6: The Double False Door of Ky and Sat-Sd-Abd, First Intermediate Period. -- Figure 7: The first Intermediate Period false door exemplifies the concept of the door as a condensed substitute for more elaborate tombs of the earlier Old Kingdom Period. -- Figure 8: A comparative exploration of table scenes belonging to two women, Nefretiabet at Giza (in the Fourth Dynasty) and that of Senet at Thebes six hundred years later. |
Figure 9: A Family Group: The Stela of Ameny and Renseneb with their children, Abydos, Dynasty 13. The compositional arrangement of this stelae is discussed in Table 2 below. -- Table 2. The Stela of Ameny (Franke and Marée 2013, plate 16). -- Figure 11: Head end of the coffin of Ouadj, Sedment (Asyut), Dynasty 9 to 10 (Willems 1988: 47). -- Figure 12: Offering Table Scene: Coffin of Heqata, Qubbet el-Hawa. Late First Intermediate Period, Dynasty 9 and 10 (Willems 1996, plate 16). -- Figure 13: The Coffin of Ashyt, Thebes, Dynasty 10 - 11 (Willems 1996, Plate 46). -- Figure 14: Coffin of Khnumnakht, Meir, Dynasty Eleven to Twelve. -- Figure 15: Offering scene inside the coffin of Ini, Gebelein, Dynasty 11 or 12 (Grajetzki 2006, plate X). -- 16. Mesopotamian stelae (Hermann and Schloen 2014, figures 3.1, 3.2, 3.4, C1). -- CHAPTER 5 CONCLUSION: GATHERING THE STRANDS -- 5.1 The End of the Afterlife -- 5.2 anx Dt r nHH: Living Enduringly and Repeatedly -- APPENDIX 1: APPENDIX TO CHAPTER 3 -- Women Depicted At Their Own Offering Tables1 -- APPENDIX 2: APPENDIX TO CHAPTER 4 -- Ritualised Elements and Royal Motifs within Offering Table Imagery -- APPENDIX 3: Titles and epithets associated with women in possession of offering table depictions (based on the 106 instances of women's offering table scenes collated in Appendix 1, page 92). -- APPENDIX 4: Frequency of rituals enacted in offering table depictions from the examples included in this study. -- BIBLIOGRAPHY. |