Structure: KV 1 Location: Valley of the Kings, East Valley, Thebes West Bank, Thebes Owner: Rameses VII Other designations: 1 [Hay], 1 [Lepsius], 7 [Champollion], A [Pococke], Ier Tombeau à l'ouest [Description], O [Burton] Site type: Tomb
Description: The entrance is cut into the base of a hill at the end of the first northwest branch wadi. This unfinished tomb comprises an open entryway ramp (A), corridor B, vaulted burial chamber J, and an unfinished chamber (K) with a rear recess. The walls are decorated with excerpts from the Book of Gates (chamber K), Book of Caverns (corridor B), Book of the Earth (burial chamber J), Opening of the Mouth ritual (corridor B), and the deceased with deities (corridor B, chamber K, burial chamber J). The ceilings are painted with motifs of flying vultures and astronomical figures. There are 135 Greek, and several demotic, Coptic, and nineteenth century graffiti in the tomb, indicating that KV 1 has been accessible since antiquity.
Noteworthy features: The conversion of the second corridor to a burial chamber is noteworthy. Its central two-tiered pit in the floor, provided with canopic jar niches in the sides, is unique.
The figure of the king with the goddesses adoring the sun disk on the outer lintel of gate B is a first.
This is one of the latest tombs to be cut in a side wadi.
It was used as a dwelling by Coptic monks. Axis in degrees: 327.72 Axis orientation: Northwest Latitude: 25.44 N Longitude: 32.36 E Elevation: 171.219 msl North: 99,803.743 East: 94,006.256 JOG map reference: NG 36-10 Modern governorate: Qena (Qina) Ancient nome: 4th Upper Egyptian Surveyed by TMP: Yes Maximum height: 4.25 m Mininum width: 2.74 m Maximum width: 5.17 m Total length: 44.3 m Total area: 163.56 m² Total volume: 463.01 m³ Entrance location: End of spur Owner type: King Entrance type: Ramp Interior layout: Corridor and chambers Axis type: Straight Grafitti Painting Sunk relief Architectural elements Domestic equipment Furniture Tomb equipment Vegetal remains Vessel stands Written documents At the time of the king's death in his seventh regnal year, work on the tomb's third corridor (now chamber K) was abandoned and the second corridor was enlarged and became burial chamber J. A break in the end of the granite pit cover was made by robbers to gain access to the burial. The tomb was used by Christian monks or hermits as a dwelling.
This site was used during the following period(s): New Kingdom, Dynasty 20, Rameses VII Byzantine Period Graeco-Roman Era
Pococke, Richard (1737-1738): Mapping/planning Napoleonic Expedition (1799): Mapping/planning (plan and section, and recording of decoration details) Burton, James (1825): Mapping/planning Wilkinson, John Gardner (1825-1828): Visit Hay, Robert (1825-1835): Mapping/planning (drawings of tomb and sarcophagus) Lane, Edward William (1826-1827): Visit Franco-Tuscan Expedition (1828-1829): Epigraphy Lepsius, Carl Richard (1844-1845): Epigraphy Ayrton, Edward Russell (1906): Excavation (reopening of the tomb and removal of the coffin containing the mummy of Rameses VII to the Cairo Museum, filled in entrance to tomb, the location of which was then forgotten) Service des Antiquités (1952 or later): Excavation Piankoff, Alexandre (1958): Photography Brock, Edwin C. (1983-1984, 1990, 1994): Excavation (search of burial pit, dump, and foundation deposit for the Royal Ontario Museum) Conservation history: In 1994, the Supreme Council of Antiquities cleaned the tomb's walls and filled cracks in walls and ceiling with plaster. Some ancient graffiti were covered over in the process. In the same year, the Supreme Council of Antiquities created a walkway from the paved road to the tomb entrance and built a wood shelter with cement benches nearby. A wooden floor, railings, and large glass panels have been installed throughout the tomb. Site condition: There are major cracks in the walls and ceilings of corridor B. The plaster is intact where it is not damaged by cracks, vandalism, or later graffiti. The paint is in good condition, although much blue pigment has fallen away.
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Printable Tomb Drawings

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