Narmer
Pharaoh
Dynasty 1 of Egypt
Narmer on the Verso of the Narmer Palette
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Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Narmer
(Ancient Egyptian: nꜥr-mr, may mean "painful
catfish", "stinging catfish", "harsh catfish", or
"fierce catfish";[4][5][6] fl. c. 3100
BC)[7] was an ancient Egyptian king of the Early Dynastic Period, whose reign
began at the end of the 4th millennium BC. He's believed to have been the
successor to the Protodynastic king Ka. Many scholars consider him the unifier
of Egypt and founder of the First Dynasty, and in turn the first king of a
unified Egypt. He also had a prominently noticeable presence in Canaan,
compared to his predecessors and successors. Neithhotep is thought to be his
queen consort or his daughter.
A
majority of Egyptologists believe that Narmer was the same person as
Menes.[a][9][10][11]
Consort Uncertain: possibly Neithhotep
Children Uncertain: probably Hor-Aha
Father Ka?, Scorpion II?
Burial Chambers B17 and B18, Umm El Qa'ab
Dynasty 1st dynasty
Narmer (Ancient Egyptian: nꜥr-mr, may mean "painful catfish", "stinging catfish", "harsh catfish", or "fierce catfish";[4][5][6] fl. c. 3100 BC)[7] was an ancient Egyptian king of the Early Dynastic Period, whose reign began at the end of the 4th millennium BC. He's believed to have been the successor to the Protodynastic king Ka. Many scholars consider him the unifier of Egypt and founder of the First Dynasty, and in turn the first king of a unified Egypt. He also had a prominently noticeable presence in Canaan, compared to his predecessors and successors. Neithhotep is thought to be his queen consort or his daughter.
Narmer
(Ancient Egyptian: nꜥr-mr, may mean "painful
catfish", "stinging catfish", "harsh catfish", or
"fierce catfish";[4][5][6] fl. c. 3100
BC)[7] was an ancient Egyptian king of the Early Dynastic Period, whose reign
began at the end of the 4th millennium BC. He's believed to have been the
successor to the Protodynastic king Ka. Many scholars consider him the unifier
of Egypt and founder of the First Dynasty, and in turn the first king of a
unified Egypt. He also had a prominently noticeable presence in Canaan,
compared to his predecessors and successors. Neithhotep is thought to be his
queen consort or his daughter.
Historical
identity
Although
highly interrelated, the questions of "who was Menes?" and "who
unified Egypt?" are actually two separate issues. Narmer is often credited
with the unification of Egypt by means of the conquest of Lower Egypt by Upper
Egypt. Menes was the first pharaoh of Ancient Egypt according to the ancient
historian Manetho, and is identified by the majority of Egyptologists as the
same person as Narmer – although a vigorous debate also proposes identification
with Hor-Aha, Narmer's successor, as a primary alternative.[b]
The issue
is confusing because "Narmer" is a Horus name while "Menes"
is a Sedge and Bee name, also known as "prenomen" or "throne
name". All of the King Lists which began to appear in the New Kingdom only
list throne names, and almost all begin with Menes, or begin with divine and/or
semi-divine rulers, with Menes as the first "human king". The
difficulty is aligning the contemporary archaeological evidence which lists
Horus names with the king lists that list personal names.
Naqada
Label reconstruction
Two
documents have been put forward as proof either that Narmer was Menes or
alternatively Hor-Aha was Menes. The first is the "Naqada Label"
found at the site of Naqada, in the tomb of Neithhotep, often assumed to have
been the mother of Horus Aha.[12] The label shows a serekh of Hor-Aha next to
an enclosure inside of which are symbols that have been interpreted by some
scholars as the name "Menes". The second is the seal impression from
Abydos that alternates between a serekh of Narmer and the chessboard symbol,
"mn", which is interpreted as an abbreviation of Menes. Arguments
have been made with regard to each of these documents in favour of Narmer or
Hor-Aha being Menes, but in neither case is the argument conclusive.[c]
The
second document, the seal impression from Abydos, shows the serekh of Narmer
alternating with the gameboard sign (mn), together with its phonetic
complement, the n sign, which is always shown when the full name of Menes is
written, again representing the name "Menes". At first glance, this
would seem to be strong evidence that Narmer was Menes.[16] However, based on
an analysis of other early First Dynasty seal impressions, which contain the
name of one or more princes, the seal impression has been interpreted by other
scholars as showing the name of a prince of Narmer named Menes, hence Menes was
Narmer's successor, Hor-Aha, and thus Hor-Aha was Menes.[17] Cervelló-Autuori
has rebutted this (Cervelló-Autuori 2005, pp. 42–45), but opinions still vary,
and the seal impression cannot be said to definitively support either
theory.[18]
Necropolis
seal impression of the Egyptian pharaoh Den.
Necropolis
seal impression of the Egyptian pharaoh, Qa'a.[19]
Two
necropolis sealings, found in 1985 and 1991 in Abydos (Umm el-Qa'ab), in or
near the tombs of Den[20] (called the Den seal impressions) and Qa'a (called
the Qa'a sealing),[21] show Narmer as the first king on each list, followed by
Hor-Aha. The Qa'a sealing lists all eight of the kings of what scholars now
call the First Dynasty in the correct order, starting with Narmer. These
necropolis sealings are strong evidence that Narmer was the first king of the
First Dynasty, hence the same person as Menes.[22]
Name
Name of Narmer in full format
The
complete spelling of Narmer's name consists of the hieroglyphs for a catfish (nꜥr)[d] and
a chisel (mr), hence the reading "Narmer" (using the rebus
principle). This word is sometimes translated as "raging catfish".[25]
However, there is no consensus on this reading. Other translations of the
adjective before "catfish" include "angry",
"fighting", "fierce", "painful",
"furious", "bad", "evil", "biting",
"menacing", and "stinging".[4][5][6] Some scholars have
taken entirely different approaches to reading the name that do not include
"catfish" in the name at all,[26][27][28] but these approaches have
not been generally accepted.
Rather
than incorporating both hieroglyphs, Narmer's name is often shown in an abbreviated
form with just the catfish symbol, sometimes stylized, even, in some cases,
represented by just a horizontal line.[29][full citation needed] This
simplified spelling appears to be related to the formality of the context. In
every case that a serekh is shown on a work of stone or an official seal
impression, it has both symbols. But, in most cases, where the name is shown on
a piece of pottery or a rock inscription, just the catfish, or a simplified
version of it appears.
The date
commonly given for the beginning of Narmer's reign is c. 3100 BC (± 150 years),
which is derived from several sources including the Turin Canon.[7][35][36] A
2013 study, using radiocarbon dating and Bayesian statistics, placed the reign
of Aha (Narmer's successor) most likely between 3111 and 3045 BC (with 68%
confidence), with a broader range of 3218 to 3035 BC (with 95% confidence).[37]
Other mainstream estimates, using both the historical method and radiocarbon
dating, are in the range c. 3173–2987 BC.[e]
Two
alternative spellings of Narmer's name have also been found. On a mud sealing
from Tarkhan, the symbol for the ṯꜣj-bird
(Gardiner sign G47 "duckling") has been added to the two symbols for
"Narmer" within the serekh. This has been interpreted as meaning
"Narmer the masculine";[30] however, according to Ilona Regulski,[31]
"The third sign (the [ṯꜣj]-bird)
is not an integral part of the royal name since it occurs so
infrequently." Godron[32] suggested that the extra sign is not part of the
name, but was put inside the serekh for compositional convenience.
Serekhs bearing the rebus symbols n'r (catfish) and mr (chisel) inside, being the phonetic representation of Narmer's name[23]
In addition, two necropolis seals from Abydos
show the name in a unique way: While
the chisel is shown conventionally where the catfish would be expected, there
is a symbol that has been interpreted by several scholars as an animal
skin.[33] According to Dreyer, it is probably a catfish with a bull's tail,
similar to the image of Narmer on the Narmer Palette in which he is shown
wearing a bull's tail as a symbol of power.[34]
Reign
The date
commonly given for the beginning of Narmer's reign is c. 3100 BC (± 150 years),
which is derived from several sources including the Turin Canon.[7][35][36] A
2013 study, using radiocarbon dating and Bayesian statistics, placed the reign
of Aha (Narmer's successor) most likely between 3111 and 3045 BC (with 68%
confidence), with a broader range of 3218 to 3035 BC (with 95% confidence).[37]
Other mainstream estimates, using both the historical method and radiocarbon
dating, are in the range c. 3173–2987 BC.[e]
Unification
of Upper and Lower Egypt
The
famous Narmer Palette, discovered by James E. Quibell in the 1897–1898 season
at Hierakonpolis,[38] shows Narmer wearing the crown of Upper Egypt on one side
of the palette, and the crown of Lower Egypt on the other side, giving rise to
the theory that Narmer unified the two lands.[39] Since its discovery, however,
it has been debated whether the Narmer Palette represents an actual historic
event or is purely symbolic.[f] Of course, the Narmer Palette could represent
an actual historical event while at the same time having a symbolic
significance.
Narmer Palette
In 1993,
Günter Dreyer discovered a "year label" of Narmer at Abydos,
depicting the same event that is depicted on the Narmer Palette. In the First
Dynasty, years were identified by the name of the king and an important event
that occurred in that year. A "year label" was typically attached to
a container of goods and included the name of the king, a description or
representation of the event that identified the year, and a description of the
attached goods. This year label shows that the Narmer Palette depicts an actual
historical event.[40] Support for this conclusion (in addition to Dreyer)
includes Wilkinson[41] and Davies & Friedman.[42] Although this
interpretation of the year label is the dominant opinion among Egyptologists,
there are exceptions including Baines[43] and Wengrow.[44]
Archaeological
evidence suggests that Egypt was at least partially unified during the reigns
of Ka and Iry-Hor (Narmer's immediate predecessors), and perhaps as early as
Scorpion I. Tax collection is probably documented for Ka[47] and Iry-Hor.[48]
The evidence for a role for Scorpion I in Lower Egypt comes from his tomb Uj in
Abydos (Upper Egypt), where labels were found identifying goods from Lower
Egypt.[49] These are not tax documents, however, so they are probably
indications of trade rather than subjugation. There is a substantial difference
in the quantity and distribution of inscriptions with the names of those
earlier kings in Lower Egypt and Canaan (which was reached through Lower
Egypt), compared to the inscriptions of Narmer. Ka's inscriptions have been
found in three sites in Lower Egypt and one in Canaan.[50] Iry-Hor inscriptions
have also been found in two sites in Lower Egypt and one in Canaan.[50][51] This
must be compared to Narmer, whose serekhs have been found in ten sites in Lower
Egypt and nine sites in Canaan
(See
discussion in "Tomb and Artefacts" section).
This
demonstrates a qualitative difference between Narmer's role in Lower Egypt
compared to his two immediate predecessors. There is no evidence in Lower Egypt
of any Upper Egyptian king's presence before Iry-Hor. The archaeological
evidence suggest that the unification began before Narmer, but was completed by
him through the conquest of a polity in the north-west Delta as depicted on the
Narmer Palette.[52]
The
importance that Narmer attached to his "unification" of Egypt is
shown by the fact that it is commemorated not only on the Narmer Palette, but
on a cylinder seal,[53] the Narmer Year Label,[40] and the Narmer Boxes;[54]
and the consequences of the event are commemorated on the Narmer Macehead.[55]
The importance of the unification to ancient Egyptians is shown by the fact
that Narmer is shown as the first king on the two necropolis seals, and under
the name Menes, the first king in the later King Lists. Although there is
archaeological evidence of a few kings before Narmer, none of them are
mentioned in any of those sources. It can be accurately said that from the
point of view of Ancient Egyptians, history began with Narmer and the
unification of Egypt, and that everything before him was relegated to the realm
of myth.
Narmer Macehead
Peak
of Egyptian presence in Canaan
According
to Manetho, quoted by Eusebius (Fr. 7a), "Menes made a foreign expedition
and won renown." If this is correct (and assuming it refers to Narmer), it
was undoubtedly to the land of Canaan where Narmer's serekh has been identified
at nine different sites. An Egyptian presence in Canaan predates Narmer, but
after about 200 years of active presence in Canaan,[56] Egyptian presence
peaked during Narmer's reign and quickly declined afterwards. The relationship
between Egypt and Canaan "began around the end of the fifth millennium and
apparently came to an end sometime during the Second Dynasty when it ceased
altogether."[57] It peaked during Dynasty 0 through the reign of
Narmer.[58] Dating to this period are 33 Egyptian serekhs found in Canaan,[58]
among which 20 have been attributed to Narmer. Prior to Narmer, only one serekh
of Ka and one inscription with Iry-Hor's name have been found in Canaan.[59]
The serekhs earlier than Iry-Hor are either generic serekhs that do not refer
to a specific king, or are for kings not attested in Abydos.[58] Indicative of
the decline of Egyptian presence in the region after Narmer, only one serekh
attributed to his successor, Hor-Aha, has been found in Canaan.[58] Even this
one example is questionable, Wilkinson does not believe there are any serekhs
of Hor-Aha outside Egypt[60] and very few serekhs of kings for the rest of the
first two dynasties have been found in Canaan.[61]
The
Egyptian presence in Canaan is best demonstrated by the presence of pottery
made from Egyptian Nile clay and found in Canaan,[g] as well as pottery made
from local clay, but in the Egyptian style. The latter suggests the existence
of Egyptian colonies rather than just trade.[63]
The
nature of Egypt's role in Canaan has been vigorously debated, between scholars
who suggest a military invasion[64] and others proposing that only trade and
colonization were involved. The latter has gained predominance.[63][65] Tell
es-Sakan was a walled city dating to Dynasty 0 through early Dynasty 1 period,
and built almost entirely using an Egyptian style of construction. As the only
fortified Egyptian site in the region it likely functioned as a centre of
administration.[66]
Regardless
of the nature of Egypt's presence in Canaan, control of trade to (and through)
Canaan was important to Ancient Egypt. Narmer probably did not establish
Egypt's initial influence in Canaan by a military invasion, but a military
campaign by Narmer to re-assert Egyptian authority, or to increase its sphere
of influence in the region, is certainly plausible. In addition to the quote by
Manetho, and the large number of Narmer serekhs found in Canaan, a recent
reconstruction of a box of Narmer's by Dreyer may have commemorated a military
campaign in Canaan.[67] It may also represent just the presentation of tribute
to Narmer by Canaanites.[67]
Neithhotep
Narmer
and Hor-Aha's names were both found in what is believed to be Neithhotep's
tomb, which led Egyptologists to conclude that she was Narmer's queen and
mother of Hor-Aha.[68] Neithhotep's name means "Neith is satisfied".
This suggests that she was a princess of Lower Egypt (based on the fact that
Neith is the patron goddess of Sais in the Western Delta, exactly the area
Narmer conquered to complete the unification of Egypt), and that this was a
marriage to consolidate the two regions of Egypt.[68] The fact that her tomb is
in Naqada, in Upper Egypt, has led some to the conclusion that she was a descendant
of the predynastic rulers of Naqada who ruled prior to its incorporation into a
united Upper Egypt.[69] It has also been suggested that the Narmer Macehead
commemorates this wedding.[70] However, the discovery in 2012 of rock
inscriptions in Sinai by Pierre Tallet[71] raise questions about whether she
was really Narmer's wife.[h] Neithhotep is probably the earliest non-mythical
woman in history whose name is known to us today.[73]
Tomb
and artifacts
Narmer's
tomb in Umm el-Qa'ab near Abydos in Upper Egypt consists of two joined chambers
(B17 and B18), lined in mud brick. Although both Émile Amélineau and Petrie
excavated tombs B17 and B18, it was only in 1964 that Kaiser identified them as
being Narmer's.[74][full citation needed][i] Narmer's tomb is located next to
the tombs of Ka, who likely ruled Upper Egypt just before Narmer, and Hor-Aha,
who was his immediate successor.[j]
As the
tomb dates back more than 5,000 years, and has been pillaged, repeatedly, from
antiquity to modern times, it is amazing that anything useful could be
discovered in it. Because of the repeated disturbances in Umm el-Qa'ab, many
articles of Narmer's were found in other graves, and objects of other kings
were recovered in Narmer's grave. However, Flinders Petrie during the period
1899–1903,[77][78] and, starting in the 1970s, the German Archaeological
Institute (DAI)[k] have made discoveries of the greatest importance to the
history of Early Egypt by their re-excavation of the tombs of Umm el-Qa'ab.
Despite
the chaotic condition of the cemetery, inscriptions on both wood and bone, seal
impressions, as well as dozens of flint arrowheads were found. (Petrie says
with dismay that "hundreds" of arrowheads were discovered by
"the French", presumably Amélineau. What happened to them is not
clear, but none ended up in the Cairo Museum.[79]) Flint knives and a fragment
of an ebony chair leg were also discovered in Narmer's tomb, all of which might
be part of the original funerary assemblage. The flint knives and fragment of a
chair leg were not included in any of Petrie's publications, but are now at the
Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology (University College London), registration
numbers UC35679, UC52786, and UC35682. According to Dreyer,[34][unreliable
source] these arrowheads are probably from the tomb of Djer, where similar
arrowheads were found.[80]
It is
likely that all of the kings of Ancient Egypt buried in Umm el-Qa'ab had
funerary enclosures in Abydos' northern cemetery, near the cultivation line.
These were characterized by large mud brick walls that enclosed space in which
funerary ceremonies are believed to have taken place. Eight enclosures have
been excavated, two of which have not been definitely identified.[81][82] While
it has yet to be confirmed, one of these unidentified funerary enclosures may
have belonged to Narmer.[l]
Artifacts
Narmer serekh in its full formal format on an alabaster vase from Abydos
Narmer is
well attested throughout Egypt, southern Canaan and Sinai: altogether 98
inscriptions at 26 sites.[m] At Abydos and Hierakonpolis Narmer's name appears
both within a serekh and without reference to a serekh. At every other site
except Coptos, Narmer's name appears in a serekh. In Egypt, his name has been
found at 17 sites:
4 in
Upper Egypt: Hierakonpolis,[88] Naqada,[89][90] Abydos,[77][78] and
Coptos[91][92]
10 in
Lower Egypt: Tarkhan,[93][94] Helwan,[95][96] Zawyet el'Aryan,[97] Tell Ibrahim
Awad,[98] Ezbet el-Tell,[99] Minshat Abu Omar,[100][101] Saqqara,[102][103]
Buto,[104] Tell el-Farkha,[105][106] and Kafr Hassan Dawood[107]
1 in the
Eastern Desert: Wadi el-Qaash[108]
2 in the
Western Desert: Kharga Oasis[109][110] and Gebel Tjauti[111][112]
During
Narmer's reign, Egypt had an active economic presence in southern Canaan.
Pottery sherds have been discovered at several sites, both from pots made in
Egypt and imported to Canaan and others made in the Egyptian style out of local
materials. Twenty serekhs have been found in Canaan that may belong to Narmer,
but seven of those are uncertain or controversial. These serekhs came from
eight different sites: Tel Arad,[113][114] En Besor (Ein HaBesor),[115][116]
Tell es-Sakan,[117][118] Nahal Tillah (Halif Terrace),[119] Tel Erani (Tel
Gat),[120][121] Small Tel Malhata [fr],[122][123] Tel Ma'ahaz,[124] and Tel
Lod,[125]
Narmer's
serekh, along with those of other Predynastic and Early Dynastic kings, has
been found at the Wadi 'Ameyra in the southern Sinai, where inscriptions
commemorate Egyptian mining expeditions to the area.[126][127]
Nag
el-Hamdulab
First
recorded at the end of the 19th century, an important series of rock carvings at
Nag el-Hamdulab near Aswan was rediscovered in 2009, and its importance only
realized then.[128][full citation needed][129][130] Among the many
inscriptions, tableau 7a shows a man wearing a headdress similar to the White
Crown of Upper Egypt and carrying a scepter. He is followed by a man with a
fan. He is then preceded by two men with standards, and accompanied by a dog.
Apart from the dog motif, this scene is similar to scenes on the Scorpion
Macehead and the recto of the Narmer Palette. The man, equipped with pharaonic
regalia (the crown and scepter), can clearly be identified as a king. Although
no name appears in the tableau, Darnell[129] attributes it to Narmer, based on
the iconography, and suggests that it might represent an actual visit to the region
by Narmer for a "Following of Horus" ritual. In an interview in 2012,
Gatto[131][full citation needed] also describes the king in the inscription as
Narmer. However, Hendricks (2016) places the scene slightly before Narmer,
based, in part on the uncharacteristic absence of Narmer's royal name in the
inscription.
Chambers B17 and B18 in the Umm el-Qa'ab, which constitute the tomb of Narmer
The First
Pharaoh (The First Dynasty Book 1) by Lester Picker is a fictionalized
biography of Narmer. The author consulted with Egyptologist Günter Dreyer to
achieve authenticity.[132]
Murder by
the Gods: An Ancient Egyptian Mystery by William G. Collins is a thriller about
Prince Aha (later king Hor-Aha), with Narmer included in a secondary role.[133]
Pharaoh:
The Boy who Conquered the Nile by Jackie French is a children's book (ages
10–14) about the adventures of Prince Narmer.[134]
The Third
Gate by Lincoln Child is the third book in the Jeremy Logan series and revolves
primarily around the discovery and exploration of a fictional secret burial
place of Narmer.
Warframe
uses Narmer's name for a faction added in The New War update that shares some
similarities to the pharaoh's reign.[135]
In The
Kane Chronicles by Rick Riordan, one of siblings Carter and Sadie's parents
comes from Narmer's lineage, the other from Ramses the Great (book one, The Red
Pyramid, page 195).
With
affection,
Ruben


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