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Dating the Egyptian Old Kingdom: The reign of Djedkare (5th dynasty)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2024

Anita Quiles*
Affiliation:
Laboratoire de mesure du Carbone 14, LSCE/LMC14, CEA Saclay, Bât.450, pte 4E, 91191 Gif sur Yvette Cedex, France Institut français d’archéologie orientale du Caire, 37 Cheikh Aly Youssef, B.P Qasr al-Ainy 11562, 11411 Cairo, Egypt
Hana Vymazalová
Affiliation:
Czech Institute of Egyptology, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, nám. Jana Palacha 2, 11638 Prague, Czech Republic
Miroslav Bárta
Affiliation:
Czech Institute of Egyptology, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, nám. Jana Palacha 2, 11638 Prague, Czech Republic
Mohamed Megahed
Affiliation:
Czech Institute of Egyptology, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, nám. Jana Palacha 2, 11638 Prague, Czech Republic
*
Corresponding author: Anita Quiles; Email: anita.quiles@cea.fr
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Abstract

This study aims to discuss the chronology of the Egyptian 5th dynasty of the Old Kingdom and the tentative date of accession of king Djedkare based on material from his royal necropolis at South Saqqara and non-royal cemetery of Abusir South, Egypt. A series of radiocarbon (14C) dates were established through analysis of archaeological material from several monuments at the necropolis, including the king’s pyramid complex, pyramid complex of his queen, and two elite tombs (Isesiankh and Khuwy). In addition, two samples from non-royal tombs in the Abusir South cemetery, were taken into consideration for further precision during the modeling, associated with king Huni (end 3rd dynasty) and king Niuserre (5th dynasty). The contextualized 14C dates together with re-evaluation of historical evidence on Djedkare’s rule, results in a new model of temporal probability density which can be further refined with any new data from archaeological research. It shows that Djedkare’s reign can be currently modelled between 2503 and 2449 BCE (95.4%), thus slightly older than expected by literature. This presented model provides a more precise chronological frame for the late 5th dynasty period of Egyptian history, which was period of a significant socio-economic transformation.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of University of Arizona
Figure 0

Figure 1. A satellite image of the necropolis with the pyramid complexes of Djedkare (1), Pepy I (2), Merenre (3) and Pepy II (4), and the 4th Dynasty Mastabat Faraun of Shepseskaf (5) shows also the vast unexcavated areas of the South Saqqara site (detail of the satellite image by World View 2, Nov. 30, 2020, after Bárta and Brůna 2021, 115).

Figure 1

Figure 2. Djedkare’s necropolis at South Saqqara (Djedkare Project, © Hana Vymazalová).

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Figure 3. Examples of samples collected in the Djedkare’s cemetery: rope sample (IFAO_1052 © Ifao) and its original position (© Djedkare Project, Mohamed Megahed), pieces of mummy wrappings and textiles (IFAO_0971 and IFAO_0972 © Djedkare Project, Ahmed Gabr).

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Figure 4. Comparison of FTIR spectra on samples IFAO_0971(above) and IFAO_0972 (below) before (in black) and after cleaning (in green). They are compared to the spectrum of a modern linen (in red).

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Table 1. 14C results of analyses carried out on Djedkare’s cemetery samples and the Abusir South sample

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Figure 5. Calibrated probability densities obtained on samples coming from the Djedkare’s cemetery. Textiles samples are in red, the rope is in orange and the pieces of charcoal are in black.

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Figure 6. Sequence model of the 14C results obtained on samples archaeologically attributed to the reign of king Djedkare.

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Figure 7. Modeling of the previous sequence by constraining the whole sequence to have lasted from 29 to 44 years maximum. a] simulated boundaries for the beginning and end of Djedkare’s reign; b] correlation graph between the two previous simulated boundaries; c] modeling of the interval corresponding to the duration of Djedkare’s reign, described a priori as After(29)&Before (44+5*T(5)), d] results modeled on the calibration curve (IntCal20).

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Figure 8. Niuserre’s reign. a] Modeled boundaries corresponding to the end of the 3rd dyn., the end of Niuserre reign and surrounding the reign of Djedkare; b] plotting results on the calibration curve (IntCal20); c] correlation plot between the start (x-axis) and end (y-axis- modeled probability density for Djedkare’s reign.

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Figure 9. Comparison of 14C results obtained on Textiles and Rope samples (red), Charcoal samples (black), and the analysis carried out by the Oxford lab on a Papyrus sample from the British Museum (green).

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Table 2. Results of modeling obtained for the accession date and the end of reign of king Djedkare

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Figure 10. Comparison of the modeled temporal estimates for the accession dates of king Den (from Quiles and Tristant 2023), king Pepy II (from Quiles et al. 2023), to the Sum of the modeled probability densities obtained for the Boundaries “Djedkare’s accession date” and “Djedkare’s end of reign.”.

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Figure 11. Modeling of the intervals of years between the successive reigns. For Den-Huni and End Djedkare-Pepy II, no prior probability distribution was put in the model.