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Hedjet

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Hedjet
Hedjet, the white crown of Upper Egypt
Details
CountryAncientUpper Egypt
SuccessorsPschent
S1
Hedjet
ḥḏt
inhieroglyphs

Hedjet(Ancient Egyptian:𓌉𓏏𓋑,romanized:ḥuḏat,lit.'White One') is the White Crown ofpharaonicUpper Egypt.After the unification ofUpper and Lower Egypt,it was combined with theDeshret,the Red Crown ofLower Egypt,to form thePschent,the double crown of Egypt. The symbol sometimes used for the White Crown was the vulture goddessNekhbetshown next to the head of the cobra goddessWadjet,theuraeuson the Pschent.[1]

History[edit]

Head of a royal statue wearing the White Crown. Between 1493 and 1482 BC,New Kingdom,from the Karnak precinct of Amun-Ra.Museo Egizio,Turin.

The white crown, along with the red crown, has a long history with each of their respective representations going back into thePredynastic Period,indicating that kingship had been the base of Egyptian society for some time. The earliest image of the hedjet was thought to have been in theQustulin Nubia. According to Jane Roy, "At the time of Williams’ argument, the Qustul cemetery and the ‘royal’ iconography found there was dated to the Naqada IIIA period, thus antedating royal cemeteries in Egypt of the Naqada IIIB phase. New evidence from Abydos, however, particularly the excavation of Cemetery U and the tomb U-j, dating to Naqada IIIA has shown that this iconography appears earlier in Egypt".[2]

Frank Yurcostated that depictions of pharonic iconography such as the royal crowns, Horus falcons and victory scenes were concentrated in theUpper EgyptianNaqada cultureandA-Group Nubia.He further elaborated that "Egyptian writing arose in Naqadan Upper Egypt and A-Group Nubia, and not in the Delta cultures, where the directWestern Asiancontact was made, [which] further vitiates the Mesopotamian-influence argument ".[3]According toDavid Wengrow,the A-Group polity of the late 4th millenninum BCE is poorly understood since most of the archaeological remains are submerged underneath Lake Nasser.[4]

Stan Hendrick,John Coleman Darnelland Maria Gatto in 2012 excavated petroglyphic engravings from Nag el-Hamdulab in Aswan, the extreme southern region of Egypt that borders the Sudan, which featured representations of boat procession, solar symbolism and the earliest depiction of the white crown with an estimated dating range between 3200BC and 3100BC.[5]

Nekhbet,the tutelary goddess of Nekhebet (modern el Kab) near Hierakonpolis, was depicted as a woman, sometimes with the head of a vulture, wearing the white crown.[6]The falcon godHorusofHierakonpolis(Egyptian: Nekhen) was generally shown wearing a white crown.[7]A famous depiction of the white crown is on theNarmer palettefound at Hierakonpolis in which the king of the South wearing thehedjetis shown triumphing over his northern enemies. The kings of the united Egypt saw themselves as successors of Horus. Vases from the reign of Khasekhemwy show the king as Horus wearing the white crown.[8]

As with thedeshret(red crown), no example of the white crown has been found. It is unknown how it was constructed and what materials were used.Feltor leather have been suggested, but this is purely speculative. Like the deshret, the hedjet may have been woven like a basket from plant fiber such as grass, straw, flax, palm leaf, or reed. The fact that no crown has ever been found, even in relatively intact royal tombs such as that ofTutankhamun,suggests the crowns may have been passed from one monarch to the next, much as in present-day monarchies.

See also[edit]

  • Atef– hedjet crown with feathers identified withOsiris
  • Khepresh– blue or war crown also called royal crown

References[edit]

  1. ^Arthur Maurice Hocart,The Life-Giving Myth,Routledge 2004, p.209
  2. ^Roy, Jane (February 2011).The Politics of Trade:Egypt and Lower Nubia in the 4th Millennium BC.Brill. p. 215.ISBN9789004196117.Retrieved16 June2015.
  3. ^Frank J.Yurco (1996)."The Origin and Development of Ancient Nile Valley Writing," in Egypt in Africa, Theodore Celenko (ed).Indianapolis, Ind.: Indianapolis Museum of Art. pp. 34–35.ISBN0-936260-64-5.
  4. ^Wengrow, David (2023)."Ancient Egypt and Nubian: Kings of Flood and Kings of Rain" in Great Kingdoms of Africa, John Parker (eds).[S.l.]: THAMES & HUDSON. pp. 1–40.ISBN978-0500252529.
  5. ^Hendrickx, Stan;Darnell, John Coleman;Gatto, Maria Carmela (December 2012)."The earliest representations of royal power in Egypt: the rock drawings of Nag el-Hamdulab (Aswan)".Antiquity.86(334): 1068–1083.doi:10.1017/S0003598X00048250.ISSN0003-598X.S2CID53631029.
  6. ^Cherine Badawi,Egypt,2004, p.550
  7. ^Toby A. H. Wilkinson,Early Dynastic Egypt,Routledge 1999, p.285
  8. ^Jill Kamil,The Ancient Egyptians: Life in the Old Kingdom,American Univ in Cairo Press 1996, p.61