Karomama Meritmut (original) (raw)

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God's Wife of Amun

Karomama Meritmut
Statuette of Karomama Meritmut at the Louvre (N 500)
God's Wife of Amun
Predecessor Henuttawy
Successor Shepenupet I Royal titulary Prenomen (Praenomen)Sitamun MutemhatNomen <mwttmrkAr Z1Ma Ma > Karomama Meritmutshort form <kA Z1r ra MZ1a > Karomama
Burial Shaft tomb in the Ramesseum
Dynasty 22nd Dynasty
Father possibly Osorkon II

Karomama Meritmut (prenomen: Sitamun Mutemhat) was an ancient Egyptian high priestess, a God's Wife of Amun during the 22nd Dynasty.[1]

She is possibly identical with Karomama, a daughter of Pharaoh Osorkon II, who was depicted in the _sed-_hall of the pharaoh. She followed Henuttawy as high priestess. She is depicted in the Karnak chapel Osiris-Nebankh ("Osiris, Lord of Life"). A bronze statue of hers, Statue of Karomama, the Divine Adoratrice of Amun (N 500), which she received from her overseer of the treasury Ahentefnakht,[2] is now on display at the Louvre;[1] a votive statue of Maat she also received from him, was found in Karnak, a stela of hers, her canopic jars and ushabtis are in Berlin.[3] She was followed as God's Wife by Shepenupet I. Her tomb was found in December 2014 in the area of the Ramesseum at Thebes.[4]

  1. ^ a b Dodson, Aidan; Hilton, Dyan (2004). The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05128-3., p.219
  2. ^ Helen Jacquet-Gordon: A Statuette of Ma'et and the Identity of the Divine Adoratress Karomama, in: ZÄS 94 (1967), 86-93
  3. ^ Dodson & Hilton, p.220
  4. ^ Karomama tomb discovered in the Ramesseum temple