Tomb of RAMESSES IV: KV 2 is cut into the base of a hill on the northwest side of the main wadi of the Valley of the Kings, just south of the branch wadi leading to KV 1. The tomb consists of three gently sloping corridors (B, C, D) followed by a chamber (E), a burial chamber (J), and a corridor beyond (K) with side chambers Ka-c. The tomb is decorated with scenes from the Litany of Ra (corridor B, corridor C), Book of Caverns (corridor D, corridor K), Book of the Dead (well chamber E), Book of Gates (burial chamber J), Imydwat (burial chamber J), Book of Nut (burial chamber J), Book of the Night (burial chamber J), Book of the Earth (gate Kb), deceased and deities (corridor B, corridor K, side chamber Ka, side chamber Kb, side chamber Kc), and burial furniture (side chamber Kb).
The original plan of the tomb was altered after the death of the king, and the chamber which would have been pillared chamber F was used for burial chamber J. Two plans of the tomb are known: a plan of the whole tomb drawn on a papyrus now in the Turin Museum (Cat. 1885), and a sketch of the doorway of the tomb on an ostracon found in the rubble at the entrance.
Notable architectural features of this tomb include: the barrel-vaulted ceiling of corridor D; the ramp through the floor of corridor D, gate E and chamber E; the conversion of a pillared chamber into a burial chamber; side chambers and recesses off the rear corridor K. Also unusual are the number of foundation deposit pits, although not all were used. Decoration unique to this tomb includes the representation of Shu and Nut from the Book of Nut on the ceiling of burial chamber J, the mummiform figures in Ka and Kc, and parts of the Book of Caverns, which appear for the first time in the Valley of the Kings. KV 2 is one of the few tombs for which an ancient plan has survived.
The tomb was frequently visited in antiquity, and graffiti are scattered throughout the tomb. In general, each visitor left his name, his profession, his origin, and personal comments about the tomb. There is a significant number of Coptic graffiti, including representations of saints and Coptic crosses. [X]
mermaid144 liked this
historyandartareapassionofmine reblogged this from ancientegyptdaily herzallah94 liked this
spoilofwar reblogged this from ancientegyptdaily
celestairoses liked this
suncloudess reblogged this from egypt-ancient-and-modern
plurdledgabbleblotchits liked this
wolves-r-watching liked this
foulstudentking-blog liked this
kouhei001 liked this
legendarytimemachinecloud liked this
thatiswhytheywilldestroyus reblogged this from ancientegyptdaily
ladyhaley28 liked this
kulaykape liked this
itsageekhaven reblogged this from educationsaves bi6money reblogged this from domina-est-in-crimen
pocmonk liked this domina-est-in-crimen reblogged this from educationsaves
domina-est-in-crimen liked this
idonotliketheconeofshamesblog liked this
lookingformyperfectsandwich liked this
educationsaves reblogged this from ancientegyptdaily
bellabloom22 liked this
fleurdelys-fletri liked this nikewingedvictory reblogged this from diskuspiter
diskuspiter reblogged this from ancientegyptdaily
khrayszie-ghurl-08 reblogged this from egypt-ancient-and-modern
batwingsbee reblogged this from egypt-ancient-and-modern
batwingsbee liked this
doozee liked this skaldulverine liked this
j4ck14dd liked this
still--a--dreamer liked this
olivier056 reblogged this from egypt-ancient-and-modern apollolxii liked this
brawgavin liked this
kennyblaine liked this firelordderpy liked this
jkdjjtk liked this
oldbliv2 liked this
clicks14 liked this ancientegyptdaily posted this
- Show more notes
