Lady Shep-en-hor c. 600 BC was an Egyptian woman whose coffin, and possibly mummy, was originally found in Thebes but now resides in the Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery in Glasgow.
[1][2][3] Her remains and coffin were first known to have been in the ownership of Giovanni Belzoni and been the collection of the museum since 1820 when they were donated by Joshua Heywood.
[3][4] According to the coffin, Shep-en-hor was the daughter of In-Amun-nif-nebu (father) and Irt-irw (mother).
[3] The text on the coffin mostly consists of prayers although it mentions Shep-en-hor's name as well as those of her mother and father.
[2][4] Pelvic dimensions resulted in the radiographers involved in the X-ray concluding that the mummy was that of a woman 1.47 m tall under the age of 40.