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Instruction of Hardjedef : ウィキペディア英語版 | Instruction of Hardjedef
The ''Instruction of Hardjedef'', also known as the ''Teaching of Hordedef'' and ''Teaching of Djedefhor'', belongs to the didactic literature of the Egyptian Old Kingdom. It is possibly the oldest of all known Instructions, composed during the 5th Dynasty according to Miriam Lichtheim, predating ''The Instructions of Kagemni'' and ''The Maxims of Ptahhotep''. Only a few fragments from the beginning of the text have survived on a handful of New Kingdom ostraca and a Late Period wooden tablet. The first lines of the text establish Prince Djedefhor, Khufu's son, as the author of the ''Instruction'', but this has been shown to be highly improbable. In antiquity Hardjedef enjoyed a reputation for wisdom,〔Ian Shaw, ''The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt'', Oxford University Press 2003, p.90〕 his name appears in the Westcar Papyrus, and according to the ''Harper's lay from the tomb of King Intef'', a copy of which survives in Papyrus Harris 500, he is mentioned in the same breath as Imhotep, his maxims having survived while his tomb had been lost.〔Donald Mackenzie, ''Egyptian Myth and Legend'', 1907, pp.246f.〕 His fame was especially great during periods of classicistic revival, when he and other Old Kingdom sages became role models for aspiring scribes.〔Katheryn A. Bard, ''Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt'', Routledge 1999, p.41〕 ==References==
*Lichtheim, Miriam, ''Ancient Egyptian Literature'', Volume I, 1973, pp. 58f. 〔
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