Serekh
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Serekh in hieroglyphs |
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In Egyptian hieroglyphs, a serekh is a rectangular enclosure representing the niched or gated façade of a palace surmounted by (usually) the Horus falcon, indicating that the text enclosed is a royal name. The serekh was the earliest convention used to set apart the royal name in ancient Egyptian iconography, predating the later and better known cartouche by four dynasties and five to seven hundred years.
History
One of the most important elements of royal display and identity in ancient Egypt was the kingâs name, important as pharaohs were concerned that future generations remain aware of their reigns.[1] These were first seen from rulers as early as those of Dynasty 0 and continued to be used by kings throughout the history of ancient Egypt.[2] For example, a serekh of Senusret I, who was a king during the Twelfth Dynasty, has been found and is now displayed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. The serekhs of kings from the 30th Dynasty can also be seen.[3] The serekh represented the kingâs palace shown in a combination of two views, plan and an elevation. The rectangular enclosure represented the plan while the patterned area represented the elevation of the façade.[4] A serekh incised or painted in ink on a vessel denoted that the contents were the produce and/or property of the royal court.[5] The serekh containing the kingâs name was used on a variety of objects and made a fundamental statement of royal ideology.[6] The kingâs name was written in hieroglyphs and the Horus falcon, in reference to the sky god Horus, usually surmounted it.[1]
The Horus name is the first of five royal titles that were in use by the Fifth Dynasty. The second title is (He of) the Two Ladies, representing the king as manifesting, and under the protection of, the goddesses Nekhbet of Elkab and Hierakonpolis in Upper Egypt, and Wadjet of Buto in Lower Egypt.[7] The third title is the Horus of Gold, with the Horus falcon above the hieroglyphic sign for gold. The fourth title is often translated as âHe of the Sedge and Bee,â with the sedge plant symbolic of Upper Egypt and the bee symbolic of Lower Egypt.[7] This is also known as nswt-bĂŹty, a title which expressed the many dualities over which the king exercised rule: Upper and Lower Egypt, the Black Land of cultivation and the Red Land of desert, the realms of day and night, and the natural and the supernatural.[8] The fifth title is Son of Ra.[7] This name claims a direct solar origin for the king as child of the sun-god.[9] The Horus name was commonly written in the serekhs of ancient Egypt. There are a couple of cases in which the Horus name appears without serekhs, and only Peribsen and Khasekhemwy have serekhs without the Horus name.
Horus
The kingâs name was written in hieroglyphs and the Horus falcon, in reference to the god Horus, usually surmounted it.[1] As a result, the kingâs name in the serekh came to be known as his âHorus name.â[4] The writing of the kingâs name within the serekh symbolized the king in his palace as the center of royal administration and power. The serekh as a whole was therefore a symbol of kingship. The presence of the Horus falcon showed that the living king was a manifestation of the god.[4] Additionally, the Horus names of several First Dynasty kings expressed the aggressive authority of Horus, perhaps reflecting the coercive power of kingship at this early stage of Egyptian statehood. Examples of such names are âHorus the fighterâ (Hor-Aha), âHorus the strongâ (Djer), and âarm-raising Horusâ (Qa'a). All of these names reveal the warlike iconography of the earliest royal monuments from the period of state formation. They emphasize an authority based upon military strength and the power of life and death.[10] The emphasis in the Second Dynasty, however, began to change possibly due to the periods of instability that the kings faced, though the exact reason is still disputed. This led to a slight alteration in the structure of the serekh, solely during the reigns of Peribsen and Khasekhemwy. Since this alteration only occurred during these two reigns, it is seen as an exception, as the succeeding kings returned to the previous iconography.
Progression
The earliest serekhs were empty because the symbol alone relayed the necessary message of royal power. Over time, the king began to write an epithet within the serekh.[11] These serekhs were dominated by the symbol of Horus. During the Second Dynasty only, changes in the formulation of the Horus name to a Seth-name and then a Horus-and-Seth name were seen.[10] These changes occurred merely during the Second Dynasty and are viewed as an exception to the typical use of the Horus name as is evidenced by the continued use of Horus in the serekhs of the Egyptian kings before and after Peribsen and Khasekhemwy.[11] Many propositions have been made as to why this change occurred, though the exact reason is still disputed.
Peribsen and Khasekhemwy
For reasons which remain unclear, Seth attained particular prominence in the late Second Dynasty, temporarily replacing, then joining, Horus as the god atop the royal serekh.[12] When the name Peribsen, who was the penultimate king of the Second Dynasty, was written in a serekh, it was surmounted, not by the usual Horus falcon, but by the Seth animal, a hound or jackal-like creature with a wide, straight tail.[13] Peribsen thus made a visual statement that he was the earthly embodiment of Seth.[6] The importance of Seth in the reign of Peribsen was also reflected in a sealing of the king from Abydos. It referred to a god named âthe golden oneâ or, perhaps more likely, âhe of Nubt (Naqada)â, the usual epithet of Seth in historic times. It appears as though Seth was adopted by Peribsen as his personal deity. This is emphasized by the wording of the inscription: âHe of Nubt has handed over the Two Lands to his son, the dual king Peribsenâ.[12] One interpretation of this dramatic change in the format of the royal name is that it represented a rebellion of some kind that was quashed or reconciled by the last king of the dynasty, Khasekhemwy, whose name appeared in serekhs surmounted by both the Horus falcon and the Seth animal.[13] Originally known as Khasekhem, which means âThe One who Arises in respect of the Power,â his name eventually came to be known as Khasekhemwy which means âThe One who Arises in respect of the Two Powers.â The âTwo Powersâ have been interpreted by some as the Horus falcon and the Seth animal.[14] The addition to Khasekhemâs name is further evidence that he was trying to merge the ideas of both Horus and Seth. While the validity of this proposal is debatable, Khasekhemwyâs epithet from seal impressions supports this notion. It is interpreted as âthe Two Lords are at peace in himâ which can be viewed as though he resolved some internal conflict, especially if âTwo Lordsâ are seen as referring to Horus and Seth and their followers respectively.[13] Others have viewed this evidence as a way of proclaiming national renewal under Khasekhemwy as he was able to reunite Upper and Lower Egypt. This remains speculative, however, due to the lack of hard evidence to support this notion.[15] Nonetheless, it seems likely that foreign relations reached a new level under Khasekhemwy since a seal-impression of his reign showed the first occurrence of the title ĂŹmĂŹ-r3 h3st which means âoverseer of foreign land(s).â It strongly suggests the imposition of Egyptian hegemony on foreign territory.[16] The change of the deity image on a serekh was significant because while the kingâs name sometimes appeared in a serekh without an image of a deity above, no deity other than Horus was so far known to occur on the serekh until the reign of Peribsen.[14] Due to evidence that Peribsenâs stelae were exposed to erasure of the Seth animals, it has been inferred that whatever reasons Peribsen had for substituting his falcon failed to win acceptance among future generations after Khasekhemwy.[14]
Conclusion
The role of the serekh in the early stages of Egyptian kingship emphasizes the importance of iconography in establishing and propagating royal power.[10] The serekhs of kings were seen as early as Dynasty 0 and as late as Dynasty 30 in some form.
See also
- Fivefold Titulary
References
- â 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Kathryn A. Bard, An Introduction to the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt (Malden: Blackwell Publishing, 2008), p. 114.
- â Ian Shaw, The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt (New York: Oxford University Press Incorporated, 2000), p. 6.
- â Stephen Quirke, Who Were The Pharaohs?: A history of their names with a list of cartouches (London: British Museum Publications Limited, 1990), p. 29.
- â 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Gay Robins, The Art of Ancient Egypt (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2000), p. 33.
- â Toby A.H. Wilkinson, Early Dynastic Egypt (New York: Routledge, 2000), p. 44.
- â 6.0 6.1 Robins (2000), p. 36.
- â 7.0 7.1 7.2 Bard (2008), p. 123.
- â Wilkinson (2000), p. 200.
- â Quirke (1990), p. 11.
- â 10.0 10.1 10.2 Wilkinson (2000), p. 202.
- â 11.0 11.1 Wilkinson (2000), p. 201.
- â 12.0 12.1 Wilkinson (2000), p. 295.
- â 13.0 13.1 13.2 Kathryn A. Bard, "The Emergence of the Egyptian State (c. 3200-2686 BC)", in The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, Ian Shaw (New York: Oxford University Press Incorporated, 2000), p. 86.
- â 14.0 14.1 14.2 Robins (2000), p. 37.
- â Wilkinson (2000), p. 91.
- â Wilkinson (2000), p. 92.
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