Menhet | ||||||||
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Manhata | ||||||||
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Dynasty | 18th Dynasty | |||||||
Pharaoh(s) | Thutmose III | |||||||
Titles | King's Wife | |||||||
Spouse(s) | Thutmose III | |||||||
Burial | Wadi Gabbanat el-Qurud |
Menhet or Manhata (Ancient Egyptian: mnḥt(tꜣ)) was an ancient Egyptian King's Wife of the Eighteenth Dynasty during the New Kingdom.
Family[]
Menhet was a minor foreign-born wife of Pharaoh Thutmose III. Her parentage and offspring remain unknown. Her name appears to be Canaanite, suggesting that a west-semitic origin would be most likely.[1] Thutmose III had two more foreign wives; Menwi and Merti. All three were interred together, but whether the three foreign wives were related is unknown as the faces on the lids of their canopic jars are all different.[1]
Burial[]
Menhet, Menwi and Merti are only known from the discovery of their burial in a lavishly furnished rock-cut tomb in Wadi Gabbanat el-Qurud, a necropolis located southwest of the Valley of the Kings.[2] The tomb is thought to have been discovered intact by local tomb robbers in 7 August 1916, but by the time a proper excavation took place only the gold and stone objects had survived as the wood and mummies had disintegrated.[3]
References[]
Bibliography[]
- Lilyquist, C./Hoch, J.E./Peden, A.J., 2003: The Tomb of Three Foreign Wives of Tuthmosis III. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.