| Djedkare Isesi | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tankeris | ||||
| Gold cylinder seal bearing the names and titles of the pharaoh Djedkare Isesi. | ||||
| Pharaoh of Egypt | ||||
| Reign | 2414–2375 BC, 5th dynasty | |||
| Predecessor | Menkauhor Kaiu | |||
| Successor | Unas | |||
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| Died | 2375 BC | |||
Djedkare Isesi in Greek known as Tancheres[1] from Manetho's Aegyptiaca, was a Pharaoh of Egypt during the Fifth dynasty. He is assigned a reign of twenty-eight years by the Turin Canon although some Egyptologists believe this is an error and should rather be thirty-eight years. Manetho ascribes to him a reign of forty-four years while the archaeological evidence suggests that his reign is likely to have exceeded thirty-two years. His prenomen or royal name—Djedkare—means "The Soul of Ra Endureth."[2]
Djedkare Isesi did not, as was customary for his dynasty, build his own sun temple, but did build his pyramid at Saqqara instead of Abusir. This is believed to be a sign that Osiris had now replaced the sun-god Ra as the most popular god. Titles were now thought to hold magical power; their growing importance believed to be a sign of a gradual decentralization of power.
An entire series of dated administrative papyri from Djedkare's reign, (the Prisse Papyrus at the Louvre, authored by Ptah-hotep), was discovered in king Neferirkare's mortuary temple. According to Miroslav Verner, Djedkare Isesi's highest known date is a Year 22 IV Akhet day 12 papyrus,[3] which would belong anywhere from Year 32 to Year 44 of his reign depending on whether the Cattle Count was Bi-annual (2 times) or semi-annual (1.5 times).
Djedkare Isesi's reign is well documented both by the Abusir papyri as well as by numerous royal seals and contemporary inscriptions; taken together, they indicate a fairly long reign for this king.[4]
His almost complete mummy, along with a badly broken basalt sarcophagus and a niche for the canopic chest, was discovered in his damaged pyramid tomb at Saqqara.
See also
References
- Miroslav Verner, Archaeological Remarks on the 4th and 5th Dynasty Chronology, Archiv Orientální, Volume 69: 2001, pp. 405-410 (coverage of Djedkare Isesi's reign)
External links
- Egyptian Kings
- The Instruction of Ptahhotep Index Page (Prisse Papyrus)
- The Mastaba of Ptahhotep reliefs from his tomb (Prisse Papyrus)
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