KV32
Tomb KV32, located in the Valley of the Kings in Egypt, is the burial site of Tia'a, the wife of Amenhotep II and mother of Thutmose IV.
| KV32 | |
|---|---|
| Burial site of Tia'a | |
|   KV32 | |
| Coordinates | 25°44′18.1″N 32°36′01.8″E | 
| Location | East Valley of the Kings | 
| Discovered | 1898 | 
| Excavated by | Victor Loret | 
The tomb was discovered in 1898 by Victor Loret. It is an undecorated tomb and runs back some 40 metres into the mountainside with a burial chamber (6.24 x 8.56 x 4.01 m) at the end.[1] A portion of it was penetrated by workmen digging the original burial chamber in the tomb of Siptah KV47.
KV32 has been fully cleared, excavated and published by a team from the University of Basel's MISR Project. The finds in the tomb include hundreds of fragments of a canopic chest and fragments of lids with a human head for covering the potholes that contained the entrails of the queen. Other finds include shabtis and shabti miniature coffins with name of the queen.[2] Vases with the name of the mayor of Thebes, Sennefer and those of his wife Sentnay were found too.[3]
References
    
- Jenni, Dorn, Paulin-Grothe, Aston: Das Grab der Königin Tiaa im Tal der Könige (KV 32), p. 16.
- Jenni, Dorn, Paulin-Grothe, Aston: Das Grab der Königin Tiaa im Tal der Könige (KV 32), pp. 33–43
- Jenni, Dorn, Paulin-Grothe, Aston: Das Grab der Königin Tiaa im Tal der Könige (KV 32), pp. 67–68
Bibliography
    
- Hanna Jenni, and Andreas Dorn, and Elina Paulin-Grothe, and David Aston: Das Grab der Königin Tiaa im Tal der Könige (KV 32). Swiss Egyptological Studies, SES, 1. Basel 2021. (online: https://edoc.unibas.ch/81215/)
External links
    
|  | Wikimedia Commons has media related to KV32. | 
- Theban Mapping Project: KV32 - Includes detailed maps of most of the tombs.
