![]() | This article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to
self-published sources. (February 2013) |
Khaset (Mountain bull, also Chasuu) was one of 42 nomes (administrative division) in ancient Egypt. [1] [2] [3] [4]
| ||
Khaset in hieroglyphs | ||
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Khaset was one of the 20 nomes in Lower Egypt and had district number 6.
The area of the district is not readable, usually the nomes were about 30-40 km (18-24 miles) in length and their area depending on the depth of the Nile valley and the beginning of the desert. [1] The area was calculated in cha-ta (1 cha-ta equals roughly 2.75 hectare / 2.4 acres) and the distance was calculated in iteru (1 iteru equals roughly 10.5 km / 6.2 miles) in length. [5]
The Niwt (main city) was Khasu/ Xois (part of modern Sakha) and among other cities were Per-Wadjet/ Buto (modern Tell el-Farain). Per-Wadjet was sometimes also part of the Sap-Meh nome. [2] [3] [4]
Every nome was ruled by a nomarch (provincial governor) who answered directly to the pharaoh. [2] [3]
Every niwt had a Het net ( temple) dedicated to the chief deity and a Heqa het (nomarch's residence). [1]
The district's main deities were Wadjet and Ra. Other major deities in the area included Isis and Osiris. [2] [3] [4] Today the area is part of the Gharbia Governorate.
![]() | This article may contain excessive or inappropriate references to
self-published sources. (February 2013) |
Khaset (Mountain bull, also Chasuu) was one of 42 nomes (administrative division) in ancient Egypt. [1] [2] [3] [4]
| ||
Khaset in hieroglyphs | ||
---|---|---|
Khaset was one of the 20 nomes in Lower Egypt and had district number 6.
The area of the district is not readable, usually the nomes were about 30-40 km (18-24 miles) in length and their area depending on the depth of the Nile valley and the beginning of the desert. [1] The area was calculated in cha-ta (1 cha-ta equals roughly 2.75 hectare / 2.4 acres) and the distance was calculated in iteru (1 iteru equals roughly 10.5 km / 6.2 miles) in length. [5]
The Niwt (main city) was Khasu/ Xois (part of modern Sakha) and among other cities were Per-Wadjet/ Buto (modern Tell el-Farain). Per-Wadjet was sometimes also part of the Sap-Meh nome. [2] [3] [4]
Every nome was ruled by a nomarch (provincial governor) who answered directly to the pharaoh. [2] [3]
Every niwt had a Het net ( temple) dedicated to the chief deity and a Heqa het (nomarch's residence). [1]
The district's main deities were Wadjet and Ra. Other major deities in the area included Isis and Osiris. [2] [3] [4] Today the area is part of the Gharbia Governorate.