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Waset's District of
Deir el-Medina
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Founded in the reign of Thutmosis I in the early New Kingdom, the workmen's village at Deir el-Medina existed to provide a ready pool of scribes and workmen for the design and construction of the royal tombs in the Valley of the Kings near Waset (ancient Thebes). While its official role came to an end in the reign of Ramesses XI after a period of approximately 450 years of continuous industry, Deir el-Medina continued as an important religious and mortuary site until Christian and Islamic times.
When compared with other villages of the time, the settlement at Deir el Medina was atypical. A policy of deliberate seclusion ensured that contact with the world outside was kept to a minimum to ensure the security of the royal tombs but there were The village though small and cramped held approximately one hundred and forty houses, seventy of the homes contained within a walled compound. There were also chapels, a law court and a temple to the goddess HetHert (Hathor). Houses were single-storied dwellings arranged in terraces with four to seven rooms, thin mud-brick walls and some stone and wood used in their construction. At the rear of the house, a staircase gave access to the roof which served as an important multi-purpose living space. Due to the contiguous roofing of the terraces, easy navigation thoughout the village at rooftop level would have been possible and may have contributed to a stronger sense of community. In contrast, at ground level beyond the confines of the house, mobility was hampered through overcrowding and the scarcity of thoroughfares. A visitor to a house in Deir el-Medina would have noted the figure of a deity, often Bes but sometimes Heru (Horus) or Aset (Isis), painted on the external wall. Mounting a number of steps, they would have entered the mud-brick dwelling and found themselves in in the entrance hall. The evening of the eight day may have seen the return of the woman's partner from the Valley of the Kings, his eight hour working day behind him. On a summer's evening, as Re descended in the west to enter the underworld, the small family may have eaten their evening meal on the rooftop, their action mirrored by the actions of others along the length of the settlement. Drinking their beer, they may made plans to continue work on their own tombs the following day. For the villagers, life was ordered and secure.
Hapshetsut Nebet ![]()
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