Iset (daughter of Amenhotep III)
Iset | |
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Born | Iset |
Monuments | She appears in the temple at Soleb |
Residence | Thebes, Egypt |
Other names | Aset, Isis |
Title | Princess of Egypt |
Religion | Ancient Egyptian religion |
Spouse(s) | Amenhotep III (father) |
Parent(s) |
Amenhotep III (father) Tiye (mother) |
Relatives |
several siblings Thutmose IV (grandfather) |
Iset or Aset was a Princess of Egypt.
Family
Isis was one of the daughters of Ancient Egyptian pharaoh Amenhotep III of the 18th dynasty and his Great Royal Wife Tiye. She was a sister of Akhenaten.[1] Iset's other brother was Crown Prince Thutmose.
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Iset in hieroglyphs |
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Her name is the original Egyptian version of the name Isis. It is likely she was the royal couple's second daughter (after Sitamun). She became her father's wife in Year 34 of Amenhotep's reign, around Amenhotep's second sed festival.[2]
She appears in the temple at Soleb with her parents and her sister Henuttaneb, and on a carnelian plaque (now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City) with Henuttaneb, before their parents. A box found in Gurob and a pair of kohl-tubes probably belong to her.[3]
After the death of her father she is not mentioned again.
References
- ↑ Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson (2004), p.154-155
- ↑ Anneke Bart: Amenhotep III
- ↑ Dodson–Hilton