Sobekneferu
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Persondata | |
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NAME | Sobekneferu |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Nefrusobek Skemiophris (in Manetho) |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Pharaoh of Egypt |
DATE OF BIRTH | {{{Birth}}} |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Ancient Egypt |
DATE OF DEATH | {{{Death}}} |
PLACE OF DEATH | Ancient Egypt |
Preceded by: Amenemhat IV |
Pharaoh of Egypt 12th Dynasty |
Succeeded by: Sekhemre Khutawy or Wegaf |
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Sobekneferu | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Nefrusobek Skemiophris (in Manetho) |
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Reign | 1806 – 1802 BC | ||||||||||||||||||||
Praenomen |
Sobek-kare Sobek is the Ka of Re |
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Nomen |
Sobekneferu The beauties of Sobek |
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Horus name |
Beloved of Re |
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Nebty name |
Daughter of the powerful one, Mistress of the two lands |
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Golden Horus |
Established of crowns |
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Died | 1802 BC |
Sobekneferu (sometimes written as Nefrusobek) was the Egyptian female pharaoh of the Twelfth dynasty. Her name meant "the beauties of Sobek". Some scholars believe that she was the daughter of Pharaoh Amenemhat III and Manetho states that she was the sister of Amenemhat IV. She is the first known female ruler of Egypt, but Nitocris may have ruled in the Sixth Dynasty.
Amenemhat IV most likely died without a male heir. Consequently, Amenemhat III's daughter Sobekneferu assumed the throne. According to the Turin Canon, she ruled Egypt for 3 years 10 months and 24 days. The end of her reign also concluded the Twelfth dynasty and inaugurated the beginning of the Thirteenth Dynasty of Egypt.
[edit] Reign
She is not known from many monuments, though many of her (headless) statues have been preserved including the base of a king's daughter with her name that was discovered in Gezer.[1]. She also made additions to the funerary complex of Amenemhat III at Hawara (called a labyrinth by Herodotus) and built at Herakleopolis Magna while a fine cylinder seal bearing her name and royal titulary is now located in the British Museum.[2] A Nile graffito, at the Nubian fortress of Kumma records the Nile inundation height of 1.83 metres in Year 3 of her reign.[3] Her monumental works consistently associate her with Amenemhat III rather than Amenemhat IV, supporting the theory that she was Amenhotep III's daughter and was perhaps only a step-sister of Amenemhat IV.[4] Kim Ryholt notes that the contemporary sources from her reign show that she never adopted the title of "Queen or King's sister"--only 'King's daughter'--which supports this hypothesis.[5]
Her tomb has not been positively identified, though she may have been interred in an uninscribed pyramid complex in Mazghuna, immediately north of a similar complex ascribed to Amenemhat IV. In a papyrus found at Harageh, a place called Sekhem-Neferu is mentioned. This is perhaps the name of her pyramid.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Kim Ryholt, The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, Carsten Niebuhr Institute Publications, Museum Tusculanum Press, (1997), p.213 ISBN 87-7289-421-0
- ^ Gae Callender, 'The Middle Kingdom Renaissance' in Ian Shaw, The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, (Oxford Univ. Press: 2003), paperback, p.159
- ^ Gae Callender, op. cit., p.159
- ^ Ryholt, op. cit., p.213
- ^ Ryholt, op. cit., p.213
[edit] References
- Dodson, Aidan. Hilton, Dyan. 2004. The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson
- W. Grajetzki, The Middle Kingdom of Ancient Egypt: History,Archaeology and Society, Duckworth, London 2006 ISBN 0-7156-3435-6, 61-63
- Shaw, Ian. Nicholson, Paul. 1995. The Dictionary of Ancient Egypt. Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers.
- Shaw, Ian, Ed. 2000. The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, Oxford University Press. Graffito ref. pg. 170.
- Sobekneferu: The First certain Royal Queen of Egypt