Ahmose-Sitamun
Ahmose-Sitamun | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
God's Wife King's Daughter King's Sister | |||||||||
Burial | |||||||||
Egyptian name |
| ||||||||
Dynasty | 18th Dynasty | ||||||||
Father | Ahmose I | ||||||||
Mother | Ahmose-Nefertari |
Ahmose-Sitamun or just Sitamun was a princess of the early Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt.
Etymology
[edit]Her name Ahmose-Sitamun (sꜣt-jmn; Sat-Amun/Satamun) means "Child of the Moon, Daughter of Amun".
Biography
[edit]Sitamun[1] was the daughter of Pharaoh Ahmose I and sister of Amenhotep I. Her titles were: King's Daughter (sꜣt-nsw); King's Sister (snt-nsw); God's Wife (ḥmt-nṯr) Her name was written in cartouche.
By Year 18 of Ahmose I (1570-1546 BC high chronology), her title string included King's Daughter and God's Wife. When her brother Amenhotep I (1545-1526 BC high chronology) became king, the title King's Sister was added to her title string.
Attestations
[edit]Barracco 16
[edit]A stela belonging to a subordinate of King's Daughter Satamun.[2]
Hannover 1935.200.209
[edit]A limestone stela dating to Year 18 of Ahmose I where she is King's Daughter and God's Wife.[3]
Benson, Gourlay, Temple, 297-299 (IV), pl. XI (1)
[edit]At Karnak, a limestone statue stood before the eighth pylon at Karnak.[4] On this mounument she holds the titles King's Daughter, King's Sister and God's Wife. The title King's Sister should date this monument to the reign of her brother, Amenhotep I.
Death
[edit]The Tomb of Sitamun has not been identified. Her mummy was found in a secondary context.
Coffin of Sitamun
[edit]The Coffin of Sitamun has a length of 1.28 m.[5]
Mummy, Cairo CG 61060
[edit]The Mummy of Sitamun was identified by inscriptions on her wrapping and was found in the Deir el-Bahari cache (DB320) and is today in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo.[6] Maspero apparently misidentified this mature woman as a child, because her skull and some bones were found in a child's coffin.[7][8]
References
[edit]- ^ "Person sꜣt-NSW Sꜣt-JMN (Ahmose) | Persons and Names of the Middle Kingdom".
- ^ "Barracco 16 | Persons and Names of the Middle Kingdom".
- ^ "Hannover 1935.200.209 | Persons and Names of the Middle Kingdom".
- ^ "Benson, Gourlay, Temple, 297-299 (IV), pl. XI (1) | Persons and Names of the Middle Kingdom".
- ^ "Sitamun".
- ^ "Ancient Egypt - Cache DB320 at Deir el Bahari".
- ^ Michael E. Habicht () The Complete Royal Mummies of Ancient Egypt: Part 3: Royal Funerals
- ^ Constantin Emil Sander-Hansen: The God's Wife of Amun. København 1940, p. 6.
Sources
[edit]- Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton: The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson, 2004, ISBN 0-500-05128-3, p. 129