Lintel bearing Senakhtenre's cartouches, from Karnak
Pharaoh
Reign
c.1 year?[1]
Predecessor
Sekhemre-Heruhirmaat Intef
Successor
Seqenenre Tao
Royal titulary
Horus name
Merymaat[2] Mry-M3ˁt Beloved of Maat
Karnak king list: Senakhtenre Snḫt.n-Rˁ Perpetuated like Ra[3]
Prenomen (Praenomen)
Senakhtenre Snḫt.n-Rˁ Perpetuated like Ra
Nomen
Ahmose Jˁḥ-ms Iah bore him
Consort
Tetisheri
Children
Seqenenre Tao, Ahhotep I, Ahmose Inhapi, Sitdjehuty; Kamose (?)
Father
Possibly Nubkheperre Intef
Died
1558 BC (Possibly)
Dynasty
17th Dynasty
Senakhtenre Ahmose, was a king of the Seventeenth Dynasty of Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period.[4] Senakhtenre reigned for a short period over the Theban region in Upper Egypt at a time where the Hyksos 15th Dynasty ruled Lower Egypt. Senakhtenre died c.1560 or 1558 BC at the latest.
^Senakhtenre is now attested by two contemporary objects. In January to February 2012, a 17th dynasty granary doorway and a fragmentary lintel made of limestone found buried at Karnak was discovered by French Egyptologists. They proved to bear hieroglyphic inscriptions which recorded this king's royal titulary. All other references to him are posthumous and date to the New Kingdom period.
^Sébastien Biston-Moulin: Le roi Sénakht-en-Rê Ahmès de la XVIIe dynastie, ENiM 5, 2012, p. 61-71, available online.
^Peter Clayton, Chronicle of the Pharaohs. Thames and Hudson Ltd., 2006. p.94
^Darrell D. Baker: The Encyclopedia of the Pharaohs: Volume I - Predynastic to the Twentieth Dynasty 3300–1069 BC, Stacey International, ISBN 978-1-905299-37-9, 2008, p. 380
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was the daughter of Queen Tetisheri (known as Teti the Small) and SenakhtenreAhmose, and was probably the sister, as well as the queen consort, of Pharaoh...
daughter of Pharaoh SenakhtenreAhmose and Queen Tetisheri. She was the wife of her brother Seqenenre Tao and was the mother of Princess Ahmose. Sitdjehuti was...
Second Intermediate Period. He probably was the son and successor to SenakhtenreAhmose and Queen Tetisheri. The dates of his reign are uncertain, but he...
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lesser wife or concubine. Queen Ahmose, who held the title of Great Royal Wife of Thutmose, was probably the daughter of Ahmose I and the sister of Amenhotep...
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was possibly the son of Seqenenre Tao and Ahhotep I and the brother of Ahmose I, founder of the Eighteenth Dynasty. His reign fell at the very end of...
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The pyramid of Ahmose was built not as a tomb, but a cenotaph for pharaoh Ahmose I at the necropolis of Abydos, Egypt. It was the only royal pyramid built...