He also appears on the palace facade in the Ramesseum.
This name was usually written in a serekh, a representation of a palace façade.
The palace façade sits on top of the gate, between the minarets.
Tessin the Younger shared his father's enthusiasm for discrete palace façades.
The serekh also lacks the horizontal line that delimits the palace facade from the name of the ruler above.
The actual name of the king was written within the upper part of the palace facade.
However, there were also several mastabas of the First Dynasty, decorated with a palace facade.
The niches of the palace facade were painted red; only one niche, with a wooden floor, was unpainted.
The outside was decorated with a palace façade and with the biographical inscription.
The old palace façade was demolished in the late 19th century along the Sagrario.