Nesitanebetashru
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| Nesitanebetashru[1] in hieroglyphs | |||||||||||
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| Era: 3rd Intermediate Period (1069–664 BC) | |||||||||||
Nesitanebetashru (n.sj-tꜣ-nb.t-jšrw) was the name of two ancient Egyptian women. The name means "belonging to the lady of the ashru"; the ashru or isheru was a crescent-shaped sacred lake around the temples of solar goddesses, here it refers to Mut.
Nesitanebetashru of the 21st dynasty was a daughter of Pinedjem II, High Priest of Amun, and Neskhons. She is mentioned in the funerary text of her mother, written on a wooden tablet. Her mummy, coffins and ushabtis were found in the tomb TT320 and are now in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.[2]
Her funeral text, known as the Greenfield papyrus, is one of the longest on record. It is held in the collections of the British Museum.[3]