OCR Output

about which Helck notes that the meaning of the title is unknown,** the correct reading
cannot be confirmed due to the lack of collating with the original inscription in the
tomb;"" and jmj-r3 ‘rrjj.t ‘overseer of the gateway”, to which Bryan refers as jmj-r3 rwijj.t
‘overseer of the ruit’, and for which the same is true regarding the collation as for the
latter title. Binder notes the significance of the holder of this office as one who was
responsible for controlling who could gain admittance to the palace and contact the king
in person." Unfortunately, without more evidence nothing else can be concluded in
regard to the career or life of Wah.

IIL.6. Djehutimes

Date: Thutmose III (?) — Amenhotep II (?) (based on the stylistic criteria of the
tomb structure and decoration)

Genealogy: unknown

Tomb: Theban Tomb 205

Remains: — tomb structure
— funerary cone DM 350

Functional title: wb3 nswt

Besides the fact that he bore the title wbz nswt ‘royal wb3 and he was buried in Thebes,
nothing else can be ascertained about the life and career of Djehutimes. According to
the stylistic criteria of his tomb, TT 205, situated on the mound of Khokha in the Theban
necropolis, he was supposedly active during the reign of Thutmose III and/or Amenho¬
tep II.*" The tomb itself has not been published. Only a small part of its decoration
remained on the western end of the northern wall of the transverse hall, above the shaft,
a detail of an offering scene depicting a figure of a sem-priest with remains of an inscrip¬
tion above and before him.” The inscription is part of an offering formula, naming
Djehutimes as the beneficiary of the offering.

48 Helck, 1958, 67, n. 2.

#9 The title jmj-r3 nbjjw ‘overseer of the goldsmith’ might be considered as a possible candidate. Han¬
nig, 2006, 63.

#° Binder, 2008, 239.

® For the architectural description of the tomb, see Kampp, 1996, 491.

#2 Porter — Moss, 1960, 305; Kampp, 1996, 491.