05/09/2026
The face of Queen Tiye survived long enough for the modern world to still recognize her more than three thousand years after her death. Queen Tiye lived during the height of Egypt’s 18th Dynasty in the 14th century BC and became one of the most influential royal women of the ancient world.
She was the wife of Pharaoh Amenhotep III, mother of Akhenaten, and grandmother of Tutankhamun.
Unlike many queens whose roles remained largely ceremonial, Tiye appears repeatedly in inscriptions, diplomatic correspondence, and royal monuments as an active political figure deeply involved in the affairs of the kingdom.
Foreign rulers wrote directly to her.
Her influence inside the royal court became so significant that she continued holding authority even after the death of her husband.
But one of the most astonishing parts of her legacy is the extraordinary condition of her mummy.
When archaeologists and researchers examined the remains identified as Queen Tiye, they discovered a face still preserving recognizable features after more than 3,300 years.
Her hair survived in remarkable condition, and the shape of her face, cheeks, mouth, and eyes remained disturbingly human.
The preservation reflected the extraordinary sophistication of Egyptian embalming methods developed during the New Kingdom.
Ancient embalmers carefully dried the body with natron salts, treated tissues with oils and resins, and wrapped the remains in protective linen layers designed to preserve the individual for eternity.
Today, Queen Tiye’s mummy remains one of the most striking examples of how ancient Egyptian funerary practices could preserve not only a body, but the visible identity of a person who lived over thirty centuries ago.