Pepi II Neferkare, who succeeds Merenre Nemtyemsaf…
2277 BCE to 2266 BCE
Pepi II Neferkare, who succeeds Merenre Nemtyemsaf I, was once thought to be the son of Pepi I and Queen Ankhesenpepy II but it is now believed Pepi II was rather the son of Merenre, who married Ankhesenpepy after Pepi I's death—based on an inscription from a block of white limestone from her mortuary temple, according to Audran Labrousse, director of the French Archaeological Mission.
Pepi II would, hence, be the grandson of Pepi I instead.
He succeeded to the throne at age six, after the premature death of his father.
His mother Ankhsenpepy II most likely ruled as regent in the early years of his reign.
An alabaster statuette in the Brooklyn Museum depicts a young Pepi II, in full kingly regalia, sitting on the lap of his mother.
Despite his long reign, this piece is one of only three three-dimensional representations (i.e., statuary) in existence of this particular king.
She may have been helped in turn by her brother Djau, who was a vizier under the previous king.
Some scholars have taken the relative paucity of royal statuary to suggest that the royal court was losing the ability to retain skilled artisans.
Harkhuf, a governor of Aswan and the head of one of the expeditions sent into Nubia to trade and collect ivory, ebony and other precious items, captured a pygmy.
News of this reached the royal court, and the excited young king sent word back to Harkhuf that he would be greatly rewarded if the pygmy were brought back alive, likely to serve as an entertainer for the court.
This letter, preserved as a lengthy inscription on Harkhuf's tomb, has been called the first travelogue.
Over his long life, Pepi II had several wives, thought to include Neith (A), Iput II, Ankhenespepy III, Ankhenespepy IV, and Udjebten.
Following a long tradition of royal incestuous marriage, Neith was Pepi II's half-sister (daughter of Ankhnesmerire I) and Iput was his niece (a daughter of his father Merenre).
Of these queens, Neith, Iput, and Udjebten each had their own minor pyramids and mortuary templates as part of the king's own pyramid complex in Saqqara.
It is thought that Pepi II carried on in the tradition of his predecessors and continued with existing foreign relations, and possibly expanding further trade links into southern Africa.
Copper and turquoise mining were undertaken at Wadi Maghara, and alabaster was quarried from Hatnub, both in the Sinai.
There is at least one trade expedition to Punt recorded.
Diplomatic records also exist of missions to Byblos in ancient Canaan.
The king is thought to have taken a policy of pacification in Nubia, with Harkhuf making at least two further expeditions into the area.
Over time it appears as though relations grew strained, for while Harkhuf managed to return safely from each of his expeditions, one of his successors was not so lucky.
There were also military forays into adjacent lands, but it is noted that there was an increasing reliance upon Libyan and Nubian mercenaries.
Further possible evidence of a relative lack of success in these ventures comes from the fact that a scene from the king's pyramid, depicting him as a Sphinx trampling his enemies—including a Libyan chieftain and his family—is wholly derivative from the mortuary complex of previous pharaoh Sahure, which calls into question the veracity of the events supposedly being depicted.