(bpk, Berlin/ Aegyptisches Museum, Staatliche Museen, Berlin, Germany / Art Resource, NY)
A bust of Queen Nefertiti ca. 1350 B.C. (top). The queen, her husband Akhenaten, and their daughters are portrayed (above) on a stone relief.
But the Royal Tomb also contains a third, unfinished chamber whose royal resident is unknown.Could it perhaps be the tomb of Akhenaten's wife, Nefertiti? Egyptologist Marc Gabolde of Paul Valéry University, who has been searching for Nefertiti's tomb, thinks so. "I now believe that Nefertiti died a few months before Akhenaten and was buried at Amarna, despite the fact that her suite in the Royal Tomb was unfinished." But at least one other scholar is less certain. "I do not think it is likely that she was buried in Amarna," says archaeologist Barry Kemp of the University of Cambridge, director of the Amarna Project. "Or, at least, nothing found in the tomb suggests that it had housed burial equipment for her," Kemp adds. "She could have been buried at Thebes, or on the now utterly robbed necropolis at Gurob; or she could have been taken back to her home city of Akhmim and buried in the ancestral cemetery there. We may never know."
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario