Sekhmakh
Appearance
Sekhmakh | |
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Queen consort of Meroë King's Daughter King's Wife Mistress of Egypt | |
Queen regnant of Meroë? | |
Reign | ???? BC - ???? BC |
Spouse | Nastasen |
Father | Harsiotef? |
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Sekhmakh Sḫ m3ḫ in hieroglyphs | |||||||||||
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Sekhmakh was the wife of the Nubian king Nastasen, who ruled in the 4th century BC.[1]
Sekhmakh is known from the great stela of the king, where she is depicted in the roundel. She is also known from her funerary stela,[2] found in a temple at Jebel Barkal and obviously reused.[3] The burial, where the stela was once placed is unknown. Sekhmakh bears the titles king's daughter, king's wife and mistress of Egypt.[1] Her royal parents are unknown.
Sekhmakh had a Horus name and is referred to as "king" on a stela from Jebel Barkal, possibly indicating that she was a queen regnant or had some kind of role that was a precursor to the reigning queens of Meroë. [4]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Eide, Tormod (1994). Fontes Historiae Nubiorum: From the mid-fifth to the first century BC. University of Bergen, Department of Classics. ISBN 978-82-91626-01-7.
- ^ Khartum 1853
- ^ Török, László (2021-10-01). The Image of the Ordered World in Ancient Nubian Art: The Construction of the Kushite Mind, 800 BC - 300 AD. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-49355-1.
- ^ Joyce Haynes; Mimi Santini-Ritt (2012). "Women in Ancient Nubia". In Marjorie M. Fisher; Peter Lacovara; Salma Ikram; Sue D'Auria (eds.). Ancient Nubia: African Kingdoms on the Nile. The American University in Cairo Press. p. 173.
Literature
[edit]- Laszlo Török, in: Fontes Historiae Nubiorum, Vol. II, Bergen 1996, 468, ISBN 978-82-91626-01-7