A list of attestations is provided by Ryholt 1997:393 File 17/2. In the preserved attestations only the prenomen and nomen are preserved. • BM EA 38089 | At Abydos, a limestone block with two cartouches containing the prenomen and nomen of Sobekemsaf II. • MMA 25.3.330 | At Dra Abu el-Naga, a shrine fragment. • MMA 25.3.229 | At Dra Abu el-Naga, a stela with the royal name Sobekemsaf (nomen) found together with the shrine (MMA 25.3.330), belonging to a private individual. • BM EA 1163 | At Qurna, a triangular limestone stela of a contemporary temple scribe Sobekhotep with cartouches of Sobekemsaf II. • Medinet Habu magazine | At the Luxor-Farshut Road, a door-jamb of a king Intef (nomen) with the royal name of Sobekemsaf (nomen), indicated as the father of Intef. The orthography indicates that Intef was
Nubkheperre Intef. • Present location unknown | At Thebes, a lintel. • Cairo JE 85415 | Provenance unknown, a finger-ring. • Present location unknown | At Dra Abu el-Naga(?), a small pyramid tomb. Note that attestations with the nomen Sobekemsaf may belong to one of two kings, Sobekemsaf I or Sobekemsaf II.
Non-contemporary attestations A series of attestations date to Ramesses IX at the end of the 20th Dynasty, • BM EA 10221 "Pap. Abbott" | At Thebes, a document with inspection of pyramid-tomb. • Brussels, Musées Royaux E.6857/Amherst 6 "Pap. Leopold/Amherst" | At Thebes, a document with investigation of violated pyramid-tomb. • Vienna ÄS 3876 II:7 "Pap. Ambras" | At Thebes, an inventory list with references to document above.
The robbery of Sobekemsaf's tomb The
Abbott and
Leopold-Amherst Papyruses, which are dated to Year 16 of
Ramesses IX, state that this king's royal pyramid tomb was violated and destroyed by tomb robbers. The confessions and tomb robbery trials of the men responsible for the looting of Sekhemre Shedtawy Sobekemsaf's tomb are detailed in the latter papyrus which is dated to Year 16, III Peret day 22 of Ramesses IX. This document relates that a certain Amenpnufer, son of Anhernakhte, a stonemason from the Temple of Amun Re "fell into the habit of robbing the tombs [of noblemen in West Thebes] in company with the stonemason Hapiwer" and mentions that they robbed Sobekemsaf's tomb along with six other accomplices in Year 13 of Ramesses IX. Amenpnufer confesses that they In his trial, Amenpnufer testifies that he and his companions dug a tunnel into the king's pyramid with their copper tools: Amenpnufer states that the treasures taken from the two royal mummies amounted to "160 deben of gold" or 32 lbs (14.5 kg). The document ends with the conviction of the thieves—with a probable death sentence—and notes that a copy of the official trial transcripts was dispatched to Ramesses IX in
Lower Egypt. Amenpnufer himself would have been sentenced to death by
impalement, a punishment which "was reserved for [only] the most heinous crimes" in Ancient Egypt. ==Theories==