Djedankhre Montemsaf

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Djedankhre Montemsaf was a

Second Intermediate Period c. 1590 BC.[2][3] As such, he would have ruled concurrently with the 15th Dynasty, which controlled Lower and Middle Egypt
.

Attestations

Gebelein

Djedankhre Montemsaf is attested by an inscribed block found in Gebelein.[1][4]

Unknown Provenance

A bronze axe-blade of unknown origin, now in the British Museum, and bearing "The good god Djedankhre, given life".

Two scarab seals of unknown provenance: Scarab BM EA 40687 and Scarab Petrie Museum UC 11225[1][5]

King Lists

Djedankhre Montemsaf is not attested on the surviving fragments of the Turin canon, his reign and those of four other kings of the end of the 16th Dynasty being lost in a lacuna.[2] For this reason, the exact chronological position as well as the length of his reign cannot be ascertained.

Speculations

Dynasty 13

An older study by

Mentuhotep VI and succeeded by Dedumose I on the throne.[6]

Dynasty 16

According to the new arrangement of kings of the Second Intermediate Period and

He was thus a king of the late 16th Dynasty and may have reigned ca. 1590 BC. The arguments supporting this chronological position are: 1) the form of his prenomen Ḏd-X-Rˁ, which is in common with those of Dedumose I and Dedumose II; 2) the location of finds attesting Montemsaf in Thebes and the south; and 3) the style of the axe-blade which can be dated to the late Second Intermediate Period.

References

  1. ^ , 2008, p. 221
  2. ^ a b Kim Ryholt: The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, Museum Tusculanum Press, (1997), p. 202
  3. ^ Chris Bennett, A Genealogical Chronology of the Seventeenth Dynasty, Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt, Vol. 39 (2002), pp. 123-155 JSTOR
  4. ^ see scarab here[permanent dead link].
  5. ^ Jürgen von Beckerath: Untersuchungen zur politischen Geschichte der zweiten Zwischenzeit in Ägypten, Glückstadt 1964, (XIII G.)
  6. ^ New arrangement, Digital Egypt for Universities