The 2nd and 3rd dynasties in ancient Egypt |
There were kinship links between Khasekhemwy and the 3rd
dynasty, but the change between them is marked by a definitive shift of the
royal burial place to Memphis. Its first king, Sanakhte, is attested in
relief from Maghāra in Sinai. His successor, Djoser (Horu's name
Netjerykhet), was one of the outstanding kings of Egypt. His Step Pyramid at Ṣaqqārah
is both the culmination of an epoch and—as the first large all-stone building,
many times larger than anything attempted before—the precursor of
later achievements. The pyramid is set in a much larger enclosure than that of
Khasekhemwy at Abydos and contains reproductions in stone of ritual structures
that had previously been built of perishable materials. Architectural details
of columns, cornices, and moldings provided many models for later development.
The masonry techniques look to brickwork for models and show little concern for
the structural potential of the stone. The pyramid evolved through numerous
stages from a flat mastaba (an
oblong tomb with a burial chamber dug beneath it, common at earlier nonroyal
sites) into a six-stepped, almost square pyramid. There was a second, symbolic
tomb with a flat superstructure on the south side of the enclosure; this
probably substituted for the traditional royal burial place of Abydos. The king
and some of his family were buried deep under the pyramid, where tens of
thousands of stone vases were deposited, a number bearing inscriptions of the
first two dynasties.
Thus, in perpetuating earlier forms in stone and burying this material,
Djoser invoked the
past in support of his innovations.
Djoser’s name was famous in later times, and his monument was
studied in the Late period. Imhotep, whose title as
a master sculptor is preserved in the Step Pyramid complex, may have been its
architect; he lived on into the next reign. His fame also endured, and in the
Late period, he was deified and became a god of healing. In Manetho’s history, he is associated with reforms of writing, and this may reflect a genuine
tradition, for hieroglyphs were simplified and standardized at that time.
Djoser’s successor, Sekhemkhet, planned a still more grandiose step
pyramid complex at Ṣaqqārah, and a later king, Khaba, began one at Zawyat
al-ʿAryan, a few miles south of Giza. The burial place of the dynasty's last king, Huni, is
unknown. It has often been suggested that he built the pyramid of Maydūm, but this probably
was the work of his successor, Snefru. Inscribed
material naming 3rd-dynasty kings is known from Maghāra to Elephantine but not
from the Middle
East or Nubia.
The organizational achievements of the 3rd dynasty are reflected in
its principal monument, whose message of centralization and concentration of
power is reinforced in a negative sense by the archaeological record. Outside
the vicinity of Memphis, the Abydos area continued to be important, and four
enormous tombs, probably of high officials, were built at the nearby site of
Bayt Khallaf; there were small, nonmortuary steps pyramids throughout the
country, some of which may date to the 4th dynasty. Otherwise, little evidence
comes from the provinces, from which wealth must have flowed to the center,
leaving no rich local elite. By the 3rd dynasty the rigid structure of the
later nomes, or provinces, which formed the basis of Old Kingdom
administration, had been created, and the imposition of its uniform pattern may
have impoverished local centers. Tombs of the elite at Ṣaqqārah, notably those
of Hezyre and Khabausokar, contained artistic masterpieces that look forward to
the Old Kingdom.
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