Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Amenherkhepshef

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Amenherkhepshef
Remove ads

Amenherkhepshef (also Amenherkhepshef D [note 1] to distinguish him from earlier people of the same name) was an ancient Egyptian prince and a son of Ramesses VI with Queen Nubkhesbed.[1] He lived in the mid 12th century BCE during the Twentieth Dynasty of the late New Kingdom period.[2]

Quick facts hieroglyphs ...
Thumb
Tausret's coffin, later usurped by prince Amunherkhepeshef for his burial.

He died before his father and was buried in the reused sarcophagus of Tausret in an extension of the tomb originally planned for Chancellor Bay, KV13.[3] The tomb is located in the Valley of the Kings, on the west bank of the Nile, in Thebes, Egypt.

Remove ads

Notes

  1. The "D" in this name is not part of the original Egyptian name, rather it is a denomination added in modern Egyptology to distinguish him from other people of the same name:
    Amenherkhepshef A, a son of Ramesses II,
    Amenherkhepshef B, a son of Ramesses III, and
    Amenherkhepshef C, Ramesses VI.

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads