Hemiunu

Coordinates: 29°58′46″N 31°07′48″E / 29.97944°N 31.13000°E / 29.97944; 31.13000
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Hemiunu
Hereditary Prince

King's son of his body

Vizier
Statue of Hemiunu at the Pelizaeus Museum, Hildesheim, Germany, his feet rest on columns of hieroglyphs painted in yellow, red, brown, and black
Egyptian name
Hmiwnw
DynastyFourth Dynasty of Egypt
FatherNefermaat
MotherItet

Hemiunu (fl. 2570 BC) was an ancient Egyptian prince who is believed to have been the architect of the Great Pyramid of Giza.[1][2] As vizier, succeeding his father, Nefermaat, and his uncle, Kanefer,[3] Hemiunu was one of the most important members of the court and responsible for all the royal works. His tomb lies close to Khufu's pyramid.

Biography

Hemiunu was a son of prince Nefermaat and his wife, Itet.[4] He is a grandson of Sneferu and a nephew of Khufu, the Old Kingdom pharaoh. Hemiunu had three sisters and many brothers.

In his tomb, he is described as a hereditary prince, count, sealer of the king of Lower Egypt (jrj-pat HAtj-a xtmw-bjtj), and on a statue found in his serdab (and now located in Hildesheim), Hemiunu is given the titles: king's son of his body, chief justice, and vizier, greatest of the five of the House of Thoth (sA nswt n XT=f tAjtj sAb TAtj wr djw pr-DHwtj).[5]

Tomb

Hemiunu's tomb lies close to Khufu's pyramid and contains reliefs of his image. Some stones of his badly damaged mastaba (G4000 [es]) are marked with dates referring to Khufu's reign.[6] His statue[7] can be found at the Pelizaeus Museum, Hildesheim, Germany.[4]

His statue was found in the walled-up serdab of Hemiunu's mastaba by archaeologist Hermann Junker in March 1912. Ancient looters had ransacked the mastaba in their quest for valuable items and the wall to the serdab had a child-sized hole cut into it. The robber forcefully gouged out the statue's precious inlaid eyes and gold castings, in the process the right arm was broken and the head severed. The head has been restored,[8] using a relief of Hemiunu as a guide for the nose's profile.

The seated statue is well-preserved, apart from the damage mentioned above (importantly, his head being severed and lost), and is notable for its realism, not found in ancient Egyptian art depicting royal figures. Hemiunu's features are only lightly stylized and clearly based on his appearance. He is depicted as obese, with notable accumulation of fat in the pectoral region. This contrasts with the more idealized representation of male subjects in royal portraiture in this and most succeeding periods of ancient Egyptian art.

Notes

  1. ^ De Camp, p. 35
  2. ^ Shaw, p. 89
  3. ^ Cambridge, p. 166
  4. ^ a b Arnold, p. 107
  5. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-10-11. Retrieved 2010-09-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) page about G 4000, the tomb of Hemiunu
  6. ^ Strudwick, p. 157
  7. ^ Tiradritti, p. 13
  8. ^ N.Y.), Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York (1999). Egyptian Art in the Age of the Pyramids. Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 9780870999079.

References

  • Dieter Arnold, The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egyptian Architecture, I.B.Tauris, 2002
  • Nigel C. Strudwick, Texts from the Pyramid, SBL, 2005
  • Cambridge Ancient History by Cambridge University Press, 2000
  • Francesco Tiradritti, Arte egizia, Giunti, 2002
  • Lyon Sprague De Camp, Catherine Crook De Camp, Ancient Ruins and Archaeology, Doubleday, 1964
  • Ian Shaw, The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, Oxford University Press, 2003

See also

List of Egyptian architects

  • Media related to Hemiunu at Wikimedia Commons

29°58′46″N 31°07′48″E / 29.97944°N 31.13000°E / 29.97944; 31.13000