Ikhernofret Stela Explained

Created: 1864 BC
Discovered Place:Egypt
Height:100 cm
Material:Limestone

The Ikhernofret Stela (Berlin Museum ref 1204) is an ancient Egyptian stela dated to the Middle Kingdom and is notable for its veiled description of how the mysteries of the deity Osiris were carried out in Abydos. The stela is 100 cm high and made of limestone. Osiris is depicted standing under a winged sun disk facing Senusret III. The text is laid out below Osiris in twenty-four horizontal lines. Underneath the text, Ikhernofret, a 12th Dynasty treasurer under Pharaoh Senusret III, is depicted at an offering table with his family.[1] The rituals celebrated the god's kingship, death and resurrection.[2]

The stela describes how Ikhernofret is regarded as a beloved "foster child" of the King who was made "Companion of the King" when twenty-six. He is sent on a mission to Abydos by the King to carry out work in honour of the Kings Father "Osiris, Foremost of the Westerners".[2]

The stela records how the festivities were celebrated in four main parts.[3]

The Egyptologist and novelist Christian Jacq used the Ikehernofret inscriptions as the foundation of his Osirian series "The Mysteries of Osiris".

See also

External links

References

  1. "The Literature of Ancient Egypt", William Kelly Simpson, pp. 425–427, Yale University Press, 2003,
  2. "Ancient Egyptian Literature: The Old and Middle Kingdoms", Miriam Lichtheim, pp. 123–125, University of California Press, 1975,
  3. "Death and Salvation in Ancient Egypt", pp. 227–229, Jan Assmann, Translated by David Lorton, Cornell University Press, 2005,