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Amarna Tomb 13: Neferkheperuhesekheper [1] Mayor of Akhetaten: Amarna Tomb 14: May [4] General of the Lord of the Two Lands, etc. Amarna Tomb 15: Suti [1] Standard-bearer of the company of Neferkheprure-Waenre (Akhenaten) Amarna Tomb 16: unknown: Amarna Tomb 17: unknown: Amarna Tomb 18: unknown [4] Only the facade of the tomb was completed ...
The Amarna Royal Tombs Project (ARTP) is an archaeological expedition devoted to the Amarna Period.It was established in 1998 to ascertain on the ground and in the ancient records the fate of the missing Amarna royal dead, which were transferred to the Valley of the Kings upon the abandonment of Amarna during the 18th Dynasty reign of the Pharaoh Tutankhamun.
The Tomb of Ay at Amarna is a tomb chapel in Amarna, Egypt.It is the last and southernmost tomb in Amarna and is named Southern Tomb 25. It was intended for the burial of Ay, who later became Pharaoh, after the 18th Dynasty king Tutankhamun.
The Royal Tomb of Akhenaten is a multichambered tomb in the Royal Wadi east of Amarna, Egypt, where members of the Amarna Period royal family were originally buried. [1] [2] Akhenaten was an Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh who reigned for seventeen years (1355-1338 BC) from his capital city of Akhetaten, known today as Amarna. [3]
Amarna Tomb 1 is a sepulchre near Amarna, Upper Egypt. It is the tomb of the ancient Egyptian noble Huya, which is located in the cluster of tombs known collectively ...
Amarna Tombs 7–a, b, c are small unfinished tombs located near Tomb 7 (The tomb of Parennefer). Tombs 7a and 7b are very small. Tombs 7a and 7b are very small. Tomb 7c had some columns completed, but no inscriptions were evident.
Amarna (/ ə ˈ m ɑːr n ə /; Arabic: العمارنة, romanized: al-ʿAmārna) is an extensive ancient Egyptian archaeological site containing the remains of what was the capital city during the late Eighteenth Dynasty.
KV55 is a tomb in the Valley of the Kings in Egypt.It was discovered by Edward R. Ayrton in 1907 while he was working in the Valley for Theodore M. Davis.It has long been speculated, as well as much disputed, that the body found in this tomb was that of the famous king, Akhenaten, who moved the capital to Akhetaten (modern-day Amarna).