Sunday, December 02, 2007

The Early Kings of Hierakonpolis

Archaeology Magazine - Interactive Dig

Thanks to Chris Townsend for the news that the Hierakonpolis Interactive Dig section has been updated with 2007 Field Note 6 - The Early Kings of Hierakonpolis. As usual, there are lots of details and some excellent photographs (all of which can be clicked on to view much bigger images). Here's a short extract:

Hierakonpolis (Nekhen) has long been a site of profound significance for the study of Egypt's beginnings, not just because of zombies, and not just for us today. Even the ancient Egyptians thought it was old, and venerated its early rulers, their names long forgotten, as the jackal headed Souls of Nekhen. While the sheer extent and diversity of the Predynastic (ca. 3800-3000 B.C.) remains (see introduction) attest the historic basis of their beliefs, recent discoveries in the elite cemetery at the site indicate these memories stretch back much further than we ever imagined. These new finds are also allowing us to tie up many loose ends around that site (while creating others) and put together a much more coherent picture of the early rise of Hierakonpolis and Egyptian civilization, although there is still much we need to find out.

Based on the still unparalleled Painted Tomb (Tomb 100), discovered by F.W. Green in 1899, it was believed that Hierakonpolis was at its peak in the Naqada IIC period, thus about 3500 B.C., a time of social change and economic development throughout Predynastic Egypt. One of the largest tombs of its time, the painted scenes on its walls containing elements that would go on to become characteristic of royal iconography proclaimed the royal status of its owner and his home town. But try as we might to find further evidence for this, everywhere we looked around the desert site, the extensive archaeological remains, which include breweries, food production installations (see 2007 Field Note 3), pottery kilns, and ceremonial centers (see Narmer's Temple), all dated some 300-400 years earlier (early Nagada II period). This level of complexity suggested that strong rulers had already been established well before the owner of the Painted Tomb, but it was not until 2000 that the first clear indications of their existence were finally uncovered (see Elite Cemetery). The discovery of the elaborate and clearly royal tomb (Tomb 23) in the elite cemetery, first summarized in a special report (see Special Report: New Finds from the Elite Cemetery), has since been supplemented by further exploration that have revealed a vast and unexpected architectural complex and a unprecedented view of the very beginnings of Egyptian kingship, civilization, and some if its more enduring characteristics.

I was at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford yesterday, where the Scorpion Macehead and a number of other artefacts from Hierakonpolis are on display (and where I took the above photograph). I'll post some more photographs from that collection in the next week or so.

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