Mastaba S3504
Mastaba S3504 is a large mastaba tomb located in the Saqqara necropolis in Lower Egypt. It was built during the reign of the ancient Egyptian Pharaoh Djet, in the First Dynasty, shortly after 3000 BC. It is one of the largest mastabas from this dynasty. The building was excavated in 1953 by Walter Bryan Emery.
Structure
The building is made of dried mudbricks and is 56.45 metres long and 25.45 metres wide. The original height is unknown. The mastaba was decorated on the outside with a palace facade. On the long sides there were eleven niches, but on the short sides, only four. The facade was painted white, the innermost niches red. The mastaba was enclosed by a wall and stood on a low platform, on which models of cattle heads with real cattle horns were found. Around the tomb there were up to 65 subsidiary tombs.The actual mastaba superstructure contained 43 chambers. Below this was the burial chamber, which was surrounded by additional store rooms. The burial chamber itself was originally clad in gilt wood.