Previously (for about 100 years) the tomb was accessible and for most of this time the target of numerous investigations and intrusions, although early on already heavily destroyed.
In the first half of the nineteenth century, John Gardner Wilkinson, Robert Hay and J.
Only few remains of the decoration survived, such as an offering list[7] and a banquet scene, where Senenmut is once shown with his mother and once with his father.
[8] A special feature only known from this tomb are several rock cut stelae providing the name and titles of Senenmut.
In some cases it can be assumed that they even had an undecorated burial chamber in the Valley of the Kings, while a decorated chapel closer to the fertile land.