|  Illustration of the two men                    holding hands and walking on a tour of inspection can be seen                    on the southern wall of the entrance hall. Niankhkhnum leads                    Khnumhotep by the hand into the inner spaces of their tomb.                    THE EMBRACE BETWEEN THE FALSE DOORS|                         On the western wall of the                offering chamber are two false doors. The one on the right for Khnumhotep,                the one on the left for Niankhkhnum. It was thru a later intrusive                robber's shaft that damaged Niankhkhnum's false door that the Egyptologists made                their first entrance into the tomb. These false doors are separated                by the scene pictured here of the two men embracing though not as                closely as at the entrance.
 THE ETERNAL EMBRACE IN THE OFFERING CHAMBER
|  On the eastern wall of the offering chamber,            the identical pair are shown in the most intimate embrace possible within            the canons of ancient Egyptian art. Niankhkhnum is on the right grasping            his companion's right forearm; Khnumhotep, on the left, has his left            arm across the other man's back, tightly clasping his shoulder. Again            the tips of the men's noses are touching and this time their torsos            are so close together that the knots on the belts of their kilts appear            to be touching, perhaps even tied together. Here, in the innermost private            part of their joint-tomb, the two men stand in an embrace meant to last            for eternity. |  | 
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 |     THEIR NAMES CARVED ABOVE THE ENTRANCE TO THE ROCK-CUT CHAMBER
                |  | photograph ©1999 Greg Reeder |  | 
                     Here at the entrance to that part of the tomb carved into                      the rock, the names of Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep are inscribed                      as one name over the doorway. Both have the jar hieroglyph                      which is the name of the potter god Khnum. The name Niankhkhnum                      on the right with the jar and the ankh sign is translated                      as "Khnum has life." The name Khnumhotep on the left with                      the jar and the offering sign means "Khnum is satisfied."                      Hotep means "peace" or "satisfaction"                      and is a hieroglyph of a loaf of bread on a table as an offerings                      for the dead. The name Khnum besides being a reference to                      the god Khnum also meant "joined together" and "to                      unite with" and later included "associates, companions,                      friends,"and even "house mates". Their names                      inscribed together above the entrance to the rock-cut chamber,                      may be a design element to suggest a                      play on words, meaning "joined in life and joined in peace",                      i.e. the blessed state of the dead, and may have reference                      to the closeness of the two and their desire to remain together                      in this life and the next. We cannot be sure at what point                      in their lives they assumed these names. Were they both born                      with these names or did the names come about from the close                      relationship they shared during their lifetime?THE BANQUET IN THE ROCK-CUT CHAMBER| At the far Southern end of the rock-cut chamber is THE BANQUET scene            where Niankhkhnum and Khnumhotep are shown feasting on offerings and            being entertained by dancers, clappers, singers and musicians. The doorways on the right lead into the offering chamber and to            the false doors of the two men.
 
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 THE EMBRACE AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE OFFERING CHAPEL
 
|                         It is here at the offering chapel that the most                intimate portrayals appear. This scene is at the entrance, between                two doorways. The identically attired manicurists are shown embracing,                nose to nose. Their children surround them, (this photo is a close-up,                more children are represented) but the wives are not represented                here. The relationship between the two men is not clear. Egyptologists                consider it "problematical." Are they brothers? Could they be twin                brothers? Are they close friends or are they lovers ? Are they all                of the above? A reasoned argument can be made defending any and                all of these positions.              |  ©1999 Greg Reeder click on image for a larger view
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