1. HISTORY OF THE EXPLORATIONS (Primo paragrafo) Roberto Buongarzone 1A. North Saqqara in the last two centuries. The fascinating discovery of Saqqara crosses the whole history of Egyptian archaeology from the middle of the XVIII century, and yet it is far from being over. The exploration of Djoser’s step pyramid, by Von Minutoli and Segato in 1821, and Perring and Vyse in 1837, was the beginning of modern archaeological research in the Saqqara site. The German Egyptologist Richard Lepsius was the first to discover and describe about thirty tombs in the area surrounding the pyramid (R. Lepsius 1849), and marked their positions in the first archaeological map of the necropolis, which also remained the most accurate until the one drawn by Smith in 1936 (W.S. Smith 1936). The sensational discovery of the Serapeum complex (SAC02) in 1850-’51 urged the French archaeologist Auguste Mariette, after he was appointed Director of the Egyptian Antiquities in 1858, to carry on the exploration of the Saqqara plateau, north of Djoser’s pyramid. His main purpose was to take the statues from the mastaba serdabs to fill the future museum of Egyptian Antiquities in Cairo; but he was also wise enough to copy many inscriptions, especially those on the false doors, and to draw sketches of the plans of 115 mastabas (A. Mariette, 1885). Among his most important discoveries in Saqqara is Kaaper’s mastaba (NSP87), where he found the famous wooden statue representing its owner,
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1. HISTORY OF THE EXPLORATIONS (Primo paragrafo)
Roberto Buongarzone
1A. North Saqqara in the last two centuries.
The fascinating discovery of Saqqara crosses the whole history of Egyptian
archaeology from the middle of the XVIII century, and yet it is far from being
over.
The exploration of Djoser’s step pyramid, by Von Minutoli and Segato in 1821,
and Perring and Vyse in 1837, was the beginning of modern archaeological
research in the Saqqara site.
The German Egyptologist Richard Lepsius was the first to discover and
describe about thirty tombs in the area surrounding the pyramid (R. Lepsius
1849), and marked their positions in the first archaeological map of the
necropolis, which also remained the most accurate until the one drawn by
Smith in 1936 (W.S. Smith 1936).
The sensational discovery of the Serapeum complex (SAC02) in 1850-’51 urged
the French archaeologist Auguste Mariette, after he was appointed Director of
the Egyptian Antiquities in 1858, to carry on the exploration of the Saqqara
plateau, north of Djoser’s pyramid. His main purpose was to take the statues
from the mastaba serdabs to fill the future museum of Egyptian Antiquities in
Cairo; but he was also wise enough to copy many inscriptions, especially those
on the false doors, and to draw sketches of the plans of 115 mastabas (A.
Mariette, 1885). Among his most important discoveries in Saqqara is Kaaper’s
mastaba (NSP87), where he found the famous wooden statue representing its
owner, known as Skeil el-beled, “Headman of the village”, which is presently
kept at the Museum of Cairo. He also discovered Ty’s mastaba, one of the most
beautiful ones in Saqqara and therefore included in phase 3 of our project
(NSP109). Hesira’s mastaba too, with its magnificent carved and decorated
wooden panels, was discovered by him. The results of his researches were
published posthumously by his successor Gaston Maspero, under the title
Mastabas de l’Ancien Empire; this work was one of our bibles in order to gather
information about the necropolis.
Maspero chose to devote himself to the pyramids in South Saqqara, focusing
on his sensational discovery of the Texts of the Pyramids (G. Maspero 1894).
In 1893 it was Jacques de Morgan’s turn, immediately after he was appointed
head of the Antiquities Department, to discover, north of Teti’s pyramid, the
two stately mastabas of Mereruka and Kagemni, bordering on one another,
which are still the most visited of Saqqara. We have included them among the
ten tombs in our phase 2 (ATP18 and 17), in order, too, to take the anthropic
impact on monuments which have been visited for more than a century. These
two mastabas lay under some mud brick tombs dating back to the New
Kingdom, which were in turn overtopped by the avenue of sphinxes of the
Ptolemaic period joining the Serapeum and the Anubieion, at the borders of the
cultivated land.
We also owe to De Morgan the famous Carte de la nécropole memphite of
1897, a milestone in the archaeological cartography of Saqqara and of the
other Memphite necropoles. All the monuments explored up until that moment,
of some of which no traces are left, are reported in it, even though its
cartographical landmarks may be incorrect.
De Morgan’s successor, Victor Loret, in 1897-8 carried on the exploration of the
area north-west of Teti. Under a level of tombs of the New Kingdom which he
first documented before destroying it (ATP 44-46; V. Loret 1899), he discovered
the pyramids of the queens Khuit and Iput (PS03 and 02), the latter being Teti’s
wife. Loret also discovered one of the rare documented cemetery avenues of
the necropolis (J. Capart 1907), which goes from the north-east corner of Teti’s
pyramid to Khuit’s and Iput’s two pyramids. Many important tombs of the VI
dynasty, in addition to Kagemni’s mastaba, overlook this avenue: among them,
that of vizier Ankhmahor (ATP04), with its rare scenes of surgery and
physiotherapy: circumcision and toe manipulation (J.F. Nunn 1996).
In that same 1898, Norman de Garis Davies completed the exploration, which
Mariette had just begun many years before, of the mastaba of Ptahhotep and
Akhethotep (WSP09), one of the most beautiful in Saqqara, and published its
very refined reliefs in an exemplary way (N. de Garis Davies 1900 and 1901).
Ptahhotep’s mastaba, included in phase 3 of our project, was monitored
instrumentally, together with Unas’s pyramid and Ty’s mastaba.
When Maspero returned to his appointment as General Director of Antiquities,
after Loret, the exploration of the pyramids started off again, in search of new
inscriptions on the walls of the funeral apartments. At the beginning of year
1900, the chambers of Unas’ pyramid, the first decorated with the Texts of the
Pyramids, were already open to the public. It is an exceptional monument,
which bears on the walls of its funeral apartments the first original version of a
magical-religious text, and therefore the first literary text in the history of
mankind. Only in 1996 was Unas’s pyramid closed to the public, and it is now in
urgent need of interventions to slow down the deterioration of the once very
bright colours embellishing its hieroglyphs and the palace-façade decoration of
the western portion of the sarcophagus chamber, made from an alabaster
triptych of three huge monoliths (about 20 tons each) surrounding the
sarcophagus.
The task of clearing the area surrounding the pyramid from the sand and of
discovering the ruins of its funeral temple was entrusted by Maspero to
Alexandre Barsanti. He brought back to light the little mastaba of Semnefer (V
dynasty), at the pyramid’s north-west angle (A. Barsanti 1900a), and the three
the road which, skirting the eastern cliff, turns near the Boubasteion and then
divides and reaches today’s most visited monuments. The excavation works
led to discover a real rock-cut funeral palace, regularly frequented for several
centuries starting from the Saitic period (E. Bresciani, S. el-Naggar, S.
Pernigotti, F. Silvano 1983), when vizier Bakenrenef had his underground
temple-tomb built there. The more than three thousand blocks forming a part
of the tomb’s impressive decorative cycle, pillaged by antiquities thieves for
more than a hundred years from the half of the XIX century on, were
recomposed virtually in reconstructive plates, using the information technology
as well. The writings embellishing the walls of the six decorated internal rooms
range from the Texts of the Pyramids to the funerary books of the New
Kingdom (S. Pernigotti 1985) to Saitic formulae (R. Buongarzone 1990, 1991-
1992). Near Bakenrenef’s tomb, the Pisan mission discovered three minor rock-
cut tombs (BN1, BS1 and BN2 – ESP32, 31 and 29), the portal of the last of
which bears inscriptions of important solar texts (M.C. Betrò 1990).
At the half of the Seventies, a mission of the Egypt Exploration Society and of
the British Museum studied a group of mastabas of the VI dynasty in the
cemetery area of Teti, north of Mereruka’s and Kagemni’s mastabas (W.V.
Davies et alii 1984; A.B. Lloyd et alii 1990); later on, and up until today, this
area has been made object of systematic exploration by a mission of the
Australian Centre for Egyptology, directed by Naguib Kanawati together with
some well-known Egyptian archaeologists. The mission both cleaned and
restored tombs discovered in the first half of the last century by Loret, Quibell,
Firth and Saad, and brought to light for the first time many tombs of officers of
the VI dynasty. Publications were significant and numerous (N. Kanawati et alii
1984, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000a, 2000b, 2001; K. Sowada et alii 1999).
From 1992 on the Egyptian-Dutch Research Project on ancient DNA, in
collaboration with the Leiden Museum and the Egypt Exploration Society,
focused on the evolution of monkey and ape species by examining the
exemplars of the Northern Animal Necropolis (J. Goudsmit and D. Brandon-
Jones 1999).
In the same year, an Egyptian mission directed by Zahi Hawass (Z. Hawass
2000) cleaned around the site of the mortuary temple of Queen Iput I (PS02),
an area where, between the end of the XIX and the beginning of the XX
centuries, Loret, Quibell, Firth and Gunn had been working. Hawass undug for
the first time the entire funeral temple of the queen and discovered the tomb
of Tetiankhkem, one of Teti’s sons, on the eastern side of the funeral temple.
The mission later unearthed Khuit’s pyramid (PS03) and explored its burial
chamber.
An epigraphic and topographical survey of the area surrounding Teti pyramid
has been directed since 1992 by David P. Silverman and Josef Wegner of the
University of Pennsylvania Museum of Anthropology, in conjunction with an art
historical survey of Rita Freed of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (D.P.
Silverman 1997). The Middle Kingdom tombs of Sekhweskhet and Sahathoipy
were re-excavated by the Pennsylvania-Boston expedition in 1997 (D.P.
Silverman 2000).
Over the last twenty years several missions have been working at the Unas
causeway.
All over the Eighties, a mission from the universities of Hannover and Berlin,
directed by P. Munro, investigated the area north-west of the Unas causeway,
near the funeral temple, restoring order in an area of extremely complex
stratigraphy, messed up by too many cursory explorations (P. Munro 1993).
Since 1991 a mission of the Louvre Museum, directed by Christiane Ziegler, has
been working in the area immediately to the north of the Unas causeway, just
next the south-east angle of Djoser’s wall. The mission’s initial purpose was to
find the exact place of the mastaba of Akhethotep (APU36), sold to France in
1903 and now exposed in the Louvre. The excavations went far beyond that,
and brought to light two other mastabas of the Old Kingdom (APU61, 62), many
modest burials of the late period (XXVI-XXX dynasties) and layers of Coptic
settlements related to the nearby monastery of Apa Jeremias (C. Ziegler 1997,
2000).
In 1998-9 a mission of the Australian Centre for Egyptology surveyed some
unexplored shafts in the tomb of Irukaptah (APU42), south of Unas causeway
(A. Mc Farlane 2000).
We owe to a team of Tokyo’s Waseda University one of most interesting
findings of the last years (S. Yoshimura, I.H. Takamiya, 1997, 1999, 2000): on
the summit of a prominent limestone outcrop about one km north-west of the
Serapeum, the Japanese team unearthed, over annual campaigns since 1991, a
stone structure (NSP236; 25x30m ca. at the base) built by Khaemwaset, the
fourth son of Ramesses II, with an outer wall, inner rooms and a portico to the
east. The remains of the refined internal reliefs and of a limestone false-door
prove that the building was constructed specifically for the prince. Attached to
this stone monument of Khaemwaset, a mud brick house (NSP236) was found.
The foundations of a large mud brick structure (NSP237; about 25x22 m) were
also discovered in the western part of the outcrop. Stelae bearing names and
figures of Tuthmosis IV suggest that it was a royal resthouse, perhaps for
hunting of animals.
In the last years, the area stretching in the desert west of Djoser’s complex was
the object of some scientific researches, the first ones carried out from De
Morgan’s times. Following a geophysical survey of the area (1987), a mission of
the university of Warsaw has been working since 1996 in an area east of
Djoser’s walls, about 120 m from the pyramid’s western edge (K. Myliwiec
1998, 1999; K. Kuraszkiewicz 2000). In 1997 vizier Merefnebef’s tomb was
found (WSP32), dating back to the beginning of the VI dynasty, with a richly
decorated cult chapel, hewn into the rock. The entire zone contained structures
of the archaic period, overtopped by burials of the Ptolemaic period.
Surprisingly, no trace of any activity between the Old Kingdom and the
Ptolemaic period was found.
In 1990, Ian Mathieson, from the National Museums of Scotland, in cooperation
with the Egypt Exploration Society, started off a geophysical mapping project of
the valley stretching from the Gisr el-Mudir Sekhemkhet ridge in the south to
the Abusir West Saqqara Wadi in the north (I. Mathieson 1997, 2000; D. Jeffreys
and A. Tavares 1994, 2000). The most interesting results are actually about the
Gisr el-Mudir area (PS07) and the nearby L-shape enclosure (WSP34), two
enclosures which are clearly visible in the aerial photos and which almost all
scholars attribute to sovereigns of the II dynasty. In the Gisr el-Mudir, surveys
revealed the presence of limestone walls forming an enormous stone-walled
enclosure measuring 600x300 m (twice the size of the Step Pyramid complex);
instead, the L-shape enclosure’s walls were made of mud bricks. The remote
sensing techniques did not detect any coeval building inside the two
enclosures, which are maybe to be connected to the archaic enclosures of
Abydos and Hierakompolis. They could be areas where the funeral cult of
archaic sovereigns was performed, maybe inside structures in perishable
materials of which nothing is left.
North of the two enclosures, along the valley leading to the ancient lake of
Abusir, Mathieson’s survey detected several brick mastabas buried on the
northern side of the valley and a likely mastaba field starting at the tomb of Ty
in the west and stretching down to the Sacred Animal necropolis in the east.
1C. Open problems
A lot is still to be discovered, then; but a lot more about Saqqara’s and
Memphis’ history may be revealed by future excavations. The recently
discovered vast cemetery areas of the New Kingdom are discrediting the cliché
of a necropolis leaving to Thebes the undisputed supremacy after having had
its golden age, with the other Memphite necropoles, during the Old Kingdom;
nevertheless, some scholars still do not admit the idea that there are no royal
burials of the I dynasty in Saqqara, even because of the enormous amount of
royal pottery of the I dynasty found inside the tunnels along the northern and
western walls of Djoser’s complex. Maybe the “cult area of Den” (according to
Kaiser’s hypothesis in MDAIK 41, 1985), north of the Serapeum, was not
isolated, and the Abusir West Saqqara wadi has just begun to reveal significant
hints of its frequentation in the archaic period (S. Davies and H.S. Smith 1997).
In the area sited to the north-west of the wadi, not far from Abusir, the
Japanese researchers of the Waseda University in Tokyo have just found
(September 2002) the remains of an impressive stepped limestone structure,
probably a mastaba, about 4.5 m high and 33.5 m long. In case this structure
proved to be more ancient than Djoser’s pyramid (2650 BC ca), which is
considered the most ancient stone building in the history of humankind, it
would be an exceptional discovery, as exceptional as the discovery of the
limestone walls of the Gisr el-Mudir.
A fascinating task for the archaeologists of the present and of the future is to
investigate the organization of the necropolis through the ages (cfr. A. Macy
Roth 1988) and to reveal the richness and value of the Saqqara site as a whole,
with three millennia in a few meters - paraphrasing an interesting text of Lisa
L. Giddy 1997 - everywhere in this huge necropolis. Thus the new discoveries
of the last years stretch our view of Saqqara from the Old Kingdom towards the
Archaic Period on one side and from the New Kingdom towards the Late Period
on the other.
2. The archaeological documentation and the Egyptological
database (secondo paragrafo)
Roberto Buongarzone
2A. Archaeological maps
The study of archaeological maps has been one of the most interesting tasks
for Egyptologists, architects and specialists of the GIS. It was, in my opinion, an
exemplary model of team working between people with different trainings, and
different mentalities as well. While the Egyptologists tend to analyze
archaeological data and are mainly interested in historical issues, the
architects aim to synthesize cartographical data and to represent them clearly
on maps, whereas the specialists of the GIS consider maps as related to the
whole system, and aim to their utilization in data processing. Assembling the
different archaeological maps into the already existent and more detailed map
of Saqqara was a hard task, the credit of which is due to Antonio Giammarusti,
who had to digitize in Autocad maps which were often discordant or inaccurate
(a common fault among archaeologists), to correct them with the help of data
measured in situ with GPS or simply by means of a survey with maps in hand.
The Egyptologists often had to play the role of exegetes of archaeological
maps, helping to interpret what the archaeologists of the late XIX or the early
XX century meant with their maps which might not distinguish graphically, for
istance, the stratigraphical levels or the height of the door lintels.
2A.1 General archaeological maps of Saqqara
Such maps cover a lapse of time from the half of the XIX century to year 1980.
For reasons of graphical space, even the most recent maps do not report all
the monuments’ positions.
The Lepsius map (1849). It is the most ancient map of Saqqara and reports
the tombs and pyramids explored by the German Egyptologist. Almost all the
monuments explored by Lepsius in Saqqara were brought back to light during
the most recent explorations. As far as the missing ones are concerned, the
map’s accuracy, even though remarkable for that time, is not such that it
allows to locate them with certainty: the radius of probability is of many
metres, in some cases (like that of the south plateau necropolis of the New
Kingdom) even of 50 m.
The De Morgan map (1897). Very detailed, but also topographically very
inaccurate, it reports many tombs without indicating their names, which made
it almost impossible to identify them with the known monuments, especially
with the tombs discovered by Mariette, which were likely to be still visible
above ground at De Morgan’s time. This map has however some undeniable
merits: it is, for instance, the only one to report the entire route of the
Serapeum way, the Anubieion before Martin’s excavations and the catacombs
of the jackals, unexplored in modern times.
The Smith map (1936). It is the first modern map of Saqqara,
topographically accurate and based on the map of the visible monuments
drawn by the Survey of Egypt 1932, with, in addition, the position of the buried
mastabas reconstructed by W.S. Smith from available records and surface
indications. This precious map reports accurately Saqqara’s situation in a
period when the great excavations by Quibell and Firth had just finished. It
reports, in particular, many mastabas of the north plateau discovered by Firth
shortly before he died and never published, and also many mastabas
discovered by Mariette and no more traceable on the ground. The
topographical marks of the positions of the tombs discovered by Leipsius and
Mariette east of Djoser’s complex and south of Userkaf is also extremely useful,
since nowadays the area is occupied by a parking lot for tourist coaches. This
map shows the evolution of modern routes of access and visit to the necropolis
compared to De Morgan’s times, and proves that at Smith’s time the Serapeum
way was already totally sanded up.
The Spencer map (1974). It updates Smith’s map using the first edition of
the Porter & Moss Bibliography as well. It is less accurate than its model from
the topographical point of view, but has the great merit of reviewing the
intricate situation of the most ancient discoveries in the north plateau,
rearranging the six different notation systems (Lepsius, Mariette, De Morgan,
Quibell, Firth and Emery) and also correcting some of the recent mistakes (for
instance W.B. Emery’s two tombs 3518).
The Porter & Moss maps (1978-80). The maps of the famous Bibliography
are extremely precious for Egyptologists, but topographically inaccurate.
Besides, they do not report all the locatable tombs.
2A.2 Non-archaeological maps.
Six cadastral planimetries of year 1932, to the scale of 1 to 2500, and an
aerophotogrammetry (aerial survey), sheets H23, H22, to the scale of 1 to
5000, of the Civil Survey Authority, produced by the Consortium SFS.IGN
(France), based on a 1977 aerial survey, integrate the Smith map as far as
modern installations are concerned.
The aerophotogrammetry, which provides the aerial photo-interpretation of the
ground structures and gives indications about monuments buried underground
too, was the topographical base on which the archaeological data were
inserted.
General maps of the site in order of publication
R. Lepsius, Denkmaeler aus Aegypten und Aethiopien, Abth. I, Bl. 32, 33, 34, Berlin 1849.
J. De Morgan, Carte de la nécropole memphite, Dahchour, Sakkarah, Abou-Sir, 1897.
W.S. Smith in G.A. Reisner, The Development of the Egyptian Tomb down to the Accession of Cheops, London 1936, Map 2.
A.J. Spencer, Researches on the Topography of North Saqqara, Orientalia N.S. 43 (1974), pp. 1-11 and Tab I.
B. Porter, R.L.B. Moss, Topographical Bibliography of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, Reliefs, and Paintings, III2, Part 2, Saqqara to Dahshur, 3 Fascicles, Second Edition revised and augmented by PhDr. Jaromír Málek, Oxford 1981.
2A.3 Partial archaeological maps of Saqqara
The data of the general maps, transferred on the cartographical base, were
integrated from time to time with maps of the single archaeological sites,
prepared by archaeologists themselves or by the missions’ architects.
Sometimes it was not easy to make different data from successive excavations
on the same site coincide. This was the case with the area north of Teti, where
the plans of the recent excavations by Kanawati at times did not correspond
with the old but accurate plans by Firth and Gunn (1926) and by Quibell and
Hayter (1927). This is the case too for Martin’s map (1981) of the area of the
north plateau with the Northern Animal Necropolis and the nearby tombs,
which omits some details in comparison to Quibell’s map, published in 1923. Or
even, still as far as the north plateau is concerned, the position of the
mastabas of the I dynasty given by Emery in his splendid treatises Great
Tombs of the I Dynasty proved to be completely inexact. Luckily, the
aerophotogrammetry, the aerial photo and the survey on the site, where the
trace of the buried walls is still visible on the sand covering them, allowed
Antonio Giammarusti to report correctly these important monuments on the
map.
Partial archaeological maps of the site in order of publication.
A. Mariette, Le Sérapéum de Memphis, Paris 1857.
G. Maspero, "Trois années de fouilles" in MMAF I, p.20 (1883-84).
N.de G. Davies, Ptahhetep and Akhethetep, Part I, London 1900.
J.E. Quibell, Archaic Mastabas, Excavations at Saqqara VI (1912-14), Le Caire 1923.
C.M. Firth, B. Gunn, Teti Pyramid Cemeteries, Cairo 1926, Pl. 51.
J.E. Quibell, A.G.K. Hayter, Teti Pyramid, North Side, Excavations at Saqqara, Le Caire 1927.
W.B. Emery, Great Tombs of the First Dynasty I, Cairo 1949, II, London 1954, III, London 1958.
Abd El-Hamid Zayed, Le tombeau d’Akhti-hotep à Saqqara, ASAE LV (1958).
V. Maragioglio, C.A. Rinaldi, Notizie sulle piramidi di Zedefrâ, Zedkarâ Isesi, Teti, Turin 1962.
V. Maragioglio, C. Rinaldi, L’architettura delle Piramidi Menfite, II-VII, Turin 1963-70.
W.B. Emery, "Preliminary Report on the Excavations at North Saqqara 1965-6", JEA 52 (1966).
A.M. Moussa, H. Altenmüller, The Tomb of Nefer and Ka-hay, Mainz am Rhein 1971.
J. Ph. Lauer, J. Leclant, Le temple haut du complexe funéraire du roi Teti, BdÉ 51, Le Caire 1972.
S. Hassan, Mastabas of Princess Hemet-ra and others, Excavations at Saqqara III (1937-38), Cairo 1975.
R. Stadelmann, "Die Königsgräber der 2. Dynastie in Sakkara", Mélanges Gamal Eddin Mokhtar, Vol. II, BdÉ 97/2 (1975).
S. Hassan, The Mastaba of Neb-Kaw-Her, Excavations at Saqqara I, Cairo 1975.
U. Hölscher, P. Munro, „Der Unas-Friedhof in Saqqara 2. Vorbericht über die Arbeiten der Gruppe Hannover im Früjahr 1974", SAK 3 (1975).
A.M. Moussa, F.Junge, Two Tombs of Craftsmen, AV 9, Mainz am Rhein 1975.
E. Bresciani, S. Pernigotti, M.P. Giangeri Silvis, La tomba di Ciennehebu, capo della flotta del re, Pisa 1977.
A. Labrousse, J. Ph. Lauer, J. Leclant, Le temple haut du complexe funéraire du roi Unas, BdÉ 73 (1977).
A.M. Moussa, H. Altenmüller, Das Grab des Nianchchnum und Chnumhotep, AV 21, Mainz am Rhein 1977.
G.T. Martin, The Tomb of Hetepka and Other Reliefs and Inscriptions from the Sacred Animal Necropolis, North Saqqara 1964-1973, EES London 1979.
E. Bresciani, S. Pernigotti, S. el-Naggar, F. Silvano, Tomba di Boccori, La galleria di Padineit, visir di Nectanebo I, Saqqara I, Pisa 1980.
G.T. Martin, The sacred animal Necropolis at North Saqqâra, The southern Dependencies of the Main Complex, EES London 1981.
W.V. Davies, A. El-Khouli, A.B. Lloyd, A.J.Spencer, The Mastabas of Mereri and Wernu, EES London 1984.
N. Kanawati, A. El-Khouli, A. Mc Farlane, N.V. Maksoud, Excavations at Saqqara, north-west of Teti’s Pyramid, II, Sidney 1984.
E. Bresciani, M.C. Betrò, A. Giammarusti, C. La Torre, La tomba di Bakenrenef (L. 24): attività del Cantiere Scuola 1985-1987, Saqqara 4, Pisa 1988.
R. Stadelmann, Die Ägyptischen Pyramiden vom Ziegelbau zum Weltwunder, KAW 30, Mainz am Rhein 1985.
A. Insley Green, The Temple Furniture from the Sacred Animal Necopolis at North Saqqara, 1964-76, EES London 1987.
G.T. Martin, "The Saqqâra New Kingdom Necropolis Excavations 1986: Preliminary Report", JEA 73 (1987).
G.T. Martin, The Memphite Tomb of Horemheb, Commander-in-chief of Tutankhamun I, Reliefs, Inscriptions and Commentary, EES London 1989.
A.B. Lloyd, A. J. Spencer, A. El-Khouli, The mastabas of Meru, Semdenti, Khui and others, EES London 1990.
A. Zivie, Découverte à Saqqarah Le vizir oublié, Paris 1990.
H.D. Schneider, G.T. Martin, et alii, "The Tomb of Maya and Meryt: Preliminary Report on the Saqqara Excavations 1990-1", JEA 77 (1991).
S. Tawfik, "Recently excavated ramesside tombs at Saqqara, 1: Architecture", MDAIK 47 (1991).
L. L. Giddy, The Anubieion at Saqqâra II, The Cemeteries, EES London 1992.
A. Labrousse, A.M. Moussa, Le temple d’accueil du complexe funéraire du roi Ounas, BdÉ 111, Le Caire 1996.
A. Labrousse, L’architecture des pyramides à textes, I, Saqqara Nord, BdÉ 114/1-2, Le Caire 1996.
C. Ziegler et alii, "La mission archéologique du musée du Louvre à Saqqara. Résultats de quatre campagnes de fouilles de 1993 à 1996", BIFAO 97 (1997).
M. el-Ghandour, "Report on work at Saqqara south of the New Kingdom cemetery: Seasons 1994, 1996, 1997", GM 161 (1997).
D. Jeffreys, J. Bourriau, W. Raymond Johnson, "Fieldwork 1997-8, Memphis 1997", JEA 84 (1998).
N. Kanawati, M. Abder-Raziq, The Tety Cemetery at Saqqara, Vol. III, The Tombs of Neferseshemre and Seankhuiptah, Warminster 1998.
K. Sowada, T. Callaghan, P. Bentley, The Tety Cemetery at Saqqara, Vol. IV, Minor Burials and other Materials, Warminster 1999, Pls. 1, 2.
J. Goudsmit, D. Brandon-Jones, "Mummies of Olive Baboons and Barbary Macaques in the Baboon Catacomb of the Sacred Animal Necropolis at North Saqqara", JEA 85 (1999).
K. Mysliewic "Saqqara, Excavations 1998", PAM 10, Reports 1998 (1999).
R. van Walsem, G.T. Martin et al., "Preliminary Report on the Saqqara Excavations, Season 1999", OMRO 79 (1999).
A. Labrousse, J. Ph. Lauer, Les complexes funéraires d’Ouserkaf et de Néferhétepès, BdÉ 130/2, Le Caire 2000, Figs. 42, 383.
N. Kanawati, M. Abder-Raziq, The Tety Cemetery at Saqqara, Vol. V, The tomb of Hesi, Warminster 2000.
N. Kanawati, M. Abder-Raziq, The Tety Cemetery at Saqqara, Vol. VI, The tomb of Nikauisesi, Warminster 2000.
C. Ziegler, "Recherches sur Saqqara au musée du Louvre: bilan et perspectives", in M. Bárta, J. Krejcí eds., Abusir and Saqqara in the year 2000, Praha 2000.
S. Yoshimura, I. H. Takamiya, Waseda University excavations at North Saqqara from 1991 to 1999, pp. 161-172, in M. Bárta, J. Krejcí eds., Abusir and Saqqara in the year 2000, Praha 2000.
A. Zivie, "La resurrection des hypogées du Nouvel Empire à Saqqara", in M. Bárta, J. Krejcí eds., Abusir and Saqqara in the year 2000, Praha 2000.
Z. Hawass, "Recent discoveries in the pyramid complex of Teti at Saqqara", pp. 413-444, in M. Bárta, J. Krejcí eds., Abusir and Saqqara in the year 2000, Praha 2000.
2B. The choice of the monuments for phases 2 and 3.
Our project involved, for the first two years phase, the choice of 13 monuments
for an analysis of the environmental risk representative of the entire site. The
matter was to choose, among more than 600 main monuments, those which
could best represent a significant sample of the entire site in period, position,
typology, state of preservation, anthropic frequentation and environmental
risk.
The three tombs of phase 3 – the only ones subjected to instrumental
monitoring -, the pyramid of Unas and the mastabas of Ty and Ptahhotep, were
chosen by the Supreme Council of Antiquities in May 2000, before the official
start of the project. They are the most known and important monuments in
north Saqqara, save for Djoser’s pyramid, the general conditions of which do
not allow the access to the funeral apartment. The funerary chambers of the
pyramid of Unas, with the first version of the Texts of the Pyramids carved on
their walls, were visited for almost a century and are today in very poor
condition, even though they have been closed to public for six years. The
mastaba of Ptahhotep, too, has been for a century, and still is, among the most
visited in Saqqara: its decorated reliefs were unrivalled in delicacy in that
period. The mastaba of Ty, which contains reliefs with scenes as precious in
quality and repertory, has been subjected to anthropic impact for 125 years,
even though the temporary closing of the Serapeum (now opened again)
brought less visitors to it.
These three monuments are sited along the central axis of north Saqqara,
between the imaginary prolongation southwards, north-westwards and
northwards of the western side of Djoser’s complex.
We had the task to choose the other ten monuments, on the basis of the
abovementioned criteria and also considering the monuments’ accessibility at
that time (year 2000). It would certainly have been interesting to include a
mastaba of the III dynasty of the north plateau, or one of the necropoles of
sacred animals. But almost all the tombs of the north plateau are now sanded
up, and all the necropolis of the animals were inaccessible at that time,
Serapeum included, due to consolidation works. Our task was not the
archaeological research, but the construction of a risk manual from available
data.
Another important requirement for our choice was the possibility to evaluate
the evolution of the monuments’ decay; therefore, they had to be known since
at least twenty years, they had to be well documented at the moment of their
discovery and, if possible, also through the years, with photographs and
publications. As far as the New Kingdom was concerned, Horemheb was an
almost unavoidable choice, as it was the first tomb of that historical period to
be unearthed in Saqqara not too recently (1975). Besides, G.T. Martin’s
detailed publication (1989) and the photos of its discovery in the archives of
Saqqara were a very good basis to evaluate the decay of its delicate painted
reliefs. The best example of starting documentation was the tomb of Ty, with
its publications made in 1913 (Steindorff), 1939 (Épron and Daumas), 1953 and
1966 (Wild), whose splendid photographs show the progression of the
monument’s state of preservation.
Monuments perio
d
Area typolog
y
preservati
on
Anthropic
frequentati
on
Environmen
tal risk
Historical
-artistic
value
S3507 I dyn. North
Plateau
mud
brick
mastab
a
Bad Closed
since its
discovery
High High
Djoser
North and
South
Buildings
III
dyn.
Central
plateau
limesto
ne
building
s
decent Open since
its
discovery
Medium High
Nefer V
dyn.
Unas
valley
Rock-
cut
tomb
excellent Limited
access
Low High
Kagemni VI
dyn.
Serapeu
m way
valley
limesto
ne
mastab
a
Bad Open since
its
discovery
Medium High
Mereruka VI
dyn.
Serapeu
m valley
limesto
ne
mastab
a
lacking Open since
its
discovery
Medium High
Idut VI
dyn.
Unas
valley
limesto
ne
mastab
a
lacking Open since
its
discovery
until the
Nineties
Medium High
Teti VI
dyn.
Serapeu
m valley
pyramid decent Open since
its
discovery
Medium High
Horemheb XVIII
dyn.
South
plateau
Temple-
tomb
lacking Closed
since its
discovery
High High
Tjaiennahe
bu
XXVI
dyn.
Unas
valley
Shaft
tomb
Good Closed
since the
Nineties
Medium Medium
Padienisi XXVI
dyn.
Unas
valley
Shaft
tomb
Good Closed
since the
Nineties
Medium Medium
2C. A system of selection and organization of archaeological data
One of the biggest problems faced by the Egyptological team in the initial
phase of the organization of the GIS was the creation a system of
archaeological data compatible with an advanced computer system, the GIS,
requiring a standardization of pieces of information which somehow forces the
nuances peculiar to archaeological data: uncertain or multiple dating of some
monuments, mixed typologies of tombs, different building materials, etc.
The computer experts Renzo Carlucci and Emanuele Brienza prepared an
ACCESS database with different levels of information, all to merge in the GIS. In
the first level database we decided to input the following basic data:
2C1. IDENTIFICATION DATA (MAIN DATABASE)
No. tomb of the project, assigned following the classification
of the Porter & Moss Bibliography. This fundamental work has
been at the roots of our job. The Bibliography’s subdivision
into areas, which we adopted, doesn’t take into account the
sites’ topography; it refers instead to the natural reference
monuments for every Egyptologist: the pyramids of Djoser,
Unas, Teti and Sekhemkhet. We decided to preserve this
subdivision in our database for reasons of convenience, and
because our work did not have the ambition to replace the
use of the Bibliography, but was meant to relate its data to a
map, that was to be unique and updated with all the
monuments of Saqqara. Obviously, we updated the
Bibliography’s data both with recent excavations and with all
the information we got in two years of work, even about old
excavations and particularly the poorly documented ones in
the north plateau. Thus, our notation proceeds with the
following partitions:
PS = Pyramid-Field of Saqqara
NSP = North of the Step Pyramid
ATP = Around Teti Pyramid
ESP = East of the Step Pyramid
WSP = West of the Step Pyramid
APU = Around the pyramid-complex of Unas
BMS = Between the Monastery of Apa Jeremias and the
enclosure of Sekhemkhet
TPU = Tombs of position unknown
The order of notation follows the Bibliography’s list, and then
goes on with the new entries, inserted, when possible, in an
area’s north-south order, otherwise in order of discovery.
P. and M. No.. It is the tomb number given by the Porter &
Moss Bibliography (if lacking, there is the abbreviation nn, no
number), which is the same number assigned by
archaeologists who worked on the site. Double numbers, with
the second one in brackets, refer to the notation given by
different archaeologists (for instance, Mariette and De
Morgan). For the new entries we adopted the same system as
Porter & Moss: that is, to report the numbers given by
archaeologists to the discovered tombs (for instance, BN1,
Bresciani N.1; MAFP for the tombs of the French mission of
the Bubasteion).
Level. It denotes the project phase: 3. monitored tombs (3),
2. tombs object of environmental analysis (10), 1. all the
remaining tombs.
Owner. The owner’s name, transcribed in international
characters according to the model of Hannig Lexica (R.
Hannig 1995, 1999, 2000), which in our opinion was a
medium point between tradition and innovation and between
the different national schools’ conventions.
Typology. Initially, it seemed easy to distinguish, for
instance, between mastabas and rock-cut tombs; but actually
we had to admit that in different cases such names
(especially the traditional mastaba) are arbitrary. In Saqqara
there are many tombs which could be ascribed to at least two
different typologies, like the tomb of Herimeru-Merery
(APU22), partly cut in the living rock, partly built in limestone
and mud bricks. The notion of shaft tomb itself is debatable,
as it is almost certain that all tombs of this kind, in every
period, had some kind of superstructure, at least a little
chapel with a false-door stela. There are also the non-
funerary, non-templar buildings, like the mud brick “blocks”
(NSP239-44) discovered by Martin south-west of the main
temple of the Northern sacred Animal Complex (G.T. Martin
1981). Reflections upon typologies have occupied a great
deal of our debates, especially between Architects and
Egyptologists. The scientific definition of the Egyptian tombs’
typologies will have surely to be reviewed in the future.
Period. All the dynasties and the longest periods have been
considered. We chose to avoid, at least in this phase of the
project, to input in this entry the dating by sovereigns, which
was settled in the Annotations instead.
Location. We tried, when possible, to be more accurate than
the Porter & Moss Bibliography, using a larger number of
landmarks.
Main building material. This entry was added on request
by the experts in preservation. Though it is almost always
reductive, it is nevertheless useful for the GIS classifications
and for the evaluation of architectural and environmental
risk: for instance, a building made mainly of mud bricks is
likely to be more at risk than a limestone one.
2C2. OTHER DATA OF THE MAIN DATABASE
Discoverer and discovery year. It is an important piece of
information, yet it is missing in the Porter & Moss
Bibliography. It allows the direct visualization, thanks to the
GIS system, of the history of the exploration in Saqqara.
Accessibility. We took into consideration, in addition to the
opening and closing to the public, the use of tombs as
storehouses as well, which makes them actually inaccessible
without a SCA authorities decree; the inaccessible tombs are
those whose entrance is prevented by structural conditions
(for instance, collapsed rooms) or by the walling of the doors
using authority. The re-buried tombs are those buried again
by sand and drifts, either completely or in such a way that
access is averted.
As for closed tombs, we reported the year of closing, when
possible. In order to obtain such information, which the
inspector’s office often did not have, Egyptologist Ehmad
Khater made personally an inquiry asking Saqqara’s senior
inspectors.
Bibliography. We input the monuments’ general
bibliography taken from the Porter & Moss Bibliography,
enrolling for that purpose some consultants: our competent
assistant Hebat Allah and Annalisa Malaguti, an Egyptologist
and collaborator of the archaeological attachée of the Italian
Embassy Maria Casini. Annalisa, in particular, collaborated
occasionally also in collecting archaeological data and in
surveying in Saqqara, making herself very useful, especially
when Italian experts could not be there.
We did not input the bibliography about each decorated
surface, nor that about the finds discovered in the tombs, in
order not to burden the database. We added instead, where
possible, the latest and the existing bibliographies about the
many monuments added to the bibliography.
Annotations. Under this entry we input the exact dating by
kingdom, significant details about the owner or the
monument’s usurpation, about the typology and the building
materials. On request of the scientific director Edda
Bresciani, we later input the finds preserved in museums and
already accounted for on the Bibliography, in order to offer a
more complete description of the monument’s history.
2C.3 THE SECONDARY DATABASE
Titles of the Owner. As for the monuments already
accounted for in the Bibliography, we only transcribed the
main titles reported by Porter and Moss, sometimes
translating in English the entries originally in Egyptian
transcription. As for the new entries, we chose ourselves the
most significant titles. We realized, though, that if we had
more time it would have been better to input titles
transcribing them from the hieroglyphs, in order to avoid
different interpretations and thus have useful archives for all
scholars to understand the officers’ allocations in
homogeneous areas of the necropolis.
Relatives. Generally, only relatives whose names are
included in the tombs’ text are reported.
Excavations. Among the excavations carried out after the
discovery of a monument, there often are interventions of
restoration, which in Egypt is almost always traditionally
entrusted to archaeologists.
Old general photos. These are the photos taken from the
archives of Saqqara’s inspectorate, and sometimes from the
publications.
New general photos. The photos shot over the last two
years by our photographers, Carlos de la Fuente and Kirols
Barsum.
General Drawings. Plants, surveys and graphic
reconstructions of the elevations taken from publications.
General Description. It is a perfectible computerization
system of the monuments’ basic data, with entries divided by
architectural items and decoration items. The entries denote
whether basic architectural and decorative items are present,
so as to make the computer (and therefore the automatic)
evaluation of the monument’s “worth” possible, in order to
estimate the risk coefficient. We are of course speaking of
quantitative value indexes: the size of a certain tomb, that is
how many internal rooms it has got, how many of its rooms
are decorated, if there are a sarcophagus in situ and
architectural ornaments of great value, like false-door stelae
and statues. The latter are meant as statues which are
integral part of the architecture, still inside the tomb, like for
instance the famous statue in Ty’s pillared room. The offering
tables too are meant as non removable offering platforms,
inserted in the original flooring of the rooms.
The general description includes an interesting implication for
scholars, as it allows to search for characteristic architectural
items in Saqqara, such as the subsidiary pyramids of the
temple-tombs of the New Kingdom, or the presence of
colonnades, hypostyle rooms and serdab. It was not always
possible to check personally, since the most part of the
monuments are inaccessible, the presence of original
floorings and ceilings, which many publications do not even
mention.
Detailed Description. This entry is dedicated to the
thirteen monuments of phases 2 and 3, with the essential
purpose to serve as caption for the walls’ pictures and
especially for the photomosaics prepared by Carlos de la
Fuente and Paola Galli.
2D. The new records
Of the 169 new entries of the database added to the 442 already there in the
Porter & Moss Bibliography, 83 refer to excavations prior to 1976, therefore to
tombs which could be inserted in the last edition of the Bibliography. Most of
them are monuments of the north plateau, which, as I said many times, has a
quite troubled excavation history. If we separate monuments by the
archaeologists who discovered them, we have:
26 of them discovered by Quibell, all of them mud brick mastabas of the north
plateau (NSP186-90, 203, 206-14, 219-26, 229, 235), except for the monastery
of Apa Jeremias (BMS61);
we have then 35 tombs discovered by Firth, two of which are in the area
around Teti pyramid (ATP88, 99), and all the others on the north plateau
(NSP171-85, 191-202, 227-8, 231-34);
the 13 new entries discovered by Emery are all on the north plateau (NSP52bis,
203bis, 204-5, 217-8, 217bis, 230, 240-4); besides, in the same area there is a
mud brick shrine discovered by Martin in 1971 (NSP239) and two tombs of the
III dynasty discovered by Smith and Jeffreys in 1975-6 (NSP215-6).
In other areas of the necropolis, there are then two Lepsius tombs (PS09 and
ATP104), two De Morgan’s (the archaic walls WSP33-34) and two Bresciani’s
(ESP31-2).
The Bibliography’s authors decided not to insert these monuments certainly in
order to make a selection (this is definitely the case with the about 500
Quibell’s tombs), choosing the best documented and the most important
monuments. While the exclusion of a non-pharaonic monument, the monastery
of Apa Jeremias, is understandable, the fact remains that the tombs discovered
by Emery at the end of the Sixties, some of which are well documented in the
volumes of the Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, were not inserted. And the
exclusion of the “destroyed pyramid” Lepsius XXIX (PS09) appears to be a
mistake (nobody’s immune, we least of all). As far as the tombs discovered by
Firth are concerned, probably the Bibliography’s authors were faced with an
almost complete lack of documents. We chose to insert at least the most
remarkable structures, re-examined and summarily described by W.S Smith in
1932 (Reisner 1936). We chose to be “looser” about Quibell too, inserting
tombs which we thought to be worthy of mention in size and findings.
Nevertheless, we would have liked to input every single documented or
somehow signalled funerary shaft, but we had no time in this first phase, and,
most of all, our purpose was to create a database related to a map. And even a
detailed map such as ours could not include thousands of “minor” burials.
The 86 monuments discovered in the last twenty years bear witness to a
remarkable enthusiasm in excavating a site which has still many secrets to
reveal.
No less than 59 among the new discoveries date back to the New Kingdom,
thus proving that this period is the less represented in the modern research on
the site. Together with the Late and the Coptic period, the New Kingdom was
underestimated to date in Saqqara, even because of the old habit to knock
down the later structures to reach the Old Kingdom layers. Christiane Ziegler’s
recent excavations north of the Unas causeway testify the presence also in that
area of Coptic settlements over the Old Kingdom structures (C. Ziegler 1997,
2000). It is certain that during the less recent excavations the Coptic layers,
like those of the late period and even of the New Kingdom – it is the case of the
area north of Teti – were destroyed without documenting them, with a few
exceptions, like Loret’s excavations between 1897 and 1899 just in the area
north-east of Teti (V. Loret 1899). The modern archaeology’s historical sense
will be able to give in the future a much more complete picture of Saqqara’s
three thousand years of history, especially if the archaeological research will be
planned in relation to the general historical view of the archaeological site.
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