Teti and Sesheshet
Egypt

Teti and Sesheshet


haaretz.com (Ran Shapira)

The Egyptian researchers who, in early January, entered the burial room in the latest pyramid to be discovered in Saqqara, south of Cairo, labored for five hours before they could lift the lid of the sarcophagus within. Inside was a mummy wrapped in a flax shroud. In addition to pottery shards, gold wrappings were also found in the sarcophagus, which apparently were used to cover the fingers of the mummified body. Although no inscriptions were found in the tomb, the researchers assume, with a high level of probability, that it contains the body of the mother of the founder of the Egyptian Sixth Dynasty: Pharaoh Teti.

The pyramid in which the queen, Sesheshet, was buried, was discovered in November 2008 - it is the 118th found in Egypt. Its discovery in Teti's burial compound surprised the researchers to some extent, since the site had been thoroughly combed through over the past 150 years. In addition to the pyramid where the king himself was buried, two "satellite pyramids" were found, the tombs of his two principal wives: The one belonging to Iput I was discovered about 100 years ago; the second, of Khuit, was discovered in 1994. Information about the queen herself is very meagre.

In a papyrus document that includes medical prescriptions, her name is mentioned alongside a request for a preparation that was supposed to strengthen thin hair. Nevertheless, it is possible that the "pharmacists" used her name to lend a bit of prestige to the prescription, and did not necessarily prepare it for her. Another inscription mentions her as being the mother of the king, and in several reliefs of the same area the name "Sesheshet" appears. However, these do not contribute substantial information about the king's mother. Scholars believe she played a very important role in her son's ascent to the throne, thanks, among other things, to her success in mediating between two rival factions within the royal family.




- More Re Sesheshet
El Pais (Jacinto Anton) This repeats much of what went before, but also makes the point that Sesheshet was not a well known queen in the way that Nefertari or Nefertiti were, although she is mentioned in some ancient Egyptian texts. It is thought that...

- Old Kingdom Mummy Thought To Be Queen Seshestet Found
When I fired up Outlook this morning my eyes nearly popped out of my head - dozens of emails alerting me to the fact that the remains of a mummy thought to be that of Queen Seshestet the mother of the Pharaoh Teti, have been found in the remains of a...

- Kings Wife Sesheshet
The mother of the founder of the sixth dynasty king Teti had a pyramid now mostly destroyed and has recently been found. http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2008/922/fr3.htm...

- Dr. Hawass's Pyramid
The pyramid belongs to the mother of the founder of Egypt's sixth dynasty king Teti. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/11/081112-pyramid-video-ap.html...

- Sixth Dynasty Pyramid Found
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