Neferefre

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Neferefre Isi (also known as Raneferef, Ranefer and in Greek as Script error: No such module "Lang"., Template:Transliteration; Template:Circa 2480 BC - Template:Circa 2458 BC)Template:Sfn was an ancient Egyptian king of the Fifth Dynasty during the Old Kingdom period. He was the eldest son of king Neferirkare Kakai and queen Khentkaus II. He was known as prince Ranefer before he ascended to the throne.

Neferefre started a pyramid for himself in the royal necropolis of Abusir called Netjeribau Raneferef, which means "The bas of Neferefre are divine". The pyramid was never finished, with a mason's inscription showing that works on the stone structure were abandoned during or shortly after the king's second year of reign. Together with the sparsity of attestations contemporaneous with his reign, this is taken by Egyptologists as evidence that Neferefre died unexpectedly after two to three years on the throne. Neferefre was nonetheless buried in his pyramid, hastily completed in the form of a mastaba by his second successor and presumably younger brother, king Nyuserre Ini. Fragments of his mummy were uncovered there, showing that he died in his early twenties.

Little is known of Neferefre's activities beyond laying the foundations of his pyramid and attempting to finish that of his father. A single text shows that Neferefre had planned or just started to build a sun temple called Hotep-Re, meaning "Ra is content" or "Ra's offering table", which possibly never functioned as such given the brevity of the king's reign. After his death, Neferefre might have been succeeded by an ephemeral and little-known king, Shepseskare, whose relation with Neferefre remains highly uncertain and debated.

Sources

Contemporaneous

There are very few archaeological sources contemporaneous with Neferefre, a fact which is now seen by Egyptologists, including Miroslav Verner, to imply a very short reign.Template:Sfn Verner knew of only one inscription dated to his rule. It was left by the builders of his pyramid on a corner block at the end of the corridor leading to the pyramid substructures.Template:Sfn The inscription was written on the fourth day of the Akhet season in the year of first occurrence of the cattle count, an event consisting of counting the livestock throughout the country to evaluate the amount of taxes to be levied. It is traditionally believed that such counts occurred every two years during the Old KingdomTemplate:Sfn although recent reappraisals have led Egyptologists to posit a less regular and somewhat more frequent count.Template:Sfn Therefore, the inscription must refer to Neferefre's first or second year on the throne, and his third year at the very latest.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn Finally, a few artefacts dated to Neferefre's rule or shortly after have been uncovered in his mortuary complex and elsewhere in Abusir,Template:Efn such as clay seals bearing his Horus name.Template:Sfn

Some of the Abusir Papyri discovered in Khentkhaus II's temple and dating to the mid- to late Fifth Dynasty mention the mortuary temple and funerary cult of Neferefre. They constitute a written source near-contemporaneous with his reign, which not only confirmed the existence of Neferefre's pyramid complex at a time when it had not yet been identified,Template:Sfn but also gives details regarding the administrative organisation and importance of the funerary cult of the king in Ancient Egyptian society.Template:Sfn

Historical

Relief showing three hieroglyphs in a cartouche
Cartouche of Neferefre on the Abydos king list

Neferefre is present on several Ancient Egyptian king lists, all dating to the New Kingdom period. The earliest such list mentioning Neferefre is the Abydos King List, written during the reign of Seti I (fl. 1290–1279 BC), and where his prenomen occupies the 29th entry, between those of Neferirkare Kakai and Nyuserre Ini.Template:Sfn During the subsequent reign of Ramses II (fl. 1279–1213 BC), Neferefre appears on the Saqqara Tablet,Template:Sfn this time after Shepseskare, that is as a second successor to Neferirkare Kakai. Owing to a scribal error, Neferefre's name on this list is given as "Khanefere" or "Neferkhare".Template:Sfn Neferefre's prenomen was in all probability also given on the Turin canon (third column, 21st row), which dates to the same period as the Saqqara tablet, but it has since been lost in a large lacuna affecting the document. Nonetheless, the part of the reign length attributed to Neferefre by the canon is still legible, with a single stroke sign indicating one year of reign to which a decade could in principle be added, as the corresponding sign would be effectively lost in the lacuna of the document.Template:Sfn

Neferefre was also likely mentioned in the Aegyptiaca, a history of Egypt written in the 3rd century BC during the reign of Ptolemy II (283–246 BC) by the Egyptian priest Manetho. No copies of the Aegyptiaca have survived to this day and it is now known only through later writings by Sextus Julius Africanus and Eusebius. Africanus relates that the Aegyptiaca mentioned the succession "Nefercherês → Sisirês → Cherês" for the mid-Fifth Dynasty. Nefercherês, Sisirês and Cherês are believed to be the hellenized forms for Neferirkare, Shepseskare and Neferkhare (that is Neferefre), respectively. Thus, Manetho's reconstruction of the Fifth Dynasty is in good agreement with the Saqqara tablet.Template:Sfn In Africanus' epitome of the Aegyptiaca, Cherês is reported to have reigned for 20 years.Template:Sfn

Family

Parents and siblings

Statuette of a seated king holding a mace and wearing the long crown of Upper Egypt
Menkauhor Kaiu could be a son of Neferefre and Khentkaus III

Neferefre was the eldest son of his predecessor Neferirkare Kakai with queen Khentkaus II.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn This is shown by a relief on a limestone slab discovered in a house in the village near AbusirTemplate:Sfn and depicting Neferirkare and his wife Khentkaus with "the king's eldest son Ranefer",Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn a name identical with some variants of Neferefre's own.Template:Sfn This indicates that Ranefer was Neferefre's name when he was still only a crown prince, that is, before his accession to the throne.Template:Sfn

Neferirkare and Khentkaus had at least another son, the future king Nyuserre Ini. In addition, since the relation between Shepseskare and Neferefre remains uncertain, it is possible that the two were brothers too, as suggested by the Egyptologist Silke Roth,Template:Sfn although other hypotheses on the matter have been proposed: Verner sees Shepseskare as a son of Sahure and hence Neferefre's uncle, while Jaromír Krejčí believes Shepseskare was Neferefre's son.Template:Sfn Finally, yet another brother,Template:Sfn possibly youngerTemplate:Sfn than both Neferefre and Nyuserre has also been proposed: Iryenre, a prince iry-patTemplate:Efn whose filiation is suggested by the fact that his funerary cult was associated with that of his mother, both having taken place in the temple of Khentkaus II.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Consort and children

Until 2014, no consort of Neferefre was known.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Late in that year, the mastaba of Khentkaus III was discovered by archaeologists from the Czech Institute of Egyptology working in Abusir, south east of Neferefre's pyramid.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn The location and date of the tomb as well as inscriptions found in it strongly suggest that Khentkaus III was Neferefre's queen.Template:Sfn Indeed, not only was Khentkaus III presumably buried during the few decades following Neferefre's reign, but her mastaba is also in close proximity to his pyramid,Template:Efn and she bore the title of "king's wife", proving that she was a queen.Template:Sfn

In addition, Khentkaus III was also called "king's mother" by inscriptions in her tomb, indicating that her son had become king. Since Neferefre's second successor Nyuserre Ini is known to have been his brother rather than his son, and since Khentkaus III might have been buried during Nyuserre's reign, as indicated by mud seals,Template:Sfn this only leaves either Neferefre's ephemeral successor Shepseskare or Nyuserre's successor Menkauhor Kaiu as possibilities.Template:Sfn There is an ongoing debate in Egyptology concerning these two alternatives. Verner posits that Shepseskare was an uncle of Neferefre and therefore that Menkauhor Kaiu was Neferefre's son. Meanwhile, Krejčí views the opposite hypothesis, that Shepseskare was Neferefre's son with Khentkaus III, as more probable.Template:Sfn

Two further sons of Neferefre and Khentkaus III have been proposed by Verner: the "king's son" Nakhtsare,Template:Sfn whose filiation is supported by the general date and location of his tomb,Template:Sfn and Kakaibaef, a member of the elite buried in Abusir.Template:Sfn Krejčí notes the lack of the titular "king's son" in relation to Kakaibaef, thereby emphasizing the conjectural nature of Verner's assertion.Template:Sfn

Reign

Accession to the throne

Black and white drawing of columns of hieroglyphs from a cylinder seal
Drawing of the impression of a cylinder seal of Shepseskare

Two competing hypotheses exist in Egyptology to describe the succession of events running from the death of Neferirkare Kakai, third king of the Fifth Dynasty, to the coronation of Nyuserre Ini, sixth ruler of the dynasty. Relying on historical sources, most notably the Saqqara king list and Manetho's Aegyptiaca, where Neferefre is said to have succeeded Shepseskare,Template:Sfn many Egyptologists such as Jürgen von Beckerath and Hartwig Altenmüller have traditionally believedTemplate:Sfn that the following royal succession took place: Neferirkare Kakai → Shepseskare → Neferefre Isi → Nyuserre Ini.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In this scenario, Neferefre would be the father of Nyuserre, who would have become king after the former's unexpected death.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

This view was challenged at the turn of the millennium, most notably by Verner,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn who has been responsible for the archaeological excavations of the Fifth Dynasty royal necropolis of Abusir since 1976. Firstly, there is the relief, mentioned earlier, showing that Neferefre was in all likelihood Neferirkare's eldest son.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Secondly, excavations of Neferefre's pyramid have yielded his mummy, which showed that he was 18 to 20 years of age at the death of Neferirkare.Template:Sfn Consequently, as the previous king's eldest son, in his late teens to early twenties, Neferefre was in optimal position to ascend the throne. Positing that Shepseskare reigned between Neferefre and his father would thus require an explanation as to why and how Shepseskare's claim to the throne could have been stronger than Neferefre's.Template:Sfn

Plan of the necropolis of Abusir showing the alignment of the pyramids of Sahure, Neferirkare Kakai and Neferefre on an axis pointing to Heliopolis. The pyramid attributed to Shepseskare is off this alignment, somewhat to the north.
Map of the necropolis of Abusir.Template:Sfn The unfinished pyramid is attributed to Shepseskare.Template:Sfn The red line points to Heliopolis.Template:Sfn

Thirdly, archaeological evidences indicate that Shepseskare most likely reigned for only a few weeks to a few months at the most rather than seven years as credited to him in the Aegyptiaca,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn a hypothesis already supported by Nicolas Grimal as early as 1988.Template:Sfn Indeed, Shepseskare is the least known Fifth Dynasty king, with only two sealsTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn and a few seal impressions bearing his name known as of 2017,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn a paucity of attestations suggesting a very short reign. This is also supported by the state of Shepseskare's unfinished pyramid, which "was interrupted [and] corresponds to the work of several weeks, perhaps no more than one or two months".Template:Sfn

Fourthly, archaeological evidence also favors dating Shepseskare's reign to after Neferefre's.Template:Sfn Some of the few seal impressions bearing Shepseskare's name have been discovered in the oldest part of Neferefre's mortuary temple,Template:Sfn which was not built until Neferefre's death.Template:Sfn This seems to indicate that Shepseskare made offerings for the funerary cult of Neferefre, who must therefore have reigned before him.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Another argument concerns the alignment of pyramids of Sahure, Neferirkare Kakai and Neferefre: they form a line pointing to Heliopolis, just as the three pyramids of Giza do.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn In contrast, Shepseskare's unfinished pyramid does not fall on the line to Heliopolis, which strongly suggests that Neferefre's pyramid had already been in place when Shepseskare started to build his.Template:Sfn Lastly, while Shepseskare is noted as the immediate predecessor of Neferefre in the Saqqara king list, Verner notes that "this slight discrepancy can be attributed to the [political] disorders of the time and its dynastic disputes."Template:Sfn Verner's arguments have convinced a number of Egyptologists, including Darrell Baker, Erik Hornung and Iorwerth Edwards.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Reign duration

Statue of a standing pharaoh in black stone. He is holding a mace and a rounded crown.
SchistTemplate:Sfn statue of Neferefre wearing the white crown of Upper Egypt discovered in his pyramid complex at Abusir, Egyptian MuseumTemplate:Sfn

While Neferefre is given a reign of some 20 years in epitomes of Manetho's Aegyptiaca,Template:Sfn the current academic view is that this number is an overestimation of his true reign length, which must have been significantly shorter. Before the results of the extensive excavations in Abusir were fully published, Egyptologists following the traditional succession hypothesis credited Neferefre with around a decade of rule, based on the paucity of attestations contemporaneous with his reign. For example, von Beckerath and Winfried Barta gave him 11 and 10 years on the throne, respectively.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This view now has few supporters.Template:Sfn

Indeed, since then, Verner has set forth the hypothesis of a reign of no more than two years.Template:Sfn His conclusion is based on archaeological evidence: the unfinished state of his intended pyramid, and the general paucity of documents datable to his rule. Verner writes that:

The shape of the tomb of Neferefra...as well as a number of other archaeological finds clearly indicate that the construction of the king's funerary monument was interrupted, owing to the unexpected early death of the king. The plan of the unfinished building had to be basically changed and a decision was taken to hastily convert the unfinished pyramid, (of which only the incomplete lowest step of the core was built), into a "square-shaped mastaba" or, more precisely, a stylized primeval hill. At the moment of the king's death neither the burial apartment was built, nor was the foundation of the mortuary temple laid.Template:Sfn

Furthermore, two historical sources conform with the hypothesis of a short reign: the mason's inscription in Neferefre's pyramid was discovered "at about two thirds of the height of the extant core of the monument"Template:Sfn and probably refers to Neferefre's first or second year on the throne; and the Turin canon which credits Neferefre with less than two full years of reign.Template:Sfn The combination of archaeological and historical evidence led to the consensus that Neferefre's reign lasted "not longer than about two years".Template:Sfn

Building activities

Pyramid complex

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Outline of the pyramid of Neferefre. Essentially a square with a hole in the middle for the underground chambers and a passage leading to them.
Structure of the first step of Neferefre's pyramid. A: External wall, B: Internal wall, C: Stepping fill, D: Pit for the underground chambers, E: Pit for entry.

Pyramid

Neferefre started the construction of a pyramid for himself in the royal necropolis of Abusir, where his father and grandfather had built their own pyramids. It was known to the Ancient Egyptians as Netjeribau Raneferef meaning "The bas of Neferefre are divine".Template:EfnTemplate:Sfn

Planned with a square base of Template:Convert, the pyramid of Neferefre was to be larger than those of Userkaf and Sahure, but smaller than that of his father Neferirkare.Template:Sfn Upon the unexpected death of Neferefre, only its lower courses had been completed,Template:Sfn reaching a height of c. Template:Convert.Template:Sfn Subsequently, Nyuserre hastily completed the monument by filling its central part with poor quality limestone, mortar and sand.Template:Sfn The external walls of the building were given a smooth and nearly vertical covering of gray limestone at an angle of 78° with the ground so as to give it the form of a mastaba, albeit with a square plan rather than with the usual rectangular shape.Template:Sfn Finally, the roof terrace was covered with clay into which local desert gravels were pressed, giving it the appearance of a mound in the surrounding desert,Template:Sfn and indeed it was by the name "the Mound"Template:Efn that the monument was subsequently called by the Ancient Egyptians.Template:Sfn Verner has proposed that the monument was completed this way so as to give it the form of the primeval mound, the mound that arose from the primordial waters Nu in the creation myth of the Heliopolitan form of Ancient Egyptian religion.Template:Sfn

The monument was used as a stone quarry from the New Kingdom period onwards,Template:Sfn but was later preserved from further damages as its appearance of a rough unfinished and abandoned pyramid did not attract the attention of tomb robbers.Template:Sfn

Mortuary temple

Works on the mortuary temple in which the funerary cult of the deceased king was to take place had not even started when Neferefe died. In the short 70-day period allowed between a king's death and his burial,Template:Sfn Neferefre's successor—possibly the ephemeral ShepseskareTemplate:Sfn—built a small limestone chapel. It was located on the pyramid base platform, in the Template:Convert gap left between the masonry and the platform edge, where the pyramid casing would have been put in the original plans.Template:Sfn This small chapel was completed during Nyuserre's reign.Template:Sfn This pharaoh also built a larger mortuary temple for his brother Neferefre, extending over the whole Template:Convert length of the pyramid side but built of cheaper mudbrick.Template:Sfn

Ruined wall of bricks and a few stones in the desert.
The ruins of the mortuary temple of Neferefre, 2007

The temple entrance comprised a courtyard adorned with two stone and 24 wooden columns.Template:Sfn Behind was the earliest hypostyle hall of Ancient Egypt the remains of which can still be detected, its roof supported by wooden columns in the shape of lotus-clusters resting on limestone bases.Template:Sfn This hall was possibly inspired by the royal palaces of the time.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The structure housed a large wooden statue of the king as well as statues of prisoners of war.Template:Sfn Storage rooms for the offerings were located to the north of the hall. In these rooms several statues of Neferefre were discovered, including six heads of the kings,Template:Sfn making Neferefre the Fifth Dynasty king with the most surviving statues.Template:Sfn East of the main hall was the "Sanctuary of the Knife" which served as a slaughterhouse for the rituals. Two narrow rooms on either sides of the central altar in front of the false door in the main hall may have housed Template:Convert longTemplate:Sfn solar boats similar to Khufu's.Template:Sfn

A significant cache of administrative papyri, comparable in size to the Abusir Papyri found in the temples of Neferirkare and Khentkaus II,Template:Sfn was discovered in a storeroom of the mortuary temple of Neferere during a 1982 University of Prague Egyptological Institute excavation.Template:Sfn The presence of this cache is due to the peculiar historical circumstances of the mid-Fifth Dynasty.Template:Sfn As both Neferirkare and Neferefre died before their pyramid complexes could be finished, Nyuserre altered their planned layout, diverting the causeway leading to Neferirkare's pyramid to his own. This meant that Neferefre's and Neferirkare's mortuary complexes became somewhat isolated on the Abusir plateau. Their priests therefore had to live next to the temple premises in makeshift dwellings,Template:Sfn and they stored the administrative records onsite.Template:Sfn In contrast, the records of other temples were kept in the pyramid town close to Sahure's or Nyuserre's pyramid, where the current level of ground water means any papyrus has long since disappeared.Template:Sfn

Mummy of Neferefre

Fragments of mummy wrappings and cartonnage, as well as scattered pieces of human remains, were discovered on the east side of the burial chamber of the pyramid.Template:Sfn The remains amounted to a left hand, a left clavicle still covered with skin, fragments of skin probably from the forehead, upper eyelid and the left foot and a few bones.Template:Sfn These remains were in the same archaeological layer as broken pieces from a red granite sarcophagusTemplate:Sfn as well as what remained of the funerary equipment of the king,Template:Efn hinting that they could indeed belong to Neferefre.Template:Sfn This was further corroborated by subsequent studies of the embalming techniques used on the mummy, found to be compatible with an Old Kingdom date.Template:Sfn

The body of the king was probably dried by means of natron and then covered with a thin layer of resin, before being given a white calcareous coating. There is no evidence of brain removal as expected from post-Old Kingdom mummification techniques.Template:Sfn A final confirmation of the identity of the mummy is provided by radiocarbon dating, which yielded a 2628–2393 BC interval for the human remains in close correspondence with estimated dates for the Fifth Dynasty.Template:Sfn Thus, Neferefre is, with Djedkare Isesi, one of the very few Old Kingdom kings whose mummy has been identified.Template:Sfn A bioarchaeological analysis of Neferefre's remains revealed that the king did not partake in strenuous work,Template:Sfn died in his early twenties at between 20 and 23 years old and that he may have stood Template:Convert in height.Template:Sfn The remains of a second individual were discovered in the burial chamber, but those proved to belong to an individual from the Late Middle Ages, who likely lived during the 14th century AD. He had simply been laid on rags and covered with sand for his burial.Template:Sfn

Sun temple

Entrance of a tomb with two columns set between long descending walls of stones.
The Mastaba of Ti, where the only attestations of the Hotep-Re have been found, 2015

Following a tradition established by Userkaf, founder of the Fifth Dynasty, Neferefre planned or built a temple to the sun god Ra. Called Hotep-ReTemplate:Efn by the Ancient Egyptians, meaning "Ra is content"Template:Sfn or "Ra's offering table",Template:Sfn the temple has not yet been located but is presumably in the vicinity of Neferefre's pyramid in Abusir.Template:Sfn It is known solelyTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn from inscriptions discovered in the mastaba of Ti in North Saqqara,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn where it is mentioned four times.Template:Sfn Ti served as an administration official in the pyramid and sun temples of Sahure, Neferirkare and Nyuserre.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Given Neferefre's very short reign, the lack of attestations of the Hotep-Re beyond the mastaba of Ti, as well as the lack of priests having served in the temple, Verner proposes that the temple might never have been completed and therefore never functioned as such. Rather it might have been integrated to or its materials reused for the Shesepibre, the sun temple built by Neferefre's probable younger brother, Nyuserre.Template:Sfn Incidentally, an earlier discovery by the German archaeological expedition of 1905 under the direction of Friedrich Wilhelm von Bissing may vindicate Verner's theory. This expedition uncovered the ruins of large buildings of mudbricks beneath the sun temple of Nyuserre in Abu Gorab.Template:Sfn It is possible that these represent the remains of the sun temple of Neferefre, although in the absence of inscriptions confirming this identification, it remains conjectural.Template:Sfn

Pyramid of Neferirkare Kakai

Great but ruined pyramid made of bricks and stones in the desert.
The pyramid of Neferirkare in Abusir, 2006

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". When he ascended the throne, Neferefre faced the task of completing the pyramid of his father which, with a square base side of Template:Convert and a height of Template:Convert, is the largest built during the Fifth Dynasty.Template:Sfn Although well underway at the death of Neferirkare, the pyramid was lacking its external limestone cladding and the accompanying mortuary temple still had to be built. Neferefre thus started to cover the pyramid surface with limestone and build the foundation of a stone temple on the pyramid's eastern side. His plans were cut short by his death and the duty of finishing the monument fell on Nyuserre's shoulders, who abandoned the task of covering the pyramid face and instead concentrated on building the mortuary temple in bricks and wood.Template:Sfn

Funerary cult

Like other kings of the Old Kingdom period, Neferefre benefited from a funerary cult established at his death. Some details of this cult as it occurred during the Fifth Dynasty have survived in the Abusir Papyri. A 10-day yearly festival was held in honor of the deceased ruler during which, on at least one occasion, no less than 130 bulls were sacrificed in the slaughter house of his mortuary temple.Template:Sfn The act of mass animal sacrifice testifies to the importance that royal funerary cults had in Ancient Egyptian society, and also shows that vast agricultural resources were devoted to an activity judged unproductive by Verner, something they propose possibly contributed to the decline of the Old Kingdom.Template:Sfn The main beneficiaries of these sacrifices were the cult's priests, who consumed the offerings after the required ceremonies.Template:Sfn

The funerary cult of Neferefre seems to have ceased at the end of the Old Kingdom or during the First Intermediate Period.Template:Sfn Traces of a possible revival of the cult during the later Middle Kingdom are scant and ambiguous. During the Twelfth Dynasty, a certain Khuyankh was buried in the funerary temple of Neferefre. It remains unclear if this was to associate himself closely with the deceased ruler or because other cultic activities in the area constrained the choice of location for Khuyankh's tomb.Template:Sfn

Ancestry

Template:Ahnentafel

Notes, references and sources

Notes

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References

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Sources

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Template:Refend

Template:Sister project

Template:S-endTemplate:PharaohsTemplate:Authority control
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check King of Egypt
c. 2460 – c. 2458 BC Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by