Ahmose-Nefertari, the wife of King Ahmose I, the editor of Egypt, the Hikkus and Asians, and the founder of the Eighteenth Dynasty, was the greatest ruler in Egypt. Ruling of 1550 BC. Until 1525 BC. His wife Ahmus Nefertari played a prominent role in the battle that ended with the expulsion of invaders from Egypt and was the first woman in history to take up the post of commanding a full military squad and fought with great efficiency

Nefertari's mother, Ahatep, was the wife of King Sakhnin Ra Ta'a, the second of the seventeenth Dynasty kings, and some inscriptions were found indicating that Ahtep Hetp was involved in the reign of the Liberation Tigers of Hetksus.

Ahmose and Nefertari are thought to be not of one father, with Ahmose and the same color as the Egyptians, while Nefertari appears in black.

Nefertari gave birth to seven children, three of them children, two of whom died, and four daughters, three of whom died. The surviving children were Amenhotep the First and Ahat Hottep the second, and she married her brother Amenhotep the First.

It was known that she was still alive during the first year of the reign of Thutmose I; thus, it seems that she was still alive after her son Amenhotep the first.
Her life

The name Ahmos Nefertari was found in Sinai and Sai Island and was famous, and was the first queen to receive the status of the divine wife of Amun.

Nefertari lived under the rule of her husband, son Amenhotep the First and her grandson Tuthmosis the First, and there is a statue in Karnak Temple.
Her tomb

In 1914, the tomb of Ahmus Nefertari was discovered at the top of the Valley of the Kings at the northern edge of Daraa Abu Naga

Tags: Biographyqueens
Skip to main content