
Broad collar of Neferu-Ptah
Neferuptah or
Ptahneferu (“Beauty
of Ptah”) was a daughter of the Egyptian king
Amenemhat III (c. 1860 BC to 1814 BC) of the
12th dynasty. She was the
sister of Pharaoh
Sobekneferu.
Neferuptah is one of the first royal women whose name was written
inside a
cartouche. Although she never had
the title 'king's wife', she must have had a special status; it is
possible she was regarded as a future ruler.
Her titles included
member of the elite, great of favour, great
of praise and
beloved king's daughter of his body.
A burial
for her was prepared in the tomb of her father at Hawara
.
However, she was not buried there, but in a small pyramid at
Hawara. Her tomb was found intact in 1956 and still contained her
jewellery, a granite sarcophagus, three silver vases and other
objects. The granite sarcophagus was inscribed with a short
offering formula. Inside the sarcophagus were found the decayed
remains of two wooden coffins. The outer one was decorated with
inscribed gold foil. Identical inscriptions were found on the
sarcophagus of Queen
Hatshepsut, who
lived about 300 years later. Her tomb is mentioned on a papyrus
found at Lahun. She is depicted next to her father in the temple at
Medinet Maadi.
Objects belonging to
her include a sphinx of black granite and the fragment of a statue
found on Elephantine
Footnotes
Literature
- Flinders Petrie: Kahun, Gurob, and Hawara, London 1890
(online: [308245])
- N. Farag: The discovery of Neferwptah, 1971