Narmer Serekh Sign
During the summer of 1994, excavators from the Nahal Tillah expedition
discovered a rare incised ceramic sherd with the serekh sign of
King Narmer, the same individual whose ceremonial slate palette
was found by Quibell in Upper Egypt. The serekh was found on
a large circular platform, possibly the foundations of a storage
silo on the Halif Terrace. It dates to ca. 3,000 BCE. The serekh
is a stylized rectangle which contained the Horus name of ancient
Egyptian kings. The pharaohs had five royal names. Made up
of two compartments, the bottom contains parallel lines which
represent the frontal view of a palace . The top compartment
represents a plan view of the courtyard of the palace. The name
of the king is written here in hieroglyphics. Narmerís
name is represented phonetically by the catfish (Nír) and
the chisel (mír). Mineralogical studies of the sherd with
the serekh sign show conclusively that it is a fragment of a wine
jar which was imported from the Nile valley to Israel some 5,000
years ago.
For more information, see:
Levy, T.E., van den Brink, E.C.M., Goren, Y. and Alon, D.
1995 New Light on King Narmer and the Protodynastic Egyptian
Presence in Canaan. Biblical Archaeologist 58: 26-36.