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Ahmose-Henuttamehu

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Ahmose-Henuttamehu
Queen consort of Egypt
Great Royal Wife
Mummy of Ahmose-Henuttamehu, found in DB320
BornThebes?
DiedThebes
Burial
Thebes, eventually in TT320
SpousePharaoh Ahmose I
Issueunknown
Egyptian name
N12
ms
HW24 t
tA
M15
Dynasty18th of Egypt
FatherSeqenenre Tao
MotherAhmose Inhapi
ReligionAncient Egyptian religion

Ahmose-Henuttamehu (“Child of the Moon; Mistress of Lower Egypt”) was a princess and queen of the late 17th-early 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).[1][2] Ahmose-Henuttamehu was a half-sister to the Great Royal Wife and God's Wife of Amun Ahmose-Nefertari.

Life and Burial

Ahmose-Henuttamehu is shown with another royal lady - possibly her mother Ahmose-Inhapi - behind her.
Prince Sipair, unknown royal lady, Queen Ahmose, Queen Tures, and Queen Henuttamehu - Tomb of Khabeknet in Thebes.

Not much is known about the life of Ahmose-Henuttamehu. The Queen is mentioned on a stela as depicted in Lepsius' Denkmahler.

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 Shoshenq I.[3]

Ahmose-Henuttamehu is included in the list of royal ancestors worshipped in the Nineteenth Dynasty. She appears in the tomb of Khabekhnet in Thebes. In the top row, Prince Ahmose-Sipair appears on the left, and Ahmose-Henuttamehu appears as the fourth woman from the left, after the God's Wife and Lady of the Two Lands Ahmose, and the King's Wife Tures.[4]

References

  1. ^ Grajetzki, Ancient Egyptian Queens: A Hieroglyphic Dictionary, Golden House Publications (2005)
  2. ^ Dodson, Aidan; Hilton, Dyan (2004). The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05128-3., p.128
  3. ^ Mummy of Ahmose-Henuttamehu
  4. ^ Kitchen, K.A., Rammeside Inscriptions, Translated & Annotated, Translations, Volume III, Blackwell Publishers, 1996