This raised relief is originally from Montuhotep IIβs π ππΏπ ±π΅ππͺ mortuary temple at Deir el-Bahri. This relief was part of one of the main areas of the temple πππ that was added at the end of Montuhotepβs π ππΏπ ±π΅ππͺ reign πΎ. This dates the relief to c. 2010β2000 B.C.E. (Middle Kingdom, Dynasty 11).
Letβs read some hieroglyphs πΉππͺ!
While Montuhotep π ππΏπ ±π΅ππͺ is his birth name ππ, the cartouche we are looking at is his throne name ππ!
π³ππ€ – Nebhapetra
Letβs look even closer at the individual glyphs!
π³ – Ra
π – βNebβ (nb)
π€ – βHapetβ (αΈ«rw or αΈ₯jpt)
Most of the time when you have a three πΌ symbol throne name, the glyphs are read middle, right/bottom, and then top/left. The symbol for Ra π³ is written first but said last, due to honorific transposition! Basically, out of respect for the god πΉ, their name ππ is written first!
In English (and other languages like Italian) we have something similar to this – we say βten dollarsβ but write it as βdollars tenβ – $10!