
Relief Depicting Meryneith Inspecting His Stables and Ships Unloading Merchandise, from his tomb at Saqqara
An item at Metropolitan Museum of Art
This block depicts a view over a stable yard and a harbor. In the upper right corner a figure who is certainly the tomb owner reviews the scene, followed by three men who are probably account-scribes, and a man with a stick. The stableyard includes a stable at the far left where a man hand feeds three very fat oxen who are tethered to a stone, and a yard where other tethered oxen are fed. In the harbor cargo boats still under sail or docked bring a delivery of what appears to be sheaves of grain and grain. Work by the Leiden Museum / Leiden University joint expedition to the Memphite necropolis Saqqara in 2001 revealed the lost tomb of Meryneith, or Meryre as he is also known, and showed that this block joins another in Berlin and both appear to belong to the upper part of a wall in that tomb whose lower part depicts a granary and deliveries to a granary. The excavators have published a line drawing of the reconstructed scene, which is also included here. The tomb had been known in the nineteenth century but then its location was lost to scholarship. Meryneith began his tomb in the Saqqara Necropolis in the reign of Akhenaten and finished it during the reign of Tutankhamun. He thus served over the course of the Amarna Period and into the ensuing reign. This block belongs to a part of the tomb the excavators have attributed to just the time Akhenaten adopted his name, year 5 of that king's reign. It seems that Meryneith changed his name to Meryre at a point during the Amarna Period and changed it back to Meryneith after that Period ended. During the Amarna Period Meryneith / Meryre attained the title High Priest of the Aten, and so he might be the same as the High Priest of the Aten Meryre at Amarna, though the title could refer to the Memphis Temple of the Aten.
Egyptian Art
An exhibit at Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Met collection of ancient Egyptian art consists of approximately 30,000 objects of artistic, historical, and cultural importance, dating from about 300,000 BCE to the 4th century CE. A signifcant percentage of the collection is derived from the Museum's three decades of archaeological work in Egypt, initiated in 1906 in response to increasing interest in the culture of ancient Egypt.