" beneath the Nebty symbol. Reconstruction prt After the
Horus name, the Nebty name is the second oldest royal name of Ancient Egyptian history and also known as the "
Two-Ladies name". Egyptologists such as Toby Wilkinson and Ludwig David Morenz point to an obvious prototype of the Nebty name used before the introduction of the final form:
ivory tags from the Abydos tombs of the kings Hor-Aha and Djer and the queen
Neithhotep show the Two-Ladies crest with the red crown instead of the cobra over a basket. In the case of Hor-Aha the Nebty crest is of special interest, because it is depicted inside a three-framed building (shrine? tomb?) together with the hieroglyph
Men (Gardiner sign
Y5; meaning "to stay" or "to endure"). It is intensely disputed whether this sign group merely gives the name of a Nebty shrine (
Men-Nebty; "where the Two Ladies endure"), whether it shows Aha's Nebty name inside his tomb or whether it shows, instead, Narmer's Nebty name, indicating that Aha buried Narmer. The ivory tags of kings Djer and Djet show the prototype inside a palace and a shrine, guided by the notation that the kings visited the palace of the Two Ladies or oversaw the building of wine cellars for the Nebty shrine. The first use of the final form of the Nebty crest (vulture and cobra over two baskets) appeared during the reign of king
Semerkhet, who called himself
Iry-Nebty ("guardian of the Two Ladies"). After him, every future king used a Nebty name, though not every king of the early dynasties and the Old Kingdom is known by his Nebty name. Another problem in assigning Nebty names is that during the Old Kingdom Egyptian queens also used the Nebty crest as a part of their birth names. Prominent examples are the queens
Hetephernebti and
Djefatnebti. This has caused a problem concerning the interpretation of a Nebty name appearing on an ivory stencil from
Saqqara. It is disputed whether it was the name of a queen (
Djeseret-ankh-Nebty) or just the Nebty name of king
Sekhemkhet. == See also ==