OCR Output

Snw.tj 'overseer of the double granary’. However, this title appears on his funerary cone,
but it is clearly a shortened version of the first one because of the limited space on the
object. Intriguingly, except for jmj-r3 pr wr n nswt ‘high steward of the king’, most of his
titles are only attested by him, and only two of them are attested by two or three other
persons.*°°

Maaninakhtef also held two religious titles, jmj-r3 dhr.w n Jmn ‘overseer of the leathers
of Amun’ and jmj-r3 pr n Mntw nb W3st ‘steward of Montu, lord of Thebes’. He must have
been in close connection with Montu, since his block statue had once stood in his tem¬
ple in Medamud, where it was found under the pavement.*” Both of these titles, the
provenance of his block statue, as well as his presumed burial place in the Theban
necropolis strongly imply that he lived in the Theban area. From his family only his
brother, Begeni, and his sister-in-law, Tinetmennefer are known from the stele of Paser,
the two being mentioned above. It is worthy of note that Maaninakhtef bore the ranking
title jrj-p“t h3tj-" ‘member of the elite, foremost of action’, as well as the epithets hrd n
k3p ‘child of the kap’, mh-jb n nb 13.wj ‘confidant of the lord of the Two Lands’ and hsjj
n ntr nfr ‘favoured of the good god’, which also refer to his prestigious position in the
court, as well as to his trusted status by the king himself.

IILıı. Iuti

Date: Thutmose IV (based on the cartouche on the stele)
Genealogy: unknown

Tomb: unknown

Remains: — stele, Cairo, Egyptian Museum, JE 72268
Functional titles: wb3 nswt

Int hnk.t
Honorific title: hrd n k3p

Iuti is the only wb3 nswt ‘royal wb?’ who can be dated with certainty to the reign of Thut¬
mose IV. His only remains is a round-topped stele found in Giza in the vicinity of the
Sphinx.** In the lunette of the stele there is a winged solar disc, while beneath, in the

466

Taylor, 2001, 10, 14, 17, 24, 28, 39, 43, 50, 60; Al-Ayedi, 2006, 5, 18, 49, 63, 95, 113, 132, 155.
“7 For the circumstances of discovery of the statue, see Bisson de la Roque, 1927, 108.
4% Zivie, 1976, 166.