Label of King Narmer found in Abydos in 1998

[Post on EEF by Michael Tilgner on April 27, 2000 ("Earliest historical document found?"), reproduced below, slightly edited.]
In an article about the origins of the Egyptian writing system (GEO Epoche, nr. 3, April, 2000) the German Egyptologist Prof. Dreyer, now director of the Deutsches Archaeologisches Institut Kairo, is cited with (yet) another important find: an annual label with an inscription of Narmer, which is said to be a little bit older than the famous Narmer palette, about 3100 BC (pp. 126-127). A photo of this label you may find below.
The label was found in the debris of the Abydos plateau. The scene is interpreted ("translated") as "The Pharaoh smites the people of the Papyrus country (= of the Delta)". According to Dreyer the find shows that this scene is not a symbolic one, but referring to a historical event. Thus the Narmer palette (for a drawing/photograph, see URL1, URL2) is illustrating "just another" event in the lengthy process leading to the unification of the country.
The label itself is termed as "the oldest historical inscription of mankind"!
Michael Tilgner
mtilgner@knuut.de

Source of photograph: German magazine "GEO Epoche", nr. 3, April, 2000, p. 126


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