Seneb

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MaterialPainted limestone
SizeH. 22 cm (8.7 in);
W. 22.5 cm (8.9 in);
L. 25 cm (9.8 in)
Createdc.2520 BC
Seneb
Seneb (left) with his wife Senetites (right) and their children (below)
MaterialPainted limestone
SizeH. 22 cm (8.7 in);
W. 22.5 cm (8.9 in);
L. 25 cm (9.8 in)
WritingEgyptian hieroglyphs
Createdc.2520 BC
DiscoveredTomb of Seneb (G 1036),
West Field of the
Giza Necropolis
Present locationEgyptian Museum, Cairo
IdentificationJE 51280[1]
S29n
D58
Seneb
in hieroglyphs
Era: Old Kingdom
(2686–2181 BC)

Seneb was a high-ranking court official in the Old Kingdom of Ancient Egypt, circa 2520 BC. A dwarf, Seneb was a person of considerable importance and wealth who owned thousands of cattle, held twenty palaces and religious titles and was married to a high-ranking priestess of average size with whom he had three children. His successful career and the lavishness of his burial arrangements are indicative of the acceptance given to dwarfs in ancient Egyptian society, whose texts advocated the acceptance and integration of those with physical disabilities.

Seneb is depicted with his wife and children in a painted sculpture from his tomb, rediscovered in 1926, that is a famous example of Old Kingdom art.[2] It shows him sitting cross-legged on a block of stone with his wife embracing him and his children standing below him where the legs of a full-size person would ordinarily have been. The composition of the scene thus achieves a harmonious symmetry. It depicts Seneb realistically with the facial features and shortened limbs of an individual with achondroplasia, a common form of dwarfism. Paintings and carvings in the tomb give his titles and depict various scenes from his life, such as carrying out inspections of his estate and holding symbols of his office.

Map of Giza Necropolis
Map of the Giza Necropolis. Seneb's tomb was found in the western cemetery (the West Field)

Seneb was buried in a mastaba – a flat-roofed brick tomb – located in the West Field of the Giza Necropolis near modern Cairo, where a large complex of ancient Egyptian royal tombs and mortuary structures was built, including the Great Pyramid. It was rediscovered by the German archaeologist Hermann Junker in 1926. The tomb is situated close to that of another dwarf, Perniankhu, a high-ranking royal courtier who may have been Seneb's father.[3] Its date was long uncertain but is now firmly attributed to the reign of Djedefre (2528–2520 BC).[4] His wife's name also appears in the nearby tomb of an official, Ankh-ib, suggesting that the families of Seneb, Perniankhu and Ankh-ib may have been related.[5] Seneb was apparently buried with his wife, but no trace remains of the bodies,[6] and the tomb was looted long ago, like most of the others at Giza. It was one of the first known attempts at building a ceiling dome over a square chamber, with the dome resting on jutting bricks at the corners of the room.[7]

The rectangular interior of Seneb's mastaba contained two cult niches with a false door and cavities containing stone chests.[8] Three statues were found within the chests – the painted limestone sculpture of Seneb and his family and two other statues in wood and granite. The wooden one disintegrated when it was discovered but Junker recorded that it had been about 30 cm (12 in) high and depicted Seneb standing with a walking-staff in one hand and a sceptre in the other.[9] The remnants of the wooden statue are now in the Roemer- und Pelizaeus-Museum Hildesheim in Germany, in a very fragmentary state; the outline of a curled wig can still be made out, as can the pose of the left arm, which was held forward at the elbow.[10] Seneb's 1.5 ton sarcophagus is part of the collection of the Egyptian Museum of the University of Leipzig.[11]

Sculpture of Seneb and his family

Role and position

References

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