Abstract
Introduction
The Amarna Royal Tomb has been the focus of Egyptological research since the 1890s. Facsimiles of wall decorations and objects from the tomb were comprehensively published in two volumes by G. T. Martin, 1 whose publication also includes a catalogue of relief fragments from the Royal Tomb, which are now in various museums. 2
Nevertheless, one relief fragment from the Amarna Royal Tomb remained unknown. It belongs to the Egyptian collection of the Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology of the University of São Paulo, Brazil.
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This paper introduces the previously unrecognised object and attempts to retrace its original location within the Royal Tomb’s decorative scheme. Based on decoration and an assessment of the object’s biography, it is suggested that the São Paulo fragment of the Amarna Royal Tomb originally comes from wall B in room
The object
Object 68/2.1 in the Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology’s collection is a gypsum plaster relief fragment measuring 15 cm in height by 14 cm in width. The

Left: object inv. 68/2.1, Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, University of São Paulo (photo: Ader Gotardo, courtesy of the Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, University of São Paulo). Right: drawing of object inv. 68/2.1 by R. Lemos.
According to museum records, Walter Wreszinski (1880–1935) originally collected the object ‘in the burial chamber of Princess Meketaten’ at the Amarna Royal Tomb at the end of the nineteenth century. In fact, it is known that artefacts attributed to the Amarna Royal Tomb appeared on the antiquities market before the first official expeditions to the site in the 1890s. 5 It is unclear, however, how the relief fragment ended up in Brazil in the possession of antiquities collector Franz Hermann Edgar Tapajós Hipp. Tapajós Hipp later sold part of his collection, including the Amarna fragment, to the Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology in 1968. 6
According to museum records, the fragment depicts an Amarna princess, namely Meketaten, an interpretation also followed by local scholars.
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However, this is not the case, as a comparison with other fragments from the Royal Tomb clearly reveals that the woman depicted on the São Paulo fragment is one of the attendants to the royal ceremony represented several times in the Royal Tomb. The type of hairstyle depicted consistently matches the hairstyles of female mourning attendants on wall reliefs in rooms
Discussion
The São Paulo fragment is similar to several gypsum plaster fragments from rooms
A comparison of a set of photographs produced in 1935 11 with the first drawings of the Royal Tomb’s decoration in the 1890s by Bouriant and his colleagues 12 allowed Martin to reconstruct certain scenes and identify the original location of some fragments. 13 Certain fragments now belong to museum collections, though the whereabouts of other pieces remains unknown. 14
The São Paulo fragment is an addition to the Martin corpus, although it seems to have been acquired before the severe damage to the scenes that occurred after Pendlebury’s work at the Royal Tomb. The first epigraphic documentation of the Royal Tomb by Bouriant and his colleagues already recorded damage to the wall reliefs. Although difficult to determine with certainty, it is possible that the São Paulo fragment was already missing from the walls by the time of the first archaeological work at the Royal Tomb at the end of the nineteenth century to the beginning of the twentieth century.
The main decorative scheme of room

Wall F, room
The decoration scheme in room

Wall B in room
Bouriant’s drawing of the scene on wall B of room
Another possible location for the São Paulo fragment would be pillared hall E. 19 The reliefs in this room, which was never fully decorated, 20 were heavily damaged after Pendlebury’s work in the tomb in 1931–2. 21 In fact, in 1982, Martin was still able to note several fragments in the debris in pillared hall E, including plaster fragments. 22
In the scene on wall B in pillared hall E, several mourning women are depicted (fig. 4).
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These women have the same hairstyle as the one shown on the São Paulo fragment, similar to the mourning women in rooms

Mourning women, wall B (detail), pillared hall E from Martin,
Conclusion
The São Paulo fragment of the Amarna Royal Tomb could potentially be from three different parts of the tomb. These possible locations are wall F in room
According to museum records, the relief fragment from the Amarna Royal Tomb now in São Paulo was collected at the end of the nineteenth century, prior to the destruction of the decoration of pillared hall E as recorded by Pendlebury in the 1930s. At the same time, it seems that the São Paulo fragment was already absent from the tomb before Bouriant’s 1890s expedition. Additionally, wall F in room
Although difficult to determine with certainty, I would suggest that the fragment comes from the right side of the lower register on wall B of room
The wall reliefs in the Amarna Royal Tomb have suffered from severe damage. This makes it impossible to determine the location of the São Paulo fragment with precision. It is possible that other small fragments from the tomb lie unrecognised in other museum collections. If fragments eventually emerge, they could point us towards a better understanding of the tomb’s decorative scheme and the history of the Amarna Period.
