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Crown Prince Tuthmose (or, more accurately, Djehutymos) was the eldest son of pharaoh Amenhotep III, who lived during the Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt. He apparently died and disappeared from records before his father and his younger brother Amenhotep succeeded instead. He seems to have died toward the end of his father's reign. His brother, Amenhotep oddly may have been his father's coregent when Tuthmose was still alive. Pharaoh is a title used to refer to any ruler, usually male, of the Egyptian kingdom in the pre-Christian, pre-Islamic period. ...
nomen or birth name Nebmaatre Amenhotep III (called Nibmu(`w)areya in the Amarna letters) was an Egyptian pharaoh of the Eighteenth dynasty. ...
Known rulers, in the History of Egypt, for the Eighteenth Dynasty. ...
Neferkheperre-waenre Beautiful are the forms of Re, the one of Re Nomen Akhenaten He who is beneficial to the Aten (after Year 4 of his reign) Amenhotep Horus name Meryaten Nebty name Wernesytemakhetaten Golden Horus Wetjesrenenaten[1] Consort(s) Nefertiti, Kiya Meritaten, Ankhesenpaaten, Ankhesenpaaten-ta-sherit Issues Meritaten, Meketaten...
Neferkheperre-waenre Beautiful are the forms of Re, the one of Re Nomen Akhenaten He who is beneficial to the Aten (after Year 4 of his reign) Amenhotep Horus name Meryaten Nebty name Wernesytemakhetaten Golden Horus Wetjesrenenaten[1] Consort(s) Nefertiti, Kiya Meritaten, Ankhesenpaaten, Ankhesenpaaten-ta-sherit Issues Meritaten, Meketaten...
He served as priest of Ptah in ancient Memphis[1], and had the full titles of Crown Prince, Overseer of the Priests of Upper and Lower Egypt, High Priest of Ptah at Memphis and sm-priest of Ptah. Ptah In Egyptian mythology, Ptah (also spelt Peteh) was the deification of the primordial mound in the Ennead cosmogony, which was more literally referred to as Ta-tenen (also spelt Tathenen), meaning risen land, or as Tanen, meaning submerged land. ...
Memphis was the wife of Epaphus, the founder of Memphis, Egypt in Greek mythology. ...
References
- ^ Aidan Dodson (1990). "Crown Prince Djhutmose and the Royal Sons of the Eighteenth Dynasty". The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 76.
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