Anuketemheb

Anuketemheb ("Anuket in Feast"[1]) was an ancient Egyptian princess and queen of the 19th or the 20th Dynasty. She is known from only one artifact, a red granite sarcophagus lid which was originally hers but was later reused for Takhat, the mother of Amenmesse and was discovered in the tomb KV10.




Anuketemheb[1]
ˁnq.t-m-ḥb
in hieroglyphs

Anuketemheb's titles were "King's Daughter", "King's Wife" and "Great Royal Wife".[2] Her father and husband couldn't be identified, but she is possibly identical with a princess depicted in a forecourt of the Temple of Luxor, in a procession of daughters of Ramesses II; her name is only partially readable but ends in em-heb.[3][4]

Sources

  1. Hermann Ranke: Die ägyptische Persönennamen. Verlag von J. J. Augustin in Glückstadt, 1935., I., p.69
  2. Dodson, Aidan, Hilton, Dyan. The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt. Thames & Hudson (2004). ISBN 0-500-05128-3, pp. 183, 194.
  3. Amenmesse Project (KV-10) – A University of Memphis Mission: Historical Observation
  4. Brock, Lyla Pinch. Egyptology at the Dawn of the Twenty-first Century: Archaeology. American Univ in Cairo Press (2003). ISBN 9774246748, pp.99-100
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