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Userkare
Ancient Egyptian pharaoh From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Userkare (also Woserkare, meaning "Powerful is the soul of Ra") was the second king of the Sixth Dynasty of Egypt, reigning briefly, 1 to 5 years, in the late 24th or the early 23rd century BC. Userkare's relation to his predecessor Teti and successor Pepi I is unknown and his reign remains enigmatic.
Although he is attested in some historical sources, Userkare is completely absent from the tomb of the Egyptian officials who lived during his reign and usually report the names of the kings whom they served. Furthermore, the figures of some high officials of the period have been deliberately chiselled out in their tombs and their titles altered, for instance the word "king" being replaced by that of "desert". Egyptologists thus suspect a possible Damnatio memoriae on Pepi I's behalf against Userkare. In addition, the Egyptian priest Manetho who wrote an history of Egypt in the 3rd century BC states that Userkare's predecessor Teti was murdered but is otherwise silent concerning Userkare. Consequently, Userkare is often considered to have been a short-lived usurper to the throne, possibly a descendant of a cadet branch of the preceding Fifth Dynasty. Alternatively, he may have been a legitimate short-lived ruler or a regent who ruled during Teti's son Pepi I's childhood before his accession to the throne.
The tomb of Userkare has not yet been identified, either because it was never finished or because Pepi I erased traces of his predecessor's rule. If the tomb was indeed started, Egyptologists conjecture that it should be located in South Saqqara.
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Attestations
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Contemporaneous sources
Few artefacts dating to Userkare's lifetime have survived to this day, the only secure attestions contemporaneous with his reign being two cylinder seals[2][note 2] inscribed with his name and titles,[21] and a copper mallet from the Michaelides collection.[22][note 3] The mallet bears a small inscription giving the name of a crew of workmen "Beloved ones of Userkare" who hailed from Wadjet, the 10th nome of Upper Egypt, located around Tjebu, south of Asyut.[25]
The French Egyptologists Michel Baud and Vassil Dobrev have also proposed that a copper axe head discovered in Syria could belong to Userkare.[15] The axe bears the name of another crew of workmen called the "Beloved ones of the Two Golden Falcons", where "Two Golden Falcons" is the golden Horus name of a pharaoh. Although both Khufu and Sahure bore this name and either one of them may be the owner of the axe,[26] Baud and Dobrev note that Teti's and Pepi's golden horus names are "Golden Falcon who Unites" and "Three Golden Falcons", respectively. Given the role of the golden Horus name as a symbol of the transmission of royal powers in the Old Kingdom period,[27] Dobrev proposes that the missing link between Teti's and Pepi's names is the name "Two Golden Falcons" and that it would logically correspond to Userkare's brief intervening reign.[27] Consequently the axe would be an attestation of his rule.[15]
The English Egyptologist Flinders Petrie has tentatively identified Userkare with a king named Ity attested by a single rock inscription found in the Wadi Hammamat. The inscription, dated to the first year of reign of Ity, mentions a band of 200 sailors and 200 masons under the direction of the overseers Ihyemsaf and Irenakhet[28] sent to the Wadi Hammamat to collect stones for the construction of Ity's pyramid called "Bau Ity",[29] meaning "Glory of Ity"[30] or "The Bas of Ity".[3] Petrie's identification of Userkare with Ity relies solely on his estimation of the inscription to the Sixth Dynasty and the fact that Userkare is the only king of this period whose full titulary is not known.[29] This identification is nowadays either rejected[31] or deemed conjectural[32] and several dates belonging to the First Intermediate Period (c. 2180 – 2050 BC) have been proposed for Ity.[30]
South Saqqara Stone
In addition to historical and contemporaneous sources, details about Userkare's reign were once given on the nearly contemporaneous South Saqqara Stone, a royal annal of the Sixth Dynasty dating to the reign of Merenre Nemtyemsaf I or Pepi II.[33] Unfortunately, an estimated 92%[34] of the original text was lost when the stone was roughly polished to be reused as a sarcophagus lid, possibly in the late first intermediate to early Middle Kingdom period (c. 2050 – 1650 BC).[35] The presence of Userkare on the annal can nonetheless be inferred from a large space between the sections concerning the reigns of Teti and Pepi I[36] as well as from traces of a royal titulary in this space.[37][38] Although the text reporting Userkare's activities is lost, its length suggests that Userkare ruled Egypt from two to four years,[39] with the former seen as less likely than the latter.[40]
Historical sources
Userkare is present on the Abydos King List, a list of kings written during the reign of Seti I (1290 – 1279 BC), over 1,000 years after the early Sixth Dynasty. Userkare's cartouche occupies the 35th entry of the list, between those of Teti and Pepi I,[41][42] making him the second pharaoh of the dynasty.[43]
Userkare was possibly also listed on the Turin canon,[44] a king list composed during the reign of Ramesses II (1279 – 1213 BC). Unfortunately, a large lacuna affects the second line of the fourth column of the papyrus on which the list was written, the place were Userkare's name might have been located.[36]
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Reign
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The consensus among modern Egyptologists is that Userkare reigned between Teti and Pepi I during the early sixth dynasty.[4][8][45][46][47][48] For Michel Baud, the absence of monuments as well as the scarcity of artefacts and documents pertaining to Userkare all point to the short duration of his reign.[note 4][8][39][52] For the same reasons, his relations to his predecessor and successor are largely uncertain and Egyptologists have proposed a number of hypotheses regarding his identity and rule. These fall broadly into two contradictory scenarios: one that sees Userkare as a legitimate ruler or regent,[45] while the other perceives Userkare as an usurper, possibly responsible for the murder of his predecessor Teti.[32]
At the opposite, the minority opinion held by soviet Egyptologists Oleg Dmitrievich Berlev and Yury Perepelkin is that Userkare is not an independent ruler but rather a name of Teti.[48]
As a legitimate ruler
The Egyptologists William Stevenson Smith,[31] William C. Hayes[53] and Nicolas Grimal[54] believe that Userkare briefly ruled Egypt either as a legitimate stopgap ruler or as a regent with queen Iput I. Indeed, Teti's son Pepi I reigned for circa 50 years, indicating that he was likely very young at the death of his father, likely too young to immediately assume the throne.[55] The theory that Userkare was merely a regent is rejected by Naguib Kanawati, on the basis that Userkare might have been mentioned on the Turin canon, is present in the Abydos king list and holds full royal titulary, something reserved exclusively to reigning pharaohs.[56]
In support of the hypothesis that Userkare was a legitimate stopgap ruler, Grimal stresses that he is well attested by historical and contemporaneous sources, in particular the South Saqqara Stone. This seems in contradiction with the idea that, being illegitimate, he was victim of a Damnatio memoriae by his successor Pepi. In addition, there is no direct evidence of difficulties associated with Pepi I's rise on throne in the archeological record, which one could expect had Userkare been a usurper.[54] Rainer Stadelmann and Michel Baud underline that there is no clear evidence for a damnatio memoriae targeting Userkare. For example his funerary complex may have been planned yet never erected, which they find would provide a better explanation for its absence than a "speculative"[39] attempt on Pepi I's behalf to erase traces of his predecessor's rule.[57]
Vivianne Gae Callender—who agrees that Userkare was the target of some kind of damnatio memoriae[58]—has put forth another theory in which Userkare was a legitimate son of Teti born while his father was king, but not his first-born son. In this hypothesis, Userkare's claim to the throne would rely on his being born after Teti had assumed power, while Pepi I would be the eldest son of Teti yet born before Teti's elevation to power.[59] In particular Teti's eight to 12 years of reign would imply that Userkare would have been around 10 at the time of his coronation and facing a resenting older brother, possibly explaining the paucity of attestations of his rule.[59] Morris Bierbrier goes even further by suggesting that the "ambitious" brother in question was the future pharaoh Pepi I who might have had Userkare killed.[46] Proceeding by elimination Callender has also conjectured that a queen "Khentet[...]" mentioned in a south Saqqara relief could be Userkare's mother,[60] an opinion shared by Bierbrier.[46]
As a usurper to the throne

The Egyptian priest Manetho wrote a history of Egypt, the Aegyptiaca, in the 3rd century BC during the reign of Ptolemy II (283 – 246 BC). No copies of the Aegyptiaca have survived, and it is now known only through later writings by Sextus Julius Africanus (c. 160 – 240) and Eusebius (c. 260/265 – 339). According to the Byzantine scholar George Syncellus (fl. 800), Africanus's version of the Aegyptiaca reported that Othoês—the hellenized name of Teti—was murdered by his bodyguards or attendants.[61] Based on this statement, Egyptologists have found it plausible that Userkare participated in or at least benefited from Teti's assassination, despite Userkare's absence from the Aegyptiaca.[61] Userkare's name is theophoric and incorporates the name of the sun god Ra, a naming fashion common during the preceding Fifth Dynasty.[54] Since Teti was not a son of the last Fifth Dynasty king Unas, some Egyptologists have proposed that Userkare could have been a descendant of a lateral branch of the Fifth Dynasty royal family who briefly seized power in a coup.[8][45][62]
The Egyptologist Naguib Kanawati also finds the hypothesis that Userkare was a short-lived legitimate ruler or regent "unconvincing".[63] Indeed, archeological evidence lends credence to the idea that Userkare was illegitimate in the eyes of his successor Pepi I. In particular, there is no mention of Userkare in the tombs and biographies of the many Egyptian officials who served under both Teti and Pepi I.[64] The viziers Inumin and Khentika, who served both Teti and Pepi I, are completely silent about Userkare and none of their activities during Userkare's time on the throne are reported in their tomb.[65] Furthermore, the tomb of Mehi, a guard who lived under Teti, Userkare and Pepi, yielded an inscription showing that the name of Teti was first erased to be replaced by that of another king, whose name was itself erased and replaced again by that of Teti.[66] Kanawati argues that the intervening name was that of Userkare to whom Mehi may have transferred his allegiance.[67] Mehi's attempt to switch back to Teti was seemingly unsuccessful, as there is evidence that work on his tomb stopped abruptly and that he was never buried there.[68]
A similar situation is encountered in the mastaba of Merefnebef, a "lowly"[69] official and courtier who started his career under Teti then was elevated to the highest position, becoming vizier, in all probability under Userkare.[70] The tomb exhibits distinct building phases, the latest one corresponding to Merefnebef's vizierate during which Merefnebef had his title inscribed repeatedly at the exterior of his tomb.[71] Work on the tomb was then abruptly stopped, either with Merefnebef's death or with his political downfall following the death of Userkare. Later on, one of Merefnebef's son intervened in the mastaba chiseling out the figures of his father and brothers, altering his father's titles in particular those of "Honoured by the king" by erasing the word "king" or even replacing it with the word "desert".[72][73] Finally the mastaba, left unfinished, was deliberately walled off so as to be hidden from sight.[74] For Karol Myśliwiec who excavated the tomb, this shows that "the infamy of the most shameful moment in [Merefnebef's] career, that of being (probably) promoted to the function of vizier by the usurper Userkare, was visibly remembered for generations".[73] This opinion is shared by the Egyptologist Peter J. Brand who sees here an instance of a wider pattern of promotion of low-ranking officials to the highest offices under Userkare, followed by their demotions or expulsions under Pepi I.[69]
Michel Baud also sees difficulties with the idea that Userkare was fully legitimate: he points in particular to the "disturbing"[39] silence of contemporaneous private biographies, with no official of the time period mentioning serving under Userkare. Furthermore, Michel Baud and Vassil Dobrev do not see Userkare's presence on the South Saqqara Stone royal annals as evidence that he was legitimate in the eyes of his successors: it could be that royal annals and kings lists were not affected by damnatio memoriae measures, even those targeting usurpers, because their purpose was precisely to systematically record all royal names and activities, regardless of their political context.[75]

As a name of Teti
Berlev and Perepelkin have proposed that Userkare was in fact the prenomen of Teti, which is otherwise unknown.[48][76] They argued that the redactor of the Abydos king list added supplementary names to kings known to him by the same nomen so as to distinguish them. This was the case for Teti, a nomen which appears three times in the list. According to this hypothesis the redactor added the ruler's prenomen "Userkare" to his name but this was interpreted by later Egyptians as referring to two distinct kings.[76] A possible evidence supporting this theory is found in the pyramid of Khendjer (built c. 1750 BC) where an ancient graffito wrongly refers to it as the pyramid of Teti. This confusion may be due to the fact that Khendjer's prenomen was Userkare and so, perhaps, was Teti's.[48][76]
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Tomb
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The location of the tomb of Userkare has not yet been identified. The brevity of his reign implies that the tomb was probably unfinished at his death, making modern identification difficult.[45] Since Userkare was a Sixth Dynasty king, his tomb was presumably planned to be a pyramid. A possible vindication of this hypothesis is the copper mallet mentioning a team of paid workers from the nome of Wadjet. These workers were involved in an important building project, likely to be Userkare's pyramid.[54]
Two hypotheses for the location of Userkare's pyramid have been put forth. The Egyptologist Vassil Dobrev proposed that Userkare's pyramid is located in the area of Saqqara South known today as Tabbet al-Guesh, north-west of the mortuary complex of Pepi I. Indeed, a large necropolis of Sixth Dynasty administration officials is found there, which according to Dobrev, hints at the nearby presence of a royal pyramid.[77] The astrophysicist Giulio Magli believes instead that the pyramid of Userkare is to be found midway between those of Pepi I and Merenre Nemtyemsaf I, at a place that would make the three pyramids form a line parallel to the one formed by the pyramids of Sekhemkhet, Unas, Djoser, Userkaf and Teti to the North.[78]
Notes
- The Egyptologist Peter Kaplony attributes three seals to Userkare[17] but one of these seals reads "Userka[...]" and could instead belong to Userkaf.[18] In addition, a number of seals bearing the name "Userkare" have been attributed to him but are now believed to belong to the 13th Dynasty pharaoh Userkare Khendjer,[19] one of which is in the Brooklyn Museum.[20]
- Kaplony's attribution of the mallet to Userkare in 1965 is accepted by Anthony Spalinger but differs from that proposed by Hans Goedicke in 1962. Goedicke instead read the hieroglyphic signs on the objects to indicate that it belonged to Netjerkare.[23][24]
- Most Egyptologists propose a short reign for Userkare. An exception is Hans Goedicke. By attempting to reconcile conflicting data from historical sources, he proposed that Userkare reigned over the North of Egypt while Pepi reigned concurrently over the South. In this view Userkare ruled for between 20 and 33 years.[49] To support this, he points to an inscription dated to the "Year after the fifth cattle count" of an uncertain king of the sixth dynasty as beloning to Userkare. Since this count was biennial prior to Pepi II's reign, this could correspond to Userkare's tenth year on the throne.[49][50] The inscription has been ascribed to Pepi II by Osing.[51]
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