Semat | |
---|---|
Queen consort of Egypt | |
Tenure | c. 2950 BC |
Died | c. 2950 BC |
Burial |
Semat in hieroglyphs | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Semat Sm3.t The Companion[1] |
Semat (fl. c. 2950 BC) was an Ancient Egyptian Queen, who was a wife of the King Den. She was buried near him in Abydos.[citation needed]
Very little is known about Semat besides a stela discovered near Den's tomb in Abydos[citation needed]. She held the titles of
|
| |||||
M33.t-Ḥr.(w) Maat-Hor "She who sees Horus" |
Rnm.t-Stš
Renmet-Setesh "She who carries Seth" |
Both of these titles were associated with queens in ancient Egypt.[2] Semat was not the only woman identified from funerary stela. Other women whose funerary stela were found near Den's tomb are Seshemetka and Serethor.[3]
The stela was in the Egyptian Museum of Berlin, but was destroyed during World War 2.[4]