Tuesday 12 April 2011

EVIDENCE THAT HAS BEEN OVERLOOKED

The Discovered tomb (TT226), which is thought to belong to a person called Hekareshu, was a royal scribe and Overseer of the royal nurses from the time of Amenhotep III. Inside the tomb was inscription, a title of the owner even though very damaged said, 'Overseer of the Upbringing of the King's Sons', there also was a visible painting of Hekareshu, seated on a chair, which shows on his lap, four sons.
This evidence alone shows that Amenhotep III then had four sons not just two as we are always told by Egyptologists.

Next a discovery of a relief in a temple at Amarna shows Nefertiti smiting a female with a mace under the rays of the Aten. This relief is unprecedented and very unusual, as to shows an execution by Egyptian queen.

A close inspection shows the female victim had an Egyptian side lock; infact the victim looks very much like an Egyptian princess. It also appears that the victim was kneeling when hit with a first blow to the left side of her face, which it is clear from the relief was between the left eye and the mouth.
The question we have to ask, who was this Egyptian princess?
The recent 2010 Dna tests of the royal mummies, gives us a clear answer.
The mummy in question was discovered in the ancient Egyptian tomb KV35 by archeologist Victor Loret in 1898. The body was given the designation KV35YL ("YL" for "Younger Lady") and currently resides in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.
A recent 2010 examination of the KV35YL conclueded that KV35YL body was about 25 to 35 years old at the time of death. It also determined that a large wound on the left side of the mummy's mouth and cheek, which also destroyed part of the jaw, had happened prior to death and that the injury had been lethal. This matches the Amarna relief exactly. But is KV35YL mummy a princess as the relief indicates. The DNA tests taken in 2010 have shown conclusively that the KV35YL mummy was a princess and was the daughter of Amenhotep III and Queen Tiye. It also determined that she was the mother of Tutankhamun, by her brother, a mummy found in KV55.
KV35YL – the Younger Lady



It is misleading, that Egyptologists do not know the name of king Tutankhamun mother.
A scarab was discovered at the Temple of Osiris at Abydos. The amazing thing about this scarab is that it contained the two cartouches, Tutankhamun's and the King's Mother, side by side - leaving no doubt as to its meaning... "The Good God (the king), (Nebkheperura), King's Mother, (Merytra ).
Reference to the scarab was in a work published by the French Egyptologist, Mariette, in 1880! (Mariette, Abydos, Paris, 1880, tom.II, pl. 40n) it also was in a work published by British Egyptologist, E.A.Wallis Budge in 1923 shortly after the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb.


The next discovery was near the Chapel of Uazmes, which was discovered and cleared out by M. Daressy in 1887.A Sandstone was found dedicated to princess Sitamen daughter of Amenhotep III, with her full name, it said… daughter of Amenhotep III. ... Of the 21st day . . . queen of Upper and Lower Egypt, Sit-ra-meryt-Amen.
Sit-ra-meryt-Amen is the same as Sit-amen-Meryt-ra. Therefore it is very clear that Princess Sitamen is Meryt-ra.

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