May (governor)

May was an ancient Egyptian official of the New Kingdom who was in office under king Thutmosis III.

Statue of May, Egyptian Museum in Berlin

May is known from his tomb in Qaw el-Kebir and from one, perhaps even from two statues. He bears the titles mayor and overseer of priest and was therefore most likely the local governor at Qaw el-Kebir, ancient Tjebu.

The tomb of May was excavated at Qaw el-Kebir. It has several underground chambers. Here were also found the fragments of his sarcophagus, that was smashed into pieces. The sarcophagus was decorated on the inside and on the outside, providing the names and titles of May [1]

May is also known from a statue that is now in the Egyptian Museum in Berlin. It shows May sitting on a chair. The inscriptions provide his name and titles. On the statue appears also the name of king Thutmosis III, providing a precise dating.[2] Around his neck he wears the gold of honor. He must have received it from the king. A second statue now in the Luxor Museum is very close in style and also shows an official with the gold of honor. The statue is not inscribed but might belong to May too.[3]

References

  1. Guy Brunton: Qau and Badari (= British School of Archaeology in Egypt and Egyptian Research Account 50, Volume 3. British School of Egyptian Archaeology u. a., London 1930, plates XXXVII, XXXVIIA.
  2. Klaus Finneiserː Sitzstatue des Maja, inː Ägyptisches Museum, Mainz 1991, ISBN 3-8053-1230-X, p. 88.
  3. Laila M. Azzam: Another statue of the mayor May, Luxor Museum J. 1. In: Khaled Abdalla Daoud (Hrsg.): Studies in honor of Ali Radwan (= Annales du service des antiquités de l'Égypte. (ASAE) Supplément 34). Voume 1. Conseil Suprême des Antiquités de l'Égypte, Kairo 2005, ISBN 977-305-826-3, pp. 165–167.
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