Imenmes

Stele with the hymn of Imenmes, Louvre

Imenmes (fl. c. 1300 BC[1]) was an Ancient Egyptian governor, who was an Amun chief, probably around the time of the late Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt. Little is known about him, but several items in the Louvre are related to him, including the Hymn of Imenmes on a stele and a gamebox, known as a senet, which belonged to one of his children.[2] The stele contains a hymn of 28 lines related to the worship of Osiris. In the upper curve of the stele, a double offering scene depicts Imenmes, his wife and one of his sons, and below this, framed in boxes, are the couple’s six other children kneeling.[3]

References

  1. "Game box in the name of Imenmes". Louvre.fr. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
  2. Ziegler, Christiane (2008). Queens of Egypt: From Hetepheres to Cleopatra. Grimaldi Forum. p. 295. ISBN 978-2-7572-0190-9.
  3. "Hymn of Imenmes, chief of Amun's flocks". Mini-site.louvre.fr. Retrieved 6 August 2014.
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