Hrobka muže bez tváře. Předběžná zpráva o výzkumu hrobky Anchirese (AS 98), inspektora kadeřníků královského paláce
Tomb of a faceless man. Preliminary report on the excavations of the tomb of Ankhires (AS 98), the inspector of hairdressers of the Great House
Článek
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Trvalý odkaz
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/100841Identifikátory
ISSN: 1801-3899
Kolekce
- Číslo 20 [9]
Datum vydání
2018Nakladatel
Univerzita Karlova, Filozofická fakultaZdrojový dokument
Pražské egyptologické studie (Prague Egyptological Studies)Rok vydání periodika: 2018
Ročník periodika: 2018
Číslo periodika: 20
Práva a licenční podmínky
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.0/Klíčová slova (česky)
jižní Abúsír, Stará říše, 5. dynastie, Niuserre, mastaba, reliéfní výzdoba, pozdní pohřeb, rakev, amuletKlíčová slova (anglicky)
Abusir South, Old Kingdom, Fifth Dynasty, Nyuserre, mastaba, relief decoration, later burial, coffin, amuletDuring the autumn season of 2016, the tomb of an
inspector of hairdressers of the Great House, Ankhires
(AS 98), commenced excavation. The works were finished
in the autumn season of 2017. In the architecture of the
mastaba, two building phases were detected. Its cultic
places were accessible from the north. A corridor chapel,
where two levels of mud floor, a possible mud brick altar
and a northern niche in the western wall were uncovered,
leads to Room 2, giving access to abundantly decorated
Room 1 with polychrome reliefs in at least three registers.
The wall decoration of the funerary chapel was largely
destroyed; only one block remained in situ and several
fragments of the false door were found in the debris.
In the core of the mastaba, only one shaft was uncovered.
It was 11.75 m deep with a burial chamber at its bottom.
An entrance into the burial apartment was in the western
wall of the shaft. Neither the bottom of the shaft, nor the
burial chamber were finished, though. This fact is fairly
surprising taking into consideration the tomb’s intricate
architecture. The tomb is preliminarily dated to the late
Fifth Dynasty (Nyuserre – Djedkare).
Interestingly enough, six late burials in wooden coffins
(67–69/AS98/2017, 99–101/AS98/2017) from the end of
the First Millennium BC were excavated by the western
part of the entrance into the mastaba, and to the east of
its eastern outer wall. The coffins were decorated very
simply. However, the timber was very fragile and that is
why the coffins had decayed, with the exception of two
examples (67/AS98/2017 and 68/AS98/2017). In front of
the eastern outer wall, three faience amulets were found
(96/AS98/2017, 103/AS98/2017, 105/AS98/2017). These
might be related to the late burials.