Khaemweset

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Khaemweset was an ancient Egyptian prince who served as a priest of Ptah and made contributions to restoring ancient monuments and sites. He is considered one of the first Egyptologists.

Khaemweset was the fourth son of Ramesses II and Queen Isetnofret. He received military training as a youth and participated in several of his father's battles and campaigns.

Khaemweset held the role of Sem-Priest of Ptah in Memphis. In this role, he was involved in rituals including burials of sacred Apis bulls. He later redesigned the burial site of the Apis bulls, called the Serapeum.

Khaemweset

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Khaemweset
For other ancient Egyptian people called Khaemweset, see Khaemwaset (disambiguation).
Khaemwaset in hieroglyphs
Khaemwaset
3 m W3st
He who appeared in Thebes
Statue of Khaemweset from the British Museum.
Prince Khaemweset (also translated as Khamwese, Khaemwese or Khaemwaset)
[1]
was the fourth son of
Ramesses II, and the second son by his queen Isetnofret. He is by far the best known son of Ramesses II, and his
contributions to Egyptian society were remembered for centuries after his death.
[2]
Khaemweset has been described
as "the first Egyptologist" due to his efforts in identifying and restoring historic buildings, tombs and temples.
Life
Youth and military training
Khaemweset was the second son of Ramesses II and Queen Isetnofret. He was born during the reign of his
grandfather Pharaoh Seti I and the fourth son overall. In about the 13th year of the reign of Seti I, crown-prince
Ramesses puts down a minor revolt in Nubia. Ramesses takes his small sons Amunherwenemef and Khaemweset
with him on this military campaign. Khaemweset may have been only 4 years old at this time. Khaemweset and his
older brother are shown making a charge on the battle field in a chariot. The events were recorded in scenes in the
temple at Beit el Wali.
[3]
Khaemweset grew up with his brothers during a time of foreign conflict and he is present in scenes from the Battle of
Kadesh, the siege of Qode (Naharin), and the siege of Dapur in Syria. In the battle of Kadesh scenes from year 5 of
Ramesses II, Khaemweset is shown leading sons of the chiefs of Hatti before the gods. These princes were prisoners
of war. In scenes depicting the battle of Qode, Khaemweset is shown both leading prisoners before his father and
serving as an attendant of his father. In year 10 of Ramesses II Khaemweset is present during the battle of Dapur.
Khaemweset
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Priesthood
Pectoral and buckle found in the Saqqara
burial of prince Kaemwese
After this initial period where Khaemweset may have had some military
training, or at least was present at the battlefield, he became a Sem-Priest of
Ptah in Memphis. This appointment occurred in c. Year 16 of Ramesses II's
reign. He would have initially been a deputy to the High Priest of Ptah in
Memphis named Huy. During his time as Sem-Priest Khaemweset was quite
active in rituals, including the burial of several Apis Bulls at the Serapeum. In
year 16 of Ramesses the Apis bull died and was buried in the Serapeum.
Funerary gifts were presented by the High Priest of Ptah Huy, Khaemweset
himself, his brother Prince Ramesses, and the Vizier Paser. The next burial
took place in year 30 and at that time the gifts came from the chief of the
treasury Suty and the Mayor of Memphis named Huy. After this second burial Khaemweset redesigned the
Serapeum. He created an underground gallery where a series of burial chambers allowed for the burial of several
Apis Bulls.
Heb-Sed festivals
Around the 25th regnal year of his father, his older brother Ramesses became Crown-Prince, and in the 30th year
Khaemweset's name started to appear in the announcements of the (Heb-)Sed Festivals. These Heb-Sed festivals
were traditionally held in Memphis, but some of the announcements were made in the south of Egypt at El-Kab and
Silsila. While he was a Sem-Priest, Khaemweset may have constructed and built additions to the temple of Ptah in
Memphis. There are several inscriptions which attest to Khaemweset's activities in Memphis.
[]
Restoring ancient monuments
Head of Khaemwaset
Khaemweset restored the monuments of earlier kings and nobles.
Restoration texts were found associated with the pyramid of Unas at
Saqqara, the tomb of Shepseskaf called the Mastabet el-Fara'un, the
sun-Temple of Nyuserre, the Pyramid of Sahure, the Pyramid of
Djoser, and the Pyramid of Userkaf. Inscriptions at the pyramid temple
of Userkaf show Khaemweset with offering bearers, and at the pyramid
temple of Sahure Khamwaset offers a statue of the goddess Bast.
Khaemweset restored a statue of Prince Kawab, a son of King Khufu.
The inscription on the throne reads:
It is the Chief Directing Artisans and Sem-Priest, the
King's Son, Khaemweset , who was glad over this statue
of the King's Son Kawab, and who took it from what was
cast (away) for debris (?), in [...] .. of his father, the King
of South and North Egypt Khufu. Then the S[em-Priest
and King's Son, Kha]em[waset] decreed that [it be given] a place of favor of the Gods in company with
the excellent Blessed Spirits at the Head of the Spirit (Ka) chapel of Ro-Setjau, -so greatly did he love
antiquity and the noble folk who were aforetime, along with the excellence (of) all that they had made,
so well, and repeatedly ("a million times").
These (things) shall be for (for) all life, stability and prosperity, enduring upon earth, [for the Chief
Directing Artisans and Sem-Priest, the King's Son, Khaemwaset , after he has (re)established all their
cult procedures of this temple, which had fallen into oblivion [in the remembrance] of men.
He has dug a pool before the noble sanctuary (?), in work (agreeing) with his wishes, while pure
Khaemweset
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channels existed, for purity, and to bring libations from (?) the reservoir (?) of Khefren, that he may
attain (the status of) 'given life'. (Kitchen) .
Some of these restorations took place during his later tenure as Sem-Priest. The work on the pyramid of Djoser is
dated to year 36 of Ramesses II. Some of the inscriptions mention Khaemwesets title as 'Chief of the Artificers' or
'Chief of Crafts'. Hence, some of these restorations were undertaken after his promotion as the High Priest of Ptah in
Memphis about the 45th year of the reign of Ramesses II.
Crown prince
Khaemweset held the position of Crown Prince to the throne between Year 50 and Year 55 of his father's reign when
he died. He was succeeded in this position by his full brother Merneptah. He also served as Governor of Memphis.
Family
Aswan Rock stela. Top: Ramesses II, Isetnofret and Khaemwaset
before Khnum. Bottom left to right: Merneptah, Bintanath and Prince
Ramesses.
Khaemweset was the son of Ramesses II and Queen
Isetnofret. He had at least two brothers: Prince
Ramesses and Merneptah. Bintanath was his sister.
These three siblings are depicted on the Aswan Rock
stela with the Pharaoh and Queen shown with
Khaemweset in another register. It is possible that
Princess Isetnofret was a full sister of Khaemwaset as
well, although it's equally possible she was only a
half-sister.
Khaemweset is known to have had two sons and a
daughter. His eldest son, Ramesses, is mentioned on a
block statue from Memphis. Ramesses holds the title
King's Son on the statue, which here should be
interpreted as King's grandson. On the Dorsal Pillar the
text reads:
[It is] his dear [son] who perpetuates his
name - The King's Son, excellent in
wisdom, upright in mind in every deed,
great in his enlightenment at all times to
maintain the offerings for his father, - the
King's Son Ramesses, justified and
venerated one. (Kitchen)
His second son, Hori, became High Priest of Ptah at Memphis during the later part of the 19th dynasty.
Khaemweset is also known to have had a daughter named Isetnofret (also written as Isitnofret). Other women at
court with that name include her grandmother Queen Isetnofret I and her fathers sister. Khaemweset's daughter
Isetnofret may have married her uncle, the Pharaoh Merneptah. If so, she would be identical to Queen Isetnofret II.
Isetnofret's tomb may have recently been found in Saqqara during excavations by Waseda University.
[4]
Not much is
known about Khaemweset's wife, though in the demotic story, Setna II, his wife bears the name Meheweskhe.
[5]
We know one grandson of his. His son Hori, had a son who was also named Hori. This grandson of Khaemweset
would later serve as Vizier of Egypt during the tumultuous period at the end of the 19th dynasty. He was still
performing these duties under Ramesses III.
Khaemweset
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Burial
Pectoral from Khaemweset's Serapeum tomb
burial bearing Ramesses II's cartouche.
Gold mask with the likeness of Khaemweset from
the Apis bull burial.
Whilst first exploring the Serapeum of Saqqara between 1851 to 1853,
French Egyptologist Auguste Mariette was confronted by a huge rock,
which could only move by the use of explosives. Once the shattered
remnants of the rock were removed an intact coffin and numerous
funerary treasures were discovered which contained the mummy of a
man. A gold mask covered his face, and amulets gave his name as
Prince Khaemweset, son of Ramesses II and builder of the Serapeum.
However these remains have now been lost, and Egyptologists believe
that this was not the grave of Khaemweset but were the remains of an
Apis Bull made into a human form to resemble the Prince.
The Egyptologist Aidan Dodson is quoted writing in his book
"Canopic Equipment from the Serapeum of Memphis":
"Designated Apis XIV, it comprised a wooden
sarcophagus, largely embedded in the ground, with its
upper part largely crushed. Inside, there was what had the
appearance of a human mummy, its face covered by a
somewhat crude gold mask, damaged by damp and
bearing a considerable quantity of jewelry, some bearing
the name of Prince Khaemweset. In spite of its
appearance, the mummy proved to be a mass of fragrant
resin, containing a quantity of disordered bone. Although
frequently stated to be the mummy of Khaemweset, on the
basis of its possessing his jewelry, the mass of resin containing bony fragments is far more reminiscent
of the undoubted Apis of tombs E and G. Its formation into the simulacrum of a human mummy also
finds echo in the anthropoid coffin lids that covered the resinous masses within the sarcophagi of Apis
VII and IX, there can thus be no doubt that the burial is actually that of the bull, Apis XIV."
[6]
The Waseda University expedition found during earlier excavations the remains of a monument, which may have
been Khaemwesets ka-house.
[7]
Khaemweset in Ancient Egyptian fiction
In later periods of Egyptian history, Khaemweset was remembered as a wise man, and portrayed as the hero in a
cycle of stories dating to Greco-Roman times. In these stories his name is Setne, a distortion of the real
Khaemwaset's title as setem-priest of Ptah; modern scholars call this character "Setne Khamwas".
[8]
The first tale, dubbed Setne I or Setne Khamwas and Naneferkaptah, describes how Khaemwaset seeks and finds a
book of powerful magical spells, the Book of Thoth, in the tomb of Prince Naneferkaptah. Against the wishes of the
Naneferkaptah's spirit, Khaemwaset takes the book and becomes cursed. Setne then meets a beautiful woman who
seduces him into killing his children and humiliating himself in front of the pharaoh. He discovers that this episode
was an illusion created by Neferkaptah, and in fear of further retribution, Setne returns the book to Neferkaptah's
tomb. At Neferkaptah's request, Setne also finds the bodies of Neferkaptah's wife and son and buries them in
Neferkaptah's tomb, which is then sealed.
[9]
The second tale is known as Setne II or Setne Khamwas and Si-Osire. Khaemwaset and his wife have a son named
Si-Osire who turns out to be a highly skilled magician. In the first part of the story, Si-Osire brings his father to visit
the Duat, the land of the dead, where they see the pleasant fate of the deceased spirits who lived justly and the
Khaemweset
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torments inflicted on spirits who sinned during their lives. In the second part, it is revealed that Si-Osire is actually a
famous magician from the time of Tuthmosis III who returned to save Egypt from a Nubian magician. After the
confrontation Si-Osire disappears, and Khaemwaset and his wife have a real son who is also named Si-Osire in
honor of the magician.
[10]
Popular Culture
In The Kane Chronicles book The Serpent's Shadow Khaemweset appears as a ghost under the name of Setne.
Unlike contemporary and fictional portrayals by the Egyptians, he is portrayed as a ruthless and power hungry
priest who wants to become a god. At the end of the book, he steals the Book of Thoth and begins to dabble in
Greek and Egyptian magic in later related media.
Khaemwaset appears in the game Age of Mythology under the name of Setna.
References
[1] BBC: Ancient Egyptians (http:/ / www.bbc.co.uk/ history/ ancient/ egyptians/ death_sakkara_gallery_04. shtml)
[2] Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson (2004), p. 170-171
[3] Kitchen, Kenneth A., Pharaoh Triumphant: The Life and Times of Ramesses II, King of Egypt, Aris & Phillips. 1983, pp 40, 89, 102-109,
162, 170, 227-230. ISBN 978-0-85668-215-5
[4] Tomb of Isetnofret Discovered in Saqqara (http:/ / www. drhawass. com/ blog/
press-release-tomb-and-sarcophagus-isisnofret-discovered-saqqara)
[5] [5] William Kelly Simpson and Robert Kriech Ritner, The Literature of Ancient Egypt, Yale University Press (2003), p. 490
[6] [6] Aidan Dodson, Canopic Equipment from the Serapeum of Memphis, A. Leahy and W.J. Tait (eds) (1999)
[7] [7] YOSHIMURA, Sakuji and Izumi H. TAKAMIYA, "Waseda University excavations at North Saqqara from 1991 to 1999", in: Abusir and
Saqqara 2000, 161-172. (map, plan, fig., pl.)
[8] Lichtheim, Miriam, Ancient Egyptian Literature, Volume III: The Late Period, University of California Press, 2006 [1980], pp. 125 126
[9] Lichtheim 2006, pp. 127 137
[10] Lichtheim 2006, pp. 138 151
External links
Media related to Khaemweset at Wikimedia Commons
Prince Khaemwaset (http:/ / euler. slu. edu/ Dept/ Faculty/ bart/ egyptianhtml/ kings and Queens/ Khaemwaset.
html)
Khaemwaset - Nozomu Kawai. The Encyclopedia of Ancient History DOI: 10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah15225
(http:/ / onlinelibrary. wiley. com/ doi/ 10. 1002/ 9781444338386. wbeah15225/ full)
Article Sources and Contributors
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Article Sources and Contributors
Khaemweset Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=617691473 Contributors: A. Parrot, Alensha, AnnekeBart, BomBom, Boxingkangaroo17, Cmcalpine, Colonies Chris,
CommonsDelinker, Deville, Dimadick, Dougweller, Dr. Blofeld, Egyptzo, Frietjes, G.-M. Cupertino, Gobonobo, Good Olfactory, Grm wnr, Iry-Hor, Iustinus, JLCA, JMCC1, Jersyko, John of
Reading, Kameraad Pjotr, Khruner, Leoboudv, LilHelpa, Llywrch, Mairi, Mark Arsten, Markh, Mmcannis, Nick Number, None but shining hours, Rocketrod1960, Setnakhamwas,
Stephenchou0722, Stijn Calle, Tegenariaman, That Guy, From That Show!, Tiredgamer, Twthmoses, Udimu, Ufsark, WBardwin, Zad68, Zumalabe, 33 anonymous edits
Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors
File:Khaemwaset.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Khaemwaset.jpg License: Public Domain Contributors: User:JLCA
File:Louvre - pectoral et boucle de Khaemouaset.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Louvre_-_pectoral_et_boucle_de_Khaemouaset.jpg License: Public Domain
Contributors: JMCC1, Leoboudv, M0tty, Neithsabes
File:PrinceKhaemwase-AltesMuseum-Berlin.png Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:PrinceKhaemwase-AltesMuseum-Berlin.png License: Creative Commons
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File:Isetnofret.jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Isetnofret.jpg License: Public Domain Contributors: Lepsius
File:Khaemwaset's tomb treasure (Serapeum).jpg Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Khaemwaset's_tomb_treasure_(Serapeum).jpg License: Creative Commons
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