Evidence of the game of Mehen is found from the
Predynastic period dating from approximately 3000 BC and continues until the end of the
Old Kingdom, around 2300 BC. Aside from physical boards, which mostly date to the Predynastic and
Archaic periods, a Mehen board also appears in a picture in the
tomb of Hesy-Ra, and its name first appears in the tomb of Rahotep. Other scenes dating to the
Fifth Dynasty of Egypt and
Sixth Dynasty of Egypt show people playing the game. No scenes or boards date to the
Middle Kingdom of Egypt or
The New Kingdom of Egypt, and so it appears that the game was no longer played in Egypt after the Old Kingdom. It is, however, depicted in two tombs circa 700, because the tomb decorations are copied from Old Kingdom originals. Mehen also appears to have been played outside of Egypt. It appears alongside other boards displaying the game of
senet at
Bab 'edh Dhra and in
Cyprus. In Cyprus, it sometimes appears on the opposite side of the same stone as senet, and those from
Sotira Kaminoudhia, dating to approximately 2250 BC, are the oldest surviving double-sided boards known. Mehen survived in Cyprus longer than in Egypt, showing that the game was indigenized upon its adoption into the island's culture. ==Equipment==