Maathorneferure was a princess of Hatti, and was married to Ramesses II in the 34th year of his reign. Hatti is the reconstructed ancient name of a region in Anatolia inhabited by the Hattians between the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC, and later by the Hittites, who were at the height of their power ca 1400 BC–1200 BC. The capital city of both peoples was Hattusa (modern Bogazköy... Ramesses II, Abu Simbel Ramesses II (also known as Ramesses the Great and alternatively transcribed as Ramses and Rameses) was an Egyptian pharaoh. ...
She was the daughter of Hattusili III and his wife Puduchepa, her real name is unknown, but her Egyptian name translates as "One who sees Horus, the invisible splendor of Ra". Hieroglyphs are a system of writing used by the Ancient Egyptians, using a combination of logographic, syllabic, and alphabetic elements. ... copied from http://fi. ... copied from http://fi. ... Hattusili III was a king of the Hittite empire (New kingdom) 1266 BC–1236 BC. The archive of over 200 letters he and his palace exchanged with Ramesses II of ancient Egypt are an important primary source for this period. ...
At Tanis, there is a broken statue of Ramesses that shows her (mostly destroyed) figure touching his leg, together with her cartouche. The word Tanis has a number of meanings: Tanis Diena - A Latvian pig festival Tanis, Egypt - An archaeological temple site Tanis Half-Elven - A character in the Dragonlance novels & game products This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
Her Egyptian name was Maathorneferure, meaning the "One who sees Horus, the Visible Splendor of Re", and she was immediately promoted to the role of "principal wife", which was an unusual honor for a foreign born queen.
Perhaps she, being a foreign born princess, would have been completely ignorant of Egypt's ceremonial and ritual celebrations, for it was Bintanath and her half-sisters, first Meritamen and then Nebettawi, who continued to function as principal wives.
We know that Maathorneferure lived for some time at Pi-Ramesse, and we even know that she bore at least one child, a daughter, by Ramesses II.