

154: Daḫamunzu (tA-Ḥmt-nswt)
Dec 14, 2021
47:27
He said, she said. Around 1334 BCE (give or take), the King of Hatti received a curious message. While on campaign, King Suppiluliuma got word that Egypt's pharaoh (someone called "Nib-ḫuru-riya") had died. He had no son, and Egypt's ruling lady (daḫamunzu, or tA-ḥmt-nsw, the "King's Great Wife") needed assistance. The Queen sent a message: would Suppiluliuma help her, and Egypt? Strange events were about to unfold...
- Date: c. 1334 BCE (debated).
- King: Neb-kheperu-Ra Tut-ankh-Amun (debated) deceased
- King: Suppiluliuma, Great King of the Land of Hatti
- Website: www.egyptianhistorypodcast.com.
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- Music: Keith Zizza https://www.keithzizza.net/
- Music: Michael Levy http://www.ancientlyre.com/
- Sound interludes: Luke Chaos https://twitter.com/Luke_Chaos
Select Bibliography:
- T. Bryce, The Kingdom of the Hittites (New Edition edn, New York, 2005).
- T. Bryce, The Routledge Handbook of the Peoples and Places of Ancient Western Asia: The Near East from the Early Bronze Age to the Fall of the Persian Empire (London, 2009).
- T. R. Bryce, ‘The Death of Niphururiya and Its Aftermath’, The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 76 (1990), 97–105.
- T. R. Bryce, Ancient Syria: A Three Thousand Year History (Oxford, 2014).
- A. Dodson, Amarna Sunset: Nefertiti, Tutankhamun, Ay, Horemheb, and the Egyptian Counter-Reformation (2nd edn, Cairo, 2017).
- M. Gabolde, D’Akhenaton à Toutânkhamon (Paris, 1998).
- M. Gabolde, Toutankhamon (Paris, 2015).
- H. Güterbock, ‘The Deeds of Suppiluliuma as Told by His Son, Mursili II’, Journal of Cuneiform Studies 10 (1956), 41–68, 75–98, 107–30.
- H. A. Hoffner Jr., ‘Deeds of Šuppiluliuma (1.74)’, in W. W. Hallo and K. L. Younger (eds.), The Context of Scripture (Leiden, 2003), 185—192.
- N. Kawai, ‘Studies in the Reign of Tutankhamun’, Unpublished PhD. Thesis, Johns Hopkins University (2005).
- J. L. Miller, ‘Amarna Age Chronology and the Identity of Nibxururiya in the Light of a Newly Reconstructed Hittite Text’, Altorientalische Forschungen 34 (2007), 252–93.
- M. Sadowska, ‘Semenkhkare and Zananza’, Göttinger Miszellen 175 (2000), 73—77.
- O. Schaden, ‘The God’s Father Ay’, PhD Thesis, University of Minnesota (1977).
- M. Van de Mieroop, A History of the Ancient Near East ca. 3000-323 BC (West Sussex, 2016).
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