Hemiunu
Hemiunu | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Statue of Hemiunu at the Pelizaeus Museum, Hildesheim, Germany. His feet rest on columns of hieroglyphs, painted in yellow, red, brown, and black. | |||||
Native name |
Hm-ỉwnw
| ||||
Occupation |
Vizier Architect Priest | ||||
Title | Prince of Egypt | ||||
Religion | Ancient Egyptian religion | ||||
Parent(s) | Nefermaat and Itet |
Hemiunu (fl. 2570 BC) is believed to be the architect of the Great Pyramid of Giza, Egypt.[1][2] As vizier, Hemiunu was one the most important members of the court and responsible for all the royal works.
Biography
Hemiunu was a son of Prince Nefermaat and his wife Itet,[3] a grandson of Sneferu and relative 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).[4]
As Vizier he succeeded Kanefer, his uncle, and his father Nefermaat.[5]
Tomb
His tomb lies close to Khufu's pyramid, and contains reliefs of his image. Some stones of his mastaba are marked with dates referring to Khufu's reign.[6] His statue[7] can be found at the Pelizaeus Museum, Hildesheim, Germany.[3] This statue is scheduled to be loaned for the opening of the Grand Egyptian Museum (as of August 2016 the Egyptian Museum has not yet been opened, and the statue is still on display in Hildesheim). The statue was found with the head and part of the right arm broken, and only the body intact. The statue's head has been restored, as it had been damaged around its eyes.[8]
The seated statue - extremely well-preserved apart from the minor damage mentioned above - is notable for its unusual realism, with Hemiunu's features only lightly stylized, and clearly based on his actual appearance. His unidealized body is frankly shown as flabby, with a notable accumulation of fat in the pectoral region. This contrasts with the more usual virile representation of male subjects in royal portraiture in this and most succeeding periods of Ancient Egyptian art.
Notes
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
External links
- Media related to Hemiunu at Wikimedia Commons
Coordinates: 29°58′46″N 31°07′48″E / 29.97944°N 31.13000°E