TT39

Puyemré's parents were Puia and Nerferioh and he had two wives named Tanefert and Senseneb, he was the second prophet of Amūn.

In his earlier career Puyemré as second priest of Amon had been responsible for Queen Hatshepsut for the construction of the outworks of her temple.

The south chapel has sons and daughters with new year gifts before deceased and wife Sensonb on the left and Tanefer on the right wall.

In the north chapel there are funeral scenes on each side of the doorway as well as offering lists to Nefertem before being deceased.

The façade was not only the form of decoration that TT39 courtyard had but also has false doors at slight intervals and rounded tablets but also its execution the backward lean and the incised inscription in monochrome.

[3] The proposed shelter was taken into consideration the quality of the rock at the level that it was being 4.5 meters above the floor of the false doors could not be cut into.

So there was an alternative way or reconstruction including flat stones twelve to fifteen centimeters thick to provide support.

This shows that Puyemré did not follow the old custom of assigning names and offices to all but the very humblest servitors (Davies, N. de Garis 38).

The other scene where Senseneb is deceased where she is standing inspecting three rows bringing geese, ducks, and cranes, netting fowl herdsmen bringing cattle and brining netting fish, the third where there's vintage with sealing wine-jars, pressing and treading grape, and papyrus-harvest.

Plate LXIV: Presentation of animals as an element of the offering procession in the chapel of Hatshepsut Plate LXII South chapel plan and drawing of the niche in the back wall: The dead man and his wives at meat

Relief from TT39 depicting the fish gutting
"Four Foreign Chieftains" from TT39 (Metropolitan Museum of Art, MET DT10871). The second from the right is a Keftiu .