The coffin of Our Lady “Hanutawi”
The coffin of Our Lady “Hanutawi” 1----376
She holds many titles such as chanter of Amun, mistress of the house, head of the harem of Amun, flute player of Mut, and mother of the god Khonsu.
Henut Tawi ("Lady of the Two Lands") was an ancient Egyptian princess of the Nineteenth Dynasty.
Henuttawi was the daughter of Pharaoh Ramesses II and his great royal wife, Nefertari, and a half-sister of Merneptah.
She is the seventh in the list of Ramesses II's daughters and the second of two daughters whose mother is certain to have been Nefertari.
Her statue stands in the small temple of Abu Simbel, built for Nefertari. Nefertari's children have been identified on the grounds of this temple: Princes Amunherkhepshef, Pareuenemef, Meriri and Meritatum and Princesses Meritamun and Henuttawi. However, it is not located on the facade of the Great Temple of Abu Simbel, where the first two sons and his six eldest daughters are located, along with Nefertari and Queen Tuya.
The coffin of Our Lady “Hanutawi” 1----377
Her tomb is in the Valley of the Queens, Cemetery 73 not far from the tombs of other members of the Ramesses family (QV68-QV71); It is located between the tombs of her older half-sister, Bint Anta, and the Twentieth Dynasty queen Duat Ntopet (qv74). QV73 remains closed to visitors due to several structural defects and concerns related to the open joints and the tilt of the bed surface. The tomb was probably carved for a general princess and after the death of Hanut Tawi was modified specifically for her.
. In some areas of the tomb the cartouches are empty, but in the main burial chamber faint traces of her name are recorded. The tomb consists of a two-column burial chamber and two side chambers. The decorations are similar to those found in Nefertari's tomb.


Source: electronic website