Netjerikhet 'Djoser' (
Turin King List "Dsr-it";
Manetho "Tosarthros") is the best-known
pharaoh of the
Third dynasty of Egypt, for commissioning the official
Imhotep to build his
Step Pyramid at
Saqqara.
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The painted
limestone statue of Djoser in the
Egyptian Museum in
Cairo is the oldest known Egyptian life-size statue. Today at the site in
Saqqara in which it was found, a plaster copy of the statue stands in place of the original at the museum. The statue was found during the Antiquities Service Excavations of 1924-1925.
In contemporary inscriptions, he is called 'Netjerikhet', meaning ''body of the gods''. Later sources, which include a
New Kingdom reference to his Step Pyramid, help confirm Netjerikhet and Djoser are the same person.
While Manetho names one 'Necherophes', and the Turin King List names '
Nebka', as the first ruler of the Third dynasty, many
Egyptologists now believe Djoser was first king of this
dynasty, pointing out that the order in which some predecessors of
Khufu are mentioned in the ''
Papyrus Westcar'' suggests Nebka should be placed between Djoser and
Huni, not before Djoser. More significantly, the English Egyptologist Toby Wilkinson has demonstrated that burial seals found at the entrance to
Khasekhemwy's tomb in Abydos name only Djoser, rather than Nebka. This proves Djoser buried and, hence, directly succeeded Khasekhemwy and not Nebka.
[1]
Reign Length
Manetho states Djoser ruled Egypt for 29 years, while the Turin King List states it was only 19 years. Because of his many substantial building projects, particularly at Saqqara, some scholars argue Djoser must have enjoyed a reign of nearly three decades. Manetho's figure appears to be more accurate, according to Wilkinson's analysis and reconstruction in 2000 of the
Palermo Stone, which mentions the beginning and end of Djoser's reign. Wilkinson states the Annal document gives Djoser "'28 complete or partial years'" and notes Years 1-5 and 19-28 of his reign are preserved on Palermo Stone
register V and Cairo Fragment 1, register V of the document.
[2]
Family
Because Queen
Nimaethap, the wife of Khasekhemwy, the last king of the
Second dynasty of Egypt, appears to have held the title "Mother of the King", some writers argue she was Djoser's mother and Khasekhemwy was his father. Three royal women are known from during his reign:
Inetkawes,
Hetephernebti and a third, whose name is destroyed. One of them might have been his wife, and the one whose name is lost may have been
Nimaethap. The relationship between Djoser and his successor,
Sekhemkhet, is not known.
Career
Djoser dispatched several military expeditions to the
Sinai Peninsula, during which the local inhabitants were subdued. He also sent expeditions there to mine for valuable minerals such as
turquoise and
copper. The Sinai was also strategically important as a buffer between
Asia and the
Nile valley. He also may have fixed the southern boundary of his kingdom at the
First Cataract.
Some fragmentary reliefs found at
Heliopolis and
Gebelein mention Djoser's name and suggest he commissioned construction projects in those cities. An inscription claiming to date to the reign of Djoser, but actually created during the
Ptolemaic Dynasty, relates how Djoser rebuilt the temple of
Khnum on the island of
Elephantine at the First Cataract, thus ending a seven year famine in Egypt. Some consider this ancient inscription as but a
legend. Nonetheless, it does show more than two millennia after his reign,
Egyptians still remembered Djoser. His most famous monument was his
step pyramid which entailed the construction of several
mastaba tombs one over another. These form would eventually lead to the standard pyramid tomb under later Old Kingdom pharaohs.
Variants of his name include 'Zoser, Dzoser, Zozer (or Zozzer), Dsr, Djeser, Zosar, Djéser, Djésèr, Horus-Netjerikhet, Horus-Netjerichet'.
External links
★
Another detailed profile of Djoser
Notes and References
1. Toby Wilkinson, Early Dynastic Egypt, Routledge, 1999, pp.83 & 95
2. Toby Wilkinson, Royal Annals of Ancient Egypt, pp.79 & 258
★ Rosanna Pirelli, "Statue of Djoser" in Francesca Tiradriti (editor), The Treasures of the Egyptian Museum, American University in Cairo Press, 1999, p. 47.
★ Toby Wilkinson, Early Dynastic Egypt, Routledge, (Routledge:1999), pp.83 & 95
★ Toby Wilkinson, Royal Annals of Ancient Egypt: The Palermo Stone and Its Associated Fragments, (Kegan Paul International), 2000.