Mutnedjmet

Mutnedjmet's titles include: Hereditary Princess (jryt-pʿt), Great King’s Wife (ḥmt-nswt-wrt), Great of Praises (wrt-ḥswt), Lady of Charm (nbt-jmʒt), Sweet of Love (bnrt-mrwt), Mistress of Upper and Lower Egypt (ḥnwt-šmʿw -mḥw), Songstress of Hathor (ḥsyt-nt-ḥwt-ḥrw), and Songstress of Amun (smʿyt-nt-jmnw).

[3] Some Egyptologists have speculated that Mutnedjmet is identical to Nefertiti's sister Mutbenret/Mutnodjmet, the reading of whose name is disputed.

[4] As noted by Ian Mladjov, there is ambiguity in use of the "nedjem" (nḏm) and "bener" (bnr) signs in the name of Queen Tanodjmy, which is certainly to be read this way, with a phonetic complement confirming this reading, "nedjem," for what is otherwise the "bener" sign.

[6] As Geoffrey Martin writes, On the other hand, many Egyptologists like Aidan Dodson consider Nefertiti to have become the female king (i.e., queen regnant) Neferneferuaten,[7] in which case, if Horemheb's wife Mutnedjemet was Nefertiti's sister, she would have linked her husband more closely with a former monarch.

Mutnedjmet is known from several objects and inscriptions: Mutnedjmet died soon after Year 13 of her husband's rule in her mid-40s based on a wine-jar docket found in a burial chamber of Horemheb tomb at Saqqara, in Memphis and a statue and other items of hers found here.

Scarab attributed of Mutnodjmet prior to becoming queen. Brooklyn Museum , acc. no. 37.715E [ 1 ]
Sides of the double statue of pharaoh Horemheb and queen Mutnedjemet, from Karnak, Museo Egizio, Turin.