From Illahun to Djeme
Papers Presented in Honour of Ulrich Luft
Edited by
Eszter Bechtold
András Gulyás
Andrea Hasznos
BAR International Series 2311
2011
Published by
Archaeopress
Publishers of British Archaeological Reports
Gordon House
276 Banbury Road
Oxford OX2 7ED
England
bar@archaeopress.com
www.archaeopress.com
BAR S2311
From Illahun to Djeme. Papers Presented in Honour of Ulrich Luft
© Archaeopress and the individual authors 2011
ISBN 978 1 4073 0894 4
Printed in England by Infomation Press, Oxford
All BAR titles are available from:
Hadrian Books Ltd
122 Banbury Road
Oxford
OX2 7BP
England
www.hadrianbooks.co.uk
The current BAR catalogue with details of all titles in print, prices and means of payment is available
free from Hadrian Books or may be downloaded from www.archaeopress.com
A Phantom Debate ?
Edward Brovarski
years 2 and 20 of Djehutynakht IV were not consecutive,
but clearly show a change of rulers.
I first met Ulrich Luft in 1974 in the course of a visit (in the
company of David Silverman) to the Egyptian Museum
and Papyrus Collection in East Berlin. Ulrich kindly
invited us home for dinner. The dinner with Ulrich and
his room mates was so animated that it was 1:00 AM in
the morning before any of us realized that David’s and my
visas had expired two hours before. What ensued was a
frenetic automobile race through the curfew darkened
streets of East Berlin. We dreaded what might occur
when we were dropped off at Checkpoint Charlie. In
fact, we were passed right through. Nevertheless, it was a
memorable evening.
Gestermann assigns the 13th and 20th years of Ahanakht I
and the 30th year of Ahanakht I or of his son Ahanakht
II to the reign of Mentuhotep II. She believes Ahanakht
II survived into the later years of Mentuhotep II, to be
succeeded by his brother Djehutynakht IV in the reign
of Mentuhotep III. She evidently does not think that
Djehutynakht IV lived into the reign of Mentuhotep IV at
the end of the Eleventh Dynasty and assigns no nomarch
to his 8 year reign (Gestermann 2008, 9, Table 1). She then
attributes the 4th-8th years of Nehri I and the 20th year of
Djehutynakht V, son of Nehri I, to the reign of Amenemhat
I (without deciding whether that king was coregent for 10
years with his son Amenemhat I) She assigns the 2nd year
of Djehutynakht V to the reign of Senusert I (Gestermann
2008, 8-9, Table 2).
Ulrich Luft’s many contributions to the chronology of the
Middle Kingdom are well known. Of course, his interests
are too wide-ranging to be restricted to that subject alone.
Still, I am pleased to be able to offer the following study to
a respected scholar and friend.
In the 44 year reign of Senusert I, she places three nomarchs
in addition to Djehutynakht V. These are Nehri II, nephew
(?) of Djehutynakht V, around year 10 of Senusert I;
Djehutynakht VI, son (?) of Nehri II,1 around that king’s
year 18; and Amenemhat, son of Nehri II, around Senusert
I’s year 38 (Gestermann 2008, Table 2).
When I recently wrote an article entitled “The Hare and
Oryx Nomes in the First Intermediate Period and Early
Middle Kingdom” (Brovarski 2008, 31-85), I was unaware
of an important study by Louise Gestermann, “Die
Datierung der Nomarchen von Hermopolis aus dem frühen
Mittleren Reich – eine Phantomdebatte?” (Gestermann
2008, 1-15). Gestermann questions the view customary
since the publication of the Hatnub graffiti by Rudolf
Anthes (1928) that the year dates given at the head of
certain graffiti from Hatnub which belong to the nomarchs
Ahanakt I, Nehri I, and Djehutynakht V actually appertain
to the tenure in office of the nomarchs in question. She
argues instead that the year dates refer to the reign of a
king, even though this king is not mentioned by name.
According to Gestermann, this new interpretation allows
the nomarchs in question to be dated within the reigns
from Mentuhotep II to Senusert I.
In support of her thesis, Gestermann (2008, 7) argues
that Nehri I in particular expresses his loyalty to the
royal house in the graffiti ascribed to him and that this
acceptance of kingly authority renders his dating to his
own years in office rather than than those of the king he
served unacceptable. I cannot agree with Gestermann’s
point of view and think there is clear evidence from Beni
Hasan in the neighboring Oryx nome that nomarchs indeed
dated by their own years. The evidence consists of the
heading of a biographical inscription on the southern jamb
of the entrance to the tomb of the nomarch Amenemhat at
that site and reads as follows: “Year 43 under the majesty
of the Horus Ankh-mesut, the King of Upper and Lower
Egypt Kheperkare, living forever, the Two Ladies Ankhmesut, the Horus of Gold Ankh-mesut, the Son of Re
Senusert (I) living forever and ever corresponding to (xft)
Year 25 in the Oryx nome as (m) the Hereditary Prince
and Count, imA-a, Amen[emhat], justified” (Newberry
1893, pl. 8). The inscription provides clear testimony
Gestermann observes that altogether 10 regnal years are
preserved in the Hatnub graffiti, which according to her
are to be spread over the reigns of three rulers (Gestermann
2008, 8-9). Those years are as follows: the 13th (Gr. 12)
and 20th year (Gr. 10) of a pharaoh under whom Ahanakht
I served, the 30th year (Gr. 11) of the same king, either from
the period of Ahanakht I or one of his sons, the 4th (Gr.
14/15), 5th (Gr. 16-19), 6th (Gr. 20-21), 7th (Gr. 22-25) and
the 8th year (Gr. 26-28) of a ruler, under whom Nehri I was
active, and finally a 20th (Gr. 32) and a 2nd year (Gr. 31) of
Djehutynakht IV, son of Nehri I. Gesterman believes that
1
I am not clear why Gestermann questions that Djehutynakht VI was
a son of Nehri II, since he names his father Nehri and his mother Sat[hedjet]-hetep in Tomb 1 (Griffith and Newberry, 1894, pls. 7, 8). The
nomarch Amenemhat has the same parents in Hatnub Gr. 49.
25
From Illahun to Djeme. PaPers PresenteD In honour oF ulrIch luFt
that the procedure of dating by nomarchs’ years was still
in practice as late as Year 43 of Senusert I. Following
Gestermann’s reconstruction of events, Djehutynakht V is
the last nomarch to exclude mention of a king in the 20th
year of Amenemhat I (Gr. 32). In contrast the nomarch
Amenemhat definitely dates a graffiti to the 31st year of
Senusert I (Gr. 49).
is the occurrence of the epithet aA n niwt.f in Ahanakht’s
tomb (Griffith and Newberry 1895, pl. 17 [top]) and in
the stele of Rudj-ahau, which dates to the middle reign of
Mentuhotep II, when he still bore the Horus name NTryHDt (Faulkner 1951, 47-52, pl. 7; Brovarski 1981, 28, n.
124; Brovarski 1989, 1041 [u]). Willems (1983-1984, 90)
argues that the phrase is too rare to allow any chronological
conclusions. Nevertheless, until, and if, later examples
of the epithet are found, it points to a date prior to the
unification for Ahanakht I. The other phrases cited by me
point in the same direction (Brovarski 2008, 40-41).
In my recent article and an earlier article entitled “Ahanakht
of Bersheh and the Hare Nome in the First Intermediate
Period and Middle Kingdom,” I endeavored to show that
in terms of the palaeography, phraseology, and iconography
of their tombs and inscriptions the associations of Ahanakht
I and Nehri I are with the Heracleopolitan Period and the
Eleventh Dynasty and not with Dynasty 12 (Brovarski
1981, 14-30). Particularly important in this regard is the
spelling of the toponymn +dw as
Archaeological evidence also argues for a pre-Dynasty 12
date for Ahanakht I and Nehri I. For example, the coffin
of Ahanakht I (or II) (Philadelphia E. 16217a, b-E.16218a,
b) and that of Djehutynakht IV (or V) (MFA 20.1822-27)
belong to the earlier tradition of coffin making at Bersheh,
in which each exterior side of the coffin bears a wide
horizontal band of inscription and on the east side a pair of
wedjat-eyes. The earliest of the Dynasty 12 coffins from
Bersheh, those of Djehutynakht VI (CG 28123/28125), son
of Nehri II, and his brother Amenemhat (CG 28091/28092)
are different in appearance. Both bear a horizontal band
of text on each side with three vertical lines of columns on
the long sides, while the ends have a single vertical column
in addition to the horizontal band. The wedjat-eyes also
appear opposite the face of the deceased on the front of the
coffin (Brovarski 1981, Fig. 13).
and the
arrangement of prt-xrw nt as
in the tombs of
Ahanakht I and Nehri I (Griffith and Newberry 1895, pls.
11, 15, 17). Both features are typical of Bersheh in the
Heracleopolitan Period and Dynasty 11. Subsequently,
Harco Willems (1983-1984, 88) found the criteria
“inadequate.” He pointed out that Bennett (1941, 78 [4])
established long ago that the spelling of Djedu was usual
until the time of Senusert III. Be that as it may, at Bersheh
is typical of the Twelfth
itself the writing
Dynasty until the reign of Senusert III, occurring as it does
in the coffins of Djehutynakht VI, of his brother
Amenemhat, and of Djehutyhotep II, a contemporary of
that king (Brovarski 1981, 38, n. 48). Willems also stated
that it is uncertain that the formula prt-xrw nt can only
point to a date prior to the Twelfth Dynasty and stated that
it still occurs in the the tombs of Baqet III and Khety I at
Beni Hasan (which he considers to belong to the Twelfth
Dynasty) and on two others monuments from the same
dynasty both in Cairo, a stele, CG 20480, and a coffin, CG
28097. It fact, it was never my intent to say that the
formula prt-xrw can only point to a date prior to the
Twelfth Dynasty. The observation I was making concerned
the specific writing under discussion here, not the wider
use of the formula prt xrw nt. In my recent article, I
At Hatnub, both Ahanakht I and Nehri I assume royal
epithets, like anx wDA snb, sA (anx) HA.f, and anx Dt (r nHH)
(Anthes 1928, 85-86; Blumenthal 1976, 37ff.). It is unlikely
that the practice would have survived the establishment
of Dynasty 12 (Anthes 1928, 85-86; Blumenthal 1976,
37ff.). Certainly, none of the known Bersheh nomarchs of
Dynasty 12 did so.
If Ahanakht I and Nehri I both antedate the Twelfth
Dynasty, it is necessary to be more precise about
chronological positions. In my recent article (Brovarski
2008, 67-68) I made Ahanakht I a contemporary of
Wahankh II or of Nakhtnebtepnefer Intef III, at a point in
time when the Thebans had not yet expanded beyond the
Head of the South, and Nehri I a contemporary of the later
reign of Mentuhotep II and the final Theban initiative to
conquer the north. Gestermann (2008, 10), on the other
hand, assigned Ahanakht I (and his son Ahanakht II) to the
long reign of Mentuhotep II.
showed that no instances of the arrangement
appear on monuments that clearly date to Dynasty 12
(Brovarski 2008, 39). It may also be noted that the
arrangement of
is common at Heracleopolis
in Dynasty 10 or in late Dynasty 11 and is met with at
Thebes in the reign of Nebhepetre Mentuhotep (Brovarski
1981, 25, nn. 76-78; Brovarski 2009, 394).
Her sources for the dating are two. The first is Willems
(1983-1984, 102, n. 153) who proposed a date for Ahanakht
I in the last three decades of the Eleventh Dynasty. I
believe I have countered Willem’s arguments to this end
in my recent article (Brovarski 2008). Gestermann’s
other source was Rita Freed (1992, 53-59) who argued on
stylistic grounds that Ahanakht’s tomb is a product of the
period immediately following the reunification, that is,
late in the reign of Mentuhotep II. Freed’s argumentation
is as follows. In the inner chamber of Ahanakht’s tomb,
elongated figures with high, narrow waists, short upper
It seems to me that these observations are important.
There are, however, other indications that Ahanakht I and
Nehri I antedate the Twelfth Dynasty, even if they are not
so decisive as these.
The phraseology of Ahanakht’s tomb inscriptions also
associate the nomarch with the First Intermediate Period
and pre-reunification Dynasty 11. Important in this regard
26
eDwarD BrovarskI : a Phantom DeBate ?
FIg. 1
FIg. 2
27
From Illahun to Djeme. PaPers PresenteD In honour oF ulrIch luFt
bodies and small heads resemble what appears particularly
in Upper Egypt prior to the reunification (Griffith and
Newberry 1895, pls. 14, 17; Brovarski 1981, fig. 6). In
contrast, the minor figures in the outer chamber are
consistent with the Old Kingdom canon (Griffith and
Newberry 1895, pls. 15, 16). As with the minor figures,
proportionally the large figures too are correct according to
the Old Kingdom canon. Freed concluded from this that at
least two artisans or groups of artisans worked on the tomb
of Ahanakht. A “master” influenced by the North executed
the scenes in the outer chamber and the large scale figures
in both. A second artisan, who worked exclusively in the
inner chamber was trained in the Theban school before the
reunification.
as the minor figures in the outer chamber) would thus be a
member of this Heracleopolitan school.
In actual fact, the so-called pre-unification style which
features elongated figures with high, narrow waists, short
upper bodies, and small heads is not confined to the Theban
area. It occurs, for example, in a tomb at Sheikh Farag in
the Thinite nome in the late Heracleopolitan Period. The
tomb belongs to an overseer of the black cattle and scribe
of divine offerings named Heni. Like the inner chamber of
Ahanakht’s tomb, the tall, slim figures in SF 5015 (Figs. 1,
2) have rather small heads and bodies too long from the feet
to the waist.2 At the time Heni’s paintings were executed,
the Thinite nome formed part of the Heracleopolitan
realm.3 For that matter, such figures also appear in tombs
at Beni Hasan, including tombs which I have dated to
Dynasty 10 and late Dynasty 11 in my recent article. At
Beni Hasan, as at Bersheh, they occur on the same wall as
figures in the Old Kingdom canon (Newberry 1894, pls. 4,
5, 6 [Baqet III], 13, 15, 17 [Khety], 25 [Baqet II]).4
Another example of an Upper Egyptian vignette associated
with pre-unification times is the image of jousting
bulls which occurs three times in the inner chamber of
Ahanakht’s tomb (Freed 1992, 53; Brovarski 1981, Fig. 8).
This motif is found from late Dynasty 6 on from Deshasha
to Aswan, but it never appears in the Old Kingdom
cemeteries at Giza and Saqqara (Freed 1992, 53, n. 113).
Freed also argued that a number of the vignettes chosen
and the manner in which they are rendered likewise
reflect contact with or knowledge of Upper Egyptian prereunification style and iconography. For example, on
the eastern half of the south wall of the inner room are
two milking scenes where one man holds the rear legs of
a cow, as another man with one knee up and balancing
a narrow-necked jar on the upraised knee milks the cow
(Freed 1992, Fig. 42). According to her, this is the same
manner in which the scene is rendered in the tombs and on
the sarcophagi of Mentuhotep II’s minor queens.
The milking scene on on the south wall of Ahanakht’s tomb
is not rendered in quite the same manner in the tombs and
sarcophagi of Mentuhotep’s minor queens. For example,
the man holding the rear legs of the cow does not appear in
the sarcophagi of Kawit and Kemzit, while a calf is tied to
the front leg of its mother in both scenes (Naville 1907, pls.
20, 22). In the tomb of Kemzit the calf tied to its mother’s
leg is absent but so too is the man holding the cow’s rear
legs (Naville 1913, pl. 2). The differences between the
scenes at Bersheh and Thebes render the influence of the
latter on the former less compelling.
As Freed has observed, the large scale figures of
Ahanakht in both chambers are correct according to the
Old Kingdom canon (Fig. 3). Freed thinks these figures
were executed by a “master” influenced by the North in
the period immediately following the reunification. But
a large figure of Khety II in his tomb at Asyut is also
proportionally correct according to the Old Kingdom
canon (Fig. 4).5 Khety served the Heracleopolitan
sovereign Merikare (Brunner 1937, 52, 55). This suggests
that the Old Kingdom canon had been kept alive or revived
by artists of the late Heracleopolitan Period (Dynasty 10).
The “master” who executed the large scale figures (as well
The milking scene has a long history and has yet to be
studied in detail. Occasionally in the Old Kingdom a
standing man holds a rope attached to the cow’s rear
legs (Wild 1953, pl. 112; Hartwig Altenmüller 1998, pl.
17b; Munro, pl. 21; Kanawati and Abder-Raziq 2008, pl.
56); once, however, a kneeling man holds the rear legs
of the cow (Lepsius 1904, pl. 96 [middle left]). On at
least one occasion too, the calf is tied to its mother’s legs
(Altenmüller 1998, pl. 17b). The difference between the
Old Kingdom and the First Intermediate and early middle
Kingdom scenes is that, in the former, a basin or other large
vessel resting on the ground is the recipient of the milk,
while at Thebes and Bersheh the man doing the milking
holds a small jar up to the cows udder. Interestingly, in
a damaged scene in the Ninth Dynasty tomb6 of Ankhtify
at Moalla, the kneeling man who milks the cow evidently
held up a small jar (now destroyed) for no vessel rests on
the groud (Vabier 1950, pl. 27). The later version of the
milking scene may then have had a longer history than is
readily apparent at present.
2
I would like to express my gratitude to Dr. Rita E. Freed, John F. Cogan,
Jr. and Mary L. Cornille Chair of Art of the Ancient World, for permission
to reproduce the photograph and drawing of the wall painting in SF 5015
in the present article.
3
See Brovarski 1989, 944-964.In addition to palaeographic and
epigraphic criteria indicative of Dynasty 10 date, Heni was sHD Hm-nTr
#a-nfr-[Mrnra]. (Brovarski 1989, fig. 93). Royal funerary cults are not
attested earlier at Naga-ed-Dêr, and it may be that the late Heracleopolitan
sovereigns bestowed endowed offices like this to encourage local
adherents in the on-going conflict with Thebes; see Brovarski 1989, 982.
4
The same combination of elongated figures and proportionately correct
figures are apparent in Twelfth Dynasty tombs at the site: Newberry,
1893, pls. 11, 12, 13 and passim (Amenemhat), 22A (Nakht), 19, 22, 24
(Khnumhotep II).
5
Prof. David P. Silverman had graciously permitted the reproduction of
the photograph of the west wall of Asyut Tomb 4 herein.
As far as the jousting bulls are concerned, Freed has
herself observed that the motif is found from late Dynasty
6
28
For the date of Ankhtify’s tomb, see Brovarki 1989, Appendix B.
eDwarD BrovarskI : a Phantom DeBate ?
FIg. 3
FIg. 4
6 on from Deshasha to Aswan. Deshasha itself is located
at no great distance from Bersheh and could readily have
inspired the jousting bulls in Ahanakht’s tomb, if the theme
did not derive from an artist’s sketch book.
and a Mayor of Menat-Khufu (Khnumhotep II) ruled the
Oryx Nome. Subtracting 5 years for the tenure of Khety
II, this represents an average of 27 years for the tenures of
the four governors of the Oryx Nome. Even if Netjernakht
ruled for 18 years, the average of tenure for the governors
of the Oryx nome would be 22.6 years (Brovarski 2008,
50). From the point of view of chronology, the evidence
for the Twelfth Dynasty nomarchs at Bersheh is not as
clear as at Behi Hasan, but there is every reason to think
that the nomarchs of the Hare nome in Dynasties 10-12
had similar life spans. The fact that Ahanakht I ruled for a
probable 30 years and Djehutynakht V for at least 20 years
supports this view.
In my opinion, the art historical evidence from Bersheh
thus does not support the dating of Ahanakht I to the reign
of Mentuhotep II. This is the linch pin of Gestermann’s
chronological scheme which no longer holds together
because of it.
In my recent article I emphasized the importance of
“generation counting” in determining the chronology of
the nomarchs of the Hare and Oryx nomes at the end of the
First Intermediate Period and the beginning of the Middle
Kingdom. It is clear from inscriptional and archaeological
evidence at Beni Hasan and Bersheh that the nomarchs of
the Twelfth Dynasty lived normal life spans (Brovarski
2008, 51). The situation is especially clear at Beni Hasan,
where we are surprisingly fortunate in possessing a fairly
detailed chronological outline for the rulers of the Oryx
Nome (Brovarski 2008, 50). According to the standard
chronology, the sole reigns of the first four sovereigns of the
Twelfth Dynasty– Amenemhat I, Senusert I, Amenemhat
II, and Senusert II – totalled 113 years. During that time
three nomarchs (Khnumhotep I, Nakhti I, Amenemhat)
Gestermann does not adequately take generations into
account. Consequently, she assigns 4 nomarchs to the reign
of Senusert I: Djehutynakht V, Nehri II, Djehutynakht VI,
and Amenemhat (Gestermann 2008, Table 2). She believes
Djehutynakht V, son of Nehri I, began his term of office in
Year 20 of Amenemhat I and remained in office till Year
10 of Senusert I. Nehri II, who succeeded, she only allows
8 years of rule (Years 10-18 of Senusert I) and thinks
the term in office of Djehutynakht VI, son of Nehri II,
began about Year 18. She thinks Amenemhat succeeded
his brother Djehutynakht VI about Year 38 of Senusert I.
There is no reason to think that Nehri II was in office for
29
From Illahun to Djeme. PaPers PresenteD In honour oF ulrIch luFt
so short a term. Nehri’s tomb (No. 7) was completed and
there is every reason to believe he had a normal period of
reign (Brovarski 2008, 34, 47). Two generations of 40-50
years would make Nehri I a contemporary of Mentuhotep
II and the final Theban drive to conquer the North. This is
the viewpoint I have defended in my recent article.
Lepsius, K. R. 1904. Denkmaeler aus Aegypten und
Aethiopien. Vol. 2. Leipzig, J. C. Hinrichs.
Munro, P. 1993. Der Unas-Friedhof Nord-West 1. Mainz
am Rhein, Philipp von Zabern.
Naville, E. 1907. The XIth Dynasty Temple of Deir elBahari 1. EEF 28. London, Egypt Exploration Fund.
Naville, E. 1913. The XIth Dynasty Temple of Deir elBahari 3. EEF 32. London, Egypt Exploration Fund.
Newberry, P. E. 1893. Beni Hasan 1. ASE 1. London,
Egypt Exploration Fund.
Newberry, P. E. 1894. Beni Hasan 2. ASE 2. London,
Egypt Exporation Fund.
Vandier, J. Moaalla. BdÉ 18. Cairo, 1950.
Wild, H. 1953. Le tombeau de Ti 2. MIFAO 65. Cairo,
Institut français d’archéologie orientale.
Willems, H. 1983-1984. “The Nomarchs of the Hare
Nome and Early Middle Kingdom History.” JEOL 28.
Bibliography
Altenmüller, H. 1998. Die Wanddarstellungen im Grab
des Mehu in Saqqara. AV 42. Mainz,
Anthes, R. 1928. Die Felseninschriften von Hatnub nach
den Aufnahmen Georg Möllers. UGAÄ IX. Leipzig, J.
C. Hinrichs.
Bennett, C. J. C. 1941. “Growth of the ДTP-DΜI-NSW
Formula in the Middle Kingdom.” JEA 27, 77-82.
Blumenthal, E. 1976. “Die Datierung der NHri-Graffiti
von Hatnub.” AOF 4, 35-62. Berlin.
Brovarski, E. 1981. “Ahanakht of Bersheh and the Hare
Nome in the First Intermediate Period and Middle
Kingdom.” In Simpson, W. K. and Whitney, M. D.
(eds.), Studies in Ancient Egypt, the Aegean, and the
Sudan: Essays in honor of Dows Dunham on the
occasion of his 90th birthday, June 1, 1980, 14-30.
Brovarski, E. 1989. “The Inscribed Material of the First
Intermediate Period from Naga-ed-Dêr.” Ph.D.
dissertation, University of Chicago.
Brovarski, E. 2008. The Hare and Oryx Nomes in the
First Intermediate Period and Early Middle Kingdom.
In Alexandra Woods, Ann McFarlane, and Susanne
Binder, (eds.), Egyptian Culture and Society: Studies
in Honor of Naguib Kanawati, vol. 1, 31-85. CASAE
38. Cairo, Conseil Suprême des Antiquités de l’Égypte.
Brovarski, E. 2009. “False Doors and History: The
First Intermediate Period and Middle Kingdom.”
In: David P. Silverman, William Kelly Simpson,
and Josef Wegner, (eds.), Archaism and Innovation:
Studies in the Culture of Middle Kingdom Egypt. New
Haven and Philadelphia, Department of Near Eastern
Languages and Civilizations, Yale University, and
University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology
and Anthropology.
Brunner, Hellmut. 1937. Die Texte aus den Gräbern
der Herakleopolitanzeit von Siut. ÄF 5. Glückstadt,
Hamburg, New York, J. J. Augustin.
Faulkner, R. O. 1951. “The Stela of RudjaaHau.” JEA 37,
47-52.
Freed, R. E. 1992. “Art Historical Overview.” In
Silverman, D. P. (ed.), Bersheh Reports 1, 53-63.
Boston, Museum of Fine Arts.
Gestermann, L. “Die Datierung der Nomarchen von
Hermopolis aus dem frühen Mittleren Reich – eine
Phantomdebatte?” ZÄS 135 (2008), 1-15.
Griffith, F. L. and Newberry, P. E. 1895. El Bersheh 2.
ASE 4. London, Egypt Exploration Fund.
Kanawati, N. and Abder-Raziq, M. 2008. Mereruka and
His Family 2. ACER 26. Oxford, Aris and Phillips.
30