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Panesuttawy. The first two sons work for the temple of Amun, just like their father and grandfather. In other scenes, more relatives are mentioned. Djehutyemheb and Bak-Khonsu have daughters named
Tyemheb, Nakhtmut, Hennuttawy, Wernefret, and Isetnefret. Grandsons by the name of Amenemopenakht, Panebenopet, Suti called Khonsuenwia, and granddaughters named Irneferumut, Akhmut, Isis, and Dinymuti are mentioned. The daughters and granddaughters are songstresses of
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preservation and site management activities in TT45. A full archaeological study of the tomb is carried out in order to enhance our understanding of the history of use of the tomb. The acquired data are documented and published using the most recent non-invasive digital tools and developments in the field of
Digital Humanities, such as photogrammetry, digital epigraphy, digital reconstruction, and digital imaging technology.
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In 2017, the Leiden
University Mission to the Theban Necropolis started work in Theban Tomb 45 under the direction of Dr. Carina van den Hoven, with the support of the Gerda Henkel Stiftung. The international team carries out conservation, documentation, publication, art historical analysis, heritage
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In the tomb, Djehutyemheb and his wife Bak-Khonsu are depicted with their sons, who offer them bread, beer, oxen, fowl, wine, fruit, and incense. The sons are named
Panakhtenopet (scribe of the treasury in the temple of Amun), Userhatnakht (scribe of fine linen in the temple of Amun), Wennefer and
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276:. Djehutyemheb was the son of the head of the weavers named Wennefer and his wife Isis. Djehutyemheb's wife was named Bak-Khonsu. She was a songstress of Amun.
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The tomb was reused several hundred years later, in the
Ramesside Period, by a man named Djehutyemheb (Thothemheb). He was
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Djehuty and his mother receiving offerings, Tomb of
Djehuty MET 15.5.8 EGDP019646 Cropped
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Ramesside
Inscriptions, Translated & Annotated, Translations
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scribe of the offering-table of Mery, high-priest of Amun
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271:head of the makers of fine linen of the temple of
323:Topographical Bibliography: The Theban Necropolis
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242:. It was originally the burial place of the
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338:, Volume III, Blackwell Publishers, 1996
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30:Burial site of TT45 floor plan
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420:Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt
415:Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt
264:Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt
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234:, on the west bank of the
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348:Gerda Henkel Stiftung
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363:TT45 Project Website
298:List of Theban tombs
386:25.7333°N 32.6000°E
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228:Sheikh Abd el-Qurna
195:(1550–1069 BC)
129:(1550–1069 BC)
48:Sheikh Abd el-Qurna
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321:Porter and Moss,
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191:New Kingdom
180:hieroglyphs
125:New Kingdom
114:hieroglyphs
23:Theban tomb
16:Theban tomb
404:Categories
377:32°36′00″E
374:25°44′00″N
304:References
25: TT45
292:See also
61:Previous
44:Location
110:Djehuty
72: →
59:←
254:, and
220:Theban
240:Luxor
222:Tomb
282:Amun
273:Amun
236:Nile
224:TT45
218:The
75:TT46
70:Next
65:TT44
187:Era
178:in
121:Era
112:in
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312:^
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