Queen Ti Mother of the King "," King's daughter "and" Lady of the Earth

Queen Ti Mother of the King "," King's daughter "and" Lady of the Earth 
Queen Ti
Pharaonic women who ran the country behind the curtain
She lived under the Eighteenth Dynasty, the wife of King Ai, and was the mother of Queen Nefertiti from breastfeeding and her own nanny
Her husband held important positions in the court of many kings - Amenhotep the Third, Akhenaten and Tutankhamun - before he ascended the throne himself after Tutankhamun, whose end of rule came as the end of the legitimate rulers of the royal family extended since King Ahmose I. But King A, Queen T's husband, is believed to have links to the royal family; he may have been the brother of Queen Tey (Amenhotep the Third's wife).
Queen Tiye was born in Akhmim, Egypt, in 1398 BC to parents who are said to be non-Egyptian because of their Asian features, which are different from the pharaonic features recorded on the walls of the temples and evident in the features of the ancient Pharaonic statues. Her father, Yuya, was an army officer. Her mother, Tuya, was a priest in the Temple of Amun. As it turns out, Queen Tiye was not of royal origin but of the common people, but she gained a place in the heart of her husband, King Amenhotep III. "The ninth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty, who bestowed her b For titles such as "mother of the king" and "the daughter of the king" and "Our Lady of the earth", and of his eagerness for the solicitation to jump a tremendous phony lake in the western territory in Luxor to walk her splendid distinguished vessel,  was known forKing Amenhotep III polygamous marriages, as well as his marriages with princesses However, Queen Tiye had a great deal of interest in him, and was characterized by the wisdom and good opinion that made her husband King "Amenhotep the Third" consult her in matters of government, as was the case with Her son, King Amenhotep IV, nicknamed "Akhenaten" in Athens His reign after the death of his father, Akhenaten is the husband of Queen "Nefertiti" and the father of "Tutankhamun", and the sons of Queen "Tiye" are: Tuthmosis and Akhenaten, and six females: Satamon, ESET, Bikitaton, Ms. Small, Henotanib, and Nhipeta. Queen Thie died in 1338 BC and her tomb or mummy has not yet been found.
It's status and role.

Queen Ti and her husband King Amenhotep III

Queen Ti had the place she enjoyed in the heart of the king despite his many marriages, but he always ordered the sculpture of her sculptures about the same size that he carved his statues and was always depicted beside him. Unlike other queens, she was always small or medium size. Our rule of Egypt because of their intelligence and wisdom and strength is different from others.
T also lived during the reign of her son King Amenhotep IV and played an important and influential role during his reign in guiding the internal and external political life and wisdom that characterized it and the relations enjoyed with the kings of the country and had a major role in the inauguration of her son on the throne after the death of his father as She was loyal to the god Amun and his temple priests and always provided them with gifts and ammunition to draw closer to the god Amun.
Mummy of Queen Ti
The mummy was found in a secret room inside the tomb of King Amenhotep the Second with the mummy of the mother of King Tut. The original tomb No. 55 of Queen Ti was robbed and looted. The priests transferred the mummy to the tomb of 35 of King Amenhotep the Second and was discovered in 1898, but no one knew her identity at the time. Until one of the American scientists discovered in 1977 that the tuft of the queen is similar to a tuft found in a sarcophagus in the tomb of King Tut.
her family
In inscriptions from the Amarna period, Queen T is nicknamed "the nursing of the great royal wife." This shows that even if Ay was Nefertiti's father, T was not her mother. According to this theory, Aye's second wife was probably after the death of Nefertiti's mother. However, neither King A nor his wife, Queen T, are nicknamed "Nefertiti's father and mother," and T's only relationship with Nefertiti was that she was "the nurse of the extraordinary Queen Nefertiti," which should imply that Ai was not Nefertiti's dad. It was recommended that the passing of Bennett (sister of Nefertiti) was the daughter of A and T and later married to Horemheb, A's successor to power. However, the names of Bennert's death and the death of Necmett, the wife of King Horemheb, are not identical, which means that they were completely different women. It is also possible that the crown prince of King Ay, Nakht Min, was his son, probably of Queen Ti.

Queen T may have a sister called Mott Knop; one of the dignitaries named Ai was a second priest of Amun, Mott's priest and Queen T's private servant on a statue (now in the Brooklyn Museum), whose parents mentioned the statue as the death of M Knop and Nect Min. The death of M. Knop is said to be the sister of Queen Ti, and the inscription is usually interpreted as meaning that she was the sister of Queen Ti, the wife of King A.
In Tell el-Amarna the cemetery
T was filmed in an unused cemetery originally for her husband in Tell el-Amarna. On the north wall, a reward from King Akhenaten appears on the east side. I and T are displayed in front of the Impression window. Akhenaten appears in the crown of Khebrush (the crown of war) and Nefertiti in her well-known blue crown (in this case decorated with three royal lives), as well as the princesses Merritt Aten, Maakat Aten and Ankhs en Ba Aten in the window as well. The king and queen seem to receive rewards for Ai and Ti,   while Ankhs in Ba Aten stands on a pillow in front of Nefertiti for playing her chin.
Queen T also mentioned on a wooden box, engraved by the true writer of the king he loved, the commander of the troops, the supervisor of the cavalry, and the father of the god, i. The text states: The most precious person, Wahid Ra, valued by the wife of the Great Queen, housewife, c

Queen T is depicted in the tomb of I (cemetery 23) in the Valley of the Kings. They appear behind Ay in a scene where A seems to pull lotus flowers from the swamp where they are on a boat. The pictures in the cemetery were somewhat severely damaged. She was buried with her husband in WV23, fragments of human bones of a female found in the cemetery, and the bones of Queen T. T is also depicted in a rock shrine dedicated to the god of fertility Maine in Akhmim.


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Article Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tey
                  


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