The Mastaba of Kaninisut (or Ka-ni-nisut ['"KҘ(j)-nj-nśw.t"]),[2]or Mastaba G 2155, is an ancient Egyptian mastaba tomb, located at the West field of the Great Pyramid of Giza. The cult chamber of the mastaba is now on display in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna with inventory number 8006. Kaninisut was a high state official in the Fourth dynasty or early Fifth dynasty in the Old Kingdom (~ 2475-2440 BC), as demonstrated by the location and size of his tomb and his numerous honorific titles. The cult chamber of Kaninisut was built of the best quality white Tura limestone and decorated with fine, raised reliefs, which mainly depict offerings, scenes of funerary ritual and Kaninisut with his family. Kaninisut's descendants built additional smaller tombs within the large mastaba.[3][4]
Mastaba of Kaninisut | |
---|---|
General information | |
Type | Mastaba - type II a, [1] |
Town or city | Giza |
Country | Egypt |
Coordinates | 29°58′48″N 31°07′53″E / 29.979972°N 31.131343°E |
Location
editThe Mastaba of Kaninisut lies in the Giza West Field, the western cemetery of Giza. There are clearly planned fields of mastabas to the east and west of the Great Pyramid. The closest relatives of Khufu, the owner of the Great Pyramid, were buried in the East Field and high officials and dignitaries were buried in the West Field. Through this privilege, the deceased could be included in the conceptual world of the royal afterlife and receive the necessary offerings via the funerary cult operated from the royal mortuary temple. Construction, alignment and decoration of the individual private tombs reflected the contemporary cultural hierarchy. During Khufu's reign a total of 77 tombs were built in the two grave fields and numerous graves were added in later times. The regular arrangement of the individual mastabas indicates that they were constructed altogether. Apparently the completed mastabas were handed over undecorated to their owners, who were responsible for any further decoration.[5] The mastaba of Kaninisut is located in the westernmost part of its section of the cemetery, which is referred to as a cemetery "en échelon" on account of the arrangement of its tombs. [4][1]
Discovery and sale of the cult chamber
editIn 1902, the Giza West Field was divided into three parallel sections for each of the nations which had been granted an excavation concession - from east to west, the United States, the Kingdom of Italy and the German Empire. Between 1903 and 1907 Georg Steindorff undertook three excavation campaigns. In 1911, Steindorff and Hermann Junker, who had previously excavated in Nubia, decided to swap their concessions. Thus, the Austrian Academy of Sciences took over the German concession at Giza. On 10 January 1913, Hermann Junker and his colleagues discovered the Mastaba of Kaninisut. Shortly thereafter it was decided that that cult chamber would be sold to the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna, so that it could be displayed there as a typical example of Old Kingdom funerary architecture. Hermann Junker remarked that "The entire chamber is in every respect so beautiful and instructive that I consider it pre-eminently suitable for being transferred to Vienna."[6]
The Viennese industrialist Rudolf Maass covered the costs of the sale and transfer - around 30,000 krone. On 27 January 1914, the k.u.k. Oberstkämmerer and the Egyptian antiquities service signed off on the sale. The cult chamber was removed over the course of a month and was transported to Vienna in 32 crates with a total weight of 65 tonnes. They began to arrive at Vienna in July 1914. Due to the First World War and the poor economic situation after the war, the reconstruction of the cult chamber did not occur for more than ten years. The rebuilt cult chamber was first made accessible to the public on 17 June 1925.[4]
Kaninisut and his family
editKaninisut was a high official during the fourth or early fifth dynasties, as is shown by the location and size of his tomb at Giza and by his numerous honorific titles. The exact reign in which he lived is not currently clear. His family may have continued into the fifth generation, since his descendants had their graves built in the immediate proximity of his mastaba. From the tomb architecture and titles of his descendants, however, the social decline of his family can be discerned. Apparently, his family increasingly lost the high position he had enjoyed in the royal court.[7] Kaninisut bore titles such as "Lord of the kilt," "Sole Friend" and "Beloved son of the king," which were originally only used by relatives of the king, but came to be honorific titles for very important non-royals over the course of the Old Kingdom. They do not indicate much about Kaninisut's actual role. Most of the time in his titularies, the title of Sem priest is in first position. This indicates a significant role in divine and funerary cult. Kaninisut's wife Neferhanisut , had two sons Harwer, Kaninisut II. and daughter Vedjethetep as they are also depicted in the cult chamber.[7]
Description and function of the mastaba
editThe tomb of Kaninisut was a mastaba tomb. The term mastaba, which is Arabic for bench, derives from the appearance of these tombs: the upper building is rectangular with slightly inclined side walls and thus looks like an oversized bench. The core structure of Kaninisut's mastaba is 24 m long by 10.2 m wide, the height can no longer be determined due to its destruction. The outer walls were made of limestone blocks clad with a layer of fine white Tura limestone. There are no rooms in the interior of the upper building; it is filled in with rubble. Towards the end of the reign of Khufu it was becoming increasingly common to place the cult rooms within the upper building, before this they were added to the east facade of the tomb. Apparently in the case of Kaninisut's mastaba, the basic structure of the tomb was completed towards the end of Khufu's reign, but it required numerous adaptations in order to fit the new building style. Rather than to hollow out the mastaba, it was apparently decided to extend the tomb to the south, in order to install the cult chamber there.
A mudbrick porch was erected on the east facade in front of the entrance to the cult chamber. A 2.55 m long and 0.75 - 1.05 m wide passageway led to the cult chamber, which was sealed with a wooden door. The 3.60 m long, 1.45 m wide and 3.16 m high chamber contained two false doors in the west wall, which offerings were placed in front of. Behind the false door was the serdab, a small room which was completely walled off, in which the ka-statue of the tomb's owner was located. However, Hermann Junker was not able to locate the Ka-statue of Kaninisut. The chamber was robbed in ancient times, leaving traces of forceful entry.
The substructure of Kaninisut's mastaba was a 17 m deep vertical shaft grave, which led, via a short corridor, to a grave chamber roughly hewn from the rock. The rough execution of the grave chamber stands in sharp contrast to the fine execution of the cult chamber. Apparently, the underground spaces' execution was increasingly neglected in the later fourth dynasty. No remains of the deceased could be found.[7]
On the east side of the mastaba, the son of Kaninisut, who was also called Kaninisut, had a modest tomb for himself added to his father's mastaba. The upper building is 8.8 m long and 3.5 m wide. Through the east side of this addition, one could access its cult chamber, which also had two false doors in the west wall. The underground chamber for the sarcophagus was found largely empty and was probably robbed in ancient times. Despite this, some grave goods were found lying around, including fine alabaster vessels, small copper tools and four clay jars which had held the organs of the mummy. A further addition is located on the north side of the main mastaba of Kaninisut. This tomb belongs to another Kaninisut, probably the grandson of the owner of the main tomb. Not much now remains of this tomb.[1]
In the immediate proximity of the mastaba, Iri-en-re and Ankh-ma-re, probably the great-grandson and great-great-grandson of Kaninisut also erected their tombs. The small street between the Mastaba of Nisut-nefer (G 4970) and Mastaba G 4980 was perhaps the only practical space available for their tombs. The tomb of Iri-en-re was built at the northwest corner of the mastaba of Nisut-nefer and that of Ankh-ma-re was built further to the east.[7]
Relief decoration of the cult chamber
editThe cult chamber of Kaninisut is made of the best white Tura limestone and decorated with fine raised reliefs, which are now displayed in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. Some remains of the original paintwork still survive. Typically for Egyptian art, people are depicted in a combination of frontal and side views. Thus, eyes, shoulders, and chests are shown in frontal view while heads, arms, and legs appear in side view.
Entrance corridor
editOn the northern and southern walls of the entrance corridor are dining scenes. In each of them, Kaninisut sits at an offering table with twelve loaves of bread stacked close together on it, symbolising his food supply in the afterlife. Kaninisut wears a leopard pelt, the symbol of the Sem priest. On the south wall it is a long pelt and on the northern wall a more rarely depicted short pelt.[8]
To the right of the dining scene on the northern wall, there are four priests, who are depicted on a smaller scale than Kaninisut, carrying out ritual offerings for the dead: the first one is labelled as the "cupbearer of the great full table" and is kneeling with a vessel and a loaf of bread in his hands. Behind him, an Ut-priest carries out the offering ritual, extending the fist of his right hand and touching his forehead with his left hand. The third priest holds up a washing bowl, which was used for cleaning cult places. Behind him stands a Heri-wedjeb-priest with his hand raised in a speaking gesture. He takes the gifts involved in the offering ritual: incense, anointing oil, green eyeshadow, black eyeshadow, wine, wˁḥ-fruit, weh-fruit, buckthorn bread, figs, four loaves of dpt bread, buckthorn bread, t3-rtḥ bread, roasted wheat, white and green zẖt barley. On the southern wall, another man is depicted behind the Heri-wedjeb-priest, holding a large cow's leg.[8]
South wall at the door jamb
editAt the south door jamb, the delivery of an antelope is depicted on the south wall. Two men, wearing only kilts with three bands, bring the animal as an offering. The funerary priest Ankh-haf holds the antelope at the mouth and horns. The "leader of the hall" drives the animal forward with a stick. A man in front brings other offerings. The antelope is a donation from a property which provided materials for the funerary cult of Kaninisut. Above it are further images of offering gifts, arranged in two rows.
East wall
editOn the east wall above the entrance are two ship scenes. The upper scene depicts a sail boat, the lower a row boat. A long narrow band underneath the boats symbolises the water and simultaneously forms the dividing line between the two scenes. It is a real scene of two barges, the upper one with a crew of oarsmen and a raised sail coming into the harbor, as the pilot Hetepsepet looks down in that direction, in the middle stands Kaninisut leaning on a staff, a ṡm-priest in the garb of a magnate. In the upper left corner there is an inscription "arriving from the city of Dep and arriving at a beautiful field with food". On the shore, servants unload goods. A second (lower) barge of bound bundles of papyrus with a similar crew, Kaninisut giving orders, pilot Kaemheset showing the direction of departure with an inscription, "sailing to Heliopolis" with a cargo of cattle (meat) and other provisions.
The two upper registers of the rest of the east wall depict personifications of the properties which provided offerings. Arm and hand postures are similar for all figures: with the right hand they hold a basket with offering gifts on their head, from their left hand an animal hangs down. The figures represent the properties which provided regular funerary offerings.
In the third register, the delivery and slaughter of cattle is shown. In the left half, two long horned cattle and a calf are brought forward, in the right half two cattle are slaughtered. In the lowest register, thirteen men bring small tables or plates with bread, fruit and pieces of meat.[8] The symbolism of the manned barges does not express the rite of passage to the underworld, rather it is an image of Kaninisut as a merchant of goods along the Nile from north to south, as indicated by his titles "administrator of the city of Dep" in lower Egypt and "administrator of the city of El-Kab" in Upper Egypt, ( ).
Junker and later Altenmüller have stated, that nothing is actually known about the significance of these voyages in Egyptian religion. Only one thing is clear, and that is that they have nothing to do with the worship of the dead, as was usual in the inscriptions only in the later period, when the god Osiris, the god of the dead, was at the centre. The name of this god appears in inscriptions only from the late reign of the 5th Dynasty.[9][10][11]
South wall
editThe small south wall contains a list of offerings and a dining scene. The offering list consists of eight registers, in which the captions are arranged from left to right in short vertical columns without dividing lines. The dining scene is at the right hand side of the lower four registers. In the ritual offering lists, the offerings and ritual actions are noted, which were carried out in the regular funerary cult at the tomb. They begin with the list of the entrance rites, which were carried out by the funerary priest, like the purification of the cult space by sweeping and pouring water, washing hands, burning incense and supply of the seven holy oils and anointments. After this follows the list of foods and drinks which were to be brought in a defined order. These consist of various kinds of breads, cakes, meats, poultry, fruit and vegetables. Only fragments of the dining scene survive.[7]
West wall
editThe west wall was the chief cultic focus of the tomb and contained two false doors. The south false door consists of an outer frame, a false door table, an inner frame, a wind screen and a door niche.
On the crossbeam of the outer frame is the offering formula:
"The offering which the give gives, which Anubis who stands at the top of the divine hall gives; may he be buried in the west: the lord who is worthy to the great god, after he has reached very great age, the Sem-Priest and leader of the skirts Kaninisut."
A podium stands in front, on which the ritual equipment and offerings could be placed. Behind the door was the serdab with the ka statue (no longer extant).
On the left outer doorpost, two men are depicted one above the other, bringing writing equipment or fabric strips. On the left inner doorpost, are other servants who hold various things in their hands, including a pot, a scroll, and a sack. In the rectangular false door table is another dining scene with a short offering list. Above this, some titles of Kaninisut are listed. A somewhat different list of titles appears on the wind screen between the two doorposts.
An additional architrave is located between the two false door architraves, which contains a full list of all Kaninisut's titles: The Sem-Priest, the lord of the kilt,[12] the Sem-Priest of Horus, the Administrator of Dep, Mouth to the people of Pe, the sole friend, the Guardian of the Mystery of the Morning house, the Chief of El Kab, the Chief of Allocations of the House of Life, the Leader of the Petitions, the Leader of the Black Jar, the Prophet of the Lord of Buto the Son of the Black Jar, the Prophet of the Lord of Buto the son of the Northern one, the Lector Priest, the one in the Entourage of the Ha, the only one among the great people of the feast: Kaninisut.[3] Under this Kaninisut is depicted with his wife Neferhanisut and their children, son Kaninust (II), daughter Wedjehetep and Harwer. The faces of the children and of Kaninisut have been intentionally destroyed. To the left of the family, the numerous servants of Kaninisut's household are depicted, including four scribes. (Wahemka) A container stands amongst them with papyrus documents and bound papyrus scrolls. Underneath are five priests, who carry ritual equipment and offerings. More people bringing offerings can be seen in the lowest register of this space between the false doors.
The northern false door of the west wall is an additional ritual location. It also features a short offering list, names and titles of Kaninisut and an offering scene. On the inner doorposts, there are further servants carrying Hes vases. Another servant in the lower part of the outer doorposts holds up a washstand. All the servants face towards the door niche. In the door niche, there is a large hole which was possibly cut by a grave robber hoping to find a serdab with a Ka-statue in it. In the upper portion of the doorposts, the wife of Kaninisut is depicted, who does not look towards the door niche like the servants, but instead towards the large image of Kaninisut on the north wall.[3][10]
Wahemka, who served Kaninisut as a steward of the estate also worked his way to wealth and was able to build his own tomb at Giza D117[13][14]
North wall
editFile:Kaninisut15-R.jpg A large image of Kaninisut dominates the north wall. Above it is a horizontal inscription with a detailed list of his titles. Kaninisut stands with his left leg striding forward. In his left hand he holds a long staff, in his right hand a Sekhem scepter. His hair is in fairly long locks. He wears a short kilt and a leopard pelt, which is held in place by a fabric strip across his chest. Behind him stands his oldest son, Her-wer, who is shown at a much smaller scale; he only reaches halfway up his father's calf. He is depicted as a naked child with a sidelock of youth, a typical presentation of the children of tomb owners, even when the children were actually adults. In front of Kaninisut are three rows depicting scribes and officials of his household. Right at the front in the top register is his chief steward, Wehem-ka, who presents a papyrus document.[3] In the lower register there are again four scribes Sahi, Menekhka, Pehernefer, Rahotep. Kaninisut's titles are enumerated in the upper frame: King's friend, King's Son, Steward of El-Kab, Keeper of Secrets (of the King?), Dep City Administrator.
Epilog
editThe preserved decoration from the chapel of the Kaninisut mastaba in the West Necropolis of Giza (G 2155) provides an unusually complete artistic ensemble that tells about the life of the great prince in the last period Fourth Dynasty of Egypt. It is the view of the nobleman on the belief in the afterlife at that time, which at the same time presents his living world, his wealth, his family with his wife and children, and numerous servants of his household. This is evidenced by his titles in relation to the royal family, his positions in the management and administration of extensive property. It is noteworthy that he has his real name attributed to all the figures depicted, while he especially emphasises the figure of his chief administrator, the scribe Wahemka, including his subordinate scribes, who demonstrate the function of economic administration, which developed into an efficient apparatus and a functional logistics system.[15][16]
Kaninisut did not neglect his commercial activity either, by depicting the symbols of two barges transporting goods on the Nile. Kaninisut's mastaba was thus conceived, in addition to a burial ritual, also as a legacy to his successors, the son of Kaninisut II. and to his grandson Kaninisut III, who added their considerably more modest tombs to their father's mastaba (G 2156, G 2156a).[17]In the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Boston finds several fragments from tomb G 2156 attributed to Kaninisut II, among others a cornice above the entrance with a preserved inscription of adoration to the gods
The gifts given by the king and Anubis from the god's booth Osiris,[ for the new year's feast of Thoth,
the festival of joy of the great flame, the procession of Min every day,
the one of the ten greatest in Upper Egypt KҘ(j)-nj-nśw.t(II.)[18]
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Northern false door of the west wall
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South false door of the west wall
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West wall of mastaba (detail)
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Offering table
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Śm-Priest-Keninisut
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Wahemka and his wife Hotep-abes, mastaba D170
References
edit- ^ a b c Gustav Reisner, A History of the Giza Necropolis I., Cambridge University Press, London 1942 [1]
- ^ Hermann Ranke, Die ägyptischen Personennamen Vol.1, J. Augustin, Glückstadt, 1935, p.340/9
- ^ a b c d Hermann Junker, Mastabas mit Darstellungen und Inschriften., Kaiserliche Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien, 1913, p. 163-169
- ^ a b c Hermann Junker, Gîza II. Grabungen auf dem Friedhof des Alten Reiches bei den Pyramiden von Giza, Leipzig, Hölder-Pichler-Tempsky, 1932. S. 132–153, [2]
- ^ Michael Haase: Eine Stätte für die Ewigkeit. Der Pyramidenkomplex des Cheops aus baulicher, architektonischer und kulturhistorischer Sicht. von Zabern, Mainz 2004, pp. 71ff.
- ^ "Die ganze Kammer ist in jeder Beziehung so schön und lehrreich, dass ich sie in erster Linie für geeignet halte, nach Wien übertragen zu werden."
- ^ a b c d e Regina Hölzl, Die Kultkammer des Ka-ni-nisut im Kunsthistorischen Museum Wien, Kunsthisorische Museum Wien, 2005, p.21/55[3]
- ^ a b c Regina Hölzl, Reliefs und Inschriftensteine des Alten Reiches II. Philipp von Zabern, Mainz am Rhein 2001 [4]
- ^ Hermann Junker, The Offering Room of Prince Kaninisut, Kunsthistorische Museum, Vienna 1931
- ^ a b Hermann Junker, Giza IV. Grabungen auf dem Friedhof des Alten Reiches bei den Pyramiden von Giza, Holder-Pichler-Tempsky, Leipzig, 1940 [5]
- ^ Hartwig Altenmüller, Funerary Boats and Boat Pits of the Old Kingdom, Archiv Orientální 70, Quarterly Journal of Asian and African Studies, Praha, 2002, [6]
- ^ wardrobe
- ^ Hans Kayser, Die Mastaba des Uhemka. Ein Grab in der Wüste, Hannover: Zeitschrift des Museums zu Hildesheim, 1964. [7]
- ^ Hans Kayser, Die Mastabe des Uhemka, Schmidt- Küster GmbH, Hannover 1964 [8]
- ^ Mark Lehner, Labor and the Pyramids The Heit el-Ghurab “Workers Town” at Giza, Dresden 2015 [9]
- ^ Günther Roedr, Die Mastaba des Uhemka I'm Pelizaeus- Museum zu Helidesheim, Wienhausen 1927,[10]
- ^ Michael Baud, Famille royale et pouvoir sous l'Ancient Epirem Égyptien, Vol.1, Institute Français D'Archologie Oriental, 1999. P. 42-51.
- ^ a b The Giza Project at Harvard University G 5156 [11]resp.[12]
External links
editBibliography
edit- Jürgen Brinks. "Die Entwicklung der Mastaba bis zum Ende des Alten Reiches." In: Studien zur Altägyptischen Kultur. (SAK) Vol. 2, Hamburg 1989, pp. 35–44.
- Peter Jánosi. Österreich vor den Pyramiden. Die Grabungen Hermann Junkers im Auftrag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien bei den grossen Pyramiden in Giza. Wien 1997. (online; PDF; 87,7 MB)
- Hermann Junker. Die Kultkammer des Prinzen Kanjnjswt im Wiener Kunsthistorischen Museum. Wien 1955. (Englische Ausgabe online; PDF; 3,7 MB)
- Hermann Junker, Gíza III. Grabungen auf dem Friedhof des Alten Reiches; Die Mastaba des V. Dyanastie, Holder-Pichler-Tempsky, Leipzig 1941[13]
- Hermann Junker, Gíza XII., Grabungen auf dem Friedhof des Alten Reiches bei den Pyramiden von Giza, Rudolf M.Rohrer, Wien 1955 [14]
- Giza G 2155, The Giza Project at Harvard University [15]