High officials during Teti's reign, from around…
2337 BCE to 2326 BCE
High officials during Teti's reign, from around 2345 to 2333 BCE, are beginning to build funerary monuments that rival that of the Pharaoh.
For example, his chancellor builds a large mastaba consisting of thirty-two rooms, all richly carved.
This is considered a sign that wealth is being transferred from the central court to the officials, a slow process that will culminate in the end to the Old Kingdom.
Teti is murdered by the usurper Userkare and buried in the royal necropolis at Saqqara.
Userkare ("The Soul of Ra is Strong") may have been a royal claimant from the Fifth dynasty but he was certainly a rival to Teti for the throne.
Since Manetho claims that Teti was killed by his bodyguards, theories of conspiracy have been put forward that Userkare was the leader of this conspiracy who then proceeded to seize the throne.
The recently discovered South Saqqara Stone document from Pepi II's reign confirms his existence and assigns him a reign of two to four years.
Teti's son, Pepi I, eventually managed to oust Userkare and succeed his murdered father.
In the Turin King List, there is a lacuna between Teti and Pepi I Meryre, large enough to have fit an entry for Userkare.
Userkare is apparently mentioned in several king-lists.
Userkare started work on some larger building projects, as shown by an inscription mentioning his workforce.
However, no pyramid-complex has been identified for him, presumably because of the brevity of his reign.
Pepi would have needed the support of powerful individuals in Upper Egypt in order to overthrow a usurper and win back his rightful throne.
These individuals would remain a strong presence in his court thereafter, and two of his queens were daughters of his Upper Egyptian vizier.
Pepi I's reign is marked by aggressive expansion into Nubia, the spread of trade to far-flung areas such as Lebanon and the Somalian coast, but also the growing power of the nobility.
One of the king's officials named Weni fights in Asia on his behalf.
His mortuary complex gives name to Memphis.