Tuya (queen)

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Tuya
Queen consort of Egypt
Great Royal Wife
QueenTuya-ROM-small.jpg
King's Mother Tuya
Born Thebes?
Died ca. 1257 BC
Thebes
Burial QV80, Valley of the Queens, Thebes
Spouse Pharaoh Seti I
Issue Tia
Ramesses II
Henutmire (possibly)
Full name
Tuya or Mut-Tuya
Egyptian name
t w i A B7
Dynasty 19th of Egypt
Father Raia
Mother [R]uia
Religion Ancient Egyptian religion

Tuya (also called Tuy or Mut-Tuya[1]) was the wife of Pharaoh Seti I of Egypt and mother of Tia, Ramesses II and perhaps Henutmire. She was the daughter of Raia who was a military officer based on his title of Lieutenant of the chariotry.[2] Tuya's daughter, Princess Tia, was married to a high ranking civil servant who was also called Tia.[2]

As the mother of Ramesses II, she enjoyed a privileged existence of a respected king's mother and was allowed the opportunity to correspond with the Hittite royal court after the Year 21 peace treaty between Egypt and Hatti put in place by Ramesses II.

Monuments and Inscriptions

Canopic jar lid of Queen Tuya from the Luxor Museum
Statue of Tuya from the Vatican.
  • Statue, Vatican Museum no. 28 with figure of Henutmire.[3] The inscription identifies Queen Tuya as: Mother of the King of South and North Egypt, Queen Mother of the King of South and North Egypt (even of) the Horus-Falcon, Strong Bull, Lord of Both Lands, Usermaatre Setepenre, Lord of Crowns, Ramesses II, given life like Re; The God's Wife and Great Royal Wife, Lady of Both Lands, Tuya, may she live.[4]
  • At the Ramesseum, fragments of North Side-Chapel of Queen Mother Tuya were found. Ramesses II had this chapel dedicated to his mother. A scene in this chapel records the name of Tuya's father and mother.[4]
  • The Ramesseum contains scenes of the Divine Birth of the Pharaoh.[4]
  • A Statue and base block, found in Tanis but originally from Piramesse. Her titles are given as Hereditary Princess, Chief of the Harem, greatly favoured, God's Wife and Queen Mother, Great Royal Wife, etc.[4]
  • In Abydos Tuya's name appears on fragments of a limestone statue and in texts in Ramesses II's temple.[4]
  • In the Ramesseum Tuya's name appears on fragments of a colossus and in scenes on the main (central) doorway into the great hypostyle hall.[4]
  • A statue inscribed with the name and titles of Tuya was found at Medinet Habu, but likely originated from the Ramesseum.[4]
  • Queen Tuya appears on two of the collosi flanking the entrance to the temple at Abu Simbel.[4]
  • A sandstone lintel from Deir el-Medina records the names of Ramesses II and Tuya.[4]
  • A jamb now in Vienna (Inv. 5091) shows Ramesses II followed by Tuya, making an offering to Osiris.[4]
  • A carved alabaster canopic jar stopper in the form of her head, today resides in the collection of the Luxor Museum.[5]

Death and Burial

Tuya likely died soon after Year 22 of Ramesses' reign and was buried in an impressive tomb in the Valley of the Queens (QV80).[3] In her tomb, Tuya "was stripped of the first part of her name to become plain Tuya for eternity; the loss of the prefix Mut- suggests that her death had ended in an almost divine earthly status."[3]

In popular culture

Queen Tuya has been first portrayed by actress Irene Martin in Cecil B. DeMille's The Ten Commandments, as one of Bithiah's maidservants famous for quoting "Bithiah could charm tears from a crocodile".

She also appears in The Prince of Egypt as the adoptive mother of Moses, voiced by Helen Mirren. She is portrayed by Sigourney Weaver in the 2014 Ridley Scott film Exodus: Gods and Kings; In 2015, the Brazilian novel, Os Dez Mandamentos , the Queen Tuya is played by actress Angelina Muniz.

References

  1. Joyce Tyldesley, Ramesses: Egypt's Greatest Pharaohs, Penguin Books, 2000. p.116
  2. 2.0 2.1 Tyldesley, p.116
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Tyldesley, p.122
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 4.9 Kitchen, K.A., Rammeside Inscriptions, Translated & Annotated, Translations, Volume II, Blackwell Publishers, 1996
  5. C. Desroche Noblecourt, "Abou Simbel, Ramses, et les dames de la couronne" in E. Bleiberg & R. Freed (eds) Fragments of a Shattered Visage: the Proceedings of the International Symposium of Ramesses the Great, 1991. Memphis: p.129
  • Grajetzki, Wolfram (2005) Ancient Egyptian Queens – a hieroglyphic dictionary