Burials in the Valley of the Kings
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The following is a list of who is buried where in the Valley of the Kings and nearby areas.
(Missing entries indicate that the intended occupant of the tomb is unknown, or that the tomb is incomplete and was never used as a burial place.)
ValleeDesRois.JPG
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Original Burials
East Valley
- KV1 – Ramesses VII
- KV2 – Ramesses IV
- KV3 – Son of Ramesses III
- KV4 – Ramesses XI
- KV5 – Sons of Ramesses II
- KV6 – Ramesses IX
- KV7 – Ramesses II
- KV8 – Merenptah
- KV9 – Ramesses V/Ramesses VI
- KV10 – Amenmesse
- KV11 – Ramesses III
- KV13 – Bay
- KV14 – Twosret/Sethnakhte
- KV15 – Seti II
- KV16 – Ramesses I
- KV17 – Seti I
- KV18 – Ramesses X
- KV19 – Mentuherkhepshef
- KV20 – Hatshepsut/Thutmose I
- KV34 – Thutmose III
- KV35 – Amenhotep II (later served as a mummy cache – see below)
- KV36 – Maiherpri
- KV38 – Thutmose I
- KV39 – Amenhotep I ?
- KV42 – Hatshepsut-Meryetre
- KV43 – Thutmose IV
- KV45 – Userhet
- KV46 – Yuya and Tjuyu (parents of Tiy)
- KV47 – Siptah
- KV48 – Amenemopet
- KV50 – animals, possibly pets of Amenhotep II
- KV51 – animals
- KV52 – animals
- KV54 – Tutankhamun embalming cache
- KV55 – Tiy and Smenkhkare/Akhenaten cache
- KV57 – Horemheb
- KV60 – Sitre In
- KV62 – Tutankhamun
- KVB-KVT – pits, some of which may have been intended as tombs, others were probably furerary deposits.
West Valley
Deir el-Bahri
- DB320 – Served as a mummy cache. See below.
Mummy Caches
As the New Kingdom began to collapse, during the Rameseid period, tomb robbery became rife. There is some evidence to suggest that even the clergy were involved. Far from being pious, they decided to reopen the tombs of their god-kings to reuse the vast treasures that were buried with them, where they were of no use.
However, they were not entirely without scruples, for as the tombs were emptied, the occupants were moved to select "safe places", of which there are two notable examples.
KV35
This was originally the tomb of Amenhotep II. The following were discovered in the tomb:
- Amenhotep II
- Amenhotep III
- Hatshepsut-Meryetre
- Merenptah
- Ramesses III
- Ramesses IV
- Ramesses V
- Ramesses VI
- Seti II
- Sethnakhte
- Siptah
- Tiy ?
- Thutmose IV
- Webensenu
- plus two other unknown individuals
DB320
This astounding cache, located in the cliffs overlooking Hatshepsut's famous temple at Deir el-Bahri, was found to contain many of Egypt's most famous Pharaohs. They were found in a great state of disorder, many placed in other people's coffins, and several are still unidentified.
- Ahhotpe I
- Ahmose-Hentempet
- Ahmose-Henttimehu
- Ahmose-Inhapi
- Ahmose-Meryetaum
- Ahmose-Nofretiri
- Ahmose-Sipair
- Ahmose-Sitkamose
- Amenhotep I
- Amosis
- Bakt
- Djedptah-iufankh
- Duathathor-Henttawy
- Hatshepsut
- Isiemkheb
- Maatkare-Mutemhet
- Masaharta
- Merymose
- Nebseni
- Neskhons
- Nestanebt-ishru
- Nodjmet
- Paheripedjet
- Pediamun
- Pinudjem I
- Pinudjem II
- Rai
- Ramesses I
- Ramesses II
- Ramesses III
- Ramesses IX
- Seniu
- Seqenenre-Taa II
- Seti I
- Siamun
- Siese
- Sitamun
- Sutymose
- Tayuheret
- Tetisheri
- Thutmose I
- Thutmose II
- Thutmose III
- Wepmose
- Wepwawet-mose
- plus 8 other unidentified mummies.
Further reading
- John Romer, Valley of the Kings (Henry Holt, 1981)
- C. N. Reeves, Valley of the Kings: The Decline of a Royal Necropolis (Keegan Paul, 1990)
- Nicholas Reeves and Richard H. Wilkinson, The Complete Vallery of the Kings (1996, Thames and Hudson)
- Kent R. Weeks, Araldo De Luca (photographs),Valley of the Kings (Friedman/Fairfax, 2001)
External links
- Theban Mapping Project (http://www.thebanmappingproject.com/) - Includes detailed maps of most of the tombs.fr:Tombeaux de vallée des Rois