Amenhotep III

Amenhotep III
in hieroglyphs
praenomen or throne name
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<hiero>ra:nb-mAat</hiero>
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nomen or birth name
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<hiero>i-mn:n-R4-HqA-R19</hiero>
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Amenhotep III (called Nibmu(`w)areya in the Amarna letters) was an Egyptian pharaoh of the XVIIIth dynasty. According to different authors he ruled ca. 1413-1377 BC, 1405-1367 BC, or 1386-1349 BC, following on from his father Thutmose IV. With his Chief Queen Tiy, he fathered Akhenaten, who succeeded him on the throne.

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Amenhotep III, Ägyptisches Museum, Berlin
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The northern Colossus of Memnon

Amenhotep appears to have been crowned while still a child, perhaps between the ages of 6 and 12. His lengthy reign was a period of peace and prosperity and of artistic splendour. He built extensively at the temple of Karnak, including at least two pylons, a colonnade behind the new entrance, and a new temple to the goddess Ma'at. He also oversaw construction of another temple to her at Luxor.

His mortuary temple on the west bank of the Nile was, in its day, the largest religious complex in Thebes but, unfortunately, he chose to build too close to the floodplain and less than 200 years later, it stood in ruins. Much of the masonry was purloined by later pharaohs for their own construction projects. The Colossi of Memnon — two massive 18-metre stone statues of Amenhotep that stood at the gateway of his mortuary temple — are the only elements of the complex that remained standing.

Amenhotep's names are shown in Egyptian hieroglyphs to the right. The etymology of the name Amenhotep can be interpreted as "Amun is pleased". His nomen is transliterated as ỉmn-ḥtp ḥḳ3-w3st, which is usually realised as Amenhotep Hekawaset. His epithet, Hekawaset, means "ruler of Thebes". In Greek, Amenhotep was called Amenophis. Upon his accession to the throne, Anenhotep took the praenomen Nebmaatre. This is transliterated as nb-m3‘t-r‘, and is the name written Nibmu(`w)areya in the Amarna letters.

He was buried in the Western Valley of the Valley of the Kings, in WV22


Preceded by:
Thutmose IV
Pharaoh of Egypt
Eighteenth Dynasty
Succeeded by:
Akhenaten


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Topics about Ancient Egypt edit Missing image
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Ankh

Places: Nile river | Thebes | Alexandria | Heliopolis | Luxor | Abydos | Giza | Memphis | Tanis | Rosetta | Amarna | Fayyum | Elephantine | Saqqara | Dashur
Gods: Osiris | Isis | Ra | Horus | Anubis | Seth | Thoth | Maàt | Amun | Hathor | Hapy | Ptah | Bast | Sobek| Mut | Nuit | Chnum | Taweret | Bes | Min | Seker
Rulers: Narmer | Menes | Djoser | Khufu | Mentuhotep II | Hatshepsut | Thutmose III | Akhnaten | Tutankhamun | Rameses II | Ptolemy I | Cleopatra
Consorts: Tetisheri | Ahmose | Tiy | Nefertiti | Ankhesenpaaten | Nefertari | Mark Anthony
Court officials: Imhotep | Weni | Ahmose, son of Ebana | Ineni | Senemut | Maya | Yuny | Manetho | Pothinus
Death: Mummy | Canopic jars | Ankh | Book of the Dead | KV | Mortuary temple | Ushabti
Buildings: Pyramids | Karnak Temple | Sphinx | Great Lighthouse | Great Library | Deir el-Bahri | Colossi of Memnon | Ramesseum | Abu Simbel
Writing: Egyptian hieroglyphs | Egyptian numerals | Transliteration of ancient Egyptian | Demotic | Hieratic
Egyptologists: Zahi Hawass | Howard Carter | Alan Gardiner | Bob Brier | Kent R. Weeks | Mark Collier

See also: Amenhotep III, Abu Simbel, Abydos, Egypt, Ahmose, son of Ebana