Greek form: Uenéphes (after his Gold name In-nebw); His name and titulary appear on the Palermo Stone. His tomb was later thought to be the legendary tomb of Osiris.
(or ruled as regent to her son Den or ruled as both king/queen and regent). Merneith was buried close to Djet and Den. Her tomb is of the same scale as the tombs of the (other) kings of that period.[5]
Greek form: Kénkenes (after the ramesside diction of his birthname: Qenqen[7]). First pharaoh depicted wearing the double crown of Egypt, first pharaoh with a full niswt bity-name.
↑Tyldesley, J. (2006). Chronicle of the Queens of Egypt. Thames & Hudson.
↑Teeter, Emily, ed. (2011). Before the Pyramids, The Origins of Egyptian Civilization. The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. p. 207.
↑William Matthew Flinders Petrie: The Royal Tombs of the Earliest Dynasties. Cambridge University Press, New York 2013 (reprint of 1901), ISBN1-108-06612-7, p. 49.
↑Nicolas-Christophe Grimal: A History of Ancient Egypt. Blackwell, Oxford UK/ Cambridge USA 1992, ISBN978-0-631-19396-8, p. 53.