Mutemwiya
Mutemwiya | |
---|---|
Title | King's mother |
Spouse | Thutmose IV |
Children | Amenhotep III |
Relatives | Akhenaten (grandson) |
Mutemwiya (also written as Mutemwia, Mutemuya or Mutemweya) was a minor wife of the
Biography
Mutemwiya in hieroglyphs | ||||||||||||
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Mwt m wiA Mut in the divine barque |
Mutemwiya is not attested during the reign of her husband Thutmose IV. She would have been overshadowed at court by the chief queens Nefertari, and later Iaret. Mutemwiya is only shown on the monuments of her son Amenhotep III.[3]
While she occasionally was identified by some researchers as a daughter of King Artatama I of Mitanni, no evidence proves that she is the same person, and nothing about her own background is known.[4] There seemed to be evidence that she was not a daughter of Artatama,[5] but this theory has been discarded.[6] Cyril Aldred has suggested that Mutemwiya be a sister of Yuya.[7] He argues that since Mutemwiya was present during the early years of her son's reign, she might have engineered the marriage between Tiye and the young king to connect her family with royalty. However, this theory is poorly supported by texts or archaeological finds.
Mutemwiya held many titles including God’s Wife (Hm.t-nTr), Lady of The Two Lands (nb.t-tAwy), Great King’s Wife, his beloved (Hm.t-nsw-wr.t mry.t=f), noblewoman (r.t-pa.t), countess, Great of Praises (wr.t-Hsw.t), Sweet of Love (bnr.t-mrw.t), Mistress of Upper and Lower Egypt (Hnw.t-rsy-mHw), and God's Mother (mwt-nTr).[8] The titles king's mother and god's mother amount to the same thing since the god in question was the reigning king, Amenhotep III.[9] All of these titles, including that of Great Royal Wife, were used only after her husband's death, during her son's reign. At the time of Amenhotep III’s accession to the throne she gained prominence as the new pharaoh's mother.[10]
Mutemwiya is shown in the
A partial granite statue representing Mutemwiya was found in Karnak and it now is in the collection of the British Museum. The statue takes the form of a rebus showing the goddess Mut seated in a barque, thereby forming her name. Mutemwiya is named in the inscription on the side of the barque.[10][11]
Along with her daughter-in-law, Tiye, she also is shown on the Colossi of Memnon erected by Amenhotep III.[3][6]
Death
The date of Mutemwiya's death is unknown, but she is believed to have survived long into her son's reign. The evidence for that is her presence among the sculptures of the Colossi of Memnon, which was built well into his reign, as well as a mention of her estate on a wine-jar label found in Amenhotep III's Malkata palace in Thebes.[6]
References
- ^ Ranke, Hermann (1935). Die Ägyptischen Personennamen, Bd. 1: Verzeichnis der Namen. Glückstadt: J.J. Augustin. p. 147.
- ^ Barbara Watterson: Amarna: Ancient Egypt's Age of Revolution. 2002
- ^ a b Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson (2004), pp. 132-141.
- ^ Betsy Bryan, The Reign of Thutmose IV, (Johns Hopkins University Press: 1991), p.119
- ^ Nicolas Grimal, A History of Ancient Egypt, (Blackwell Books: 1992), p.221
- ^ ISBN 978-0-472-08833-1
- ^ ISBN 0-500-27621-8
- ISBN 978-0-9547218-9-3
- ^ Betsy Bryan, Chapter 6: "Thutmose IV Abroad and at Home" in 'The Reign of Thutmose IV,' pp.113-118
- ^ ISBN 0-500-05145-3
- ISBN 0-500-27902-0
See also
- Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt Family Tree