Mery (High Priest of Osiris)

Mery was an ancient Egyptian High Priest of Osiris at Abydos, during the reign of pharaoh Sety I and Ramesses II of the 19th Dynasty.

Mery
High Priest of Osiris
PredecessorHat
SuccessorWenennefer
Dynasty19th Dynasty
PharaohSety I, Ramesses II
FatherHat
MotherIuy
WifeMaianuy
ChildrenWenennefer

Biography

Mery
in hieroglyphs

Mery was the son of the High Priest of Osiris Hat. Mery succeeded his father in the role of High Priest of Osiris during the reign of Sety I, and continued in office for the first decade of the reign of Ramesses II.[1] Mery's wife Maianuy was the daughter of the High Priest of Osiris To (also written as Tjay) who had preceded Hat in office.[2]

Mery is known from several monuments shared with his son. A double statue of Wenennefer and his father Mery (Cairo JdE 35257) depicts both Mery and his son Wenennefer. The text on the statue identifies Mery as the son of the High Priest of Osiris Hat and his wife Iuy.[3]

A family monument from Abydos (Cairo Museum JdE 35258) belonging to Wenennefer shows his father Mery holding two standards. The name of Ramesses II appears throughout the scenes.[4]

A fragments from Wenennefer's tomb chapel Abydos contains text mentioning his parents Mery and Wiay, and his wife Tiy.[5]

gollark: It was also very annoying, but I think it's more of a joke/nostalgia thing.
gollark: Also, 1-based indexing is evil, yes.
gollark: Though I dislike how Python has so many weird syntax special cases and features; Lua's is comparatively simple.
gollark: I kind of prefer Python's whitespacey syntax to Lua's.
gollark: Wait, it says: > This middleware is available in Express v4.16.0 onwards.

References

  1. Kitchen, Kenneth A., Pharaoh Triumphant: The Life and Times of Ramesses II, King of Egypt, Aris & Phillips. 1983, p 170, ISBN 978-0856682155
  2. H Franzmeier, News from Parahotep: The small Finds from his Tomb rediscovered, Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, 2014, pp 151-179
  3. Kitchen, Kenneth A. Ramesside Inscriptions, Translated and Annotated Translations: Ramesses II, His Contemporaries (Ramesside Inscriptions Translations) (Volume III) Wiley-Blackwell. 2001, pg 318-320, ISBN 978-0631184287
  4. Kitchen, Ramesside Inscriptions, pp. 320-21
  5. Kitchen, Ramesside Inscriptions, pp. 326-7



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.