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Menkheperre
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Menkheperre, son of by wife Duathathor-Henuttawy (daughter of by wife Tentamon), was the High Priest of Amun at Thebes in from 1045 BC to 992 BC and de facto ruler of the south of the country., p.207


Biography
Menkheperre's eldest full brother followed their father as High Priest. He was followed by another brother, , after whose death, in the 25th year of , Menkheperre became High Priest.K.A. Kitchen, The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt TIPE (1100–650 BC) 3rd ed., Warminster: Aris & Phillips Ltd, Ş384 With his elder half-brother ruling at Tanis as Pharaoh , Menkheperre's power, like that of Masaharta, must have been somewhat curtailed. Menkheperre took as his throne name the title of "First prophet of Amun", just as his great-grandfather had, perhaps an indication of this diminished role, though he kept the unlike his successors in the temple., p.207

Menkheperre married his niece Isetemkheb, daughter of his brother Psusennes I and wife Wiay. Their children were:Dodson & Hilton, op.cit., pp.200-201

  • , also called Nesbanebdjed II, who followed him as High Priest.
  • , wife of Smendes II, Chantress of Amun. She is mentioned on the 10th pylon of the . She was buried in the tomb MMA60, her coffins are now in Boston and New York. She had a daughter called Isetemkheb.
  • , High Priest after his brother's death. He married his sister Isetemkheb and became the father of Pharaoh .
  • , wife of Pinedjem II.
  • Hori, priest of Amun and Seth. His mummy and coffins were found at (Deir el-Bahari) and are now in Cairo.
  • Meritamen, Chantress of Amun. She was buried at under the pontificate of Psusennes II. Her coffins are in Cairo.
  • , Chantress of Montu. She was buried at , her coffins and papyrus are now in Cairo. She was married to , Third Prophet of Amun. Their sons, Pinedjem and Menkheperre became Third and Fourth Prophet of Amun, respectively.
  • Psusennes, priest of Min, and at , known from a stela at the .
    (1997). 9780714109886, British Museum Press.


See also
  • , a stela issued by Menkheperre during his early pontificate and containing an amnesty decree for some rebels.


Further reading
  • Philippe Collombert, Quand Menkheperre s'addresse à Amon (Stèle du Bannissement, L.12), in: RdÉ 48 (1997), 257–259.
  • Gabrielle Dembitz, The Oracular Inscription of the High Priest of Amun Menkheperre in the Khonsu Temple at Karnak, in: A. Hudecz – M. Petrik (eds): Commerce and Economy in Ancient Egypt. Proceedings of The Third International Congress for Young Egyptologists; 25–27 September 2009, 2010
  • Cathie Spieser, La titulature du grand-prêtre d'Amon Menkheperré de la statuette N43 du Musée de Durham, in: CdÉ 77 (2002), 47-54
  • Cahail, K.M & Damarani, A. (2016), "The Sarcophagus of the High Priest of Amun, Menkheperre, from the Coptic monastery of Apa Moses at Abydos". Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts Abteilung Kairo (MDAIK) 72, pp. 11–30.

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