Amethu called Ahmose

Amethu called Ahmose was a vizier of ancient Egypt.[1] He served during the reign of Thutmose II and the early years of the reign of Hatshepsut and Thutmose III of the 18th Dynasty.[2]


Amethu[1]
in hieroglyphs
Amethu called Ahmose
Vizier
SuccessorUseramen
Dynasty18th Dynasty
PharaohThutmose II, Hatshepsut and Thutmose III
WifeTa-Amethu
ChildrenUseramen, Neferweben, Amenhotep, Akheperkare
BurialThebes TT83

Family

His wife's name was Ta-Amethu. Their children include the viziers Useramen and Neferweben. Two additional sons are known from Theban tomb TT122: Amenhotep, an Overseer of the Magazine of Amun, and Akheperkare, a prophet of Montu.[1]

Amethu called Ahmose and his wife Ta-Amethu also had several grandchildren. The later second prophet of Amun Merymaat was a son of Amenhotep. Vizier Rekhmire was a son of Neferweben.[1]

Tombs and burial

Amethu called Ahmose was buried in TT83 in Sheikh Abd el-Qurna, Thebes.[1]

gollark: You can always route through a virtual server cuboid, such as the osmarks.net virtual hexahedral servers.
gollark: I was thinking it might be neat to make it a pattern-matchy language, but I am not sure what that would mean or how it would work.
gollark: So `bee apio [ 4, 7 * q ]` is the same as `beeapio[4, 7*q]`.
gollark: It has an exciting feature where it completely ignores whitespace.
gollark: I made a basic parser for it which parses stuff like `bee[apio, forms] = 7*2*x^3`, and a really simplistic evaluator, but I'm not sure what the semantics *should* be like.

References

  1. Porter,B. and Moss R.L.B., Topographical Bibliography of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, Reliefs and Paintings: The Theban Necropolis, Part One: Private Tombs. Second Edition. Griffith Institute. Oxford. 1994
  2. Hatshepsut by Anneke Bart


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.