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Nefertiti

Nefertiti (/ˌnɛfərˈtti/[3]) (c. 1370 – c. 1330 BC) was a queen of the 18th Dynasty of Ancient Egypt, the great royal wife of Pharaoh Akhenaten. Nefertiti and her husband were known for their radical overhaul of state religious policy, in which they promoted the earliest known form of monotheism, Atenism, centered on the sun disc and its direct connection to the royal household. With her husband, she reigned at what was arguably the wealthiest period of ancient Egyptian history.[4] Some scholars believe that Nefertiti ruled briefly as the female king Neferneferuaten after her husband's death and before the ascension of Tutankhamun, although this identification is a matter of ongoing debate.[5][6] If Nefertiti did rule as Pharaoh, her reign was marked by the fall of Amarna and relocation of the capital back to the traditional city of Thebes.[7]

Nefertiti
The bust of Nefertiti from the Egyptian Museum of Berlin collection, presently in the Neues Museum
Queen consort of Egypt
Tenure1353–1336 BC[1] or
1351–1334 BC[2]
Pharaoh
(as Neferneferuaten, disputed)
Reignc. 1334–1332 BC
PredecessorSmenkhkare
SuccessorTutankhamun
Bornc. 1370 BC
Thebes, Egypt
Diedc. 1330 BC
SpouseAkhenaten
Issue
Names
Nefertiti
Dynasty18th of Egypt
FatherAy (possibly)
MotherIuy (possibly)
ReligionAtenism
Neferneferuaten-Nefertiti in hieroglyphs


 


Neferneferuaten Nefertiti
Nfr nfrw itn Nfr.t jy.tj
Beautiful are the Beauties of Aten, the Beautiful one has come

She was made famous by her bust, now in Berlin's Neues Museum. The bust is one of the most copied works of art of ancient Egypt. It was attributed to the sculptor Thutmose, and it was found in his workshop.

Names and titles edit

Nefertiti had many titles, including:

  • Neferneferuaten[8] (Beautiful is the beauty of Aten) nfr-nfrw-jtn
  • Hereditary Princess (iryt-p`t)
  • Great of Praises (wrt-Hzwt)
  • Lady of Grace (nebet-imat, nbt-jmꜣt)
  • Sweet of Love (beneret-merut, bnrt-mrwt)
  • Lady of The Two Lands (nebet-tawi, nbt-tꜣwj)
  • Main King's Wife, his beloved (hemet-nesut-aat meretef, ḥmt-nswt-ꜥꜣt mrt.f)
  • Great King's Wife, his beloved (hemet-nesut-weret meretef, ḥmt-nswt-wrt mrt.f)
  • Lady of All Women (henut-hemut-nebut, ḥnwt-ḥmwt-nbwt)
  • Mistress of Upper & Lower Egypt (henut-shemau-mehu, ḥnwt-šmꜣw-mḥw).[9]

While modern Egyptological pronunciation renders her name as Nefertiti, her name was the sentence nfr.t jj.tj “the beautiful one has come” and probably contemporarily pronounced Naftita from older Nafrat-ita or perhaps Nafert-yiti.[10][11] Nefertiti's name, Egyptian Nfr.t-jy.tj, can be translated as "The Beautiful Woman has Come".[12]

Family and early life edit

Almost nothing is known about Nefertiti's life prior to her marriage to Akhenaten. Scenes from the tombs of the nobles in Amarna mention that Nefertiti had a sister, named Mutbenret.[13][14][15] Further, a woman named Tey carried the title of "Nurse of the Great Royal Wife."[16] In addition, Tey's husband Ay carried the title "God's Father." Some Egyptologists believe that this title was used for a man whose daughter married the pharaoh.[17] Based on these titles, it has been proposed that Ay was in fact Nefertiti's father.[12] However, neither Ay nor Tey are explicitly referred to as Nefertiti's parents in the existing sources. At the same time, no sources exist that directly contradict Ay's fatherhood which is considered likely due to the great influence he wielded during Nefertiti's life and after her death.[12] According to another theory, Nefertiti was the daughter of Ay and a woman besides Tey, but Ay's first wife died before Nefertiti's rise to the position of queen, whereupon Ay married Tey, making her Nefertiti's stepmother. Nevertheless, this entire proposal is based on speculation and conjecture.[18]

It has also been proposed that Nefertiti was Akhenaten's full sister, though this is contradicted by her titles which do not include the title of "King's Daughter" or "King's Sister," usually used to indicate a relative of a pharaoh.[12] Another theory about her parentage that gained some support identified Nefertiti with the Mitanni princess Tadukhipa,[19] partially based on Nefertiti's name ("The Beautiful Woman has Come") which has been interpreted by some scholars as signifying a foreign origin.[12] However, Tadukhipa was already married to Akhenaten's father and there is no evidence for any reason why this woman would need to alter her name in a proposed marriage to Akhenaten, nor any hard evidence of a foreign non-Egyptian background for Nefertiti.

The exact dates when Nefertiti married Akhenaten and became the king's great royal wife are uncertain. They are known to have had at least six daughters together, including Meritaten, Meketaten, Ankhesenpaaten (later called Ankhesenamun when she married Tutankhamun), Neferneferuaten Tasherit, Neferneferure, and Setepenre.[15][19] She was once considered as a candidate for the mother of Tutankhamun, however a genetic study conducted on discovered mummies suggests that she was not.[20]

Life edit

 
Alabaster sunken relief depicting Akhenaten, Nefertiti, and daughter Meritaten. Early Aten cartouches on king's arm and chest. From Amarna, Egypt. 18th Dynasty. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London
 
Close-up of a limestone relief depicting Nefertiti smiting a female captive on a royal barge. On display at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Nefertiti first appears in scenes in Thebes. In the damaged tomb (TT188) of the royal butler Parennefer, the new king Amenhotep IV is accompanied by a royal woman, and this lady is thought to be an early depiction of Nefertiti. The king and queen are shown worshiping the Aten. In the tomb of the vizier Ramose, Nefertiti is shown standing behind Amenhotep IV in the Window of Appearance during the reward ceremony for the vizier.[19]

 
A standing/striding figure of Nefertiti made of limestone. Originally from Amarna, part of the Ägyptisches Museum Berlin collection.

During the early years in Thebes, Akhenaten (still known as Amenhotep IV) had several temples erected at Karnak. One of the structures, the Mansion of the Benben (hwt-ben-ben), was dedicated to Nefertiti. She is depicted with her daughter Meritaten and in some scenes the princess Meketaten participates as well. In scenes found on the talatat, Nefertiti appears almost twice as often as her husband. She is shown appearing behind her husband the pharaoh in offering scenes in the role of the queen supporting her husband, but she is also depicted in scenes that would have normally been the prerogative of the king. She is shown smiting the enemy, and captive enemies decorate her throne.[21]

In the fourth year of his reign, Amenhotep IV decided to move the capital to Akhetaten (modern Amarna). In his fifth year, Amenhotep IV officially changed his name to Akhenaten, and Nefertiti was henceforth known as Neferneferuaten-Nefertiti. The name change was a sign of the ever-increasing importance of the cult of the Aten. It changed Egypt's religion from a polytheistic religion to a religion which may have been better described as a monolatry (the depiction of a single god as an object for worship) or henotheism (one god, who is not the only god).[22]

The boundary stelae of years 4 and 5 mark the boundaries of the new city and suggest that the move to the new city of Akhetaten occurred around that time. The new city contained several large open-air temples dedicated to the Aten. Nefertiti and her family would have resided in the Great Royal Palace in the centre of the city and possibly at the Northern Palace as well. Nefertiti and the rest of the royal family feature prominently in the scenes at the palaces and in the tombs of the nobles. Nefertiti's steward during this time was an official named Meryre II. He would have been in charge of running her household.[5][19]

Inscriptions in the tombs of Huya and Meryre II dated to Year 12, 2nd month of Peret, Day 8 show a large foreign tribute. The people of Kharu (the north) and Kush (the south) are shown bringing gifts of gold and precious items to Akhenaten and Nefertiti. In the tomb of Meryre II, Nefertiti's steward, the royal couple is shown seated in a kiosk with their six daughters in attendance.[5][19] This is one of the last times princess Meketaten is shown alive.

Two representations of Nefertiti that were excavated by Flinders Petrie appear to show Nefertiti in the middle to later part of Akhenaten's reign 'after the exaggerated style of the early years had relaxed somewhat'.[23] One is a small piece on limestone and is a preliminary sketch of Nefertiti wearing her distinctive tall crown with carving began around the mouth, chin, ear and tab of the crown. Another is a small inlay head (Petrie Museum Number UC103) modeled from reddish-brown quartzite that was clearly intended to fit into a larger composition.

Meketaten may have died in year 13 or 14. Nefertiti, Akhenaten, and three princesses are shown mourning her.[24] The last dated inscription naming her and Akhenaten comes from a building inscription in the limestone quarry at Dayr Abū Ḥinnis. It dates to year 16 of the king's reign and is also the last dated inscription naming the king.[25]

Possible reign as a Pharaoh edit

Many scholars believe Nefertiti had a role elevated from that of great royal wife, and was promoted to co-regent by her husband Pharaoh Akhenaten before his death.[26] She is depicted in many archaeological sites as equal in stature to a King, smiting Egypt's enemies, riding a chariot, and worshipping the Aten in the manner of a pharaoh.[27] When Nefertiti's name disappears from historical records, it is replaced by that of a co-regent named Neferneferuaten, who became a female Pharaoh.[28] It seems likely that Nefertiti, in a similar fashion to the previous female Pharaoh Hatshepsut, assumed the kingship under the name Pharaoh Neferneferuaten after her husband's death. She was then succeeded by Tutankhamun.[29]

It seems less possible that Nefertiti disguised herself as a male and assumed the male alter ego of Smenkhkare.According to Van Der Perre, Smenkhkare is thought to be a co-regent of Akhenaten who died before Neferneferuaten assumed the kingship.[30]

If Nefertiti did rule Egypt as a Pharaoh, it has been theorized that she would have attempted damage control and may have re-instated the ancient Egyptian religion and the Amun priests. She would have raised Tutankhamun in the worship of the traditional gods.[31]

Archaeologist and Egyptologist Dr. Zahi Hawass theorized that Nefertiti returned to Thebes from Amarna to rule as a Pharaoh, based on ushabti and other feminine evidence of a female pharaoh found in Tutankhamun's tomb, as well as evidence of Nefertiti smiting Egypt's enemies which was a duty reserved to kings.[32]

Death edit

 
Nefertiti worshipping the Aten. She is given the title of Mistress of the Two Lands. On display at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.

Old theories edit

 
Fragment with cartouche of Akhenaten, which is followed by epithet Great in his Lifespan and the title of Nefertiti Great King's Wife. Reign of Akhenaten. From Amarna, Egypt. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London

Pre-2012 Egyptological theories thought that Nefertiti vanished from the historical record around Year 12 of Akhenaten's reign, with no word of her thereafter. Conjectured causes included injury, a plague that was sweeping through the city, and a natural cause. This theory was based on the discovery of several ushabti fragments inscribed for Nefertiti (now located in the Louvre and the Brooklyn Museum).

A previous theory that she fell into disgrace was discredited when deliberate erasures of monuments belonging to a queen of Akhenaten were shown to refer to Kiya instead.[15]

During Akhenaten's reign (and perhaps after), Nefertiti enjoyed unprecedented power. By the twelfth year of his reign, there is evidence she may have been elevated to the status of co-regent:[33] equal in status to the pharaoh, as may be depicted on the Coregency Stela.

It is possible that Nefertiti is the ruler named Neferneferuaten. Some theorists believe that Nefertiti was still alive and held influence on the younger royals. If this is the case, that influence and presumably Nefertiti's own life would have ended by year 3 of Tutankhaten's reign (1331 BC). In that year, Tutankhaten changed his name to Tutankhamun. This is evidence of his return to the official worship of Amun, and abandonment of Amarna to return the capital to Thebes.[5]

New theories edit

In 2012, the discovery of an inscription dated to Year 16, month 3 of Akhet, day 15 of the reign of Akhenaten was announced.[34] It was discovered within Quarry 320 in the largest wadi of the limestone quarry at Dayr Abū Ḥinnis.[35] The five-line inscription, written in red ochre, mentions the presence of the "Great Royal Wife, His Beloved, Mistress of the Two Lands, Neferneferuaten Nefertiti".[36][37] The final line of the inscription refers to ongoing building work being carried out under the authority of the king's scribe Penthu on the Small Aten Temple in Amarna.[38] Van der Perre stresses that:

This inscription offers incontrovertible evidence that both Akhenaten and Nefertiti were still alive in the 16th year of his [Akhenaten's] reign and, more importantly, that they were still holding the same positions as at the start of their reign. This makes it necessary to rethink the final years of the Amarna Period.[39]

This means that Nefertiti was alive in the second to last year of Akhenaten's reign, and demonstrates that Akhenaten still ruled alone, with his wife by his side. Therefore, the rule of the female Amarna pharaoh known as Neferneferuaten must be placed between the death of Akhenaten and the accession of Tutankhamun. Neferneferuaten, this female pharaoh, specifically used the epithet 'Effective for her husband' in one of her cartouches,[28] which means she was either Nefertiti or her daughter Meritaten (who was married to king Smenkhkare).

Burial edit

 
Limestone trial piece showing head of Nefertiti.
 
Heads of Akhenaten and Nefertiti 18th Dynasty Egypt

Nefertiti's burial was intended to be made within the Royal Tomb as laid out in the Boundary Stelae.[40] It is possible that the unfinished annex of the Royal Tomb was intended for her use.[41] However, given that Akhenaten appears to have predeceased her it is highly unlikely she was ever buried there. One shabti is known to have been made for her.[42] The unfinished Tomb 29, which would have been of very similar dimensions to the Royal Tomb had it been finished, is the most likely candidate for a tomb begun for Nefertiti's exclusive use.[43] Given that it lacks a burial chamber, she was not interred there either.

In 2015, English archaeologist Nicholas Reeves announced that high resolution scans revealed voids behind the walls of Tutankhamun's tomb which he proposed to be the burial chamber of Nefertiti,[44][45] but subsequent radar scans showed that there are no hidden chambers.[46][47]

In 1898, French archeologist Victor Loret found two female mummies among those cached inside the tomb of Amenhotep II in KV35 in the Valley of the Kings. These two mummies, known as 'The Elder Lady' and 'The Younger Lady', were identified as likely candidates of her remains.

An article in KMT magazine in 2001 suggested that the Elder Lady might be Nefertiti.[48] However, it was subsequently shown that the 'Elder Lady' is in fact Tiye, mother of Akhenaten. A lock of hair found in a coffinette bearing an inscription naming Queen Tiye proved a near perfect match to the hair of the 'Elder Lady'.[49] DNA analysis confirmed that she was the daughter of Tiye's parents Yuya and Thuya.[50]

On 9 June 2003 archaeologist Joann Fletcher, a specialist in ancient hair from the University of York in England, announced that Nefertiti's mummy may have been the Younger Lady. This theory was criticised by Zahi Hawass and several other Egyptologists.[51] In a subsequent research project led by Hawass, the mummy was put through CT scan analysis and DNA analysis. Researchers concluded that she is Tutankhamun's biological mother, an unnamed daughter of Amenhotep III and Tiye, not Nefertiti.[20]

KV21B mummy edit

One of the two female mummies found in KV21 has been suggested as the body of Nefertiti. DNA analysis did not yield enough data to make a definitive identification but confirmed she was a member of the Eighteenth Dynasty royal line.[52] CT-scanning revealed she was about 45 at the time of her death; her left arm had been bent over her chest in the 'queenly' pose. The possible identification is based on her association with the mummy tentatively identified as Ankhesenamun. It is suggested that just as a mother and daughter (Tiye and the Younger Lady) were found lying together in KV35, the same was true of these mummies.[53]

Hittite letters edit

A document was found in the ancient Hittite capital of Hattusa which dates to the Amarna period. The document is part of the so-called Deeds of Suppiluliuma I. While laying siege to Karkemish, the Hittite ruler receives a letter from the Egyptian queen. The letter reads:[54]

My husband has died and I have no son. They say about you that you have many sons. You might give me one of your sons to become my husband. I would not wish to take one of my subjects as a husband... I am afraid.

This proposal is considered extraordinary as New Kingdom royal women never married foreign royalty.[55] Suppiluliuma I was understandably surprised and exclaimed to his courtiers:[54]

Nothing like this has happened to me in my entire life!

Understandably, he was wary, and had an envoy investigate the situation, but by so doing, he missed his chance to bring Egypt into his empire.[54] He eventually did send one of his sons, Zannanza, but the prince died, perhaps murdered, en route.[56][57]

The identity of the queen who wrote the letter is uncertain. She is called Dakhamunzu in the Hittite annals, a translation of the Egyptian title Ta hemet nesu (The King's Wife).[58][59][60] The possible candidates are Nefertiti, Meritaten,[61] and Ankhesenamun. Ankhesenamun once seemed the likeliest, since there were no candidates for the throne on the death of her husband, Tutankhamun, whereas Akhenaten had at least two legitimate successors. But this was based on the assumption of a 27-year reign for the last 18th Dynasty pharaoh, Horemheb, who is now accepted to have had a shorter reign of only 14 years. This makes the deceased Egyptian king appear to be Akhenaten instead, rather than Tutankhamun.[citation needed] Furthermore, the phrase regarding marriage to 'one of my subjects' (translated by some as 'servants') is possibly either a reference to the Grand Vizier Ay or a secondary member of the Egyptian royal family line. Since Nefertiti was depicted as being as powerful as her husband in official monuments smiting Egypt's enemies, she might be the Dakhamunzu in the Amarna correspondence, as Nicholas Reeves believes.[62]

Gallery edit

Cultural depictions edit

References edit

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Works cited edit

  • Dodson, Aidan (2016) [1st pub. 2014]. Amarna Sunrise. Egypt from Golden Age to Age of Heresy. Cairo; New York City: American University in Cairo Press. ISBN 9781617975608.
  • Athena Van der Perre, The Year 16 graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr Abū Ḥinnis. A Contribution to the Study of the Later Years of Nefertiti, Journal of Egyptian History. 7 (1), (2014) pp.67-106

External links edit

  • Staatliche Museen zu Berlin: Egyptian Museum and Papyrus Collection 2010-07-02 at the Wayback Machine
  • C. Nicholas Reeves: The Burial of Nefertiti?
  • Habicht M. et al: Who else might be in Pharaoh Tutankhamun's tomb (KV 62, c. 1325 BC)?
  • A 3D model of a bust of Nefertiti

nefertiti, this, article, about, ancient, egyptian, queen, other, uses, disambiguation, other, individuals, named, neferneferuaten, neferneferuaten, disambiguation, 1370, 1330, queen, 18th, dynasty, ancient, egypt, great, royal, wife, pharaoh, akhenaten, husba. This article is about the Ancient Egyptian queen For other uses see Nefertiti disambiguation For other individuals named Neferneferuaten see Neferneferuaten disambiguation Nefertiti ˌ n ɛ f er ˈ t iː t i 3 c 1370 c 1330 BC was a queen of the 18th Dynasty of Ancient Egypt the great royal wife of Pharaoh Akhenaten Nefertiti and her husband were known for their radical overhaul of state religious policy in which they promoted the earliest known form of monotheism Atenism centered on the sun disc and its direct connection to the royal household With her husband she reigned at what was arguably the wealthiest period of ancient Egyptian history 4 Some scholars believe that Nefertiti ruled briefly as the female king Neferneferuaten after her husband s death and before the ascension of Tutankhamun although this identification is a matter of ongoing debate 5 6 If Nefertiti did rule as Pharaoh her reign was marked by the fall of Amarna and relocation of the capital back to the traditional city of Thebes 7 NefertitiThe bust of Nefertiti from the Egyptian Museum of Berlin collection presently in the Neues MuseumQueen consort of EgyptTenure1353 1336 BC 1 or 1351 1334 BC 2 Pharaoh as Neferneferuaten disputed Reignc 1334 1332 BCPredecessorSmenkhkareSuccessorTutankhamunBornc 1370 BC Thebes EgyptDiedc 1330 BCSpouseAkhenatenIssueMeritaten Meketaten Ankhesenamun Neferneferuaten Tasherit Neferneferure SetepenreNamesNefertitiDynasty18th of EgyptFatherAy possibly MotherIuy possibly ReligionAtenismNeferneferuaten Nefertiti in hieroglyphs Neferneferuaten Nefertiti Nfr nfrw itn Nfr t jy tjBeautiful are the Beauties of Aten the Beautiful one has come Great Royal Wife of Pharaoh AkhenatenShe was made famous by her bust now in Berlin s Neues Museum The bust is one of the most copied works of art of ancient Egypt It was attributed to the sculptor Thutmose and it was found in his workshop Contents 1 Names and titles 2 Family and early life 3 Life 3 1 Possible reign as a Pharaoh 4 Death 4 1 Old theories 4 2 New theories 5 Burial 5 1 KV21B mummy 6 Hittite letters 7 Gallery 8 Cultural depictions 9 References 9 1 Works cited 10 External linksNames and titles editNefertiti had many titles including Neferneferuaten 8 Beautiful is the beauty of Aten nfr nfrw jtn Hereditary Princess iryt p t Great of Praises wrt Hzwt Lady of Grace nebet imat nbt jmꜣt Sweet of Love beneret merut bnrt mrwt Lady of The Two Lands nebet tawi nbt tꜣwj Main King s Wife his beloved hemet nesut aat meretef ḥmt nswt ꜥꜣt mrt f Great King s Wife his beloved hemet nesut weret meretef ḥmt nswt wrt mrt f Lady of All Women henut hemut nebut ḥnwt ḥmwt nbwt Mistress of Upper amp Lower Egypt henut shemau mehu ḥnwt smꜣw mḥw 9 While modern Egyptological pronunciation renders her name as Nefertiti her name was the sentence nfr t jj tj the beautiful one has come and probably contemporarily pronounced Naftita from older Nafrat ita or perhaps Nafert yiti 10 11 Nefertiti s name Egyptian Nfr t jy tj can be translated as The Beautiful Woman has Come 12 Family and early life editSee also Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt family treeAlmost nothing is known about Nefertiti s life prior to her marriage to Akhenaten Scenes from the tombs of the nobles in Amarna mention that Nefertiti had a sister named Mutbenret 13 14 15 Further a woman named Tey carried the title of Nurse of the Great Royal Wife 16 In addition Tey s husband Ay carried the title God s Father Some Egyptologists believe that this title was used for a man whose daughter married the pharaoh 17 Based on these titles it has been proposed that Ay was in fact Nefertiti s father 12 However neither Ay nor Tey are explicitly referred to as Nefertiti s parents in the existing sources At the same time no sources exist that directly contradict Ay s fatherhood which is considered likely due to the great influence he wielded during Nefertiti s life and after her death 12 According to another theory Nefertiti was the daughter of Ay and a woman besides Tey but Ay s first wife died before Nefertiti s rise to the position of queen whereupon Ay married Tey making her Nefertiti s stepmother Nevertheless this entire proposal is based on speculation and conjecture 18 It has also been proposed that Nefertiti was Akhenaten s full sister though this is contradicted by her titles which do not include the title of King s Daughter or King s Sister usually used to indicate a relative of a pharaoh 12 Another theory about her parentage that gained some support identified Nefertiti with the Mitanni princess Tadukhipa 19 partially based on Nefertiti s name The Beautiful Woman has Come which has been interpreted by some scholars as signifying a foreign origin 12 However Tadukhipa was already married to Akhenaten s father and there is no evidence for any reason why this woman would need to alter her name in a proposed marriage to Akhenaten nor any hard evidence of a foreign non Egyptian background for Nefertiti The exact dates when Nefertiti married Akhenaten and became the king s great royal wife are uncertain They are known to have had at least six daughters together including Meritaten Meketaten Ankhesenpaaten later called Ankhesenamun when she married Tutankhamun Neferneferuaten Tasherit Neferneferure and Setepenre 15 19 She was once considered as a candidate for the mother of Tutankhamun however a genetic study conducted on discovered mummies suggests that she was not 20 Life edit nbsp Alabaster sunken relief depicting Akhenaten Nefertiti and daughter Meritaten Early Aten cartouches on king s arm and chest From Amarna Egypt 18th Dynasty The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Close up of a limestone relief depicting Nefertiti smiting a female captive on a royal barge On display at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston Nefertiti first appears in scenes in Thebes In the damaged tomb TT188 of the royal butler Parennefer the new king Amenhotep IV is accompanied by a royal woman and this lady is thought to be an early depiction of Nefertiti The king and queen are shown worshiping the Aten In the tomb of the vizier Ramose Nefertiti is shown standing behind Amenhotep IV in the Window of Appearance during the reward ceremony for the vizier 19 nbsp A standing striding figure of Nefertiti made of limestone Originally from Amarna part of the Agyptisches Museum Berlin collection During the early years in Thebes Akhenaten still known as Amenhotep IV had several temples erected at Karnak One of the structures the Mansion of the Benben hwt ben ben was dedicated to Nefertiti She is depicted with her daughter Meritaten and in some scenes the princess Meketaten participates as well In scenes found on the talatat Nefertiti appears almost twice as often as her husband She is shown appearing behind her husband the pharaoh in offering scenes in the role of the queen supporting her husband but she is also depicted in scenes that would have normally been the prerogative of the king She is shown smiting the enemy and captive enemies decorate her throne 21 In the fourth year of his reign Amenhotep IV decided to move the capital to Akhetaten modern Amarna In his fifth year Amenhotep IV officially changed his name to Akhenaten and Nefertiti was henceforth known as Neferneferuaten Nefertiti The name change was a sign of the ever increasing importance of the cult of the Aten It changed Egypt s religion from a polytheistic religion to a religion which may have been better described as a monolatry the depiction of a single god as an object for worship or henotheism one god who is not the only god 22 The boundary stelae of years 4 and 5 mark the boundaries of the new city and suggest that the move to the new city of Akhetaten occurred around that time The new city contained several large open air temples dedicated to the Aten Nefertiti and her family would have resided in the Great Royal Palace in the centre of the city and possibly at the Northern Palace as well Nefertiti and the rest of the royal family feature prominently in the scenes at the palaces and in the tombs of the nobles Nefertiti s steward during this time was an official named Meryre II He would have been in charge of running her household 5 19 Inscriptions in the tombs of Huya and Meryre II dated to Year 12 2nd month of Peret Day 8 show a large foreign tribute The people of Kharu the north and Kush the south are shown bringing gifts of gold and precious items to Akhenaten and Nefertiti In the tomb of Meryre II Nefertiti s steward the royal couple is shown seated in a kiosk with their six daughters in attendance 5 19 This is one of the last times princess Meketaten is shown alive Two representations of Nefertiti that were excavated by Flinders Petrie appear to show Nefertiti in the middle to later part of Akhenaten s reign after the exaggerated style of the early years had relaxed somewhat 23 One is a small piece on limestone and is a preliminary sketch of Nefertiti wearing her distinctive tall crown with carving began around the mouth chin ear and tab of the crown Another is a small inlay head Petrie Museum Number UC103 modeled from reddish brown quartzite that was clearly intended to fit into a larger composition Meketaten may have died in year 13 or 14 Nefertiti Akhenaten and three princesses are shown mourning her 24 The last dated inscription naming her and Akhenaten comes from a building inscription in the limestone quarry at Dayr Abu Ḥinnis It dates to year 16 of the king s reign and is also the last dated inscription naming the king 25 Possible reign as a Pharaoh edit Many scholars believe Nefertiti had a role elevated from that of great royal wife and was promoted to co regent by her husband Pharaoh Akhenaten before his death 26 She is depicted in many archaeological sites as equal in stature to a King smiting Egypt s enemies riding a chariot and worshipping the Aten in the manner of a pharaoh 27 When Nefertiti s name disappears from historical records it is replaced by that of a co regent named Neferneferuaten who became a female Pharaoh 28 It seems likely that Nefertiti in a similar fashion to the previous female Pharaoh Hatshepsut assumed the kingship under the name Pharaoh Neferneferuaten after her husband s death She was then succeeded by Tutankhamun 29 It seems less possible that Nefertiti disguised herself as a male and assumed the male alter ego of Smenkhkare According to Van Der Perre Smenkhkare is thought to be a co regent of Akhenaten who died before Neferneferuaten assumed the kingship 30 If Nefertiti did rule Egypt as a Pharaoh it has been theorized that she would have attempted damage control and may have re instated the ancient Egyptian religion and the Amun priests She would have raised Tutankhamun in the worship of the traditional gods 31 Archaeologist and Egyptologist Dr Zahi Hawass theorized that Nefertiti returned to Thebes from Amarna to rule as a Pharaoh based on ushabti and other feminine evidence of a female pharaoh found in Tutankhamun s tomb as well as evidence of Nefertiti smiting Egypt s enemies which was a duty reserved to kings 32 Death editFurther information Amarna succession nbsp Nefertiti worshipping the Aten She is given the title of Mistress of the Two Lands On display at the Ashmolean Museum Oxford Old theories edit nbsp Fragment with cartouche of Akhenaten which is followed by epithet Great in his Lifespan and the title of Nefertiti Great King s Wife Reign of Akhenaten From Amarna Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology LondonPre 2012 Egyptological theories thought that Nefertiti vanished from the historical record around Year 12 of Akhenaten s reign with no word of her thereafter Conjectured causes included injury a plague that was sweeping through the city and a natural cause This theory was based on the discovery of several ushabti fragments inscribed for Nefertiti now located in the Louvre and the Brooklyn Museum A previous theory that she fell into disgrace was discredited when deliberate erasures of monuments belonging to a queen of Akhenaten were shown to refer to Kiya instead 15 During Akhenaten s reign and perhaps after Nefertiti enjoyed unprecedented power By the twelfth year of his reign there is evidence she may have been elevated to the status of co regent 33 equal in status to the pharaoh as may be depicted on the Coregency Stela It is possible that Nefertiti is the ruler named Neferneferuaten Some theorists believe that Nefertiti was still alive and held influence on the younger royals If this is the case that influence and presumably Nefertiti s own life would have ended by year 3 of Tutankhaten s reign 1331 BC In that year Tutankhaten changed his name to Tutankhamun This is evidence of his return to the official worship of Amun and abandonment of Amarna to return the capital to Thebes 5 New theories edit In 2012 the discovery of an inscription dated to Year 16 month 3 of Akhet day 15 of the reign of Akhenaten was announced 34 It was discovered within Quarry 320 in the largest wadi of the limestone quarry at Dayr Abu Ḥinnis 35 The five line inscription written in red ochre mentions the presence of the Great Royal Wife His Beloved Mistress of the Two Lands Neferneferuaten Nefertiti 36 37 The final line of the inscription refers to ongoing building work being carried out under the authority of the king s scribe Penthu on the Small Aten Temple in Amarna 38 Van der Perre stresses that This inscription offers incontrovertible evidence that both Akhenaten and Nefertiti were still alive in the 16th year of his Akhenaten s reign and more importantly that they were still holding the same positions as at the start of their reign This makes it necessary to rethink the final years of the Amarna Period 39 This means that Nefertiti was alive in the second to last year of Akhenaten s reign and demonstrates that Akhenaten still ruled alone with his wife by his side Therefore the rule of the female Amarna pharaoh known as Neferneferuaten must be placed between the death of Akhenaten and the accession of Tutankhamun Neferneferuaten this female pharaoh specifically used the epithet Effective for her husband in one of her cartouches 28 which means she was either Nefertiti or her daughter Meritaten who was married to king Smenkhkare Burial edit nbsp Limestone trial piece showing head of Nefertiti nbsp Heads of Akhenaten and Nefertiti 18th Dynasty EgyptNefertiti s burial was intended to be made within the Royal Tomb as laid out in the Boundary Stelae 40 It is possible that the unfinished annex of the Royal Tomb was intended for her use 41 However given that Akhenaten appears to have predeceased her it is highly unlikely she was ever buried there One shabti is known to have been made for her 42 The unfinished Tomb 29 which would have been of very similar dimensions to the Royal Tomb had it been finished is the most likely candidate for a tomb begun for Nefertiti s exclusive use 43 Given that it lacks a burial chamber she was not interred there either In 2015 English archaeologist Nicholas Reeves announced that high resolution scans revealed voids behind the walls of Tutankhamun s tomb which he proposed to be the burial chamber of Nefertiti 44 45 but subsequent radar scans showed that there are no hidden chambers 46 47 In 1898 French archeologist Victor Loret found two female mummies among those cached inside the tomb of Amenhotep II in KV35 in the Valley of the Kings These two mummies known as The Elder Lady and The Younger Lady were identified as likely candidates of her remains An article in KMT magazine in 2001 suggested that the Elder Lady might be Nefertiti 48 However it was subsequently shown that the Elder Lady is in fact Tiye mother of Akhenaten A lock of hair found in a coffinette bearing an inscription naming Queen Tiye proved a near perfect match to the hair of the Elder Lady 49 DNA analysis confirmed that she was the daughter of Tiye s parents Yuya and Thuya 50 On 9 June 2003 archaeologist Joann Fletcher a specialist in ancient hair from the University of York in England announced that Nefertiti s mummy may have been the Younger Lady This theory was criticised by Zahi Hawass and several other Egyptologists 51 In a subsequent research project led by Hawass the mummy was put through CT scan analysis and DNA analysis Researchers concluded that she is Tutankhamun s biological mother an unnamed daughter of Amenhotep III and Tiye not Nefertiti 20 KV21B mummy edit Main article KV21 KV21B One of the two female mummies found in KV21 has been suggested as the body of Nefertiti DNA analysis did not yield enough data to make a definitive identification but confirmed she was a member of the Eighteenth Dynasty royal line 52 CT scanning revealed she was about 45 at the time of her death her left arm had been bent over her chest in the queenly pose The possible identification is based on her association with the mummy tentatively identified as Ankhesenamun It is suggested that just as a mother and daughter Tiye and the Younger Lady were found lying together in KV35 the same was true of these mummies 53 Hittite letters editA document was found in the ancient Hittite capital of Hattusa which dates to the Amarna period The document is part of the so called Deeds of Suppiluliuma I While laying siege to Karkemish the Hittite ruler receives a letter from the Egyptian queen The letter reads 54 My husband has died and I have no son They say about you that you have many sons You might give me one of your sons to become my husband I would not wish to take one of my subjects as a husband I am afraid This proposal is considered extraordinary as New Kingdom royal women never married foreign royalty 55 Suppiluliuma I was understandably surprised and exclaimed to his courtiers 54 Nothing like this has happened to me in my entire life Understandably he was wary and had an envoy investigate the situation but by so doing he missed his chance to bring Egypt into his empire 54 He eventually did send one of his sons Zannanza but the prince died perhaps murdered en route 56 57 The identity of the queen who wrote the letter is uncertain She is called Dakhamunzu in the Hittite annals a translation of the Egyptian title Ta hemet nesu The King s Wife 58 59 60 The possible candidates are Nefertiti Meritaten 61 and Ankhesenamun Ankhesenamun once seemed the likeliest since there were no candidates for the throne on the death of her husband Tutankhamun whereas Akhenaten had at least two legitimate successors But this was based on the assumption of a 27 year reign for the last 18th Dynasty pharaoh Horemheb who is now accepted to have had a shorter reign of only 14 years This makes the deceased Egyptian king appear to be Akhenaten instead rather than Tutankhamun citation needed Furthermore the phrase regarding marriage to one of my subjects translated by some as servants is possibly either a reference to the Grand Vizier Ay or a secondary member of the Egyptian royal family line Since Nefertiti was depicted as being as powerful as her husband in official monuments smiting Egypt s enemies she might be the Dakhamunzu in the Amarna correspondence as Nicholas Reeves believes 62 Gallery edit nbsp Headless bust of Akhenaten or Nefertiti Part of a composite red quartzite statue Intentional damage Four pairs of early Aten cartouches Reign of Akhenaten From Amarna Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Limestone statuette of Akhenaten and Nefertiti or Amenhotep III and Tiye 63 and a princess Reign of Akhenaten From Amarna Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Limestone relief fragment A princess holding sistrum behind Nefertiti who is partially seen Reign of Akhenaten From Amarna Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Siliceous limestone fragment relief of Nefertiti Extreme style of portrait Reign of Akhenaten probably early Amarna Period From Amarna Egypt The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology London nbsp Granite head statue of Nefertiti The securing post at head apex allows for different hairstyles to adorn the head Altes Museum Berlin nbsp Head statue of Nefertiti Altes Museum Berlin nbsp Akhenaten Nefertiti and their daughters before the Aten Stela of Akhenaten and his family Egyptian Museum Cairo nbsp Nefertiti offering oil to the Aten Brooklyn Museum nbsp Talatat showing Nefertiti worshipping the Aten Altes Museum nbsp Relief fragment with Nefertiti Brooklyn Museum nbsp Akhenaten and Nefertiti Louvre Museum Paris nbsp Nefertiti presenting an image of the goddess Maat to the Aten Brooklyn Museum nbsp Talatat representing Nefertiti and Akhenaten worshipping the Aten Royal Ontario Museum nbsp Boundary stele of Amarna with Nefertiti and her daughter princess Meketaten Nelson Atkins Museum of Art nbsp Limestone relief of Nefertiti kissing one of her daughters Brooklyn Museum nbsp Talatat with an aged Nefertiti Brooklyn Museum Cultural depictions editNefertiti was portrayed by Geraldine Chaplin in Nefertiti and Akhenaton 1973 Mexican short film of Raul Araiza Nefertiti was also portrayed by Iman in the music video for Michael Jackson s Remember the Time 1992 Nefertiti was portrayed again by Riann Steele in Doctor Who 2012 in the episode Dinosaurs on a Spaceship References edit Akhenaton Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 2007 05 26 Jurgen von Beckerath Chronologie des Pharaonischen Agypten Philipp von Zabern Mainz 1997 p 190 Nefertit or Collins Dictionary n d Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 24 September 2014 RE Freed S D Auria YJ Markowitz 1999 Pharaohs of the Sun Akhenaten Nefertiti Tutankhamen Museum of Fine Arts Leiden a b c d Dodson Aidan Amarna Sunset Nefertiti Tutankhamun Ay Horemheb and the Egyptian Counter Reformation The American University in Cairo Press 2009 pp 36 38 ISBN 978 977 416 304 3 Van de Perre Athena 2014 The Year 16 graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr Abu Ḥinnis A contribution to the study of the later years of Nefertiti Journal of Egyptian History 7 67 108 Badger Utopia 2017 08 11 Nefertiti Mummy Queen of Mystery retrieved 2017 10 30 A Dodson Nefertiti Queen and Pharaoh of Egypt Her Life and Afterlife The American University in Cairo Press 2020 p 26 Grajetzki Ancient Egyptian Queens A Hieroglyphic Dictionary Golden House Publications London 2005 ISBN 978 0 9547218 9 3 Schenkel W Zur Rekonstruktion deverbalen Nominalbildung des Agyptischen Harrasowitz Wiesbaden 1983 pp 212 214 247 Allen James P 2014 07 24 Middle Egyptian An Introduction to the Language and Culture of Hieroglyphs Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 05364 9 a b c d e Dodson 2016 p 87 Norman De Garis Davies The rock tombs of el Amarna Parts I and II Part 1 The tomb of Meryra amp Part 2 The tombs of Panehesy and Meyra II Egypt Exploration Society 2004 Norman De Garis Davies The rock tombs of el Amarna Parts V and VI Part 5 Smaller tombs and boundary stelae amp Part 6 Tombs of Parennefer Tutu and Ay Egypt Exploration Society 2004 a b c Dodson Aidan and Hilton Dyan The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt Thames amp Hudson 2004 ISBN 0 500 05128 3 Jacobus Van Dijk Horemheb and the Struggle for the Throne of Tutankhamun Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine BACE 7 1996 p 32 van Dijk J 1996 Horemheb and the Struggle for the Throne of Tutankhamun PDF Bulletin of the Australian Centre for Egyptology 31 32 Retrieved 15 September 2019 Dodson 2016 p 87 88 a b c d e Tyldesley Joyce Nefertiti Egypt s Sun Queen Penguin 1998 ISBN 0 670 86998 8 a b Hawas Zahi Saleem Sahar N 2016 Scanning the Pharaohs CT Imaging of the New Kingdom Royal Mummies New York The American University in Cairo Press p 123 ISBN 978 977 416 673 0 Redford Donald B 1987 Akhenaten the Heretic King ISBN 9780691002170 Dominic Montserrat Akhenaten History Fantasy and Ancient Egypt Psychology Press 2003 Trope B Quirke S Lacovara P Excavating Egypt Great Discoveries from the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology 2005 ISBN 1 928917 06 2 Murnane William J Texts from the Amarna Period in Egypt Society of Biblical Literature 1995 ISBN 1 55540 966 0 Athena Van der Perreː The Year 16 graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr AbuḤinnis A Contribution to the Study of the Later Years of Nefertiti inːJournal of Egyptian History 7 2014 67 108 Nefertiti Ancient History HISTORY com HISTORY com Retrieved 2017 10 26 AncientHistory 2017 04 28 Nefertiti s Odyssey National Geographic Documentary archived from the original on 2019 11 06 retrieved 2017 10 26 a b Brand P ed Under a Deep Blue Starry Sky PDF Causing His Name to Live Studies in Egyptian Epigraphy and History in Memory of William J Murnane pp 17 21 Archived from the original on 2013 10 12 Van der Perre Athena 2014 The Year 16 Graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr Abu Hinnis A Contribution to the Study of the Later Years of Nefertiti Journal of Egyptian History 7 1 94 102 Retrieved 22 November 2023 Van der Perre Athena 2014 The Year 16 Graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr Abu Hinnis A Contribution to the Study of the Later Years of Nefertiti Journal of Egyptian History 7 1 94 102 Retrieved 22 November 2023 AncientHistory 2014 12 16 Queen Nefertiti The Most Beautiful Face of Egypt Discovery Channel archived from the original on 2017 03 08 retrieved 2017 10 26 Badger Utopia 2017 08 11 Nefertiti Mummy Queen of Mystery retrieved 2017 10 26 Reeves Nicholas Akhenaten Egypt s False Prophet p 172 Thames amp Hudson 2005 ISBN 0 500 28552 7 Van der Perre Athena 2012 Seyfried Friederike ed In the Light of Amarna 100 Years of the Nefertiti discovery Agyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung Staatliche Museen zu Berlin pp 196 197 ISBN 978 3 86568 848 4 Athena Van der Perre The Year 16 graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr Abu Ḥinnis A Contribution to the Study of the Later Years of Nefertiti Journal of Egyptian History 7 1 2014 p 68 Van der Perre Athena 2012 Seyfried Friederike ed In the Light of Amarna 100 Years of the Nefertiti discovery Agyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung Staatliche Museen zu Berlin p 197 ISBN 978 3 86568 848 4 Athena Van der Perre The Year 16 graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr Abu Ḥinnis A Contribution to the Study of the Later Years of Nefertiti Journal of Egyptian History 7 1 2014 p 73 Athena Van der Perre The Year 16 graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr Abu Ḥinnis A Contribution to the Study of the Later Years of Nefertiti Journal of Egyptian History 7 1 2014 p 76 Athena Van der Perre The Year 16 graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr Abu Ḥinnis A Contribution to the Study of the Later Years of Nefertiti Journal of Egyptian History 7 1 2014 pp 77 Murnane William J 1995 Texts from the Amarna period in Egypt United States of America Scholars Press p 78 ISBN 1 55540 966 0 Dodson Aidan 2018 Amarna sunset Nefertiti Tutankhamun Ay Horemheb and the Egyptian counter reformation Revised ed Cairo The American University in Cairo Press p 18 ISBN 978 977 416 859 8 Kemp Barry 2014 The city of Akhenaten and Nefertiti Amarna and its people Paperback ed New York Thames amp Hudson p 255 ISBN 978 0 500 29120 7 Kemp Barry The Amarna Royal Tombs at Amarna PDF p 6 Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 1 July 2019 Martin Sean August 11 2015 Archaeologist believes hidden passageway in tomb of Tutankhamun leads to resting place of Nefertiti International Business Times Radar Scans in King Tut s Tomb Suggest Hidden Chambers National Geographic News 28 November 2015 Archived from the original on November 30 2015 Retrieved 30 June 2019 Sambuelli Luigi Comina Cesare Catanzariti Gianluca Barsuglia Filippo Morelli Gianfranco Porcelli Francesco May 2019 The third KV62 radar scan Searching for hidden chambers adjacent to Tutankhamun s tomb Journal of Cultural Heritage 39 8 doi 10 1016 j culher 2019 04 001 S2CID 164859865 Sambuelli Luigi Comina Cesare Catanzariti Gianluca Barsuglia Filippo Morelli Gianfranco Porcelli Francesco May 2019 The third KV62 radar scan Searching for hidden chambers adjacent to Tutankhamun s tomb Journal of Cultural Heritage 39 9 doi 10 1016 j culher 2019 04 001 S2CID 164859865 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edit Dodson Aidan 2016 1st pub 2014 Amarna Sunrise Egypt from Golden Age to Age of Heresy Cairo New York City American University in Cairo Press ISBN 9781617975608 Athena Van der Perre The Year 16 graffito of Akhenaten in Dayr Abu Ḥinnis A Contribution to the Study of the Later Years of Nefertiti Journal of Egyptian History 7 1 2014 pp 67 106External links editNefertiti at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote Staatliche Museen zu Berlin Egyptian Museum and Papyrus Collection Archived 2010 07 02 at the Wayback Machine C Nicholas Reeves The Burial of Nefertiti Habicht M et al Who else might be in Pharaoh Tutankhamun s tomb KV 62 c 1325 BC A 3D model of a bust of Nefertiti Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nefertiti amp oldid 1191258710, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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