Nebankh

{{Short description|Egyptian official}}

{{Infobox Egyptian dignitary

| Name= Nebankh

| Style = High steward

| Image = File:Neferhotep Aswan.png

| Caption= Inscription of Neferhotep I from Konosso listing the members of his family as well as the Royal acquaintance Nebankh (rightmost column).Karl Richard Lepsius: Denkmäler aus Ägypten und Äthiopien , 1849, Tafel II, Band IV, [http://edoc3.bibliothek.uni-halle.de/lepsius/tafelwa2.html available online] see p. 151 plates e and f

| Predecessor=

| Successor=

| Dynasty= 13th dynasty

| Pharaoh= Sobekhotep IV

| Father= Sobekhotep, steward

| Mother= Hapyu

| Wife=

| Children=

| Burial=

}}

Nebankh was an ancient Egyptian official of the Thirteenth Dynasty. He is one of the better known personalities of this period.

Family

{{hiero|Nebankh|nb:Z1-anx-n:x|align=right|era=2ip}}

Nebankh was the son of the steward Sobekhotep. His mother is named Hapyu. His brother Dedusobek Bebi was the father of queen Nubkhaes.Kim Ryholt: The Political Situation in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period. Kopenhagen 1997, {{ISBN|8772894210}}, pp. 239–242,

Career

=King's Acquaintance=

At Konosso, an inscription listing the members of the royal family of Neferhotep I, also shows treasurer Senebi and king's acquaintance Nebankh. Another colleague was king's acquaintance Rehuankh.

=High Steward=

Under king Sobekhotep IV he became high steward. In this position he went on expeditions to the Wadi Hammamat and Wadi el-Hudi.

=Other attestations=

Nebankh is known from a high number of monuments, including rock inscriptions and several stelae and a statue, found at Abydos. His heart scarab is so far the oldest datable heart scarab. It is a human-headed green jasper heart scarab with nine lines of hieroglyphics bearing the name of Nebankh.London, Bristish Museum EA65378; Stephen Quirke: Two Thirteenth Dynasty Heart Scarabs, in: Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Sociert "Ex Oriente Lux" 37 (2001-2002), p. 31

References