, ca. 2500 BC The Abydos boats were found in boat graves with their prows pointed towards the Nile. Experts consider them to have been the royal boats intended for the pharaoh in the afterlife.
Umm el-Qa'ab is a royal necropolis that is about one mile from the Abydos boat graves where early pharaohs were entombed. The Abydos boats are the predecessors of the great solar boats of later dynasties upon which the pharaoh joined the sun god
Ra and together journeyed down the sacred Nile during the day. They would have had many of the important attributes and metaphors that were attached to the
solar barques of later dynasties, and indeed perhaps should be called solar boats of an earlier design. The
Khufu ship, built for the Pharaoh Khufu – Cheops – ca. 2500 BC., is usually identified as the earliest solar barque. It was buried in a pit at the foot of the
Great Pyramid at Giza. vessel / pharaoh Aha, early 1st Dynasty, ca. 3000 BC|right The Abydos boat graves were adjacent to a massive funerary enclosure for the late
Dynasty II (ca. 2675 B.C.) Pharaoh
Khasekhemwy at Abydos which is eight miles from the Nile.
Umm el-Qa'ab is a royal necropolis at Abydos where early pharaohs were entombed. However, these boat graves were established earlier than late in Dynasty II, perhaps for the afterlife journeys of
Hor-Aha, the first king (ca. 2920–2770) of the
First Dynasty of Egypt, or Pharaoh
Djer also of
Dynasty I. Two more recently located mortuary discoveries have been identified as those of
King Aha, who may have been the son of the famous King
Narmer, to whom the first unification of Upper and Lower Egypt is often attributed. == First Dynasty ships ==