Tell Nebesha or Nebesheh (also known as 'Faraon' or 'Farun') is an archaeological site in Egypt, and the location of the ancient city of Imet. It is found around 10km south of Tanis in the Eastern Nile Delta. This was the ancient capital of the 19th Nome of Lower Egypt. By the Assyrian period, it was succeeded by Tanis.
Archaeologyedit
The site consists of three areas: the temple site, the town, and the cemetery.[3]
A temple at the site, dedicated to the goddess Wadjet, the cobra goddess of Lower Egypt, may have been constructed during the Ramesside Period. Yet the evidence of inscriptions discovered at the site "clearly indicates that occupation begun in the 18th Dynasty".[4]
Wadjet was worshipped in the area as the 'Lady of Imet'. Later she was joined by Min and Horus to form a triad of deities. This was based on an Osiriac model identified elsewhere in Egypt.[4]
The enclosure contained two temples. A smaller one has been dated by foundation deposits naming King Ahmose II (Amasis) of 26th Dynasty. It seems to have been dedicated to the deity Min. The bigger temple was dedicated to Wadjet.
Re-used monuments from the Middle Kingdom were also found. They may have been moved here from another location.
Petrie concluded that the temple was built during the 12th Dynasty, and then reused in the 19th Dynasty under Ramesses II.
In the course of Petrie's excavations,
In one of the earlier tombs no fewer than two hundred uninscribed funerary statuettes in green-glazed pottery were found; and in another some thirty thousand beads of glass, silver, and lapis lazuli. Bronze spear-heads, amulets, scarabs, etc., were also turned up in considerable numbers.
— Amelia Edwards, Pharaohs Fellahs and Explorers. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1891.
Petrie also found the remains of a colossal seated statue of Rameses II, a Middle Kingdom granite altar, and remains of two Middle Kingdom statue-thrones carved from red sandstone.
More recently, the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities excavated there. Middle Kingdom and later burials were identified.
Some Saite tombs were found in the 1985/6 seasons.
^ abGauthier, Henri (1925). Dictionnaire des Noms Géographiques Contenus dans les Textes Hiéroglyphiques Vol. 1. pp. 73–74.
^Wallis Budge, E. A. (1920). An Egyptian hieroglyphic dictionary: with an index of English words, king list and geological list with indexes, list of hieroglyphic characters, coptic and semitic alphabets, etc. Vol II. John Murray. p. 957.
^Farun-Nebesheh site survey www.deltasurvey.ees.ac.uk
^ abVincent Razanajao, D'Imet à Tell Farâoun : recherches sur la géographie, les cultes et l'histoire d'une localité de Basse-Égypte orientale. (English synopsis)
^Rita E. Freed, Defending Connoisseurship: A Thrice Re-inscribed Sphinx of Dynasty XII, in Donald P. Hansen, Erica Ehrenberg, eds. Leaving No Stones Unturned: Essays on the Ancient Near East and Egypt in Honor of Donald P. Hansen. Archived 2013-11-04 at the Wayback Machine Eisenbrauns, 2002. p. 77 ISBN 1575060558
Mustafa, I.A., “A Preliminary Report on the Excavation of the EAO at Tell Faraon - 'Imet', Season 1985- 1986”, in van den Brink (ed.), The Archaeology of the Niie Delta, 141-149.
----, “Some Objects Dating from the Archaic Period Period at Tell Faraon-Imet”, GM 102, 1988, 73-84.
Petrie, W.M.F., Tanis II, Nebesheh (Am) and Defenneh (Tahpanhes), London, 1888, 1-37.
----, Ten Years' Digging in Egypt. London, 1893, 64-70.
Vincent Razanajao, « La demeure de Min maître d’Imet. Un monument de Tell Farâoun réinterprété », ENIM 2, 2009, p. 103-108.
Vincent Razanajao, "Tell el-Fara'un and the Ancient Imet", in: M.I. Bakr and H. Brandl with F. Kalloniatis (eds.), Egyptian Antiquities from the Eastern Nile Delta (Museums in the Nile Delta, vol. 2), Cairo/Berlin 2014, pp. 48-58, 200-239; ISBN 9783000453182.