San Diego Museum of Man-2001.063.0001

Accession Number: 
2001.063.0001
English

Ir.t-Hr-r=w

Irethoreru

There are many things about the coffin of Irethoreru that remain a mystery. We don't know where Irethoreru lived or was buried or what he did for a living. We also don't know where Irethoreru himself is now located. However, his coffin now resides in the San Diego Museum of Man, and was donated to the museum in 2001.

We suspect, because of the style of the his coffin, that Irethoreru may have been buried in Middle Egypt. The beard on the coffin projects from the neck in a solid block, which is a feature that has been noted on several coffins from el-Hibeh1. The back of his coffin appears to have once been decorated with an image of a standing goddess (only the hatching on her dress remains visible) which is a feature characteristic of coffins from the Fayum area 2. In another similarity with coffins from the aforementioned sites, long snakes with their heads at the shoulders of the deceased undulate down both sides of the coffin.

The coffin probably dates from between the Saite Period (26th Dynasty) and the Ptolemaic Period. Irethoreru’s name means “May the Eye of Horus Be Against Them”3—an allusion to the belief in the power of the eye of Horus to ward off evil in whatever form it might take.  Furthermore, Irethoreru bears a unique title of which we have not been able to find another example—“xw-iwa”. We have tentatively translated it as “Protector of the Meat Offerings”. Another possilibity is "Protector of the Heir". His coffin gives the names of members of three generations of his family: his mother, Tabetja4 , his father, Sematawyirdis 5 , and his father’s father, whose name is lost. None of them are known from any other monuments.

All that remains of Irethoreru's grandfather's name is a title (which we originally thought to be the name itself): sA-mr=f. This title gives us an important clue as to where the coffin originally came from. Sa-mr=f priests are a type of priest associated with the syncretism of Osiris and the local god of Herakleopolis Magna, Heryshef6. Perhaps not coincidentally, Heryshef appears on Irethoru's coffin, among the protective funerary deities. This evidence of Irethoreru'a grandfather's title, and the stylistic similarities with Middle Egyptian coffins described above indicate that Irethoreru probably lived and was buried in one of the cemeteries around Herakleopolis Magna, perhaps Abusir el-Melek.

Notes: 
  • 1 Gessler-Löhr, Beatrix. "Eine Gruppe Spätzeitlicher Mumiensärge Aus El-Hibeh." In Burial and Mortuary Practices in Late Period and Graeco-Roman Egypt, edited by Katalin A Kóthay, 195-41. Budapest: Museum of Fine Arts, Budapest, 2017. P 207.
  • 2 Stövesand, Katharina. "Regional Variability in Late Period Egypt: Coffin Traditions in Middle Egypt." In Ancient Egyptian Coffins: Craft Traditions and Functionality, edited by John H Taylor and Marie Vandenbeusch, 389-403. Leuven: Peeters, 2018. P 339.
  • 3 Ranke PN I, 42:11
  • Similar to PN I 356:17
  • 5 Ranke, PN I, 296:11
  • 6 Mokhtar, Mohamed Gamal el-Din. Ihnâsya El-Medina (Herakleopolis Magna): Its Importance and Its Role in Pharaonic History. Publications de l’Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale du Caire, 1983. p 196-197 
Publications: 

Unpublished

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San Diego Museum of Man-2001.063.0001- Irethoreru

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