Akhetaa (also written Achtiaa and Aa-Akhti) was an ancient Egyptian high official during the mid to late 3rd Dynasty (Old Kingdom period). He is mostly known for his tomb inscriptions, which refer to various seldom used titles as well as to the shadowy king Nebka, in whose cult Akhetaa served.[1]
^Wolfgang Helck: Untersuchungen zur Thinitenzeit (= Ägyptologische Abhandlungen, vol. 45). Harrassowitz, Wiesbaden 1987, ISBN 3-447-02677-4, p. 244.
Akhetaa (also written Achtiaa and Aa-Akhti) was an ancient Egyptian high official during the mid to late 3rd Dynasty (Old Kingdom period). He is mostly...
Contemporary office partners included Netjeraperef, Khabawsokar, Pehernefer and Akhetaa, who were also holding office under Huni and Sneferu. All their tomb inscriptions...
Third Dynasty high official Akhetaa who, among other positions, held that of "priest of Nebka". The exact location of Akhetaa's mastaba is now lost, hindering...
name of King Wenis Wall from a temple of Ramessus II Wall of the tomb of Akhetaa Wall tile from the 20th Dynasty Water jars and stand Water pot in the name...
contemporary office partners included Netjeraperef, Khabawsokar, Metjen and Akhetaa, who were also holding office under Huni and Sneferu. All their tomb inscriptions...
office partners of Khabawsokar may have been Hesyre, Metjen, Pehernefer and Akhetaa. These are likewise known for their unusually rich decorated tomb chapels...