Qakare Ibi
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Qakare Ibi (died Template:Circa 2167 BC) was an ancient Egyptian king during the early First Intermediate Period (2181–2055 BC) and the 14th ruler of the Eighth Dynasty.<ref name="ryholt2000"/><ref name="encyclo"/><ref name="beck">Jürgen von Beckerath: Handbuch der ägyptischen Königsnamen, Münchner ägyptologische Studien, Heft 49, Mainz : P. von Zabern, 1999, Template:ISBN, available online Template:Webarchive see pp. 68-69</ref> As such, Ibi's seat of power was Memphis<ref>Ian Shaw: The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, p.107, Template:ISBN</ref> and he probably did not hold power over all of Egypt. Ibi is one of the best attested kings of the Eighth Dynasty due to the discovery of his small pyramid in South Saqqara.
AttestationsEdit
Qakare Ibi is attested on the 53rd entry of the Abydos King List, a king list which was redacted some 900 years after the First Intermediate Period during the reign of Seti I.<ref name="encyclo">Darrell D. Baker: The Encyclopedia of the Pharaohs: Volume I - Predynastic to the Twentieth Dynasty 3300–1069 BC, Stacey International, Template:ISBN, 2008, p. 302</ref><ref name="beck1">Jürgen von Beckerath: The Date of the End of the Old Kingdom of Egypt, JNES 21 (1962)</ref> According to Kim Ryholt's latest reconstruction of the Turin canon, another king list compiled in the Ramesside era, Qakare Ibi is also attested there on column 5, line 10 (Gardiner 4.11, von Beckerath 4.10). The Turin canon further indicates that he reigned for "2 years, 1 month and 1 day".<ref name="ryholt2000"/><ref name="encyclo"/> The only other attestion for Qakare Ibi is his pyramid in South Saqqara.
Pyramid complexEdit
At Saqqara-South, Qakare Ibi was buried in a small pyramid. It was discovered by Karl Richard Lepsius in the 19th century who listed it as the number XL in his pioneering list of pyramids.<ref>Karl Richard Lepsius: Denkmäler aus Aegypten und Aethiopien, available online.</ref> The pyramid was excavated from 1929 until 1931 by Gustave Jéquier.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
Ibi's pyramid is the last built in Saqqara, located to the northeast of Shepseskaf's tomb and near the causeway of the Pyramid of Pepi II.<ref>"Saqqara, City of the Dead: The Pyramid of Ibi" The Ancient Egypt Site Template:Webarchive</ref> It is very similar in plan, dimensions and decorations to the pyramids of the queens of Pepi II, the last great pharaoh of the Old Kingdom. Consequently, it was proposed that the pyramid was originally that of Ankhnespepi IV (ˁnḫ-n=s ppj, "Pepi lives for her") a wife of Pepi II, and was only later appropriated by Ibi.<ref name="Stadelmann-Ibi">Rainer Stadelmann: The Egyptian pyramids. From brick to the wonders of the world. 3rd edition of Saverne, Mainz, 1997, Template:ISBN, pp. 203-204.</ref> Adjacent to the pyramid is a small chapel where the funerary cult took place. No trace of a causeway nor of a valley temple has been found to this day, and it is likely that there never was any.
The pyramidEdit
Ibi's pyramid is not oriented to any cardinal point, being rather on a northwest–southeast axis. The edifice would have been around Template:Convert large and Template:Convert high with a slope of 53°7′ at the time of its construction.<ref name="encyclo"/> The core of the pyramid was built with limestone blocks of local origin, most of which are now gone, probably reused in later constructions. As a result, the monument appears today as a Template:Convert high heap of mud and limestone chips in the sands of Saqqara. On some of the remaining blocks, inscriptions in red ink were found mentioning a chief of the Libyans, the meaning of which is unclear. It seems that even though the foundations for the outer casing of the pyramid were laid, the casing itself was never mounted.
Internal structuresEdit
On the north side of the edifice, Jéquier found an Template:Convert long limestone-clad corridor leading down with an inclination of 25° to a large granite portcullis.<ref name="encyclo"/><ref name="ReferenceA">Gustave Jéquier, La pyramide d'Aba, 1935</ref> Behind this portcullis lay the king's burial chamber. Both the corridor and the walls of the burial chamber were inscribed with the last known instance of the Pyramid Texts.<ref name="encyclo"/><ref name="ReferenceA"/> The texts seem to have been directly inscribed for Ibi rather than appropriated by him, although the possibility of the texts being rescribed can not be ruled out. Jéquier judged the quality of the inscriptions as "very average".<ref name="ReferenceA"/> Furthermore, the placement of the spells appears relatively indiscriminate.<ref name="Stadelmann-Ibi"/> The burial chamber's ceiling was flat and decorated with stars. It was probably made of a single Template:Convert long block of Tura limestone<ref name="ReferenceA"/> now missing. Today a large block of concrete protects the chamber.
On the west side of the burial chamber is a false door and a huge granite block on which once stood the sarcophagus of the king. On the east side there is a serdab for the statue of the Ka of the deceased.
ChapelEdit
Adjacent to the east side of the pyramid is a small mudbrick chapel which served as temple for the cult of the dead king.<ref name="encyclo"/> The entrance of the chapel is located on its north side. Inside the temple, immediately against the pyramid wall is an offering hall where Jequier found a stone washbasin as well as stele or a false door of which only the foundations remain. An alabaster tray and obsidian mortar tools were also discovered there.
The south part of the chapel is occupied by magazine rooms.
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
BibliographyEdit
- Mark Lehner. The secret of the pyramids of Egypt, Orbis, Munich 1999, Template:ISBN, p. 164
- Christopher Theis: The Pyramids of the First Intermediate Period. After philological and archaeological sources (= studies of ancient Egyptian culture. Vol 39, 2010). pp. 321–339.
- Miroslav Verner. The Pyramids Universe Books, New 1998, Template:ISBN, pp. 415–416.
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