Meretseger (queen)

For the namesake goddess, see Meretseger.
Meretseger with her husband Senusret III on a New Kingdom stela. British Museum, EA846

Meretseger ("She who Loves Silence") was an Ancient Egyptian queen consort.

Biography

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Meretseger
in hieroglyphs

Meretseger appears in sources of the New Kingdom as the wife of Senusret III. According to that she would be the first Egyptian queen consort to bear the title Great Royal Wife, which became the standard title for chief wives of pharaohs. She was also the first queen consort whose name was written in a cartouche.[1] However, as there are no contemporary sources relating to Meretseger, she is most likely a creation of the New Kingdom.[2]

Along with Khnemetneferhedjet II and Neferthenut, she is one of three known wives of Senusret III (a fourth, possible wife is Sithathoryunet). She was depicted on a New Kingdom stela (now in the British Museum, EA846), and on an inscription in Semna, dating to the reign of Thutmose III.[3]

References

  1. Aidan Dodson & Dyan Hilton, The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt, Thames & Hudson (2004) ISBN 0-500-05128-3 pp.26-27
  2. C. van Siclen: Egyptian Antiquities in South Texas. Part 2. A kohl Jar of Queen Meresger, in: Varia Aegyptiaca 8 (1992), 29-32
  3. Dodson & Hilton, p.97.
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