Ankhesenamun

@Queens, Birthday and Life

Ankhesenamun was a queen of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt

1348 BC

EgyptianHistorical PersonalitiesEmpresses & Queens
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: 1348 BC
  • Nationality: Egyptian
  • Famous: Ancient Egyptian Queen, Empresses, Queens, Historical Personalities, Empresses & Queens
  • Spouses: Akhenaten, Tutankhamun
  • Siblings: Tutankhamun
  • Birth Place: Thebes (Luxor, Luxor Governorate, Egypt)
  • Gender: Female

Ankhesenamun born at

Thebes (Luxor, Luxor Governorate, Egypt)

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Birth Place

Ankhesenamun was born Ankhesenpaaten to royal Egyptian parents, Akhenaten and Nefertiti. She is believed to be one of the six daughters of the famous couple. The first three daughters, Meritaten, Meketaten and Ankhesenpaaten were likely to have enjoyed a much greater stature within the family as they are the ones who appear more frequently in the paintings. She was half-sister of Tutankhamun, who happened to be her brother from a different mother.

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Childhood & Early Life

She was born in around 1348 BC in the city of Thebes. Soon after that, her father left the city and founded a new city called Akhetaten, in honor of his God, Aten. Ankhesenamun grew up in this new city and being from the royal family, she had a very rich and royal upbringing.

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Childhood & Early Life

She was extremely close to her siblings and it is said that her father Akhenaten got married to her for sometime after his wife died. Before her, he had married his first daughter, Meritaten. It is also assumed by some history scholars that Meritaten might have had children with her father quite possibly as well. She was also said to have been a wife of Smenkhkare, who succeeded Akhenaten. Smenkhkare was appointed the co-regent by her father, which was a very common practice in the ancient Egyptian society.

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Marriages

Akhinaten and Meritaten died around the same time, and according to the rules, Ankhesenamun had to marry Smenkhkare. Her other sisters haven’t been mentioned properly in the history and their existence has also been questioned from time-to-time. Smenkhkare was much older than her and didn’t treat her well. The lifespan of the pharaohs used to be quite shorter back in the days and after about three years of Reign, Smenkhkare too died and the throne fell in the hands of Tut.

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Marriages

As per Egyptian rules, Ankhesenamun now had to marry his half-brother so she married Tutankhamun in about 1334 BC at the age of 13 and the young pharaoh Tut was a few months shy of 10. The couple moved to Amarna, a city which their father had established, and stayed there for four years. Eventually, they moved to the capital city of Thebes. The city worshiped the god named Amun and that was when both of them added 'Amun' to their names, to pay their respect to the god.

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Marriages

The couple had a very happy marriage, as described in the wall paintings, but despite their happy lives together, they could not have children together. In the royal family, the chances of a normal delivery were very low as science claims that children born of incest are usually unhealthy. Tut and Ankhesenamun were both half-siblings, and several historians also claim that they could very well be siblings, born of the same mother. They had two daughters who died in infancy; their bodies were found in the tomb of Tut, and further DNA testing revealed that they were suffering from birth deformities, a result of interbreeding between the same bloodlines.

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Marriages

As it was norm in those times, Tut seemed to have married many women in his short life, but Ankhesenamun was the only one who is widely documented. After reigning for 10 years or so, Tut died at the age of 18. The cause of his death is still debated ever since his mummy had been found in 1922. The later tests suggested that his left leg was fractured at the time of his burial and some reports also suggest that he died due to assassination.

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Marriages

Shortly after Ay started his reign, Ankhesenamun practically disappeared from history. Several attempts have been made to locate her grave but to no avail.

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Later Life & Legacy

There have been several references of Ankhesenamun in movies, books and TV programs. In the novel ‘Tutankhamun and the daughter of Ra’, she is extensively mentioned, and so is in the Belgian series titled ‘Het Huis Anubis’, where she has been portrayed as a vengeful wife of Tutankhamun. Judith Tarr wrote a novel ‘Pillar of Fire’, which is also related to the life of Ankhesenamun.

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Later Life & Legacy