Seneb-Neb-Af

Seneb-Neb-Af was an Egyptian Administrator of Tenants. Discovered in a mastaba in the Dahshur Archaeological Area dated to be from roughly 2300 BCE from the Old Kingdom. Idet, Seneb's wife, had a position as a Priestess of Hathor and as the Lady of the Sycamore.

The Mastaba
The mastaba was discovered in the Dashur Archaeological Area in an Egyptian-German archeological mission directed by Dr. Stefan Steildmayer.

The mastaba is built from mudbricks, and reportedly belonged to "Seneb-Neb-Af" and his wife "Idet".

The mastaba is notable for its inscriptions depicting Egyptian Daily-Life activities such as grain threshing, ships sailing on the Nile River, and market selling activities which is "rare in Dashur Mastabas."