Merneith is believed to have become ruler upon the death of
Djet. The title she held, however, is debated. It is possible that her son Den was too young to rule when Djet died, so she may have ruled as regent until Den was old enough to be the king in his own right. Before her,
Neithhotep is believed to have ruled in the same way after her husband
King Narmer died, as Narmer's son was too young to rule. Her name was written on a Naqada seal inside a serekh, which was the way the kings' names were written. This would mean Merneith may have actually been the second female in Egypt's first dynasty to have ruled as pharaoh. The strongest evidence that Merneith was a ruler of Egypt is her tomb. This tomb in
Abydos (Tomb Y) is unique among the otherwise exclusively male tombs. Merneith was buried close to Djet and Den. Her tomb is of the same scale as the tombs of the kings of that period. Two grave stelae bearing her name were discovered near her tomb. Merneith's name is not included in the king lists from the
New Kingdom. A seal containing a list of pharaohs of the first dynasty was found in the tomb of
Qa'a, the third known pharaoh after
Den, her son. However, this list does not mention the reign of Merneith. • Items from the great
mastaba (Nr 3503, 16 x 42 m) in
Saqqara, where her name has been found in inscriptions on
stone vessels, jars, as well as seal impressions. In particular, there is one seal from Saqqara, which shows Merneith's name in a
serekh. • Merneith's name was found on objects in king
Djer's tomb in Umm el-Qa'ab. ==Tombs==