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23
17 For the theory that Smenkhkare was Nefertiti see, for instance, Samson,
Nefertiti and Cleopatra: Queen-Monarcbs of Ancient Egypt, pp. 86—9, 95—7, and
Reeves, Akhenaten: Egypt's False Prophet, 2001, pp. 170—3, after the work of
John R Harris in 1973. For strong arguments against this conclusion, see Allen,
«Nefertiti and Smenkh-ka-re», GM 141 (1994), pp. 7—17.
24
18 Harris, «Akhenaten and Nefernefruaten in the Tomb of Tut» ankhamun», in
Reeves, After Tut» ankhamun: Research and excavation in the Royal Necropolis at
Thebes, 1992, pp. 55–62.
25
19 Eaton-Krauss, «The Sarcophagus in the Tomb of Tut» ankhamun», in Reeves,
1992, pp. 85–90.
26
20 Welsh, Tutankhamun's Egypt, p. 8.
27
21 For a more recent case for the body from KV 55 being that of Smenkhkare see
Rose, «Who's in Tomb 55», Archaeology 55:2 (March/April 2002), pp. 22–27; Filer,
«Anatomy of a Mummy», Archaeology 55:2, (March/April 2002), pp. 26–29.
28
22 See, for example, Reeves, 2001, pp. 81–84, 173—4.
29
23 Fairman, «Once again the so-called coffin of Akhenaten», JEA 47 (I960), pp.
25–40.
30
24 Harrison, pp. 115—16.
31
25 Davis, Excavations: Biban el Moluk: Tbe Tombs of Har-mhabi and
Touatankhamanou, 1912, p. 2.
32
26 Ibid., pp. 3, 125.
33
27 Ibid., p. 127.
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