Hedju-Hor | |
---|---|
Hor-Hedju | |
![]() A clay cutting of a hieroglyph of Hedju Hor [2] | |
Pharaoh | |
Successor | Ny-Hor? |
Dynasty | Dynasty 0 - (disputed) |
Hedju Hor was a ruler in northern Egypt from the Predynastic Period whose name means 'the maces of Horus'. [3] [4] [5] As very little information is known about him, this has caused a debate among historians regarding his social status.
Hedju Hor is only known from two clay jugs on which his serekh appears: one from Tura in the eastern Nile Delta and one from Abu Zeidan on the northeastern tip of the Nile Delta. [6] [7] Wolfgang Helck, who was an Egyptologist, held him as a Pharaoh of Dynasty 0 and identified him with Wash, who is known as the ruler defeated by Narmer on the Narmer Palette. [8] This opinion was also later shared by historian Edwin van den Brink. [9] By contrast, Toby Wilkinson and Jochem Kahl both argue that Hedju Hor was not a pre-dynastic Pharaoh but, rather, a ruler of a small proto-state of the pre-dynastic era and have attributed to him the title King. [10] Hedju Hor also has no known tomb and is not found in the text of the Palermo Stone, which is a stone listing the oldest kings of Ancient Egypt. [11]
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link), p. 98.