The Children of Adam and Eve

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Wikigenealogy

Queen of Egypt Meresankh III

Hetepheres and her daughter Meresankh III.
Name
Queen of Egypt Meresankh III //
Name prefix
Queen of Egypt
Given names
Meresankh III
Family with parents
father
mother
Marriage Marriage
herself
brother
brother
brother
Family with Pharaoh of Egypt (2558-2532 BC) Khafra (Chephren, Khaf-Re, Khauf-Re, Khafre, Khephren or Rachaf)
husband
herself
Marriage Marriage
son
son
son
son
daughter
son
son
son
son
daughter
daughter
Pharaoh of Egypt (2558-2532 BC) Khafra (Chephren, Khaf-Re, Khauf-Re, Khafre, Khephren or Rachaf) + Khamerernebty I
husband
husband’s partner
stepson
stepdaughter
Pharaoh of Egypt (2558-2532 BC) Khafra (Chephren, Khaf-Re, Khauf-Re, Khafre, Khephren or Rachaf) + Queen of Egypt Hekenuhedjet
husband
husband’s partner
stepson
Pharaoh of Egypt (2558-2532 BC) Khafra (Chephren, Khaf-Re, Khauf-Re, Khafre, Khephren or Rachaf) + Queen of Egypt Persenet
husband
husband’s partner
stepson
Note

Meresankh's Parents were brother and sister. She married the pharaoh Khafra of the Fourth dynasty of Egypt and bore him four sons: Nebemakhet, Niuserre, Khenterka and Duaenre as well as a daughter named Shepsetkau.

When she died some time shortly after the reign of Khafra, Meresankh was buried in an extensively decorated mastaba tomb at Giza along with a rock-cut chapel (G7530-5440). Inscriptions on the tomb provide both the time of her death and the datefor her funeral, which followed some 272 days after her death. She apparently died during the first regnal year of an unnamed King, possibly the pharaoh Menkaure.

This tomb was originally planned for her mother Hetepheres II, but she instead donated it for her daughter's use, which suggests that Meresankh's death was sudden and unexpected. Hetepheres also provided her daughter with a black granitesarcophagus decorated with palace facades for Meresankh's burial.

Her tomb was discovered by archeologist George Reisner on April 23, 1927, with subsequent excavations undertaken by his team on behalf of Harvard University and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Her sarcophagus and skeleton are today located in the Cairo Museum; the latter reveals that she was 1.54 metres (5 feet) tall and between 50–55 years at her death. The tomb also contained a set of the earliest known canopic jars. A limeStonestatue depicting Queen Hetepheres embracing her late daughter Meresankh was found in her tomb and is today located in the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

Media object
Hetepheres and her daughter Meresankh III.
Hetepheres and her daughter Meresankh III.