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Valley of the Queens

The Valley of the Queens, also known as Biban el-Harim, Biban el-Sultanat,
and Wadi el-Melikat, is a place in Egypt where wives of Pharaohs were buried
in ancient times. In ancient times, it was known as Ta-Set-Neferu, meaning -
'the place of the Children of the Pharaoh', because along with the Queens of the
18th, 19th and 20th dynasties (1550 1070 BCE) many princes and princesses
were also buried with various members of the nobility. The tombs of these
individuals were maintained by mortuary priests whom performed daily rituals
and provided offerings and prayers for the deceased nobility.

The valley is located near the better known Valley of the Kings on the west
bank of the Nile across from Thebes (modern Luxor) . This barren area in the
western hills was chosen due to its relative isolation and proximity to the
capital.
The kings of the 18th dynasty, instead of the traditional building of pyramids as
burial chambers (perhaps because of their vulnerability to tomb robbers), now
chose to be buried in rock-cut tombs.

This necropolis is said to hold more than seventy tombs, many of which are
stylish and lavishly decorated. An example of this is the resting place carved
out of the rock for Queen Nefertari (1290-1224 BCE) of the 19th Dynasty. The
polychrome reliefs in her tomb are still in tact.

The ancient Egyptians gave it the name Set Neferu, meaning "seat of beauty".
From 1903-1906 an Italian expedition discovered about eighty tombs, some of
which belonged to children of royalty. Many were severely damaged having
been burned and or reduced to being used as stables for donkeys and camels.
One of the most well-known tombs is that of Nefertari, the best-loved of
Ramesses II's numerous wives. In her honor he built a beautiful temple at Abu
Simbel.

Tomb of Nefertari

Nefertari (Nefertari Merytmut) c. (1300-1250 BC) was the Great Royal Wife
(or principal wife) of Ramesses the Great. She is one of the best known
Egyptian queens, next to Cleopatra, Nefertiti and Hatshepsut. Her lavishly
decorated tomb, QV66, is the largest and most spectacular in the Valley of the
Queens.
Queen of Rameses II (19th Dynasty, 1279-1213 BCE).
The brilliant colors and draftsmanship of its painted reliefs
make it one of Egypt's most outstanding tombs.

Nefertari - Photo taken in her Abu Simbel temple


The Valley of the Queens is the site of over 90 tombs of royal wives, sons, and
daughters from the 18th, 19th, and 20th Dynasties. (Royal women of the 18th
Dynasty appear not to have had one exclusive cemetery but were buried in
many, often remote locations, as well as occasionally in the Valley of the
Kings) Early tombs lie at the northern 'mouth' of the valley, later tombs nearer
its southern end.

Other tombs include:

The Tomb of Khaemwese (Tomb 44): Scenes in Khaemwese's tomb show him
being presented to the guardians of the gates to the afterlife along with his
father. He is making an offering in the scene, and is dressed in a robe, wearing
a necklace and the sidelocks of youth.

The Tomb of Queent Titi (Tomb 52): She is probably the queen of a 20th
Dynasty. She is depicted with the sidelocks common to the Egyptian young of
the period and in the presence of the gods Thoth, Atum, Isis and Nephthys. In
the next chamber the queen is shown making offerings to Hator the cow, and in
the last chamber the gods Neith, Osiris, Selquit, Nephthys and Thoth.

The Tomb of Amenhikhopeshef (Tomb 55): Amenhikhopeshef was a son of


Ramses III and scenses show him with his father and the gods Thoth, Ptah and
others. He was probably about nine years old when he died. Scenes show him
being presented to various gods, including Anubis, the Jackal-headed god of
the dead, by his father, Ramses III. A premature baby was also found in to
tomb. This belonged to this mother, who aborted upon learning of
Amenhikhopeshef's death.
Tomb no. 30 - Nebiri (probably), Head of the Stable, Dynasty XVIII
Tomb no. 31 - A Queen
Tomb no. 33 - Princess Tanezem(t) Dynasty XX (?)
Tomb no. 36 - Princess, no name
Tomb no. 38 - Queen Sitre' wife of Ramesses I
Tomb no. 40 - A Queen, cartouche blank
Tomb no. 42 - Prince Para'hirwenemef, Charioteer of the stable of the Great
House, son of Ramesses III
Tomb no. 43 - Prince Set-hirkhopshef, King's son, Hereditary prince of the
royal children of his Majesty, Charioteer of the Great Stable. Son of Ramesses
III.
Tomb no.44 - Prince Kha'emweset, Sem- priest of Ptah. Son of Ramesses III.
Tomb no. 46 - Imhotep (probably) Vizier. Tuthmosis I.
Tomb no.47 - Princess 'Ahmosi Daughter of Sekenenre'-Ta'a and Sit-dhout:
Tomb no.51 - Queen Esi II mother of Ramesses VI, daughter of Hubalznet:
Tomb no. 52- Queen Tyti Ramesside
Tomb no. 53 - Prince Ramesses son of Ramesses III
Tomb no. 55 - Prince Amen(hir)khopshef Royal Scribe, Overseer of Horses,
son of Ramesses III
Tomb no. 60 - Queen Nebttaui daughter of Ramesses II
Tomb no. 66 - Queen Nefertari Wife of Ramesses II
Tomb no.68 - Queen Merytamun daughter of Ramesses II
Tomb no.71 - Queen Bent'anta daughter of Ramesses II
Tomb no.73 - A Princess, no name. Dynasty XX
Tomb no.74 - Queen Tentopet Great King's mother and King's wife
Tomb no.75 - A Queen, no name

Unnumbered Tombs and Pits


Queen Mut. . . perhaps Tuy (Mut-tuy), wife of Seti I, mother of Ramesses II.
West of Tomb 66.
'Ahmosi King's son, son of Nebsu and Ian
A hundred metres east of Tomb 47 in a small valley. Dynasty XVII
Princess Neferhet King's daughter, New Kingdom. Probably south-east of
Tomb 75

Tombs in Branch valley, south-west of the Valley of the Queens


Remains of canopic-jars, including one with text of a queen, Dyn XXV or
XXVI (from excavation in 1895).
Tomb of Princess - from time of Amenhotep III. Position unknown.

Valley of the Kings


The Valley of the Kings is a valley in Egypt where for a period of nearly 500
years from the 16th to 11th century BC, tombs were constructed for the kings
and powerful nobles of the New Kingdom (the Eighteenth through Twentieth
Dynasties of Ancient Egypt).[2][3] The valley stands on the west bank of the
Nile, across from Thebes (modern Luxor), within the heart of the Theban
Necropolis. The wadi consists of two valleys, East Valley (where the majority
of the royal tombs situated) and West Valley.

The area has been a focus of concentrated archaeological and egyptological


exploration since the end of the eighteenth century, and its tombs and burials
continue to stimulate research and interest. In modern times the valley has
become famous for the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun (with its
rumours of the Curse of the Pharaohs), and is one of the most famous
archaeological sites in the world. In 1979, it became a World Heritage Site,
along with the rest of the Theban Necropolis.

The Valley was used for primary burials from approximately 1539 BC to 1075
BC, and contains some 60 tombs, starting with Thutmose I and ending with
Ramesses X or XI.

The Valley of the Kings also had tombs for the favourite nobles and the wives
and children of both the nobles and pharaohs. Around the time of Ramesses I
(ca. 1300 BC) the Valley of the Queens was begun, although some wives were
still buried with their husbands.

The quality of the rock in the Valley is very inconsistent. Tombs were built, by
cutting through various layers of limestone, each with its own quality. This
poses problems for modern day conservators, as it must have to the original
architects. Building plans were probably changed on account of this. The most
serious problem are the shale layers. This fine material expands when it comes
into contact with water. This has damaged many tombs, particularly during
floods.

The Valley of the Kings, in Upper Egypt, Thebes, the burial place of the
pharaohs of the New Kingdom, 18th, 19th, and 20th Dynasties.

Most of the tombs were cut into the limestone following a similar pattern: three
corridors, an antechamber and a sunken sarcophagus chamber. These
catacombs were harder to rob and were more easily concealed. The switch to
burying the pharaohs within the valley instead of pyramids, was intended to
safeguard against tomb robbers. In most cases this did not prove to be affective.
Many of the bodies, of the pharaohs, where moved by the Egyptian priests, and
placed in several caches, during the political upheaval of the 21st Dynasty.
Construction of a tomb usually lasted six years, beginning with each new reign.

The text in the tombs are from the Book of the Dead, the Book of the Gates and
the Book of the Underworld.

The Valley of the Kings has two components - the East Valley and the West
Valley. It is the East Valley which most tourists visit and in which most of the
tombs of the New Kingdom Pharaohs can be found.

By the end of the New Kingdom, Egypt had entered a long period of political
and economic decline. The priests at Thebes grew in power and effectively
administered Upper Egypt, while kings ruling from Tanis controlled Lower
Egypt. The Valley began to be heavily plundered, so the priests of Amen
during 21st Dynasty to open most of the tombs and move the mummies into
three tombs in order to better protect them. Later most of these were moved to a
single cache near Deir el-Bari. During the later Third Intermediate Period and
later intrusive burials were introduced into many of the open tombs.

Almost all of the tombs have been ransacked, including Tutankhamun's, though
in his case, it seems that the robbers were interrupted, so very little was
removed.The valley was surrounded by steep cliffs and heavily guarded. In
1090 BC, or the year of the Hyena, there was a collapse in Egypt's economy
leading to the emergence of tomb robbers. Because of this, it was also the last
year that the valley was used for burial.The valley also seems to have suffered
an official plundering during the virtual civil war which started in the reign of
Ramesses XI. The tombs were opened, all the valuables removed, and the
mummies collected into two large caches. One, the so-called Deir el-Bahri
cache, contained no less than forty royal mummies and their coffins; the other,
in the tomb of Amenhotep II, contained a further sixteen.

Exploring the Vally of the Kings

The Valley of the Kings has been a major area of modern Egyptological
exploration for the last two centuries. Before this the area was a site for tourism
in antiquity (especially during Roman times). This areas illustrates the changes
in the study of ancient Egypt, starting as antiquity hunting, and ending as
scientific excavation of the whole Theban Necropolis. Despite the exploration
and investigation noted below, only eleven of the tombs have actually been
completely recorded.

The Greek writers Strabo and Diodorus Siculus were able to report that the
total number of Theban royal tombs was 47, of which at the time only 17 were
believed to be undestroyed. Pausanias and others wrote of the pipe-like
corridors of the Valley - i.e. the tombs.

Clearly others also visited the valley in these times, as many of the tombs have
graffiti written by these ancient toursits. Jules Baillet located over 2000 Greek
and Latin graffiti, along with a smaller number in Phoenician, Cypriot, Lycian,
Coptic, and other languages.

Before the nineteenth century, travel from Europe to Thebes (and indeed
anywhere in Egypt) was difficult, time-consuming and expensive, and only the
hardiest of European travelers visited before the travels of Father Claude
Sicard in 1726, it was unclear just where Thebes really was. It was known to be
on the Nile, but it was often confused with Memphis and several other sites.
One of the first travelers to record what he saw at Thebes was Frederic Louis
Norden, a Danish adventurer and artist. He was followed by Richard Pococke,
who published the first modern map of the valley itself, in 1743.

In 1799, Napoleon's expedition drew maps and plans of the known tombs, and
for the first time noted the Western Valley (where Prosper Jollois and Édouard
de Villiers du Terrage located the tomb of Amenhotep III, WV22). The
Description de l'Égypte contains two volumes (out a total of 19) on the area
around Thebes.

Nineteenth Century

European exploration continued in the area around Thebes during the


Nineteenth Century, boosted by Champollion's translation of hieroglyphs early
in the century. Early in the century, the area was visited by Belzoni, working
for Henry Salt, who discovered several tombs, including that of those of Ay in
the West Valley (WV23) in 1816, and Seti I, KV17 the next year. At the end of
his visits, Belzoni declared that all of the tombs had been found and nothing of
note remained to be found.

In 1827 John Gardiner Wilkinson was assigned to paint the entry of every
tomb, giving them each a designation that is still in use today they were
numbered from KV1 to KV21 (although the maps show 28 entrances, some of
which were unexplored). These paintings and maps were later published in The
Topography of Thebes and General Survey of Egypt, in 1830. At the same time
James Burton explored the valley. His works included making KV17 safer from
flooding, but he is more well known for entering KV5.
In 1829, Champollion himself visited the valley, along with Ippolitio Rosellini.
The expedition spend 2 months studying the open tombs, visiting about 16 of
them. The copied the enscriptions and identfied the original tomb owners. In
the tomb of KV17, they removed some wall decorations, which are now on
dispaly in the Louvre, Paris.

In 1845 - 1846 the valley was explored by Carl Richard Lepsius' expedition,
they explored and documented 25 main valley and 4 in the west.The later half
of the century saw a more concerted effort to preserve rather than simply
gathering antiquities. Auguste Mariette's Egyptian Antiqities Service started to
explore the valley, first with Eugéne Lefébre in 1883, then Jules Balliet and
George Bénédite in early 1888 and finally Victor Loret in 1898 to 1899. During
this time George Daressy explored KV9 and KV6.

Loret added a further 16 tombs to the list of tombs, and explored several tombs
that had already been discovered.

When Gaston Maspero was reappointed to head the Egyptian Antiquities


Service, the nature of the exploration of the valley changed again, Maspero
appointed Howard Carter as the Chief Inspector of Upper Egypt, and the young
man discovered several new tombs and explored several others, clearing KV42
and KV20.

Twentieth Century

Around the turn of the Twentieth Century, the American Theodore Davis had
the excavation permit in the valley, and his team (led mosty by Edward R.
Ayrton) discovered several royal and non-royal tombs (KV43, KV46 & KV57
being the most important). In 1907 they discovered the possible Amarna Period
cache in KV55. After finding what they thought was the burial of Tutankhamun
(KV61), it was announced that the valley was completely explored and no
further burials were to be found.

Howard Carter then acquired the right to explore the valley and after a
systematic search discovered the actual tomb of Tutankhamun (KV62) in
November 1922.

At end of the century, the Theban Mapping Project re-discovered and explored
tomb KV55, which has since be discovered to be probably the largest in the
valley, and was either a cenotaph or real burial for the sons of Ramesses II.
Elsewhere in the eastern and western branches of the valley several other
expeditions cleared and studied other tombs. Recently the Amarna Royal
Tombs Project has been exploring the area around KV55 and KV62, the
Amarna Period tombs in the main valley.

Twenty first Century

Various expeditions have continued to explore the valley, adding greatly to the
knowledge of the area. In 2001 the Theban Mapping Project designed new
signs for the tombs, providing information and plans of the open tombs. A new
visitors' centre is currently being planned.On February 8, 2006, American
archaeologists uncovered a pharaonic-era tomb (KV63), the first uncovered
there since King Tutankhamun's in 1922. The 18th Dynasty tomb included five
mummies in intact sarcophagi with coloured funerary masks along with more
than 20 large storage jars, sealed with pharaonic seals.

SAMPLE DECORATIONS

Decorations in the tombs vary greatly. Usually the sacred texts cover the walls
and sarcophagus, collectively known as the 'Books of the Dead'. The text, was
intended to aid the deceased, on his journey through the netherworld.
Horus, Ramses I, Anubis
FAMOUS PHARAOHS BURRIED IN THE VALLEY OF THE KINGS
Ramses II

Ramesses III

The tomb is sometimes referred to as the "Harpers Tomb" due to the two
harpers playing to the gods in four of the chambers. Ten small chambers branch
off of the main corridors. These were for the placement of tomb furniture.

Ramesses IV

Three white corridors descend to the sarcophagus chamber. The chambers


ceilings depict the goddess Nut. The lid of the pink granite sarcophagus is
decorated with Isis and Nephthys, which were meant to serve as guardians over
the body. Their duties fell short, however, as the tomb was robbed in ancient
times. Originally the priests placed the sarcophagus in Amenhotep II II's tomb
in order to hide the body, which was a common practice.

Ramesses IX

Two sets of steps lead down to the tomb door that is decorated with the
Pharaoh worshipping the solar disc. Isis and Nephthys stand behind him on
either side. Three corridors lead into an antechamber that opens into a pillared
hall. The passage beyond that leads to the sarcophagus chamber.
Merneptah

The steep descent into the tomb is typical of the designs of the XIX Dynasty.
The entrance is decorated with Isis and Nephthys worshipping the solar disc.
Text from the 'Book of the Gates' line the corridors. The outer granite lid of the
sarcophagus is located in the antechamber, while the lid of the inner
sarcophagus is located down more steps in the pillared hall. Carved on the pink
granite lid is the figure of Merneptah as Osiris.
Ramesses VI

Originally built for Ramesses V, three chambers and a 4th pillared chamber
was added by Ramesses VI. Complete texts of the Book of the Gates, the Book
of Caverns and the Book of Day and Night line the chambers. Portions of the
Book of the Dead are located in the pillared chamber, along with scenes of the
skygoddess, Nut.

Seti I

The longest tomb in the valley, 100m, contains very well preserved reliefs in all
of its eleven chambers and side rooms. One of the back chambers is decorated
with the Ritual of the Opening of the Mouth, which stated that the mummy's
eating and drinking organs were properly functioning. Believing in the need for
these functions in the afterlife, this was a very important ritual. The
sarcophagus is now in the Sir John Soane Museum, London.

Tuthmose III

The tomb of Tuthmose III is at the far end of the East Valley and is one of the
earliest in the Valley. Its burial chamber is in the shape of a cartouche (oval-
shaped) and its inscriptions are interspersed with stick figures. The approach to
this unusual tomb is an ascent up wooden steps, crossing over a pit, and then a
steep descent down into the tomb. The pit was probably dug as a deterrent to
tomb robbers. Two small chambers, decorated with stars, and a larger vestibule
are in front of the sarcophagus chamber, which is uniquely rounded and
decorated with only red and black.

Amenhotep II

A steep flight of stairs and a long unadorned corridor lead to the sarcophagus
chamber. Three mummies, Tuthmosis IV, Amenhotep II III and Seti II, were
found in one side room and nine mummies were found in another.

Horemheb

This tomb's construction is identical to that of Seti I's with the exception of
some of the inner decorations.

Other Important Burials

Ancient Flowers Found in Egypt Coffin in Egypt's Valley of the Kings "KV
63" National Geographic - June 30, 2006 - Follow-up story to those below
Pharaonic tomb find stuns Egypt
BBC - February 10, 2006
New Tomb Opened in Egypt's Valley of Kings
National Geographic

Archaeologists have discovered an intact, ancient Egyptian tomb in the Valley


of the Kings, the first since King Tutankhamun's Tomb was found in 1922. The
tomb contains five sarcophagi with mummies, breaking the nearly century long
belief that there's nothing more to find in the valley where some of Egypt's
greatest pharaohs were buried.

Found in the tomb was the red granite head of King Amenhotep III - father of
the Pharaoh Akhenaten.

Researchers discover 3,400-year-old artifact depicting Queen Ti MSNBC -


January 25, 2006
Egyptologists have discovered a statue of Queen Ti, wife of one of Egypt¹s
greatest pharaohs and grandmother to the boy-king Tutankhamun, at an ancient
temple in Luxor, an Egyptian antiquities official said. The roughly 3,400-year-
old statue was well-preserved. Ti's husband, Amenhotep III, presided over an
era which saw a renaissance in Egyptian art. A number of cartouches, or royal
name signs, of Amenhotep III were found on the statue, and the statue's design
and features allowed researchers to identify it as a New Kingdom, 18th
Dynasty statue of Queen Ti.

Akhenaten was the son of Amenhotep III and Queen Tiy, a descendent of a
Hebrew tribe.
Queen Tiy wearing a double feathered crown

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