Ankhkherednefer's official titles in hieroglyphs | |||||||||||
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Rwḏw-ˁ3-n-ˁḥ Great Inspector of the Palace | |||||||||||
Sḫ3-nfr-n-pr-Tm-nb-ˁjn Good scribe of the Temple of Atum, Lord of Tura[note 1] | |||||||||||
Ḥrj-jdnw-n-pr-ˁ3 Supreme Lieutenant of the Pharaoh | |||||||||||
Block statue of Ankhkherednefer |
Ankhkherednefer (Ancient Egyptian: ˁnḫ ẖrd nfr, lit. ''The beautiful child lives'')[1] (name formerly read as Ankhrenepnefer, or Ankhsherynefer) was an ancient Egyptian official known from a block statue found in the Tell el-Maskhuta (perhaps ancient Pithom). The statue, made of red granite is now in the British Museum (BM 1007).
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Ankhkherednefer in hieroglyphs | ||||
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Era: New Kingdom (1550–1069 BC) | ||||
Ankhkherednefer served under king Osorkon II whose name appears on the statue. On the statue he bears the titles: Great Inspector of the Palace; Good scribe of the Temple of Atum, Lord of Tura[note 1] and Supreme Lieutenant of the Pharaoh.