His family are recorded in the following order:—
| Row 1. | ‘His wife, Atef-s-senb. |
| His son, the Great One of the Southern Tens, Y-meru. | |
| His son, the Great One of the Southern Tens, Erde-en-ptah. | |
| Row 2. | His daughter, the servant of the Ruler, Auŷ-senb. |
| His son the Am-khet,[38] Dedut-res. | |
| His sister, Auŷ-senb. | |
| His son, the Am-khet,[38] Y-meru. | |
| Row 3. | The Keeper of the Bow, Sa-Hathor. |
| The Lady, Sent-nw-pw. | |
| The Uab-priest of Amen, Sebek-hetep. | |
| The Lady, Sep-en-urdet.’ |
There was no evidence to show to which of these two tombs this stela belonged.
In the rubbish, and partially under the foundations of the wall of the Lower Court of the ‘Valley’-Temple, was a coffin[39] that had been thrown out from one of the XIIth Dynasty tombs. This coffin was of wood, rectangular and oblong in form, with no inscriptions or decoration; it contained a body of a female child. Round her neck was a cornelian necklace still attached by its strings, and on her breast was a bronze mirror reflector; from the manner this reflector was wrapped in linen it must have been buried with the deceased without a handle. The girl’s hair was plaited.
Circular Pit No. 35.
This pit ([Pl. XXX]) was the last and most puzzling of all opened this season. It is a rock-hewn shaft, some three metres in diameter at the mouth and only 63 cms. at the bottom, and thus, like an inverted cone, descends 22·50 metres[40] into the Tafle stratum. The filling was absolutely untouched, and from top to bottom consisted of pure black soil from the arable plain; the upper surface had been hardened by water. The bottom of the shaft, apparently unfinished, was on one side slightly deeper than the other. A hollow copper bead-like object of cylindrical-drop shape found on the top surface, was the only object discovered here. At four metres below the surface the shaft had been cut through one of the pit tombs[41] of the cemetery, and the hole in the side thus caused had been mended with mud bricks. Its whole meaning is at present inexplicable.[42]
No. 36, [Pl. XXX].
A large mud-brick structure of which only part of one side has been exposed by our excavations. This part lies within the area of the ‘Valley’-Temple (No. 14), and is in line with the Colonnaded Terrace. The one end (north-east corner) and the stretch of some thirty-five metres of wall that has been uncovered does not give us enough data to tell its exact meaning or date. It is built upon the bed-rock, and it averages four metres in height. The brickwork seems to be earlier than that of the New Kingdom. The probabilities are that it belongs to the Intermediate Period or even perhaps the Middle Kingdom. Towards the southern end of the part cleared by us the foundation of the wall has been built over the courtyard of Tomb No. 41.
Tomb No. 37.
This tomb, shaped like an inverted T, is the largest one yet opened in this group; in fact it could be ranked among the larger mausolea of the Theban Necropolis, and evidently belonged to one of the higher Egyptian dignitaries (Pls. XXX, LV).