Nebty-tepites
Nebty-tepites (nb.tỉ tp ỉt=s, "The two crowns on the head of her father"[1]) was a Princess of ancient Egypt. She is mentioned in the tomb of her mother, Meresankh II.[2]
Nebtytepites in hieroglyphs |
---|
Nebty-tepites | |
---|---|
Born | Nebty-tepites |
Resting place | unknown |
Other names | Nebtytepites |
Title | Princess of Egypt |
Parent(s) | Prince Horbaef and Queen Meresankh II |
Relatives | Pharaoh Khufu and Queen Meritites I (grandparents) Princess Nefertkau III (sister) Prince Djaty (brother) |
Biography
Nebty-tepites was a daughter of Prince Horbaef and his half-sister Meresankh II. She had a sister Nefertkau III and a brother Djaty. After Horbaef's death, Meresankh married one Pharaoh, either Djedefra or Khafra and she became a Queen. So, Nebty-tepites was a niece and step-daughter of her mother's second husband.[3]
gollark: I don't see why you would want it? They couldn't really be extra cores which seem like they're on the same CPU. They would, as I said, have to be an effectively independent computer with some kind of high-bandwidth link to the main one.
gollark: That would also be very impractical, unless you make the "extra cores" basically a small independent computer with its own RAM and stuff.
gollark: Connect PCIe devices, mostly, which you can do now.
gollark: As far as I'm aware, the traces on the boards for the DIMMs have to be very precise lengths and stuff or the signals will get messed up.
gollark: That's totally impractical.
References
- George A. Reisner. A History of the Giza Necropolis III, Unpublished 1942 Manuscript, Chapter 16: The Royal Family of Dynasty Four, page 146
- Giza pyramids a website maintained by the Boston Museum of Fine Arts; G 7410-7420
- Resiner, op.cit., pp.146-149 gizapyramids.org
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.