Khnumhotep and Niankhkhnum were the head manicurists for the royal family, but held a number of different official titles and duties. Both or either men held the following titles: •
m-r jr ant pr aA "overseer of manicurists (literally, 'those who do fingernails') in the palace." •
sHD jr ant pr aA "inspector of manicurists in the palace" •
Hrj sStA "guardian of secrets" •
rx nswt "king's acquaintance" •
zXAw nswt "king's scribe" •
mHnk nswt "confidant of the king" •
jr xt nswt "keeper of the king's things" •
mrr nb.f "one who is beloved of his lord" •
Hm-nTr ra m Szp jb ra "sun priest in the (place where the sun-god) Ra's heart receives welcome," that is, in
Nyuserre's solar temple at
Abu Ghurab •
wab mn swt nj-wsr-ra "purity attendant of the enduring places of
Nyuserre" (a cleaner-priest in this king's pyramid complex at
Abusir). •
wab nswt "one who purifies the king." (a personal priest to the king) •
nb jmAx nTr aA "lord of those who are honored before the great god" (an aspirational title signifying donations to the individual's mortuary estate from the king). On duty at the sun temple, Niankhkhnum or Khnumhotep may have watched over subordinate officials, such as the
m-r pr Sna "overseer of the magazines" who in turn supervised crews of porters stocking and withdrawing material from the granaries and store-rooms. Care of the king's body and wardrobe in preparation for his public appearances required a large number of aides, apparently working in different ateliers each under its own leadership. In addition to the manicurists whom Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep supervised, the palace had attendants under one or more men holding the title
jrj nfr HAt "keeper of the headdress," responsible for the king's wigs and headcloths,
jrw Snj " hairdressers, who kept him shaven, and an
m-r n jzwj Xkrwt nswt "overseer of the two chambers of king's adorners." The post of
Xkrt nswt "adorner of the king" was always held by women, who were legally, if not socially, equal to men in Egypt. Neferhotep-Hathor is labeled with this status at the funeral procession of Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep. How, or how often, personnel in the hairdressers' shop, which from titulary evidence stands higher than the manicurists in 5th and 6th Dynasty prestige rankings, communicated with the latter remains unknown. No hairdressers are labeled at the funeral procession. Ptahshepses, the keeper of the headdress who became Nyussere's vizier, and Ti, overseer of the pyramids and sun temples, are two officials whom Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep may have worked with. Both Khnumhotep and Niankhkhnum are attested on a harvest scene in the splendid burial estate of Ptahshepses, where they may have been quarry supervisors, yet named as
jr ant pr aA "palace manicurists," quite junior to titulary in their own tomb, which could mean Ptahshepses died while they were younger. A door jamb, besides
TAtj "vizier," displays the title
HAt-a "one whose arm is in front," a pure honorific Allen distinguishes from the
m-r and
jrj titles specifying responsibility domains we've encountered up to now. The
jrj nfr HAt "keeper of the headdress" epithet, recorded in many of the rooms, is spelled with the mouth sign (Gardiner D21), not the eye sign (D4), so that it shares the introductory word of
jrj-pat "hereditary prince," another of Allen's honorifics. ==Tomb==