Gebu was a high official in Ancient Egypt with the title high steward and royal sealer, during the late Twelfth or early Thirteenth dynasty of the late Middle Kingdom.
Attestation
Gebu is only known from one statue.
At Thebes, a grandorite statue of Gebu sitting with crossed-legs was found in the Temple of Amun at Karnak. Inscriptions show that the statue was a gift from an unnamed king and dedicated to the god Amun. The stylistic features put it to the late Twelfth Dynasty or early Thirteenth Dynasty.
Literature
Mogens Joergensen: Catalogue Egypt I (3000–1550 B.C.): Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek. Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek, Kopenhagen 1996, ISBN87-7452-202-7, S. 188–189, Nr. 78.
Marsha Hill: Statue of the High Steward Gebu in a Cross Legged Pose. In: Adela Oppenheim, Dorothea Arnold, Dieter Arnold, Kei Yamamoto (Hrsg.): Ancient Egypt Transformed, The Middle Kingdom. Yale University Press, New York 2015, ISBN978-1-58839-564-1, S. 133–134, Nr. 66.