Semerkhet

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Persondata
NAME Semerkhet
ALTERNATIVE NAMES {{{Alt}}}
SHORT DESCRIPTION Pharaoh of Egypt
DATE OF BIRTH {{{Birth}}}
PLACE OF BIRTH Ancient Egypt
DATE OF DEATH {{{Death}}}
PLACE OF DEATH Ancient Egypt
Preceded by:
Anedjib
Pharaoh of Egypt
1st Dynasty
Succeeded by:
Qa'a
Semerkhet
Reign 9 years
Horus name
G5
s U23 F32
Image:srxtail2.GIF
Semerkhet
Issues Qa'a?
Burial Tomb in Umm el-Qa'ab, Abydos
Major
Monuments
Tomb in Umm el-Qa'ab

Semerkhet was the sixth king of Ancient Egypt's First Dynasty who ruled around 2950 BC. Although little is known of his reign, Semerkhet seems to have had a difficult time as king judging by the records of Manetho.

Manetho states that there were numerous disasters in Semerkhet's reign but he alleges that this was due to the fact Semerkhet was an usurper to the throne. Semerkhet deliberately scrubbed Anedjib's name from numerous artifacts, but Semerket's own name was later omitted from the Saqqara King List. He did, however, manage to build a much larger royal tomb than Anedjib despite his short 9 year reign. Semerkhet is only known otherwise from one or two contemporary artifacts and, more importantly, in the Palermo Stone Annals.

Contents

Although the third BCE Egyptian priest Manetho records that this king ruled Egypt for 18 years, this figure apparently included an otiose decade to his reign. Toby Wilkinson in his analysis of the Palermo Stone in Royal Annals of Ancient Egypt, specifically notes that Cairo Fragment One register III of this document gives "Semerkhet 8 1/2 years (this figure is certain, since the entire reign is recorded [here]." (Wilkinson: pp.78 & 258) Semerkhet's royal name, written in a serekh, was also preserved in this section of the document--hence the 9 year reign can only belong to him. Wilkinson concludes that this king had a reign of 9 full or partial years based on the 5th Dynasty Palermo Stone Annal which would have provided more accurate figures for the reign of the 1st and 2nd Dynasty kings. (Wilkinson: p.80)

Semerkhet is buried in Tomb U of the royal necropolis at Umm el-Qa'ab, near Abydos.

  • Toby A. H. Wilkinson, Early Dynastic Egypt, Routledge, London/New York 1999, ISBN 0-415-18633-1, 79-80
  • Toby Wilkinson, Royal Annals of Ancient Egypt: The Palermo Stone and Its Associated Fragments, (Kegan Paul International), 2000.

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