit , pl. II, x+5; x+749 ibidet 16t note (o). Comparealso Nimst OP- ci -, 73o 50 ! K-k-t IVP 1379t 8; Nims, op. ci -, fig-7, x+16; Gardinerp loc. cit., (This last by implicationp since the wb3wwere destroyed by fire); Urlc-, IV9 765,13loc. cit..; Spiegelbergt loc. cit ; bernyp loco cit.; 51 Hassang Mariette, loc. cit.; Sauneron, op. cit-P PLIIP X+7; Brugscht LO-0Daressyp loc* cit.; Hayes, loc. cit. (By implication, cit.; since wbS is determined with r-= 52 Posener, loco cit.. 53 Erichsent loc. cit.. 6erny, loc. cit.. 54
CW
26,196.
2859 300p 57 Griffith, Catalogue of the Demotic Graffiti of the Dodecaschoenus III, pl, XII, Ostre Philae 27p le 58 ! MY 19 107b; 1089 111. Por photographs of t7jis column in situ see; Lyonsp A Report on the Island and Temples of Philaep Pls-39-40Y (column No*19)o A further Roman example of wbb "column" exists on Obelisk" of which I have been unable to find a Brugsch (46rterbuch, 269) gives a spelling publication. of C'ZOV and the text is translated, by Erman without a copy of the inscriptiong 17, IV, c. 59 Other w4'5whave also been identified with existing palm-columns. The description og the columns is foundp in two similar accounteg Hor which are generally regarded as on statues of the official belonging to the Twenty-Sixth Dynasty (Louvre A88 and an unnumbered statue in the Alexandria museum. See note 22 above andp for a bib, liography of each statuesee Vercoutte3; BIPA 49 (1950)t 85; 100-) (ibid. However Vercoutter 85-114)v although admitting thatv on r stylistic grounds, he would prefer to date the statues to the TwentySixth Dynastyp equates the work described by Hor with work of the Thirtieth Dynasty at Heraoleopolis. This is in the temple of Horshef which was excavated by Petrie (Ehnasyag 5-17; Plo-V-XI)-who to have been mainly the work of Ramesses II with some later rebuildingg possibly in the reign of Nectanebo II. There in the Saite period. At was no definite evidence for rebUilding the front of the temple is a row of granite palm-columns and it is these which Vercoutter would like of graniten in the two texts. to identify with the 11w1jsw found it R6mische Obelisken, the 'Marberini
Since these columns are covered with the name of Ramesses II they can not have been erected by Hor whether he lived in the Twenty-Sixth Dynasty or the Thirtieth. It is possible that Hor restored the columns and then claimed to have built them, but one would then have expected them to have been inscribed with the cartouche of the king for whom the work was carried out* A further to Vercoutter's theory is that
the side walls of the court which he would equate with the "south and north lnbw" of the text on Louvre A88 do in fact lie to the east and west of the temple which faces south. In addition the elements named by Hor do exist
objection
qI
in in
at Heracleopolis
but
equally that
could there
temple and it is possible any normal Egyptian once a Late Period temple at Heracleopolis which destroyed. Consequently tification which while it is tempting to accept evidence not with yet
iden-
meaning positively
possible
the palm-columns
R2
M
Y m
xxii
&%7C-3
.,
45 Dyne V9
XVIII, xix 9 xxx
ro in j C-:
6 Dyne V
Dyn. Vp VIp XII, 010-XVIII, 2nd. Intel XIIJ9 f----, Dyne VI,
XIX, XVIII
XXII 10
Dyne Vg VIll
Dyn, X1114
Dyne XII, 20
Dyne XII15
Dyn. XII18
Int. 23
or XJX
22
43
= 42 VAMP
N. K.
-b -Rf
LY II
=T-r
24 XjXt V XIX27
Dyne XV11125
93aDyne
XV11126'
Dyne XV11128
Dyne XV11129
a MUM
Dyne XV11130
Dyne XIX31
W-01
Dyne XIX34 37
Ptol.
of
wsbt in
shown this
above word
to
be extaustive is almost
ways
which of
be written variants
total
number
wr#ings.
dop howeverp
selection. which without employed the the FD enclosure the sign these addition the could did be appear the signs if
"battlements"
enclosed
differ and number could considerably. by the FLD could vary, those as could
"palace"
q3
it were included. Wsbt is Ptolemaic within writings the sign, which use theobattlemented"enelthe hall in question.
osure usually
giveg
the name of
in many different from the contexts a word which occurred Old Kingdom to the Ptolemaic it is derived Etymologically from period. 38 the root ws4 "to be broad,, been reggenerally and hasp thereforev 39similar hall in type to arded as the name for a "(broad) or court,, 40 words such as wsh. "broad necklace,, and wsb "transport ship for cargo"041
ws4t
occurred
in titles
in mythological in the Pyrcontexts but in generalt There are exceptions944 in these texts, and alsop either
in which offerings were made or one from a hall 45 between the wsbt and offerings The 'connection which offerings. came. by the wasp thusp established at a very early date and is reflected donations in the offering name 3tp wsbt which was one of the regular 47 listst The implication and is also mentioned in the Pyramid Texts. that offerings were frequently made in the wsbt is supported by the archaeological evidence from the only Old Kingdom wsbt which can be identified with any degree of certainty. This is the largeg open court, surrounded by a colonnade of loti48There form columnst in the mortuary temple of Neferirkare at Abusir. lotican be no doubt that this court is the ws7jt with thirty-seven )49 which is mentioned in form columns (4bwt q. v. an inspection50 This open court originally account in the Abusir Papyri. contained 51 an altar so there can be no doubt that offering ceremonies were there. performed is not possible to identify any other wsbt of the Old Kingdom to determine the nature of the wsht in the earliest so it is difficult history. The detailed depictions periods of Egyptian of the Old KingIt dom writings corner often show a palace, and it is labelled tempting as tt4, standing this in the arrangeof the enclosure to interpret
ment as a representation form of the wsbt. In origing of the ancient therefore, one would expect the wsh.t to have been an open court, presumably broader than it was long, surrounding and protecting an important building The projections such as a palace. on the wsbtsign are probably buttresses rather than battlements, secular52 reflecting 53 Dynastyp the popularity architecture of the niched wall of the Archaic period. in both and funerary
However,
by the Fifth
q4-
the word has come to be used of an open court which formed a part of, temple of Neferirkare tlieppyra1id than enclosed, so it must rather be assumed thatg from an outer during the early Old Kinedomf wsbt was transferrdd It is this later meanto one within a building. and developed* from the
court
of evidence
Kingdoms,
building textsp precludes of actual temple remains and detailed the identification by the of temple wEajwt. However it is clear that, Twelfth Dynasty at leastp wsht was in regular use as a term for a X_ . in a temple. court or hall The building a wsljt tion in Papyrus Reisner III to refer accounts contained the inspecnt 4wt-ntrt54 while a papyrus from Lahur4 recording of the pyramid-town the temple055 of Ankh-Sesostrio, mentions wsbwt in
various
from about a temple wsbt can be obtained from Crocodilopolis. These dr3ms descolumn-drums of Amenemhat III for Sobekq of "a 12Dtq its w3d-columns and its cribe the building, X_ 56 its -obaw in electrum. " The wsbt was clearly the szwt in granitep in which these granite hall papyriform cluster columns were erected hall, so this ws1jt must have been either or an a roofed hypostyle open court with colonnades, Thirteenth within inundation similar Dynasty Pylon to that stelat of Neferirkare of at Abusir. that An interesting which was found high Sebekhotep, VIII, records an
more information
at Karnak,
unusually proceeded
to the wsbt
of the r-pr
the temple of A;mm. "His majesty (and) Hapir the great on% w-as r-pr being but full of wellcame is A similar, of the so this stela of the Middle less the temple
majesty,
the t of this
waded in it..
preservec; text on the other side 58 Unfortunately the plan events. largely a matter for speculation with any existing hall.
describes Kingdom
However as so much emphasis was placed on the facttIhAt the wsbt of the temple was floodedq it can be assumed that it was one of the main halls This is or courts of the temple. suggested IV, by another who carried "a pure Second Intermediate out building-work s3tw in Period in stelap of 59 the Aman temple.
also
making
the WSbt W37t of this 4: wt_ntr.,, but, in such a contextq W3dyt has no determinative
96
presumably It Karnak
refers
to the fact
that
or court
which in
same wsbwt are attested One excepidentified. but most of these can not be positively temple Pylons which is described is the hal& between the Fourth and Fifth tion 61 This same hall II as a 'Owsht ofrzbble wLJ-7columnsll. by Amenhotep t-2 63 both the of which reflect wnyt, and a 3? a w3dytwas also called In view of the etymological fact that the hall columns. contained in this case at leasto to note that, interesting of ws4t it is origin 64 known use This is the first broader than it was deep. a wsbt was than a colonnaded court, hall for a hypostyle rather of ws4t Dynasty various Among the identified. Kaxnak can not be so firmly wsbwt at from the Third blocks of Tuthmosis IV which were extracted sandstone Along the top of Pylon are a number which make up a scene of bulls. text which mentions a :111173 building this scene is an incomplete 65 1wnw. Inr The first bft-4r word has been restm mn73n rwdt pbrw m 66 by Barguet as wsljtq andq in view of the fact that similar ored 67 this restoration to ws4t hft-hr elsewhereq attested are expressions ( or The exact nature of the building is almost certainly correct. 68 Barguet from which these blocks came is still buildings) uncertain. in front it to have been a colonnaded court situated of considers 69 the Fourth Pylon. Further Another uary '3t example of wsbt III occurs on a granite This building block text from the a sanctwsbt describes
of Tuthmosis
at Karnak.
"a great columned wsht (with) t3w m Inr n rwtt sandstone w3dyt 70 this as the court behind Hims identified t3-columns". Originally 71 but he later the Sixth Pylon reconsidered and decided that it ref72 hall of the Festival Temple of Tuthmosis j-jI, erred to the pillared Barguet had previously suggested that this was the hall between the 73 is correct pylons. 'Which of these identifications Fourth and Fifth is impossible the to Sixth say. Pylon Both behind of Tuthmosis I and the court 4 had papyriform. columns and so could have while the form of support the determinatives that it the it of the the view is was the rare text is refers*75 clear that the hall
as w3dytq
would
Whichever
Dynasty
there
one wsbt
in
the tmn
that wsbt was not being used of one Karnak. It is evident at hall in the temple but as a term for any large and important particular hall or court. The fact that there could be more than one ws#t in any his by a text of Amehhotep 1119 describing also 76 The plan of this bwt nt t4w m =pwt at Memphis in which were ws7qwt. to all the major halls temple is unknown butp pres=ablyp wsbwt; referred temple is illustrated or courts A wsbt the temple tion for within the building. of Amenhotep II 77 but, as this is known to have existed in example seems to be an abbrevia4i 78 be discussed below. of the reign of Medamad it
wsbt 4byt,
will
There was also a wsLit in the great temple of the Aten at Azarna. 79 is described the wslt n 4wt bnbn m pr Itn This and must have been as 80 There was another waljt at one of the courts of the great temple. but it was a paj: t of the 81 Amarna which can be identified more positively be detailed "grpat palAoe'19 not, the main tempef and ,will below* so-called text for the Butcher's I at Abydos a dedicatory 82 it as a sGw w"b with a ws: 4t and wdiw. hrjbbxe describes The wd1w will be the three storerooms, Hall itself opening onto the Butcher's and it is most likely that the wsbt is the main hall it could alsop although 83 Two further texts possibl. vt be the smaller hall with four columns. 84 from this temple refer to the same wsht. The colonnaded court which Rameses II added onto the Eighteenth In the temple of Seti 11wsbt in front Dynasty temple at Luxor is described his (A=nb) as a of 85while the same king used wsbt to describe the hypostyle hall ipt9" 86 templet indicatingp that wsbt of his Theban mortuary quite clearlyp hall in the same could be used of both a forecourt and a hypostyle reign. Later by using textsv of the Twentieth formg to Twenty-Second Dynasties, showp that there were a number of wobwt in the 87 temple of Amun at Karnak, If any principal hall or court could be designated to help of descriptive a wsbt then the addition adjectives the wsbt in question became necessary. specify in a Twentieth Dynasty papyrus which describes This is demonstrated made how the Vizier the plural
for the workmen of the Royal Tomb in t3 Wst 113t 11tho great offerings 88 Is of the temple of Rameses Il '1 at Medinet Habu. The use of the _tlf 9.3t would have distinguished this wsbt from any other in the adjunct same temple.
V This use of descriptive fonnulation wsbt 4byt, only of various will adjectives led, from the New Kingdom, to the
be discussed
include is found in the Nineteenth rarelyg Dynasty and must have described the hall into which the image of the WThere is also the term wabt n bnr "the outer god made its appearance. the Graeco-Roman expression wsbt" which is self-explanatoryv9land 92 wsbt ms"'t which was used for that part of the temple to which the the area immediately in front public could be admitted, probably of the pylon. In the Ptolemaic the temple temple of Edfu every hall on the main axis of as a wsbt and so the name of the hall was 93 the hall in question. added to the noun in order to specify In the context thereforep the development of wsbt of a templet is quite clear. The word originated as a large open enclosure and wasq by the Old Kingdomp transferred within a temple, In the'Middle but whether to an open colonnaded court Kingdom the wslt is known to have in a hypostyle hall or in colonnades certainThe was described
columnsp be decided.
ly be used of both increased use of the plural texts from Edfu show thatv thw major used of difficult nature halls siderooms or courts
by the New Kingdomp wsbt could the hypostyle haAl and the open forecourt. form and the evidence wst It could is a temple. isp of eventualljrp within describe noticeably
Howevert
or stores. as one would although from expectt something the much more of the
In relation
wswt,
of a palace
evidence (h) is
available. In the reign ed to the temple 'h n wst*94 has suggested time
attachthe
called
in front was situated of the Fourth 95 the entrance to the temple). It is possible was a part within of the temple complex. the temple
added to 14 in order
wabwt which
the palaces
are connected with palaces are, however, clearly themselves. In the reign of Tuthmosis III his heir,
CIS
the prince
Amenhotepp was taught to shoot 96 of Thinisq which must have been a larg% of records was full Rekhmire must have been an inner can be identified with actual to which in
in
the ws]3t of
the pr-(. 3
Oa the other (42, ) of the in the office 97 Cne further roofed room. open court. remains at is in theligreat of the front is 98 the building 99
at Amarna. The ceremonial 1tn the ws4t almost certainly fragmentary This evidence front inscriptionsp wsbt of a building that
reference
made in var-
found could is
area around the court, be used for a large ceremonial by other texts in which in the
court
in
supported
captives wsbt
and plunder
campaigns
the New Kingdom ws4t occurs in the plural form in contexts from which it can only be deduced that wcbxt -or-nsw 101 had become a standard phrase to describe the royal palace; the court* Cne textv at least, implies that access to the wabwt, pr-nsw was not more usually easy "*...... as for he who reaches alive the wsbwt pr6-nswq he is while a thousand die. " waves of the In seaq one remains like the 102
as in the temple, it would seem that wsbt was used for a large open court and was later transferred originally to all the principal itaelf rooms of the palace, so that the residence could be referred to as the ws4wt pr-nsw. Eveh when ws4t is used of more than one hall or buildingp it is only whether a temple or a palacet large and important roomsp and, for this reasong it to private houses. Cne exception to this is applied asty fine praise papyrus bbn for which himself, in tells how a private detail individuall 103 Since EEwt. it court found is within to refer a to
the palacep
containing great
the
the building
is to emphasiouthe of ws4wt in this context size of the house and the importance of its owner* One further use of wsbt, a detailed study of which would'be the scope of this workp is as a place of judgementt outside usually 104 in mythological contexts, which presumably reflects a similar use of the term on earth. Various courts purely wslawt of the gods are known some of vhich may be actual OLile the temples of the gods', within others appear to be 106 mythological.
IR9, Cne final which by the Middle ponsible Further Hatshepsut and going is prefound for of the title :Use of lry-p't wsbt was to describe This which was held which is the the is is large open court in
Bed festival
shown particularly attested by the for official would ran. of the res108
and New Kingdoms for proof the of symbolic this the pr-nsro interest dynastic the Step of
king by
meaning short to
provided which
a scene
wearing to the
Ipb-sd the
robe
is entitled 109 11 This use view court is, that such in the
particular or early
as it
original
as that a copyp
facts
Heb-sed word
on earth* was used Although buildings the the primarily it it for large
halls first
or
courts
applied to
open the
principal In view
forecourt. specific
a more
translations
should wsbt. to
use
such
for or "court" as "hall" slations (qovo), waht was never 4byt applied temple or palace. the use the of word in wsbt
the
compound part of
one particular
almost the
to such
palaces buildin
language
no longer
consequently,
does
occur
Coptic*
PzLhzeit, to Kaplony
III, (Ibid.,
of these
writings of wsbt occurs in a title (oder 3m-ntr in der wsbt der ljtlr)" found (Ibid. the on two cylinder seals
second examplep which is proper name IINJ wslat-Nt" ative evidence for either
yvsbt and either goddess. Nor is the name Nj-wsbt-Nt noted by Ranke (Personennamien)e Since the reading and interpretation of these early seals is still rather problematical, and the sign in h the existence question could be read as alphabetic of ws)jt 6n the Archaic It must be underseals can not be taken for granted*
100
h6wevers type
that
the wslit
enclosure is
of edifice
and that
the lack
prior material which of inscribed paucity ); Chicago University, three dynasties. Bubastite Osorkon, ing" that Portalp 68-69, ) wsht office pl. 16,51reads should
to the Fourth
Dynasty
Caminos, (The Chronicle of Prince f-0 it "disturbthe sign as wsbt 'but finds to mean a have been used in such a context There are, however, rp titles linking the Old Kingdom; 1,186; (BorsS wrAat Les Mastabas
"scribal
a wst with
Reiches,
Mariette,
1jrp, sd m wSbt c.N(t) (Hassanj Glza, V, 247) and that wsbt was used 263P fig. 119; pl. XXXIII9 A)j, so it is possible to describe The alternative would be to take office. a scribal this writing as an example of the rare word h from which the alphasign acquired its 04). phonetic value (ILbeq Ut 470t 1-2; Gardiner, Grammarp Sign list, M17and the contexts (loc. Gardiner citp) the The exact meaning of this word is doubt. ' in which it occurs are singularly unhelpful. that a late Period sign papyrus describes
betic
notes
sign as a pr n 6t "field-house" so the h would have been a light temporary hall than an established rather or court. structure Fairman (ASAE 43(1943)t 308) noted that Grdseloff was of the opinion that all writings variants of h were, in fact, of w!&t. However the examples (ref-470,1-2)) 1Y true writings of that of h quoted would not the by the WO"rterbuch(Belogstelien, seem to support signs is sign this view, It IIP is 715
of wslat,
were interchangeable quoted by Fairman (loc. 013 occurs Oriental in place Institute,
the reverse
of 04 in
Universityl'
Gliza, XIP 55, abb-33(This word, in Urkep It 47,10 as h3yt ience noted h3yt. both by Hassan (GIza, and Fischer
judicial
I can find
that
of a courtv
although
was ever used as the name smsw h3yt was often held by officials
101 who also between that this had the judicial wsLit and is functions. the for judicial There arev however, it This is title firm more links likely
procedureaso h3yt,
similar
also
cit-9
Papyrit employ
pl*XXXIIA, the
11
"enclostire"
plsoVIIAp
B; LIIAt
A, 3t b);
It
LD, 11,48op. cit-t op. pls, XX; XXVo For similar citop It pl*XIIt fig*225; The exceptional t6 indicate examples IIP pl-VIshape of the buttresses see; 1Upl.
Murray, VII
Davies,
Murray, in this
pl*XVIII.
230; PYrot
Grab- und Denksteine des Mittleren Reiches, and Schfer, I, 1769 b, 4; Mariette, Catalogue-glen6ral des Monumento d'Abydoe, and Chevrier, IV, 10929 6; et PYrUne Chapelle Abd el-Razik, 11I, note It 598 also apply here. Murray, op. 110 for dtliatshepsmt a Karnakq It -JF.A 60 (1974)t 147t 3;
261; lacau
Griffith
El-Bersheh,
Beni Hasan,
Ch. d'Eg. t 36 No-,71 (Jan* Do Wit, 10 Pyr., 1069a; Urko, ITt 265P 51D, 11,64, XVIII; 12 Pyreq lyr-9 1984ae a; Marrayp 1551a. ope citep plIX;
Davies,
op.
cit
TIq ple t
loz
15 Ibid. 9 pl. IOA9 E, 4; similarg 16 Anthes, Die Felseninschriften von Hatnub, pl. 16p Gr. 179 31 59 (1924)9 Autographed pageov 10t 7; jig 9-10 (papyrus 17 Scha: rffv ZAS 10096); Gardinert Late Egyptian Miscellanies, 20,3; 1089 3; 1109 39,4; Stories, 40P 7; 56t 2; Idep Ramesside Administrative Documents, 64t 12. This is the usual writing of texts. Writings with the cursive w wsbt in Late Egyptian hieratic 0. are also commont see; Id. 9 'Late Egyptian Miscellanies 66,16; 809 8; 124,6. 18 Habachig ASAE 37 (1937)v 880 19 Idep SAK 1 (1974)9 209; Pl-: 120 Helckq MDAIK.24 (1969)9 1999 11; Pl-XVII?
21 Mariettep 22 1ouvre 23 Berlin 24 U=k., Abydos, stela 3: Ip 309 28. Aegyptische the. ). Inscriften, 1795; 11,49 13; Do 3Inschriften nuo dem Ko 56 (omitting C286; Wreszinskiv
15; Idv
late
Egyptian
11-
Museen, 66,17;
1778,6; 2p,
Janssen, cit.
Two Ancient
Egyptian
9, x+11;
Do Wit,
the proper
name'Dm-m-wa#t,
26 Berlin
K6niglichen
les
11,38Antichits, Egizie
27 Schiaparellij, 204; Naville, pl, XIII; 28 Urkoj 29 Griffith, 30 Davieso 31 KRI-j It 32 Naville, IV,
Museo Archeologico
di Firenze,
De Witv
e, 3. 33 LDT9 1119 13434 Helckp Die Ritualszenen auf der Umfassungsmauer Pamses, II in Karnak, pl. 199 bild 21. 35 liamada, AUE 47 (1947)9 17,536 Brugsch,
Wste pl.
Oase El Khatgeh
in der Libysche
103
37 Do Wit,
68.
39 Ibid. 9 Iq 366,5-17; 3679 1-2; Gardiner, OnOm-., 11,208* ; Id, q Grammarp 562; Faulknerv Con, Diet*, 69. 40 W-b-t IP 3659 16. 41 Ibidev 366,1-2; similar, 366p 3-4. 42 Ibidet 367,143 Ibid-P 3679 2* 44 Pyre, 1266b; 1551a; 1749a; 1084a45 Ibideq 214c; 807b; 866a; 905b; 1069a. 46 Barta, Die AlthMtische Opferlistep passim* 47 PYr-P 590; 103b; See also De Back,, The Egyptian Coffin Texts 19 209f* 48 Borchardtp Das Grabdenkmal des K6nigs Nefer-ir-kW-re'-, pl, 10. A 49 Posener-Krileiger, Archives Neferixkare P IIP 499-501, 50 Posener-Krie'ger and De Cenivall op* citev pl*XXXIIA, 11* 51 Borchardt, op- cit-P 752 Weeks, JARCE9 (1971-1972)v 29-33, see especially the plan of the gateWayo 53 Emeryp Great Tombsof-the First Dynasty I-III. 54 Simpsong op. cit-t Pls-10AP A, 36; 1OAj,Et 4; 15A9 Gq 5p 23- For a discussion of wsbt as used in this papyrus see Ibidep 3755 Scharffp loc. cit.. 56 Habachip ASAE37 (1937)p 88* 57 Ld-P SAX1 (1974)9 211; pl. IIe 58 RLida, 209; pl. l-. 59 Helck, MDAIK24'(1969), 199t 11; pl. XVII, 11. 60 Helck (P?ide, 196) translates. welat w. yt as "Saulenhalle'le 3d_, 61 Irk*, IVt 1331P 1162 Ibid, q 157v 13; 1589 8; 3749 11; 13289 1-3T 63 Ibid-9 365P 364 PM-P 119 Pl-X65 Chevrier, ASAF. (19509 5729 figt8; Id-p ASAE52 (1954)9 2509 51 PlOVIII0 66 Barguett Temple 95-
67 Compare; Abd el-Razikl, loc. cit* (wsbtes m bft-hr 1119 134 (wSbt '3t NPsst--**4Obft-brOs)* '
68 Saunerong BIPAO75 (1975)9 45369 Barguetv loc. cit**
10+
X+3-
op. cit-9
74 See wsc-IP-5975 See t3 p*285and c3 P-30-31-76 Urk., IV, 17959 IN 77 Ibid-v 14839 12. 78 See wst 4byt pe 109.,
(Apy 6); VI, pl. XIV, Iq p3XXXVII; IT, pi. XXXIII 79 Daviesq op. cit. 9 (ceiling for S. ); XV19 10. See also Ibid, j 11v pLIX inscription made in the ws73t at Amarnae offerings Textq 194-19580 Fairman in Pendlebux7p City of Akhenatenq IIIv
81 See p*98.
82 KRIP It 83 Ep 1949 1VI9 22*
84 Ego
It
temple of Hamesses II
85 Abd el-Razik, been taken lacau
Compare alsop in the cit--t 1.53OPat Abydost nid. t IIP 7An Eighteenth Dynasty court 133; wobt J, at Luxor of has in front the temple;
and Chevrier,
135, note
( P. Turin cite;
2); Or-
op.
cit-o
Institutep
Portalp
88 Gardinerg
89 See P--107-11390 Legrain, cit-t 39 No-,7; 8, note 14; LDt IIIt the hall of Barguet, (op* 92. citet 315); M, suggests Pylons It 75t that 1321, b, Barguot, Tathmosis
I between
the Fourth
was a wobt byt but he does not cite the At Tod the excavation ]report calls any evidence for this. Ia b'7t (Bisson do la Roque, Tod, hall Sesostris columned of wsbt at Karnak 13; 15; 18) butt aZaing no evidence for this is presented.
8;
91 'Wb. It 461,10. 9 92 Wbot 1,366t 11. 93 Do Witt op. cit-t 110-71 (Jan. 1961), 68; 691 90; No-72 (4uly
105
2B99 293; in
311;
temple
the Ptolemaic
the hypost; le
was held 94 95
to n) referred the "forecourt" the temple of Ptah at Memphis. ) of Lacau and Chevrierg op. cit. 9 Ig 989 Karnakt 11. 63-73- See also Ottog Topographie Gittong des BIFAO 74 (1974), Thebanischen Gaue3,25and which IV9 976,131092,6-7cps cite, 1119 plt3. XIIIB;: XIV. For the view that this JNES thAn a palace see; Uphillp was antEmple-rMet below p. 262-3151-166, See also 6wt-r'(r3bty)q opo citog 8o, a; 1119 Pls-CII, Late 31; CIII, 4120,3o IV9 21599 14 (wsbwt JEA 109 (1924), (199 6)o on 90; Egyptian Miscellanies, Urkov
16; pl. XXI (a wobt in which 79, note Ray suggests (ibidet
96 97 98
U-rk-t Ibideq
99
Pendleburyg 66,16;
110t
151,479 10; Smither, IV, IE 28 (1942)t 179 10; Mariettoo .; 66,17; Naville, jAn quatron StMen pl. XIII; text; Gardiner, Late Egyptian 2a*
11,309
28; Urko,
orientbes
9, line
x+11 of II
Helckp
auf der ftfassungsmauer Hamada, loc, 106 Pyre, o 1984a; Marietta, the wsbt cit.
Ramses'
in Karnak,
Lee Mastabas
do Vancien Statues
230o See I,
of Gab; Legrain,
Statuettes
Lange and Sch&fer, op., cit, q Ig 176t bo 4; Navillet 1I19plX, B, e, 3; KM, Dynasty Temple at Deir el-Baha-rl, Gardiner, general Late Egyptian Miscellanies 38,9; Mariettet Konigliche des Monilments d'Abydoa, 11,226; Wreszinaki, 261; Berlin
56. Webt also OP- Cit-9 Occurs in such names as Imn-m-wr4t (Urke IT, 1644t 5) 1 Natyp Wsbt (Mariette, 914; Lange and Sch&fer, It op* citet op. cite, ope cit-t
io6
Newberryq Beni Hasan, I, 119 152,6; 107 Lange and Schiifer, op. citev Schiaparellio, op* cit pl*XXXV; LDT, 1119 252; Urk. 9 IV9 1513,13; Bubastic 266; Urk., IV, 18819 4; 18979 10; Nwzille, pl*XXXV9 E. 108 Spencer, 109 Naville, JEA 64 (197819 Deir el-Bahariv 52-55III, 1XIV (Urke 9 IV, ple 265P 5)40
101
wsbt tLbyt Dyne XVII "117A a4 LJ Dyne XV1113 1 not 1W a IM Dyne XVIII4 Dyne XVIII 6 D. yn, XV1112
Dyne XV1115
A
Dyne XV1117
Dyne XV1119
Dyne XVIII
m C.a)mb -a %it
Dyne XVIII8 10
Dyne XVIII
Dyne XVIII 12
Dyne XIX
Dyne r.7 C3 3fa _. 4
13 0
XXI15
16
Dyne
L. .J
XXU17
19 Ptole LL
Dyne XXV
is
one which
in enough examples
any detailed
to be made, conce=ing its position in an Egyptian and function 22 temple. The earliest known dates to the Seventeenth Dynasty writing to a part of which may suggest that wstt 4by was the name applied the temple which had not could existed previously, of although curvival. earlier writings be Just the absence of The term occurs in later periode.
sporadically
in use to tomple a word which was confined tic. in C6p. architecture, ws4t bbyt has no equivalent 23 The W6rterbuch translates des Tempel all wsbt 4byt as "Festhof 24 hall,,, and Faulkner an "festival As has been shown above wsbt alone could refer to any of the princiPal halls or courts of a temple, although originally it was used to be the of an open court. Consequently wobt bbyt
one would
expect
%OB
specific festal pas de la la name of one of ceremonies these major hallsq presumably that precede one in which "il no slagiosait ou le pronaos
took place.
cour veritable
concluded qui
du dans l1enciente salle hypostylet mais d1un espace sletendant 25 that the waht temple, en avant du pylOne dlentree" He considered . 4byt was a court in which were held certain ceremonies to which a 26 On present number of members of the publid selected were admitted. is not possible wsbt 1byt, it i6q however, evidence wsbt 4byt within the wsljt temple. tLbyt so far known was in text the Seventeenth mentions in view that Dynthe The earliest it to be specific possible about the function the position to identify of of the the
asty temple of Osiris at Abydos. Since the term is on a column it can be assumed that a hyposWe evidence, cription, hall or a colonnaded court. is mo3mlikely to be correct. It is fir]enof
which
The latter,
V9 statesp of king Intef wobt bbyt m mswt, "He Z7 that there had *already been made the wst 4by anew"t Euggesting If this earlier such a court in the temple. court were of the Middle Kingdom then the history back further of the term would be carried evidence,, From the reign of Hatshepaut there are a number of references these a wsbt 4byt in the temple of Amun at Karnake Unfortunately not occur in dedication inscriptions to the fact and offered the 29 sanctuary in any particular that the tribute halls from There are two references expedition two of title the barque was measured from Amun being the blocks of than can be proved on present to do
or courts,
the Punt 28 to Aman in the wsbt 4byt and of Hatshepout show a scene of with a descriptive
carried
by the priests
Lacau and Chevrier r4-t m wsbt 4byt. have suggeoted that this ' hall webt 4bYt was the hypostyle of Tuthmosia I betweeh the Fourth and 30 Pylons. Fifth This hall was describedg laterl by Amenhotep II, as a it is not called wsbt3l although a wsbt I; byt in any text which can be firmly to it. The identification of the wobt bbyt in the 32 reign of Hatshepsut be discussed below when more conclusive will evidence for the usual location of this court has been presented. Fortunately in various such evidence does exist, ae courts temples are known to have been called wsbt 1byt* ascribed In of the the court South temple describes at Buhen an inscription the makingg by Tuthmoois on one of the columns 33 III, of a ws]jt byt.
Oct
by Caminos stands.
34
this
can only
refer
to the court
in
There
but it was open to the sky or roofed that it was an open court with only the colonnades roofed over* the temple as containing The Amada stela of Amenhotep II describes 36 leaving "a sandstone pylon in front no doubt at of the wobt byt*, the forecourt of the all that the term was being used to describe temple* In the reign of Amenhotep 37 this
is 35
some doubt
was an open court with only four columns along the facade of the hypoetyle ha.11.37 The came fore1wnyt, illustrating the the same stelat court was also called, on a between a name which described 1wnytv and hallv appearance of a a name which specified of the same hall, Wsbt 1byt, The parallel stela, which in Egyptian the physical the function
distinction
antine, also mentions been recovered but it to the wsbt %Lbyt;of which was reused in the makingv might 4byt see.., for 39 This
the temple of Khnum at Eloph. describes 38 The plan of this temple has not a wsbt hbyt. is of interest to note that another reference at Elephantine of Trajan so that Barguette exists on the island. all on a block Thin describes (rbyt)
Khnum, of text
at least
asions of festivals. The remaining known wsbwt tibyt 40 be identified although one text, of Medamudv indicates The inscription bbyt in "so it the ws. 4t... might 41 states something that the
of the Eighteenth
Dynasty
can not
was to be cot up in
on the altars sprinkled which are to reconstruct this templet of were found42 and the statue was not shows that the court the torm wcbt could containv
on which offerings were made, but also private statues from the reversion which could benefit of offerings. In the Nineteenth Dynasty the court of Ramessee II in the temple 44 of Luxor was called Dynasty an a wsbt 4byt and in the Twentieth inscription on the top of the second pylon of the temple of Rameosea altars III at Medinet temple of the Habu has been understood 45 as a wsht 4byt. to refer to the second court
Ito
by Karnak was described, The forecoutt of the temple of Khonsu at 46 day forecourt of the present 4byt Herihor, and so was as a wsht On a stela of Sheahonq the temple of Amun. The latter occurs reference to provide the quarries stone for I from Silsila were reopened where building work at Karnak, including ounded by statues lake at Karnak a wi4t I; byt which 47 (wjdyt q. v. ). of no-Horakhty was to be currthe
beside
sacred
48
1byt which ban not, now, be identified. contained a wsbt is true of so many words, the meaning of the Ptolemaic In periody as in the hall t0although, hypostyle yt was extended to include 4b a IEt 50 it was still temple of Philae, used for a colonnaded court. From this evidence it can be seen that the wsbt bbyt of a dynastic was the colonnaded court situated the function describes The name primarily temple wsht as a place members of the plablic fact that this court in which offerings immediately of this behind particular the pylon. temple
could
ware made and to which certain for festivals, However, the be admitted to citizens was always the other first than hall the of
priesthood temple
to which access could only to which only the priests red halls though the term wsbt 1byt does not appearance forecourt. a change in ation of the courtp the temple it The change of meaning ritual,
be situated towards the rear of the be gained by means of the more sacwere admittede in itself Consequently, the physical the colonnaded may reflect loose applicaldescribe solely for period the
came to be used in
the Ptolemaic
of the evidence
presented
which hall above, exactly to wsbt 4byt in the reign At the time of the
of Amun in
the oft-referred 52 when the prodthe temple 'was could Pylons have boon or the
return
to Azun in the wsbt 4byt, uce was weighed and offered basically that erected by Tathmosis I so the wsbt 4byt the hypostyle hall between the Fourth and Fifth either large
open court surrounded by colonnades and statues behind the 53 Fifth Pylon. The latter the usual plan of a wobt byt, fulfills an open colonnaded court but it must be remembered that the term was used for such a court becamsev in later templesq the forecourt waa
the first the primary more likely between queen's presented Petrie,
hall
to which
the public
could
be easily
admittede it
Since is
requisite that
Pylons
a much more open aspect Abydosp 19 pl, lVI* fragment on the This left
by Tuthmosia 54
writing
is
the
the coliimn
of pl. LVI in
the column on the right, 2 note 2)e 11 Jequier, L'Architecture, Une Chapelle 3 4 5 6 7 Lbid., Urk-, Ibid. 192. IVP 340P
as was suggested
by Barguet
346,159 Ibid,, 429,10. Caminos, 2). The New Kingdom Temples of Buhen, Das Aegyptische the Todtenbuchq It 1, Pl-79 (Urk-9 IV9 819P
Havillep
P1-193t
6; -t
IVt
14839
10 (without 9 Ibidop
determinative).
12959 1312959 149 1361,6. 9 H[orman] do G, El-Amarn IIlp IlIq pl*XIX* . 129 (ref-465,6). Institute, Medinet Habu, V, pl. 356D. of Herihore
Oriental
pl-XIIIt 2*
ASAE 29 (1929)9
20 De Morgan et al. p Kom Ombos, It 21 ChasSinat, 119,13Edfoup Ill 22 For wr4t 23 Wb-9 It n bnr, 366,10.
24 Paullmer,
Con. Dict.,
for byt
"festival
offerings")*
liz
25 Barguetq 26 rbid.,
310, note
For another
in Agyptischen
citoo 10o 192 (For ). 197See; Ibid., Stars that 3409 1 (where in the wnht was since but a photograph of one of these
29 Lacau and Chevrier, blocks see; Jequier, 30 Lacau and Chevriert 31 Urk-9 IVP 13319 11references is 32 For further Hatshepsut 4byt".
wsbt 4bYt
described
as "glittering the
This would
from which
ceilings
were painted
a star-design
motifs can not slx3w in question were painted Ibidep 4379 14 (where wsbt 4byt has been restored and
33 Caminosp 8199 34 35 2), op. 12. IV, 12959 and 13Le Temple d'Amada, IIt pl*I,, cit.., 66. The New Kingdom Temples of Buhen, I, P1.79
out)
IV,
(also
Caminos, Ibid*9
36 Urke, 37 Barguet
Dewachterg
38 Lrkep Up 12959 1439 Ibid, v 13619 6. loc. cit Davies, loc. 40 Naville, great Aten temple at Akhetaten);
cit. a court in the Urkop IV9 21249 4 (a wobt 4byt, built by Horemheb in the temple of Ptah at Memphis). One more oxample of
Dynasty ws)jt 4byt which was quoted by both Barguotq an Eighteenth (op. cit., 107, note 5) is the 309, note 2) and Arnold (op. cit-P incorrect by Moret (Studies P=esented to result of an restoration P. Lle Griffith, Ivv 121) of the first sur les sign of the noun nbbwt (q,, v. )*
(presumably
41 Urk-9 42 Bisson
do la Roquep Rapport
107-110*
43 Ibidet
44 Wb. 9 Belegstelleng
11,5 45 Chicago Exc. University, Oriental 111,6 Institute, 24. 111,16 47was taken of the fact by P149 IIv that, 219 to be the wsbt tLbyt (ref. 609 13)loc. cit.. See also H61scher,
Med. Habu,
and note
46 LD, 1119 244a; Wb. 9 Belegstelleng 47 Caminos, JEA 38 (1952), Pl*XIIIP 48 Driotong is loc. cit.. temple. Wsbt 4byt In view name of this always 49 Chassinatt
elsewhere,
a court within a templet this is unlikely loc. cit ; De Morganp loco cit** being the of the 349t 10)temple
to be correct.
50 LDP IVP 39b. 51 The exception see note 52 In year 53 Borchardtv self took 459 of Hatshepsut Baugeschichtev at Karnakt (R?Eov IVv 9t abb. 7, including second cpurt of Medinet Habu
Hatshepsut
her-
executed place
the return of the Pant after 4-5; Borchardt, 20). op. citop in Hommages il Serge Sauneronj 1,69; 54 See nowt however, Letellier bu3.lding pl. XI9 A, where a text from a limestone of Tuthmosis II is published. The damaged inscription that Tathmoais II relates Inr hd in madep for Amang a nfr n (nw. Letellier rethe damaged signs to read wsbt bbyt, which is undoubtedly constructs She suggests (Elid. *,70-71) that this structure stood in front of the Pourth Pylon at Ka=ak and was later refurbished with the sandstone blocks of Tathmosis IV which were recovered from the correct* fill of the Third is Pylon. correcto II ist If this then it suggestion for the'eituation a similar same name. This of the wsbt 4byt positiong court would have occupied courts likely of the
within
the templet
to other
of Tuthmosis
therefore,
references
are made in
texts
of the reign
It+
mm% t= c
Dyne xix4
Dm. XX5
Dyn. XX
1Dm. XXB
by the itp Wbrterbuch the to
rm
Iene XX9
Dyn. XX7
5114
This it is is the only word noted to relate either with stem bn"*"o so not possible survive from etymologicallyp demotic or Coptic brief BnS did below) not into appear of tezm. any other (however see further existence as it is Dyn-
Nineteenth 11
and Twentieth
term
by Gardiner
all it
the a is a word.
"door-post";
evidence the of
since
Book of Chapter
Dead in
Eighteenth is
section
125 the
deceased
entering their
he tells
The came procedure is repeated with the I-ryt and then , 12 the door-faetenings. BnS and cryt are also linked on an ostracon which lists two groups are desworkmen engaged on a bAilding projectv cribed in airTurin of in-9 as nty br p3 bns and two as nty is given m t3, ryt*13 a papyrus on n3w bnlgw in the on the In now hwt-
as employed 'Iryt
conjunction
with
verso
of
the pap-
YXu8 with the tomb-plan The identity of of Ramesses IV on the rectoo the tomb on the it may be that verso has not been firmly established; Ramesses V which was usurped by Raztesses VI 15 or that of Ramesses Of 16 17 IX. From the measurements Gardiner concluded quoted for the bn'sw that it referred to the "door-jamb". The measurements of the bn'g are given which as wmt (reveal or thickness)p refer is in to also which combined can only Such an interpretation Of the Two Brothers hy ..,_(height) the jamb. supported a bull is and hr (face)v all of the
story
115 of blood of This fall the beside great of tri the two bnt-w of His (_qov. ) ok Pharaoh. that Majesty 18 which are on the two
sides
bn5 was used to describe a door-jamb 19 the suggestion that bnS' was the ancestor refutes of Drioton of the 20 Coptic "co2ing" This etymology noun XwG911crownllt or "battlement"* 21 22 is followed by Westendorf but not by Cerny to derive who prefers \wjaj from the Semitic "arm"o in Arabic "to make stem lbs ##to clothe" , amount evidence a stockade, lated Ramesside former ter the bulwark of is reeds"* hardly Drioton's commensurate and the of based story suggestion with of vertical ground the the that facts bng be transknown from The the of latthe by "fronton" tomb-plan the
papyrus
gives
a tall
the
on the
in the
on either
the
of
of
This doubto
includes in view
to
bn'swe
evidence,
bns does
mean "door-jamb", I 2 3 4 5
I, 264t I,
(Chap. 125,29)e
Oatraca, Hieratic and Gardiners, Gardiner, Late Egyptian Miscellaniesp Id., Chester Beatty I, pl. XVII, 10.
1,11
and 12.
127,13-
6 7
Gardiner, JEA 4 (1917), 148, (5), (6) and M* and Ibi d, 146, (3); 147P WGardiner, (emended to ' La te Egyptian Storiesp 269 12 Carter
from )t
dp&-* C=
d. 26a, note 16,9, c-" , see Ibide, Is I 9 11avill6v (Chap. 125,29, 11,326 T. f)OP- Cit-P 10 Wb-, 1,464,3; 83See also Faulkners, Con. Didt., 11 Carter 146-147and Gardiners, op. cit-9
12 Budge, loc.
13 Corny
cit.;
Navillev
op, cit., Carter
op. cit
plXVII,
111 326. P
1,11 12 (bn"s); and cit- 9 146. 2,511-517; 1,13
14 Gardiner, 15 Carter
Egyptian op.
part
plan
116
16 Carter 498,
loc.
cit.;
L11.9, I,
part
2,501-505,
Plan
on
and Gardiner,
Late Egyptian
op. cit.
146, t
(3);
147,
(4);
14st
(5),
(6)
and
26,12.
21 Westendorf, Koptisches Handw8rterbuch, 22 6erny, Dictionary, Coptic Etymological 23 Gardiner, Cheater Beatty Ip pl*XVIIt
76. 7010*
III
bbnt
pyn. XII1 Dyno
41 1
Dyne XVIII
XVII14
Dyn. XTIlI
Dyne XVIII,
/mill a
'S"Iff
10
J a m
xix
XVIII
12
0 Aft--^
%%
mi
3 Dyne XjXl
Dyn. C-3 XIXt
R IW I XX lb fl
jg3
Dyne XX17 i C--a Dyn o XX 18
Dyno XjXl
Dyne
I 19 XXI
-0
20 0 C=
Dyno
XXV21
Dyne
XXV22
Mu11 0
Dyn o XXX23
w ww
em
m
Ptol. Ptol.
24 27
Ptol.
25
JC'=
A,. %.
U 'U'2
Ptole
26
LILA
The first point t6 note about bbntp the meaning of which is not open to doubtp is that it may have existed prior to the Eighteenth DynastYv 28 the earliest The Twelfth date given for its use by the W6rterbuch. Dynasty writing quoted above occurs, twice in Papyrus Reisner III. Unfottunately to tne contexts are not clear and so it is not possible state for certain that tnese two occu7rxmces are writings of the later 'word bnt. SimpsonZ9is of the opinion that these are for bLint-and does not see the use of h instead of b, as a problem. )*"2" j in thi 0 Papyrus 44a'3L Lf 'M"' to the <:> C refers 'a
takes pyl on while to be a writing 31 it. of rwyt 13bty bbnt, "the
eastern
rwyt
not word
spelled vhich 34
The main
would
be the
lis
It would be inadvisable to example of the Egyptian name for a pylon. dismiss this on the grounds that all other examples of the word are Of the Now Kingdom and later of wb3j once since an earlier writing Dynastyp has to the Eighteenth also thought not to have existed prior 35 The archaeological now been recogaisod. evidence would suggest that there were pylons in templest certainly in the Middle Kingd=36 and 37 in the Old Kingdom. Few early pylons have survived because possibly they would have been made of mud-brick with only their doorways in stone.. This practice continued in the Theban mortuary temples up to, the pylon of the temple of Seti I at Gurna. Since bbnt and including, term for a pylon and since pylons seen to have existed was the regular in the Middle Kingdomp it would not be surprising to find a Twelfth Dynasty writing of the word. However in view of the fact that the in Papyrus Roisner III are bhntp not bbntp and having regard writings to the unclear contexts in which the word is used, it would be best to treat of bbnt,,
Etymologically and is related to bbnt similar or is derived expressions structure from in a verbal stem "to be vigilant"38 39 Hebrew. It can easily be such as a temple pylon acqui-
these occurrences
as possible#
rather
than certain,
writings
tower-like
ed a name based on such a verb. A similar name, bbn, was used from the New Kingdom for a large estate40 and the two words can look very 41 like the context Usually each other. can be used to distinguish one from the other. Neither into of the two terms seems to have survived COPtict in the case of b:4ntt while in demwhich is hardly surprising 42 Otic texts the two words seem to be indistinguishable. The meaning of bbnt is not open to question. Prom at least the Eighteenth for Dynasty, and possibly earlierp temple. dual and plural; for in this all three forms bbnt was the usual term the monumental pylon which inctive feature of the Egyptian The word being cribed However Ono pylon TtlthmOsis obelisks "between used in is found in the to describe and dist-
singular,
by Caminos
a two-towered
so with
I at Karriak, Pylons 4 and 5- 'When Hatshepsut in the hall between these pylons she described the bbnty wrty of ...... Ankheperkare"44 while
119
form bbnwt for 43bnty wrty inscription in a dedication of Rameses II at his temple the fact that the temple originally had at Abydoe probably reflects 47 two pylons, Medinet while the pylons of the temple of Ramses Mat 49 ,jabU48 are described as bbnw<t,. h6wever, bLint in More usuallyt the dual or the plural to one pylon alone. The dual either refers form is used for the Six1h 1rlon- at Karnak5o the pylon of the mortuary 52 temple of Amenhotep III at Thebes5l and the model pylon of Seti I, form is found describing the following those 'while the plural pylons; 53 Of thd temple of Amenhotep III the temple of Seti I at at Soleb. Abydos954 the Khonsa temple at Ka=akt55 the temple of Taharqa at 57 Kawa56 and the Pirst Pylon of the A=, n temple at Karnak. Whenever bnt with ic the dual or the plural the plan of the temple to which it one or more pylons
Tor (in einer
the work of Tuthmosis I at Ka=sks, uses the 45 Similarly the use of the dual the two pylons*
found in
whether
einfachen
is
intended.
the Belegstellen
The WSrterbuch_gives
--W"
only two references. text from The first of these is an unpublished Karnak59 which I have taken to equal a text of Rameses IX describing
as the itself temple h7POrbole -leaving of the in no a b4n(t>60 Third and the gate which Pylons a sb3 he of 3962 erected the in the Fourth as in since room the Aman temple. wall southern 61 The doorway between is
labelled door
term for is the usual a large which 63 be interpreted This can only as built pylon the to adjoining be erected by of the the stone wallsp side is at
gateway.
second one
reference of the
given crypts
from
Hathor
examples
provide
a firm
the
developed of
meaning. misgse
They of and
likely since
CaBOB either
simple
originalt the
specific,
Ptolemaic
I Simpsong Papyrus Rejengr 1119 IOAj E32; (omitting pls. 2 Urke, IT, 365P 4; 7389 1-
) IN '16.
J34-
3 lbid-t
56,1.
120
6 Ibid-p 1295t 13 and 14; similarKRI, 1,479 12. 7 LD9 1119 89; Urk. 9 IV9 1750Y 138 Ibid. 9 16549 11; KRIv ITp 38,1 and 2 (restored)* 9 Pilletl ASAE25 (19209 9o 10 Urk. p IV, 165OP4; similar Mariettep Abydosy IIP Pl-3t 11 Urk., 179 1650P 1812 Ibid. 1823P 19
4o
13 BadawyqMisdellanea Wilbourianay 19 5Y fig-5o 14 Abd el-Raziky JEA 60 (1974)t 151p 2o The damagedsign is reproduced in the publication as 0 but, from comparison with other writings it is probably the pot V which is intended. The other alternative would be the sign c= as in NO-1515 Ibid. v 151P 516 KRI, 119 38t 4; Gardinerp Late Egyptian Miscellaniesp 1349 2; Jansseng Two Ancient Egyptian Ship's Logs, 61,9. 17 Chicago Universityp Oriental Institutep Medinet Habul Vp PL-3559 818 Erichseng Papyrus Harris 19 4P 9; 5OP14-15; Barguett Templep 84; Janssen, op. cito, 60y 23 and 25; Gardinerp The Wilbour Papyrusl I, pls. 20At A441 29; 30A, A63t 13; 30A, A64v 20; 32A, A67,19s 32Ap A689 13; 69Av B222 1419 1Df IIIp 2489 h and 1; 2519 a and bo 20 Caminos, JEk 38 (1952)v Pl-XIIIY 46. 21 Macadam,The Templesof Kawa, 11 plso8p 24; 12p17. 22 Ibidel PI-14P 4-23 Abd el-Razik, MDAIK, 23 (1968)9 159 (in plural); Idol MDAIK34 (1978)9 11424 Chassinatp Le Temple de Dendaraq VI, 69 725 Idol Edfoup Y9 311? 12. 26 Petrie, Koptosp pl. XXp 20; (with one tower only) XX, 19o 27 Chassinat, op- cit-P V9 4f 2. 28 WbopIq 471p 9-11, 29 Simpsont op. citop 38, note 6o 30 Ibidov P1.10A,F-32. 31 Ibidop 3832 See below p. 151ff-
III
33 34 35 36
see below P. 143See below p. 149P n- 36. Jamesp The Hekanakhte PaPerst pl. 12A9 versot 3- See also above P;664; The earliest certain pylon would seem to be that of the chapel of $ankhkzoe* on the western cliffs Thebes. (For photographs at , -king
of this see Petrie, Qurneh, pls. V and VI; for pylon The Excavation see Hokscher, There were also brick pylon-towers of Medinet on either of the a description 4-5t fig. 2) Habu, Ilt
of the Middle Kingdom gateway in the temple of Thoth at He=mopolis (Bittel and 24-25) and other brick He=annq MDA3X 5 (1934)t pylonsp which have side since lusive. been completely for pylons is A pylon destroyed, prior described must once have existed. to the Middle Kingdom is in in the less conc"temple 37 The evidence
thought not
Description Dynasty
has been restoredp in plany by (Von Bissingq Niuserre Das Reof 11 8-10; 19-24) while a precursor same des
was seen in the structures at the corners of the funerary Abusir (Borchardt, Das Grabdenkmal complex at He-user-req 97)258; 832-8339 der alten note Agypter 1116. See also
Sotheq
und ihre
Namen, 903ff-
39 Wbep It 40 Wb-t It
41 Compare, for
(bbnw(t)) Erichsenp op- cit-P 4,9 examplep Gardinerg Late Egyptian Miscellaniesp 110p 11 (bhn). Glossarv 121. 56.
42 ErichsenjDemotisches 43 Caminosp ope cit-9 44 Urk-P 17P 3659 445 Urk-P IVP 560 1. op- cit-P 47 PMt VIP 32. 46 Mariette,
IIP Pl-39 4-
48 PM9 UP pl-X1III49 Erichsen, Papyrus Harris 50 Urk. 9 IT, 167P 15) uses the singular
121
51 Urk-P IVP 16509 4. As Cazinos (loc. here followed 52 Badawyq loc. 53 Urk-, by the plural cit. * IVP 17509 13, The inscription
granite rams found at Gebel Barkal temple at Soleb to which the texts US 66 (1931)9 819 6-10. For, a plan of Soleb temple see PMp V179 168). 54 KRIP It
is from one of a number of but originally intended for the (PM., VII9 216; Reisnerp refer
47P 12. The temple of Seti It as it now standsp has only by Rameses II (PLIP VIP 1-2). It isp one pylon which was erected intended to build two howeverg possible that it was originally done at the nearby temple of Razeses II CLIII-d-p 32)* pylons as was 248P h and i. pl. 6p 24- Por a plan of the temple see; ibid. Pl-XIIIP 46. <784) D. 20 11)v Karn. p
55 UP My
56 Macadamq op. cit., IIt p1612. 57 Caminos, OP- cit-P 58 Wb-P IP 4719 11-
59 Wbo,Belegstelleng It 77 (ref-471t 60 Barguet, Op- cit-P 8461 PM9 III pl. X. 62 Barguet, Op- cit-9 27363 See sbl P* 221 64 PM9 111 75-76. 65 Quoted by the Belegstellen but this vi, 6,7-
Denderahq Mvo. 479 abo 109 as; Mariettet has now been published by Chassinat, Le Temple do Denderat
123
pr There the is are no true alone frequent variants or with writing, while pr the of the pr which was-always either with written 2 The latter stroke. and a the the Old Kingdom stroke in is to the only of
ideogram occuriing
from
without it 3
found
was employed
compounds
the of
value served
of
pr
it
was used
in
words for
as a general of the pr is
determinindicated
Sign
the
Roman period in words from which such pryt meant ct* theory the 10 as
a hypothetical there
although in Copticp it
as the
12r but
rejected as pr
1-1-twhich,
some extentp 11 of pr
same role
the
dynasties4 given list of by the the this Wo"rterbuch various study* uses Since is "houseN 12 prt many
on to scope
as "house" of
interpreted of letters
were
Loret14 an entrance
rather He points
term
today.
amongst
whom the
temporary the
structures weather
as protection have
known also of
consisted
suggested buildings9
housesp which
compounds
as pr-jiq
describe
an enclosure came to in
storehouses.
be used this
included buildings,
work
extent
referred concerned
rather
than
adminittrative
12.1-
is
Examples of these 16 from the Archaic period. inscriptions In the biographical open to doubt* to describe the large estates
occurring
of
used
poor man pr undoubtedly man a pr was something of a pr dates cription pr which size that
The earliest extant much more grandiose. to the reign of Snoferu when Metjen built
in width*17 The in length and 200 cubits 200 cubits was to say of this prq added to the fact that the text continues 18 the pr contained proves that this pr a lake and orchardsp rather Harkhufj ts-columnsp than in a house. the Sixth Dynastyq describes digging a lake and planting on his way home to Egypt building a 19 trees. The
tells from how Harkhuf, same inscription the Southp came from the neighbourhood of the pr of the ruler of 20 Setju and Irtd6twhich must have been the estate of this Nubian chief . Another comes from indication text ao. from that, in the Old Kingdomp pr meant "estate"
Giza in which a man describes how he was left (Lst) in charge of all the possessions during which of his brothert (lit) time "the property increased the pr more in his pr than (in) 21 Another Old Kingdom inscription from Giza records of any noble. " 22 the sale of a prv while a similar sale is mentioned in the Hekai4a 23 nakhte letters. The natural for en "estate" development in it-s widest of the term resulted in its being used the of sensep the land department. This is owned by in temple
Wepwawet at Siut. were to the property of the pr of his father and not from the pr of Presumably the nomarch was n9t permitted to use the arc04 of the official estate for his own benefit and had to pass intact,
to the next holder of the office. Egyptian texts often mention the "founding (grg pr) of a all 25 to be a synonym for "to marry" which is taken by the W6rterbuch that a young man would leave the family and seems tm indicate home and establish regarded his own pr.. The maxims of Ptahhotep thing for show that a man to do, as the right and responsible this 26 was while
125
tells
how he joined
he had found-
its it also retained p-r. was used often for an "estate" 28 By the New Kingdom '-to the ancestor of meaning of "house". original 30 29 Howthe Coptic V41 9 had begun to be used with the Same meaninge texts preserved vocabulary of the literary ever the more conservative the use of pr for "house"* to his pro of the Two Brothersp when Anpu returned he found that the fire had not been lit and that the pr was in dark31 to the actual h-ouse-building This can only be referring ness. and In the Story in the story of the Doomed Princet of the pr same must be true, to keep his daughter isolatedq which the ruler as of Naharain built it is described from as having only one window which was 70 cubits 32 the ground. the
There are also some examples of pr being used in preference to 33 It in non-literary texts of the same and later periods and pr-is 34 also found in demotic texts.
It cang thereforev be seen that at all periods pr was used of a "house". This usage was notp howevor, confined to the actual housebuilding butp even by the Old Kingdom, it could be extended to include an entire estate. It was logical that the house of the king, 35 te palace, should have been described as pr-nsw this term and alsop like the simple pro came to be used of an estate from which 36 produce could be isSUed. The differences between pr-nsw and other terms which are usually 37 38 translated as "palace" such as c4o 1,39 could stP-839 and pr-c., . only be elucidated after a detailed study which is not relevant to this work. The distinctions could well be based on their respective administrative functions rather than on their physical characteristicso The role of-the'torm, pro as it related to Egyptian temples is of concern to this study,. The fact that pr could be used of a temple as well as of a domestic dwellingq indicates that the term was not Although the plan restricted in use to one particular building-plan. of an Egyptian temple, as the "house of the godJ1 was based on that of a house, the simple house-plan was extended and elaborated to such an extent that the plan of a temple bears no resemblance to the original enclosure depicted in the ideogram*
126
In
the Koptos
Decrees
of
of Min at
to variously Koptos is referred r-PT1194011the Er of r-pr P "this as 42 41 "the bwt of'Xin'19 Mine, also while the Decrees of Neferkauhor and the functdescribe The terms bwt and bwt-ntr the term bLwt-ntr*43 use that the temple ion of the temple as a cult-centreJ44 r-pr indicates the fact that the reflects while pr served as an offering-place45 temple was the actual home of the god. The fact that the decrees were 46 to be set up "at the crrwt of the 32r of Min,, suggests that pr here is being used of the temple itself estate* and not its administrative However# in individual the pr of a private could temple pr could be the stone temple be his "house" a in which case the term was being used as a synonym for 4wt-ntr,, itself, the entire temple complex within the enclosure wall, or the administUnfortunately there are many texts in which the context rative estate* the same way that or his "estate" does not allow a decision to be made as to which support of these translations would be the most accurate. There are a few texts which , used of the stone temple alone* the Festival
Comlex at Karnak gives a speech of the Ennead to the (smnb) the pr of his father him to embellish king instructing Amun47 Inr tL The temple of Hatshepsut Re in nfr n 1-nw. at Deir El-Bahari 4 is described the temple*49 as a pr as is the Anubis chapel within The temple of Ramesses III the forecourt within of the Aman temple5o at Karnak is called "the pr of Usermaare Merismun in the pr of A=inll T of to the temple and a curious use of the term is found in relation how the king found the temple of Taharqa at Kawao The text tells Amun built of brick
in stone* The and ordered it to be reconstructed inscription "then this bwt-ntr in sandstone.... continues, was built the pr in gold, the columns (w)j3w) in gold its pylons (bbnw) and ...... 51 (2b-3w) inscribed its doors with the Great Name of his Majesty. j, The sandstone bwt-ntr is clearly the stone temple-building and Mac-
to the main temple becauser adam has suggested that pr also refers "Minute specks of gold leaf were found adhering to the walls in 52 If this is so, and it is difficult placesis. to see to what else in such a contextv pr could refer then pr n nwb must be in apposition Inr hd to bwt-njr m nfr n rwat. Two interesting tomb-scenes show the facades of temples with labels indicating that each was regarded as a pr. Cneq from the tomb of
12-1
Panehsy at Thebes (No. 16) shows the frontage of the temple of Amun Karnak which, in the reign of Ramesses II to which the tomb is at The text above the representation datedg was at the second pylon. 53 The second example is from the that it is the pr of Amun-Re. states the facade of tomb of Amenmosey also at Thebes (No. 19), and depicts king Amenhotep I. The legend reads; temple dedicated to the deified a 54 ( 'Imn 4LtpJ n p3 wbl "The pr of Amenhotep of the wb3,,. Since the pr to the stone temple to the temple complex and the entrance entrance would have both been through it is not possible to decide was intended. the pylon on which which of formed the temple facade these two interpretations
that There are, however, other texts which showl quite clearlyp from the stone pr could be used of the temple temenosp as distinct building, the bwt-ntr. A-building built texts Egypt his text (Amun's) that the king of Amenhotep I from Karnak states ( smnb) his 4wt-nt pr and embellished 955 while of Hatshepsut describe how treest brought back to
6n both dides of the hwtexpeditiony were planted 56 between the Er and the hwtof Amun. The distinction ntr in thepr in the stela of Pianchi. the con, After nir is also well exemplified the king went to the pr of the god quest of each major cult-centre, where, ]wt-ntr after purification to make offerings., rituals 57 in the pr-dw however, estate, he entered . the
In the New Kingdom in particular, the designation of his administrative was described as being within
the pr of a particular god was administratively to the main temple of the god in question. sabordinate In this way the royal mortuary temples on the West Bank at Thebes 58 in the pr of Amun,, were often described as "the hwt of king ..... indicating that they were under the control of the temple of A= the situation at Karnak. Obviously of the temples on the opposite ression, with the identification precludes the temenos of the main temple is also found of prp building* of in this exp-
outside
Thebes between
the main cult-centre For examplet at and its dependent temples. HeliOPOlist Ramesses III built a bwt nt bbw m rnpw to the north of the city, being "in the pr of Itost. 59 which was regarded as It can be seen, thereforep that the simple termt prt could
l2a
have used
various of the
throughout of a private to
the
dynastic
period it of could
in
Egypt. refer to
When the
an official!
s estate* 7rne
was transferred
be the Only
temenos
a careful with
evidence can
temple
remains, of the
show which
interpretation
38t versov 383; Pyr. t 292d E. g.; Devaud, Les Maximes de Ptahhote v (Unas); 1189c (Pepi I); Irk., Gayetv Ste'les de la Me 1,150,16; Dynas.tie, tische oglyphic and 15pl. LIVt Lesestucke, Textsp 2; De Buckv Readin 939 20; Irk. VIP Pl-479 Bookv 91,13; Sethe, Aegyp Museumv HierIVP 4099 9; British 9 12; Daressy, ASAE 18 (1919)0 1459 14
Examples
of pr are legiong e. g.; Urk-P It 3t 1; writing VIIP It 15; Lange 49 10; 1219 13-14; 1259 8; 163v 11; 216,11; of this and Schferg (IV9 pl. VI); James, Grab- und Denksteine 1,69, des Mittleren Reiches UP 299 (IV9 pl. XXXI); Sethev op- cit-P 939 3t 20; The Hekanakhte Papers and other Early Middle Kingdom Doc-
96t 12; 1009 6; uments, pl. 26t 8; Urk. 9 IV, 3PI; 439 10; 47,7; 117P 5; 1329 7; 1609 7; 1639 3; 165,4; 1949 16; 195t 1; 297P 4; 3009 2; 328# 4; 456,9; LRI, Late Late I, 352,10; 353P 2; 3099 14; 405P 3; 409P 9; 4499 5; 10649 15; 2039 13; 1494,16; 206v passim; 15599 11; Gardinerp 472p 16; 862P 5; 9129 13; 124P 5v 9 and 10; Egyptian Miscellanies, Egyptian Stories, 34t 8-11; 38,10; 3,5 2029 8;
30,11-319
15; 499 2; Id. j and 12; 79 10; 99 12; 109 4; 139 13 Erichsen, 58,6-9; Papyrus 69,11; Harris Krk., 1,695; III, 15P
1; 48t
4
5 6 7
Ibid. v 518-532.
Gardiner, Griffith Cernyt ion Grammar, Sign List, Two Hieroglyphic and Petrie, Coptic 775a. 269b; 9 C"erny, opp cit 128. p Etymological Dictionaryt Egyptian 0.1. Papyri 316; from Tanistliplo. 171XVIO, Dict-
Cnmp A Coptic
Ibid.
l2q
11 'Vb- 9 Ig 51112 Ibid. 9 511-516. loc. ci 13 Gardiner, 14 Loret in Lefebvre, example, 3Kgmi XII (1952)9 laff. shelters at Mahasna; Garstang, 15 See, for 16 As note the predynastic 5-8;
pl. IV.
17 Rr-k- 9 It
18 Ibid. It v It 19 Ibid*t It It It
49,1049,13-141212 13-14125,8216v 17257-9 15cit.. 939 209 34 (P. Prisse, 9 8p 10); 38 (P. Prisse, 109 8)e
loc.
28 'Wb.t It 160,1-136 41; Crum, OP. cit. 9 66. 29 Cernyq op. cit-,
30 Gardiner, 31 Gardiner, Onom,.* IIj 206*-207*. late rmtian Stories, 139 13-15DynastY, Misc-
Great
Tomb Robberies
of
Eaptian Egyptian
Gardiner, 119 pl. XXXII9 B. Me 100529 11,18; MY 41,10; 489 15; 499 2; grk*t ellanies 34 Erichsenq Demotic note British 35 n-9 36 E. g.; 37 n-t 38 Ibid., 39 Ibid, 40 Urk., It 6. Demotisches Papyri in Glossarp 132; Griffithp Library, the John Rylands
See also; Glanvillep Catalogae Museum It xxxi note 1. Y 513,3-510; 58,10; 60,16;
of Demotic
1105,5-6;
2158Y 16#
2; 283t
15;
2859 10;
ISO
Iv
282,6;
2839 2; 283,8;
284,6;
2859 16;
286,
3; 287,7;
2909 4300,3; 302,16; 3039 15P-177ff-, See further under Irzytv above bwt p. 165ff,; Md bwt-ntr r-Pr 299t 16.
be translated 47 Vrk. t IV, 863,5-2Inr hd nfr n Cnw should properly "limestone" but most of the works of Tathmosis III at Karnakp including the Festiigal Complexy are of sandstone, See further under bwt-nrq below p. 182. 48 Ibid*, 49 Ibidep 50 Erichsen, I7v 2979 46P 5I, 8p 23 (Insc. pl. IV). 3009 2. Papyrus Harris I,
Le Tombeau de Panehsy, 21p fig. 10. 53 Baud and D=iotont Le To3abean d'Amonmos, pl. 2B. The owner of the tomb was 54 roucartl of Amenhotep of the wb's. For this god and hie relationa priest ship to the wbs of Aman see farther under 039 above P- 69-7055 irk-P 56 Ibid., 57 Ibid. IVP 439 10IV9 328,4; 353,2.
111,35,6; 389 10- See also under 4wt-ntr, below P-1134j 58 Examples are nulnerousp eg.; Mop 1119 1529 c; KRI9 Iq 206,8; 216,11; Erichsenv Rapport Chevrier 26. 59 Erichsen, op. cit-, 349 10Vt 228t 11; Gardinerp Late Egyptian Miscellaniesp The Wilbour pl. =IV; (1933-1934), II 42; Papyrus, Bnxyere 56; 25139 17; Gardiner, op. citep 12,6; IVY 59; 61; Marciniak, Deir El-Bahari, 1,69; sur les Fouilles -le de Deir El-Meodineh and Driptany.
a Karnakq
1,31 pr-113(t)
TIC C'73 1
Dyn. XI
IL-13 1.0
Dyn. XX7
of the
two examples
of pr-hi(t)
occurs
in
the Eleventh
accounts of Hekanakhtep in which five pieces of willow-wood James has noted that the pr-bs was the rear are said -to be m pr-h3.3 4 As has been noted part of a house "perhaps even the out-houses,,,, above5 the only other 6a which is in a wb3t temple-context. The second example of pr-4z(t) is in the Dream Stela of Tanutamun 7 Although this can at Napata. location given in the account elsewhere is found for a mast of a term which is not outside
to a part of the Amun temple and refers the etymology of the torm would suggest identifiedl not be firmly that it was either the rear part of the temple or a building at the back of the main temple building. Possibly building pr-4s(t) could be used for the rear part of any kind
of
or complex. Since the term was in use in both the Eleventh Dynastiesq it is likely that further and the Twenty-Fifth examples hopefully in contexts of the te= may come to lightp from which a identification more cartain of the nature of the pr-h3(t) can be made. I Jamesp The Rekanakhte uments, pl. 12, Vp 2, Papers and other Early Middle Kingdom Doo-
5 See Wb3q p. 66-676 James, op. cit., pl. 12, vo 3o 7 Urk. p 111,68,13-
ISZ
pb3
Dyne XX 13 Ic 00%
I E3Xj
Dyne XX2
Dyn, XX3
=ell" -1
termp known only from three as yet unpublished ostracap was taken has been adoptby Helck4 to mean "veneer" and the same i-nterpretation 5 ed by Janssen. the In Ost. Berlin 11260 the pLi3 is linked with the door-frameg 6 4trip in the phrase ps 4tri and p3y*f pbs "the bLtri and its pbs" it ocburs in the expression in Ost. IPAO pb3 n ps abs "the pb5 of -704 the sbs .7 8 to have been Kemp has pointed out that door--frames were unlikely Mis the lintel or veneered and Euggests that the p:4-s wasp in facty either (me htrw in the door. In view of the fact that 4tri the threshold of L- -- 9 both jambs and lintelp the pbs is the plural) seems to have included In Osto Deir El-Medineh 289 to have been the threshold. most likely 10 - wooden thresholds the p45 is made of wood for doorways have been and 11 found at Deir El-Medineho
1
2 3
4
Prices
Materialen
Wirtschaftsgeschichte
391-392*
P-195ff10 Janssen, op. cit-9 39111 Eege, Brayerev Rapport sur les Fouilles 37P fig*25-
de Deir El-Iledineh
(19
IS3
There are only two Imown examples of this word and both are in the is from the archives form, nkibwt. The first of the writing plural the columns temple of Neferirkare at Abusir and describes mortuary inscription of of that templep while the second is in a building Amenhotep IIIf Nkibwt is ecially It referring to the construction of the temple at Luxor. to the word nlbt "flower espof the lotus, related 1 3 (Prom the Nineteenth the closed bud. n Dynasty #m t4 and used of the lotus ) bud and the flower respectively. to assume that 4bwt was used to desthose popular in with in closed-bud capitals. the Old and Middle
would thus be reasonable cribe lotifo3: m columns, particularly The lotus bud column was very and recurred in 6 depicted
Kingdoms lotus
the Ptolemaic
capital
were often
Columns with an open tomb-scones but few actual ex#. L: period. in a context columns the the twelve J tporch. of leaves no court
amples have been found. The Fifth Dynasty writing doubt of that it refers temple the mortuary these
occurs
which
the great
columns
of the
"vestibule" of
them was able to reconstruct they had been wooden lotus bud columns on limestone wereq at Abusir, papyrus the determinatives signs T as lotiform as 4bwt of 4bwt are'not lotus bud colcolumns which were des-
a contemporary
Unfortunately
plant and was therefore but would not have been a suitable that these column. It is possible scribed ative as of 21tbt an open lotus "lotus" in
used have been transa: i'ved in the pub10 This hijroglyph depicts a papyrus . used as an ideogram for a papyriform column deterainative htiratic which signs for a lotiform should be trandeterminefor
flower,
The second writing word by the WSrterbuch, is impossible this to trace later
of 4bwtp 12 is of
this
Dynasty
since
example
to describe
papyriform
1*3+
columns
and it
would
have or
been
interesting in meaning
to
have
had
evidence
as
second III
occurs temple
south
pedestal
Luxor. in
Arnm-Rep
a great
sandstone A 11%/01 II is
of
this
inscription pronoun
unusual. is to to this
group
,rbjw. s. not
addition the
nhbwt
ought in
befor4
determinative. word
w43 was used specify There and all formp (the must the
nl)bwt
areq those
in either or
the
temple
of
Luxor
(the
hypostyle so it the
some or
of
determinative
the which
certainly 4bwt
papyriform-cluster
described
the the in
Old Kingdom
word
for for
came can
Dynasty lack of
intervening the
period. lotus
the in
largely word
superceded nhbwt
the
otherg
since
they
4bwt
of
papyrifomm
beenp
more usuallyp
described the in
reading the
plural.
lacking but_4bwt was probably evidence is unfortunately used of both types of lotiform column, that with the open flower as just as w54 was used to describe both well as the closed-bud varietyp types of papyriform column. Written that nlbwt is such a rarely found word can be easily texts are generally of the New Kingdom explained as detailed building column was most commonin the Old and Middle Kingwhile the lotiform The fact doms. If more building inscriptions had survived intact from the
1,36 then no doubt periods earlier would have been augmented. 1 Posener-Krieger 11. 2 Urk-p IVP 1712p2. templep This textp from the pedestal of in full has also been published to the to P. U. Griffithp 121. ) and the part relevant presented (Die Palmen im, Alten Agyptenp 36. ) is quoted by Wallertp columns (Die Belegstellenp 429p ref. 2949 4-)the. W6rterbucho III and 'MT the missing Moret restored sign as and this was followed of Luxor south wall by Moret (Studies the the number of known writings of nhbwt
and Do Cenival,
Papyrip
pl. XXXIIA9
by Wallert
but is almost certainly wrong. The WO"rterbuch restored the sign as the 4 bird (Gardinerp Gra=arp Sign-list, G. 21) which is supported by the later publication of the Fifth Dynasty text. The surface of the sione upon which the missing sign was inscribed is now completely lost and no trace of the original sign remains. The variety of forms given by the different for the detwriters of both wh3, and abwt in this text only serves to w emphasize the need for true epigraphic copies. The WO"rterbuch Belegstellen gives wrong forms for both determinatives while erminatives
Wallert
of whsw correct but that of nlbwt wrong. Since there appears to be no published photograph of the text (Pmp III 336. ) 1 checked the original at Luxor. The determinative of wh3w of 4bw Is a papyriform cluster column.
has that
297Y 10- Dya-19 onwaud5 ID-9 III 307p 3-8. End of the New Kingdom and Graeco-Roman period. 6 Borchardtr Die Aegyptische PflanzenAulep 3-177 Posener-Krie"gert Archives N; ferirkarep 111 435, note y. See also Kaplonyp Orientalia 41 (1972)p 203p whop for some reasonp reads 8 9 the word as xibbwt rather than 4bwt. Borchardt, Das Grabden1mal des KO"nigs Nefer, -ir-kell-ret Posener-Krieger 20-22. 1
and De Cenival, op. citop pl&=II4o 10 Ibid. p pl. XXXIIA, 11* 11 Pyrp 1223e. On the other hand it is also possible that nhbWt because of the use of wld acquired the w3d sign as determinative to describe the papyriform cluster column which bears a strong type resemblance to the lotus bud column. Examples of the fo=er
13b
the mortuary temples of Niuserre and Sabure (Borchardtq Das Grabdenkmal des K6'nigs-Ne-user-relp 11,, Das Grabdenkmal des Knigs Slashu-rell It
in
12
abb- 5. and Borchardt, 539 abb- 59-61. ) n., 119 294t 4Urk-9 IVP 1712,2.
13 14
See footnote
79 abb. in
109
two forms
similarity early
on Egyptian de 11ordre
Seep for example, Foucarty Histarchitecture. lotiformep passimg where boh fo=s are treated
15
13'1
T-pr Dyn. IV, VIq XI9 2adol 'Into, XVIII9 XIX Dvn. VI,
.4=21 xxii
XIII,
XVIII,
XVIII
4=--v-3 XVIIIP I
L-3 49=> 10
Dyn. XVIII,
The etymology
of r-pr
who concludes that it is not to but rather since r-pr was first applied as 'Ila porte do sortiellp in an Old Kingdom tomby out of which the spirit false-door of the a Gradually the dead man could come to accept the funerary offerings* offering-place structure "chapel" "temples"o This of theory of Vergote's of seem to be an accurate the use of r-pr. It willp thereforep would of and it developed the tomb. into
10
the supera nichop then a room within The tern hadv thereforej come to be used of a transferred to other chapels and applied to
was then
here
the textual to present evidence to support this himselfy whose article was primarily etymological to do so. for the use of the term for a false-door
The evidence
comes from
the Old Kingdom at Saqqara. In particular a text describing in the Fifth Dynasty tomb of Ti reads "Bringing offering-bearers 11 Ti. " The Sixth produce to the '4T9-3Iffl of the "sole courtier" 14:?, 12 Dynasty tomb of Sneferunefer has a similar formula using -. 1 * 13 In the tomb of Kagemniv formulae have "the chsmber (, It) of the L-LrIIq R-pr is also used of the offering chapel in the Fourth Dynasty tomb 14 of Debhen at Giza. This was lined with limestone. This use of r-pr is not restricted to the tombs of private individuals since a royal 15 funerary chapelf of king Menkauhorp is also called a r-pr. It can be seen, thereforet that, even by the Fourth Dynastyp r-pr could be used of a "chapel" 16 the usual torm was rwt. as well as for the false-doorp for which
1,19 R-pr was also being employedp by the Old Kingdomp as a term for
of temple and occars as such in the decrees issued for the benefit a to as r-pr the temple of Min at Koptos. This temple is often referred 17 implies Idu clearly the decree for the Vizier "this r-pr" pn and 18 (pl. ). bwt-ntr being as important that r-prw were to be regarded as as This and bwt-ntr question as to what the differencep Gardiner once remarked "that"r-pr textp in which r-pr temple of the are used side by sidep raises if anyv is between the two terms, seems sometimes to imply a temple'1*19 This view has been
secondary rank or a provincial 20 by Vandersleyen it to have been founded on rejected who considers fortuitous to regard a L-pr as being a part He prefers occurrences. of a hwt-ntr and cites an example from the Book of the Dead in support 1 Wsir ink hm n r-pr. k Imy-lb n 4wt-ntr1,21 this theory. of which je suis le pretre he translates de ton lieu do culte as. 110 Osiris, 22 this is based on a Unfortunately qui est dans ton enclos sacre, 11 does not mean "which is in" but is a wrong translation since imy-lb 23 The text shouldp thereforev be translated noun "favouritell asp 110 . I am the servant of your r-pro the favourite Osiris, of your bwt-ntrilt implying This a specific a degree is of equivalence between textst the two terms, particularly those by other
This is the as both 1wt-ntr and r-pr. by Tuthmosis case with the temple of Ptah at Karnak which was rebuilt "Now his majesty found this r-pr in brick........ III. ehis majesty order24 for him in sandstone"* Both the temples ed that this tLwt-ntr be built of Amada and Elephantine, also this referred 4wt-ntr to by both which his which terms. fatherp in were completed "Now it the King order that by Amenhotep 119 are was his majesty who beautified of Upper and Lower Egyptp Mon2 the great terms name of his in this r-pr for father ever".
in which
kheperrev the
are known to have 26 been used. These include the temple of Osiris the temple at Abydos, temple at Buhen (in a Nineteent13,. of Mat at Kaxnakt27 the northern 28 Dynasty text)t the festival complex of Tuthmosia III at Karnak29 itself030 The fact that the Amun temple, and the Karnak temple of A= which the major should that state cult-centre have been so often the New Kingdom and in later periodst described as a r-pr is a clear indication in status to a hwt-ntro was in no wa; inferior in
There
be established both
a T-pr
ISCI
the
seem to
temples. r-p were in some way regarded as subordinate This shows the weighing of incense in the presence of Payemre with the deseriptive label 11Reckoning the incense for the 1%-prw which (? lmyw-7jt) the pr of Aimin, in the pr-4 to are subordinate of the 31 bwt-ntr.,, Facing the scene are the names of the r-p which include the pr of Amun itself, the prw of Mat (? )o Khonsup Monthu temples and several poyal mortuary 32 ibly) the temple of I=or. All of these temples would have been under the administrative control of the temple of Amunq whith is why they to the pr of the god. Howeverv each are described as being subordinate 114wt-ntr" or 11bwt#1 of these could elsewhere have been called showing that there were no distinctions in either size or function bwtween a Enpr and a bwt-ntr. This can also be illustrated by a building text of Tuthmosis III from Karnak. "I (the king) pleased him (Amun) by making for him ..... 33 4wt-ntr In this text the is on the east of this 1--pr. to r , sea the Karnak temple of Ajmxnv while 4wt-nt_r is, probablyp the much 34 "Eastern Templesi. smaller Another ing" text shows that a EMpr could even be regarded Uinnakhte of their dutdes in as "containdescribes the bwt-ntr A statue of the official a bwt-ntr. him as "one who informs every official 35 of every r-pr. is It is unnecessary, therefore, the two terms. appearance ntr) criteria Ptah M and on the West Bank as well as (poss-
from Koptos
to attempt it
Both were used for a temple nor its sizet but the fact that in which offerings could
and a place
6o every temple in Egypt it follows that any 4wt-nt could be described as a r-pr and vice versa. 36 R-pr often occurs in the plural form as a generic term for "temples" but it seems always to have retained its meaning as an offoring-place and the link between a :-pr and offerings is stressed in texts of all periods. "One who knows the offerings 37 Intef 9 son of Myt). "Controller city" (Twelfth 'Tsernakhta of divine Dynasty did title of the r-prwit in (Eleventh Dynasty stela
were relevant
of
whatever
laws
1+0
establishing divine
the rule,
r-prwj
their
to be received in
"One who provisions 41 Dynasty statue ). Describing forms a former of men, offerings 42 1). Harris R-pr was originally
the r-prwII
of
anarchy;
"They made the gods like the the r-prw. " (Papyrus presented within a false-doorp then chapel an offering could be made* It couldp the result a 1wt-ntr
any place in which offerings andf by extensiony be appliedv to any temple with therefore, quite accuratelyp legitimately, that one building could be describedl as both and a r-pr. R-pr occurs 44 Coptic scripts. This is the meaning of "temple" in both
with
the demotic43
and
one of
found
writings Dynasty,
of jnr
in
the I,
the Eighteenth
e9go; 'grkep
Les Mast-
Empire, 394, bottom; Clare and Vandier, Textes abas do Itancien de la premiere Periode intexmediaire 479 et de la XIeme Dynastio, 339 11; Mariette, Abydos IIP Pls-30; 39; Urk. p IV, 100,11; 1639 8; 1699 7; 1759 9; 268,13; 363P 12; 366,15; 7539 2; 767Y 1; 8639 2; 9929 4; 1187P 11; 12259 3; 1252t 17; 12949 7; 13709 5; 14329 13; 1441,9; 1511,4; ERIP It 279 4; 283,14; is 360P 11; Abd El-Razikt also found in the plural JEA 60 (1974)t 1519 5. This
grouping
(KRI9 It
2409
Sethe, 4; Vercoutterp
biographiques
writing Clare
occasionally
singulart
IV,
occurs
and Vandier, OT- ci -P 44,31,3; 44P 19; 45Y 5; 45t 20; 49,4; Urk., Up 1045t
18 j 19; 1151,14;
%+I
11569 3; 14419 13; 14439 1; 1444P 145 Sethe, opl cit-, 739 21; Urk., IV, 208,9; 7699 5; 7729 4; 8359 7; 1 8399 17; 879,5; 1376,12; 1447,13; 14959 14; British M-useump Wb., Belegstelleng 11,588, (ref. Hieroglyphic Texts, VIP Pl-47,14; 397,6). Also in the plural formsv4::"c--3 (jrk-t It 304P 18; -Sethiaj. c=> i C-3 c-3 (Urk, IV9 102t 2 and 10); Qbideq 69,18); pp. cit., -. r. 3 v 111 I IV9 913,2); and 'eff: L% (Ir-k-p VIIIt 43)6 Usually in the pluralv Sdthe, 02- ci -, 33P 4; Urk, q IV, 1579 8 (singular); 387,2; 483,12; 20279 3; 20299 14; KRIp It 42v 8 and 9; 49,7 (singular); 126,2; Gardinerv late Egyptian Miscellanies, 6,9; Erichsenq Papyrus Harris 1,7,9; 129 7; 91,13; Gardiner, F-A27 (1941), 707 All the following examples are in plural fo=mso Irk., IV, 2489 9; 1095,9; 1184,10; 1186,9; Mariettep op, ci -t 1P P1952,16; Chicago Universityq Oriental Institute, The Bubastite Portalp pl. 169 42; Vandermleyen, Rev. d'Eg. 19 (1967)9 pl. 9, A, 18; Chassinat,
Edfou, 8 Usually It in 229. the pluralt op. 1!rk*t IVP 96P 5; 150P 7; 8349 13 (singular); Urk-P plural)* Int 669 12*
Urk. 9 111,35,1; 10 Vergotef US 91 (1964)t 11 Steindorf, 12 Mariette, 13 Von Bissing, 14 Irk. * Les Mastabas loc. cit.. loc* cit.
Empire,
3941, bottom,
Iq 209 59 15 Lb_id. p Ig 2129,3Urk. 9 It 281,1; 2829 2; 2929 2. Osiris 1,2791 4at Abydos, Ibid., Similarly for the temple of
18 Urk-v
It
19 Gardiner,
21 Navillev
70, note 1.
cit-, 1489 note 148. Con. Diet* , 18. 1. It pl. CCIV9 Chap*1809 12 (Pa)o Todtenbucht
20 Vandersleyen,
22 Vandersleyen, 23 T-q
24 Urk. 9 IVP 879P 525 Urk-9 IV9 1295,7 and 826 Sethe, op. c 76,12; -9 Urk. j IVO 100,11. Cf. hwt-nt-r, P-178; 164-
1+2
IV9 15119 4- Cf. 38,8 (n! P-r); 157t 8; IV9 8639 8- Cf.
hwt-ntr,
It
32 Ibid*,
1,94-96.
chicht6 33 rk-, IV, 834P 13- Seet Barguet, 34 See, Ell., II, pi. XVII, 6. 35 1_rk-, IV, 1187,1136 Eg., Sethev Op- c-it-, 33,4; 484,10; 10; 1049 7,413,2; 2027,3; Erichsen, Mariette, Abydos, I, Papyrus Harris OP- cit-,
zur Wirtschaftsge
78,9; 1151,14;
Rrk.,
IV,
102,
1392,3;
1443,1;
240,12; PL, 529 16; KRIp 1,126,2; Loc. 7,9; 12,7; Chicago Universityq , 44,31,3-
cit., 37 Clere and Vandiert 38 Urk-P VII, 4339 Ibid-P Ld-, 40 P? 41 Ibid*, IV, IV, 1225,2-31184,10-
1045t 3-6.
42 Erichsen,
91,13op. cit., 43 Mot Demotisches Glossa 1 245298b; Cerny, Coptic Etymolomcal Dict44 CrumalA Coptic Dictionary, Vergote, loc. cit. * ionaryq 138- See alsop in greater detail,
1+3
rwt
Dyne IV 1 Dyne IV 2 Dyn. V3 5 . e 12;
Dyn. Ch
V,
VI4
Dyno V or VI
Dyn o VI
Dyne VI7 9
Dyn. VP Dyn. VI
13
Dyn, vi
CU <==>
<=> CM 1
Dyno V,
12
M
15
-.---=> C-3
Dyn.
V,
rn
16
Dyn.
XI'4
2 C-3
Dyns17
<=>
tu; p
Dyn. XI,
Dyn. X?
<=> i= r,=:; i
Xlx
--a <=> c, um \\ 22 Dyn o XVII, 25 26 N OK. Dyne XIX 28
xi I
Dyn. XVIII9 xix Dyne XVII, 20
Dyno XII
Dyne XVII,
19 2nd Int o
21
23
Dyne XVIII
C. N
24
Dyne XVII,
N, y27
31 Dyn. XXV 34
by the W6rterbuch. The 35 first is a tena for the false-door of a tomb while the second is 36 translated In view of the fact that the basic as "gate" or 11doorio. that they are, in meaning of each rwt is the same, it seems likely Two entries with the spelling fact, the same term, applied entrances. Consequently at different both are included times in to different this entry* types of
There do S? however, seem to be a distinction between the terms , (qevo) which will be discussed below, and between rwt xwt and rryt and rwyj , one of the accoutrements of the false-door. In the Old Kingdom rwt was used for the false-door of a tomb39 I 40 When it was used in such a v; ty ;mt was or a royal pyramid temple.
14-t determined false-door. by detailed signs depicting the complex design of the
This It
was notv
however,
the only
meaning
of rwt
in
was also used as a term for an actual entrance 'Irwt". This way has been found which was labelled erary temple of Queen Wedjebten to tWo 6fficials the lintel of of the Sixth doorway belongs the jambs while neath nt the figures dt. f their
and one stone dooz%came from the funat Saqqara. names and titles The on
Dynasty
and gives
"the rwt of his funerary 42 by Jequier had of the officials who suggested that the estates formed a part of the estate of the Queen. Whatever the true meaning 43 there can be no doubt that rwt is the name of the doorway of At itself. entrance. In the Pyramid 44 in additiong rwt Ist. texts, also, both rwt in is used for the some kind of
on each side is the text rwt 41 (? )#,. This was discussed estate
Rwt is,
foundt
in the expression
The W5rterbuch
9nwt und pr-lid" pound noun and commented that it was t'parallel zu 45 bei Memphist. The evidence for the first and "eine Ortlichkeit these which comes from various (usually offerings in this second definition offering of meat) context formulae of
of
are provided
the Old Kiggdom in Ist. 46 from the rwt by Junk6=, references, involving the def47
brieflyp was discussed, the W6rterbuch gave several Two of these is presumably are titles that
none of which are very helpful. Ist, 48 while the third the rwt inition
on which
is based, since it describes Sokar-Osiris in as "preeminent 49 I the rwt ist of 1wt-k-s,,. Vwt-k3 may be short for Vwt-k3-pth? a name of Memphis, but the epithet gives no indication og the nature of the building. The second component of the compound, Ist, is a term for 50so Ist kind of kitchen bakery the rwt some or was probably a workplace from which goods were issued for the mortuary cult to be offered at the false-doort In the Middle the rwt. Kingdom the use of the dual rwty appears. The expression rwty wrty occurs in the story of Sinuhe where it is used of the main entrance to the royal palace. At the beginning of the story 51and the rwty wrty are closed on the death of Amenemhat I when his to Sinahe to ask him to return to Egypt he says that successor writes
14-5
on his
arrival
Sinuhe
can kiss
the earth
to the palace when Sinuhe has returned king in the 'Lhnwty, he leaves the palace talled in
at the rwty wrt . and had his audience by the rwty wrty
52
and is
the house of a prince*53 Other examples of the dual form include the rwty of the pr-ns 54 Period mentions of Nekhen while a stela of the Second rntermediate the rwty ot the god Osiris the entrance to the at Abydost55presumably temple. A further example from the Middle Kingdom may occur on the jambs of the gateway
of Amenemhat II at Hermopolis which is described 56 being a sb3 c2or rwt (plural) bwt-;4ntr. This was taken by the exas 57although to be a writing the cavators of the preposition r-rwty, form would be unusual in this expression. This shows use of the plural that for it is not always possible to be certain as to whether rwty is the dual form of the noun of a component of the preposition r58 The latter have originated in the use of the former to rwtywill describe an entrance so that anything which Was "at the entrance" was "outside" Which of the two was intended of the building. must be decof the word and the determinative used* For example, a text of Amenhotep I, from Karnakq describes the 59 (sb3) on which it was inscribed door The as being r rwty 1wt-ntr. door in question (20 cubit3high) is a large monumental entrance and 60 is also called "the southern indicating that it stood, originsb3,'P on the south side of the Amun temple and probably allyv marked the 61 to the temple complex, main southern entrance Rwty herd is deter. '. by TTTT that this is not the preposition mined but so it is likaly spelling is the dual noun, It used to describe one of the principal 62 entrances to the temple temenos. ided on the context, the
has been suggested by Sethe that rwty was the word used for a pylon before the introduct-don Dynasty. of bbnt in the Eighteenth Since the earliest known examples, from the story of Sinuhe, describe a palace, not a temple, this can not be proved. Most surviving examples of rwty and rwty wrty date from the Eighteanth Dynasty or later and so are contemporaneous there does with bbnt, In addition seem to have been a distinction made between the rwty of a temple and the bbnt of the same building, In the reign of Tuthmosis I, both the Fourth and Fifth Pylons the this temple king, of Aman at Karnak before the Fourth The surviving were erected* Pylon, is stated to be "at obelisk the rwty
of
of
14-6
. f" Another
that text
is
to
say,
in front
of
to
the work of Tuthmosis I gives 64 details of the two bbnt on either side Of the rolumned hall and cont5 inues with a description of the flagstaffs at the rwty of the bwt-ntr It is interesting that the same text should use both rwty and bbnt in to describe the same pylon (the Fourth). The such close proximity which reason for this is that both the Fourth and Fifth Pylons could be calin that led bbnt reign, but onljt the Fourth,, the main entrance to the temple
describes
the Fourth as a rwty, and it was outside Pylon that the obelisks and the flagstaffs were erected. The same pylon is again described as a rwty by Tuthmosis III who 66 in the space before it* also constructed obelisks At Karnak, in particularp there could be several The main rwty. could the west, along the 67 temple axis and this was the rwty wrty of the temple* There was also 68 a rwty on the southern side of the temple, as is shown by the door of Amenhotep I, presumably on the line of the existing southern app69 roach, and there was a "western rwty" which led into the palace (1-h) named Nil-w3*11-r-ft to the north-west probably situated of the 70 approach to the Eigbtee2th Dynasty temple. entrance will always In the context ortant ion entrance of Karnak of the temple, wrty therefore, rwty was used of an impWith the except4 of Amendescribof the main entrance. to the temple have been from
be described
and rwty
the two probably nearly always coincided. Further temple rwty include a mention in a damaged text hotep II in a flagpole niche of the Eighth Pylon at Karnak, ing the erection
the rwty (only the determinative of the flagpoles at 71 is preserved) In the reign of this king the Eighth of the bwt-nt . Pylon was the southern entrance to the temple. Rwt is also found in texts from the temple of Seti I at Abydos. 72 In one case braziers (bmw) are to be set up it a rwt while shrines 7'_ to be built were of stone at the r*ty of the lord of Ta-Djeser. At the temple of Razesses M at Medinet Habu two of the fladpold dedications rFvty wrty on the first of his bwt-ntr.,, pylon 74 state that the flagpoles the term Cnce again the arellat is being used for
of attemple. to Amun at the rwty of the the union of the reed and
At Rawa, king Tahai-qs: 'r1made obeisance 75 bwt-nt and the Shabaka stone describes
14-1
the the
papyrus PtolemaicBoth
at
the period
rwty rwt
of
the
tLwt of
In
date
t'77
royal
was noted
above
Sinuhe
and the
New Kingdom. of the Vizier from the tomb of Rekhmire the wrtY text "in term
was the
the
"entrance"
and
as having In at the
and that of
a synonym tomb of
Thebes,
Dynasty, 80
aa official
goes
make his
beside
therefore, In the
for
the
entrance to describe
to
a buildthe
false-door this the often palace ways erary the period Middle
the
tomb
mythologicql example, in
onward Kingdom by It
entrance found
from contexts 81 From heaven. dual entrance for from other the form, to a
the
qualified or within temple name rwt. Rwt should the temple. the of
adjective
main used
dynastic from
doorfunbear
buildings
apart
example
Queen Wedjebten
detailed
no door-frames
for
than
the
does
demotic
or
Coptic.
1 2 3
des Alten
Reiches,
19 44;
PL-10
(No-
1384).
of given
the
determinatives in the
of
this
public. with
collated
the
originals
Cairo
Museum (No.
]Llu=ayp Saqqara Mastabas, I, pl. Vll; Hassang Glza, 1-929-1930,1099 fig-10? (Urke, 1,234,16); Urk., 1,175,12; Pyr. 9 1638a. 5 Junker, Giza, XIq 876 Urk-, 1,107,2.
14-2
7 8 9 Borchardt, Pyre, urk., 603a. 1,99,16. 603a with d'Oudjebtent 1 (1933)v '; op. cit., I, 114*and pl*28 (Urk*j 1,86,16).
10 Pyr. 9 1638a; 2067b. 11 Pyre, 1713a (see also 12 Jequierq La Pyramide 13 Urk- 9 19 220 1,11 e Rev* dlEgeq 14 Drioton,
and n, reversed). 22, fig. 28 (Urk., x+6 (The text, (Insc. by Pierret
1,2739
4)*
pl. IX,
louvre
stela
Louvre, 119 inaccuratelyp C-159 was published, 29)e Mere (in Nimsq Studies in Honor of John A. Wilsong 71-72, notes) lion E*9) has pointed out that the initial sign of this word is the (: [idvq (Gardiner, E. 23) not the bubalis Grammar, Sign List, can be confirmed des Mittleren from the photoII,
This as was given b: Pierret. (Driotong graph op, citeg pl. IX), 153;
15 lange
and SchAferg Grab- und Denksteine IV, pl. XL3:p 15. Gardinerv Late Egyptian see; Gardiner,
Reiches,
16 Sinuhe R. 9;
Miscellanies, jDramm ,
of rwt as a determinative 17 Sinuhe B. 189; B*28518 Roeder, 19 Marietteg 20 Urkop IV, MDAIK 3 (1932), Abydos, 43,4;
289 fig-13-
22 IE-rhovIV9 56,323 Gardinerv 24 Urk-, 25 Urkot JEA 38 (1952), IW, 1105,16. IV9 1386,16 (Faulkner, of rwty 11,598 , 29. 190-359 be Con. Dict. 9 147 quotes ); 1867,5"outside". (ref-404t 5); Mariette, this refer19 pL.
op.
cit.,
409 a, 12. 27 Erman, ZAS 38 (1900)9 28 Ma=iette, 29 KRI, It OP,, Cit-9 177t 1-
Oriental
Institute,
Maoadamq The Temples of Kawa, 19 P1.8p 9 (Insc31 15c. 7AS 39 (1901)t Pls-I--IIt 32 Breastedq
14-q
33 Piehl,
Inscriptions, Edfouq
11,8411,31-
34 Chassinat,
11,4049
1-101 Faulknerg
Maspero,
ON Cit-P
PSBA XI
147304ff-
37 T2-9 119 4079 12-1511,407,9-10; (1889)9 389 9 and 11; 99P 16. 1.1079 loco 232; Pyrqq cite* 20Pbo
43 Wb-, YOL510,4-944 PYr* 9 603a; 1638a; 1713a. 45 Kb--, II, 404v 4-546 Urk-, 47 Junker, 48 Pierret, riften It 1759 12; Murray, loc, cite. 11,35 (C-176); Wreszinski, Aegyptische Insch179, V, 2. op. c pl. VII; Junker, loc. cit..
OP- cit-,
5). Por further 49 Wb., Belegstell! n, 11,598 (ref-404t Ibid, 11,598 (ref-404,5) and possibly rwt 11st see; It 44; Pl-10 (No, 1384)OP. cit-, 50 Wb-s It 52 Ibid*, 53 Ibid., 1279 7-9. B, 189* B, 28551 Sinuhe R. 9.
of writings Borchardt,
54 Lange and SchXerq op- cit-v 119 153; IV9 Pl-XLIq 1555 Mariette, OP* Cit-9 II,? L-30,37* 56 Roederv loc. cit-* AS 67 (1931), 85, note 557 nLide, 28, note 2; 1det . 58 Wb-9 11,405,6-8. The blocks from this doorway were found in the 59 Urk,, IV, 43,4"cour de la cachette" at Karnak, see; PM., 11,133-13460 Urk-9 IV, 43,12, 61 Barguet, 90488 and note 2. op. cit., 62 Sethe, Die Bau- jXnd Denkmalsteine der alten Agypter und ihre Namen
63 ! r-k--v IV, 93,6. Faulkner, Con, Diet*, 84, took this to be a M of the dual of bljnt, but in this context it is more writing
160
likely 11,75.
to be for
rwty.
For the
location
of these
obelisks
see; LM9
64 !irk., IV, 56,1. 65 Lb IV, 56,3 -, -id 66 Ibid., IV, 642,12. See also PM, 11,74-7567 Lacau and Chavrier, op. cit., 108,11 and 12. 68 Urk-, IV, 43,4 and 12; 1332,19. 69 Lacau and Chevrier, op. citop 98,19. 70 Ibidep 71 Urk., 103, no See also Gitton, IV, 1332,19, :_IFAO74 (1974)9 63-73-
72 KRI, 19 171,1177v 1. For a rut (? ) in the Xiwt. &ntr of Ptah-Sokar see; Mariette, 1440, ap 12o Op- cit-, 74 Chicago University, Oriental Institute, Medinet Habu, 119 Pl-1039, 5 and 16. 73 ERI, I, 75 Macadam, op. cit., I, loco citop 76 Bre"ted, 77 Chassinat, 79 Ibidep cit.; 78 Urk-P IV, 1105P 16. 1867,5* Late Egyptian Miscellanies, 39,6. Erman,, 1gypter, 63, of the king. loc. pl. 8p 9. Piehl, loc. cit,; Wb.,, 11,404,2.
80 Gardiner,
161
rryt
Dyn * VI 1 ."I
r -3
O*K. in
g>b
6=0
1 st.
Int.
Int.
Dyne XII
789 JQ644
10 C-i XXI 3
Dyne XIIP
44 1
. 06
xviii
Dyne XVIII 11
xxvi
12 Dyne XVIII C-3 Dyne XX15 4
S6 1-261 44 cl m9MM
Dyn.
% 1 c-->
4="=>
to be resolved this word is that of the concerning 16 The W5rterbuch the reading reading* queried xMt in view of the the number of writings with the double r and also those which omitted problem the word as Mt, we Gardinerl7gave under the same entry as rwtv while 18 Faulkner, who again reads the word as, rwyt, has separate entries 6erny 19 took the for rwyt and rwt. Howeizer, reading of the word to be rryt, above. which wpuld be supported contain by the majority of the writings quoted due to and are piobably (qov. ) while the Late confusion with the similarly spelled word rwt Ck e-=>[F=u Egyptian the earlier writings . c=> ci and particularly variant would suggest that a double r was intended at the beginning of the in which only one r occur are again probably due to word* Writings Both of the writings with only the. b6 sign Im r rryt from come of Imaunedjeh in the reign of Tuthmosis III, showing that various spellings could be used for one 20 the same text. wordp even within The balance of the evidence would seem to be in favour of a confusion with rwt. the title hasp accordinglyp been adopted in this study. Rkyt occurs in texts from the Old Kingdom to the Twenty-Sixth Imy-r Dynasty. It is used most frequently in the title rryt which 21 is first found in the Sixth Dynasty and is the title of several 22 Intermediate Period. officials It continues at Dendera in the First 23 to be used in the Middle Kingdomp although it is never a very common title. In the New Kingdom one important holder of the title is the 24 Iny-r Theban official Imaunedjeh who was both a rryt and 37myreading rryt and this Those which the w are rave
The first
15Z
Other officials of the same dynasty also held the simple nsw. 27 26 There would seem to have it recurs in the Saite period. title and been more than one official to the rryt attached since an Eighteenth 28 Dynasty text talks However titles of the rmt of the =t. such as this, in no matter how often they may occur, are not very helpful rt deciding on the nature of the building as to the involved. function of the rryt is found An important in indication
25
a code of behaviour
they the wish text is that their rryt also has pr-n of
for
and that
to be rec-
rryt
officials to be
turn
the
evidence
Eighteenth held
official
Imaunedjeh
he was also a wbm nsw32 and wam The fact nsw tpy. and has undoubtedly nedjeh had such a combination of titles
to the confusion in the past between the rryt and the
33
that
grryt
Imau-
contributed 34
as an-
other
had the titles 3, wtLmnswt wj1m,-- n nsw, 38 tpy n nsw37 and wm tpy n rryt. Although ImaunedJehIs titles officialq
Intef,
35
36
whm are
never
the fact that both men were wbmw has compounded with 'Irryt led to the mistaken identification title, of the rryt of Imainedjeh's in Intef's titleg To add im-r rryt and the Irryt wtLm_tpy n -rryt. to the confusionp duties among the list of Intef's are the state-
of the
g44r6-3 n
group
09
40 This 0
and
to be a writing there is no evidence that the sign tk can be read as IIt wasp however, often confused with -: J,'6becaase of the similarity of the two signs in hieraticP41 and the group is, thereforep to be understood This of rryt. as a writing Intefy means that the official among whose titles was w4m tpy n 'rryt, duties in the rryt. This does not, howeve=9 necessitate performed . the identification that they were in of close the twop although proximity it is p1robably as both appear to assume to have been situated fair
)53 buildingg the entrance to an official often the palace. at to a palace or office, the area immThe 'Irryt was the "approach" before the door, while the rryt was a reception-room within ediately the is shown by the buildhg, consistent use of the dete=inative as . highly likely M for rryt. It is, thereforep that the duties of the The would meet and overlap. in the 'Irryt wbmw would greet visitors and petitioners and lead them to the rryt where they would wait before being condudted in to the officials connected with presence of the official rryt would with whom they had business. in use to the Howevert from to include buildings. Originally official seem to have been confined of administrative appears to have been extended the two areas
reception-rooms
houses. Early examples of this are rooms in private 42 43 to the Eighteenth Dynasties but these give and Nineteenth indidation In the Twentieth Dynof the function of the rryto
his idle lifep asty a text advising a scribe to reject remarks that 44 he has made for himself in the brewers' in a rryt quarter, while, love-songs daep the rryt for of similar seems to be a meeting-place 45 lovers. 46 Cerny has suggested that rryt may be related to the Coptic te= "cell, 3: oom,,647 Essentiallyp or antechamber thereforep rryt was used to describe a reception-room to administrative the officesp attached usually within later, it, palace, although came to be used for a room in a private dwelling. Rryt does not seem to have ever occurred in a temple-context here primarilybecause it hasp in the past, been and is included confused Davies, XII. 2 3 Weillp Petriev stellenp 4 5 6 Petriev Fischer, Raraq pl. XLIII; Dendereh II, anotherp damagedt writing occurs on pl. XLII. with b6th rwt and crryt. 119 pl.
N[orman)
el-Gebrawi,
Millennium
BeCop pl. XVIIt a. 339 220 and 227 (the earliest Prissep in which to the early this Middle
exspelling
is Papyrus
of rryt
occursp
and which
151Kingdom. must, which Other versions have been are of the Middle and New Kingdoms. original 7)also of It used the is in text There from
an Old were
Kingdom
versions this
copied of rryt
(Ibid., was
spelling
983,6; lange IV, 9589 10; 961,1; and Schiifer, p Reichesq 1.303; des Mittleren IIP 310 (with Denksteine Davies Harip rryt N Cormanj de Gt El-Amarna, Cnomastique of the 1119 pls*27;
Amarnient
No*19) 3my-r
of 4A 1cD=6,,
I* inscriptions
on any Tell
Petriet
Amarna, pl*239 NO-44; Pendleburyl City of Akhenaten, III, plolXnIV9 7). Hari also gives the same title, in the same way, for spelled is named on a weight User (Harig op. cit NO-72), This official --v (Pendlebury,, III, 4; which bears his titles op. cit Pl-LXIIq , ) including CIII, 49 the damaged group',., It is possible that this is to be read more likely be'restored Late 7 Zgba, version 5). Egyptian Op- cit-t of 1119 1619 7) although it is gn* In any case the word cannot to be a writing of to give the writing Gardiner, reproduced by Hari; as rryt Miscellaniesq 519 442 (This 259 13; 106,17writing Dynasty occurs in a Twelfth (Papyras B. Mo 10371/10435P 0(Papyrus Prisse, that this 13,10) term (Ibid*9
The older
passage
of rryt
Hasang It
Insc.
Louvre,
Up
108*
Lange and Sch1iferg op- cit-P 958P 15; Wb., Belegstelleng IV, 9549 5; 958t B.
9579 6;
10 Urk-t 11 Ibid,
IVv 967t 7; 9739 17v IV, 10649 15; 1867,6. 12 Ibid., 13 Gardiner, Cheater Beatty It pl. XXX, 92P 4Hieratic Papyri in the British 14 Lbid. v pl. XVIt 9* 15 Budge, Facsimilies Mus
thf Egyptian
(this XLII, Second Series, 111,12 pl. column writing was , (OP- cit-, here by Gardiner, transcribed 36, note 1) and as shown Cerny (Coptic Etymological Dictionary, 134) but as c'Ps by (Liebespoesie, 6). ) Miller, pl.
155
Gra=
1,577148,. 134 passim. Weillp loc. cit.. X; XI, * Fischer, op. cit., pl. XVII,
958,8; 983,6;
loc.
27 Wb., Belegstelle
11,603, 9
cit.. (ref-407p
14)-
R8 'Erk. . IV9 1867,6. 339 220 and 227* 29 Zba, OP,, cit-9 30 Gardinerg JEA 37 (1951)9 109, note 31 As notes 32 Urk*q 33 ald-P 34 Erman, 24 and 25 above. IV9 955P 10; 9579 10; IV9 957,61 957,15; ZIS 20 (1882), Studien
961,9; 961,1;
2. note
ZIS 26 (lm)p
Spiegelberg, reiche
ur)d Materialen
zam Rechtswesen
52-53,
35 Urk. , IV, 975,16 and 1736 Ibid. , IV,, 963,1537 Ibid. 9 IV, 964P 938 Ibid*, IV, 9659 5; 972,1539 Ibid., 1V, 9679 7. Grammar, Sign Listp Hieratische 40 Lbid-P IV9 973,1741 Gardinerp E. 23 and U-13; M61ler, Palaeographi p 1-11,125 and 468. Liebespoesie, 42 Urk-9 IV9 10649 15; Miller, pl. I, 18. 43 Gardinerg Late Egyptian Miscellaniest 44 Ibid-, op-, ci writings 106,17. pl, XVIO 9; XXX, G. 294; 6iller, 12; For a discussion of these P12,6-7, column IIIt , of rryt see; Gardinerg OP- cit , 36, note 1. Chester Beatty Papyri, I 45 Gardiner, 25P 13-
166
%R
46 Cerny,
Coptic
Etymological Dictionaryt
Dictionary, 287b.
134-
47 Crum, A Coptic
161
ro
ro
Dyne
V3
I st Int*
Ptol.
r. ==
C& Dyn9 V4
m
m 92
9===: p
Dyn- V5
Dyne X118
ri J'%a
-.
Dyne XII
-a4
ro nyfl Dyne XVIII10
* h..
zi -
Dyne XVIII
O-kD; =: q
12
-
C
Ack
, q V==:Dyne XIX13
v=:9
III
ral
44 re q =:
ink 3
'4 C-3
I ri
Dyne XjXl
ro &
in
An
16 Dyne XX
XXII, 18 XXV
ca =,
= 'Q-Q
44 cl C--j ro
ro
I .\-=. Dyne
20 Dyn * XXV 3
It
'A4 1 r= v--: ,,
% rZ3
22
M304;
A C-3,CL
Ptol.
D3rn. XXX2 25
Ph, A=*
24
26 _ ptol.
29
Ptol.
Zi
fD ft
Ptole -28
pto, 031
Ptolo
Ptole
30
Ft: 344
Z2; Z4
Ptolo
32
144 ra.
1,
ptol.
33
lei
pto, 034
for building has three entries One Th,e Vrterbm-ah elements named hlyt. 5:>36 of these seems to be connected with the verb hs "to roaatt, and wasp As such this wotdq which kind of bakery or kitchen. probablyp some 37 the scope occurs only in accounts of the reign of Seti I, is outside ta be related to the h3yt under discusof this study and is unlikely sion here* The other two words in the W8rterbuch are h3yt "hall" or "fore-
Iss
court.,
36
and h3yt
"heaven"
or
,roof it.
39
This
division htt
by Faulkner terms is also followed who gives ate 41 h3Yt Ip 0 rt a,,,. that there was only However, it seems likely of which Late changedv or rather became extendedi, translation when a small
from the
into
one term
between is chapel
the Old and Mid"ceiling" and the or portico was intin the
smsw hiyt of of
determinatives of which2bhow 43 44 indicating and "ceiling,,, albnep only one word which is
support thatq on
involved* in
Despite use
this
continued
known of the daties of the 47 48 or a pyramid a temple although 49 In the last offidiale a palace of Rekhmire 50 " This as "clearing would or suggest a portico
mentioned Vizier
the
enter front
the
buildingt
a porch
edifice. the yt
sb3 of
had just Sincd Rekhmire mentioned 51 down where courtiers were bowing to assume building h3yt, thatq (the having Irryt, entered qevo) in the he was front
would
area
main of the
ushered of the
official
a covered
portico
hSyt
of which
this are
title known it
are would is
rare
before
the
Third
Period. "ceiling"
h3ytp
although of by that
also
acquired
"Porticoll, date,
Kingdom
be already
determined
of
h3yt
outside of 0 -111
of
the
title gt
gmew
the the
tomb M
Ankhtif*. would
XpAjg. to
obscure of the
appear
other
h3yt
leave
no doubt
of
the
mean-
Instructions
of
Amenemhat
1,
the
hsywt
of
a pr
are
des-
169 cribed suggest sky. as being that this made of h3yt lapi B. 54 The choice coloured this text of a blue blue date the to from choice stond imitate the of would the New Kingvocab-
surviving
and consequently
An Eighteenth
Dynasty
stela
records
the fact
that
the
storehouses
of
the temple of Amun at Karnak were filled with tribute up to their 55 h-yt, in the Book of the Deadt the house (pr) of Osiris while, 56 (Inbw), (s3tw) and a ceiling (Myt). floor A sm_ contains walls a description Dynasty, ilar of a pr of Amunp in the Twenty-First also 57 j includes haytp inbwt s3tw and c-3wy. a h3yt is tm be understood in these texts, Clearlyp as a "ceiling" and thisp translation earlier. icularly ests portico ful for on the evidence for The use of availablep texts would seem to be the preferable to the New Kingdom oil smsw h3,ytv howeverp partthe term in
the word in
inscriptiong meaning
a wider
an entrance, of the New Kingdom the development are not very 58 of the term. before
Unfortunately
an understanding in
of
a temple
Dynasty
and porch
At the end of the same dynastyg Tanutamunbuilt two h3Yt for the temple of Amunat Napata. One is described as being of stone with 60 door-leaves (II-_,, of electrum. while the secondt at the back (? pr wy) 61 ]_&t, qevo) of the temple was connected with the care of cattle. Whatever the nature of the latterv the former hsyt was probably a portico like those erected in the Thirtieth Dynasty. This is possibly also true of the h3yt built in the wb3 of Horshef., "by the official 62 Hor in the Twenty-Sixth Dynasty* Vercoutter has identified this with the frontage of the Ramesside temple at Heracleopolis but this 63 suggestion remains unproved.
A damaged texto contemporaneous with the %e-Sam-h dynasty, notes
IbO
the restoration
of a h3y[t] at Kawa. Dynasty h3yt had become the By the Thirtieth with low screen sites* walls One of these
64
the
porticos on several
were erected I
temple
by Nectanebo
of aandstonet surrounded as a Ilh-3yt.... at Philae and was described 65 the building; The same king records by columns. " of at He=opolisp a pr for the goddess Nehmetaawy, with a h3yt which is said to have 67 66 The columns with sistram-capitalsp portico as has-the at Philaes Hermopolis In pottico was undoubtedly of Hibis of similar oasisj design* Nectanebo II constructed the temple in Kharga
onto the front of the columns, abutting with plant-form a portico 69 68 temple. This is called and also a h3yt c3t, a h3yt Arridaeus In the time of Philip work was executed on the w1bt of including the building the Falcon at Athribis, of a hiyt with eight
W3d
at the
entrance
was firmly
(r)
these
extended in use and applied and wasp thusp easily design, wherever their of similai position within the temple complex* In the Ptolemaic the term was used for period 71 the roof-chapel of the temple or Hathor at Dendera, and for build72 73 ings situated beside the sacred lakes. The Dendera roof-chape, is similar in to style to the Thirtieth other Dynasty porticos can not and there be so readily is suppose that differed greatly h3ywt.) which size
no reason identified,
Other or appearance* 76 Graeco-Roman h2qwt are recorded at Esna974 Karnak75 and Edfu. The meaning of hsyt in the Late and Graeco-Roman periods is not in doubt; it referred to a small portico or chapel with screen walls and engaged columns. Similarly in texts up to the Twenty-First translated as "ceiling". terms It is there is no doubt that of the existencet which is best are two separate Dynasty possible of a noun h3yt these
in plang
unrelated
however, it which happen to show similar spellings, is much more likely that the original term h3yt, "ceiling'19 was extenddate than can be proved on present edq probably at a much earlier evidenceg to cover a small porch in front of an entrance still and it the is term and as such that it occurs in the title smsw h3Yt. Later to the porticos came to be appliedq specifically, of Graeco-Roman periods.
the Late
16%
Previous it was a te= to to discussions for this see a porticop is the. Goedicke as this of h3yt have, in or in the main, concluded structure. the title of as used which, that 77 One smsw h3Yt9 the in adminthis
pavillion whop
similar
discussing
h3yt 78 ., If be
"collective a were sop from This to to support the term is not then
to of
distinguished
the
clearly, there
described is no
W8rterbuch or not
an
survived as 11 to the 80
question. 62
regarded or
h3yt
forecourt,
preferred
see
1 2
3 4 5
IXv 77t abb-31; Mariettev Empirdp 262 (wrongly numbered 362)9 Junker, Junker,
Borchardt, Hassant Borchardt,
dzav
op. cit-P
Statuen
6 -11oAdierv
des Mittleren
Relcheal
I.
8 Ibid, 9 179 Ibid. 9 249; Chassinatp Edfoup 1,415ZAS 34 (1896), 47- see also Malininep BIFAO 34 (1934)v 10 Griffithq 6511 Urk- 9 IV9 1073,512 Ibido, IV9 4299 7loc. cit.; malinineg loc* cit* (P. Sallier UP 1119 1. 13 Griffith, The second bird was transcribed by both Griffith and Malinine as the 4-sign (Gardiner, Gra=arq Sign Listp G.21). It ist in factp Tlw-bird (Ibidop the G-4) as would be expected in such a writing. For a copy of the hieratic text see+ Budge, Facsimilies of Egyptian Hieratio Papyri in the British Museumq Second Seriesp pl., IXV,
162.
Compare the
sign
with
MO'llerj
Hieratische (Malinine,
applies
same sign on a new ostracon (unnumbered). This writing plate stead 14 Budge, (Chapter III's Roeder, of F-4 . The Book of the Dead, 1259 44); Chicago the Great 393-
65 and following the word with n inText volumeg Institute, pl*23A9 267, Rameses 19;
(1898)t
Egyptian Oriental
Universityq Inclosure
Temple vfithin
of Among I.
ASAE 52(1954)p
15 LD-P 111,17016 Gardiner, Cnozqp Pl-XIW5* 17 Hamadaq ASAE 47 (1947)t 179 318 LD., IIIv 255)'L-, Urk-, 111,68,13literaturzeitung Rev. d'Eg. Pl-37o iII; III8 (1951)9 13 (1910)t 107; Pl-4; Pl-II9,
20 Urk. 9 111,689 5BIPAO 49 (1950)t 21 Vercoutter, 22 LD*p III, 23 Metropolitan Hibis 65p reveal)* 285a. Museum of Artq Oasisq
Expeditionp (same,
in El-Khargeh
24 Daressyp ASAE 18 (1919)9 145P 825 Sauneronq Esnaq IIIv 26 Ibideq 194, Insc*284P 3196, Insc. 284,12*
27 Urk. 9 VI11f 152,23728 Chassinat, BIFAO 30 (19309 30029 Urk., VIII9 52, No. 63P he 30 Mariettep opo cite, IV90-2. 31 Urk-9 VIIIP 52, Noe63, d. 32 Mariettet opo citep Ij. 62, J. 33 Dmichenq Baugeschichte des Denderatempelsq, pl, XXXI, 14 and 1734 Wbot 119 476 (not quoted, by the Belegstellen 35 Ibid. 9 476,1436 Ibid-9 4759 937 KRIq I, 244t 15; 245P 14; 260,9; 269p 151110 note 3v notes that 38 Wb-s UP 476t 4-11. 39 Ibid. P 476,12-13. Leclantg, op., cit#9
16S Fairman lated is h3yt of the opinion "ceiling" 156. that the rather W5rterbuch than Dach should "roof". have trans, -
11,476,8-11. op. loc. op. cit. cit. 1,17; 9 cit.. v 67; 249; RKk. q IVP4299 Kingdom, 7; 1073, Gardiner, Late Egyptian
43 E. g. t Lange and Schaferp 61,1; Stories, Malinine, 44 E-g-v 545 Murrayq 46 For 31; Index of Lange and Schaferv
of
the
Old
discussions Gardiner,
Helckq
Beamtentiteln,
Amenemhat,
loc.
ci
.; Cnom.,
Badawi,
Lbidov
1,60*-61*
53 Vandierp 54 Malinine, 55 Urk-P 56 Budgev 57 Ramada, 58 LD., iental 59 Leclantt 28-38. 60 Urk., 61' Ibido, IIIP IV,
loc, loc.
at
the
Or-
Institute, loc.
cit.;
(also
Yoyotteq
d'Eg
18 NO-55
1953)v
513(1950)t 12759note 1,166; see; 200; 167. Lyons, pl. 26, line 106. see; 88 and pls. II; III. (See also; Dar-
62 Vercoutter, essy,
BIFAO 49
1,67,
For
a plqn
A Report
on the
and 4-
66 Roederq
393-
16t
67 Lyons, loc,
68 Metropolitan 66t reveal. graph
cit..
Museum of Arto Egyptian Expeditiong opcit, X, 0,. 65, and for a photo.., -Iq pl. J=III, 9
69 Ibid*9
70 Daressy, 71 Mariette, 72 Mariette,
I, pl-64,
'top-.
145,8. IV, 02; DUmichen, loc. cit.. 100-103 111,0.37;
73 Chassinat,
19 Pl-XLI;
PM-9 VI,
and
194, Insco2849 3-
d and h; 152,237o Idop BIFAO 30 (1931), 300o 76 Chassinat, Edfoul, 1,415; 77 Leclant, opo citop 111-112; Badawyt ZIS 102 (1975)v 88; Vercoutter, Le Culte d'Horus & Edfca 95; Barguetv Templev 288; Alliott OPo Citoo Temps des Ptolemees, au oo egyptiens, 210, note 4; isis d'Edfou, p. X, note 17)q 134, note 7 (2) for 11,483; Daumas, les Mammisis des Temples 36; Chassinat, Le Ma=JEA 4 (19 YoYottev opo cit-P 8; See also Cartef
and Cardinert hzyt as a term for "ceiling". 78 Goedicke, The Report of-Wenamun, 19o See also Wilke, ZA'S76 (1940), 93-9979 Wbop 11,476,12o f-1-3-31.For Zmeerr see; Crum, A Coptic 80 Gardiner, Onomop 1,60*-61* 713b-714ao This term does not appear to be entered Westendorf's Koptisches Handw'O'rterbucho Dictionaryq 81 Cerny, Coptic Etymological 82 Spiegelbergp Koptisches Dictionary, 298. 248; Ido, Koptische EtyHandw6rterbuchv in
mologien, 25, No. 16o 83 Krall in Revillout, Revue Egyptologique 84 Wb-9 1119 2229 5-
165
bwt Dyn. I D. vn* I-PtolP. Dyno V, VI, XII, XVIII, C3 Dyno VIq XVIII 50 Dyne XII13 Dyno XVIII 16[] 14 Dyno XI, Dyn. XVIII 17 Dyno XjIl 5 18 Dyn. 5 a 19 Dyne 13 Dyn. I, Dyne V7 N XVIII 12 V, XII4
Dyii. V9, VI, XII9 XIxq XX, Ptol. cl C-3 11 Dyno Xii
Dyno XII
20
Vwt is
dynastic common term which was in use throughout an extremely Egyptp from the Archaic period to the Ptolemaic era. It is a term to to be devoted and it is not posswhich a separate study ought really ible in a work of this kin4 which is attempting to review a large this one word which occurs so number of wordsp to assess adequately frequently Sn texts of all periods* However, it would also be unaccto omit such an important term and I propose to give here a eptable summary of actual the history of 4wt and to discuss its use *ith'relation both and in clear must the preslightly to buildings. a very ancient is one which onwards. in occurs, It is, alone thereforeq
the First
Dynasty
the enclosure
represented
which
was already
The form of periods. (see the writings period enclosure this which whichp at this is of brick. of
varies
essentially
a rectangular
the identification
square
lb6
corners was in
of
the
in the
the
most
usual
form
of
the
sign have
which inter-
constant
preted
possibly a tower to guard the entrance others have regarded it as being a 26 The early variants representation of the gateway itself. of the sign interpretation would tend to support the latter as the second writing It is, thereforeq quoted above does seem to show an entrance. probable that the small sq1zarn represents a gateway in the corner of the enclosureg as a building, 25 to the enclosurev while square the This wasp probablyg designed to restrict a complex entrance 27 in which case it can be claimed to the enclosure 4wt have survived. at Abydos, known today as the A third example also exists as the enclosure purpose of these is now occease of that at least
First 24
Dynabty.
Some writers
access
two protodynastic
These are the large brick enclosures 28 Shunet Ez-Zebib and the Middle FortP which opied it has not been possible monastery. 30 by a Coptic
enclosures
has been a subject of much debate. The excavators regarded them as "forts'19 based prinarily a judgement which was, presumably, on thibir 31 More recent opinions has size. on the nature of these enclosures depended on whether or not the writer believed the royal cemetery Um El-Q&! ab to be the actual tombs of the kings of the Archaic perat iodg The weight of the evidence doesp however# indicate that the royal tombs of the First Dynasty, and some of those of the Second Dynasty, were at Abydosq the large 32 high officials, In this archaic case it mastabas at Saqqara belonging that to id most likely the'enclosures
at Abydos were connected with the provision of the mortuary cult of the dead kings9 playing role to that of the court around similar a the Step Pyramid at Saqqara. Both the Shunet and the Middle Fort have complex gateways which would have been readily in represented the hieroglyphic by a square in the corner of the enclosure*33 to regard Saqqara as the royal cemetery Those writers who prefer 34 Emery of the Archaic period have suggested other interpretations* the Upper Egyptian sees them as "surrounding of the king" residence sign
that they were "Residenzen far die Teilnahme and Ricke35 considers der lebenden Vnige G5tter-festen" an abydenischen at the nearby 36 Osiris temple. Lauer, however, suggests that they were magazines for this same temple. In view Step Pyramidq of the comparison the proximity of which can be made with the court of the
the enclosures
to the royal
cemetery
16-1
overwhelming cult,
that
1wt was concerned are much more as either Osiris are of temple. the
primarily
with
funerary
likely
to have for
as cult-places monarch or
than the
residences
storehouses
Abydos similar of
Second existed
but
"tombs
to
the
Dynasty.
hieroglyph periodp it
well-estaUished to
by
start similar
dynastic
necessarily is possible
with
dead
brick certainly
enclosure, evidence
whatever to
was called
There estates
were
enclosed used, in
describe
which term is
offerings of the
mortuary study
scope
already
benn
extensively
by Jacquet-Gordon
and those known as n1wtv which 38 the 4wt as having She regards king to provide for by when refer if his the the mortuary king. These
attested
on the from
jar-seals the
either contained
which of the
produce
office to the
tomb to is of
despatching 41 to the
as it
known from
actual
build-
further the
cult-centres serves to
which Abydene
support
enclosures.
found of at
the 4wt
tomb of of
title to the
king Kda at Abydos 42 This would have Kda. has since had been already of Adjib is comp-
Abydos
which
destroyed. use by
addition end of
1wt-k3
come into
A tLwt-k3
16T
as is
a 4wt-k3
of of
the
first
king
of
:bhe
private
wt-113 for the -45 continues. name of edifice '. the the
mortuary
as the of the
mortuary changed
no longer by of left
that Dashur 46 to
were with
inta
Valley before
Snofdru the is
quarries.
papyri of Nefer-
temple
of
Neferirkare,
referred
as "the
irkarei,
47
bwt of Kakaiii.
48
with
these a
"foundation"
in view
in which which
part-
the writing
of Hwt-Nfr-Ir-k5_rI
the officials which 49 the pr-wrw, both of which refer However, probably temple. records from refer This that is other examples to an estate so with for 51
areas than
a duty-rota the '=t-bntt and 50 of the temple. the tLwt of a king to his mortuary
from
another
provisions
the same archive which of Neferirkare were brought two ways. provisioned in which Firstly, a the
thereforep
to describe
and secondly
Hwt does not occur as the term for a cultus temple cult was celebrated. L. (q*v-)t in the Old Kingdomy the regular expression being 4wt-nj although possible exceptions to this are found on the Fifth Dynasty Palermo Stone.
In lack employ could within inscriptions "gateway" standard as bwt. are of the Archaic period with 52 rectangular of that the enclosures which the can be equated bwt-hieroglyph, Cn the others showing Stone the the the same name which simple is rectangle also found,
the
the
be read which
Palermo
hieroglyphs is not
edifice*53
but, occasionsame buildings 54 have "battlements... These buildings 55 #. them as 11G6tterfestLMgen, who regards three of these buildings are named
view
least
I bq
in
connection of the
with
the
pd-gs
ceremony,
it
is
most
likely
that
they
were
temples In the
some kind. same annals of of a temple. bwt in the Middle 57 Kingdom with There the is is less well cult evidence attestedg as the for although 4wt the 1my-r be relative has not of use hwt the expression tp-bwt (qov. ) occurs56 to mean
it
still are
mortuary little
various of the
relation of
"Overseer
temples the title although 58 that lawt could Sethi, implies bwt-ntr. However, further due to the
this
period,
evidence
As with the
so many words
the
majority
of
the
extant
examples
date
from
New Kingdoino One interesting text, from the beginning of the Eighteenth Dynasty, his
how Ahmose I builty at 60 Tetisheri. These grandmother records that of the 4wt, in brick rubble which the stela
text
was found,
a square with
buildingg to form
divided a solid
filled at the
constructiono of 61 offering
chapel, from 4
entrance into
were of of
extended been, to
the this
The stela The use either Egyptian for solid the dead
origin. desoribe
up at
the
an edifice, by basis
bears
templet
function,
virtually cult of
chapel of
pottery the
as to
purpose funerary
building. of
hhows
as already be used
continues
as the
name of
mortuary
of this
the are
so doingo West
on the
described
1wt of
a particular
Thebes 62
110 Often in tive to the these pr of temples are 63 indicating Amun", of the main described as being that of they "the were 4wt under of the the king (named)
control these
temple
Amun at
Karnak. ) of
Amun at 4wt nt ]w
name of millions
years"
to have been used only for actual was once thought 65 templesp in which the was, in fact9 used of any temple the king was observed, *,,. to r the chief with even god the if of cult the the of temple 66 area. the king the in question this is
Since it
name of
a king's
tomb in r-&3 hr
was
"The of
and noble
association to
and, 68 was,
was extended
the for
onward of of
that
increasing for
examples
was employed
period 70 that
There of this
added
in
such of
a brief 4wtv
study as
term.
aspect is
the
Ramesside
a topic
too
diverse
be considered however, of
once
again
the in
1wt which
clearly wayq
almost
exclusively name of
this royal is
and which
New Kingdom
as the
temple. of
building of
term
function
Originally sign
hieroglyphic
III the Old Kingdom, the to the term was being applied to buildings The link period so closely which bore tLwt of the the
the
original
enclosure.
between
these
prethe
identity with
the
that being
even result
distinction of
the the
cult-place
mortuary
of had 73
72 meanings fallen
Coptic hwt
period, survives
by which only
disuse,
as a term
allsepulchrel"
Hor-AhA,
20, fig.
13 (also
in Kaplonyq
Die Inschroccurs on
der Agyptischen
Prihzeitq
the from tomb 3357 at Saqqara, and has within-the enclosure name of Hor-Aha. The sealh-as-two and one rows of hwt-enclosures large This group has been read by Kaplony as either 1wt-njswt - . (Ibid., Or 4wt-k'j'(t) 11,1098). 2 Petrie, is Royal Tombs II, pl-XIIt 3& The reading pl. VI, of the sign as I)Lwt by comparison Wth Ibid-v I, bwt-enclosure of the same naze* pl-IXq this 12. 8 which
confirmed It
shows a
"gatewael of the hwtsign lacks the characteristic 6 hieroglyph, the reading is confirmedq as with No, 2, by comparison (Ibid, It pl. IX9 1 and 2; IX9 1 and 3)- Other with other wiitings writings of this simple enclosure which could be interpreted as '%wt" 165,15; see; Kaplonyq British OP- ci -, Museum, Hieroglyphic III, 5,110; Pls, Texts, from II, 67,241; pl. 2D. Dynasty to that the following Urk-, It
This
writing
consistently are
the Pirst
Examples only
so numerous
Petrieq a representative opo selection; Lit., I, pls. XV, 16; XXVI, 58t 59 and 60; Kaplonyq op, vit*y HIP 36,118,86P 322; 1239,737; 1259 749; jjrkep 19 49 9; Pls-35,115; Petrie, Hedum pl*21; ID-9 119 42a; 76a; Marietteg Les Mastabas provide de I'Ancien Rnpirep 384; Newberry,, El-Bersheh, 19 pl. XXXIII; Reiches, I. Lange and Scha'fer, Grab- und DenkBteine
des Mittleren
111
39t h,
5; Newberryo Dynasty
Beni Hasang 19, pl. VII; Temple at Deir Mariettev Deir El-Bahari, El-Bahario I, Abydon It
Urk., III,
IV,
25,1P;
Naville,
pl, LXXXIV,
Oriental
Institutep
The Bubastite
Portal, 351;
539; Mariette,
pl., 21; Lange and Sch&fer, I The RaxmBsse=, 1896, pl, XXXIII; Mariette, 317 (in 228; pl*XII, the name of a town); D., 111 63; Petrie,
111, pl. XXIII. 1 Quibell, op. ci ., 1,6; Les Mastabas de l'Ancien Norm=3 pl. III; de Go Ptahhotep, jjrk., It
Empire, I,
Davies Dender
'grk-,
VII,
7 Ulk-o It
IV,
236,141,85,7; Newberry, op* cit N[o=an3 de Go El-Amarna, 152d; Mariette, Abydos It XVIII; Urk., pl. IV, 3; Urk, 9 IV, I, U479 a.
(in hwt-k3); 1,264,14 9 Lange and Schafert op. cit-t 111 4; '9-rk-, (the exact fo= of the 11wthere is 9 ); VII, 28,16; IV, 212,10 28,1; 108,1; 447,5; 766,2; 885,7; 975,8; 1748,5; KRI, 1,171, 7,7; 13,17; 5 and 6; 326,11; Erichsen, Papyrus Harris 1,6,3; 30Y 3; 50,8; 67t 16; Faulkner, The Papyrus Bremner-Rhind, 6,15; 24,12; 33,510 Urk-, 1,131,6; Davies N [o3nan3deGo The Tombof'Puyemre at Thebes, I, Pl-40 ( in the expression bwt-k3 n 'Icbms Nfrtiry 11 De Buck, The Egyptian Coffin Texts, I, 160e; Adam, ASAE56 (1959), pl. 9. 12 Louvre C*198 (this stela, mentioned by Pierret (Insc. Louvre, III 53) does not appear to be published and this sign, in the title 1k34wtv was noted in the Louvre. The stela Is dated by Boreux (Antiquit6s legyptiennes, Catalogue Guide, 1,161) to the Twelfth Dynasty). 13 Bisson de la Roque, To"d, 107-Hieratic Papyri from Kabun and Gurob, Pl-35t 34e 14 Griffith, 15 British Museum,Hieroglyphic Texts, III pl, 2 (this could concievably be a writing of rbt, but, since 4wt-ntr in the same stela is written a reading of hwt for this group is probably to be preferred). 16 urk. I IV, 131,16.
1"13
17 Ibid-,
18 Berlin
15429 8.
K6niglichen of -i it Museeng ); Aegyptische Inschriften, 48,3; Erichsen, 119 41 (with op. cite 9 ! R--It 1,42,3;
000 instead
79 9; 70,10; , E)
81,15
(withxaand'
reversed);
49,22
(with
cursive
19 Urlc. p IV, 1928v 14o 20 KRI, It 39,1321 Foucart, 22 Chicago B. 23 Chassinat, 24 Gardiner, 25 Griffith, 26 Masperof Classique, Cgrrelly Edfou, Grammar, A Collection PSBA-XII 402,0.6 and Wiegallp Is 589List, of 0.61 note 1 (after 35Lefebvre, Royal Grammaire Tombs de 1'Egyptien Ayrton Calverlp). le Tombeau d'Amonmos, Oriental pl. X111. Institute, Medinet Habu, II, pl. 123,
Unffersity,
Sign
111,28-29;
27 See, for examples Emerys, Archaic Egyp , 118, fig-75 also been suggested that the 4wt hieroglyph depicts within
and 76. It
has
a temple enclosure-wall and it exists on the site of the Old Kingdom temple at Tella situation Basta (Jacquet Gordon, Les Noms des Domaines funbraires sous l1ancien Empire 'egyptient 4, after Anon. Ch. d'Eg- 39 and 40 (January and July 1945), 84)e However, Habachi makes no mention of a sanctuary in the North-West corner (Tell Basta, 11-32) and although the temple
sanctuary may well lie to the North-West of the centre of the enclosure, it is not in the corner and the plan of the temple enclosure (Ibids plan)* does not resemble the usual hwt-hieroglyph 28 Ayrton et ale, op. citop pl. VI. 29 Ibideq ploVII* 30 Ibid, t 331 1hil-d-i 1-532 Kemp, JEA 52 (1966), 13-22. 33 See notes 28 and 29 above. 34 Emeryp op. cit., 116. 35 Ricke, Bf- 4. Bemerkungen, 1,27; 36 Lauerq MDAIK 25 (1969), 83Beitrage 37 Petrie, Tombs of the Courtiers 130, anm.1631-9; pls,, I-XXI; PM-P
and Cxyrhyhkhos,
11+
cit
; Peet,
t passimp Goedicke,
MDAIK 21 (1966),
18; Fischer,
Mot
40 E&. 19,36;
Die Inschriften
243;
III,
35t 114; 36v 118; 499 182; 86v 327; 94t 366; 123,
737; 154,878. It pl. IX, 12. For the exact Irrovenance of this op. cit-t Ibid., 15; pl, IX (over chamber 3)inscription see; 43 Amelineau, Les Nouvelles Pouilles d'Abydos, 1895-1896,1, Pl-32. 9-11; Lacau and 44 Petrie, op. cit. 9 1, pl. VII, 10; 11, ploVIII, Lauer, La Pyram6de 'a' Degree, IV, pl. 12 (Nos. 61 and 62); 15 (No* 74)45 Mot III, 5v 14-20; See also; 14and De Cenival, B; XCIIIA, The Abu Sir A (twice); Papyri, ploIVAq go Varille, de Hap Inscriptions 75-76. 9 concernant l'Architecte 46 Fakhry, Amenhotep file
XCVAO A.
Archives
Neferirkare,
It
opo citev
2 and 3o The same buildings are named on inscriptions from elsewhere, figs-13-23Kaplony, ZiS 68 (1962), see; ploIq 5-16o tliej eijno -.an not be distinguished on ploI1, 9 ?44,3; Eajhp_ sad Ibid.,,. K6 and 39; See; d1bo -Urk. Rhotog: op* cit. Museum, Hieroglyphic plog; Texts, Griffith, 28,16; referring Hy 10; 111, Plo38; from Kahun I, see; El-Bershehp
248-t 157 British plso2; Adam, ASAE 56 (1959)9 and Gurobp Pl-35,34; ploXXXIII. For lawt in Papyri
Hieratic
Newberry,
to the estatesq
1"75 British 58 Lange 59 For I at thiseum, and Schgfer, example see; 28,1. alev qPcit-P 35-37; pllI,, For another copy of the stela Bisson IIp pl. 8; I, Vrke, 5a cult-centre 107. of Sesostris VII, 61,3-
op.
39p h, to T8d,
de la
pl, LII. The XIth. 1); Id. Dynasty Temple El-Bahari, p_ The XItho E (for Wb. at Deir It El-Bahariq III, ple
1 (Tuthmosis IV,
Deir p 885P 7 (Ttithmosis III); II); pls*VIT of Egypt, Habu, Quibell, 13t Navilleg 1; II, VIII,
fig*191)
a better (Amenhotep
photograph III
11,109,
figso92
Erichsent.
opq cito,
Materialen Gardiner,
IVP 1796,10. 7-8; Gardiner, Memphis, V, 35Harris, 22-23; Otto, Top: und
Wandrelief
to as 4wt nt
of a royal cult may once have existed. V 67 Cerny, A Community of Workmen at Thebes in the Ramesside Period, 22-24- It is also of interest that the one exception to the rule that only royal tombs are called p3 br, id the use of the term to Serapeum at Sagqara (Ibido, 14). The Serapeum is also called a 4wt nt 4w m rnpwt ( Brugsch, ZIS 22 (18809 116) indicating the high regard in which the Apis bull was held since expressions normally reserved for the tomb and cult-place to the burial-place of the king were applied of of the Apisj1 the this sacred (Vercoutter, animal. Textes The Sepapeum was also described as a 4wt-ntr biog-raphiques du S6rapleum do MemPhist 32). describe the "tomb
aret however, a number of temples which bbw m =pwt in which evidence for the is not immediately it obviousq although
68 Urk.,
Iv,
108; 1; 131P 16; 1329 4 and 14; 447, '5 (quoted by the
I-i
T2., ual). 69 E. g.
111,1,11
as a use
of
4wt
for
the
house
of
a private
individ-
Urk.,
IV9 Davies,
299 10;
387t
1;
766,2;
859,2; IV,
975,8; 3;
1796,10;
N[orman] 111,152,
de G, El-Amarn d; op., cit., Chicago the pl. 351; 539; Great 16,40; et al** Van Dyk, 6,3;
6; and 23,7;
LD.,
, G6ttingen 79 7-9;
679 4,5
81,15; within
Amun
and Gourlayo
Temple
Edfou,
however, to the
mortuary god of
chief
area,
4wt4ntr
Demotisches Coptic in
Glossar,
Etymological
Dictionary,
Coptic
Nepthys place-nazes and in the names of the goddesses (loc. is derived cit) and in the noun 2SN66-re which (Ibid*, 289; bsing, 441)Nominalbildung
till
bwt-nt
Dyne It V, VIv 'Vilig X11p X, I Dyne V2
M9 b-IJ
xixg C. % r--a
M C-3 Ist xi
xxi,
Dyne V, VIp
Intel
ri 11
C-3 D. vn* My
11
Dyne XVIII1
L. --Ij
XVIII Dyne XIIv 2nd Intel 1D Jcl xix C-2 12 Dyne XVIII13 Dyne XII AZ C-1 C-3 16 Dyn &X IX Dyne XVIII15 13,
_j
C--3
D. 7n. XIX17 In
Dyne XIXP XX
E-3
in
Dyne XVIIIj
XIX
19
11wt,ntr
is
the
term
for
Egyptian
temple
periodr more
the bwt. of a god* The place of the was an the building signp centre step
a fortified a bwt, it
of the
was called
would have been a logical to a god other It cannot than term. be provedv seem to
the king
howeverp
centre
a god ever 23
resembled
the bwt-enclosure.
The earl-
known representations
of cUlt-temples
of wood and reeds which are quite different large brick of enclosures cults which were erected for the mortuary the kings. Howeverg it is possible that these shrines were enclosed by a brick boundary ws,119 as were later templesy wjth the dynastic result that all that would be visible of the shrine itself from the
1-18
tops of the exterior would be the. -, the building to the was dedicated that the most frequently possible Old Kingdom which enclose
denoting of a god. It
that
thereforet in the
writings within
mf 4wt-ntr
the 4wt are an attempt the temple as it was seen by the general to reproduce pictographically This form of 1wt-ntr was already wall. public outdide of the enclosure the ntr-sign established Ka-a from by the end of the 24 Saqqara. First Dynasty, occurring on a seal of
The archaeological evidence for the plans of early temples is inthese templesp built of brickt wood and reeds9 have not conclusive as 25 to any great extent. survived Period Intermediate By the time of the Old Kingdom and the First temple and 4wt-nt established as the name of a cultus was firmly several examples, with belonging to various be identified godsp are known which cannot 26 to this is One exception remains. o:C Zhentimentiu at
any extant to Old Kingdom temple a number oCreferences -the 27 Abydos. Theoretically, of a particular called 4wt-nt a royal king This is . references mortuary the temple
the pyramid
are made in the Abusir temples of the Old Kingdom which are called those of 1wt-n-tr include 29 31 33 SnoferU930 Menkaure, Nebka, Shepseakaf32 and various queens. In the Middle fortunatelyp on the physical asty 4wt-nt is only Kingdom bwt-nt rarely of found in occurred frequently, which question. but is, An, are of use in One Twelfth of it now
karg
to which
nature
deciding Dyn-
which
remainsy
the Thoth
Amenamhat I
erected a limestone gateway (sb5) after he had found the bwt-ntr in 34 The xuined temple was presumably one built during the Old ruins. Kingdomy and it ih of interest to note that a graffito of the First Intemediate Period records that six hundred men were sent to bring of Thoth, Lord of Eshmunein5 almost certainly a reference to the temple at Hermopolis. Other Middle Kingdom bwt-nt which can be identified with extant remains include the Osiris temple at Abydost at which work was undertaken by an officiall Mentuhotep, in the reign of Sessostris 1#36 the temple of Mentuhotep Nebhepetre at Deir El-Bahar137 and the Axzm temple at Karnak. 38 stone from Hatnub to the 4wt-ntr
119
titles39 or epithet& are known only from Most of the texts of the Middle Kingdomin occursp which twt-nt the rituals information of the temple and services give more about in question. lay out of the structure than they do about the actual Other temples This is well exemplified in the contracts the priesthood of the bwt-nt the temple are not of concern texts which bear that on the bwt. *nlr subject itself to suggest temple there that arranged of Wepwawet At Siut.. to this study but it of the functions by Hapdjefa with 41 The rituals of can be noted of the temple of the temenos. that tend
and did not refer are not infrequent statues of private fron
For examplep
Kingdom to
the =eversion
the tLwt-ntr be set up within 42 These statues would have of offerings. the the temenos. Similarlyp not within could
the torch in the of Hapdjefa mention the ceremony of lighting 43clearlyg here the main temple buildingg bwt-ntr while other, texts 44 of the equipment used in the temple rituals. give indications that tLwt-nt for the actual These indications was used primarily by the evidence of later periods when aresupported texts were composedg often listing building detailed as elements of the main temple* the tLwt-nt components which were found only within temple This which is well records illustrated by a text of the Second Intermediate Period work carried outp by Sebekhotep IV9 in the temple of building
the pr of Amun at Karnak. The construction wotk took place within Amun but the text shows that the liwt-ntr, said to contain a sbi, '- 5 vy- Ia8 11, 3tW in the wsbt w-sd-yt and "a ,second 113 was the stone 45 temple itself. This view is also supported by many other selection in building only texts of the
of which his
a representative bwt-nt
need be quoted
(Thoth's)
great
were of alabaster cly of Hatnub and its Artemidos inscription of Hatshepsat). "Menkheper=e, he made for his father for the King
its sb3W Tura Limestonep 46 (Speos od Asian copper,, Dedwent Lord of Nubiap for
and them
of Upper and Lower Egypt, Khakaure the making because my Majesty had found it in sandstonef of a bwt-ntr 48 (Semna). brick destriyed.,. and greatly
(made) of
190
(TuthmOsiS
III)
found
this
#wt-ntr
built
of brick,
into ruin,. My Majesty ordered lEhsw and sb3W in woodq having fallen the cord to be stretched over this bwt-ntr anewq it being erected in 49 (Temple sandstone,, of Ptah at Karnak). "Menkheperre, he made as his monument for his father Khnum.... the for him of "Now it a bwt-ntr was his Majesty in sandstone*50 (Amenhotep II) who'beautified (Ku=a). this bwt-ntr
making
which his father, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt Menkheperrephad built for Khnum...... it being constructed in stone as a work of eternityp the Inbw around it in brick, the c3w in cedar worked with copperp the 51 (Elephantine). sb3w in graniteo "He made as his monument for his father Amun...... in sandstoney worked with him of a noble Uwt-ntr..... uary Temple of Amenhotep III "I (Bakenkhons) made for the making for 52 (Mort_ " gold...
at Thebes). him (A;nun) a Xiwt-ntr at the upper ...... 53 it in granite..,, obelisks sb3 of the 2r of Amune I erected within (Reign of Ramesses II, the Temple of Amun-Hearer-of-Prayers at Karnak). built "I (Ramesses III) for you (Amun) your bwt-nt its within
groundq
in limestonep its sb-. and htrw were of goldq mounted with bw 54 (a Temple within in the Delta). copper...,, a vineyard All of these texts is buing used of the main suggest that 4wt-njr temple building. Pu=ther evidence of this comes from the Punt stone reliefs of Hatshepsut out at Deir El-Bahari where the queen describes Punt ahould how she has carried the commands of Aman "that be estab-
lished
both jured stone
trees
garden
upon
conof the
of trees enclosure
planted
obelisk the
describes
its
situation of
temple
as "in
in 9 I had previously of
the bwt-nl
the neighbou! chodd of Ipet-Sat"p56 erected to two obelisks Since stone the at the rwty normally it is to 4Lwt-
obelisks building,
stood
the entrance
that There
to the 4wt-ntr are many other references the principal temple in Egypt in the New Kingdom.
191 contained ly guarded is This treasure-stores if they as these the reign could be more easily and efficient-
were situated
within
shown in
prwy-tLd
stones in the tLwt-ntr of Amun at Karnakf 59 they up to their with his tribute ceiling 60 61 Into these stores went taxes from foreign and tribute campaigns. The administrative buildings of the Aman templep as well as the homes for less-valuable of priests, storehouses pens for the articlesq of all being filled
sacred animalsq workshopsp etco would have been situamted outside of the hrtmnjr, but within the temple enclosure These wouldt howwall. to" the temple they served ever, have been regarded as "belonging to note that the workshops of the Amun temple and it is interesting Is n k3t nw lxwt-ntr 'Ifm 162 and the master craftsdescribed are as 63 men as 4ryw 4mwt nw 4wt-ntr. a complex containing many temples each of which be called This is the case with could, in its own right, a tLwt-ntr, the temple of Amun-hearer-of-prayerst as described abovep the festival 65 the temple of complex of Tuthmosis 111,64 the te3pple of Khonsu, 66 67 in the forecourt, Ramesses III the temple of Ptaht the temple of 68 69 Mut In addition tLwt-ntr was also used and the temple of Monthuo The granite of parts of the Amun temple. is sanctuary of Hatshepsut 71 Hall. call'ed a. bwt-n: tr7O as was the Bypostyle The Hatshepsut sanct' 72 uary was also described as a 4wtp bm and rqi-ntr so that it is clearr that each of these terms was not being employed with any degree of accuracyo In the case of the Hypostyle Hall it was probably felt that such an imposing hall was worthy of a more bombastic name than Iwnyt, one which could have been more accurately appliedp such as The use of #wt-ntr for this hall can be compared to the use of wb-3 as a name f or the In generall however, 4wt-nt same hallo Karnak forms
W3dyt or wsbt.
was not employed as a teim for a than an entire buildingg part of a temple rather it does although also seem to have been used to describe the sanctuary of the temple of Hatshepsut In this case the term occurs., on an at Deir El-Bahari. inscription which wasp perhapsq originally from the siteo a graffito The text reads; "Fourth month of Akhetv day 16p beginning of opening 73 the sba of the hwt-ntr in the mountain of Djeseru.,, Hayes has suggested that the text "without the initiation much doubt records 74 the cutting of of the central In view of sanctuary of the temple:
192 the fact that the Karnak this is sanctuary was also called a tLwt-ntr in the
Also at Deir El-Bahariq assumption, 75 3#t-nt to the Hathor chape, which was in fact a sepwas applied 6 be and couldp thereforep arate cult-centre with its &wn sanctu temples described in the same way that the various as a bwt-ntr same reign, a reasonable within the Karnak Another with regard complex were so described. interesting use of this term, from the same reigag occurs
to a building ntr mnw. Cn the statue of Hapusoneb called to as tLwt-ntr m Inr hd nfr n '-nw M3c-t-k3, -rl ntr maw this is referred 77 (named) MaAtkare, "The tLwt-njr in limestone However on the ntr mnw". Karnak sanctuary two buildings howeverp text of Hatshepsut a hwt of the same name is assigned and to Tmthmosis these 111.78 The change of royal name is nmt remarkable
arisest building
from Karnakv where it is described of Tuthmosis III as Inr hd nfr the iwnn ntr mnw m "the lwnnl-ntr n rwdt mnwv in sand" The difference in building has led Lacau and material stone". 80 to assume that two buildimgs Chevrier one made of are involvedg limestone However, this apparent difference and another of sandstone. of material consistent may not in be significant the the use of since terminology the Egyptians for types of were not stone. As
has pointed out 37. tLd nfr n 1-nw "is quite often applied by nf 81 This can be illustrated of sandstone". mistake to buildings with complex of Tuthmosis III regard to the festival at Rarnakp a sandbuilding is described being made of Inr tL! which variously stone. as 82 Inr 84 0 b nfr n rwdt83 and inr n rw4t. Inwq Bearing this in nfr n that the apparently limestone mindp it is possible njr mnw and the Harris apparently actually sandstone made of nt-r mnw were in fact Unfortunately the it same buildingg probably is not possible to 85 identify this building the terminwith any known remains although ology used would suggest that it was an edifice of some sizep servsandstoneo
The text of Tathmosis III as a cult centre in its own right. indicates that ntr mnw was within the Karnak complex and it could have been one of the buildings cleared away to make way for later Eighteenth Dynasty constructions, The blocks from this structure couldp In thereforev the reign yet be dioobveredl Lwt-ntr re-used occurs elsewhere only rarely on the as ntr site. was of Akhenaten
ing
193 a term which was avotded 86 since there was only supposed to be the
Accordingly
the great
temples
of
than described Thebes and at Amarna were usually as tLwt, rather at 4wt-ntr. With the restoration of the cult of Aman the term was 87 by its absence from the it is noticeable re-established although 88 Text" However the "Coronation "Restoration Stela" of Tutankhamun. (pl. ) Li-st ldh r ts-sty msy. nf of Horemheb states smawyn. f kiwt-ntr "bmw. sn nbw "He renovated from the marshes of the Delta the hwt-ntr 89 images-#$ to Nubia. He fashioned all their to the use of 1wt-ntr from the EightOne problem which relates IUC-: 112 3 990 and such as eenth Dynasty onward concerns writings (q. v. ) the expression former is a standard writing The sb-n-tr of and it is is often is almost impossible to decide intended. The second formp to be taken as a writing those examples as feminine In many casest forms with to be possible context as to whether with the feminine of bwt-nt writings the hwt-ntr ending
or s#-ntr almost
study,
of both however,
are regarded
as forms lack
feminine
endings
precludes
reading
of the group
on the
for a shrine so seems to have been usedv primarilyt since stL-ntr 19 to describe temple could be quite that examples of an entire regarded as writings reasonably true that the Egyptians unately the uaage of have aqquired such terminology a wider of 1wt-nj were not with However, . consistently that it isp unfortaccurate sb-nt in seems to
the result
through meaning in the New Kingdomt probably 91 Those writings confusion with bLwt-rktr. which are treated as fem11192 be taken as hwt-nt inine include and can, thereforet a form occurs in the inscription Ramesses II in of Bakenkhons the temple describing work carried out for of Amun-hearer-of-prayers
which
for sb-ntrt the term is used as if at Karnak. Although apparently it is a feminine noun and, since it is employed to describe an entire templet it is most likely to be a variant Other texts of tLwt-ntr. which the would seem to be writings writings of hwt-ntr L 1[6c, a 94 Z__ ------- 3 1841 95 occurt both from Buhent in which both and C-3 to be read as 1wt_ntr. As an indication aret presumablyp of the regular have parallels of sli-ntr which use 93 and on a stela of Ramesses I
I Y+ difficulty of distinguishing in the two terms, it to can be noted the same text that under
one case gives a reference 96 both sh-nir and hwt-ntr whilep in another which would seem to be an example of tLwt-ntr 97 erbuch as a writing of sl-ntr More usuallyp howeverp 4wt-ntr continued hwt-wnclosurep leaving no doubts Dynasty In the Nineteenth bwt-ntr
the W6rterbuch
to be spelled of
with
the
as to the reading
the term.
is used to describe many temples, 98 99 100 for example those of Seti I at Abydos, Kanais, Memphisg Red101 102 103 Gurna esieh, and Speos Artemidbs and of Razesses II at 104 105 Karnak and Luxor. In Papyrus W Heliopolis, the temple of Re at 107 the temple of Osiris at Abydos, and the temple of 108 Ramesses III the temple of Amun at Karna in addition to within 109 (in the plural) being used as a term for temples in general 110 temple of Amun in the Delta. and to describe an unidentified The Pianchi into the records how the king was received stela used of great "His temple Majesty his at Memphis after proceeded to the pr od Ptah out in the pr-dW3e for All him. his fowl that of Ptah subjugation and his into of that city. Harris I, the term is
which
were perfonaed
offering
South-of-his-Wallp 111 This good thing. " was the stone-built ceremonies took
temenos. Similar and not the entire "(He) came and proceeded place when the king reached Heliopolis; 112 to the pr of Reg entering into the hwt-nir in great praise" 113 and on the submission of Tefnakhte. Later, in the same dynasty, Monthuemhat records that he embell114 (pl. ) of ThLebes ished the hwt-ntr while the last king of the dynasty, Tanutamung mentions important bwt-nt several on the 115 "Dream Stela"t including that of Khnum at Elephantine, of Ptah 116 117 118 Memphis at and of Amiln both at Karnak This and at Napata. last temple was still described long after the Twentyas a, tLwt-nt 11,9 Fifth Dynasty had ended in Egypt. In the following dynasty there is an interesting to reference the Serapeum at Saqqara as 'this (the Apia') bwt-ntr on the desert
I er-
of Ankhtawy. 11
120
Strictly a burial
speaking placep
hwt-ntr
ought the
nct
to have been a
however,
indicates and the use of hwt-ntr 121 the Apis in the Late Period. tLwtv :wt-ntr in theory describes a place
od the
in which
a cult
was celebrated
leastp the building involved could have been at temples conformed to a however, Egyptian In practice, did not change greatly, The LLwt-ntr so that itself most hwt-ntr did was the actual (jb3) the temple-temenos within and under (pr). the gods estate Rarely the of of a temple rather than the wholep
be used of a part of
examples
are exceptional. der igyptischen 26,13; Sir 241t FiLhzeit 1119 pl. -- 80t 15; LD9 IIY 399 b; Posenerpl. XII4.9 b; Newberryp
Papyriq
adam, A Corpus of Inscribed Razik, JEA 60 (1974)9 1450 2; XRIv 1,206,6; pl-XXIV; 4P 14); form Davies though 'qrk-9 Urk-9 IIIP 35P 9;
Urk. I IVP 469 2; Davies and MaeEgyptian Funerary Coneso 506; Abd ElPetrie, Memphisp IIp
52y 9;. Wb. 9 Belegstellen, 1119 2 (ref. 119 45Y 12. This writing is also found in a plural Goedickev Re--Ised blocks from Lisht, 19t X095;
Monthouemhatp 89. Aland Macadam, OP- Cit-P 461; leclant this writing is found from the First Dynasty of tLwt-ntr
is not commonafter the Old Kingdom dynasty are few in number* The and examples from any particular "gateway" could, of coursev be positioned in either of the bottom corners of the signq as id the case with most variants of the term.
2 This is really only a variant of the form of the first of the Alta"gyptischer writing but the more worthy PLIP 3of accurate notey depiction flagpole makes it Annaleno
to the Ptolemaic
Periodp
it
Sch&ferq
Bin Bruchstuck
op. cit. 9 pl. XLIAt 2; Fischer, and De Cenivalq 6; 269t 14; 2729 8; 2759 39 279t 26; Urk. j 1,1319 307,16; op. cit., pls. VAq e; VIAj 14; 1199 8; d; XIIIA9 and De Cenivalq IXIIAq 26-27;
3; 304,8;
4 Posener-Krieger 1; xtvjtAj_B;
Urk. t 1,879
1709 17-18;
19t.
3-
des MittGrab- und Denksteine 5 q!! S-P Is, 379 15; Lange and Schfert KRI, It 2069 9. leren Reiches JI, 199; Urk, t IV, 194,6; 6 Anthes, Die Felseninschriften Les Inscriptions and Montet, von HaLnubU pl -149 NO-13; Couyat du hieroglyphiques et hieratiques the plural. The copy given of the text of the latter being the correct Sethep Aeg94p 23; 412,10;
Caddi HAMMmatq pl. XXI (in (Ibid. instead 81) has 9 fo=)
It 39P gy 7; IIP 100; 407; 7 Lange and Schiifer, ]bP- cit-P 749 19 and 22; 760 20; 93P passim Lesestucke, yptische 408P 12; 409,8; 353,3; Urk-P IVt 709 5; 939 3; 328,6; 8349 9; 834Y 12; 1156P 3; 1294P 13; Davies 436; KRI9 It 124t 5; Vercoutter, Textes de 11'emphi , 32; Roeder, ASAE 52 (1954)9 form of the Twenty-Fifth dazagedt plural
and Macadamp op. cit. p du Serapum biographigues 414. An interestingg c,, c-','9 Dynasty is but
Up. cit. * 88; pl. XXIV. 1e Mastabat Fa=aounq pl., XII; Newberry, opo citop 110 ple IIIP 138; Plo155 (dated XXXVI; Borchardtf StatueU und Statuetten, Dynasty but by PMp I (II)p 784 to by Borchardt to the Thirteenth the time of Menthuhotep Nebhepetre, presumably because the prenomen of the king appears in the text. Since, however, the statue was intended for the king's mortuary temple at Deir El-Bahari it need temple not be contemporaneous with his reign as this particular continued to function long after the death of the king); Setheq opo , cito, 98t passim; Urkej IV9 439 4; 56t 3; 1869 2; 2129 1; 213P 14; 8589 8; 882t 2; 932P 4; 476,7; 768t 13; 816,15; 386t 4; 429,6; 978P 15; British Inscriptions MuseumqHieroglyphic concernant l1architecte Davies, El-Amarna, VIP ploxViv lower register, 11; KRI9 It OP 2; 659 5; 129,14; 1409 129-1359 passim; 2059 16; 206p 2t3; UP IIIt dt 1. VIP Plo47P 4; Varillet de Hapou, 8; Amenhotep fils Texts,
9 Sethe, opo cit-P 729 19; 97P 3; 96,14-21; Ur1cp VII9 It 15; 179 4; 429 16; 589 9; Natrillep The XIth Dynasty Temple at Deir ElBahari, It ploXXIV; De BuckP Reading Bookt 96,5; Roeder, 2= 3 (1932)v 28v fig-13; Marietta, Abydog, IIP 309 39; Hayes* LEL 46 (1960), Pl-IXq 3; Urkov IVP 738P 10; 765Y 12-15; 11879 11; 1294Y 14; Davies and Macadam, Op- Citop 461; Badawyq Miscellanea &rny Wilbourianag 19 Plo5t fig-5; Ostracat and Gardinery Hieratic
181
pl-Xv
3, rectoy Papyrus
1; Champolliont Haxris
Notices
Descriptives,
IIq
85;
Erichsenq
IIIP
679 16; 69 3; 109 10; 309 3; 34,15; , 389 lip 63p 3; 65t 2; 65p 10; 659 12; 660 2; 155; 96P 4;
679 12; 9? 8. 9 10 Lange ancl Sch9fer, Op- cit-p 199t Helckq MDAIK 24 (1969), Une Chapelle IV9 439 11; 2066,141 11 Navilley (grouped 12 Navilleq 13 ir-k-, 14 Plid. IV, d'HatshepwiltiL 1659 3; 388t 1,2# cite; Lj[j cit.. 4KRI, ).
UP
154;
Sethe,
op. 2709
cit.,
19 267P
9; 765,7;
19 206,8
ci within
1009 15298,16. 301v 7(after bwt-ntr is the name of the templep that of
Iq 216,11 I at Gurna).
17 Kuentzy
Massif est da Pyl'one de Ramses II L Louxory La Face sud c1n. the sign is the name of the temple of RamXXI (enclosed within pl. example from the temple of Seti I sses II at Luxor. For a similar My 2 (ref-4p 11); p Ramses III's Temple within AChicago Univerthe Great
Gurna see; ID, 111,150). at Wbe Belegstelle 18 KRIt 1,3,2; sity, 19 B=nner, Oriental Institutep
Inclosure
of Amun Pl-19
Pl-779
Scene Die SZLdlichen Raum. des Tempels von Luxor, Pl-153, (all the west wall (pl. the scene's'on the masterplan XVIII/155 of Plantikow-Miinster, 19) are wrongly numbered); ZAS 95 (1969)p 119, 1, by 5s IP-Tv 1,15; 1119 129 (ref-, 465,6)0 Wb. Belegstelle abb. j have been included These writings here because they are either treated nouns or have parallels as feminine which are read 4wt-ntr, see ficrther above P-183 and belowp under sb-n_tr P-254-
20 6ernyt
Coptic Etymological Dictionaryv 289; Crilmt A Coptic Dictionary, 692a; Q"sing, Nominalbildungp 44121 Roquet, BIPAO 71 (1972)i 96-11722 See above, jLyEt p. 165-167. 23 See, for example, the temple of Neith (Pettiet Royal Tomboy 119 IIIq a; X) and the shrines depicted on archaic seals (Kaplonyo pls. op. cit*, 1119 p1s. 19,37 and 38; 40-45)For a review of these
IRS
early
temples
BIPA
6 (1908)9
25-41-
24 Kaplonyq
op. cit-,
Pl-SOP which
There was an early building on aic Period have been excavated. the site of the Osiris Abydos, 11,7-9; temple at Abydos (Petrie, pls. 1; LI) and scanty remains of archaic were found at stractures (Quibell Hierakonpolis IIP 7-8; Pl-IXXII)and Green, Hierakonpoli P The "temple primitif" at Medamoud consJAs of an enclosure bounded (Robby a polygonal two artificial mounds wally within which were ichon and Varillet Description de Med, sommaire du Temple primitif 1-2; Plan. ) amoudq 26 Urk. 9 It 26,12 241Y 15 and 18; and 13; 379 25; 879 14; 131,6; 269 14; 300t 3; 3049 18; 3059 1 and 11; Pischerp loc. cit.. 27 llr-k-y It 119t 8; 170Y 171 279t 10- Por plans of the Old Kingdom temple at Abydos see; Petrie, opi cit. 28 Posener-KrAger 29 LD2 IIP and De Cenivalp op. 1; XLIAq 2; XLVIIAp B; IXIIAv 26-27; 39p b. pls. LII-LIII. 9 cit. t pls. VA, e; XIIA, LUXAv At 5D; XIIIAq
30 lEr-k- 9 It 79 331 Ibid. p It 275t 332 Jequier, Le Mastabat Faraoung pl, XII. op, cit. pl. VIA, 9 d; Urkop I, 272t 33 Posener-Krieger 8; 307t 16. loc. loc. cit.. cit*. same temple see and De Cenivaly
34 Roeder, 35 Anthesq
IIP 154; 155- For the 36 Lange and Sch5.fer, Op-, cit-o also; Ibid. t 119 199. loc. ci loc. cit.; Haville, 37 Borchardt, .; 38 Navilloq 39 E-gU*-q loc. cit.. 17Y 4; 42o 16; I, t pl. XXIII; 58,9; Couyat VIIP op. ci 407. op. cit. 119 pl. XXXVI. j Sethe,
loc. cit.
cit.; It 9
Newberry,
39, go 7; IIP 40 Uck. j VIIj 41 Setheq op. 42 Newberry, 969 443 Ibid. 939 4y
189
44 ibid.,
96,14-21;
op. citv
119 100.
45 Helckv loc.
cit.. 46 urk. t IV, 3889 9 (Gardiner, LEA 32 (1946)t pi. VI, 27). 47 "Inr_hd nfr n t-i sty* As Caminos has pointed out (The New Kingdom Temples of Buhen, It 20, note 6) all the temples (Buhenq Semna an& Kumma) which are described as being made of this material are built Studies in Ancient of sandstone. Harriet howevert (Lexicographical Egyptian Mineralev 69) prefers to regard the term as a name for "limestone from the neighboulboodof Aswan"* The only rocks in the vicinity of Aswan are sandstone and granite. 48 Urk- P IV9 197t 16. 49 Ibidej IVP 7659 12-1550 Ibid., IV, 2129 7- See note 47 above. This temple is also described being made of Inr b4 nfr n e3r-tq another name for sandstone as (Harrist Op- cit-P 72). text of 51 Urk. 9 IVf 1294P 14-12959,6. Compare the almost identical the Amada stela, Ibid. p IVp 12949 13-12959 5-, 52 Ibid., IV, 1648,6-9. cit 54 Erichsenq op. cit. 9 10,10. 55 Urk-s IVP 353,3Compare also Ibid-P 56 11bid*9 M 57 Ibid., 58 Diid-t 584t 10IVP 439 11; 165P 3; 298,16; Varillev 768,13; loc. 769,17; 9789 IV, 939 3ci .; Vb. Belegstelleng 53 Plantikow-Miinster, loc.
IV9 328,6;
3469 16.
15; 10569 8; 1156P 3; 2066,14; 1119 2 (ref-4.14); et alo. 59 Urk-P IV9 429,6. 60 Ibid. 186,2. 9 61 Ibidot 70t 562 Ibid*p 9329 4-
63 Lb-idpt 9339 1564 Ibid. 858p 8 and 11; 8609 2. v 65 Champollion, op. cit., 235P 11,234; 66 Chicago University, Oriental Institute, D. 67 See above p. 180. 68 Urk-t IV, 4129 10.
op. cit-,
I,
Pl-77p A and
%90
808. It Pls-XXIII9 179*XXXIVY Inventaire t 270,424For a disc70 Lacau and Chavrier, op. cit. 9 1,267,418; It 48P 59ussion of this see; Ibid., 71 KRI9 1,201,4 15; 202,8 and 13; 2039 79 13 and 16; 205,16; and 2o6t 3 and 6-9. Karn 72 Lacau and Chevrier, loc. cit.. See also at wrt, below, p. 20473 Hayesq loc. cit, e 74 Ibid. t 32 (in his note 29 Hayes gives, as another example of hwtntr meaning "sanctuary" a reference to Urk. t IV, 427- This is the "Northampton Stela" of Djehuty which refers to the'*granite"sanctuary of Hatshepsute The term in question isp however, stL-n_tr not tLwt-ntr) * 75 -rk-v IVY 3019 7; 308P 776 PM, IIP 77 Urket 350-353; Pl-XXXVIY 1IV, 4769 7Op- Cit-P It 84P 139-
69 Varille,
80 Lacau and Chevrier, loc cit.. 69. 81 Harris, op. cit., 859v 3; 9639 5858,14; 82 Urk. 9 IVY 855,17; 83 Ibid-9 84 Ibid*, IVY 856,9. IVY 8569 16; 857,7; 858P 11-
85 For discussions
the identity of ntr mnw see; Ottot Topographie of des Thebanischen Gauss 23; Lacau and Chevrier, loc. cit.. 1,61. gwt-ntr does occur 86 Smith, R-9The Akhenaten Temple Project in one variant of the shorter hymn to the Ateng see; Davies, ElAmarn , IVv pl., XXXIII; Up pl, XVI. Another variant has Swt(PLid. It pl. XXXVII, see also under S-wt-r- below P*264) t 87 In the reign of Tutankhanan, for examplet see; jrk. 9 IVY 2066t 14; 2079P 16. 88 lbid*t IVY 2025-2032. At the beginning of the stelat where the text the temples and shrines which have fallen lwnn, following terms occur; r-prt bm, and 4wt. 89 LlLid, j IVY 2119t 13lists 90 See notes 17 and 18 above. 91 See further under qb-tnt below p. 254-25592 Plantikow-Mfinster, loc. cit.. into rain, the
191
93
1119 129 (ref-4659 6); Compare LDT*j It 15 with Wb,, Belegstellen, keti-iep Scarabs and Cylinders with-Namest pl. XXXIXv 2 apd see; YoYottet K; mi 14 (1957)t 849 note 2* 2t 145)-
94 KRIq It 95
1119 2 (ref-49 11) and 1119 129 (ref-465v 97 Ibid. 9 1119 129 (ref-4659 6)9 98 KRIq It 1299 14; 129-1359 passim. 99 Ibid. 9 It 659 5100 Ibidov 1249 5101 LD-9 1119 1409 dq le 102 KRIq 19 216,11. 103 Ibid-v 439 2. loc. cit-o 145t 2; 1479 1104 PlantikOw-Munster, 105 Abd El-Razikv
op. citor 106 Erichsenv OP- cit-v 309 3; 349 15. 679 16. 107 Ibid., 108 Ibidej 6P 3109 Ibidov 70t 10110 Ibid,, Ill 112 Ibid*q 109 10* 359 6-li. 1119 389 11Urk-P IIIP
113 Ibid. 9 1119 529 9. 114 I-eclanto Monthuemhatt 88; pl-XXIVo 115 Urk-P 111,659 2o 67P 12. 116 Ibid. 9 III, 65-66o 117 Ibidev III, 118 Ibid. p 111,639 13o
Ibidop 1119 929 8 and 10; 93P 7 and 12; 1039 13; 1049 12 and 16; 119 1059 7; 111P 79 12 and 15; 117P 5; 1209 12o 120 Vercoutterp loc. citoo 121 See also under bwt, P-1759 n. 67-
192.
o.
ptol*7
C-3 a Ptol.
This
in detail
by Barguet
who regards
the
4rt-3. b of a temple as being the hall immed-iately before the sauctuaryp (in dynastic temples)p being preceded by either barque-shrine or by a 9 (in Ptolemaic "hall The evidence for the temples). of offerings" a comes from, the Ptolemaic Denderah. In both of these the hall between the 1Q Howeverg and the shrine is called wslt 4rt-i7b, two other rooms are also known as lirt-lb. These of the 4xt-lb location temples "hall at Edfu temples and of offerings"
in both
openare side-rooms ing off the hypostyle hall through to the and serving corridors as " 12 hrt-lb As Haeny has pointed ambulatory. outp shouldv therefore, a be regarded as a 11salle intermediairell than a "Mittelsaall'o rather Barguet, in however, assumes that reflects 4rt-lb III the position its position of in the wsbt 4rt-lb dynastic sanctuary. is is templesq Unfortthe the Ptolemaic hall temples between dynastic
of Tuthmosis
at Karnak. refers
known use of the term, which occurs building. It is possible that brt-lb hall of the complex (the ed hall"
also the earliest texts of the with the "columnthe texts would is the name of
to the hypostyle
determined
sign as shown above)p but the evidence of is to be equated with 3h-mnw which suggest that 4rt-lb the entire building,
anew in limestone
14
him a tLrt-lb anew in sandstone. " 15 him 3Li-mnw anew in sandstone.,, 16 lbp3b-mnwt him a noble anew. " also call the building a tLwt-lat 17 and a
143 Since ition Barguet the Festival to that that the complex clearly does not occupy a similar templet pos-
at Karnak suggests
plan
lay-out
court"
buildings the now-destroyed in the 19 He regards the hypostyle hall of at Karnak. of the Middle-Kingdom hrt-lbe
complex
as the equivalent
The evidence for this theory is largely circumstantialp resting on Barguet's own suggested reconstruction of the plan of the area of 20 the "Middle-Kingdom in the In any case the use of 4rt-lb court". dedicatory texts of Tuthmosis III compwould suggest that the entire lex, and not just the hypostyle hall, was intended* It dynastic they is unfortunate period that other occurrences of their the term from nature is the are few in numberg and that be identified with any particular such that
cannot
buildings
or halls.
from Elephantineq statue of the goddess Satett 21 gives her the epithet ntrt n 4rt-lb wr(t)9 and Sokar is described, 22 in the temple of Seti I at Abydos, as m hrt-lb. The Festival complex of Tuthmosis III is mentioned again in the epithet of a priest "one who enters to the brt-ib Dynastyj of A=in, 23 11 This would seem to suggest that there one who enters to 3YJ-MnW, was another hrt-lb at Karnak besides the Festival complexg and this is also indicated in one of the Twentieth-Dynasty Tomb-Robbery Papyri* The tomb of king Sekhemrashedtavy Sobekemsaf of the Second Intermediate Period was violated, the king being described as having "his (the king's) in his (Amun's) txt-lb monuments resting to this 24 day. "Statues of this king must have been erected in a 4rt-: Lb of the Middle-Kingdom temple. It courtt complex, of the evidence would in seemptherefore, of A== that there the temple musj; have been a hally other than the Festival probably in however, or of the Twenty-Second
An Eighteenth-Dynat3ty
possiblejon
to be quite as definite the location concerning of a hrt-lb within a temple as Barguet is, The fact that the term was used of "corridor-rooms" in the temples of Edfu and Denderaht would suggest that it was merely a term for an intermediate hall or building which gave access to another,
jq+
2
3 4
Ibidej,
PI-id-P Weigallp IIP
IV9 856,8.
IV, 857P 12; 858t 2. 48; KRI9 1,1719 It 14; Piehl, Inscriptionsq v ASAE 8 (1907)9
5 6
Edfo Pl-599 o; 649 d; Chassinatq It 388; De Wit, Ch. d'E: g- 36 NO-72 (July 1961), 312; 313, Legrainp Statues et Statuettes, 119 57Peet, The Great Tomb Robberies of the Twentieth Egyptian Dynast 93; Mariette, Denderah, IIp pl*III (B, M&10221), op* citep op. citet 69 4Marietteg Cliassinatv 119 pl, 8p d, Up 63-
7 a
op. cit-t
NO-72 (July Beitr&ge Bf.
It
Pl-5;
De Wit,
1961).
312;
99, Basilikale
13 U-rk-P IV9 855,16-1714 Ibidov 15 Ibidep IVP 856j 8-9. IVP 8579 6-7-
16 Ibide 9 IV,, 858v 2* IV9 856,16. 17 Ibidop 18 Ibid., IV, 6589 8 and 11o
154-155; P1-IIsolely situ in on the fact the "Middle; that three were found the (Barguetv .. in Kingdom court". of the
suggesting
aligned
Templet
1719 14-
23 Legrain,
24 Peett
loc.
cite,
cit..
The Wbep 111,1389 in'the king's 21, took this this is to be a refercertainly incorrecto tomb, but
loco
ence to a 4rt-lb
ic;S
7
Dyn. XIX-) XX
Dyno XIX9 XX
Dyne XX3
Dyn- XX4
Dyn a XX5
in use to the Nineteenth and TwentVtA appears to have been confined Janssen fo=* in the plural ieth Dynasties and occurs most often 6 considers term for "both jamb B11 while Christophe btri regards as a 7 the two jambs and the lintel. the "chambranle'19 that the term denotes I in is made from the evidence of Papyrus Harris This assessment in door-frame, (always in the plural) is used for the which btr1w is usually 2b3 but which with conjunction the sbbw could be made of the same is, occasionally, and 8 For 19 or of different materials. mets. wood or a precious material, the pr of Wepwawet at Siut was surrounded by a sbty with example 10 On those occasions where "great 4tr1w of stone and sb-sw of cedar". the two elements are of different materials* htr1w occurs with tri a term for the Lrl. The htrlw door-leaves with a sbty The pr of Osiris at Abydos is provided " and tt1w of cedar". stone 12 it would certainly therefore, In this papyrusP formp describes the plural all framep the jambs and the lintel, with other examples of the word. papyrusp B. 11.10053, thieves describe how they In the tomb-robbery to the pr n the elements and this is which with 11h. tr1w of 4tr1w,
seem that
probably
the Ramesseum and removed the g:0ding from the of went the High Priest htr! w13 while an inscription of Amunt Roma-Royt of thebt=1w of that a structure Karnak records was found in rains, at wood being erminatives different Karnakv missingg used for materials and was restored with 4tr1w of sandstoneq the detthe also at )] wood(? the two writings of 14 Similarly involved. the term reflecting work carried 4tr1w of [of this outv
htriw of Ramesses III at Medinet _' i7 Ramesses IX at Ka rnak. In the context house 114tr1w of limestonev of a private
Iqb
with
a chisel" in
18were,
erected found
in
the
"fine
the
Raia built
136 includes funerary on Ost, Gardiner equipment of on ostraca. 19 in this casep ht3ln is m-4-t "the btZI. Of the tomb" presumably, p-3 than as the a= of its the 4tril was regarded as one entity rather components. Deir Other El-MeMneh 22 and IPAO 764Cne problematical writings 20 319 and on the unpublished writing of 4trl is of the term in the singular ostracaq occur Berlin in Ost. 21 11260
on another ostracong lines of Pe 10129 which contains Deir El-Iledineh a copy of several the papyrus states "its Anastasi, 1. When describing pyrobelisk an 23 eAALr= (nbn) of one cubit in height, its of two fingers* amidion IC44A= 24 J Gardiner The ostraconp howevert replaces C_. . 3 with 25 the former as "Point(? )n translated not unreasonable suggestion 9a involved. The reading in view of the context and the determinWve is quite certain 4trI a on the ostracon of and can only be interpreted as an error on the part Since -the meaning "Jambs" this is probably than just the true rather or the plural* whether it is used in the singular 1 Lefebvre, Inscriptions conceznant les grands Papyrus 9; Erichsent Cenq the writer of the ostracon. I is of Ltrlw in Papyrus Harris of "door-frame" of the term
found
meaning
Rome6,
Roy et Amenhote 7( It
pl-LXP
Ostraca, Hieratic and Gardiner, des Ostraca hieratiques non litt; r2.
aires
2 'The writing is found only in the pluralp with this dete=ainative It may occur at least so far as published examples are conce=edo in the singular in thev as yet unpublished, Ost-- IPAO 764 (Janssen, frorf, -the. Rameodid Periodq 392); Lefebvrep loc. Erichsent 5P 10 (with -4=> replaced by\\); 7P 13 cit.; OP- ci -t ( as 5,10); 679 1; 68t 4; 68,13-14; 50,11; 70v 2; 94P 8; Gardinert Late Egyptian Miscellanierjq 110p 16; Peetp The Great Tomb Robberies XXI9 3 of the Twentieth Egyptian Dynastyp Ilf pls. XXv passim; Thesaurus 1323P 39 vers 18-21. y by Mariettep Commodity Prices
As given has
Karn
P P1-40t
49 Brugschv
lqll
4 5 6 7 8 9
Chicago. Universityp
Orlental
Medinet
Saunerong BIFAO 64 (1966)v Jansseng Christophel Erichsen, Ibid. 9P- Cit-v Melanges op. cit-9 6v 7; 391Masper 94Y 8-
23-
11, Probablyp
in
facto
gildine;
on
10 Ibid. j, 64 13-14 Compare al so 50 ; L70 " 2, 1,11 67,1311 Lblidep 689 4- Compare also 67,1; 635) has taken btrl-sb3 12 bsing (Nominalbildung
The occasional noun meaning "door-post"* and their separation when different materials are involved show that this compound is in fact a writing of "the door-frame (4trlw) the door-leaves (sb3w)"* See further under tW39 below p. 276. and 13 Peetq op, cit*t Ht pl. XXq 2-XXIP 39 passim. 14 Lefebvret loc. cit.. citoo loco cit. o 16 Chicago Universityp 17 Mariettep loco cite* 18 Gardiner,, loco cito, 19 Cerny and Gardinerp 20 Ce=yv loc. citoo
21 See, Janssenq 22 Ibid. 392. 9 231Zat%Unerq Egyptian 24 Posenerg Medinah, 25 Gardinerv 26 Posener, 27 Janssen fOr"twins" Catalogue IP Pl-7P ON cit-P op. gives cit-v
15 Sauneron, loc.
loc.
cit.,
hieratiques
the etymology
of 4tri
andy thereforep prefers as a term for the two jambs alone. 391)of oxen" (Janssen, op- cit-., derived from one would think,, (Wbot 1119 202p 2-3) indicating
from the noun as being derived to interpret the building element He compares However, it to 4tr these "a span terms tie are, together" combboth
of the
ination that is
of various inherent in
elements terms
(jambs formed
animals)
jqR
hm
Dyne VI
o4a56 a0
rl
2 Dyne VT L
Dyne XVII,
Dyne Xvill 111 Dyne XV1119
o-1,
Dyne, XVIII Dyne XVIII Dyne XVIII8
-wot-
2, =-
kix
XVII127
Dyne XVIII1
2 -.=YorL -i 0
1
(D 1,0 -. 1.,
Dyne XVII19 XIX
.W
39
(? -f I'.)
C-73 % C-3 11
Dyne XVII 1
12 1\a i
-&&
30 Dyne Xvjnl
=-C--3
Dyn* Mjjl
Dyne XIX 9 XX 18
5
Z-C-M 0
16 Dyn o xl: x
CDj2x c -3 at, Ms. 0 Dyne XXV 19
PO
40
1773 III
Ptol. -. Csov-t-3 I
20
21 0 FC-3
lptol. 11
22
C-3
Ptol.
23
onwards
hm is it
a very has
term in
New Kingdom it
place.,
the
Pyramid period
Undoubtedly is to
during examples
intervening have not There that major that the this it is yet
be regretted
other
been very
are not
with
the
result in any
a bm differed
shrines. the
seem to
Egyptian other
thanc-3 correct
is
would
be logical city of
Im-shrine which
name of from
Lower Egyptian ancient 24 Such a connection was also 11m. the stelae The (or text of 26 the stela striding reads from in the South Tomb shows
the
a text of
one of at
Pyramid
Djoser red
Saqqara* standing
question
kingg a mace is
wearing
the
crowng
and a short
stave. to
clearly identified
a reference with
falcon-god shows
OPOlis,
a form
The scene
a part
199
although
its
exact
interpretation
is
may be visiting
a shrine
or founclng
one. Whatever
to see in this writing perhapap possible of "the for the bm-shrine shrine of Horus of letopolis" an origin which, howbecame indistinguishable from other shrine-words. everg later The earliest in the Pyramid recognised occurrence of the tem, Texts, isp unfortunatelyp not the goddess with Imtett (the king1s) "Imtet grasps my Letopolis connected with either Imet (Nebeshah) in the Eastern of seem likelyp of shiine o2 Horas 27 Delta.
but
place that,
hand for herself 28 It would which the god made for her". by the Sixth Dynastyt whatever the type
secret therefore,
originally
bm h-ad*bdcome a word for a shrine in general. Prom the Eighteenth Dynasty Ibmv often in the plural, occurs in to cult-centres non-specific contextst referring which cannot be identified. their sanctified "You have purified Seti 1)030 of all of the godsp each "I their I embellished the bmw and the r-prull (speech of Thoth m7 for the future. r-pru. to J!qq
involvedv
the jimw being enlargedt 11 the favourites ..... 31 one in the 1)wnn which he has desired.,, The restoration of the temples stela of Tutankhamun tells
the parlous
state
Other texts refer to specific bmwbut these can not be identified, In one case the location of the bm is known but the building itself has not survived, This is the temple of Hathor at Cusaep which was restored by Hatshepaut. "The hwt-ntr S.,. "had fallen into rain, the 35 earth had swallowed up its noble bm and children danced on its tp-hwt. " This text would suggest that the bm was pv-rt the temple (hwt-nt a of perhaps the sanctuary itself. This is supported by comparison with one of the few mwwhich can be identified, The sanctuary which Hatshepsut erected in the temple of Amanat Karnak is described variously as a hwt, !Lwt-ntro t5t wrt, sh-ntr as well L-
the reign of Akhen,;. and shrines of the gods following the r-prw af the gods and aten. "Now when his majesty arose as king, had fallen into rain, their goddesses o. oo... bmw had faILlen into decayq their 17wnnwwere as if they had never existed wt and their 32 (pl. ) were a trodden After the king had restored path.,, the cult"the gods and the goddesses are joyfulv placesp the possessors of 33 hmw rejoice.,, 34
200 texts. hm in two separate as a V III cofor Tathmosis when he was still inscribed itself, sanctuary the "He made as his monument for his father ruler with Hatshepsut. Imn-st-lbv (called) in granite hm and for him of a noble erecting, 36 (quartzite). The second example it hard stone of the Red Mountain for him a IrNow my majesty Amun temple. erected comes from the main "Imn-st-lb.,.,. in hard stone of the Red Mountaing bm (called) noble 37 is def" The namep 'Imn-st-lb, interior its electrum. worked with there that the Hatshepsut can be no doubt that initely so sanctuary of about the identification of this particular on one of 4A with anotherl built III later bm. the blocks from this is sancCne of these is on a block from the
bm is also mentioned Lnother . in a list tuary, of temples; that temple of this bm is to be equated Habu.
38 It 0
Eighteenth here the
possible
at Medinet one
Hatshepsut
on the front
an earlier
and Tathmosis
the queen's building chapel containing a barque with a peripteral of 39 0 St-/e!, 3M .. V CA the king described This structure <> as C-3 C, -, shrine. "a sacred bm in sandstonet ,,%40 The temple on this site was dedicated 41 Sr-st to A= name of the Tathmoside temple seems and the fall ! 42 (Mn-bpr_r, ) 1j=-f1sr_st. described Since Tuthmosis III to have been to suggest that the not unreasonable block, hwt called bm 4sr, named on the sanctuary might be the name 43 on the same site. of the temple of Hatshepsut 44 Horus45 In the temple of Seti I at Abydos, the chapels of Isis, the temple as a bm g1sr it is and Osiris46 the temple are each described of the same 4ing as bmv as is 47 at Qurna. the hypostyle hall of
Lm contined to be used$ althpugh sporadicallyp period but it does not seem to have been used in in Coptic. recurred Like allyp ever so many termsp shrine a Lower Egyptian the meaning of the term broadened probably of shrine or chapel andy later
into demoticq
meaning
origin., How-
Letopolis.
could
be used of within a
of a hall
201
Lacau and Chevrier, 124Ibid., Urk-9 Ibid., Irk., Ibid*, 2611 411-
Une Chapelle
d'Hatshepdout
a Karnakq
1,779
5 6 7 8 9
1411,6 KRI,
(with
reversed). 1779 1-
1,165,16 (with
reatored);
16510,6
reversed).
167,1576,10. termt Faulkner (Con. image", Dict. for 1jm, "sacred 191) takes this to be a sep9 which he cites only this ex-
10 Ibid., arate
it could also be a writing ample. This is possible although of bm "shrine" determinative. with a false Badawy, Mi scellant-a 11 Urk-t IVY 1071,7; 17ilbo=a3lap 1,5P figt4; Mariet6e, 12 Urkop Abydosp It pl*XIXq e; 1589 11TV9 1152v 17; 1329j, 10; KRIY 1,161,1;
13 RLic. v IVY 16909 6; 2o27,6. 14 Ibid, q IV, 19469 11. 15 Ibid#q 16 MY 15It 2149 12. 9 1,190,11; V, 116,10. 18 Ibidej 17 jbid. 19 Urk-Y 111,351,2. 20 Ibid9,11,46,1421 Chassinat, 22 Urk., -Ilp 23 Mariette, Edfou, 186t 8; 119 9. Chassinat, I, pls-469 opp cit. a, 4; 1,2859 . 54, b (bottom). Geographibqu 19 50-51P1-41IVY 175; 9 It IVY 20309 14197P 5; similarly, with %, for r--and (S restored, 216,
Denderah,
280,15; 24 T! -, MY Montetv Geocraphie 05 Firth 26 Montet, 27 Ibid*, It and (Quibellq op. cit-, It 180-1829
Gauthier, do 1'Egypte
28 EY-rev 1139b, 29 Urko j 379 102,1. 30 My It 1909 11. 31 Urket 32 Ibid., 33 rbideq 34 E-9-9 IVt 383P 17-
IVY 20Z7,6. IVY 2030P 14Ibid., IVt 11529 17; 13299 10.
ZOZ
35 LILld-9, IV9 3869 536 Lacau and Chevrier, 167P I37 qrk. j, in, loc. cit-779 124-
38 Lacau and Chevrier, op. cit-, 39 pm. 9 Jjv pl. XLV9 1. 40 Urk. 9 IV, 681,1041 See; H61scher, Exe. Med. Habut schaftsgeschichte
11,46;
Helck, 74, D, le
Ilaterialen
zir
Wirt-
42 Urkep IV9 882,3(loc. 43 Lacau and Chevrier ci do Dttol,, Topographie neither quoted suggest no identification . des Thebanischen Gaues, OP- cit-, for hm dsrp 25 (wrongly 6) and Helck,
as 27 by Lacau and Chevrier, 53,5OP- cit-, 44 KRI, 45 Ibidov 46 Ibid., 4T Ibide, 1,158,11. 1,161,1. 1,165,16. Iv 214P 12; 216,15-
77, note
203
at wrt
Dyn- XVIII' Dyn. XIxq Dyn, XV1112 , Dyn. XVIIII XIX3 XIX6
XVIII24
Ptole C-3r=-
Dyn. XVIIIq
C-3
pg
Dyn. XjXl
3 A 16 n
9
Dyn. XIXI
Dyn. XIX
18 Dyn. XX
-j, e,
cc=: o Co2i
Dyn.
XXl 22
XX20
J'm J -41p
C-3 C"3 E-3 24 Ptole
Ph*
ArO
Ptole
ptol,
25
x,, C: 7-3 b _d
Aae) X
M. => 0
is a "throne" of either main, meaning of st wrt and 27 Dynasty st wrt seems to In the early Eighteenth king or a god. a to the pedestal have been transferred upon which the sacred barque of The originalv a god could situated ease of previously rest, These pedestals were usaally when in procession. both ends to allow barque-shrineq open at a stone 28 has the barque. Brovarski for the priests carrying this specific use of the term in the Eighteenth Dyn26
within access
noted
out thatt astyp and has pointed the barque uary of Hatshepsutp is described is
pedestal
on the blocks from the Karnak sanctand on a pedestal of AmLm is depicted 29 In two examples the location Utp br at wrt* of the as detail; described in greater
30
in the monument the st wrt in Amun-Djeser-Djesera, upon (the mortuary temple of Hatshepsut at Deir El-Baha: ri)031 st wrt of its was being original used of the pedestal Howeverl in itselfq the an
meaning.
same period
20t
st wrt describe
in meaning
still
further
sanctuary a building
and came to be used to it. The the pedestal within itself called a at wrt in from Karnak; _mq'Imn-st-lbf (Inr n rwdt nt
him (Amun) a noble erected his at wrt like the horizon of heaven in quartzite 32 4w d'Sr)p its interior worked with electrtlm.,, "Now my majesty Another This is text may also describe the the autobiographical in many building projects Tuthmosis work" Mo
as a st wrt. stela of Djebuty who was in charge of Thebes daring the reigns of Hatshepsut and same sanctuary to to which he "led the craftsmen 33 the in graniteet. Unfortunately
was allst. wrtg a sbL-ntr built is not given so that it cannot be proved to name of this sanctuary be that of the Amun temple. However, if it is not to be so identified then works the Amun sanctuary for would be omitted from the list
of the queen's
Amunl, which is unlikely. The fact that the shrine is descthan quartzite ribed as being made of granite, rather as and granite 34 id the case, is no real problem. The same stela of Djehaty mentions work on two other swt w: rtg one his at wrt This is a llsb-ntr, of which cannot be identified. 34t-ntrl, 35 in electnim landsti. The namep 3)jt ntr of the best of the foreign cannot be related to any known shrineL. sanctuary by Brovarskiq for 36 which with Djehuty the was responsible of has of the temple The remaining
sanctuary
out works
on lac-ibtq
the
st wrt
of
cedarg
description Djehuty's after El_Bahari9, )Imn-dsr-dsrwv 731--3bt could well temple. sanctuary of Hatshepsat's of Tuthmosis III the temple of Ptah within
the westq all its doors (-1w) were of 37 bronze,,. Since the description of this of the be the name the Aimin
the reign
how he "decenclosure at Karnak was rebuiltt and the king describes (? sw1b38) his st wrt with fine metals orated and precious stonest, 039 Interestingly temples to entire at wrt soon came to be applied temples other than the sanctuarye The hypostyleor to halls within hall of Tuthmosis 19 between the Fourth and Fifth Pylons at Karnakq
zos ts called, st in an inscription for and his the the st of Lord-of-Allo temple wrt of of the st Seti is wrt I at Amenhotep II; fla wsbt the at 41 in texts the in dedicathe Sati of w5d-coll-Imns, which is described
" oe-eo-a is in heavenllt40 as "sacred In tory temple they terms For in the
wrt
horizon luxor
1peti,
Nineteenth of the
Dynasty of
occurs Abydos.
temple
as it
as to using
whether
different of it.
templev aisle of
or parts
Re-Horakhty wr in gold,
second in
hypostyle
made a pr in goldq
gold9
a sacred of of
gold
texts specific
from
godsp
the of
shrines swt-wrt
themselves
shrine; for for with for him him a pt (Re-Horakhty) 46 a st electnimp a st wrt /// its in sbiw with front wrt //// a st wrt sb3w in electrimll. with
decorated
lloootmaking Ta-Djeserv
a pr-wr for
of the 47 every
Lord-of-
with himself
electrim.,, is wrt of
wrtP radiant 48
precious
pr-wr .
years, the
my st chapel
in 49
my The
dedicatory point*50
from
damaged
the
relevant
of
Razesses with
II
at
Abydos walls
had
aq more
usualj,
alabaster
and
a pink as
granite "a st
from
the text
wrt
in
building pure
alabaster, of Seti
of the 53 to be a
temple the
stated
which
god rests,.,,
206
In Papyrus
Harris
I st wrt
is used for
the
sanctuaries
of
the
temples of Re at Heliopolisy
"the
st wrt in gold,
the tLV
55 in ketem,,,
st wrt being enlarged like a pr-w , covof Ptah at Memphisp It its and 56 The term is also ered by a t3yt of gold like the -bwy of heaven.,, 57 temple, used in the same papyrus to describe an entire of Ramesses III at Medine. t Habuq the barque-rooms 58 11st wrt in the bwt of of Amunq Khonsu and Montha called are'each 59 Usermaatre-Meryaman. to In the temple The barque-shrind of Philip which had been built the regency of the Amun temple at Karnak was replaced during
how "the st wrt of Amun A: rrhidaeus who describes in the time of the majesty of the King of Upper
into rain .... his majesty and Lower Egyptq Menkheperre-I had fallen 60 built it anew in granite. '# In the Graeco-Roman Period st wrt was often used to mean an entire 61 temple but it was also still to the sanctuary specificallyq appliedt 63 62 of a temple. This is so at Edfu and in the temple of Opet at Karnak* The development then in to of st wrtv from "throne" to "barque-pedestal'" and "barque-shrinelyl period "sanctuary" and 11templeR seems to have occurred
a short
Dynasty, of time in the Eigbteenth although it is that the term had these meanings in earlier periods textso Cnee these extended are fewer extant building they remained in use through st wrt to the Ptolseem to texts, does not
although
1
2
Lacau and Chevrier, Une Chapelle d'Hatshepsout 1197; 349vj 615; 35091 617ibidop It 34791612 (for ASAE 26 (1926), (1923)9 Pl-IVpl,. IVt
a Karnak,
It
1579
Chevxier, ASAE 23
3 lacau and Chevrierq 1519 134 'r-k-r 480; 5 IVt IIP 36.
op. cit-9
It
134P 5; 1509 7;
Edfoup It
Chassinatv
Urk. 9 IV, 167v 2 (with final 7669 7; 17099 13; 1726,17; iette, Abydost 19 P1-30y OP- cit-, 9; Chassinat,
421,10; 4229 17; 425t 9; =restored); KRI9 19 130P 5; 1329 12; 1649 14; MarPaPYrus Harris 1.519
Inscriptions
du Temple d'Opet
ao, 7
Id. v Ch. d1E9- 36 NO-71 (Jan, with 1961), 67; Mariettev Denderahq IIIt pl-71, bo 4-5IV9 4279 15; K-RIt It 1559 4; 1609 1398; IVP 13319 17IV9 20839 1517j 1918,11; Mariette, Hieratic Abydosp II, Ostracat It pl. 199 a. pl. XLV,, 4P 5; Erichsenq of Ptahj an epithet the determinativep without 59v 132199 16. is in
99 (both
8 -Ibidev 9 Ibid.,
This
h:L7 st wrtv which is more often written KRI9 It e*g*v Urkop IVO 10029 5; 1936,10;: 12 Ibid9t 3 Ibid., It I, 1519 Ot 9 and 10; 158v 7; 160t 3 and 4and 12. 1499 14 and 16; 2* 4,Institute, Ibidet VII9 157,11
1639 10;
14 Lbid. v It 15 Ibidop It
149P 13 andi15
(with
an open door);
154t
Abydo 9 UP Pl-3P Oriental 18 Chicago Universityq (without the determinative, VI9 Plo4099 20 Ibidp VIt pl-4419 21 Urk*t 119 109 7o Denderahv I, Pl-46j It 57479term 22 Mariette, 23 ILT9 19 Ibid*
VII9
Pl-5019
A;
c2*
at
24 Chassinatq 25 Ibid-9 It
st wrrt
Kuhlmann,
2B Brovarskip
29 lacau 30 Ibid* 31 Ibideq 32 Urk., 33 Ibid*, 01
34 See further
2og
35 lr--k- 9 Iv-P 4219 10. 36 Brovarski, loc. cit.. 37 Urk- t IV9 422,1738 See; Faulkner, Con. Dict., 39 U-rk-, IVP 7669 740 Ibidep 41 Ibid*, IV9 13319 17IV9 1709,13-
216.
42 KRIt IV 131P 4-1543 Ibidot, 3;129-13544 Ibidep 45 Ibidop 46 Ibidep Ig 147-163I, It 149p 9-16. 1519,3-10154t 10-15o 1579 11-14148,1-29
50 Ibid. v IV 1539 3-551 P-M-9 VIS, 38-3952 Mariette, Abydosp II, 430t 5-6. pl. 199 a. 53 P-id-q 119 Plo3t 54 KRIq IV 219,16o 55 Erichsen, 56 Ibidep
57 'LILido 51P 9. 9
58 Rooms 7v 15 and 33P see; PM*q IIj pl. XLVIII* 59 Chicago Universityq Oriental Institutep op. cit P IVP Pls-409; 4419 60 Urk. 0; VII9 P1-501P A and B. 119 109 7t 61 Mariette, Dender P It PI-46, at 2; IIIP PI-7, bp 4-5; LDTI 11*,. 244; Chassinatt Edfoup It 22; 35; 574; IIP 7962 De Wit, Cho WE 36 NO-71 (Januaryp 1961), 67. 63 :Ldeq Inscriptions du Temple dtCpet a Karnakq 98; 99 (the dedicatory which mentions the st wrt is actually situated in the room (No. VII) immediately before the sanctuary (No. X)t but there can be no doubt that the description (for a plan of the refers to the latter temple see; PM, II0 pl, XXII)e t text
209
s3t
p as u
AM
Dyne Vp xviii
2 pd. Yll
MOK03
Dyne XIX C6
Dyne XXV14 r-73 ptol. 17 Ptol. 20
ptol.
for
s3t
from in
the Middle
Kingdom
three
the Old-Kingdom
contexts
elucidating
"middle" and'horthernU 23 the Another occurrence and a thirdv mentions the s3t of a palace 24 (6nwt). eastern sit of a granary the next known example of the term is in an early Chronologically graffito to have been used for from the wall the quarries of at Hatnub the quarry itself. where it seems 25 In the Teach-
Middle-Kingdom ing
of Amenemhat 19 133t, determined ocefirs in the with the wall-signv the description of a prp "decorated with gold, its h-lywt in lapisp 26" how the An inscription from Siut tells s3t in silver, of Hapdjefa 27 (t nomarch "erected s2wt which were destroyed". and the Admonitions
describe how the children
LS)
of
princes of
were any
dashed difference
against in the
s3wt. meaning
28
give
bet-
from
Eighteenth apparent.
Dynastyp
meaning
becomes
210
An inscription
of
El-Bahari the
records
that
he was
of sjwt in the service name on all permitted temple (Djeser-djesera) her mortuary in and in the king 29 Temple-walls upon the gods of Upper and Lower Egypt. the r-p of must be made of stonev the name of an official can be inscribed which that s3t was not used of,, for examplev brick enclosure suggesting to perpetuate (Hatshepout)t walls. ribed Other walls. "I built texts also specifically use s3t when referring to insc-
30 (s's) made its sawt great. " this tomb .... *, the inscription Aman had given to "His maJesty ordered th, t the victories which 1,31 the stone s-st in the 4wt-ntr. him should be perpetuated on look at the s3wt by this bwt000o. and will 1109 those who will pass from my utterancesp recite will and 32 Egypt favour and love (them)*,, "The inscription (s's) upon the may the King of Upper and Lower
engraved with 34 "Your sacred images cut upon the 03w(t).,, 35 "His S3wt engraved with his cartoucheis that S3t was used mainly It would seemp thereforep sstv inscribed text of wall the reign in texts which date from of Ramesses II
for
a stonep
definedo It specifically eum; "the inbw in stone, 36 SSt here mast refer Thoth.,, texts could be carvddo
allows the meaning to the Ramessto a building attached refers of engraved on the M3wt with inscriptions to the surface of the wall upon which has suggested that a s-bt wast "plus 37 This is supported
Traunecker
d1un muroll les parois specialement a 11origine by a description Hall at Karnak as a "fine ms4nt for of the Hypostyle the Ennead, surrounded by open- and closed-capital coluinnsq its sawt 38 (tnwil).,, The walls in question the cultivation like the limits of inner walls are the inscribed This term does, thereforep but, like of the hall. meaning, seem to have had a particular
so maT terms, it was used less-accurately as time went In Dynasty at least, it was being used as a nonandf by the Twenty-Fifth term for a wallo S3W(t) occurs often in the stela of Pianchi, specific in the descriptions control certainly by which the king, )took It of Egypt939 and seems to be a general term for "wall", does not retain, in this stela, its original meaning, Of the various seiges found as a word for script4l a wall but in Ptolemaic survive textS4O into and also Coptico the demotic does not
S3t is occurs in
21t
1 2
The Abu Sir Papyriq pl,, LVIIIA, and De Cenivalv (in 4; LUVIAp M (partial); Urk. 0 IV9 1048,5 von Hatnub, disputed, but it Pl-139,91,9. is probably
G, plu-
4 5 6 7 8
Textsq
lErk. I IV, 68 41 109 Ibid* I Up 1845P 1310 KRIP 1,186,9; L--D-P 1119 170-17111 KRI9 1,2029 12 Ibidp It 9* dfouj
13 7(b., Belegstellen, 1119 62 (similar). 14 'g-rk--t IIIP 15 Ibideq 16 Ibid., 18 Mariettet 19 Ibid*, 20 Pierretj 21 Wbp IIIv 5v 1 5-
32t 3-
17 Chassinatv
d (twice);
III
pl, 82p c*
Insc.
22 Posener-Krie'ger 23 Ibid.
pl. XIXA, 9 24 Lbid. j pl. LXXVIA, M. 25 Anthes, 26 Malinineg being this 27 jrk#q loc. loc* cit.. cit.. silverg
Since it is
floors possible
(a2Lw) that
described is corrupt
as at
30 Urk- I IVP 1048,531 Ibidol No 6841 1032 Ibid., IV, 1845P 13-
III
33 KRIt It 35 Marietteg
34 Chassinat,
37 Trauneckerv Karnakv V, 153P 4 and note 338 KRIq It 2029,9, 39 Urk-9 IIIv 40 Chassinatp 5t 15; 16,1; OP- cit-9 It 24,, 1; 30v 17; 319 14; 329 3; 349 1 and 318; 327; Mariettet OP- cit-P Ht P18-17Y 405-
21S
sat Dyne Vp M. K.
C-72 C=
1
-%-
I st.
1952-
Int .21
Int.
C= Dyna XVIII
4 %
N, K&5
that this term, for which it cited only two The W6rterbuch suggested 7 8 The earliest references, meant "Passb6den-plattenllo example occurs in a damaged inscription Dynasty from Saqqaraq of the Fifth 9 (I) built the ewp (I) did not lay down (orp overlay) the s3wt. 11 10 The use ol the verb dr with sswt would certainly support such a meaning given by the W6rterbuch, since dr is " However the other texts in which so easy to interpret. In the description was brought of the tomb of Ankhtifi appears from Elephantine, as that s.3ty "floor". elsewhere used with are not sit, which 12 s3wt occurs the
at Moalla
to be an element in a door* The same is true of an occurrence in the Book of the DeadfitrI will not let you pass over metv said the sst of this sb3, tunless you tell 13 These two passages would suggest that s3t could be me my name$*" thresh6ld the used facthe of a door. In anotherv damaged, text, sawt are mentioned 14 "thresholds".
In The first form-cluster ws4t, Texts cribe its from two templesp example is
in proximity
however, on the of the
to doors
(caw)
also
s3,wt
are
described of the
along
with
columns.
inscriptions III
red-granite
papyria
Amenemhat s3wt in
from its
granitep at Serabit
of her
Hathor sawt
"erecting
cases
the
bases
the
stood.
s3t seems to have been a term for a stone element at floor-level, itself* a threshold, It is probcolumn-base or flooring to an identically-spelled term which is determined ably related with 17 to "Planks" -J', , and which seems to refer or "beams" of wood. I Urk. t Iq 18it 10 (Quibellp Saqqaraq 1907-8t ASAE 37 (1937)v 88 (L. Dot Up 1189 g). Pl-IXIP 3); Habachip
Basically
21+ 2 3 2329 Vt--, t 5; Pl-XXClZre and Vandierv Textes de la premiZvPeriode de la XIeme Dynastie, 46,11. Vandier, Gardiner, and Peet, The Inscriptions of Sinai, I, Mdallav
inte=ediaire
et 3179 Ap
pl*LXXIX9
as 5 Budge, The Book of the Dead,, (1898)9 Text, 264,12& 6 Gardiner and Peet, opo cite, 19 pl*LUIV, 310, (a). (cited by earlier 7 Habachi# loc. cite; Urk., Iq 181,10; publications, 8 Wbop 111,412,14see note 11 above). 9 Urk,, Iv 181,10, 10 Wb-9 V, 475,3-6. 11 !! rk-, IVP 11509 13; 1164t 9-. 12 Vandier, loc* cit** 13 Budge, loc* cite, 14 Clere and Vandier, loc. 15 Habachi, loc, cit** 16 Gardiner cit., pl. LXXIX9 317, Ag a; of. also Ibid. 9
Texts, 19 254t a; Urk. 9 IV9 7079 14; Compare also siw "der Balken" (1b. t 111,4199 14-17) and s3which occurs in the Abusir Papyri, Posener-Kri`oger, BeitrAge Me, 120 Festschrift Ricke, 76-77-
See further
belowt
216
s stw
Dyn. XVIII Dyne XVIII 2 Dyn. XVIIIp XX
Vill 456
Vitt% NsK, Late Period
N*K* ah e
originallyp use in
and usuallyp
a term
for
the
earth for
or the
the floor
ground,
architectural It is for
as a word
can be
applied of to the
s3t connected with 8 flooring. Sitw does not seem to and 9 the New Kingd6m. before in a building not in any doubt in and a few examples the of Amun****.
the
term
this
is
will
typical to work
83tW worked with gold and silver. oeeitS "Making for him (Amun) a bm of goldp "Bringing in its Retenut 83ty to Asian gild copper the with which his
s3tw
in
majesty
brought
overlaid
A mythological clearlyg the meaning in Abydo9q,,,,,. Ally such in was not either
of Aman in
used or
Coptic
1331,18;
1648,10;
2 Ibidep IV9 1329# 10. 3 Ibid. t IV9 1150,13; Champolliont Notices Descriptives, 1,733 (Lb-t 111,424,89 Up wrongly quotes this reference as Ibid., 732).
4 5 6 7 a Wreszinski, Derchain, not See above, Der Papyras Ebers, 203,17Budget The Book of the Dead (1898)p Textt le Papy-rus Salt p. 213825P 8*9 VIP 8o IVP 423-424s3t, 267 (Chapter 125P 44)-
Ilb
Period (Helck, Intermediate An example from a stela of the Second V "Q\ may be a different MDAIK 24 (1969)p 199; pl, XVII9 10) of both the determinative used, and the context since word altogether in which the term occurs, would the part of the inscription of of "door". suggest a translation IV, IV, 423P 101329p 10* loce
13 Derchaing
Addend=
After there in a discussion he publishes letter on the of meaning to the of of s3t
this
study the
appeared which
and s3tw by Frandsen example dom*' differ of the of former Essentially from term
an article from
a hieratic
conclusions
my ownt in
discuss a ast
connection
as having to
beeng cover
meaning"later
extended
Howeverg as aplural-form to for foreg building itectural ally reason a paving for the the
s3t
and s3twt is
regarding
the
latter
formerD3
would
seem to be in
s3tw)
writings
as the
word for in
the the
the
reject.
suggests support
a s-st could
casesp at the
seem to be-
tortuous
examples
s3tw is 5
described
precious
Concerning
Opavin&-block' IV examples
account is said
satisto be
Urkov
211 decorated s3tw is (sbkr, here the into used sw1b9 dr) with ie. 6 not with precious to propery the metals. block the I would or blocks socket suggest making and the that up the groove
bed of leading
with
exactly
what and I
is
the
difference to
bettrans-
and "the
examples
as anything decorated
This
however, which is
expression the
t-sm 44 at
silver" the
Amun temple
templesp Frandsen
covered
metal. six
examples,
he does mentiong This is only one is obviously a shrine. the descriptiono from the tomb of Rekhmire, of metal of the casting 9 door. -leaves (csw) for the sh-ntr The remaining of Amun at Karnak. five descriptions examples are from general of temples of the Eight10 eenth Dynasty. In all of these sstw can be easily by translated "floor" with the possible exception of the description of the door of the Third Pylon at Karnak* In this text the sstw is a part of the doorway, Lord "***making of the its of for Thrones him (Amun) a very great sb3 before Amun-Rep irety the in of the (masc. ) V being set to the Two Landsp decorated in place". used " for of the the feet door-sill. doorway thick since and which It entworked in its (swb) with silvert
it
be being
been
"floor"
an Egyptian been in
pylon
a passage haye
thickness
stone-work
view
a plural
of
a3t,
of Monthu, llimplSriag
adjective
nb is
also
possible the I
were
connected
as a plural-fo=
a new translation
219 .
the
metal-decorated
s1tw
in
the
random
examples
quoted
by Frandsent
JARCE 15 (1978)v
25-31-
2 3 4
T? -v 1119 423P 7-16; as ECHT With aryp 38* op* cit. the
424t
1-12,
also
survives
into
Coptic Diction-
Coptic
Etymological
5 6 7 6
Fraudseng
Ibide 1 29* no,, Vy 214P 15E*gop Urkop IV9 1329p 10; 1331P 18; Champolli ong Notices tives, 1. '133inaccurately translates al-ntr as Urk. p IVP 1150P 11-14- Frandsen (op. cit., "temple" 28y No. 8). 1648P 10; 16541 4-9op. citey 28. 16509 16; IVf Descrjp-
16549 8;
16559 7;
16689 2-5-
12 Frandseng 13 ir-k-Y
IV9 1668j, 4-
219
sb 3
PA*
Dyne VI
Pj 4
*1
TI
Dyne VI
2 R
Dyne V13
Dyne Up 1 st. Int. Dyn. V15 Pj W M Dyne XII . 2nd. Int. -A 6 Int. t Dyne X119 Dyne XII, XVII, t XIX7 lot. P] I C-3 -R 1-3 2nd. Int. 9 Dyne ". xviii 8 9 10 Dyne XIIpPtol. Dyne XII DYno XII *j C-3
Dyne XIIll
Dyne XVIIII 4
Pi <
12 Dyne XII
5
3)yn. XVII11
-K
Dyne XVIII17
17
I' * Dyne XVIII C-73 _jc 18 Yyne P,, XVIII19
Dyne XVIII20
V-3
23
p* TT
Dyne XVIII
21
ci tT *j
'XXv
Dyne XIX
Dyne XIX30
rn&
lp Dyne XIX33 3
Dyne XX35
Dyne XX36
c C-3
Dyne XX37
ptol. 40
38 Dyne XX
C-3 41 Ptol*
-kj
There
44
Dyne XXV1139
-7---'
can be no doubt
as to the basic
meaning
of
sb3p both
the det-
erminatives
in which the word is found show used and the contexts that sb3 is to be translated There are, howeverp interestas "door"* ing developments in the history of this word which make a re-examination of the evidence valuable. it would appear that there were many different At first
glance
110
shown many of the variants actual ways of writing in the the most frequent writing examples and above are isolated Dynasties Nineteenth was NO-13texts of the Eighteenth building and through confusion be easily The Late Egyptian writings explained can sb3 butt in factp sb-s "door" does same stem, although with other words 42 The in meaning to these other words. to be related not appear Dynasty and the word date from the Fifth examples of sb3 earliest the Ptolemaic top and including, period. " It up was used consistently S9BIL 43 into Coptic as CSe demotic survived and also occuzredin 44 Fp CBHY -k. cem pie formed from the sb3 could which parts of exactly the frame or the leaves45 and it is the question be discussed here. the doo=wav were described w which will as sb3. of in which there can In the Abusir Papyri sb3 is used in a context noted be little doorway was intended the entire since the sb3 n leaves'19 sab. f (meaning uncertain) c3wy-f "its into hn is subdivided 46 doorway9 Clearly dsof "itself". sb3 here denotes the entire and that abs indicates the designation of the frame as "itself" although doubt that could for also be used of the frame state that 48 alone. This is also shown by those doors These include temple of the First door The W6rterbuch that refer to the entire doorwayg
examples
which
stone.
of Meren=e47
and a mortuary
Intermediate
examples
are found
of actual
"sb3ll. The gateway of the Middle Kingdom labelled which are as of Thoth at HermopoliS is described as a sb3p49 as is the door frame in the from the d-&p of Amenemhat I at QUantir5O and a 51 This last foundations of the temple of Medazud. named Wn in htpw-ntr "storehouse of, divine Kingdom most buildings elements elements in were constructed the more costly stone. The door
from
a building
have survived, and consequently It has has been lost. often re-usedg when the rest of the building 52 been seenp so farp that sb3 was used of doorways in templest palaces and administrative of private time buildings. It was also used of the doors contexts. at not that refer of 55 house B53 and tombs54 as well of the Second Intermediate as in mythological Period show that did
Two texts
sb3 was the name for the door frame alone and it to the entire doorway which included the door leaves.
A stela
22.1
Sebekhotep
IV describes with
erected
a wooden
of Min at Koptos 57
As is
case with
building oco=ring have temple been
so many words
texts word prior of the to from the
principally
sb-S was but In the and in detail is few the New
detailed
a frequently useful Kingdom doorways in and, quite was made plated ally stone Dynasty suffice nI its in the in texts many of
preserved were
pylons
wall.
this of sb3w
made 59 metal
Some of fact
these the
being
but
that is sb3
being was
Eighteenth frame, is
Dynasty this
of into
the the
door and to
although
examples
demonstrate the of
sb3
inspected r3 was
the 61
great (Karnsk)
great
sb3w (A=mant) "*ooe* (Blephantine) 11 ..... "es-e9a with electrun. Although mental door of From indicated of door these frame in of temple a private the by signs to in sb3W in 65 the `, 3w in
granite
Elephantine,
its
c3W
in
bronze.
62 *4, o 63
cedar
worked
with
copperv
the
sb3w 64
in
granite.
liwy c3wy-r
in
copper. banded
" with II
sb31n "
and
giZLddd
of was
principally but
doorwayp house
be oftenp is
palace in
the the
contexts meaning
which sb3 is
change a door
Curious
since
222
had been
in
constant it
from
the
early
dynadtic used
periodp earlier
although
as frequently
as in
howeverg t6 the
that
are the
described doorways of
Even
brick of the
were
the
temples the to
door
leaves.
retained was
a situation
same word
frames I the at
different
rel-
doorways leaves
Nai; ri
decreep
door
wood are
"of cadar as being electinun gilded with ..... 70 There are other texts where sb3w 71 to be understood This as door leaves. the work 1. of Ramesses III has at various temples sbsw in Sbi in this
particularly in
Harris
n6ted72
papyrus is
always
be translated with
leaves". although
determined
consistently as being
some of
described
made of
plated with gold or 76 77 by -,= determined is probably it or _=-.* the intention is to refer to the door leaves. One final clear proof example that from the tale of for the
met&173 they are wooden 75 Whenever electrum. sb3, is safe to assume that
two
brothers leaf.
provides
sb-3 could
be used
a door
to the stablep "... he looked returned under [brotherl (and) he saw the feet of his elder 78The behind the sb3.,, distinctive shape of with the pivots is and the resulting here, sighting "cut-away" and it of is and bottoM79 "door as leaf"
the
sb3 of
sb31S "behind
Anpuls
can be understood. Sb3 originally describe Latery to the the from door leaves. the leaf, referred to the door frame could whilec-w also the be was used called to
The entire
doorway
sb3.
Dynasty retaining
onwards, its
word
original
213
1 2 3
The Abu-Sir
Papyrit
pl. IXIXAv
4-
Pyr. j 799a; Urk., It 1079 4; Cl6re and Vandier, Textes do la Insc. Louvrey premi6re Pgriode intermle'dairep 44; 459 1; Pierretv Up 29 (C-15v 5); Balcz and Bittelp MDAIK,3 (1932)9 28, abb. 13a and b; Do Backy Egyptian 309 23Reading Bookt 72,1; Marietteg Abydosq 119
5 Py=. t 1115b. 6 Clere and Vandierv OP- cit-9 46,1; Simpson, Papyrus Reisne= It (K-14); Petriet Koptoi3j pl. 12v 3; Urk, j IV, 659 9; 426,8; Pl-17A 1105P 16; 11o6,13; -1369,11. 7 De Buckt op. cit. 9 919 13; 969 5; HaYesv JEA 46 (1960)v Pl-M, 3; Mallerp Liebespoesiep pl. 10pg9(with k-'A' added by error. ) 8
9
Bisson de la Roque and Clorep Rapport sur les Fouilles, (1927 989 fig-72; 1231 fig-84; Piehlp Inscriptionsep 9
SimPsont Op- Cit-9 cit-v Pl-13A 72Y 3(G-7 and G*12); 14A (H-37);
10 De Backq op,
11 Habachit ASAE 52 (1954)v 451 and pl. IV; Helckj MDAIK 24 (1969), 199,10,12-, XVII9 10 and 12. Pl. 12 Habachit ASAE 37 (1937)t 88; 91p fig. 6. 3829 13 Also determined with 'ff - Urk-t IVP 439 12; 56,8; 295,6; 618,14; 8199 17; 8299 17; 8511 12; Himst 12; 302t 6,8,10; in Honor of John A. Wilson, fic-7; Mariettep op. citep It pls. 11a; 18; 30b; KRLp It 132Y 3; 149t 13-16; 1629 12 and 14. 14 Urk-Y IVt 439 4; 382P 5; 1648P 1115 Ibid. t 3889 10; 357P 5; 1668p 2. 16 Ibid. t 5219 1317 Ibid. 9 4309 10; 21591 16; 2160,1. 18 Ibid., 1379,8. 19 Wb- Belegstellen., IV, 22 (ref-839 20 Ibid. 21 Ibid.: 22 Ibidp 1073P 312499 14Studies
14); Urk-,
rV, 831,6.
765t 13; 1550P 1823 Ibid. 9 12951 5 and 6. 24 Ibid. f 16519.125 Wb. Belegstellen., ians, I. 5t fig-5; 9); Badswyt Miscellaa: a WilbourSaunerong BIFAO 64 (1966)p Pl-IIP x+5 and X+7; IVv 22 (ref-83t
22t
Davies,
N[dmanjde
G9 Seven Private
9 Pls-13;
30;
28 Cerny and Gardinert Hieratic Oatraca, It (omitting Papyrus Harris It 50,11 e ). 29 Barguet, MiLnstert 30 Mariette, 31 Gardiner, 32 Ibidov 33 Ide, ASkE 50 (1950), 7AS 95 (1969), opo cit*, late 39,2* Late Egyptian op- cit-, Stories, 15,6. (omitting Ilp 274; 276;
Pl-LIVP
39 4; Erichsen,
2779 fig-7; 5-
278; Plantikow-
Egyptian
10,9.
709 2; also
91 16. The
Tomb Robberies
Dynastyp
119 pl*IV, A*
(BoMo 102211 7,1)37 Chicago 38 Peet,. University, Medinet Habu, VIIv pl*501, (BoMe 10053P 'Lerso, 4,9)e ope citop pl*XXI 39 Metropolitan Museum of Art, Egyptian Expeditiont Hibis in El-Khargeh Denderah, Edfou, 82-86. Oasis, III, P1-59P1119 Pl-43o V, 4,3See also; Ward,
The Four Egyptian Homographic Roots 1 43 Erichsenq Demotisches Glossar, 419b-bv 63#t 120-121* derny, Coptic Etymological 44 Crum, A Coptic Dictionaryq 321b; Dictionaryv 147; bsing, Nominalbildungt 40445 T? -, IV, 83,9-17and De Cenivall, Posener-Krieger Les Archives in loc. cit. For discussions e Bf. 12, Festschrift funeraire of this 46 Posener-Krileger passage 83-85t Kak , see;
Beitr'Ze
Ricket
du Temple
de Neferirkare-
47 Urk-9
48 49 Clore Balcz
It
and and
1071 4Vandierv Bittel, ASAE see; la 52 OPloc* (1954)9 citcit** 451; Bubasti Clore, pl. , loc. IV. 8; For pl. cit.. another XXKIII9 door-jamb A. of the 45,1 t -
21S 52 See also for the Middle Kingdom; Habachit ASAE 37 (1937)9 889,919
6; De Bucky op. cit., 9695; Simpsonp op, cit-t 17A (K-14)G912); 14A (H. 37); 16A (J-7); and 91,1353 De Buckj op* citop fig. 54 Ibid. 72v 1; 729 39 55 PYr-q 799a; 1115b; Urk-Y IIp pl. 301 23- See also loc. cit. Koptosp * pl*12P IV, 659 9; 430t
P18-13A
(G-7
10; Mariette,
Abydob
302,6,8,10;
3829 5 and 12; 388t 10; 426,8; 844t 15; 8499 IU 850P 10 and 17; 819,17; 829; 17; 831,6; 1651t 1; 17o6t 3 and18;
1708P 8; KRIt It 1219 1499 JM 60 (1974)t 2; 149P 13-16; 162p 12 and 14; Abd El-Razikv 1-5; Mariettev 30b; Bargautp loc. cit.; op. cit. v It Pls-18t For a list loc. cit.; Chassinat, of doors of the New Kinedom see 12; 15509 let; Materialen 963-4zar Wirtschaftogeschichte des Neuen Reichest 959-60;
Helckv
59 E. g. 9 Urk. p IVv 16489 li; 1655t 8; 1668-p2; My It 132t 360 E. g. p Urk., IV, 167v 6-9; 16549 361 Urkv IVP 56, a. 62 Ibid. v 1249Y 1463 Ibid-9 1295t 6. Comparethe Amadastele (Urk. v IV9 1295Y 5) where the sb3w are of sandstone. 64 Mariette# op. cit., Ilt pl-39 465 Ibid. t Ilt pl. Ill a and b. 66 Gardiner, loc. cit.; Miller, loc. cit.. p1105t 16; 1106,13'; 1369,11; 2159P 16; 2160,1; 67 Urk-P IVP 10739 3; IVp 22 (ref*83v Ce=y and Gardinerg loc. cit.; Wb.9 Belegstellen., 1468 See "3P-33-3469 KRIP It 132t 3; 149Y 13-16; 1629 12 and 1470 Ibid. v It 47P 1071 Abd El-Razikj loc, cit*; 1Dq IIIt 152c; Saunerong loc cit.; loc. cit.; Metropolitan Museumof Artq loc cit.. 72 Christophep Melanges Masperoy It fase. 4; 239 1119 c73 Ericheeng Papyrus Harris It 5v 10; 69 7; 50v 11'74 Ibid-Y 70,2; 94t 8-
Peett
22.6
75 Ibid-t
9,16. cit.; loc, Badawy, loc. cit.; Chicago Universityp cit.; Wb. Belegstelleng IVv 22 (ref*839 (B*Mo
IV (B. M. 102219 79 1); XXII pl. Denderah IIIP Pl-43PPStotiesy 15,6 and 8.
Thrt der 1gyptischen Iv loc.
13-24-
Descrilbtivest
Plantikow-MAnster,
2211
sbbt
Dyne IV
1st.
Into,
23 Dyne
Pj
1 st.
Into
2nd. IntO7
8 40
za
Pi
16 Dyne XIX
C-3
Pe .
Dyn o XIX
Dyne XIX21 24
22 Dyn e XX 25
Dyn, Xj23
C11
Dyne XXI
pi D ft
nI%I
Dyn, XXII
PGTU Al-w
Dyne XXX26
ia n\
X&A IT
Alex.
11 31
28 H. rg ba l
= Ptol.
v
In ptol.
Alex* 30
11
27
29
ptol.
Pei IrT
Sbht occurs unfortunatelyp indication in texts it from the Old Kingdom found nature in to the Ptolemaic texts which give period little but, or no involved, is most often specific as to the of the building element
texts uses of Wat is in religious such as the .Book of the Dead"of the . Book the sbJjwt are usuall; Y intof Gates'where erpreted as being-doors or gates through which the deceased had to passt successfullyp regarded to reach the Underworld. This usage has led to as another temm for an entrance. Consequently sbbt has been translated as I'To"rll and "Tar" by the 33 34 W6rterbuchN "gateway" by Gardineil by Faulkne3: "portal" and "Mrll 35 by Erichsen. The word does not appear to have recurred in the Coptic stage of the lanouage*36 Etymologically sbbt must be a noun formed from the verb sbb "to sbbLt being
229
37
and both It
words is
share
the
38
as something
orp less
difficult
to reconcile
the obvious
etymolog-
origin
accepted translations such as "door" or has been suggested by Barguet who rendering 'a l1entree the sb7jt as *an element do protection who, while maintaining that at Deir elit seems added "basically it could also be translated 40 !palace,,.,, Sauneron pourvue d1une avancie'e. 1141 sbht is the use made of by the occurrences of the is noty howeverg used the writings occonly
sb4t to indicate
with
the door-frazev always described the porch of a building so that "portal" or even as pars pro toto with the sb4t for as 11unportique, the usual textsp of une porte of This translations supported sbbt. periodg
regarded
the religious
sign
to this era the door determinative above. Previous occurs in the EighteeAth Dynasties asionally and Nineteenth while it is found once before the New Kingdpm. This is in the Westcar The word is papyrusy Period. which damaged but is dAtes clearly from the First
mediate
fona very similar to that of employed has a hieratic A (or 'TT )43 and Erman transcribed the hieroglyph the determinative 45 The latter transcription of abbt once as such44 and once as the door. has since been generally in accepted* However no such determinative 46
The determinative
a hieratic form is quoted by MO"ller prior to the Twenty-Second Dynasty and it is possible that the sign used in the Westcar papyrus has been misinterpreted. Mokler himself transcribes the sign as '"j although the hieratic form in Westcar is quite different to examples of &N in hieratic of similar date*47 The more usual determinatives of sbbt varied in form as can be seen
%0
the signs us6d tend to reflect shown aboveg although the connection between sbbt and the verb sb)j "to enclose". The "battle48 mented enclosure,, occurs quite often and so does the sign which is a portion of the same949 These determinatives for were used originally the verb and do not really is of the nount so it can be identified. in assist fortunate that the there elucidation do exist of still the meaning sbbwt which
from
the writings
IL9 In the Twenty-Second in front Dynasty Pedubast I built a sbbt of sandstone , of the Amun temple at KarJ-1 n L
of the doorway of the Tenth Pylon consisted of screen-walls of built to the face was erected the granite An
by Horemheb*51 stated
sandstone", ruin*52
built
to replace
once an actual see how the term came to be understood, and also Egypt how the noun is derived
or "gate" in dynastic
periods
sbbt would have been used for the important These could have entrances. of Pedubast the "enclose'# I or of a more complex turning fotm
screen-walls
at right-angles
a sbht, encloses
54
the entrance to the building*53 It is this form which is shown in the Book of Gates where each god is described as bea description which can be readily understood as
a space in which the guardian of the door can sit. This is also the case in the Book of the Dead where the demons are depicted the sbbwtt in contrast to the guardians sitting within of the these is 'Irry who were sometimes texts but the it is shown sitting not the outside of the door&55 In religious pLLt actual doorp nor its frame, which "porch" within which the guardian whether of this interpretother texts,
calldd 56 sits. It is
screen-walled
now necessary
to investigate
or not
ation
to occurrences texts
the term in
singularly Dynasty
The earliest
the word are which do contain known example is from the Fourth from Tura to line the r6-pr of 57 Pj 0aa The W6rterbuch C C3
limestone
hi s tomb at Gi za and al so f or the ihierpret-d: for which there are,, abf a compound noun rwt-sb7jtp -'thib, 58 howeverp no parallels, It is also possible that the text is to be read "The rwt and the sbbt", The tomb of Dabhen contains a certain amount of Tura limestone from the local which can be distinguished limestone into which the tomb is cut. The second large chamber was
230
lined
with
by Hassanp with
seems to be inescapeable. The only_,other significant which has survived amount of Tura limestone the tomb in the tomb formed the fourth wall of this chamberv dividing 60 (cut originally into two main roomso Since the one large cavity) as to is deteemined with the wall-sign it is tempting sbtLt in question the r-..pr in the inscriptionO59 identify this wall the with the sbbt of the text, in which case the. rwt of sbbt to a false-door. The original meaning
could have walls in front of an entrance led easily to the use of the term for another kind of wall and it is that sbbt did not develop such an alternative meanperhaps surprising ing* However it is impossible to be certain that there were notg orscreening iginallyp icularly A text be sbbw ing further elements in the tomb made of Period an individual the Turn stonep there as the tomb has been damaged extensively of the First in private Intermediate since housesp by later part61 re-useo could
refer.
showsthat
pr and the enlarging of every sbbt sbbwt which are mentioned in the Admonitions as having been destroyed 63were by fire estalong with w4jw and Llryt also a part of a private ate. Apart from these few examples sbbt has survived mainly in mythological 64 domo texts in the First Intermediate Period and the Middle unlike King-
of his
appear
in many titles
elementst
There is one titlev stationed, from the Theban area; "I was one who entered to his Lord with the his backp the Iryw sblit bending down until I reached great ones at 65 the place in which His Majesty was*" Probably these were officials guarding guardians the door but in stationed is before it bore within the the Underworld sbbtg like 66 same title. between the
the
In the New Kingdom it sbbt under the name for discussion a gilded here
to distinguish
the
and another termp sbbtp which was used as 67 both words wooden temple screen, although This and the same basic function. in religious texts the sbbwt of the 68 depicted than the more rather as screens "porch". sbDwt were screen-walled porches and
had the same etymological origin is illustrated by the fact that Underworld accurate were sometimes form of stylized
However other
Now Kingdom
231
the term is used particularly of Hatshepaut, The stela two officials of Amenhotep III
at Karnakv where, in each record that they inspected of sbbw from his mortuary temple
Thebes which also describes other building work of the king in at the Third Pylon at details the area, includes of what is probably 70 Karnak with "sbbwt i1a front of itio. Dynasty* lists Sbht is also found in offering of the Nineteenth In the temple of Seti I at Abydos a list Ur m sbbt "Anubis in rsy(t) of gods to whom offerings "Horus in are to be made includes 11npw m sbbt mqit(t) and the temple. the Southern 72 These sbhWt sbht". than 71 sbbt"
screen-porches
At the Ramesseum a list made to the god Re and the Ennead includes,
gods, barques, shrines and pieces of land, sbbt_st3(t) 'it n; Iwnw "The secret sbht which is in the #wt-15t of Heliopolis. The phrase is determined with the seated-goddess sign* temple sb4wt which were almost certainly There remain further monumental ified with screen-walled gateways but which cannot aiy known monuments. In the Twentieth Dynasty the High Priest various building projects which
always be ident-
of Amun, Amenhotept among which this was the work is badly built of structure,
instigated erection
The text
it in stond. The name of the and woodl in ruins and rebuilt building is lost at the beginning of the text but it is described as a "sbljt of. stone" towards the end of the passage-74 Various eleto make up the tend sbbt are listed, that includkng this wbsw, 1#rw and sbsw. These would to suggest the 4trw
gateway.
Sauneron regarded
he took wtiw to refer 75 Sb3W, in this text, of the door, certainly would emain refers seem then door This
as being the "chambranle" to the supports of a roof in is determined by the -= rather than to a door
so almost before
to door-leaves
sbbt
structure ruppthis
at Karnak with a light wooden roof Sauneron did not attempt to identify the
screen
any extant remains at Karnakv Azenhotep did prect Pylon of the gateway on the South side of the Eightt
temple
232
of Amun76 and this could be the sb4t to this identification main objection the original
to which is that
the text
refers.
The describes
in the strusture as having been built wood and brick 177 while the Eighth Pylon dates from the Eighteenth reign of Sesostris 78 Dynasty. However, in abother text Azenhoiep also claims to have reI at Karnak79 and it may be the buildings of Sesostris constructed case that wished ruined this 4ing was particularly venerated himself to associate with Sesostris buildings which were in fact of later and the High Priest to his reign by ascribing date.
on the at Rarnakq in the reign of Djedhorp an inscription that the king renovated exterior wall of the temple of Khonsa records 80 the hwt-ntr Barguet of Khonsu in sandstone and made a sacred sbbt. has suggested that this refers to the Ptolemaic gate of the temple, Also possibly Ptolemaic howeverp at Karnak of cedarg intended built by Djedhor and later on the the building decorated would by Ptolemy seem to call of 111.81 it inscriptions an inscription describes on the gateway similar of The 82 a sbip
gateway
banded with for all the gateways that Djedhor the stone
11 sbbw(t) of sandstonep with '-3wy 63 The use of the plural here could be copper. " in the Karnak built The wall enclusure walls. 84 by Nectanebo 1 so that it is to have completed (or claim The gate in the Eastern wall similar that all of
was probably
could'have gateways.
completed)
one of
bears
the name of Nectanebo 185 as does the 6 of 11aat? It would therefore seen likely in the Thirtieth Dynasty,
although some were decorated by the Ptolemies. This use of sbbt to describe such a gatemeaning. However, these propylons way is an extension of its original did stand before the main entrance to a temple and werg therefore, in a similar wider position to the older in the sbbwt. Like many words for range of meanings the Ptolemaic sanctuary because periad; of they sbbt had a much example, at Edfu, of Horus were partand
were erected
around
or because
enclosed
In this era sbbt also occurred in the expressanctuary* sion sb4t t3 pn 11sbht of this land", a name which was used for the AL_ 88 royal palace. Sbbt can now be seen to have been neither a "door" nor a "gate"
253
but
rather
a screen-walled of projections in
"porch"t front of
element could
which turn
consisted
also
This function the entrance. to enclose and protect right-angles at in the Book of the Dead where the guardian of the sb4t is. reflected the door behind him, Althvr enclosed spacep guarding sits within in a texts were depicted sbbwt of these mythological foxm in the papyri, of the representation a more accurate stylized a in the tomb of Ranesses of Gates can be seen in thetook screen-walls 89 VIO though the Originally wood so that It is vived. of a sbbt would have been made of reeds and later that early examples have not suris is not surprising only
into stone has been translated when the structure that the sbbtq as a building elementq can be identified. ' The basic function of a sb4t was to protect an entrance and make The same was true of the sbht for unwanted visitors. access difficult screens those in into whicn were used to protect to view period wall them. sacred objects from the gaze of in meaning judged unfit the enclosure preserved intruders. When sbht was extended
the Ptolemaic
built the propylons used to describe and function of the at Karnak, the original these gates provided the only means of it of each templev and thus protected
sbbt
since
from
unwanted I 2
Urko 9 ly 20,6. Cle're and Vandierv Textes de la premiere P6riode intermediaire et de la XIeme Dynastiey 16, Bg 9; lange and Sch,iferg Grab- und Denkdes Mittleren Reichesv UP 166 (Cairo 205439 15); Havillev steine Das Aegyptische (1914)v 14des Papyrus IV, Westear Up pl. VIIv 26. p, 23724 (ref-929 Todtenbuch I, pl. CLI 137A, 20; Legraing ASAE 14
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
PSBA 18 (1896),
1)- See also addenclump below (after 4unnumbered plate p*196). Texts, Ip 193a.
Coffin
UP Pl-309
23+
11 ibid.,
Ij
pleXCIII
Ip rectot
4; Wb., Belegstellenp
(al-AF 5P fasicule the left*
IV, 22 (ref.
3) Pl-III, 3rd
19 184P 36, B.
23; Pl-VIII-
TOmbs at Xurnah pl. XXV; Bor177, No. 630; PI-116 (omitting de la Biblioteque Nationale,
The Osireion
at Abydosq pl. XIp IIv 579 (ref-391P of sb4t 12) quotes sbi. is more likely an exto is taken form to be a writing of, the sign, However in
ample of view
be the correct
22 Ramboval The Tomb of Ramesses VIf Pls-39; 23 Ibid. f pls. 29P 61.
45; 47-
24 Winlockf Excavations at Deir el-Bahrig 1911-1931, P1-8825 Montet, la Necropole royale de Tanis, It P1-3526 Bouriant, Rec. de Trav. 11 (1889)p 154 (a personal examination of this text at Karnak showed that the determinative is a shorter
sign 27 jjrk, than the mm given by Bouriaht). Up p 28 Faulkner, 189 4Papyrus Bremnei-Rhind, 34,2; 489 10-
29 Mariette, Denderaht MY Pl-30p at 12; Wb. 9 Belegstellen, IVt 24 (ref. 92p 2 Mariette, 1119 pl. 68, j and k (with op. cit. 9 t? ). 30 Ibid. It Pl-13; 9 31 Wb-9 Belegstelleng (January many other variants 1961), IIY Pl-57t Edfoug It 405a; Chassinat, 24 (refg. 92,2); De Witt Ch. d'EgKarnak, in It 3; pl. VI.
IV,
There
periodt
seem to occur
235
33 Gardinert 34 Faulkner,
0-32;
589-
35 Erichsen, Demotisches Glossar, 422. 36 6erny, (Coptic Etymological Diction CGIf-(Cxum, A Coptic EbLt. 37 T?. q IV, 91,10-20; Dictionary, Paulknerg loc.
148)9 notes that the Coptic 324a) may have been related to cite,
38 Compare Wb.1, Ut 91 and 92. 39 Barguet, Temple, 311. 40 Janssen, Commodity Prices from the Ramessid Period, 389 (There is, in factj no evidence to support the view that a sb4t at Deir elMedina was a door-frame and Janssen cites no references for this. Since sbbt does not have this meaning elsewhere it id unlikely to have been used in this w4. ) 41 Sauneron, BIFA0 64 (1966), 42 Erman, op. cit. 9 III 43 M611er, Hieratische Palaeographieg 44 Erman, op* cit*9 111 2345 Ibid, q III pl. VIIt 26e 46 lf6ller, Op- cit-9 111,340; 47 Ibid-9 15, note m; see also Ibid. 16, note o. 9 pl9VIIq 26. 111 584-
341The Abu
19 341. Compare; Posener-Krieger and De Cenival, Sir Papyri, Palaeography, pl. VIII, 0.17; IX, 0-32e
op. cite, Sign List, 0,13. 49 Ibid. 9 Sign List, 0-14. 50 PM. 9 II# J89;. Baigu--et,,, --0p* cit-9 246; pl. X)CEIII9 Be 51 211.9 111 Pl-XVt 585,9-j52 Legrain, loc. pylons at Karnak; Second (LM., III pl. VII), X)p Eighth (Ibidet III pl. XIV). pl, 54 Rambovaq op* cite, pls. 29; 39; 45; 47; 59; 61. 55 Budge, The Book of the Dead (Papyrus of Ani)q p1s. 11 and 12; Compare Naville, Igpl. CLXV (-rryt) with ibidot I, pl. CIX (sbht)0 op* ci 5A For representations of the sb4wt Of the Book of the Deadq Chapter 146, see; Naville, I, pls. CLX-CLXIV; Allen, op. cit., Book of the Dead, pls. LXXXVIII. -lXXXIX. 57 Urkoq 1,20,6. 58 Wbot IV9 92,359 Hassan, !aiza, IV, 173, figo120; 174-175e The Egyptian 53 As before Third (Lb.Ldov III cit.. the following
48 Gardiner,
236 .
60 Ibid., 61 Ibid.,
IV, IV,
170-172; 160.
62 Lange and Schiafer, loc. cite63 Gardiner, Admonitionsv pl. IIt 10-11e 64 De Buck, loc. cit.;; Clere and Vandier, III,
loc.
ci
plOVII, 26; For a possible further writing Coffin Texts see; De Buck, op. cit. y Iq 253d, but note Faulkner, The Ancient Egyptian Coffin Texts, 1.55, note 9, 65 Griffith, loc cite. 66 Montet, loc, cit.; In Faulknerv Papyrus Bremner-Rhindo 48,10 the guardians of the sbbwt of the Underworld are called S3w nw sbljwt 67 Spencer, JEA 66 (1980), (forthcoming)o 68 Naville, I, plsoCIV; CLXIV. apr. cit., 69 Urk-, IV, 4389 4; 475,6o 70 Urk., 1654P 9o The Third Pylon at Karnak doesp in fact, have before the door (! Ae, II, JX))which a sbtLt was decorated mainly by Seti I and Ramesses II but, as there are remains of a scene of Amenhotep IV, there seems to be no reason to doubt that the sbilt IV,
is of the same date as the pylon. 71 KRI, It 184,34, Be 72 KRIq Iq 184,369 73 Champollion, Be Descriptives, pl. II, I, 906e Notices
76 P11. 11,176; p1oXIV. v 77 Saunero; L, Op- cit-, Pl-IIP X+4o 78 This pylon was erected by Hatshepsut 174; ploXIV; Barguet, suggests that the present an earlier
structure, evidence that such a pylon, if it existed, was the work of Sesextensively ostris I. This king doeaq however, seem to have built Karnak (Mo, 11,108; Barguet, op- cit , 15-3055; 356, index). at 79 Mariette, des gTands Karnak, pl-40- See also Lefebvre, Histoire pretres d'AmondeKarnakq 187o 80 Bouriant, loc. cit.. 81 Barguet, op, cit 29-309 especially ,
on the site of stone pylon was built probably made of brick,, but there is no
note (2).
La Porte
dlEverjete
a Karnakt
P113-19,75-
On pl. 19,
B the
be restored is called which could as either sb[3] a [bt) V (pl. three the ideogram inscriptions The other or Lb use 9 19, A; 75 (twice)). This could be read as Lbt but the absence of a feminine suggest form of that the of ending it sign, on the was the without qualifying masculine a cobra than sbbt. adjective noun or hkr ra "great" would The
support
a reading
sb3 rather
63 Varille,
84 Barguet,
loc. cit..
29. leading of 68,11.
op. cit., 65 P11-t 119 208. 86 Ibid., Ht 11-12. fact IV, in 2. op. cit.,
This
gate, wall
of Maat,
is
in
87 De Witt
88 Wbeq 11,92,7-
A writing is found on one of the blocks from the of sb73tqPJNOq building Hommages a'* of Tathmosis IV at Karnak (Letellierg sandstone Serge Sauneron Ip 58). The text relates to a depiction of the door the Fourth Pylony sbm 6fvtf of and Letellier suggests that the sb:ht is the wooden porch which is 55 (1953)t 28-38). Cho d'Eg the text known to have existed Until the entire block to the there is (Yoyotteq properly describes
can be related
scene it
must renain
open to doubt.
2313 sbty Ph. Dyne XVIII, Roman, Ptol., Dyne XV1113 doM Dyne XIX 0H t 6 Dyne XIX7 Dyne XIX, 8 Arr. p] CID '\\ XIX, XX, Dyne XVIII,, XXII" XXV, Ptole N, K. 5 XXI9 2
P2 U Ch,
Dyne XVIII4
DIc:, '2' 11
Dyne XIX9 C-3 Dyne XX, XXVIII Dyne XX10
XX
12 Dyne XX A Dyne XX13
Dyne XXII, Ptolo Dyn.
XXX
PY, M
c=1
15 Dyne XX or
16
XXI t-3
Xxvii
pj U
Dyne XXVI or 21
18
19
11
20 pk; L .1 24 Roman H o
Ph. Arr.
23
Pi ct? 11 25 Roman
22
"- 11
Al
sbty
111 p4z
) ==r, =Dyne nM i
=- )) 'C:\\ r-j
28 XVIII
30 Dyne
Xviii
texts,
to the Eighteenth
it does not appear to be a loan word from any other Near Eastalthough Sbty doesq howeverp survive into demotic3l ern language. and Coptic32 33 Dongolese and Nubian. Arabic, as well as the modern languages; The meaning of the term is not in question sinceg from the contexts in which earliest his first on the it is foundq it clearly referred is in Tablet to an enclosure the text I. In describing wall. his The on to a sbty on Carnavon the king of Kamose, found
extant stela
town of Neferusy
claims
to have hacked
2aq ,
sbtyw the
his
people.
34
In of
this the
case plural
the is up
sbtyw
must
probably of is
to
walls than
making
the
one enclosure
in
origing as it
a sbty is used
than wall
a templep town of
former by
army
and of the of is
the
however, pre-
beseiged the
Egyptians
inhabitants. in several showing of texts that the where there various to the wall is called
described
a sbty the
n wmttp
a sbty 36this Tuthmosis described as a "prison 37 the by which heq presumably, meant that the by seige them. rather than sarrenderg and allow were of the
(n wmtt)
the ,
towns-
townspeople
on to to
to The king refused 38 they the sbty until the to of seige-wall describe
more
protective sbty
examples A stela
n wmtt
knowng that 39
Heliopolis by a sbty nt
records n vmtt
Tathmosis
a sbty of
bwt
more
emphasis
as can be
known In the
of
a town the
reign
from
both
Thebes
same king,
the Other
Eastq town
the
townspeople steka
upon which
on the
Egypt.
2+0
full
of
aoldiersp the
at Memphis attack*44
the
sbty
raised
in
h6ight over-
to withstand thrown
At Neferusy
had been
by Nimlot.
sbty
to
describe 46
a town This
wall can be 47
led
to
ith
appear-
seen particularly
Alexander". a temple
xasas high
wall. the
huge
affairs,
and
thick Often of
as long in to
some places as well preserved 48 The examples protect. of the walls are legion and need not
used
temple
enclosure
be examined
in detail.
There or renewing are of inscriptions the enclosure of various walls dates around 51 which the note of IIIf the building temple 49 Karnakq
including work of Ramesses 54 53 Montuemhat Taharqal re, nak include a Ptolemaic around Tiberius wall the
Ramesses 1.56
Other
when
was also
newed.
work on enclosure out by Ramesses walls was carried I records III the erection and Papyrus Harris of a sbty at Medinet 62 60 61 Habu, and at the temples of Osiris of Anhur at Thinisp at Abydos, 63 64 The wall of the of Thoth at Hermopolis and of Wepwawet at Siut* temple of Medinet Habu is also recorded on a stela from the north 65 Further work on the same side of the second pylon of the temple. 66 in the reign of Taharqawas undertaken enclosure Other walls at other sites includea sbty of Amenhotep III at 67 6a Soleb, one of Merenptah at Memphis wall of the and the Ptolemaic 69 temple at Koptos. Petrie decided that this last sbl2t must refer to the inner stone wall rather than to the brick wall because of the 70 measurements which are given in the text. This would also seem to be so in the case of a Twenty-Second Dynasty papyrus sbty. A hieratic states Thoth figures that (I=j on formulae a sbty before are to be recited (Sesostris Kheperkare of on brick walls the imaZes of Amun and 71 I) at Karnak. Since in this casep
Much building
were not
depicted
sbty must,
2*1
refer reign
to a stone of Sesostris
Other that the the
wallp 1.72
either
dating
from or in
commemoration
the temple
of the
Athribis to
GreLaco-Roman of temple in
sbtyw of
include
at stood
and watch
townspeople
ceremonies
the
occurs citizens
in of
DynBank at
Seti that
men., * .... every man of every "from the sbty of the bwt" of Ramesses III the 74 far as the 4wt" of Ramesses IIIe This would seem wall encompassed is being the Habu. the whole of the West One term for of
Gurna conclude
clearly used
administrative
control
temple
the sbty was such an important part of to of any temple or townt it its hardly surprising in epithets used frequently of both the king and th6ir the protection and symbolise strength which Since Typical
system was
examples of this are; "a sbty which protects 75 "my sbtY of a million (Akhenaten describing hotep 11), the cubits" 76 "a sbty of quartzite" (UD: describing Aten), th Seti I )77 and "a sbty (of Ramesses 11)*78 for his soldiers on the day of battle" There are a few-, texts in which sbty is used to enclose something other than a temple or a town but the sense of the term as a Strong defensive wall remains the same. It could be employed to describe 79 so 81 a wall around cattlet a well and a vineyard. The 1!6rterbuch gives three main meanings for this word "an encl82 84 "a fortress, #83 and "the wall of a room". osure wall'19 For the to those texts in second of these the Belegstellen gives references which sbty is used for apposite One Is and before town enclosure translation. wallsp particularly are quoted. after ary wsl For the so "fortress" thidd meaning is not three a texts
the Golenischeff Onomasticon where sbty occurs85 tsmt, Inb and mrrt. Gardiner, in his comment-
to the Cnomasticonj, translates sbty in this text as "surrounding 86 wall" and there does not Seem to be any valid reason for suggesting another, less commoh9 translation. Another of the texts referred to is a damaged building inscription from the Festival Hall of king
2+1
Osorkon [////. Festival were II at Bubastis; ei// would and the gilding /]all its rbtyw that of than in these electrum. brick does is is were electrum walls and wb3w-columns are part that of they the
stone In this
walls case,
thereforep to the
a wall of the
used set to
Dynasty
Four
stelae which
detailing East
recitations sbty of
and West
the
be made at
the
however,
iaolated
examples of
being
used
in
such
meaning of brick.
usually temples
and townsp
although
coulld af
be used a sbty
were addition
occasional sbty
For kind
reason wall,
was not
used
as a regular
ASAE 39 (1939)v Pl-XXXVII9 15; Daressy, ASAE 18 (1919), 144, 1 Lacaut IX, 10; REk., 11,66,13; Enaanq AS 38 (1900)9 124s, 2 Urk-9 IVP 184P 16; 8949 17; ERIt It 190P 15; 1949 1; Louvre stela Insc. Louvre, 119 50 which, however, wrongly C-94 ( see Pierret, dz in place gives, cl,
ogical lichen Report, '%%); Legrain, of 1906-1907,219 Egypt Exploration Papyrus H81scher, Pand, Archaeolaus den K6nigExc. Med. Habu 1; Hieratische 4-5;
126.
Scarabs of Amenhote
N09589*
Orienfees du Muslee de
1119 6; Naville,
7 K-RIPUP 919 158 Gardinerv Robberies 2. 9 Gaballat BIFAO 71 (1972), 1319 fig-1; pl-XY-III149 15; Peet, Dynasty, II, The Great Tomb the Twentieth pl. VIIv 2 versop
a+a
(Gloss* 1,67,11;
Gol-
Oriental
14 Erichsenq 4v 10; 94,6-7; op* cit-i et al. 15 derny and Gardiner, Hieratic Ostraca It pl, LXXX, versoy 416 Navillef The Festival Hall of Osorkon II in the Great Temple of 0887-1889), Bubastis frag*llo Wreszinzkit Aegyptische InsPl-VI9 chriften aus dem K. K, Hofmuseum in Wien, 31,397, It Z79 6, 17 Urk. t 111,6,12; 26,14; 18 Ibido, IIIv 134,2. 19 Habachi, 20 Urket IIt op* cit. 14t 14145,12-13* pl. 621 h, ASAE 12 (1912)9 It Ili 197t cit., 1812* same text in LD. p III, 29b, has
2319 fi&1; v
pl*XXIa.
23 Marietteg 24 Reinach
2*
op. and Weilly IVP 8329 13 (the 27 Urk-t 11 ) II instead of 28 Urket IV, 661,4,5-
copy of the
QEA 38 (1952), 11) This was taken by Gardiner Ibidep IV9 767,11, 29 Inb to which he compared a text of Tuthmosis III in the n vmtt, as Hall at Karnak where the Megiddo seige wall is described Festival Inb ( 4ej. U ) (ELid-, PLIV, 14 and Uffk* p IV9 wmtt as an
do C) -
1254t 9)o See further 30 Urk- 9 IVP 17951 1431 Erichsen, 32 Cerny, Demotisches Coptic
Etymological Koptisches
Dictionaryt
35Urkep IV9 894t 17cit.. p (see also under inb P, 25 ); 35 ir-k- s IVP 184,169 767,11 758,12; See Grapowq Studien za den Annalen Thatmosis 56-57.
661
49 5; v desyDrittenp
2-+t
37 Urk-, 38 Ibid.,
39 Ibid. 9 IVP 8329 1340 Ibid., IV, 17959 14o 41 Ibid. 9 IV, 1297,9,15 42 Ibid.,, IV, 13129 343 Ibid. v 111,26,1444 Ibid. 9 1119 31P 3-
and 16.
45 lb id. , 111,6,12* 46 Gauthier, Dict. Geogev V, 23-26. 47 Ibid., V, 24; Brugsah, Dictionnaire Geographique de 11-ancienne Eypte, 11,6.96; n., IV, 969 2, 46 E. g. Barguet, Temple pl. II. 49 Ibid. p 29ff; Habachit op. cit , 229-23550 Helck, Die Ritualszenen auf der Umfassungsmauer Rameses' 11 in
Kar. -
V, 28. Here and Ibid*v 146 (NO-3) a stela of Siptah gouth-East is described as havivg been found in excavations in the It is detailed as "Elle commemore corner of the Amun enclosure. des travaux
executes dans les rempartso. ee. "e"Rempart" is also used to translate damaged stela found in sbty which occurs on a different (Wlt B), Although a plate number is not quoted for the 1hesamarea Siptah stela it must be the one on pl. IX, opposite p*289 since only ine stela of Siptah was found* At the bottom of the stela are two lines of hieroglyphs with a building inscription which ends with; 1r, The final word is not legible nof m mnw*f n :Lt9fImn-R[-/////, & on the photograph but presumably the excavators were able to restto read sbtyo No hieroglyphic sufficiently copyp or translation of this text is given. 52 Habachit op. cit., 2349 fig-353 Legraing Egypt Exploration Reportv 1906-1907, FLmd, Archaeological 22,1. Karnak, pl-429 2355 Wreszinskig O: Literaturzeitang rientalistische 56 Habachig op, cites 231P figol; ploXXIp ao 57 Ermang op. citop 5a Loc. cit..,. 126. 54 Mariette, 13 (1910)v PLIIIP 9ore the traces transliteration
Z11-5 59 Reinach wall is Weill, ope cit. 9 2v 12e The Greek term for the same and -ffsp, 6a)ou from which one could suppose that the entire
than just the wall, However, one enclosuret rather was intended. text (Cairo 31101) specitically states that the sbty was of brick. 60 Erichsenp 61 Ibid*, 62 ibid., 63 Ibid., 64 ibid., 65 Habachi, 66 Ho"Ischerg 67 Urk-, 68 KRI, 69 Petrie, 70 Ibidet Papyrus Harris 1,4,1068,366,1767,119 68,12e opo citep loco cit. 2239 fige2e *
71 Hieratische
Papyrus aus den__Ko"niglichen Museen zu Be=li 72 DaresSY9 opo citop 145,12-1373 Sauneronp loc. cit.. 74 Peet, loco cite. 75 Urk-, IV, 1290p 11 and 12. 76 Ibido, IV, 1971,9e 77 KRI, I, 190P 15cit, o 78 KRI, 11,91,15o 79 Blancenberg Van Deldeng loc, 80 Erichsen, 81 Ibid*, 83 ibid., 84 Ibid., 86 Ibido, 87 Naville,
88 Naville, XIII XIII;
119 Pl-330-1r.
94,6-7-
82 Wbo, IVv 95,10-13IV9 969 1-2. IV, 969 3o Onom , pleXI9 F4-4-41o 11,213* op, cite,
XIV; XV.
65 Gardinert
Les Quatres
2+6
spt Dyne XX
CIL
2
cm
Dyne =3
Dyne XXV4
Although
few examples of this term there is no doubt a that the meaning of spt was the "base" of a column. It is alsop in 5 19, used of the "bases" of stelae. Papyrus Harris describes from Deir El-Medineh An qstracon a man as being "like 6 (wbs) of reeds, under which is a spt of copper*" Fortunately column a this figurative examples, use of spt is supported by more concrete there are only that he will hymn to Amun-Re Ramesses III erect stone states a in the wb-3 of the godf with spwt in silver97 whilep in the columns Twenty-Second Dynastyp granite columns in a temple of Ptah were to 8 have 11sp[w]t in every stone. " Dynasty inscThe dual form of the term is used in a Twenty-Fifth In ription from the temple wooden porch before by two columns worked with electnim. would, in the metal. Spt does not base in either appear to have been used or Coptic stages as a term of for a columnthe demotic the language. 119In fact,, this case, of Aman at Karnak where Shabaka erected a the gate of the Fourth Pylon. It was supported electrum as in "the spty under them in pure the bases with those described
earlier,
and decorated
1 Posenerp
Catalogue
litteraires
de Deir
El-
Rameses III's
Temple within
the Great Inclomre of Amon, pl: 4231 A. 18. -. 3 Badawi [Ahmed]v ASAE 44 (1944)p 2044 Yoyo-tte Ch. d'Eg. 18 NO-55 (1953)9 34' (the term 5 Erichsenq Papyrus Ha=is_Iv 8,3 the bases 6 Posener, 7 Chicago 8 Badawiq are described loc. cit*, loc. as being decorated Slo am -= and and gold).
is in
spelled silver
2-+-l
snb(; t) Dyn. V,, VI9 M. K.,, XVIII Dyn. V][4 ' Dyno V2 M. K. Dyn, V15 Dyne V13 6
Dyn. XII
7 M,, K.
Dyn. XII8 11
AAAA
MOK*9 12
10 MOKO
M. Ke
Me
NOK*13 n 16 ptol.
ptol*14
15 ptol.
quoted reasons
here
as variants
of one wordo
become clear when the textual will evidence is assessed* The W6rterbAchp howeverv preferred two to distinguish termst a masculine snb translated as I'Mauerzinnen17 and a feminine 18 The same division is followed by Faulkner who transsnbt "Manor". 19 lates This term has not snbw as "battlements" and snbt as "rampart". 20 been discussed oftenp to this being the comments of one exception Posener-Krileger on the two occurrences of the term in the Abusir papyri. In these divided i2jo papryi ds. f anb is "itselfllp found as a part of a door (03)9 "its which is the framep leaves"
presumably
13wyo
takes to be the "couronnement" in and snb. f which Posener-Kri6ger 22 brickwork The other occurrence in above the lintel of the door. 23 these papyri is spelled This subt and is translated as "muraille". to parts of a door (sbj) passagep howevert also seems to refer so it 24 is possible (h3. t that this snbtf which is described having fallen as is also the coping above the lintel. Unfortunately Coffin Texts in snb(t) contexts occurs most frequently in the Pyramid and which are of limited value to this study. The term is most often found with reference to "the falcon upon the the bwt of The-One-whose-Name-is-hidden ()3: mn_ ). 11 25 Other anbw of gods are also described including Sobekj as a as being upon snbw(t)p 27 hawkv26 and Khnum,,
2. +B
This idea of gods in bird-form sitting 28 that is from these examples emaic and it ments" is the also as a translation supported Texts. that Coffin for snbw(t) has
on snbw(t) the
recurs of
in
Ptol-
suggestion
"battle-
arisen.
Such a translation
Pyramid
16 which is found in by the unusual determinative 29 is used for both snbw and snbtv This determinative one term the of phrase 30 snbw. is involved. "Khnum sits In additiong snbwt" in spell has 355
indicating of the
only Textsp
on his
variants
which
show writings
Khnum is interesting
also
associated
with
snbwt in
an
of passage which would also seem to support a translation 31 "Khnum has sat "battlements"; upon his snbte If the sky comes with a north wind,
he sits to the south of it. If the sky comes with a south 32 that the n This implies windp he sits to the north of it ....... from the weather behind the snbto god could shelter Another god who is associated, in the Pyramid Texts# with snbw(t) is Shup where the before snbwt of the king references destroyed there Shu seem to be obstacles which must be 33 Texts In the Coffin can reach heaven. 34 to the snbw(t) of the sky. that This
are also
The evidence of these religious texts would seem to indicate the anbw( ) were battlemented ramparts on the top of buildings. translation on Middle found would is also bb suitable for two occurrences of Amenemhat IIIf of Kingdom stelae, a stela of the reign which
the te=
The first
Reisner
the number of who records at Kerma. It belongs to an official 4bt (brickst "the snbt to bgild or perhaps blocks of stone) required 35 Reisner originally identified which is in 1qValls-of-Amenemhat"j, 'Jnbw (Imn-m-4st) (? )p K*IIP at the place the funerary with chapel 36 but it has since been shown that the Egyptian Kerma monuments found at Keims, had been taken there from Egyptian sites with the "Walla-of-Amenemhat" does not have to be a building at 37 Kerma itself. Hintze has suggested that it was perhaps situated in the region of the second cataract38 and comparison with the name result of fortresst 39 story of Sinuhe, would the name of a fort. an east-Delta There is of the reign an interesting 7Inbw V33p "Walls-of-the-Raler" suggest that "Walls-of-Amenemhatn in the that
was also
parallel
to this
on anothert perhaps
also
merely
2+9
purchased) at El-Kab. 191is majesty ordered is the that snbwt which are in 40 the rest a Unfortunately "Horus" name of Sesostris
this this can be assumed to have been a fortress named after so it may king. Since the exact provenance of this stela is uncertaing In these stelae to oneof the Nubian fortresses. snbwi also refer could but This well Sabw(t) only is be fortified recurs ramparts* from period4l of the Ptolemaic Egypt has been published. dynastic texts in hieroglyphic
Dynasty stelaq of king Ahmosep from Karnak, on an Eighteenth deswibes a stozm during which damage was caused to the Theban which templese The king took measures so that "the monuments of the gods be be established,, their raised up and sacred objects snbwt should it is ct sp sst. "42 In such a general description to be certain not possible as to the exact nature of the snbwtv but 43 the use of the verb tsi "to raise" would suggest that the snbwt replaced in the were on the top of This was never the buildings. a very common term andq outside of religious texts, examples are few and far between. Ifp as the evidence suggestsp to describe the battlemented ramparts of enbt was used particularly buildingg then the lack of examples is hardly a fortified surprising building texts refer to temples. The original most detailed meaning of the term may have been less specific since it appears to have been used in the Fifth the Dynasty Abusir papyri to describe since coping above a door. Snbt does not appear in Erichsen's Demotisches does it seem to have occurred in Coptic, I Posener-KI-ileger and De Cenivalp The Abu Sir Glossarg
nor
Papyrit
pl*XXIA9
Bt
4; I_Zr. t 1121b; 1955b; De Backq The Egyptian Coffin Textst Vt 2c; Vandersley6np Rev* dlE * 19 (1967), PI-8t x+14; 9P x+19Posener-Kri'bger and Do Cenivalp Op. citol pl, IXIXL9 b; De Backi 110t. op* citep Vp 2c; VIIf PYr-y Ibidop loc. 1778a* 299b, cit; Ibidtt 1953b. NO-30-
3 4 5 6 7
Reisnerp De Buck,
260
Stobartv Egypt in
Antiquitiesp
collected
1854 and 18559 P1-1 in PSBA 27 (1905)r plate 11 (1957)9 Pl-49 220h. IVP 46g. 63; Budget
on a voyage made in Upper (StobarVs copy is also repopposite p. 106). opcit*p 11,
141; De Buck,
223a;
11,221d; V9 2c.
ZiS 49 (1911), 3-
The Book of It
3; 104michen#. Kalendor
Tempel Inschriften
It 16, lowerv 9, P 16 Dumichent OP-cit-9 It Pl-XIX9 317 In-t IIIP 458,6. 15 Chassinatp Edf 18 Ibid., 111,4589 723119 Faulknerv Con. Dictop
the comment of Adams (Nubiag 20 Cne can only notep with interestv 210); "No-one knows what a embt was, since the wo-d occurs in no other text"* 21 Posener-Kribeer and De Cenivalq loc. cit,, 22 Posener-Krieger,, Archives Neferirkareq Us 4409 note b; Id, q BeitrAse Bf. 12t Festschrift Rickeg 83Neferirkareq UP 430op. cit. t pl, XXIA9 Bt 4Ilt. 220a; 221d; 223a; VIIP 1990and De Cenivall 25 Pyr., 1778a; De Buck, op. citot 26 Gardinerp loc* cit,, 27 De Back, op. cit. t V9 2c. 28 Chassinatq loc. cit.. 29 Pyrot 1778a; 1953a. 30 De Buckp loc. cit*. 31 The version in the New Kingdom Papyrus of NU has ch'sn nJ bnm, uses the plural form of snbt and changes the suffix pronoun with (Blackmang op. cit. bms to the first 63-64)person 9 32 loc* cit*. The text continues in the same vein with regard to the east and west winds. Blackman notes thai this Middle Kingdom text is a better versionthan that of Nu.
251
33 Pyr. 9 299b; 1121b; 1953b-1.955b. TI, 34 Do Buckv op. cit-P IVP 46g; V. 35 Reisner, 36 Ibid., It
37 Adams, op. loc. cit. e
110ts:
220ho
126-127cit. 209# t
38 39
Hintzep Sinuheq
(1904)t 84cit.. text which There to is those a third from at stela Xerma which may once have is a prethe 311 con-
was re-used
Buhene after
badly
the 3tw of
6-9; H*S. j The Fortress pl. II; of Buhenj, The Inscriptionst 1). that the damaged word could be either Smith has suggested Inb because snb and prefers of the masculine P30 article, does seem to the have been a feminine possibly, word but it could be for
Snb(t) written
without
t and could,
have
been
mistaken
a masculine
term.
that this stela also refers to enance make it building activity on the ramparts of a Nubian fortress. 41 Damicheng op. cit-P It P1-XIXP 3; Ut pl. XV9 2; Id. Kalen&. er Insp fq 2; Ma=iettep loc. cite* chriftent pl*LIXp
to the other
stelae
and its
prov-
42 Vandersleyeng 43 n-P
loc.
cit..
VP 405-407*
252 sh-ntr Dyn. III-Alex. 12 Dyn. VI4 T il Dyn. X v"m Xv ii X1117 1n Dyn. XVIII 8 D7no V2 ri) Dyn. x15 11 TCM Ptol. 9 ei Dyn. Vs XIX9 XX13 XX7I9 Ptols Dyn. XII 6
ni
One of the most frequent of Anabis uses of this term is in the epithet 10 has been lanty s4-ntr. The nature of the dki-ntr in this context 11 by Altenmaller investigated in detail so this study of the term be restricted to those examples of sh-ntr, from which the type will of building can be identified. Probably temporary boothp made of light was originally s4-nj a a 12 in the festivals materialsp erected-to perfo= of some function the gods. Evidence is lacking fortthe existence of the term in the dynastiest Howevert there outside earliest of its use in epithets. are two tomb-scenes specifically The first of the Fifth Dynasty in which shrines are labelled as Fqi-nj is from
Giza (No916) and shows at at work on the funerary equipment of shrine stands alone and is des13 of Juniper".
n wcng -"A sh-ntr The second scene occurs in the tomb of Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep at ? is being Saqqara. In this scene a shrine of the form polished by a kneeling workmang the entire group being 14 labelled 'Tolishing the as snsh-ntrt s4-ntr. " In both of these examples the sh-nt is a par of the burial equipment of private a small wooden shrine* Other examples of the term in texts of the Old and Middle King15 doms can not be identified types of building. with any particular Fortunately the same is not true of the New Kingdom. A good example is recovered at Deir Elindividualsy
the point where the name of the shrine should be givenp onep however, is preservedo describing the shrine as a sb-ntr pss m hbny n tPW :b3swtp
an ebony shrine of which Naville one side and one door-leaf in the temple of Hatshepsut 16 Bahari. Most of the dedication texts are damaged at
263
The lands"* the best of the foreign "a noble sl-njr in ebony of decorated both inside and out feet tall, was shrine stood over six made to conIt is clearly a shrine opened with a double-door. and Amunige, since it is he to whom tain the image of a godt presumably Moss suggest that it originally Porter is dedicated. the shrine and 19 the temple, in a chapel of Amun within stood to the stone is also applied In the. reign of Hatshepsut, sl-nt The blocks from this were the Aman temple at Kamak. of sanctuary 20 Cne block has a scene of the Pylon. found in the fill of the Third before Amunp the electrum being intended Queen dedicating electrum 21 Lacau and the noble s4-ntr which she has made. " "to decorate 22 itself, to the sanctuary this text refers have suggested that Chevrier Another text may also to be no reason to doubt this. and there seems to the same sanctuary as a s4-ntr. refer work of Hatshepsutp This is the stela of Djebuty which describes including granite. with " 23 a st wrt sji-ntr .d(W) m nit is the fact "a st wrtg that the The main obstacle sanctuary but of granitep to the identification a sh-ntr of this sanctuary built sl-nt is not of
17
the Hatshepout
made entirely
of red quartzite is noty howeverv insurmountable This discrepancy as black granite. it came to using the correct inaccurate the Egyptians when were often the sanctuary for building terminology wasp in any casep materials and consists partly applied building that the made of granite. In additiong the to= st wrt in to the Hatshepsut sanctuary 24 by name. It can, thereforet a text which be regarded as a possibiLity was elsewhere mentions the
on a base of
particularly of the Djehuty stela is this sanctuary, sb-ntr there. is no other edifice named on the stela which could be so as that this chronicle identified* It is unlikely works of Hatshepsatts Amun should omit the sanctuary of the main temple* r.: b'lbcks from this sanctuary mentionsh-nr at a further This is the alabaster barque-shrine Ka=ak. of Amenhotep I which was 25 A dedication inscription on the shrine also used in the Third Pylon. (named) 7Imn-mn-mnw in alabaster itself describes it as "the sl-ntr c-2W of Hatnubp with upon it in Asian copperg while on the blocks for (Nos. 102 and 128) it is called Hatshepsat "the shn_tr of alabaster of (named) "Imn-mn-mnw*1127 The scene on block 102 has been publishedg by Lacau2B and shows the barque of Aman resting on a previouslyp pedestal-within the alabaster shrine.
as+
building text of in an incomplete Three writings occur of sh-ntr to the shrine on the from Karnak. The first Tathmosis III refers 29 barque of Amun "Aman-user-hetI, and the second to the monosacred lithic naosp within alabaster of Amun and Amenijrp and which 30 this naos as "a sh-ntr.... The text describes Karnak. *frOm, one at 31 barqueto the alabaster block of stone.,, The third example refers in the way-station Tuthmosis 1119 to the south of the of shrine 32 lustrous describing it as "a s#-ntr;... Seventh Pylonq alabaster *in 33 of Hatnab.,, accord Each of these examplest all of which can be identifiedy well with the evidence that a sl-ntr could be either which the image of a god could reside, the god could rest whun he was carried Other texts or a barque in procession. sjiw-n_tr which were almost listed of the buildings a shrine in shrine in which which were carved two seated figures, the king placed in the Eastern temple
cult certainly Iqlorizon of the god"(3tt called on the stela of Djehuty is a ql-nt 34 that it was is also called This sli-ntr wrtv indicating ntr). a st in which the image of the gid could rest. a shrine A scene in the tomb of Rekhmire at Thebes shows copper being brought from Retenu 35 at Karnak. Undoubtedly out not the dynastic survived. shrinel the to cast the doors (c2tw) of the s-njr of Amun
term continued
to be used for
continuous period, although Howevery in the Thi3tieth Dynasty parts of which great were found at 36 sb-ntrpt,
throughhas
granite
the Deltat
as a "very -sh-ntr
seems also to have broadened in meaning it became a synonym for hwt-ntro helpedq no doubt, by the fact the two terms employed similar Where a writing groupings. of has been treated
noun, I have taken syntactically as a feminine IQ it to be an example of liwt-ntrp because writings C-3 show such as 37 Q that the sign for in 4:wt-ntr. could be substituted There are occasionsp howeverv when sh-ntr was used to mean 11templell -L For example the Annal Inscriptions Of Tuthmosis III are described as having been recorded; lir sb-n-tr pn "upon this sl-ntfll, 38 the use of the masculine, and not that the goup is to be read as all-nj En, suggesting tLwt-ntr. Another text of the same reign uses as the feminine
aS5
sl-ntr temple
It
occurs
largely Dynasty
from the king's on an architrave 39 text. destroyed. dedication inscription d scribes this of Ramesses II court as
48 to the "a ws)jt Lbyt for the s4-ntr in sandstone'19 certainly referring entire temple. It is also of note that a Memphite temple could be 41 called either; s4-ntr 3b(Sti-mry-Pth) or 4wt-njr 34(Stlm, pr Pth 42 mry_pttL) m pr ptb.
Another case in which sli-ntr is used to mean "temple" is with regard to the temple of Kflonsu at Karnak. A dedication text of Herihor 43
describes fine monument for eternity*11 sl-ntr as a In the temple of Ramesses III at Medinet Habu a scene depicting the preparation of food in the temple slaughterhouse includes a row of men carrying offerings destined to go Itto the sl-ntr'1944 which are and a text of SetiII at Karnak relates that it was this king"who his his sb-ntr as an excellent "making festal
In the Graeco-Roman period stL-ntr could also be used of a single 46 room within a temple and there is evidence to show that this may have been true in earlier periods* An incomplete text on the east wall of room 29 in the mortuary temple of RamessesIII mentions a [m] Pr ',,=. 47 In this- expression sl-ntr hry-i7b hwt-Wsr-m31-t-r1 mry.!Imn 4wt refers to the temple itself so that it can only be concluded use of the term was to describe the Serapeum. Saqqarav49 a complex which was also at 50 regarded as a bwt-ntr. Erichsen cites only one reference for s#-ntr in demotict translat51 ing the expression as 11G6tteshallen. The term did not recur in Coptic. A, sb-ntr, thereforeq in the pre- and protodynastic periodsp was probably a light boothp or shrine, erected for specific festivals. In th Old Kingdom it is attested as a term for a shrine, forming a Part of the funerary equipment of Private individyals. Although the textual evidence has not been preserved, it would seem likaly that sd_nt could always have been used to describe the shrine in a cultus temple in which the image of the god was kept. By the New Kingdom it was also applied to a barque shrine in which the god Could rest when his image was carried in procession and to the
applied that ski-ntr is being to room 29.48
Cne further
a56
shrine
on the barque
itself.
howeverp hwt-ntrv
either sb-ntr
by came
extension
be used for
one specific
in great The actual form of the shrine can vary and can be depicted detail. Murray, Saqqara Mastabasp p1s. Ij II; XX; Dunham and Simpsong 6; 10; The Mastaba of Queen Mersyankh III, figs-3a; Iv 1209 10; 108P 3; Cl6re mediaire and Vandier, Textes de la premire Periodd VIIq inter29 et de la Xleme Dynartiev 309 T), 1 and 3; Urkot
2; 43,6; IV9-296,6; 4279,15; 734P 15; 829v 10; 13419 16; ITitas, Studies in Honor of John A. Wilsong fig-79 x+6; x+ 14; x+ 20; Lacaup ASAE26 (1926)9 pl. IV (between PA30 and 131); Pillety ASAE 24 (1924)9 57; Abd El-Razikv JEA 60 (1974)9 155; Helcky ZA'S83 (1958)9 plellIt 27; Chicago Universityp Oriental Instituteg Medinet Ra-lu. 111,1739 16-21; LDT9 Iq 15; J6quierq L'a=chitecturel q plois
2 Moussa and Altenmi-iller., 62* pl. LDP IIP 499 b (the the group same text, Das Grab des Nianchchnum by lepsius
1119
und Chnumhotepy is
as reproduced
IV,, pl. CCCC=3: 1) has in 'Whatever 9 n ); ERIv Iq 3109 of the sign it is clearly intended to be for 2 and 3; Chicago Universityq op. cit. 9 VII, pl. 486, C9 2; Vercoutter, Textes biographiques du Sgrape-um de Memphis# 17'; pl. II; Mariette, Denderah, II, 63P 11; 69,16. ple22; Urlte, II, 4 Pyro, 2100c.
coy of de la Nubiev
by Champollion
(Monuments de L'Egypte
n,
The
5
6 7
op, cit.,
Coffin
25P 49
Texts,
1Ip 196a b (BIOC El-Bahari, 4219 10; 119 11509 von Deir IV,
Mentahotep
Ip 196a; Urk*,
Urk-P IVv 1423P 17 (with the masculine article p-s). 9 Chassinatv Edf Is 3589 10 Wb-9 IIIP 465t 1-311 Altermaller, Jaarbericht-ex Oriente Lux 22 (1971-1972)9
307-317-
12 The simple tezm, ph, was not generally used of temples or parts thereof; one exception to this being in the Graeco-Roman period
26-1
when it 464v couldp like sb(T2. be used of a room in a temple p-1119 9 construction seems to have been a light see; Wb. 9 Beler2dtelle The term )". w1n is 9 1119 1299
3-21)* by
column,
119 49v
3 above).
translated
by restricts 2869 1-
(Con. the of
view
that
and
Harrisp shrine
Ancient
Egyptian
Materials
made of wn is coloured red in a tomb (Davies, Gebrawi No de G. The Rock Tombs of 9 the identification juniper pleX)p of w'n with term used for All the that shrine at Deir of El-Gabrawi the label term is is
El-Gebrdwi_
however,
missing
and Altenim-11lerv Pyrop VII9 2100c; 2t Deir the 2. El-Bahariq Cairo (Urk,
loc.,
Axnold,
119 1-4;
pls.
XXV-XX=.
This
shrinev
which
Museumq is IVt 1,
also
described
as a iwnnt
see p, 22,
296,6).
18 MY IL 19 Ibidop
21 Ibid.
22 Ibide, 24 Ibid*,
231P 367-
23 R-rk-9 IV, 4279 151679 3. This text also calls the sanctuary a 1mand describes (Harris, it as being made of inr n rwdt n dw dsr "quartzite" Lexicographical Studies in Ancient Egyptian Mineralso 76). Another odr the blocks from the shrine also uses the term bm and describes it (for once accurately) (rwlt nt dw as being made of both quartzite (m3t) (Lacau and Chevrier, op. cit*, 261,411)-
cit.. 27 lacau and Chevrierv op. cit-P 195,286. 28 Lacau, ASAE 26 (1926), pl, IV2 B (between p. 130 and 130-
269
29 Rims,
Studies
fig-79
30 PM9 119 216-217. pls. VII-XT-T. 31 Nimso op- cit-v, 32 PM, 111,173-17433 Rims, ntr op- cit-t
x+
fig-7, see;
at Karnak,
of these slw+ 20, For the identification x: had barque-shrine 72-73. The alabaster Ibid.,
badly damaged. inscription dedication which isp unfortunatelyp a but has been restored, The term used for the shrine is destroyed in Urkop IVP 852v 29 as hm, paralleling a text from Medinet Haba IV, 881,10). Sethe (LbLidd*, 852, note a) states that b is 2M v because of a following masculine pronounp a necessary restoration is another possible restoration. although sb-ntr IV, 421,10* 34 ir-k-, (jrk, 35 Lb-id-, which IV, his 1150,12. Majesty This brought scene is labelled "Bringing Asian copper of Amun
from Retenu
Karnak" (Daviesp N* de G., The Tomb of Rekh-mi-re at Thebesp at jj'C= (Cone Dicter '_7' to Faulkner IIv pl. LIII). 76) takes the group be the only This group and the entry ionary. 36 Habachiq ASAE 53 (1956), fig-14 (after P-464 example isp in of a term wdb meaning "door of cast metal". fact, to be read w-dh `1wy "to cast the '3-doors" thereforep be deleted from Faulkner's dict-
shouldt
I P-183-184-
38 Urk-, 39 Ibidop
7439 7155-
JEA 60 (1974)9
and Cylinders with names, pl. XXXIXv 2* See also YoYottev KAmi 14 (1.957), 84, note 2. (ref-465,6). 43 Wb., Belegstellen, 111,129 44 Chicago 16-21. University, Oriental Institutep Medinet Habu, III, pl-173,
Scarabs
45 Barguetv
Temple, 118,
op. cit-, of this VII, pl-4869 the C, 2* temple, see; Ibid.,
46 Wb-, 111,465,947 Chicago University, 48 For the disposition fig-16. room within
2S9
Textes
Demotisches
2bo .
t sw -
(Ir3bty) r, -
Dyne XVIII
o,
M
Dyne XVIII
456
0 T, JC
23 T
1, L -j
XIX9
Dyne XVIIIP 11
Dyne XVIII
T
Dyne XVIII
13 Tt C-3 0 jjyn*
XX14 16
Dyno XX15
Dyne XX
Tc Dyne XX17
C-3 I
C-3 I C,
130a,
r0)
\\ C-3m
Roman18
This
Anusual
term
is
known
only
in of
texts the
from word is
the
Eighteenth
Dynasty
The most to
usual
writing in
!Swtv however,
Papyras that
Wilbourg it is
swt-r'-4r34ty, as 1-0 is in
any In
involved. inscriptions
other addition aspeat the in be no
indicated since
which
the
frequent
te=
not 19 of
from
of
Akhetatenj
the god bry-lb of Re,
was Re-Horakhtyp
associated above with the
a representHabut 20
temple thatq
at term
Medinat is
even
abbreviated
to
or swt,
it
is
to be understood
as a chapel
dedicated
to
in relation was discussed by Fairmant particularly 21 to 'swt-rl. in the Amarna period and Stadelmann hast more recentlyp 5wt-r' identified to anwith a Re-chapel within a temple dedicated 22 Stadelmann has shown that the main element of a 9wt-r" other god* 23 he was an open court containing andq as examples of this, an altar cites the Re-chapels in the mortuary temples of Hatshepsut at Deir 24 26 25 el-Bahari, of Seti I at Gurnag of Ramesses III at Medinet Habu 27 and the temple of Abu Simbel. There would seem to be no doubt that this interpretation of the
I foI
of
the
design the
of
a twt-r'
is
correct which in
in
only tLry-lb
Medinet is
Habu in the
referred
occursv
chapel
question
named as
a 9wt- r-. is known RM, which also suggested -chapelp 'SWtKarnak, the Amun temple to have existed was a at on the roof of 1 1 a 28 in the this the he wnuld equate mentioned with r'and C-32 29 this Cne can only Osorkon. Prince chapel Chronicle assume that of Stadelmann has that the corresponded as no remains By analogy would also in of plan the to the Re-chapels have which that the in benn other found. has the identified Amarna to the it period Aten, the were alrelNew Kingdom templesp
with
to
dedicated Aten
Ite-Horakhty
temples of
as the
between his
somewhat identified
discussion
the the
'swtcentral
belonging of
Meretaten, of the
Maruaten
south wasq to m t3
The texts
show that
that
n ps
Itn were
original) of the
approach
central
kioakf IIp
entire kiosk.,
complexg containing
known
as Maruaten
as the
report to
implies
that
be no actual were,
evidence
to the upon
that
this the
sunlight Amarna
down to
offerings the
heaped principal
contained area
element
Re-chapels, of the
Unfortunately the identification with an altare gwt-r4 is not so certain. at Akhetaten of queen Tiy is of depicted some size in the tomb of Huya, 34 It of the
at is
Amarnal note-
an edifice
statement
as to to
Gw't-rc' like
presumably,
be found
at Maxuaten
16 Z
the
above, case
nor
is
it
to
within
the
pr It
4'-Y can
be assumed to stand
further of queen of
from
Amarna.
large
enough
which an the
as depicted a large of
court, a king
by colonnades court is
In
the while
an altar, to
by a flight halls
leads
and courts
the
rear
building
at
Amarnag led
river-scenes
has
suggestion
situated
somewhere
along
river-bank
at Maniaten. the
the is
royal unclear*
women at
reason of
creator-god. at Akhetaten
the queen as God's Wife 36 Whatever the reasong for the kingts also to the mother for two m pr
also
both
were
kicy n pi
large
monumental by the
building
to
the
west "Great
of
as the intended
as the that 41
quarters in fact,
family but
suggested
be more
between
The name of
the
building
would particularly
also
support
as a religious structurep 42 festiva, and it would, re were Uphi, 4cYp at situated 143 the within the the
equated rear of
swt-r'L buildingg
queen opening
Tiy off
with the
a part hypostyle
of
the hall.
pr44
zbs
This could It is
other
sidev
by the
stracture of
which
was under temple central that focal has room the points
noteworthy hall
that being
on the mf the
thereforeg are these existed the the building the two within 'Swt-rc pr-]cy than of
structures the
known that
pr-tLcy. Tiy9
either
queen
as being more
seem to areas of
have the
an altogether
complex
Each of centre
estedv court of has
the
structures
consisted
of a peristyle on whichp
side rooms containing this part
court
in
of which 45
beyond
was a concrete
stood an altar. was a large completed* elements of In
platformv
Four open
as Uphill
opened off
probably which
courtp of
which all
standard 6wt-rc
Re-chapel from
thereforef lead-
be identified ing
'swt-r. as a
addition, the
blocks
doorways
into of
as a lion-
Re-Horakhty
on unproven,
blockst anced
certainly on a statue Mrt-1tn. princess of the
possibly
to
from
this
building,
which
do mention
It is
47 .1 a swt-r'.
The ownership
belonged base,
of these
the now in n p3
two SWt-rc is
eldest the Itn princess
open to question.
Meretaten. t3
Cne almost
mentioned
British m pr statue to
Museum, iltn
m 3tt-Itn. the
'awt-rc n sst-nsw.... 48 The name of the forms swt-rl of the was to names
and the
gives
early this
would
seem fair
that having
always her
intended death,
rather of any
been
re-assigned
on the
The second
gwt-rl
assigned
to
Hanke has although 49 Kia. Howeverg of Ankhesenpaaten/Kia oration Hermopolis the name of of the term
inscriptions by Hanket
require on blocks
swt_r,, 050 These texts are have bean wrongly restored, Ankhesenpaaten-ta-sherit,, these blocks seem to
from
princess of
photographs
neither
have
been
2 bI-
Hanke the
implies the
that 5wt-rt
they
There
is
also
a third of the of of
block
which
name of leaving
as to third
block
who is
described m pr-h4y
s-3t-nsw n ht, f mrt. 52 ? This blockt itn. re-worked forms It from been of is the but, the unlike names
m 3btbeen
preservedg of
base
Meretaten,
possiblep start to
thereforep belong to to
these
two
'swt-rl
were
two princesses,
although
assigned of
a queen. as a cult-place by the Ramesside is indicated Wilbour. instead the of the by texts
a swt-r-
from
Amarna In
and particularly of 53
Papyrus used
a h3lnn to indicating It is
--Swt-rlis
two words
regarded
evident
a wb-priest
and Ew-nt
Papyrus particular
Wilbour, buildings,
while
to identify could
any SWt-r'
with
shows that
56 for labouring staff would have land, which an administrative and The 9wt-r', of this papyrus are situated either within been essential. town? god57 or are described as being in a particular a pr of another (? 20)59 which can be compared with One is located within a fortress 60 'swt-r' situated within a sfbye another 4-, thereforep was a cult-centre A 'swt-3: of the god Re-Horakhty, which could be situated within a temple dedicated to another god or be a separate temple. The main element of a 'swt-r' was the large open 61 could be placed court with an altar, and to upon which offerings which the sun's rays had direct access. A s'wt-r' had its own priesthood and staff9 although it wasp no dmubtp under the administrative control of the cult-centre of the chief god of the area. Although the earliest known reference to a -SWt-r' is of the Eighteenth Dynastyt it All the surviving the Twentieth they existed prior to this date. examples are of the period from the Eighteenth to frcm the Dynastyp with the exception of one writing is possible that
265 temple of Esna, in the Roman 62 periodq indicating that the term had
been
in
from neither
the
1 2 3
U-rk-, Ibidv
IV,
498,1-
1673,11El-Amarna,
Petri. eq Tell
76; Janssen, Two Ancient Egyptian Pl-XXIV, (); CorrespondSpiegelberg, 27 (omitting Ships Logs, 15,26 and I here, but (transcribed 57,10 ances du temps des rois-pie"tre as , T by Fairman in Pendlebury, 1119 The City of Akhenaten read as 203, e), Davies,
4 5
El-. Ajaarn , V, pl, XXX, 15Harmopolisp 19 (RG7-Vll: % A); Roederp AmarnaReliefs aus pl. 222, fig. 1; Aldred, Akhenaten and Nefertiti, MDA 32 (1976), No,,13Roeder, British Pl-55 (450-VII, Texts, A)VIII, pl. XXIV* is op. 167) probably cit.,
Tawfik, 99,
6 7 8
OP- cit-v
form of the name of The City and Woolley, of Re-Horakhty IV pl*LVI op* cit*, op, cit. (22/273, III, and Woolley,
ification 9 Peet
showing
(22/273,
reverse).
10 Ibid., 11 Davies, as
is
also
an example, (-nh
copied
III,
pl. L'-UVIII,
1109
14 Erichsen,
the transcribes Papyrus Harris It 701 12-13 (Erichsen *F but Fairman, op, cit., 202,2, d reads it as? ); initial sign as 70,22; 72, 70,20; Gardiner, I, pis. 63,22; The Wilbour Papyrus, (the last has an additional 60,4 the a ). i after 23,24; University, Oriental Institute, (A, Medinet Habu, VI9 Pl-427t is the fall A.
15 Chicago
16 Gardiner, spelling
I,
pl-7 this
169 38);
This
standard
term in
papyrus,
the signs are often although (A, 9t 1); 8 (A, 18,37); 18 48 (At 98t 17); 49
26b
(At 100,9). 17 Ibid. 9 19 Pls-37 (A, 78,34); 42 (A, 86,46); 44 UP 91,30)18 Sauneron, Esna, III, 10P 197,1419 Redford,, JARCE 13 (1976), 47-61; Tawfik, op. cit., 217-226. 20 Chicago University, oriental loc. cit.. Institute, 21 Fairmanp op. cito, 200-208o 22 Stadelmanno MDAIK 25 (1969), 159-17823 Ibid., 24 Naville, 165ffDeir El-Bahariv 1,1-11; PloI-VI; (for the dedication inscriptions EMP 11,362-363; on the altar Plo see; qrko,
XLv 1 (court XLII). pl. 26 H61scher, Exe. Med. Habuv 111,15, (rooms 17-19)XLVIII, 27 P11, VII,
fig-8;
PM, 11,509-510;
Pl-
99; plan on p. 96. (the North chapel). 28 Stadelmann, op* cit*, 175-176. Oriental Institute, The Biibastite 29 Chicago University, 22,11o 1119 206o 30 Pairman, op. cit*, 31 Hanke has suggested that this titles of Nefertiti and by the name and title mopolis, 166-168)o 32 Peet and Woolley, 22/273o 33 ! hLd-, 122.
Portglj
pl.
was a 9wt-rc of Kia as the names would not. fit into the space now occupied Meretaten (Hankep Amarna Reliefs aus Herof 1,121-122; pls. XXXIV, 1 and 2; LVIy
op. cit*,
205) suggVIII-XIo Fairman (op cit., pls,. ested that S'Wt-rl may have referred only to the small kiosk with the rear of the temple (Daviesp op. cito, pl. VIII; XI) an altar at the Ateny described as nb t-3 -SWt-rn as the names and titles of
mwt-nsw hmt-nsw wrt Till, occur over this rear part of the templeo However, the title "Conof the entire scene is quite explicit; ducting the Great Queen, the king's mother, My, to let (her) see her 6wt-r1111, it would seem to be more logical to assume that -SWtr'- was the name of the entire SLto, 163-16435 Pairman, op* cit., complex. See also; Stadelmann, 2po
164o
261
36 Ibid. 37 There
1659
to be no texts extant which mention a tWt-rl of Neferseem titi by name, but the boundary stelae state that a '6wt-r*of a (Davies, (name lost) V, pls. XXX9 to be built queen op. cit., was 15; XXXIIt 17) while
hieratic docket mentions t3 'SWt(c-nb rl)*.. a t3 bmt-nsw .... 4r rsy "The swt-rcof Ankh-Re (see note 8 above),. n 201, e. See of the queen.... in the south" (Fairman, op. cit.,, .* 108; 109. also; Ibidej, pl*IXXXVIII,
3B See note 39 Pendleburyp ation of this 31 above and note III, with 49 below. 33ff; the pls*XIIU-XVI* pr-h(y in Royal it the For the op. identificcit. III, 9 betof name is the
193-194. ween the refers no direct pr-hl-y 40 Uphillp 41 Assman, 42 Ibid. the true
The excavators main nature only to structure of the this temple that
Road. is more
As Pairman
there of
evidence (Ibidep
was regarded
as a part
193-194)151-166. 155-
150ff9
43 Uphillp
op* cit-Y
op. cit-, op* cit*,
156-160.
citop 158cit*9 1119 HIP pl*X. LIp fig. VIIII 1; 2 and Aldred., 3loc. cit.. 58-59; pls. XIIIB; XIV; XLI; XLII*
46 Pendleburyq 47 Tawfikq 48 British 49 Hanke, although name swt-r" other term, op,
27-28; 48-50in it
Pl-XXIVIt should he has also be noted restored that See that the an-
which is correct
possible restoration.
be the A (PLid.
443-VIII
op. loc,
citog cit*;
Roeder, Abb-48; op. cit 9 Roeder, Abb-49; op. cit. p Roederg Op- cit-9 pl-53)A (Hwnke, A (Ibid. op* cit. Abb-48; 9 Hankev 22*
are
Hermopolis cit.,
207-VIII 338-VI
op, Abb-49)-
and
9 Pl-148; to
have
been
wrongly
restored
in
the
past
read
szt-nsw
n h-t. f
s3t-nsw
ZXS 74 restored
cnI3. s-n-p-s-Itn
(1938), by 106 Hanke (block (9p.
OP-
Cit-9
148; are
Brunner,, correctly
A only).
Abb-48;
52 Roeder, 53 Davies,
49 ) but
Op- cit-P op, cit,
incompletely,
Pl-55 1, p pl, (450-VII XXVII-
omitting
A).
m pr itn
m 31at-itn.
54 Janssen,
op.
cit-P
15-
55 Loc, cit.;
Gardiner,
op. cit-9
Ip pls-70p
(A 16,38); 56 !&- Ibid-P Pls-7 8 (A, 18,37); (Bg 20,23-24); et ale. 57 In a pr of Amun; Ibid. 9 19 plo 29 (A, 62,33); UP 169 38); 30 (A, 64,29). P1-7 58 Ninvu; Ibid., I, Pls-3 (Ap 9v 1); 70 (B,
of
Seth;
Ibid,
I, , pl.
23,20-22);
Harspera;
60 (By 13Y 4); Menankh; Pls-42 (A, 66, 46); 44 UP 91P 30); 48 (At 96,17); Shatina; pl. 8 (A, 18,37); Sc o; P1.37 (A 78v 34); 49 (A, 100,9). 59 Ibid. 9 pl. 18 (Ap 40,21). 60 Janssen, loc. cit..
61 The emphasis on offerings is shown in the to the 'swt-r( with regard texts which otherwise following give no indications as to the funIII, Urk,. g IV, 4989 1; Fairman, op., cit-P ction or plan of a 'swt-rl; 202; Saunerong loce cite.
62 Loc. cit..
2b9
k3 rl'
-=:..
Z-
Dyne VI
I 3
M. Ke
3 M.Ke
Dyne XII r) 6 9
Dyne XII
q- 5 Dyne XII
D. 7n. XVII18
Dyne XII7
m 1-3 10 a Dyne XVIII
19
<=>
Dyne XVIII,
Ptole 12
11
Dyne XVIII
Af3 <=:
Dyne
C-3 xx
XVIIItI3
16 v Mi
10 C-3
MI -44
Dyn.
5 XVII11
V4
C-3
Dyne XIX9 XX
1-Y -\
18 Dyne XIX9 XX
Dyn* XXI
9
22
Dyne XXII
C--3
or
Dyne XX7I 26
23
xnii
25 Dyne XXX 28 4J C3 Ptol. Ptol.
24
4Q
Ptolo
known writing
of k3rig in
the
only
Kingdomp occurs 29 in heaven, This writing'is which rpytt in represents "a female
Textst
antedates to a k3r(
with
sign
scenes of
the nouny determines and more usually a palanquin 30 This palanquin also figures or "a goddess,,. statue" it boaxs the msw-nsw to watch the Bed-festival where The evidence from texts of later periods would make a k3ri
and the use of a palanquing was originally best be understood this determinative as an attempt to represent can temple of In the Nineteenth-Dynasty poles* a shrine on carrying k3rip is shown being described Ramesses II at Abydosp a shrinep as a 32 carried on polesp by four meno, This kind of portable was one of the meanings of the term, shrine and it could also be used for the "cabin" Howevert this being of a barque-shrine the principal quite which of in processionO33 was also carried karl 'was "naos'19 the evidence for
meaning
conclusive.
2410
examples of naoi which are actually are several Late-Period for the temple of Ilk3ri'll. Cne is the granite naos provided
which is described as "a noble karl at Edfaq by Nectanebo Ill 34 in graniten. Another granite Dynastyp is naosp of the Twenty-Sixth 35 also called a ksr(l), as is a naosp made from the rare _stonev 36 found at Koptos and dated to the Thirtieth In addition Dynasty, a Ptolemaic from the temple at Tod shows a naos, elevated upon relief 37 as a kzr(l). a stepped podiump which is labelled Although all these examples of naoi which can be proved to have been regarded earlier sb-ntr stone texts as k3rw date to the latest periods of Egyptian historyp also support the view that a k3rl was a naos. Unlike and bm, kzA does not seem to have been used for an open-endedo barque-shrine. of k3ri are rare since the before the New Kingdom, texts which although this
to the period
Second Intermediate
are extant Periods The earliest From the Middle from the
Texts
been noted.
Kingdom there
are several
occurrences,
one of whichp
gives any indication stla of Ikhernofretv as to the nature of a k3rlo the gods-who are in his (Osiris') 11-fashioned followingg and made their 38 ) anew. " (determined klr(l)w This refers to the shrines with'Z of the Abydene temple of Osiris. other gods within used of the chap-ell containing a statue of the dec39 easedp in the tomb of Khnumhotep II at Beni Hasan v and occurs in the descriptions in Papyrus Reisner 1.40 of temple-building also From the New Kingdom onwards there are many references to the 41 k1r1w of the gods in general which support a translation of "naoi,,. A typical father Re created him to fashion those who example is0lis 42 k-6ri(w)p to provision their Other texts give are in their altars.. information more specific about particular shrines; K-srl is
"*****,
statues of
"o my majesty of Tathmosis III at Karnak). "I made for you (Alm,n) a secret k3ri from one fine block of graniteq. L3w-doors upon it in copper, worked and engraved with your 44 divine image resting name, your it like Re in his horizon, " within (Work of Ramesses 1171 at Thebes). Usuallyt as in these two examplesp a k3ri was made of stone, but wooden examples are also known to have existed;
cedar to follow
the
2-11
"Then the scribe of the armyp Cnerq sent to him again, sayingg ISend me a k3rl of cedar' and the scribe, Sedi, gave him a ksri which 45 (Tomb-Robbery Papyri). in height.,, measured two cubits it as it had 46 "I found this pr of Amun fallen into ruinp rerected been... ***1 caused his ks to rest as it wishedv I made for him ak 47 (Twenty-Second in cedarell Dynasty graffito on the exterior wall of the temple K3rIq of Luxor). thereforeq unlike other "shrine" termsq seems to have had that meaning is it from the the term found in.
meaningg a naosp and to have retained specific a Old Kingdom to the Ptolemaic Sarprisinglyp Period. does not Coptic appear texts. in Brichsents Demotisches Glossar,
perhapsq nor
1 2 3 4 5 6
7
PYr-v 1773cDe Buckt The Egyptian Loco cit, * Sethe, Aegyptische Coffin Texts, 71,6. 19 248a.
Lesestucke,
Simpsonj Papyras Reisner Ip Pl-14Aq 32 and 38. For anotherp damagedv 1 6. k!, 7! in this papyrusq see; lbid*j of Pl-13Aq Occurrence Urk-P VII9 34P 19.
Lange and Schlfer, Grab- und Denksteine des Mittleren Reichesq II,
1559 4Urk-P IVt 13509 12o (1898). Budgep The Book of the Deadg It 18 ( twice).
10 Urk-t IV9 130P 16.
form of 58P 13; the determinative Das Aegyptische 1269 3; Mariette, 11 The exact KRI-P It
Edfou
Ibid*t It
15; CXCI;
Up
pl. lgt
c and do
13 Ibid.,
IV,
14 ! r_k#v,IVv*-445t 39 15 Ibid-, IVP 13419 16. 16 KRiqv iv 1861,16; 1879 1; 1889 4; Fxichseng 8; 6p 5; 6,8; 7p 4; 309 14; 529 12*
Papyrus HaxTis 19 59
17 The exact form of the determinative varies. KRI*p It 429 5; ChicOrintal Institutep Med, Habup IIIt PI-138t 45 ago University, (wrongly quoted by 'Lb*9 V9 1089 3t as; Pl-1389 55); Navillev op,
all
Miscellaniesp
479,9;
Erichsenj
op.
ci
op
29t 17, 29 Peet, The Great 119 pl*XXI, 22 Spiegelberg, also occurs
Egyptian
Dynasty,
(B. M. 10053)9
14 (1893)t
Rece de Trave
23 Piankoffq 24 Legraing
Naost 569 gives 122 (Roaderf (D? id. is too indistinct The photograph of r'73 . Pl-15) 9 form of the sign); Saunerong Esnav IIIP out the correct
6 (1905)t
10.1
25 Navillep Goshen and the Notices op. cito, Shrine of Saft el-Henneh,, pljp Sbv 3* 26 Champollion, 27 Chassinatp 28 Ibideq 29 PYr-9 30 Wb-9 Ilt Descriptives, 119 23P 112. 1.2929
19 542v VI9 37 amd 38177304159 1-14; Faulkner, Con* Diet*,, 148, Rickeq FaIttafel 4, top Iq pl.
31 E. g. 9 Kaiserv Beitrage Bf., 12, Festschrift 5P lower two registers# Quibellp register; XXVIt B. 32 Mariettet 33 H-g-t op* cit, III, t loc. It 9 pl, 19p c. cite; Satmeront loc,
Hierakonpolist
34 Chassinatt
18 (twice),
Lbid. 9 9t fig. 2. loc. cit. 35 Piankoff, 36 Legraing OP- cit-t 38 Sethe, 39 Urk-t loc. VIIt loc, cite* loc. cit.. PI-15-
the naos see; Ibid. p pl. VIII. of this naos see; Roedert
37 Champolliong
349 199 For a plan of the tomb see; Newberryp Beni Has 19 pl. XXII. . 40 Simpsonp 22- 'ci P1-13A, 6; 14A9 32 and 38. -t 41 E-9-P Urk-, IV, 1309 16; 1320p 2; Met It 42P 5; 126P 3; 1879 1; 186,1 6; V, 116t 10; 226,13; Gardinerp loc. cite; Brichsen, op. Si-t-9 79 4; 50P 17-
21B
42 Urk. 1, IV, 5539 13Barguetv Templ v 124, identifies these k3r1W 43 P? IV, 168,15, _id-v with the side-chapels of Tathmosis III in the Northern court, behind the Sixth Pylon (PM. 9 II, 92-93; Pl-XI-)44 Erichsen, op. oit. v 69 8 (similarlyp for Re, Ibide, 30,14; and for Ptahq Ibid. 9 IV9 529 12). 45 Peetq loc- cit.. 46 See wrij; ing No*21 above* 47 Daressy, loc. cit. *
Z114t3y(t)
Collffo
1 -9=, 44 zAn, ). ,
H. Ko 4
Dyn. XX3
vj44V
two terms;
ts,
translated
It would involved
as "doorg
seemp howsince the
temple ,j5-6 and t3yt "door in temple". that more than one term'is to be unlikely
and apparent term is used meanings in temple are so similar. descriptions
writings This
only
rarely
and not
prior
Dynasty,
although
its
earlier
meaning
can
words with the stem t3 are connected with 7A temple-t3yt originallyp and woven garments. was probablyp
or screen of woven reeds* The Nineteenth-Dynasof curtain ty LS! Q from the temple of Seti I at Abydos, are described as being 8 have been more solid objects* made of gold so the samustv clearly, -, Likewise the-example I refers to the of the term from Papyrus Harris 9 t3yt of a st wrt as being "of gold like the two Iliwy of heaven. " This text would seem to suggest that a t3ytv determined here with 10 the----), signp was a gildedp wooden double-door, e! 11 The hieroglyphic sign was used from the Old Kingdom 9 12 onwards in the title of the Vizierp and as a determinative of words with the stem t3, but the exact interpretation of the sign is open to question. Gardiner regards it as a "gateway (? ) surmounted by 13 it as an attempt to protecting sexpents9l, while Habachi-sees 14 depict both the plan'and the facade of a hall. The taller version in three of the four known writings, of the sign which figures is also found as a determinative in front of sbbt, a screening-porch of an entrance915 and it terms are used. in parallel is interesting in descriptive to note epithets that these two "A of a Vizier; 16 11 It is
sbht of Amun, 6, t3yt in the time of the Lord-of-All. tempting to suggest that a t3yt served a similar function and was also some kind of screening-device, Screen-wallsp ian architecturet surmounted particularly by friezes in of uraeiv with
to a sb)3t in Egypt-
are found
connection
the Window-of-
Z.15 .
Appearances, proved
The
17 t3yt
in
and in
Graeco-Roman actually
I
templesq'8 applied
could before have a
although to such
(st the
it
cannot
be
that
t3Yt
was ever
Papyras
walls.
woodeng )q of perhaps Tatankh-
a gildedv wr tomb
screen it like
gided'Ishrines"
KRIP 19 1339 3; 1349,76erny 2 Ostracav 19 pl. XCII9 1p versop 10 and Gardinerv Hieratic (Osto Gardinert 303)3 ErichGent PaPYrUs Ha=ris 19 509 16. Chassinatj Edfoug Iv 18, 5 Roy V* 230P 15- One of the references quoted is; Marietteg Abydosv Is plol9t a. The writing VP 439 as is given in Wbot Belegstelle t V P9 'A which does not, in factp occur on the plate quoted and seems to be the result of confusion between writings O-f t_ and
h spss.
6 7 8
9 Erichseng
10 Beep Christophey Melanges Masperot '19 fasc-4v 2311 Gardinerp Gramm . Sign Listp 0.16. 12 Loc. cit.; Faulknerp Con. Dict., 29313 Gardiner, loc* cit..
14 Habachiv ASAN 52 (1954)v 50315 See sbbtq aboveo P*227ff. 16 C-einy and Gardiner, loc, cit*,
Ip pl, XXV; III, 17 E. g.69 at Amarnap Daviesv El-Ama=a, pl. XIII; and at Medinet Habug H61scher, Exc. Mede Habu, 1119 P1-4(Edfu); L'Architecturet 37 (KOIR Ombo); III, 18 Eg, p J6quierg pls*25 56 (Denderah); 72 (Esna)o
2116
4i' T Ty, %,
ptol. 4
The W6rterbuch dates this 6sing has suggested everp comes from example in the Nineteenth of tw-3.6 in question
term that
to the Graeco-Roman period the first Anastasi writing quoted IIIp Papyrus
only.
How-
Dynasty
is
badly
'10, I'll
A-U
concerns
workshopsp
J4 %N /A -_. I Vi
III.
among which
---* ///,
C-3
this
of the
the three
great
to take tw3-trl he prefers as a and 9 "Thr-Pfosten". Such a compound would seem to compound noun meaning bntw or for "door-jambs" have been an illogical since either choice both terms were in use in the have been preferable htri(w) would and Nineteenth dsing Dynasty. that the compound tw3-tr: 'l could be compared to suggested the use of a compound htri-sbsp which occurs in meaning "door-jamb" the examples I. This compound does notp in fact, Papyrus Harris existf (4triw) "the door-frames in this papyrus being all writings and of were made of the same 11 The order of the two terms could also be reversed, and material* from other passthe separate identities of latr and sb5 are confirmed 12 It isv therefore, materials, where the two are made of different ages to that tw3-trl is a compound noun and it is probably most unlikely the door-leaves elements be interpreted Since tri 13 in could the same wayp as "the tw341columnslland the elements the trl-doors. 11 be used of any of which went to make The are "door-leaves"* either bn-sw or (sb3w)t111O where both
it is possible that these tr1w up a door tw3w couldv thereforep be the "door-jambs" although ]Xtriw would have been preferable. In the Graeco-Roman temples
tW3 is used as a general noun for a logical development from the etymological column14 origin of the ,a 15 term in tw3 "to raise up, to supportit.
2-1-1
of the
of 18 *tpy-cb. known
or
suggestion
The recognition
history of the texm
tw3
the
in
Anastasi
Nineteenth
Dynasty
although
would
seem
to have changed slightly period. Gardiner, 19 8). 2 DInicheng Denderah, 3 4 Do Wit, Dbmichen, Baugeschichte Late Egyptian
in meaning
between
then
Miscellaniesp
309 12 (P.
An. IIIv
versop 5 (Ma=iette,
des Denderatempelsp
pl. XXMIIP
Ip P1-7p b gives ^d\ for the second sign). Cho d'Eg- 36 NO-71 (Jan. 1961), 69. OP- cit, 4-
635-,
Gardinert
loc.
cito,
Cazinosy Late Egyptian Miseellaniesp 1076sing, loc. cit. 9 see also t3A, note 22 belowq P-2839 10 Erichsenq Papyrus Harris 949 8Iq 59 10; 9,16; 11 Ibido, 12 Ibidev 6t 7; 109 11. 70t 2. 689 13-14; tr3.
02- cit-t
15 TI. t V9 248-25016 6sing, opa cit., 17 Cnmv A Coptic 18 Fechtv for Wortakzent
Dictionaryo
und Silbenstrukturq
w6rterbuch, ogical
alls
tp-4wt
Dyne Vs, 2ad. Intell Dyne XXII XIX94 Dyne XVIII, XXIIP XXV, Ptol. 1 Dyne XX7 Ink ldm 1-3 =I C3 kp M Dyne V2 , ), I)yn. XVII, 6 ptol. 3
N, Kq
Ptol,
10 Ptol.
tp-4wt
as "der the
11 would
is
in
Egyptian types
the
the
roof
of the ('4)
a private roof is of
palace
and in (? ) at
Avaris*13 stelal4as
attested'on
tp-bwt
a storehouse
describes in the
the Abusir
roof Papyri
of
and it Pale=o
Papyri tp-4wt is used for ther roof of the mortuary 16 Neferirkare. As such it was one of the places included in for u the 17 priests On the of the temple Stone are "those the who are first on watch of
Abusir
Palermo
indications
existence other
dedicated to the god Re on the roofs of'chapels of temples 18 This would seem to have been quite gods. a common practice well-attested to have been for called the temple _9 swt-r a to of 20 Amun at Karnako19 and it is the possible same names templesP of the
Re were which
given
Artemidos is
described
on its the
eaxth had swallowed 22 tp_bwt. j, Similarlyo in temple up to of Amfin at level Kawa in of the
Twenty-Fifth the
Taharqa having
found
disrepair,
accumulated
the
tp_tLwto
2-lq
24
but
does not
seem to
Y a temPl0v seem to have
the the
roof
of
Ptolemaic
meaning.
Posener-Krieger Up
The Abu Sir Papyri, e; pls-IIIAp and De Cenivalp Statues 139 3; Legraing Admonitionso, aq 1; XIAq i; Gardinerf
at Statuetteov
2
1119 32v 2.
and De Cenivalp op- cit-9
Urk, q IV9 244P 3; 2489 1; Posener-Krieger Be pls. xjjA,, a; XIVAq B; IXMIA9 Habachiq Denderahv The Second Stela IV9 ple2e Tombeau de Neferhotpoup Storiesq 2,2; 49 5; Chicago 11; pl, III9 of Kamoseq, pl*VIP
abbol2s
8; Marietteg
upper
regiater;
Egyptian
Portalt
pl*229 Bremner-Rhindt
513; Faulknerp
5 qrk-P IV9 386t 6; 1760P 76 Schiaparelliq Museo Archeologico di Firenzeq Antichita Egiziev Iv 491; Macadamp op* citev Onomev pl, XII Gardiner, legraing 479 Be 9 Id. 1, Denderahp 10 Chassinat, op. 12 Gardinerv 13 Habachip IVP Pls-7; cit-, 1,5499; 10; Brugschp Thesaurus 539opo cit-P Iv pl, 89 lle (Amenemope, 6v 3)3; Marietta, Monumemts Diverso ple
7 8
1119 80P fo
Documentst
37,1.
The W6rterbuch
Sinahe B. 19 as an example of tp-4wt to describe the roof of a fortress* However other variants of the text have tp Inbw (Blackmanp Middle Egypti to be preferred which is probably Stories, 12; Barns, The Ashmolean Ostrakon of Sinuhev recto, 16). and De Cenivalf op. cit., pl. VA9 at 1; XIA9 i;
16 Posener-Krieger
ago
XIIA,
e; XIVA,
B; LXXVIIA9 510-511-
Be See also;
Posener. -Kri6ger,
Archives
Neferirkare, 17 Posener-Krieger
op* citq pl, II3: Av ee and De Cenivalt 18 Urk. 9 19 2449 3; 248,1BIFAQ 78 (1 19 Spiegelberg, Rec, de Trav- 35P (1913)t 38; El-Sayed, derny and 978)9 462-463; legrain, loc. cit loc. cit Faulkner, Gardiner,, loc. cite; Mariettev Monuments Divers P1-47y Be
20 Chicago University, Oriental swt-r'-I above P*261. 21 Benedite.. loc. cit.; "'7 -. Chassinat, op. cit.., 22 Urke 9 IVv 386,6. 1,549-
Institutev
loc.
cit*.
See further,
Mariettev
23 Maoadampop, citeg, pls*8j 11; 121,16. 627 OP-09 24 Exichsen, Demotisches Glossar
28%
tri
Dyne XIX 1 ICAI %\ Dyne XIX4 Dyne XIX, 2 XX Dyne XX5 Dyne xu 3
11144
will
I)yno XX
J4 \\ t4_1C-3 C=>
Dyne xx7 Dyne XXI 10 it
Dyne xx
IT)
Trl seems to have been first used in the reign doors at Thebes. In one case the word is cribe but, as it is followed to be understood identified to the inner these hall to desRamesses II, of found in the plural it is presumably by the dual adjective wrty, 12 11 Yoyotte, following Plantikow-Munster, dual. as 4 from the outer hall the doorways leading two tri as
of the Eastern Temple of Razesses II at the back of 13 to the Karnak. This text certainly the temple of A= refers at for the trl'W remains Eastern Temple but the suggested identification open to doubt. beauty joining their being "great, They are described of electrump as 14 that the sky9s, it is, perhapst more likely with and doors at the main to the great gilded description would refer such a the build: than to minor doorways within to the temple rather entrance ing. This is also suggested by the fact that the description of the -w comes between tri both of which inner would than with of which being that of the gardens and that dual is of the flagstaffsp with the main entrance the material which the are be more closely that
associated it
doorways.
and also
the tr1w
the doorleaves
described. inscription doorwaye of This same reign, notes however, uses same word
the meeting of the 1nbt-council Pharaoh, in the Southern City (Thebes) beside 11hrwof 15 This gateway, the the great tri of Razesses-Miamune" of which is called at this is unknowng is also mentioned in another 16 that sbS and trl were indicating a sb3p tri is unlikely to date. In such a context alone. of tri can be best
location
ITZ
be translated
as "door-leaves" cribe the door frames and the 17 However in precious metals. the door frames. For example, in
tLtrw and wmwt are used to desare made of woodp decorated with trl is
same papyrus
also
used of
the description
the temple of Amun speaks of Jr1W of granite with sb3w and 4trw in 16 19 27eaves. A Simgold, sb3wt in this case,, being used for the door-lea-; ilar example is found in the temple of Medinet Habu where the tr1w were of gold inlaid with precious were stones while the door-leaves 20 decorated with ktmt-gold, the the the be doorway occurs in used to mean an entire beside story of the Two Brothers where the blood of the bull falls two door jambs (LnL5w, qqvo of his majesty, "one on each side of 71 Other occurrences great tri of Pharaoh. " of the word may also 22 for the doorway, rather than the door-leaves, example of tri Kitchen has suggested 23 which would explain the Nineteenth Dynasty exception temples highly of that the from West Semitic a loan-word late appearance of the word, relatively trl is writingsq for With the doors A final
dl in
and the varied syllabic 24 text, tri ;, is used only one and was probably doors,
monumental
or palaces decorated
restricted
in use to
large,
doorway, the frame or sb3, tr1l could be used for the entire 25 the leavesp have to be judged on its so each occurrence of tri will Tri does not occur in either demotic or Coptic. context, I 2 Plantikow-Manster, E=way 67P 1; 67,13; 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Gardinerg Kitchent Gardiner, Legraint Gardiner, Erichsen, Late JU ZIS-95 72; 689 4Egyptian Miscellanies, 173, fig-It 40 26,13; 27,1. 30t 12. 60 (1974)9 Egyptian et (1969)t Erichaen, 1199 abb, 19 b, Papyrus Harris 6. It 4P 8; 50P 12;
ZAS 17 (1879),
Late Statues
Storiesq
Statuettes, It 6,1;
Beatty
plolnig, 6,6.
293
op.
cite,
128, note
situation
of
pl. XVIII,
270t Barguet, ASAE 50 (1950)t see; ) also included (loc. Me Yoyotte, cit. the main entrance 119t t to the 6.
C and D; L119
tr1W "the
Upper Gate",
op.
cit.
abb. 1, b,
Miscellanieso 67,13;
Late
Egypt-
67,1;
ibid*9
cit.;
in Papyrus be
Christophel
4,23,111, 18 Erichsen,
t 19 See sb-s p. 222. One final problematical sb3w and tr1w 20 KRI, V9 74,437-3821 Gardiners late
opo cit.
occliLrrence
of
tri
in Papyrus
Harris
I is
it lists 4trw, wmt, since, among the door parts, (Erichsen, 50t 12)o opo cite, For ktmtp a kind of gold, see; Harrist Minerals, Egyptian cite; Stories, 26,13; 27,1. I (Ibid., pl-179 10 (this is 2) takes
22 Hamada, loco the curious does not of tri ellaniesq ellanies, futed to be a writing refer
Gardiner,
Chester which
Beatty
spelling of trio If
Gardiner is
38, note
ao this III
dooro
(Gardiner,
was taken
"willow-wood"
"door-poststlo
tw3 p* 276. opo cit- 22 aboveo entry for tri see; ILbol V9 318,14-17o
218+
Dyn. XVIII
tM
This word is of known from only III in one the text, temple of the on a granite of king Amun at to the gifts block Karnak. sanctuary inscription of building Tuthmosis records projects from 2 the The benefactions within the god consisting to the temple temple
and also
treasury. Unfortunately is not possible to this interesting to text which is parts badly of preserved the that Sixth line
CO
inscription the t3
refers.
before of the
the name of the columns gives 3 '-. After 3'*gfYta break in the textq A14
1-= 0--%^
relevant
00
4z=>
published hallp
the
complete
textp
translated
this
as;
ti-pillars inlaid of sandstone, with electXn3m 5"and stone . *,. " identified this wsbt with originally and costly the one of the two courts to the north and south of the sanctuaryp 6 However, lateA Nims columns of which are papyriform clusters. decided that this passage did in fact refer to the "festival hall" in which case the t3-pillars would be the formalized to this hall. stone tent-poles which are peculiar It is impossible to identify this hall at Karnak with any degree of certainty. As well as the festival hallp, Tathmosis III created, either the courts side ofthe with Sixth the papyrifo= Pylon cluster colonnades On and also changed the plan of the hall 9 the Fourth and Fifth Pylons, The description 13t w. 3dyt could well fit the last 6f these lwnytp a wsht and a as a of Tuthmosis III at Ka=ak7
I between as a wsbt
is elsewhere described variously 10 The exact meaning of w3c *t is unclear. w3dyt. as an adjective " Nims' translation gives "spacious", unless this is a reflection of the "breadth" of the wsbty in which case he leaves w3dy untranslated. IVY also A parallel from Karnakp to this in which is found on a stela of
Sebekhotep
mention is made of work carried 12 tn. out m wst w3-dyt nt bwt-ntr Helckv who published the text 13 translated but since this must haNe wsLit w3dyt as "S"aulenhalle" to a part of the now-destroyed Middle-Kingdom templev it
referred
5 21?
is impossible the fact to identify the in the halls hall. were If w.3dyt in then c3t these two cases have III ref-
lects little
that
columnedq wsljt
one would of
hesitatioij
identifying
the
w.3dyt
Tuthmosis
with
the hall
of Tuthmosis of the
It
as was suggested
by Barguet14
who gave
t '3t w3dYt t3W MI inr n rwdt sentencei wsh. (ou cour) i colonnes. he translated "grande salle as o.... ep en de, gres. 11However this would mean that taw would have to refer fountl single-stem since of papyriform these columns of this called hallp which is hardly w34w and the three indistinct in formt have
were elsewhere
the t3-columns,
although
t-sw could correspond to either of the sets of papyrus cluster columns behind the Fifth and Sixth Pylons or to the tent-pole hall. The former type is elsewhere columns of the festival
to suggest that this so that one would hesitate one column-form could have had a third name, t3. Cn the other hand one would have expected the tent-pole columns to have been called caw since this was the name of the original called hall wooden columns which were reproduced in stone in the festival inscription and, in fact, a dedication on one of these columns reads; As reproduced in Urkunden IV the so signs are 3-columns although it is possibley if improbablep that these clearly 1: ideograms were to be read as t3w rather than I: sw. t3w was an alternative name for the tent-pole columns of the festival hall. This would explain why the word has not been found elsewhore17 as these columns were unique in Egyptian stone architecture.
1 Nimso Studies 2 Ibid., 3 Ibid, 69-74x+2. 71, note d. in Ilonor of John A Wilsong fig-7v x+3*
Probably
x+3709 UP (3);
72p II; LMp 119 92-97; pls. XI9 VI; XIIv VI; Barguetp Templey P 115-136. For photographs Architecturev of these columns see Jequier, Iv Pl-489 1Beitrige 110-111; Bf. 129 Pestschrift plsoXII9 of these 2; XIIII columns Rickel 107, note op, cit 3-
7 Nims,
8 PMt Up
Por photographs
167-182; , Architecture, I.
226
pls-49-50For a detailed
III in separate
description
entries
of Tathmosis
21-33-
see; Borchardtp
11 Nimsy Studies
in Honor of John A. Wilsonp MDLIK 24 (1969), 199, -n;pl. XVII. 54. Barguet reproduces
(3)-
196. p 14 Bargaety op. cit*p 11w as "'.i. columns. 15 See under 16 Urk-9 IVP 857-17. in
the determinatives
of
each entry. of these M the determinative The forms ) which c. more (Urk, the word 4rt-ib IV, of p hall the festival was used to describe columns that the it the t3, sign is are depicted
and note
see above p*192ff. the possibility of either an ancient on the part scribe who composed the text or t6 the wall of the temple. If the then
w3jytq
altogether
of
the
three
columns
the
could
indicating
unusual
281
tsmt
Dyn. XIX' Dyn. XX
-46M
I[C)
== hell
--0=1
Dyne XX4
Z=>
--. 41-
gl
-u 1
M1-.
Dyn. XXV7
and tkrwt
the enclosure walls of the temples of 11arris as a part of 12 10 The term is also used in the deaOsiris. Thothp" Wepwavetq and crwt and tkrw*13 this time without of a wall around a wellt cription Medinet Rabue to the enclosure wall at Tsmwt is not found in relation In theoryt thereforeq is tsmt feature omitted should from the enclosure exists at be the name of wall the other an architectural of the mortuary temples* Unfortunately so the in the
in Papyrus 9 Inhurp-
which
temple of Ramesses III, the walls of this king temple papyrus. The excavators outer plans cannot
but
at the other
enclosure The possible to have been preserved* absence of the rarenellations seem Gardiner has suggested that this is the meaning of is interesting as 15 The main evidence which would support this theory comes tsmwt. the city of from the stela of Pianchig where the king is beseiging Memphis; that it was strongp the sbty having been saw 16 Howby'new buildingp the tsmw(t) manned by strong men. " raised 17 evert Traunecker has since suggested that tsmwt were "bastions ta textt the Pianchi translation and he has pointed which would also fit "His majesty out that there were no bastions occurrence of on the enclosure this term is of walls T#e earliest on the Israel
Medinet Habu assumed that both at had crenellated ramparts14 but walls
and
do not
18 Habu.
as being sheltered where messengers are described stelat 19 from the heat of the sun by the temwt. In the Cnomasticonq tsmt 20 Inb, between the two major "wall" occurs wordsp sbty and suggesting that it wasp in itselft is in feature* This writing a prominent the singular form as is another writing in the Pianchi stela which
Ise has that betn the they built, Later in curious will determinative be safe in Memphis; skillful 21 Tefnakhte is sbtyq workmanship. records " telling a gmeat 22 his troops has
tsm(t)
constructed the
with
same dynasty,
Montuemhat
the
rebuilding
of
the'sbty in brickq
of the
the re-erectiong of Aman at Karnakp including 23 to the ground. of tsmwt which have fallen tsm(t again in the singular p describihg work carried has pointed out that formp out occurs at Luxor on a stela of for the emperor at Luxor
saggestion.
temple
Finallyp
the
evidence
would
seem to
that
tamt
should
be translated
as "bastion##*
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Spiegelbergg
Erichseng Pid., Gardiner, Wreszinakil 10 (after Urk*p Ibid,,
LS 34 (1896)p 89 3Harris 1,66,18; 6,1. literaturzeitang 13 (1910)p Pl-IIIP 68,13; 949 7-8.
Papyrus
679 12; 68P 4Onom., pl,. XIIA, Orientalistische P-387)1119 29p 15ASAE 19 (1919)p opo cit., 68p 1367v 12. 689 4. 94P 7-8., 66,18, 165-
1119 319 3-
Daressyq Ericheent
14 H61scher, Exe. Med. Habup IVP 1-3; pl. 2. 15 Gardiner, op. cit. p 119 213*9 F4-4-5 16 Urk-9 1119 319 3* 17 Traunecker, Karnak Vq 151-152. 18 Ibid. 9 151P note 519 Spiegelbergq loc. cit.. 20 Gardinerp op. cit. 9 pl. XIIAt 21 The form of this
the Cairo Marietteg omathiet
determinative
Museum and resembles that given in Urk. s 1119 299 15-P Monuments Diverst Pl-4p 88 hasc9 while De Rouge, Chrest No 47 gives 42%-
299
22 Urk. , III p 29v 1523 Wreszinski, 24 Daressy, 25 Traunecker, (opposite loc. loc. cit. * citoi, op* citts P- 468).
1519 eiting
liabachi,
lqo
Tkrw is
only
Harris
I where it
occurap
always
in
with Irwt and tsaw association an parts of an enclosure That of the mortuary temple of Ramesses III at Medinet 2 having only Irw t and tkrw (of sandstone)p Habu is described as while the other temples have tomwt as wel, 43 As has been noted above4 the outer wall enclosure and fortified Since probably from Irt wall at Medinet gates at the Rabla which entrancep had turrets straddling the was faced with sandstone*5 this torm was means "to climb" tkrwt at the
comes from
applied
to the turrets
1 Erichsen, 2 Ibidop
Papyras Harriis
It
49 11; 66,18;
49 1167v 12; 681,4; 68,133 ibid. 9 66,18; 4 See '-rtt P-395 U61scher Exc. Mode Habug Vp 1-31 pl*2*
6 Holckv tausend IIP Die Beziehungen igyptenn zu Vorderanian im 3 und 2 Jahrund Eigennameng Ve Chrey 525, Noo297; Burchardtg Fremdworte
599 11729
2q%
d3cls
Dyn * XTI
1 11
1111C-3 Dyne
IMM3 0
Dyn. XVIII
25
130
Dyn. XIX4
I I,
'o
XX
jX7
Lai
1A
Q 106
tj Dyn. XX19
1r-3
Alex.
13
II
jo
It
\ U 17
Ptol.
C-3
11
Ptol. WUL. J
12
ptol.
The first
point
to note
concerning
dsU 9 is
that
the writings
quoted
exampleg same term, The earliest above may not all 14 The door wasp apparentlyo doorway from Qdntir. occurs on a granite 15 by Amenemhat 1 first and was re-inscribed erected and inscribed texts of 111.16 Two identical in the same dynastyp by Sesostris later king, the jambst read; "He made as his monumentp the the latter on be variants of the erecting his of the sbi of the d3d3w of Amenemhatj by renewing that fatherv the King between of Upper and Lower Egyptt Sehetepibrep the noun.. d3d-SWiSp on both jambsg inscribed and the jambs, and is, therefore, which 17 had made*" over badly
the lintel
damagedg so that the form of the determinative cannot be confirmed from the photograph. Habachi reads the word as dzdAw, and identifies the building since the doorway does not have either as a "palacellp 18 inscription transthe name ofq or a dedicatory top any god. Bietak literates the term, wronglyp as S1.3dw,and equates it with the noun 19 for a "Beratungs in the palace. oder Audienzhalle" The building part thickv of it led lies off in in question under from has not been excavated since the greater but a brick a modern village, wallp three metres blocks either side of the doorway, and limestone one of which
showed. the king andv' presum20 in a foundation A statue of ablyp Seshat participating ceremony. 21 Amenemhat 19 which describes him as "beloved is of Ba-neb-djedl, the also said to have been found "lying not far from the stones*of 22 door". The block with the foundation ceremony might suggest that WYMAmenemhat was a templep or a shrine within a temple enclosure,
were found
the vicinityg
act I
but
usedq support
and the
Habachils
on the doorabsence of a deity was of view that this building to be The building
example to if
of
ought
the others
problem
be satisfactorily
resolved
its true nature to be excavated, revealed, and were Although the remaining as examples of Lisd, are all identifiable to any known buildfew can be actually related religious structuresp from the New Kingdom writing king Ahmose. "He (made) as his monumentp adsdz. 23 Monthu.., 11 Despite the unusual order of -the this sentence (a more usual order would be; Ir. ings. The earliest Mntw ..... id3) there can be no doubt This to stela that is which has been constructed* that the Od3 is dedicated midst of (hry-17b) Armant"j, occurs on a stela his of anewp for variuus nf father
'Wonthup
Lord
would
suggest
Cne block of Ahmose has been found in the temple at provenance. 24 Armant relief-wo: rkp showing Ahmose 25 and three pieces of limestone to Monthug were re-used in the construction offering of the Bucheum. These blocks may come from the did3 of Ahmoset or from the temple to which the d3di Barguetv considers
to a temple,
the meaning
Taharqa a d3d3
of
this
26
term in
some detailp
that
is
those
a "colonnade"
of that
erected
at was Karnak. a
before
The
the entrance
evidence would sitwith of a
certainly uated
seem outside of
suggest the
separate is often on
processions
the
28 canalt , sacred
The Dynasty Ramesses their in tion the One only inscription II at
lake
real
29
or
quays
30
a 43ds comes from the in in it the Eastern (lwt-ntr front 31 of From the ) it this entrance of or NineteenthTemple in of
description of
of
Bakenkhonst 11erected up to Mf
Karnak,
granite,
reaching front be on of
(4wt-nt descriptot
(m
that now it
dsb
before
colonnade kiosk
Taharqa*32
assume
peripteral
chapel.
193
Barguet is
is
that in
the the
Tsharqa texts of
"colonnades"
are
so that Barguet is
t6 have discussed
of cI'sdSwq although
conclusions
of these structures033 appearance and function The evidence that does exist would suggest that a d3d,3 was an but separate from the main templeedifice within environs a temple's buildingo by the side of a canal or lake where it and often situated served It as a resting-place therefore, chapel. it3frequent use in Ptolemaic, in hieroglyphic the texts, 113d3 demotio for the image of wouldq Despite does not texts., seem to be most likely the god when in procession, that d3d3 was a term for
a peripteral
contemporary in Coptic.
recur
Habachi, ASAE 52 (1954)9 451; Pl-IV2 Stewartq Egyptian Stelae, Reliefs and Paintingsv Iv pl. 1v I. 3 Hayes, JEL 46 (1960)t pl. XAv 89 1. 4 Plantikow-Miinsterg ZAS 95 (1969)9 119p abb*lbv 51 5 Marciniakq Deir EI-Baharit Iv pl*XII Av 7* 6 Mariette, Karnakv Pl-40Y 7-7 Gardinerg Ramesside Administrative Documenta, 62,12.
a 9 Brugsch, Barguety ortv Reise nach der Grossen Oase El-Khargehp pl. XXII9 Templeg 36 (Egypt Exploration Fundq Arphaeological N. 3176 (S) 9. Rep-
VP 350,6; 351,1; Alliot, 9 Edfou au temps des Ptolemees,, 266-267, takes (also writing 12). However, see Gardiner, ! law Bauurkunde %,., as followed in der Tempelanlagen icts the bird
Edf
le this
Culte
d'Horus
a 41d-3 74dep-
to be for
12 Mmichen,
von Dendera
Marietteg
Denderah,,
as does Brugschq Thesaurusq 365* However, It pl... 62,99 h and iq shows the bird as alo by Alliotq loc. cit** These writings areq unof the temple not yet re-published by
the part
1979 18.
29+
14 Habachip Op- cit-9 15 Ibid. 9 pleIII9 16 Ibidop 17 Ibidet 18 Bietakv pl*IV* 455; PLIVTell
448-458-
El-Dablaq
Up 37.
19 Wb-p Vp 527P 11-1520 Habachig op. citp 21 Ibid. p 453; Pl-V22 Ibidev 452. pl. VIIp A.
23 Stewartp loco cit,. Stewart reads as d3d3y pw (Lbid. translates it as "this edifice" 1,1. and note 2). t 24 Mond and Myers, Temples of Armantq It 172; 11, pl. C, 6.. 25 Id. p The Bucheump 11,50; IIIt LIV9 46 ( the reliefs each have pl. ) f m mnw.f/// /n, remains. of which only a vertical 26 Barguet, Temple, 301-302; Idop Le Papyrus N-3176 (S) du Musee du Iouvret 39-41 dedicatory-text
27 Brugsch, Reise nach der Grossen 20,1; 20,7; op loc, cit., cit., Karnakq loc. (1). loc. cit.. Kemi 14 (1957)t of earlier -, writers; 36, note 86, note jo 4,, which loc. cit.. Pl-40,7See further, Id., las Fetes religieuses dIEsna Oase El-Khargeh, Mariette, loc, pl*XXII9 cit. 9; BargSee fur* uet, op, ci ther; Alliotp 28 Hayesp loc. 29 Mariette, 30 Sauneron, 343p note 22,1;
31 Plantikow-Miinster,
32 PM. 9 119 208ff; pl. XVIII. 33 Cf., for examplep*Yoyotte, a wimmary of Alliotp loc. the opinions ci
gives cit.;
Sauneron,
Hayesq OP- ci o;
2q 6 ,
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W*M, Fog Scarabs and Cylinders with Names, (London, 1917)o Petriev W, Temples at Thebes 1896, (London, 1897)1joFo,! zSix Petrie, W.M.F., Wainwright# G.A. and Gardiner, A. Hop Tarkhan I and Memphis V9 (Londong 1913)Petrie, W*M, Fo, Tell El Amarnat (Ijondonq 1894)Petrie, W.M, Fo, Tombs of the Courtiers and Cbcyrhyo p (London, 1925)Piankoff, A. (and Maystre, C. vol. I only)t Le Uvre-des Portest 2 volumes, (Cairo, 1939-1962)o Piankofft A,, The Pyramid of Unasq (Princeton, New Jersey, 1968). Piankoffq A*, "Le Naos D29 du Musee du Louvre" in Rev. d'Eg. 1 (1933), Petrie, 161-179. (en L"arope et) en Piehlp K, q Inscriptions higroglyphiques recueilles 9'gYpte, 3 (Leipzig, 1886-1903)serieet Pierret, Pot Recueil d'Inscriptions inedites du Musee Egyptien du LOuvr!, 2 volumest (Parist 1874-1878)o Pillett got "Rapport sur les travaux do Karnak (1922-1923)" in ASAE 23 (1923)t 99-138; pls-1-YIII. Pill0t, 11.1 "Rapport our les travaux do Karnak (1923-1924)PI in ASLE 24 (1924)p 53-88PillOtt got "Rapport sur les travaux de Karnak (1924-1925)" in ASAE 25 (1925)t 1-24-
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par le grand-
a Karnak
PrutreAmenhotpe"
Sauneron, entale
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Pls-I-IId1archeologie ori-
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SchLfer, Hog Ein Bruchstuck JLltgMtischer Annaleng (Berling 1902).
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3zo
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Scharffg
thiopenkbnigeg
Entstehung,
der
Hieroglyphenschrift, Scharff,
aus iilahun"
2D-51;
1-12
in
hancl-copy.
Schenkelg
SesostriB
I im Satet-Tempel
von El-
ephantinell
in MDAIK 31 (1975),
109-125-
Antichita
Egizie,
Amenophie I,
(Eildesheim,
1978)o
1961)-
Sog Kanainp
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of Ramses II Great Hypostyle at Karnak, (leipzigg Lesestickep Hall with Seti (Chicago, 1924)I and the date 194O)o
of
Kot
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gypter K, 9 uDie Bau- und DenkmUsteine der alten NameC in Sitzungsberichte der Preussischen Akademie
864-9129 (Leipzig, X. p Beitrgge ltesten Geschichte Agypten29 1905)zur Sethe, Kot Hieroi; lyphische It Urkunden der Griechisch-R6mischen Zeitt (LeiPzi, go 1904)Setheg
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Reichesq
Kot Urkunden der 18 Dynastieg Heft 1-16, Setheg Kot "Die Trteile bn' und cr3. zu Totb. Uns
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Simpoon, V. K., The Mastabas of Kawab, Khafkhufu I and II, 1978). SimPiOnt VoKop Papyrus Reianer It (Boston, 1963), SimPOnsWoXopPapyrua Reisner 119 (Bostong 1965)Simpoon, WoXot Papyrus Reisner 1119 (Boston, 1969)o
(Bostong
of Buhen,
the Inscriptions,
(London, I,
to
1976). (War-
Temple Prd)ject,
Relation
minster
Bed-festival" Spencerp
and their
the
P, Ae,
a Wooden Screen"
in
JEA 66 (1980),
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1895-60(londop,
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86-101-
Wet "Der Siegesh-wis des Merneptah auf der Flinders Potrio-Stele" in AS 34 (1896)9 1-25Stadelmann, Reg "gwt-R'w ale Kultst9tte des Sonnengottes im Neuen Reich" in MAM 25 (1969)t 159-178Stadolmann, Steindorff,
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Upper
UPhillt
regne
B12
Vandier,
Van Dijkv Varillev
Varillep
Jo, Molalla
Miscellen
(Cairop 1950).
building 33 (1979), Inscription 19-27du tombeau de Khaemhe't" in ASAE
d'Azon-Re
of Ramesses III"
in
Gottingen 40 (1940)v
a Karnak"
"Description in
oriental
Varillep
Asp
Inscriptions 196B).
concernant
l1architecte
Amenhotep fils
Hapou
(Cairot
Varilleg
Asp Karnakv 19 (Cairop 1943)Volde, H. te, 11Geb" Lexicon der lgyptologieg in 428-429o
3, (Wiesbaden, 1976),
Jog "Les statues du deneral Horp Gouverneur d'Herakleopolis Vercoutter, (Louvre A-88t Alexandries S. No), in do Busiris at d'Heliopolis BIFA0 49 (195O)p 85-114Jog "Deux Pectoraux - Scarabees de Coeur de Sai(So1147 et 1155)" in CRIPEL 3 (1975), 11-18Vercoutter, Jog Textes biographiques du Serape= de Memphisv (Parisp 1962)o
Vergote, is, "LlEtymologie de 6g. r3-pr; gS 91 (1964), 135-134VcrnUI3, Pop "Inscriptions in BIPAO 75 (1975), de la troisi'eme 1-66. qopte rpe; ar* birball in (1)"
Vercoutter,
pbriode
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1gypten,
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Two Seasons in
Weigallp other
"A Report in
diggings"
recently 39-50-
found
in
Sebakh
and
WOillt
Hot Dara,
(Cairov
(Paris,
(Chicago,
32.5 Westendorfq Wilkes Wes Koptisches Handw5rterbuchv zu. einer Sp5,ten (Heidelbergo Bezeichnang 1965-1977)-
Cog "Bemorkangen
des Sonnengattes
(b3-nb-h3)11
Winlockg HoEo;
in ZAS 76 (1946),
Excavations at Deir
93-99o
El Bahri, 1911-191 P (New Yorks
1942)o Winlockg HoEop "Me in Tombs of the Kings XFA 10 (1924)9 217-277of the Seventeenth Dynasty at
Thebes"
Life
in Ancient
Egypt,
(Cambridget
Masses
1954)C. do, 36 Noo7l 1958)o dedicatoires 1961)t 56-97; du temple d'Edfoull NO*72 (July, 1961), in Cho dIE 277-320* (Brusselog
in 71S 64 (1929)9
1906).
(Leizigg
Wreezinskit
des Monthemhet in Tempel der 1-hit" in Grientalistische Litteraturzoitung_, 13 (1910)9 384-399Wl'eszinzki, We, Der Papyrus Ebersy Umschrift Is (Leipzig, 1913)o YOYOtteg Jet "A propos de Volrelisque in Kemi 14 (1957)9 81unique" Inschriften 91.
YOYOtte,
V
Wet "Die
Jo,
"Un porche in
dore-,
la
ports
du Ne.
temple
Cho dlEg
18 NO-55 (January,
4*9*9
au Deux-ieme Mill6nairup
(Cairo,
3z+
Egyptian Index
Inbw
jTM: jjLwZv
249231-
-e,
:twt 10.
qnpw
m sbLit io4t(t)t
3b 9 11
1 nr, n rw-dtt 182. 3. 1 esrt 204; 257o It cjw inr n rwdt Inr bd nfr n cnwp 126; 130, n-47; 182a I inr 1 ] nfr n rwdto 182o
g3c
inr
ii-d nfr
tq 189.
lt, wt 2519 n-40lwn-m t. fp 12. lwn n fnds 12Jwn k=t, 'Iwnt, 'Iwliw, 12. 12. 12.
189, n-47-
lry-p-t
Iryw
(I)r(y)
sbJjtt
230I=p 181.
1 1000
k:st nw 4wt-ntr 123; 125; 137.
lptt 134Imy-lbl, 138e Imy- re rrwt 48 9 Imy-r crrytt 48wn IMY-r watt, 93Imy-r jr4l mdw n wahtt 101. Imy-r rrytt 1511 154, n. 6. Imy-r rat nswt 152im. 4wt n Swt4p 169. v-r ImY-ttp 1391=-, 284-3-Bfyt# 'Imn-m-wo4t* 102; 1059 'Imn-mn-=wt 253. 'Imn-rng 2479 `Bm-st-lbq 1=-sbm-fs 'Imn-dar-st, 200o 'Imn-gor-derwo 204lnbtt 29o
)jnbwj=-m. "Inbw 94t 4jtq 26.
ct t3t9 11. 'It wlbtg 82't spssty 11; 249'Inh-11 , 265 n, 8'r/. i'ro 41; 47chv 205-
'#
106.
(n wsbt)p 97; 146. tltg 172, n. 15".hnwtY 145! lbg 83w3d9 30(ac1J-)v 94-95; 264-2851L3Ldyt ! bp 2649 w"btp 160. wcn, 252; 257, n-13wbzj>t, 73, n. 41wnbp 83! Ltt 249 n29 wbm '3 n nswy 152. whm n crrYts 48o
200; 204221o 0
26; 248-
325
wbmnswv 152o wlmnsw tpys 152o 152. tpy n 'Irrytt wIlm tpy n nswg 152. W= lrbg eq. n-30walo 241Wsbt 93-
m hnt,
62. 257-
M319 253;
I=-dsr-stv
2009
99,
nbwy, 83, n. 1; 215Nmty-m-wsb v 105, n. 106. Nn-W3*1-r-fs, nhbt, 133nhmt, 133!!bt 133Ntr-=w, Ntrt 23; 182; 19o, n. 85193n hrt-ib wrt,, 38, n. 8; 160. 145. 269. 146.
n ps3Itn m sht-litno p3 m3rw n)jtn 261. hr (c3 9pas n hhw n =pwt Pr-* prs %4c3 hr Imntt wasto IYO-, 1'159 n*75pPImn-htp Pr-439 pr pr wrw, 98; n P3 039 125lb8IZI.
161.
n tPW t13SWtv 252. 50; 281.
46-47; 195-
n nwb,
pr-now,
1251
145;
pr nor, 99* pr n obtf 1000 pr-lfy n p-&>Itn m pr.! Itn m 3ht"Itn, 262-264; 267, n-39pr, -hdt 123; 181pr-dw3g 127; 184. pryt pr-r, 39 123PMP 46-49pd-las 169.
205;
231-
mry"
m pr
wt nt hhw I'L rnPwtv 79; 96; 127; 110; 1*15, n. 66, GI; 239Vwt-k3-Pt4,144hb-sdv 198-199. Lbytl ill, n*24"-njr, 264-
U6 m-njr wdt Ilthr, hro 114A 99snw, 61, n. 121* r4w, 96. Sbm 5l'yt, 2379 addendum* plikrt 217OS, 210. sgr,. 264. stp-s p 1259'' smsw '-rrYtt 48154, n. 6. sn' n htpw-ntrp gn" 252. , nwt, 209*
cdp 10; 25. ktmt, 36, n-35;
2319 Hr m abht rOA09 292. 9 hry w3dytt 64, addOnd"JnRry p3 w1pp 85hryw hmwt nw 4wt-ntzt hrwq 215A4tp wsbt, 93; 101. htrt 1979 no 27. .L449 93. h3p 980 X12ty, 161.
181*
220.
204-
nztt
239
63-
tnwlv
210.
tsl v 249-
trp
sl m welit
St-1l)-R't
47-
do-ft
4t,
220; 247.
144-
ZVI
(=Yt)t
(hwt-ntr)t
<=>
11acl cl
-44;
152*
183; 254-
obbo 2Zt-220.
abbt Sbbt ts pn, 264o a (ecreen)p 2309 232.
327
Index of A=bLitectural Signs*
'rrY
)p 43-44; 48-
2BS, n. 21.
33; 221; 222; 231145; 237, n. 82. (in dual)p 149-1509 n. 63220. 274228o 234, no2le 45.
1%]
0 C'3 M rD
270165-167190-199.
256, n-34, 30-
IM
162, n. 13*
321?
Topographical Index
of Niuserre,
121* 94; 133; 168; 178; 121. tombsq 166; 167# 87; 108; 138; 145; of Razesses 19; 23; 1,14;
46-47; temple of Neferirkarep mortuary 220; 2471 278; mortaary temple of Niuserret Ifortalp 166-167; chapel of Tetisheri, 166; 178; 184; 188, n*25; 119 371 119; 96; 119; archaic 169; temple of Osirist royal
Abydosq archaic
122; 205; 221; 269; temple of Seti 122; 146; 184; 193; 200; 205; 222; 231; 274240temple, 13; 18; 109; 138great
Alexandriat Amarna,
88;
96; 98; 262-264; 267, n-39; palacelt 96; 112; 103; Maxuaten, 261-262* 221; 292.
38v n, 8; the Falconp
temple of
160; temple,
241.
Haean,
11,34;
37;
270-
Bubastis, Buhen,
138;
southern
templep
13;
108-109;
189, Byblos,
n-4739temple of Hathort of temple of Sobekq 199; 278. 168e 22; 126; 180; 181-182; 203; 57-58; 94; 213-
temple 42;
Snofera,
of Hatshepsutt
2601 temple
of Menthuhotep-Nebhepetrep
178.
Deir Doir
228;
235,
temple
193;
206;
255of Hibist of 59; 77; 79; 160 109; 138; 180; 184;
oasis, 193;
temple
M=Um,
13P 18;
160;
241-
-329
Gebel Barkalt Gizat 124; 241; Hatnub, Gurnaq 140; 178; 122. 229-230; 71; 72; tomb of Iymerit 118; 184; 187; 252200; 206; temple of Seti 1,68; tomb of Debhenp 137;
260. 209. temple (Upper of Ret 22; Egyptian)q 38; 70; 127; 184; 90-91; 206; 159temple of Nehmetawyy 287220; 240; 239temple of Horshefv of Thothq 70; templet 70; 79;
Heliopolisp Heracleopolist Hermopolis 59; 160; Hierakonpolis, Kadeshp 239Kahunt Kanaisq Karnakv 86; 184; 288; 57-
temple
temple
121;
axchaic
1889 n. 25-
of of 215;
Seti
1.18455; 70; 178; 249; 254; 74t n. 51; 82; 160-181; 255; 182; 270; 286;
Amin, 23; 34; 137; 40, n-5; 127; 138; 139; 159; 160; 217; 221; 231; 232; 240;
96; 119;
170;
293; barque-shrine
of Amenhotep It gatet Pylong 17; 110; 95; 284; 273, n-43; court
of Tathmosis IIIt behind mosis III I behind hind 69; 235j 24; the 139; the Fifth Sixth 180; 95;
76; 79;
court
of Tuthmonis
Pylong 181;
285; eastern
254;
281;
n-78; 130;
of Tathmosis 180;
243, n. 29; 284; 2379 addendum; of Sheshonq, It Pylong 13; 18-19; 63;
Pylon, Pylon, of
118-119; 118-119;
145-146;
forecourt
Tuthmosis
IV before
the Fourth
209 n-7; 21, n-33; 113; 2379 addendum; E[ypostyle lially 58; 59; 68-69; 105, n. 93; 181; 210; hypostyle hall of Tuthmosis I between the Fourth and Fifth Pylons, 18; 19; 59; 62-63; 95-96; 104t n. 90; 108; 110-111; 204-205; 284-285; Middle Kingdom temple, 9495; 179; roof-chapel 108; 181; Arrhidaeus, 284; 126; n-53; southern 181; 236, 184; n-70193; 194; 220-221; 278; 284-285; sanctuary 203-204; 127; 146; palace 253; of Hatshepsut, 97; of Ret 261; 1909 n-74; 206;
200-201;
235i
n-53;
approachp 282;
temple 229;
Tenth Pylon,
Third
330
Karnakt temple of Khonsut 86; 240; temple 180; 58; 110; 139; 181; of Opet, 181; 204119; 126; 47; 146; 278126; 138; 221. 84; 85; temple III, 119; 232; 139; 181; temple 232; 240; 255; temple of Monthut 138; 139; of Muto 59; 138; 206; 208, n. 63; temple of Ptaho
of Min, 18o;
Tuthmosis
189, n. 47.
198-199;
26; 239templet 55; 58; 68; 69; 85; 86; 205; 255; 271; 288, 188, n. 25; 220* templet 15, n,, 24; of Ramesses IIIv 241; 244, n-51; temple 96; 96; 109; 121;
184; 187;
200;
of
146; 290.
240;
260; 261;
243, n. 29. 240; 287; 70; 26p; temple of Amenhotep 1119 79; 184; 206; temple of 105, n. 93; 112;
temple 255.
of Ptaht 12.
Rahotep,
213-
Amun, 66-67;
131;
159;
184-
12; 15, n. 231 fortresses, 13; temple 39of Amenemhat It of Seti tombs, 1,184of Isis, 86;
'palace' temple
220;
Saqq,p. ra,
of Merenrep 220; pyramid-temple of Unas, 84; 1759 n. 67,184-185; 255; Step Pyramid complex, 12; 57;
331
99; 166; 198; tomb of Kagemnip 137; tomb of Niankhkhnum and Xhimlmhotepp 252; tomb of Ti. 137. Semnap temple of Rithmosis 111,179; Sklubra Horp 25463; 110Silsilas, quarries, Sinaig 189, n. 47.
temple of Hathor at Serabit el-Khadimp 13; 213Siut, 209; temple of Wepwawett 17; 124; 179; 240; 287# tomb of Khetit 17-
Soleb, temple of Amenhotep, 1119 119; 122; 240Speos Artemidos, 18; 34; 179; 184; Z18Tell Bastap festival hall of Osorkon 119 241-242; Old-Kingdom templeg 173Thebes, 26; 70; 71; 184; 239; 241; 281; chapel of Menthuhotep-Saankhkareq 121; mortuary temple of Amenhotep 1119 jig; 180; Ramesseump 59; 96; 195; royal mortuary temples, 127; 139; 169-170; temple of 69-70; 127; 130, n-54; tomb of Amenmose, 1z7; Amenhotep-of-the-wbs, tomb of Kheruefq 147; tomb of Sekhemreshedtavy-Sobekemsaafg 193; tomb of Panehsyg 126-127; tomb of Puyemreg 139; tomb of Rekhmire, 147; 158; 217; 254; tomb of Senmat, 76; 78palacep 98; temple of Anhur, 240; 287. Todv templev 104; 175, n-59; 270Tura, 229-230Valley of the Kingst 'The Tomb', 82; tomb of Ramesses IV (Turin Yrus)v 41; 45; 78; 114. papTUnis,