- Intef VIII
, when Egypt was divided between the Theban based 17th Dynasty in Upper Egypt and the Hyksos 15th Dynasty who controlled Lower and part of Middle Egypt.
Intef VIII ruled from Thebes, and was buried in a tomb in the 17th Dynasty royal necropolis at Dra Abu El-Naga. His only clear attestation is his coffin--Louvre E 3020 --now in France. [Kim Ryholt, The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, Museum Tusculanum Press, (1997), p.267] His sarcophagus contained the corrected nomen of this king as well as his prenomen, Sekhemre Heruhirmaat, "which was added in ink on the chest of the coffin." [Ryholt, op. cit., p.267] Little more is known concerning the reign of this king except that he was a short-lived successor of Nebkheperre Antef VII. The Danish Egyptologist
Kim Ryholt has argued that Intef VIII was possibly a co-regent of Nebkheperre Antef VII based on a block from Koptos which preservesRyholt observes that the length of the damaged cartouche would fit well with the long prenomen of Antef VIII: Sekhemre Heruhirmaatre.Brief Reign
Ryholt has suggested that Intef VIII died prematurely and was buried in a royal coffin which initially belonged to Nebkheperre Antef VII; hence, Intef VIII did not enjoy an independent reign of his own. Scolar Jürgen von Beckerath suspects that Intef VII might have been murdered. The British Egyptologist Aidan Dodson, however, critiques Ryholt's proposal that Intef VIII died during the reign of his predecessor and was buried in Intef VI's original royal coffin. Dodson observes that the form of the name Antef written here (which was originally similar to that used to designate Nebkheperre Antef before it was amended for Heruhirmaatre Antef) and the added king's prenomen of Sekhemre Heruhirmaat on this king's coffin was composed in an entirely different hand from the remaining texts on the coffin. [Aidan Dodson, Book Review of Ryholt, K.S.B., The Political Situation in Egypt..., Bibliotheca Orientalis LVII No. 1/2, Januari-April 2000, p.51] Dodson also stresses that
Dodson's previous explanation derives from his GM 120 (1991) article where the author argues that Intef VIII was most probably a short-lived Theban king who died within months of his accession to power since the temple ""scribes were probably still used to writing Inyotef in the manner of Nubkheperre [Intef VII] [sc. with the reed-leaf: in-it=f] , leading to the corrected mistake on the coffin [of Intef VIII] ". [Aidan Dodson, On the Internal Chronology of the Seventeenth Dynasty,"
Göttinger Miszellen 120 (1991), p.36]This would also explain the modesty of Intef VIII's coffin which lacked a royal uraeus and is stylistically similar to the clearly non-royal coffin of
Kamose . Intef, hence, would not have had the time to create a proper royal coffin in his abbreviated reign.References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.