. Sanakht's identity and position in the Third Dynasty is not entirely clear and remains the subject of debate. While Sanakht's existence is attested by seal fragments from
mastaba K2 at
Beit Khallaf and a
graffito, his position as the founder of the Third Dynasty, as recorded by
Manetho and the
Turin Canon, has been seriously undermined by recent archaeological discoveries at
Abydos. These discoveries establish that it was likely
Djoser who helped bury—and thus succeed—Khasekhemwy, rather than Sanakht. This is determined from seals bearing Djoser's name found at the entrance to the latter's tomb. Proponents of the theory that Sanakht was nonetheless the founder of the dynasty object that the presence of Djoser's seals in Khasekhemwy's tomb only shows that Djoser conducted cultural rituals in honor of this king, and does not necessarily imply that Djoser was Khasekhemwy's immediate successor. Sanakht could then have married Queen
Nimaethap, with Nimaethap being the daughter of
Khasekhemwy rather than his wife. Together with Sanakht, they could be the parents of Djoser. Alternatively, some have considered Sanakht to be Djoser's elder brother. Presently, the dominant theory is that Sanakht's reign dates to the later Third Dynasty, after Djoser. Egyptologists
Toby Wilkinson, Stephan Seidlmayer,
Kenneth Kitchen and
Rainer Stadelmann equate Sanakht with "Nebka", a name appearing in Ramesside king lists. In support of this theory is a clay seal fragment on which the lower part of a
cartouche appears. In this cartouche Wilkinson, Seidlmayer and Stadelmann see traces of a
Ka-sign, the end of the name "Nebka". Likewise, Dietrich Wildung favors equating Nebka with Sanakht, although he questions the validity of the seal as evidence given that it is too badly damaged to read the inscription within the cartouche as "Nebka" with any certainty. John D. Degreef,
Nabil Swelim, and
Wolfgang Helck are against equating Nebka with Sanakht. They refer to the fact that the name "Nebka" is not attested on any monument nor in any document dating to before Djoser. He further identifies Sanakht with a king
Mesochris mentioned by Manetho, regarding this as a
Hellenized form of the throne name of Sanakht. He dated Sanakht's reign to between the seventh and eighth king of the Third Dynasty. From this, Wolfgang Helck holds that Sanakht's Nisut-Biti name was
Weneg. King Weneg, however, is widely held to have ruled during the Second Dynasty, and Helck's theory has been greeted with skepticism. Sanakht's name was once read "
Hen Nekht" by Egyptologists such as
Ernest Wallis Budge. Today, this reading is not in use anymore; the up-to-date reading is "
Sanakht" or (seldom) "
Nakht-Sa". == Reign ==