The possibly only known contemporary inscription from Senedj's reign was found in 1909 by Egyptologist Uvo Hölscher, who assisted the excavations at the
Khephren- and
Menkaura temple at
Giza. Hölscher found a small, thin-walled and polished
diorite shard, which once belonged to a flat bowl. At the left breakline an incised inscription gives the reading: "The king of Upper- and Lower Egypt, Senedj". The inscription goes from the right to the left and exceeds the breakline, but the king's name remains reconstructable. The precious artifact was published in 1912. It was also examined by
George Andrew Reisner, who mentioned it shortly in his book
Mycerinus, the Temples of the Third Pyramid at Giza. The next source referring to king Senedj dates back to the beginning or middle of the 4th Dynasty. The name, written in a
cartouche, appears in the inscription on a
false door belonging to the
mastaba tomb of the high
priest Shery at
Saqqara. Shery held the title “overseer of all wab-priests of king
Peribsen in the
necropolis of king Senedj”, “overseer of the ka-priests of king Senedj” and “god's servant of Senedj”. Senedj's name is written in
archaic form and set in a cartouche, which is an
anachronism, since the cartouche itself was not used until the end of
3rd Dynasty under king
Huni. Egyptologist
Dietrich Wildung points to two further priests and possible relatives of Shery, who both also participated the funerary cult of Senedj,
Inkef and
Siy. Senedj is also mentioned in
Papyrus Berlin 3038, which contains medical prescriptions and therapies for numerous diseases. One of these gives instructions for treating foot
cramps, and closes with the claim that the recipe for the ointment originates from a "book of vessels". This book is claimed to originate from the time of king Usáphais (identical with king Horus
Den of
Dynasty I). King Senedj allegedly received the book as an inheritance gift. The latest mention of Senedj's name appears on a small
bronze statuette in the shape of a kneeling king wearing the White Crown of
Upper Egypt and holding incense burners in its hands. Additionally, the figurine wears a belt which has Senedj's name carved at the back. Egyptologist
Peter Munro has written a report about the existence of a mud seal inscription showing the cartouche name
Nefer-senedj-Ra, which he thinks to be a version of “Senedj”. But since the finding was never photographed nor drawn and the alleged object meanwhile got lost, Munro's claim is highly questioned by many scholars. == Identity ==