Man C of DB320 ref ref http anubis4 2000.tripod.com mummypages2 UnidentifiedandMissing.htm Unidentified ... Seniu Siese Sutymose Wepmose Wepwawet mose Discovery and clearance Image DB320 Tomb.jpg thumb 200px ... Category Theban Tombs ca TT320 de Cachette von Deir el Bahari es DB320 fr TT320 it DB320 hu Dejr el Bahari i rejtekhely nl DB320 pl Skrytka DB 320 ru DB 320 ... more details
Ahmose Henutemipet was a princess of the late seventeenth dynasty of Egypt . She was a daughter of Pharaoh Seqenenre Tao and probably Queen Ahhotep I . She was the sister of Ahmose I . She bore the titles King s Daughter and King s Sister. ref dodson , p.128 ref Mummy Her mummy was found in the tomb DB320 in 1881 and now is in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo . It was examined by Grafton Elliot Smith in June 1909. Henutemipet died as an old woman she had grey hair and worn teeth. Her mummy was damaged, probably by tomb robbers. It is likely that the mummy was moved to DB320 after Year 11 of Pharaoh Shoshenq I . ref http members.tripod.com anubis4 2000 17A.htm Ahmose Hentempet Mummy of Ahmose Henutemipet ref References Reflist DEFAULTSORT Ahmose Henutemipet Category 16th century BC women Category Ancient Egyptian princesses Category Seventeenth Dynasty of Egypt Category Ancient Egyptian mummies es Ahmose Hentempet hu Ahmesz Henutemipet ... more details
Djedptahiufankh served as the Third or Fourth Prophet of Amun and was the husband of Nestanebtishru who was a daughter of Pinudjem II and Neskhons during the reign of pharaoh Shoshenq I , founder of the 22nd Dynasty of Egypt. Consequently, he was one of the most important state officials at Thebes Egypt Thebes after this king s own son, the High Priest of Amun , Iuput A . He died around the middle of Shoshenq I s reign according to inscriptions found written on the bandages of his mummy and coffin. He was buried in DB320 Deir El Bahari Tomb 320 or DB320, which actually served as the family tomb of the 21st Dynasty High Priest Pinedjem I Pinedjem . DB320 was discovered in the 19th century and quickly became famous for containing a cache of many of the most significant New Kingdom royal mummies including the mortal remains of Amenhotep I , the Great Ramesses II , Ramesses III , Ramesses IX , and Thutmose I , Thutmose II and Thutmose III . Three separate mummy bandages dating to Years 5, 10 and 11 of Shoshenq I were found on Djedptahiufankh s body. Djedptahiufankh s burial was found intact and undisturbed, and his mummy was unwrapped by Gaston Maspero in 1886. A web link below gives a clear photo of his mummy and a discussion of his career. It also mentions some of the jewelry, in the form of gold rings, amulets and a uraeus , among other items, which were found on his body. External links http anubis4 2000.tripod.com mummypages1 21B.htm Profile of Djedptahiufankh Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Djedptahiufankh ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH Category Ancient Egyptians Category Twenty second Dynasty of Egypt AncientEgypt bio stub ... more details
otheruses Siamun disambiguation Siamun was a Prince of Egypt. Siamun s name means Son of Amun . Hiero Siamun hiero i mn n G39 Z1 hiero align right era nk Biography Siamun was a prince during the early Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt . He was the son of Pharaoh Ahmose I and Queen Ahmose Nefertari . His mummy was found in the Deir el Bahari cache DB320 and is now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo . Source Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt. Thames & Hudson, 2004, ISBN 0 500 05128 3, p.129 DEFAULTSORT Siamun Category Ancient Egyptian princes Category Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt Category Ancient Egyptian mummies hu Sziamon I. Jahmesz fia ... more details
mile Brugsch b. February 24, 1842 in Berlin , Germany d. January 14, 1930 in Nice, France was a German born Egyptologist whose career spanned the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He is known as the official who evacuated the mummies from the Deir el Bahri DB320 Cache in 1881, and as being assistant curator of the Bulaq Museum the core element of what is today s Egyptian Museum ref http www.nicholasreeves.com item.aspx?category Writing&id 328 ref . Brugsch also assisted author and occultist Aleister Crowley in 1904 by having the Stele of Revealing translated by his assistant. The Stele, and the translation, became integral parts of Crowley s subsequent writing of The Book of the Law and his founding of the philosophical practice and religion of Thelema . References reflist External links http www.egyptology.com kmt fall96 giants.html Giants of Egyptology 9th of a Series The Brothers Brugsch , accessed December 28, 2006 See also The Night of Counting the Years Egyptian movie, 1969 William Joseph Myers Thelema series Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Brugsch, Emile ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH February 24, 1842 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH January 14, 1930 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Brugsch, Emile Category German archaeologists Category German Egyptologists Category 1842 births Category 1930 deaths Germany scientist stub Egyptologist stub de Emil Brugsch fr mile Charles Albert Brugsch it mile Brugsch fi mile Brugsch ... more details
Infobox monarch name Ahmose Henuttamehu title Queen consort of Egypt image New Kingdom Queen.jpg caption A Queen from the New Kingdom full name Ahmose Henuttamehu othertitles Great Royal Wife birth date birth place Thebes? death place Thebes date of burial place of burial Thebes, eventually in TT320 consort Pharaoh Ahmose I dynasty Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt 18th of Egypt father Seqenenre Tao II mother Ahmose Inhapi children unknown religion Ancient Egyptian religion Hiero Ahmose Henuttamehu hiero N12 ms H W24 t tA M15 hiero align right era nk Ahmose Henuttamehu Child of the Moon Mistress of Lower Egypt was a princess and queen of the late seventeenth dynasty of Egypt 17th early eighteenth dynasty of Egypt 18th dynasties of Egypt. Family Ahmose Henuttamehu was a daughter of Pharaoh Seqenenre Tao by his sister wife Ahmose Inhapy . She was probably married to her half brother Pharaoh Ahmose I , since her titles include King s Wife hmt nisw , Great King s Wife hmt niswt wrt , King s Daughter s3t niswt and King s Sister snt niswt . ref Grajetzki, Ancient Egyptian Queens A Hieroglyphic Dictionary, Golden House Publications 2005 ref ref dodson , p.128 ref Ahmose Henuttamehu was a half sister to the Great Royal Wife and God s Wife of Amun Ahmose Nefertari . Life and Burial Not much is known about the life of Ahmose Henuttamehu. The Queen is mentioned on a stela as depicted in Lepsius Denkmahler. File Ahmose Henuttamehu.jpg thumb center 450px Ahmose Henuttamehu is shown with another royal lady possibly her mother Ahmose Inhapi behind her. Ahmose Henuttamehu s mummy was discovered in 1881 in her own coffin in the tomb DB320 and is now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo . It was examined by Gaston Maspero in December 1882 . Henuttamehu was an old woman when she died, with worn teeth. Quotes from the Book of the Dead were written on her mummy bandages. She was probably buried together with her mother her mummy was taken to DB320 along with other mummies after Year 11 of Pharaoh ... more details
hiero Neskhons hiero ns z x n sw hiero align right era nk Neskhons She Belongs to Khons , once more commonly known as Nsikhonsou , was a noble lady of the Twenty first dynasty of Egypt . She was the daughter of Smendes II and Takhentdjehuti, ref dodson , pp.200 201 ref and wed her paternal uncle , High Priest Pinedjem II , by whom she had four children two sons, Tjanefer and Masaharta, and two daughters, Itawy and Nesitanebetashru . These are named on a decree written on a wooden tablet, which was placed in her tomb in order to ensure her well being in the afterlife and to prevent her doing harm to her husband and children. This suggests family problems around the time of her death. ref name D207 Dodson & Hilton, p.207 ref She predeceased her husband and her mummified corpse was placed with that of Pinedjem II in DB320 Tomb DB320 in the Theban Necropolis , in which it was rediscovered in 1881 in archaeology 1881 . She was buried in the 5th regnal year of Siamun in coffins that were originally made for Pinedjem s sister and first wife Isetemkheb. Both the inner and outer coffins were found, but one of them was reused for the reburial of Ramesses IX . It is unknown whether her coffin was reused after her death or that she donated it to the reburial of Ramesses. The former theory is supported by the fact that she also donated linens for the rewrapping of his mummy the latter is indicated by the fact that apparently no attempt has been made to redecorate the coffin for a male mummy. ref http anubis4 2000.tripod.com mummypages1 DB320Coffins NeskhonsCoffin.htm The Coffins of Neskhons ref The corpse was partially unwrapped by Gaston Maspero on 27 June 1886 twenty years later, G. Elliot Smith removed the remainder of the wrappings. ref Smith, G. Elliot 61095. The Mummy of Queen Nsikhonsou , The Royal Mummies Catalogue G n ral des Antiquit s gyptiennes du Mus e de Caire 1912 . ref Neskhons did not have any gray hairs, so it is likely that she died young according to Smith, ... more details
Infobox pharaoh name Psusennes III alt name Pasebakhaennuit III predecessor Pinedjem II role High Priests of Amun at Thebes High Priest of Amun successor Iuput reign 976&ndash 943? BC dynasty Concurrent with the 21st Dynasty Psusennes III was the High Priests of Amun at Thebes High Priest of Amun at Thebes 976 BC &ndash 943 BC at the end of the Twenty first dynasty of Egypt 21st Dynasty . Little is known of this individual he is thought by some to be the same person as King Psusennes II . ref Peden, A J The Graffiti of Pharaonic Egypt Scope and Roles of Informal Writings C. 3100 332 B.C Probleme Der Agyptologie, 17. Bd Brill Academic Publishers 2001 p. 267 ref His name appears on a document found at the mummy cache DB320 which describes him as a son of the High Priest Pinedjem II . This makes him a possible candidate for Psusennes II because Pinedjem II died in Year 10 of Siamun , who was the immediate predecessor of this Pharaoh. References reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Psusennes Iii ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Psusennes Iii Category 10th century BC clergy Category Theban High Priests of Amun Category Twenty first Dynasty of Egypt AncientEgypt bio stub de Psusennes III. es Psusenes III eu Psusenes III.a fr Psousenn s III it Psusennes III ru III sh Psusennes III ... more details
Infobox person name Ahmose Sitamun image image size alt caption birth name birth date birth date YYYY MM DD birth place death date Death date and age YYYY MM DD YYYY MM DD death date then birth death place body discovered death cause resting place resting place coordinates coord LAT LONG display inline,title residence nationality ethnicity citizenship other names known for education alma mater employer notable works occupation Princess of Egypt years active religion Ancient Egyptian religion spouse children parents Pharaoh Ahmose I relations footnotes box width misc Ahmose Sitamun or Sitamun was a princess of the early Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt . Etymology Hiero Ahmose Sitamun hiero iaH ms s i mn n G39 t hiero align left era nk Name of this princess means Child of the Moon , Daughter of Amun . Biography Sitamun was the daughter of Pharaoh Ahmose I and sister of Amenhotep I . A colossal statue of hers stood before the eighth pylon at Karnak . Her mummy was found in the Deir el Bahari cache DB320 and is today in the Egyptian Museum , Cairo . Her titles were God s Wife King s Daughter King s Sister. Source Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson, 2004, ISBN 0 500 05128 3, p.129 Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Ahmose Sitamun ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Ahmose Sitamun Category 16th century BC women Category 16th century BC clergy Category Ancient Egyptian princesses Category Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt Category Ancient Egyptian mummies de Satamun hu Ahmesz Szitamon nl Ahmose Sitamun pl Ahmose Sitamun sh Ahmose Sitamun ... more details
Hiero Ahmose Sipair hiero iaH ms s G39 Z1 pA D4 hiero align right era nk Ahmose Sapair was an Ancient Egypt ian prince during the late Seventeenth dynasty of Egypt 17th dynasty . He was probably a son of Pharaoh Seqenenre Tao the Brave and a brother of Ahmose I ref name D1 dodson , p.129 ref or the child of Ahmose I . ref name Wente Wente, Edward F. Thutmose III s Accession and the Beginning of the New Kingdom. p.  271 . Journal of Near Eastern Studies, University of Chicago Press, 1975. ref Image AhmoseNefertari Stela RosicrucianMuseum.png 130px thumb left Sapair and Ahmose Nefertari During the Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt 18th dynasty he appears on several monuments. Such prominence is relatively rare in case of princes who never ascended to the throne, so it has been suggested that he might be identical with the unknown father of Thutmose I , who succeeded Sipair s nephew, the childless Amenhotep I . ref name D1 However, the mummy identified as his is that of a 5 to 6 year old boy. The mummy was found in the DB320 Deir el Bahri cache in 1881 and was unwrapped by Grafton Elliot Smith and A. R. Ferguson on September 9, 1905. ref http members.tripod.com anubis4 2000 mummypages1 Early18.htm Sipair The mummy of Ahmose Sipair ref The location of his tomb is unknown, however it was still known during the inspection of Tombs in the 20th Dynasty mentioned on the Papyrus Abbot. ref name Wente References references External links http enlil.lib.uchicago.edu cgi bin eos eos page.pl?DPI 100&callnum DT57.C2 vol59&object 145 His coffin and mummy Category Ancient Egyptian princes Category Seventeenth Dynasty of Egypt Category Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt Category Ancient Egyptian mummies de Ahmose Sapair es Ahm s Sapair fr Ahmos Sipair hu Jahmesz Szipair pl Ahmose Sipair sh Ahmose Sapair ... more details
For other Egyptian ladies called Meritamen see Meritamen disambiguation Hiero Ahmose Meritamon hiero iaH ms i mn n mr i i t hiero align right era nk Ahmose Meritamon Child of the Moon, Beloved of Amun was a princess of the seventeenth dynasty of Egypt , probably a daughter of Seqenenre Tao the Brave . She is also called Ahmose Meritamun , Ahmose Meryetamun or just Meryetamun . Her mummy was found in the DB320 Deir el Bahri cache and is now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo . ref Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson 2004 ISBN 0 500 05128 3, p.129 ref The shroud covering her body gives her name and titles as the royal daughter, the royal sister Meritamon . Maspero had doubts about the identity of the mummy, but Smith points out in his description of the royal mummies that the method of mummification is consistent with that of the Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt . The remains are those of an old woman who was relatively short in stature. The examination of her mummy shows that she suffered a head wound prior to her death which has the characteristics of wound sustained when falling backwards. The body was badly damaged by tomb robbers. ref name Smith G.E. Smith, Catalogue General Antiquites Egyptiennes du Musee du Caire The Royal Mummies, 1912, pp 6 8 and pl IV. Available via http www.lib.uchicago.edu University of Chicago ref She is not to be confused with her niece Ahmose Meritamon , who became the wife of Amenhotep I . Source references Category 16th century BC women Category Ancient Egyptian princesses Category Seventeenth Dynasty of Egypt Category Ancient Egyptian mummies hu Ahmesz Meritamon XVII. dinasztia ... more details
Infobox Egyptian dignitary Name Iuput Style High Priest of Amun Image Iuput.jpg Caption Iuput shown adoring Amun behind his father Shoshenq I at Karnak. ImageSize Predecessor Psusennes III Successor Shoshenq C Dynasty Twenty second dynasty of Egypt 22nd  Dynasty Pharaoh Shoshenq I , Osorkon I Father Shoshenq I Mother Wife Children Nesikhonsupakhered Burial Hiero Iuput hiero E9 w p t hiero era nk Iuput was High Priest of Amun from 944 to 924 BCE, during the reigns of his father Shoshenq I and his brother Osorkon I . ref name Kitchen Iuput held a variety of titles including high priest of Amun, generalissimo and army leader and Governor of Upper Egypt. ref name Kitchen Kitchen, The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt 1100 650 BC . 3rd ed. Warminster Aris & Phillips Limited. 1996 ref It is not known who Iuput s mother was, but it is assumed that Lady Tashepenbast was his sister. Nimlot B and Osorkon I were half brothers of Iuput. Iuput s daughter by an unknown wife was named Nesikhonsupakhered. She was the wife of Djedkhonsiufankh, who was a fourth priest of Amun. ref Dodson, Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, 2004 ref Other Priests and Priestesses From Iuput s time a handful of other people are known to have held positions in the Amun priesthood. Djed ptah ef ankh A served as second and third prophet of Amun in ca 945 935 BCE. Djed ptah ef ankh was called the King s Son of Ramesses and King s Son of the Lord of the Two Lands . He may have been related to the previous dynasty. Djed ptah ef ankh was buried in the cache in DB320. ref name Kitchen Nesy who was a chief of the Mahasun a Libyan tribe served as fourth prophet of Amun. ref name Kitchen References reflist Category Ancient Egyptian priests Category Twenty second Dynasty of Egypt Category Theban High Priests of Amun de Iupet es Iuput eu Iuput fr Ioupout grand pr tre d Amon it Iuput pt Iuput ... more details
as pharaoh, containing the remains of a mummified liver or spleen was recovered from the DB320 ..., C.N., Valley of the Kings Kegan Paul, 1990 p. 17 ref An unidentified mummy, recovered from DB320 ... not yet been identified with certainty and the mummified liver or spleen found in DB320 might be all ... more details
Egyptian Dynasty list The Twenty First , Twenty Second, Twenty Third, Twenty Fourth, and Twenty Fifth Dynasties of ancient Egypt are often combined under the group title, Third Intermediate Period . Rulers The known rulers, in the History of Egypt , for the Twenty First Dynasty are as follows class wikitable border 1 cellpadding 5 align center style margin 1em auto 1em auto width 75 Dynasty XXI pharaohs Pharaoh Horus name Horus name Horus name align center Reign BCE Burial Consort s Smendes Nesbanebdjed I Hedjkheperre Setepenre 1077 BC 1051 BC unknown Tentamun 21st dynasty Tentamun Amenemnisu Neferkare Heqawaset 1051 BC 1047 BC unknown Pinedjem I co regent Kheperkare Setepenamun 1062 1039 DB320 Cache in Deir el Bahari Duathathor Henuttawy Henuttawy br Isetemkheb A br Tentnabekhenu Psusennes I Pasebkhanut I Akheperre Setepenamun 1047 BC 1001 BC NRT III, Tanis, Egypt Tanis Mutnedjmet 21st dynasty Mutnedjemet br Wiay Amenemope pharaoh Amenemope Usermaetre Setepenamun 1001 BC 992 BC Tanis, Egypt Tanis Osorkon the Elder Akheperre Setepenre 992 BC 986 BC unknown Siamun Netjerkheperre Meryamun 986 BC 967 BC unknown Psusennes II Pasebkhanut I Tyetkheperure Setepenre 967 BC 943 BC unknown File Golden Mask of Psusennes I.jpg thumb 175px The gold funerary mask of pharaoh Psusennes I After the reign of Ramesses III , a long, slow decline of royal power in Egypt followed. The pharaohs of the Twenty First Dynasty ruled from Tanis, Egypt Tanis , but were mostly active only in Lower Egypt which they controlled. This dynasty is described as Tanite because its political capital was based at Tanis. Meanwhile, the High Priests of Amun at Thebes effectively ruled Middle and Upper Egypt in all but name. The later Egyptian Priest Manetho of Sebennytos states in his Epitome on Egyptian royal history that the 21st Dynasty of Egypt lasted for 130 years . ref Kenneth A. Kitchen, The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt 1100 650 BC , 3rd edition, 1986, Warminster Aris & Phillips Ltd, p.531 ref F ... more details
EgyptianRoyalTombDetail Name KV7 Location List of burials in the Valley of the Kings East Valley East Valley of the Kings Date Open in antiquity old Owner Ramesses II Excavated Henry Salt Egyptologist Henry Salt br Carl Lepsius br Christian Leblanc 1991 Prev KV6 Next KV8 Decoration Book of Gates br Amduat br Litany of Re Litany of Ra br Book of the Dead br Opening of the Mouth ref cite web url http ourworld.compuserve.com homepages Gerard Flament ramstomb.htm title The Tomb of Ramesses II and Remains of His Funerary Treasure author Christian Leblanc accessdate 2006 12 04 archiveurl http web.archive.org web 20060919041416 http ourworld.compuserve.com homepages Gerard Flament ramstomb.htm Bot retrieved archive archivedate 2006 09 19 ref Tomb KV7 in the Valley of the Kings was the final resting place of Ancient Egypt ian Pharaoh Ramesses II Ramesses the Great of the Nineteenth dynasty of Egypt Nineteenth Dynasty . It is located in the main valley, opposite the tomb of his sons, KV5 , and near to the tomb of his son and successor, Merenptah , KV8 . The tomb s location has meant that it has been very badly damaged in the flash floods that periodically sweep through the valley. Decoration and layout KV7 follows the bent axis plan of tombs of the earlier Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt Eighteenth Dynasty . The burial chamber has a sunken central area and a vaulted ceiling. Much of the decoration has been damaged beyond repair its section of the Valley is particularly susceptible to flash floods &ndash but it would have been decorated with the standard Book of Gates , Amduat and Litany of Re Litany of Ra . The mummy was relocated to the mummy cache in DB320 , and the tomb was reused in the Third Intermediate Period Third Intermediate and Ancient Rome Roman periods for burials and by early tourists. References reflist Reeves, N., and R. H. Wilkinson. cite The Complete Valley of the Kings. cite London Thames and Hudson, 1996. Siliotti, A. cite Guide to the Valley of the Kings and ... more details
Infobox pharaoh name Masaharta predecessor Pinedjem I role High Priests of Amun at Thebes High Priest of Amun successor Djedkhonsuefankh reign 1054&ndash 1045 BC dynasty Concurrent with the 21st Dynasty hiero Masaharta hiero G3 Aa18 h Z1 r V13 hiero align right era nk Masaharta or Masaherta was the High Priests of Amun at Thebes High Priest of Amun at Thebes, Egypt Thebes between 1054 BC and 1045 BC . His father was Pinedjem I , who was the Theban High Priest of Amun and de facto ruler of Upper Egypt from 1070 BC , then declared himself pharaoh in 1054 BC and Masaharta succeeded him as high priest. His mother was probably Duathathor Henuttawy , the daughter of Ramesses XI , last ruler of the 20th dynasty. His aunt Tentamun 21st dynasty Tentamun , another daughter of Ramesses married Pharaoh Smendes I , who ruled Lower Egypt. One of Masaharta s brothers was Psusennes I , who followed Smendes s successor, the short lived Amenemnisu as pharaoh. ref dodson , pp.200 201 ref Masaharta was responsible for the restoration of the mummy of Amenhotep I in the 16th regnal year of Smendes. Several of his inscriptions are known from the Karnak temple of Amenhotep II , from ram headed sphinxes also in Karnak, and a large falcon statue. He died of illness around the 24th regnal year at el Hiba. His mummy was found in DB320 the Deir el Bahri cache along with several family members it is now in Luxor . ref Dodson & Hilton, op.cit., p.207 ref He was succeeded as high priest by his brother Djedkhonsuefankh , who served only for a short time and was followed by another brother, Menkheperre . The God s Wife of Amun was their sister Maatkare Mutemhat Maatkare during Masaharta s reign. His wife is likely to have been the Singer of Amun Tayuheret, whose mummy was found in the Deir el Bahri cachette. ref Dodson & Hilton, p.209 ref It is possible that he had a daughter called Isetemkheb, since a lady by this name is called the daughter of a high priest on her funerary objects it is also possi ... more details
Infobox pharaoh name Pinedjem II image Pinudjem II.jpg caption Pinudjem II as Theban High Priests of Amun Theban High Priest of Amun . From his Book of the Dead. predecessor Smendes II role High Priests of Amun at Thebes High Priest of Amun successor Psusennes III reign 990&ndash 976 BC dynasty Concurrent with the 21st Dynasty Pinedjem II was a High Priests of Amun at Thebes High Priest of Amun at Thebes in Ancient Egypt from 990 BC to 969 BC and was the de facto ruler of the south of the country. He was married to his sister Isetemkheb D both children of Menkheperre , the High Priests of Amun at Thebes High Priest of Amun at Thebes , by Isetemkheb and also to his niece Nesikhons , the daughter of his brother Smendes II . ref name D201 dodson , pp.200 201 ref He succeeded Smendes II, who had a short rule. His children by Isetemkheb D were Psusennes II ref name D200 Dodson & Hilton, p.200 ref Harweben, a Chantress of Amun buried at Bab el Gasus ref name D205 Dodson & Hilton, p.205 ref ? Henuttawy priestess Henuttawy , God s Wife of Amun ref name D205 By Neskhons he had four children two sons, Tjanefer and Masaharta, and two daughters, Itawy and Nesitanebetashru . ref name D200 When Pinedjem II died, his mummy, along with those of his wives and at least one daughter Nesitanebetashru were laid to rest in tomb DB320 at Deir el Bahri , above the mortuary temple Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut . Subsequently, the mummies of other previous Thebes, Egypt Theban based rulers, including the much earlier 18th and 19th dynasty pharaohs Ahmose I , Amenhotep I , Thutmose I , Thutmose II , Thutmose III , Ramesses I , Seti I , Ramesses II , and Ramesses IX were gathered together and also laid in this tomb, which was revealed in 1881 . This was done to prevent their remains from being robbed as their graves have been looted by many ancient tomb raiders. References Reflist External links http www.narmer.pl dyn aaen.htm High Priests of Amun 1080 775 Thebes , accessed July 23, 2006 http ... more details
Infobox Hieroglyphen NAME hiero iaH ms ini H a p Z4 N36 hiero NAME TRANSKRIPTION Ahmose Inhapi br Unicode J ms Jn pj NAME ERKL RUNG BILD1 Inhapi whole body.JPG BILD1 BREITE 160px BILD1 BESCHREIBUNG Mummy of Ahmose Inhapi Ahmose Inhapy or Ahmose Inhapi referred to as Anhapou by Maspero was a princess and queen of the late Seventeenth dynasty of Egypt 17th dynasty and early Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt 18th dynasty . Life She was likely a daughter of Pharaoh Senakhtenre Ahmose Senakhtenre and was sister to Pharaoh Seqenenre Tao , and the queens Ahhotep I Ahhotep and Sitdjehuti . She likely married Seqenenre Tao , ref Tyldesley, Joyce. Chronicle of the Queens of Egypt. Thames & Hudson. 2006. p 79, 82 ISBN 0 500 05145 3 ref ref name DH Dodson, Aidan and Hilton, Dyan. The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt. Thames & Hudson. 2004. ISBN 0 500 05128 3 ref but it is possible she dates to the later time of Ahmose I or even Amenhotep I . ref Grajetzki, Ancient Egyptian Queens A Hieroglyphic Dictionary, Golden House Publications, London, 2005, ISBN 978 0 9547218 9 3 ref She had a daughter named Ahmose Henuttamehu . Ahmose Inhapy was mentioned in a copy of the Book of the Dead owned by her daughter Ahmose Henuttamehu, and in the tomb of Amenemhat TT53 . Her titles were King s Wife and King s Daughter . ref name DH Death and burial A tomb was made for Inhapy in Thebes, Egypt Thebes her mummy was later reburied in DB320 where it was discovered in 1881 and is now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo . ref name DH The mummy was found in the outer coffin of Lady Rai , the nurse of Inhapy s niece Queen Ahmose Nefertari . It was unwrapped by Gaston Maspero on June 26, 1886 and was later examined by Grafton Elliot Smith who described Inhapi as a big, strong built woman with a strong resemblance to her brother. Smith dates her burial to the later years of the reign of Ahmose I . The mummy had a garland of flowers around its neck. The body was laid out with her arms by her side, and th ... more details
Infobox monarch name Ahmose Sitkamose title Queen consort of Egypt image New Kingdom Queen.jpg caption A Queen from the New Kingdom full name Ahmose Sitkamose othertitles Great Royal Wife br God s Wife of Amun birth date birth place Thebes? death date death place Thebes date of burial place of burial Thebes consort Pharaoh Ahmose I offspring dynasty Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt 18th of Egypt father Kamose ? mother unknown children unknown religion Ancient Egyptian religion Hiero Sitkamose hiero G39 t H8 kA Z1 D52 E1 hiero align left era nk Ahmose Sitkamose or Sitkamose was a princess and queen during the late Seventeenth dynasty of Egypt 17th early Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt 18th dynasties of Egypt. Based on her name, she is likely to have been the daughter of Pharaoh Kamose . ref dodson , p.129 ref Her name really means daughter of Kamose . Biography She probably married Ahmose I who was her uncle or cousin, since her titles include King s Wife as well as King s Daughter and King s Sister. She was also the God s Wife of Amun , but it is likely that she was given this title only posthumously. ref Dodson & Hilton, p.129 ref Sitkamose s mummy was discovered in 1881 in the DB320 Deir el Bahari cache it was in the coffin of a man named Pediamun who lived during the Twenty first dynasty of Egypt 21st dynasty . Her mummy was unwraped by Gaston Maspero on June 19, 1886. Sitkamose was about thirty years old when she died, Grafton Eliot Smith described her as a strong built, almost masculine woman. The mummy was damaged by tomb robbers. ref http members.tripod.com anubis4 2000 17A.htm Ahmose Sitkamose Mummy of Ahmose Sitkamose ref Sources references External links http enlil.lib.uchicago.edu cgi bin eos eos page.pl?DPI 100&callnum DT57.C2 vol59&object 144 Mummy DEFAULTSORT Ahmose Sitkamose Category 16th century BC women Category 16th century BC clergy Category Ancient Egyptian queens consort Category Seventeenth Dynasty of Egypt Category Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt Category ... more details
Hiero Maatkare hiero nTr dwA t ra mAat kA hiero align right era nk For other Egyptian ladies called Maatkare see Maatkare Maatkare Mutemhat was an ancient Egypt ian high priestess, a God s Wife of Amun during the Twenty first dynasty of Egypt 21st dynasty . ref name D206 dodson , p.206 ref History She was the daughter of High Priest of Amun Pinedjem I , who was the de facto ruler of Southern Egypt from 1070 BCE onwards, then proclaimed himself pharaoh in 1054 BCE. Her mother was Duathathor Henuttawy , a daughter of Ramesses XI , last ruler of the Twentieth dynasty of Egypt 20th dynasty . Maatkare received the title of God s Wife of Amun during her father s reign she was the first God s Wife to take on a praenomen which used to be the prerogative of pharaohs. Her siblings held important positions too a brother of hers became pharaoh, a sister became queen, and three brothers held the title High Priest of Amun in succession. ref name D206 She was followed as God s Wife by her niece Henuttawy priestess Henuttawy , daughter of her brother, High Priest Menkheperre . Several of her depictions are known she was depicted as a young girl in the Luxor temple , along with her sisters Henuttawy princess Henuttawy and Mutnedjmet 21st dynasty Mutnedjmet , also, as high priestess on the facade of the Temple of Khonsu at Karnak , and on a statue which is now in Marseille. ref name D206 Her original burial place is unknown her mummy was found in the DB320 cache along with her coffins, shawabti s and other mummies from her immediate family. A small mummy, originally thought to be a child of hers was later revealed to be that of a pet monkey. God s Wives were supposed to be celibate. ref name D206 ref http www.webcitation.org query?url http www.geocities.com anubis4 2000 egyptpages maatkare.htm&date 2009 10 25 12 30 50 Maatkare s Mummy ref Sources reflist Category 11th century BC women Category 11th century BC clergy Category Ancient Egyptian priestesses Category Twenty first Dynasty ... more details
WNA or possibly DB320 ref Reeves, C.N., Valley of the Kings Kegan Paul, 1990 pp. 187 192 ref a tomb ... fragments found in KV4 and the coffin of Thutmose III that was found in the DB320 cache. This coffin ... more details
Infobox film name The Night of Counting the Years br Al Mummia image The Night of Counting the Years.jpg caption A screenshot from the film. director Shadi Abdel Salam producer Roberto Rossellini writer Shadi Abdel Salam starring Ahmed Marei br Ahmad Hegazi br Zouzou Hamdy El Hakim br Nadia Lutfi music Mario Nascimbene cinematography Abdel Aziz Fahmy editing Kamal Abou El Ella distributor General Egyptian Cinema Organisation br Merchant Ivory Productions released film date 1969 runtime 102 minutes country film Egypt language Classical Arabic budget gross The Night of Counting the Years , a.k.a. The Mummy Arabic language Arabic Al Mummia is a 1969 Egyptian film directed by Shadi Abdel Salam . It was Salam s first feature film. ref name sffs.org cite web url http history.sffs.org films film details.php?id 3469&searchfield counting title The Night of Counting the Years accessdate 2011 11 27 work sffs.org ref Egyptian critics consistently list it as one of the most important Egyptian films ever made. ref Cite journal last Farid first Samir title The top 100 journal Al Ahram Weekly issue 836 publisher Al Ahram location Boulaq date 15 21 March 2007 url http weekly.ahram.org.eg 2007 836 cu4.htm oclc 179957756 accessdate 2008 05 08 ref The film was selected as the Egyptian entry for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film Best Foreign Language Film at the 43rd Academy Awards , but was not accepted as a nominee. ref Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences ref Plot Set in 1881 , on the eve of History of modern Egypt British occupation British colonial rule , it is based on the true story of the Abd el Rasuls, an Upper Egyptian clan that had been robbing a Treasure trove cache of mummies discovered at tomb DB320 near the village of Kurna , and selling the artefacts on the illicit antiquities black market. After a conflict within the clan, one of its members goes to the police, helping the Antiquities Service find the cache. Symbo ... more details