Nes-Peka Shuti Relief: Block from Right End of Second Register
- Medium: Limestone
- Place Found: Thebes (Deir el Bahri), Egypt
- Dates: ca. 664-610 B.C.E.
- Dynasty: XXVI Dynasty
- Period: Late Period
- Dimensions: 16 1/8 x 17 3/8 in. (41 x 44.1 cm)
- Collections: Egyptian, Classical, and Ancient Middle Eastern Art
- Museum Location:
This item is on view in Egypt Reborn: Art for Eternity, Temples and Tombs, Martha A. and Robert S. Rubin Gallery, 3rd Floor - Accession Number: 52.131.2
- Credit Line: Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund
- Image: Overall, 52.131.2_transp5487.jpg. Brooklyn Museum photograph
- Catalogue Description: Limestone relief of male mourners from tomb of Nespeka-shuti. The group is from the right end of a long scene of male mourners. Four complete and one incomplete figure preserved. All men standing, wearing plain wigs and long skirts. Hands raised to heads. End man holds left hand to breast. Incomplete line of inscription in raised relief at upper edge. Plain border along right end of relief. Condition: Relief is assembled from several fragments with gaps on upper part. The surface is in fragile condition in some sections, particularly around figure of last man which has had some surface fills. Fill-ins on blank area at right and on some of the skirts.
The vizier was the highest-ranking governmental official in ancient Egypt. His duties included overseeing the administration of the country by supervising, for example. the bureaucracies that dealt with land management, tax collection, and judicial affairs. It appears that in the Old Kingdom the task became so formidable that separate viziers were created for the northern and southern parts of the country this division seems to have continued throughout the remainder of ancient Egyptian history.
Nespeqashuty was vizier, presumably of Upper Egypt, during the reign of Psamtik I, first king of Dynasty XXVI, and may also have served as such under Tanwetamani, last king of Dynasty XXV. For an unknown reason, rather than building a new tomb for himself, he expropriated and rebuilt an older tomb from Dynasty XI. Built high on a cliff face at Thebes, the tomb commanded a sweeping view of the Theban necropolis and was situated just above an important processional route. In addition to remodeling the tomb's courtyard, Nespeqashuty decorated the tomb with reliefs which had to be fashioned in freshly hewn stone and attached to the tomb walls because the tomb's own stone was too poor to be carved. The reliefs from his tomb that are shown here compare favorably with those from the tomb of Montuemhat, one of his contemporaries.
This text refers to these objects: 52.131.1a-i; 52.131.2; 52.131.3; 52.131.4; 52.131.5; 52.131.6; 52.131.7; 52.131.8; 52.131.9; 52.131.10; 52.131.11; 52.131.12; 52.131.14; 52.131.15; 52.131.16; 52.131.17; 52.131.18; 52.131.19; 52.131.20; 52.131.21; 52.131.22; 52.131.23; 52.131.24; 52.131.25; 52.131.26; 52.131.27; 52.131.28; 52.131.29; 52.131.30; 52.131.31; 52.131.32
Related Audio
Tomb Relief Blocks
- Download
- Embed
FAQ


Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum