Ahmose Henuttamehu
Ahmose Henuttamehu in hieroglyphics | ||||||
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Ahmose Henuttamehu (Ah mose Henut ta mehu) Jˁḥ ms Hnw.t t3 mḥw The moon (god) is born, mistress of Lower Egypt |
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Mummy of Ahmose Henuttamehu |
Ahmose Henuttamehu was an ancient Egyptian princess and queen at the transition from the 17th to the 18th dynasty (around 1550 BC).
family
Ahmose Henuttamehu was a daughter of King Seqenenre and his sister consort Ahmose Inhapi . She was probably married to her half-brother Ahmose I , as she was named King Wife ( ḥmt-njswt - hemet-nisut), Great King Wife ( ḥmt-njswt-wrt - hemet-nisut-weret), King's daughter ( s3t-niswt - sat- nisut) and royal sister ( snt-niswt - senet-nisut). She was the half-sister of the Great King Wife and Consort of Amun Ahmose Nefertari .
Life and aftermath
Not much is known about the life of Ahmose Henuttamehu. She is mentioned on a stele depicted in Lepsius' monuments from Egypt and Ethiopia .
Ahmose Henuttamehu's mummy (Egyptian Museum Cairo, CG 61061) was discovered in 1881 together with the coffin in the cachette of Deir el-Bahari (scientific grave number DB / TT320) and is now in the Egyptian Museum Cairo . The mummy was badly damaged in transit from Luxor to Cairo. According to Gaston Maspero's December 1882 investigation , she died an old woman with worn teeth, signs of tooth decay and an abscess on a tooth root. Ahmose Henuttamehu was about 1.52 m tall, according to Grafton Elliot Smith . Their mummy bandages were inscribed with sayings from the Book of the Dead . She was probably buried with her mother; in the year 11 of Pharaoh Scheschonq I her mummy was transferred to DB320 together with other mummies.
Their cult of the dead extends into the 19th dynasty . She appears together with other Ahmosids in the Theban tomb TT2 (tomb of Chabechnet).
literature
- Grafton Elliot Smith: The Royal Mummies. Imprimerie de l'Institut français, Cairo 1912 (Reprint: Duckworth, London 2000, ISBN 0-7156-2959-X ), p. 19.
Web links
supporting documents
- ^ Aidan Dodson , Dyan Hilton: The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt. Thames & Hudson, London 2004, ISBN 0-500-05128-3 , p. 128.
- ↑ tungsten Grajetzki : Ancient Egyptian Queens: A Hieroglyphic Dictionary. Golden House Publications, London 2005.
- ↑ 17th Dynasty Royal Mummies from DB320, Ahmose-Henttimehu. In: The Theban Royal Mummy Project. Retrieved December 28, 2017 (English).
- ↑ Kenneth A. Kitchen : Ramesside Inscriptions, Translated and Annotated Translations. Volume 3: Ramesses II, His Contemporaries. Blackwell, Oxford 1996.
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Ahmose Henuttamehu |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | ancient egyptian queen |
DATE OF BIRTH | 16th century BC Chr. |
DATE OF DEATH | 16th century BC Chr. |