This is the person mentioned in a rock inscription of El Kab, published by Stern (Aeg. Zeitschr., 1875, [Pl. I] r.). By this identification we can claim this tablet for the VIth dynasty.
2. The inscription of this XIIth dynasty sandstone stela from the cemetery must be divided in the middle. The right half—“the well-deserved of Anubis, Usrtsn, son of Srtuy (?)”—relates to the chief personage holding a nabút in the left hand and the well-known sceptre of command in the right.
The person behind, who carries a long Nymphaea caerulea, is “his beloved son, Khuy, son of Mryt-[.a]tfs,” and may be the dedicator of this stela. So we have the following genealogy:—
Srtuy (?)
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Usrtsn—Mryt-[.a]tfs
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Khuy
3. Limestone stela of the end of the XIIth dynasty, from the cemetery, dedicated by a certain Sabna to his father, who had the same name and was a prophet of Amon.
In the first line we have the formula of offering addressed to Osiris, the next contain this genealogy:—
Ankht[.a]t I
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Ankht-[.a]t II = Sabna I = Mrt-[.a]ts
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Ḥny Sabna II
[Pl. V.]—No. 1. A figure of blue-glazed ware from a XIIth dynasty tomb (No. 1). It represents a very flat-headed deity, with the youthful side-lock, the body in mummy form, the darker lines representing a bead network.
No. 2 is the alabaster ushabti of the XIIth dynasty.
No. 3 is the fine bronze (height 19 cm.), now at Ghizeh, representing a man adoring Nekheb; his hands are side by side before him, palms down. This is by far the finest of the 800 bronzes found together; of these 700 were worthless, the rest ordinary Osiris figures.