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El-Sheikh Said |
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On the east bank of the Nile a few kilometres south of Mallawi,
officials of the 15th Upper Egyptian Nome were buried in a group of
rock tombs cut into the side of the cliff. The area is named after a
Muslim holy man, Sheikh Said, who was also buried nearby. The site is
very close to Deir el-Bersha and marks the northern limits of the
Amarna plain. |
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During Dynasty IV the mastabas favoured by officials buried in the
necropolises at Giza and Saqqara had developed into rock-cut tombs
with a layout similar to that of a mastaba, and an entrance simulating
the appearance of the earlier tombs. By Dynasty VI this development
resulted in the full-blown rock-cut tomb, which was cut into the steep
cliff-face at the edge of the valley. These tombs were particularly
prominent in Middle Egypt and other regions of the Nile Valley where
the terrain was unsuitable for the construction of mastaba-style
monuments. The cemetery at el-Sheikh Said is among the earliest
examples of this type of rock-cut tomb.
The necropolis contains the tombs of the governors of the Hare
Province who were buried during Dynasty VI, including ‘Chiefs of the
Palace’ Meru-bebi, Wau and Ankheti. They are simple structures
containing a tomb chapel, a smaller inner hall and a statue or
offering chamber. They usually contained one or more shafts leading to
subterranean burial chambers.
The capital of the 15th Upper Egyptian Nome was at el-Ashmunein on the
west bank of the Nile. The cemetery at el-Sheikh Said is important
because of the absence of contemporary evidence from the capital of
the province. |
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