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Henutmire

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Henutmire was an ancient Egyptian princess and queen. She was one of the eight Great Royal Wives of Pharaoh Ramesses II of the 19th Dynasty of Egypt.

Key Information

Life

[edit]

She is supposedly the third and youngest child of Seti I and Tuya, and the younger sister of Ramesses II and Tia. This theory is based on a statue of Queen Tuya, now in the Vatican. The statue shows Tuya with Henutmire, thus it is assumed that they were mother and daughter. However, she is nowhere mentioned as "King's Sister", a title which Princess Tia used, thus it is unclear whether she was a younger sister or a daughter of Ramesses.[1]

On a statue of Ramesses II, Henutmire is granted the title "the King’s Daughter of his body, his beloved, the Great Royal Wife". This title confirms that Henutmire was indeed Ramesses II’s daughter, not his sister[2], and that she died during the reign of Amenmesse. One of the crimes committed by a criminal in that period was the theft of a goose at her funeral.[3] Her lifespan further supports the conclusion that she was Ramesses II’s daughter.

Her name means "The lady is like ". She married Ramesses II and became Great Royal Wife; if she was his daughter, she was the fourth to do so, after Bintanath, Meritamen and Nebettawy. She is shown on statues of Ramesses from Abukir and Heliopolis.[4] On a colossus from Hermopolis she is depicted together with Princess-Queen Bintanath. Both have the titles The Hereditary Princess, richly favoured, Mistress of the South and the North, King's Daughter, Great Royal Wife.[5]

Death and burial

[edit]

She died during the reign of Amenmesse, and was buried in the tomb QV75. Her tomb was robbed already in antiquity; the trough of her coffin was later used for the burial of priest-king Harsiese in Medinet Habu. It is now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.[6]

Sources

[edit]
  1. ^ Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson (2004), p.164
  2. ^ Obsomer, Claude (2012). Ramsès II. Les grands pharaons. Paris: Pygmalion. pp. 229–230. ISBN 978-2-7564-0588-9.
  3. ^ Vernus, Pascal (2003). Affairs and Scandals in Ancient Egypt. Cornell University Press. p. 81.
  4. ^ Dodson & Hilton, p.170
  5. ^ Kitchen, K.A., Ramesside Inscriptions, Translated & Annotated, Translations, Volume II, Blackwell Publishers, 1996.
  6. ^ Dodson & Hilton, p.170
[edit]
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from Grokipedia
Henutmire was an ancient Egyptian princess and queen of the Nineteenth Dynasty, known primarily as the daughter of Pharaoh Seti I and Queen Tuya, the sister and one of the Great Royal Wives of her brother Pharaoh Ramesses II.[1][2] As a member of the powerful Ramesside royal family, Henutmire held the titles of King's Daughter and Great Royal Wife, reflecting her high status within the court and her role in the pharaonic tradition of sibling marriages to maintain divine bloodlines.[1][2] Her depictions appear on a reused statue of her mother Tuya, now in the Vatican Museums, where she is shown on the left side of the dorsal pillar.[1] Little is documented about her personal life or contributions beyond her marital and funerary roles, though her tomb, QV75 in the Valley of the Queens near Thebes, features refined New Kingdom decorations including scenes from the Book of the Dead and protective deities like Anubis and Ra-Herakhty.[2] Constructed during Ramesses II's long reign (c. 1279–1213 BCE), the tomb highlights the elaborate burial practices afforded to royal women of the era and was later plundered and reused in subsequent periods.[2] Scholarly debate persists regarding her exact parentage, with some sources proposing she was instead a daughter of Ramesses II himself, based on reinterpretations of inscriptions and titles in her tomb.[3]

Background

Family Origins

Henutmire's parentage has been a point of contention among Egyptologists, with two primary theories dominating the discussion. The traditional view holds that she was the daughter of Pharaoh Seti I (reigned c. 1290–1279 BCE) and his principal wife Tuya, positioning her as the younger sister of Ramesses II. This interpretation draws support from a statue in the Vatican Museums (inv. no. 2270) that depicts Henutmire standing beside Tuya, inscribed with titles identifying her as a "king's daughter" and "king's wife," suggesting a familial link to Seti I's household.[2] Scholars such as Lana Troy, Aidan Dodson, and Dyan Hilton have endorsed this theory, citing the statue's stylistic and contextual elements as evidence of her birth during Seti I's reign in the late 14th century BCE.[2] Under this scenario, Henutmire would represent the third known child of Seti I and Tuya, following their eldest daughter Tia and the future pharaoh Ramesses II, within a relatively modest royal family structure early in the 19th Dynasty.[2][4] An alternative hypothesis, advanced by Hourig Sourouzian and Christian Leblanc, argues that Henutmire was instead the daughter of Ramesses II himself by an unidentified secondary wife, born in the early years of his extensive reign (c. 1279–1213 BCE). This perspective is bolstered by inscriptions in her tomb (QV 75) bearing the titles "King's Daughter of his body," which explicitly denote biological paternity by the reigning king, Ramesses II, rather than his predecessor.[2] Proponents of this view also note the absence of any "King's Sister" title in Henutmire's surviving monuments, a designation that would be expected if she were Seti I's daughter and thus Ramesses II's sibling; furthermore, they date the Vatican statue to Ramesses II's era based on its iconographic details and the implied royal context.[2] If accurate, this would place Henutmire among Ramesses II's vast progeny—he is credited with over 100 children across his many marriages—exemplifying the expansive and interconnected nature of the 19th Dynasty's royal lineage, where daughters often served prominent roles at court.[2][5] Her birth would thus fall within the initial decades of Ramesses II's rule, aligning with the dynasty's peak of power and prolific familial expansion.[4]

Name and Titles

Henutmire's name, rendered in hieroglyphs as ḥnwt-mj-rꜥ, translates to "The lady is like Rê," drawing on the solar deity Rê (Ra) to evoke divine protection and royal legitimacy, a motif prevalent in 19th Dynasty personal nomenclature that linked individuals to the sun god's eternal power.[6] Her primary titles encompassed "King's Daughter of his body, his beloved," which some scholars interpret as indicating her direct biological descent from Ramesses II, alongside queenly designations such as "Great Royal Wife," "Lady of the Two Lands," "Mistress of Upper and Lower Egypt," "Hereditary Princess," and "Mistress of South and North."[6][7] These titles underscored her elevated status as both a royal princess by birth and a principal consort, setting her apart from secondary wives like Isetnofret by emphasizing her integral role in the royal bloodline.[6] The titles likely evolved upon her marriage to Ramesses II, transitioning from princessly epithets to include full queenship honors, thereby highlighting her dual function in preserving and extending the pharaoh's lineage.[7]

Life at Court

As Princess

Henutmire spent her early years in the royal court during the late New Kingdom, embodying the typical roles of a princess of the 19th Dynasty. Depending on interpretations of her parentage (see Background > Family Origins), this period would have been under her presumed father Seti I and into the reign of Ramesses II, or entirely under Ramesses II. Royal daughters were raised within the structured environment of the palace harem, where they received education alongside princes and select non-royal children to prepare for contributions to the ruling elite. This training encompassed literacy, religious knowledge, and practical skills in administration and court protocols, reflecting the norms for female members of the royal family.[8] In the royal court, centered initially at Memphis and later shifting toward Pi-Ramesses under Ramesses II, Henutmire would have engaged in ceremonial and religious duties customary for princesses. These included participation in temple festivals, such as processions where royal women led musical performances or offerings to deities like Amun, underscoring their auxiliary roles in maintaining ma'at through ritual activities. Unlike some siblings, such as her sister Tia who married into the high nobility early, Henutmire's tenure as princess appears to have extended into Ramesses II's early reign, allowing greater visibility in familial representations before her later elevation.[8] One of the earliest attestations of Henutmire's status as princess is her depiction on a colossal granite statue of Queen Tuya, now in the Vatican Museums. Carved on the left side of the dorsal pillar, Henutmire is shown as a young royal daughter, inscribed simply as "royal daughter," highlighting her integration into royal propaganda that emphasized family unity and divine legitimacy. This statue, originally from the Ramesseum and repurposed from an 18th Dynasty original, serves as evidence of her prominence in court iconography prior to assuming higher titles.[1]

Marriage to Ramesses II

Henutmire's marriage to Pharaoh Ramesses II elevated her from princess to Great Royal Wife, a status she achieved as one of eight principal consorts during his long reign in the 19th Dynasty. Her parentage is debated: traditional interpretations identify her as his sister and daughter of Seti I and Tuya, making the union a sibling marriage, while some scholars propose she was his daughter by an unidentified mother, resulting in a father-daughter marriage.[2][9] Under either view, she was among the daughters who wed their father, succeeding Bintanath (daughter of Isetnofret I), Meritamen, and Nebettawy (both daughters of Nefertari).[9] The marriage likely took place in the mid-reign of Ramesses II, circa 1260s–1250s BCE, aligning with the dynasty's pattern of close-kin unions among royalty to reinforce political alliances, secure succession, and maintain the perceived purity of the divine bloodline.[10] Such practices, including sibling and father-daughter marriages, were not uncommon in the New Kingdom to symbolize the pharaoh's god-like authority and consolidate familial power within the royal house.[10] In her role as Great Royal Wife, Henutmire undertook ceremonial duties typical of Ramesses II's queens, including participation in state rituals, religious festivals, and diplomatic events that underscored the pharaoh's legitimacy and Egypt's international prestige.[11] She may have also contributed to the oversight of the royal household, managing aspects of court administration and women's quarters in a manner akin to predecessors like Isetnofret I, though specific attestations for her are limited compared to more prominent consorts.[11] No offspring are attested to Henutmire, distinguishing her from other Great Royal Wives who bore numerous children to Ramesses II; this absence may stem from the relatively late timing of her marriage or possible infertility, though no direct evidence confirms the latter.[9]

Representations

Monumental Depictions

Henutmire appears on several monumental statues erected during the reign of Ramesses II, underscoring her elevated status as both princess and Great Royal Wife. A notable example is the colossal statue from Hermopolis Magna (modern Ashmunein), where she is depicted standing alongside her co-wife Bintanath, both identified by inscriptions as Great Royal Wives, positioned at the side of the enthroned pharaoh to emphasize familial and royal unity. This quartzite monument, likely intended for a temple context dedicated to the god Thoth, highlights the pharaoh's propagation of dynastic harmony through public sculpture. Individual statues of Henutmire have also been identified from key religious sites, including Abukir and Heliopolis, where she is portrayed wearing full royal regalia, including the vulture headdress symbolizing protection by Nekhbet and the modius crown denoting her queenship. These granite figures, often standing or kneeling in offering poses, were strategically placed in solar and creation centers like Heliopolis to affirm her legitimacy and divine favor within the cosmic order of the Two Lands. The use of durable hard stones such as granite and quartzite in these works signifies the high prestige accorded to her, as such materials were reserved for elite royal commissions capable of withstanding time and environmental exposure. A specific instance preserved on a granodiorite statue of Queen Tuya (now in the Vatican Museums, inv. no. 22678), originally from the Ramesseum—Ramesses II's mortuary temple—is where Henutmire is carved on the dorsal pillar, inscribed as "King's Daughter" and implied consort, originally positioned to honor the royal lineage in a temple setting.[1]

Funerary Evidence

The primary funerary evidence associated with Henutmire is a pink granite sarcophagus trough, inventory number JE 60137 in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo. This outer container, discovered outside her tomb QV75, bears inscriptions identifying her as King's Daughter and possibly Great Royal Wife of Ramesses II, thereby verifying its original attribution to her.[12] The sarcophagus was reused approximately 250 years later during the 22nd Dynasty for the burial of priest-king Harsiese (also known as Horsiese A), whose tomb was excavated within the Medinet Habu temple precinct in 1932 by the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. Harsiese's remains were placed in the trough, which was closed with a separate hawk-headed lid, and the assemblage included four canopic jars attributable to him rather than Henutmire. The inscriptions on the trough were not altered during this reuse, preserving evidence of Henutmire's royal status.[2] No additional portable funerary objects, such as shabtis or canopic jars definitively linked to Henutmire, survive, owing to the plundering of her tomb in the late 20th Dynasty. This sarcophagus nonetheless offers key insights into 19th Dynasty elite female burial practices, underscoring the use of high-quality stone for royal consorts to ensure eternal protection and commemoration through inscribed titles and divine associations.[12]

Death and Burial

Circumstances of Death

The date of Henutmire's death is unknown, though her tomb indicates that burial occurred during the reign of her husband, Ramesses II (c. 1279–1213 BCE).[13] The historical context reflects the stability of the 19th Dynasty during Ramesses II's long rule. No contemporary records detail any specific illness or event leading to her passing, though this era saw mortality among the elite due to prevalent diseases such as infections or parasitic conditions common in ancient Egypt.[14] Her interment followed standard royal practices of the New Kingdom, occurring shortly after death to ensure proper funerary rites and mummification, with the body placed in QV75 before the tomb's robbery in the late 20th Dynasty. Uncertainties persist regarding the direct cause of death, as no inscriptions or medical papyri reference her final days; this lack of detail is typical for royal women of the period.[13]

Tomb QV75

Tomb QV75 is located on the northern slope of the main wadi in the Valley of the Queens, part of the Theban Necropolis on the west bank of the Nile at ancient Thebes, near the entrance to the valley and among other 19th Dynasty royal tombs.[2] This positioning suggests it was likely one of the later tombs constructed during the reign of Ramesses II (c. 1279–1213 BCE), as part of his extensive burial program for female royal family members.[2] The tomb follows a simple linear corridor design typical of New Kingdom queens' burials, consisting of a short rock-cut stepped ramp (A) leading to a doorway (B) and into a pillared entrance hall (C), from which a smaller side chamber (E) branches off to the west and a descending corridor (G) leads eastward to the sarcophagus chamber (I) with four pillars. An undecorated pit (F) was added later during reuse.[2] This layout is modest in scale compared to pharaonic tombs in the nearby Valley of the Kings, emphasizing functionality and symbolic protection over grandeur.[2] The tomb's walls feature poorly preserved paintings drawn from the Book of the Dead, depicting Henutmire's journey to the afterlife, including scenes of protective deities such as Anubis and Horus-Inmutef in the entrance hall (C), and the queen adoring Ra-Herakhty in the sarcophagus chamber (I).[2] Accompanying inscriptions bear her royal titles, such as King's Great Wife and King's Daughter, alongside ritual offerings and funerary texts intended to ensure her eternal provisions.[2] The decorations underscore the tomb's role in facilitating the deceased's transformation and integration into the divine realm, a common motif in 19th Dynasty elite female burials.[2] QV75 was extensively robbed in antiquity, likely during the late 20th Dynasty, leaving minimal remains upon modern inspection, including a shattered granite sarcophagus, a canopic jar lid, approximately 80 ushabti figures, fragments of ceramic and wine jars dated to regnal year 22 of Ramesses II, and an alabaster stopper.[2] The tomb was reused in the 22nd Dynasty and Roman period, with evidence of a coffin fragment repurposed for another burial.[2] The tomb was first documented in the early 19th century by French Egyptologist Jean-François Champollion during his expeditions to Thebes, who noted its inscriptions identifying Henutmire.[2] Further exploration occurred through 19th-century surveys by European scholars, with systematic attribution confirmed in the late 20th century by Egyptologist Christian Leblanc based on hieroglyphic evidence linking it to Henutmire as a daughter and wife of Ramesses II.[2] The Getty Conservation Institute's Valley of the Queens Assessment Report (2001–2006) provided detailed documentation of its architecture and condition, aiding ongoing conservation efforts.[2] As a representative example of New Kingdom queens' tombs, QV75 highlights the standardized yet symbolically rich burial practices for royal women, prioritizing protective iconography and textual spells over the expansive complexes reserved for pharaohs.[2] Its simpler design contrasts sharply with the more elaborate QV66 of Queen Nefertari, reflecting differences in status and resources allocated within Ramesses II's extensive funerary program for his consorts.[2]
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