Mummy 61074: a strange case of mistaken identity
Summary: Mummy 61074: A Strange Case of Mistaken Identity. Priests of the Twenty-first Dynasty king Smendes I (1070-1043 BCE) had the unenviable task of quickly reburying the kings of the New Kingdom after the Valley of the Kings repeatedly had proven insecure as a final resting place. In the process of reburial these priests identified the mummies of the kings as quickly and as accurately as they could, but reasons exist to question some of their identifications. Mummy 61074, in the Cairo Museum, currently carries the identification of Amunhotep III (1386-1349 BCE). This paper examines Mummy 61074 and with the aid of xray and serological evidence proposes that 61074 is not Amunhotep III but his son Akhenaten.
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Format: | Artículo biblioteca |
Language: | eng |
Published: |
Pontificia Universidad Católica Argentina. Facultad de Ciencias Sociales. Departamento de Historia. Centro de Estudios de Historia del Antiguo Oriente
2007
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Subjects: | RITOS FUNERARIOS, FARAONES, MOMIAS, HISTORIA DE EGIPTO, |
Online Access: | https://repositorio.uca.edu.ar/handle/123456789/11907 |
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Summary: | Summary: Mummy 61074: A Strange Case of Mistaken Identity.
Priests of the Twenty-first Dynasty king Smendes I (1070-1043 BCE) had the
unenviable task of quickly reburying the kings of the New Kingdom after the Valley
of the Kings repeatedly had proven insecure as a final resting place. In the process of
reburial these priests identified the mummies of the kings as quickly and as accurately
as they could, but reasons exist to question some of their identifications. Mummy
61074, in the Cairo Museum, currently carries the identification of Amunhotep
III (1386-1349 BCE). This paper examines Mummy 61074 and with the aid of xray
and serological evidence proposes that 61074 is not Amunhotep III but his son
Akhenaten. |
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