¿Quién se casó con Den?
Nakhtneith se casó con Den .
Betrest se casó con Den .
Serethor se casó con Den .
Seshemetka se casó con Den .
Semat se casó con Den .
Den
Den, o Udimu, fue el quinto faraón de la dinastía I de Egipto de c. 2930-2910 a. C..
Manetón le denomina Usafais, según Sexto Julio Africano y Eusebio de Cesarea y le atribuyen 20 años de reinado. Aunque Kaplony cree que pudo llegar hasta 45 años.
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Nakhtneith
Nakhtneith (fl. c. 3050 BC) was a queen consort of ancient Egypt. She lived during the 1st Dynasty. Her name means "strong is (the goddess) Neith".
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Betrest
Betrest (also read as Batyires, and Batires) was a queen of Ancient Egypt. She lived during the First Dynasty.
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Serethor
Serethor was a woman who lived in ancient Egypt during the First Dynasty.
Serethor was a wife of the pharaoh Den. She is known from a funerary stela in Umm El Qa'ab, which is now in the Musée du Louvre, but no titles have been preserved. She may have been buried in the funerary complex of Den.
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Seshemetka
Seshemetka was an ancient Egyptian queen from the First Dynasty of Egypt, a wife of pharaoh Den and the mother of Anedjib. Her royal titles were Great one of the hetes-sceptre (Weret-hetes, Wr.t-ḥts), She who sees Horus (Remen-Hor(u), Rmn-Ḥr.(w)), She who carries Seth (Renmet-Setesh, Rnm.t-Stš).
Very little is known about Seshemetka besides a stela discovered near Den's tomb in Abydos. Seshemetka was not the only woman identified from funerary stela. Stelae of royal women named Semat and Serethor were similarly discovered in Abydos. These women may be further wives of king Den, but nothing beyond their names is known about them.
Wolfram Grajetzki (referencing Petrie, Troy, and Roth) lists Seshemetka as a wife of King Djer and states that she was buried near Djer's funerary complex in Umm el-Qa'ab, Abydos.
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Semat
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.
Very little is known about Semat besides a stela discovered near Den's tomb in Abydos. She held the titles of
Both of these titles were associated with queens in ancient Egypt. 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.
The stela was in the Egyptian Museum of Berlin, but was destroyed during World War 2.
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