-
serekhs of
ancient Egypt.
There are a
couple of
cases in
which the
Horus name
appears without serekhs, and only
Peribsen and
Khasekhemwy have
serekhs...
- the
serekhs of
kings were yet anonymous.
Later the name of the king was
written beside the
serekh or
omitted completely. In many
cases the
serekh lacks...
- Iry-Hor's name have been
found in Canaan. The
serekhs earlier than Iry-Hor are
either generic serekhs that do not
refer to a
specific king, or are for...
- Tura,
where a tomb
yielded a
complete jar
bearing a
serekh topped by two falcons. More recently,
serekhs of
Double Falcon have been
found in the
Sinai Peninsula...
- they were from
different time periods. The
serekh is
surmounted by a falcon, as is
conventional for
serekhs, and
contains a
single sign. The sign is an...
- dynasty. In this period,
those kings'
names were
inscribed in the form of
serekhs on a
variety of
surfaces including pottery and tombs. The Protodynastic...
-
insignia called a
serekh,
which is "a
composite hieroglyphic symbol standing for the king/crown/state and the state's property". The
serekhs bear the rebus...
- likelihood,
Naqada III saw the
earliest codification of signs,
where royal serekhs—a
rectangular cartouche representing the
niched or
gated façade of a palace...
-
Scorpion II of
Naqada III. It was soon
thereafter portra****
mounted upon the
serekhs of Seth-Peribsen and Khasekhemwy.(pp 66-67, E20, E21) Egyptians’ depictions...
- clay seals, Neithhotep's name was
written inside a
double serekh, and
between the
merged serekhs perches the
divine standard of Neith. One
unusual seal impression...