This stela with rounded top has been rather poorly executed. The representations and inscriptions are rather hasty and inexact. In the lunette are the two udjat-eyes, which are typical for this period. Underneath them are three lines containing the offering formula invoking Osiris-Khentimentiu. In the main register is a seated man on the left facing an offering table with a huge heap of offerings. In front of him are his mother (with lotus flower in her hand) and his brother. The fives lines of inscription at the bottom mention the name and titles of the depicted persons.
(1) An offering, which the king gives to Osiris-Khentimentiu, the Great God, Lord of Abydos, so that he may give a funerary offering of bread and beer, (2) oxen and fowl, alabaster and linen, incense and ointment and all good and pure things for the Ka of the chief (3) of the hall of justice Khentikheti-hotep, son of Kheti, lord of reverence. (6) His sister Weky. His brother, the administrator Heku, son of Khemy. (7) His father Ib. His brother Seneb. His wife Kuy, true of voice. (8) Their son Ra-nefer. Their son Sedjed-wa. Their son Kemes. (9) Their daughter Tety. Their daughter Hetepty. Their daughter Dedet-amet. (10) Their son Iny. Their son Renef-seneb, true of voice, lord of reverence.
Bibliography
Bergmann, E. von, Inschriftliche Denkmäler, in: Recueil de Travaux rélatifs à la philologie et à l'archéologie égyptiennes et assyriennes (RecTrav) 12 (1890) 12: Nr. 9.
Hein, I. & H. Satzinger, Stelen des Mittleren Reiches einschließlich der I. und II. Zwischenzeit, Teil II. Corpus Antiquitatum Aegyptiacarum (CAA) 7 (1993) 28-32, 82.
Bergmann, E. von, Übersicht über die ägyptischen Alterthümer (1876), Nr. 23.