Fig.80 115 Tomb group of Henefiawy From Deir eI-Bahri, tomb 60 Third Intermediate Period, Dynasty 21 Wood Acquired by exchange with the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1954 (54.639, 640). a. Outer coffin (box only) Length 210 cm., width 74.5 cm., height 51.5 cm. b. Inner coffin (box and lid) Length 187 cm. Deir eI-Bahri tomb 60 (fig. 80) was uncov- ered by Herbert E. Winlock in the spring of 1924 while he was excavating for the Met- ropolitan Museum of Art. The tomb was ex- cavated for the use of the family of the High Priest of Amen Men-kheper-re of Dynasty 21, though other burials were added in the same dynasty and the tomb was expanded during Dynasty 23. The original occupants of tomb 60 were three female members of Men-kheper-re’s family. The first two burials were those of Henettawy, daughter of Pinedjem and sister of Men-kheper-re, and Djed-mutes-ankh, who was probably either a wife or daughter of the same man. The final burial was that of Henettawy, daughter of lset-em-akhbet and owner of the Museum’s coffins. This Henettawy is believed to have been the daughter of Men-kheper-re, though she may have been his granddaughter.' Broken seals of the High Priest Men-kheper-re were found in the tomb, suggesting that these three women were buried during his tenure as High Priest. Some time after the last of the women was interred, a fourth burial was introduced into the burial cham- ber. The coffins were reinscribed for the de- ceased, a priest of Amen by the name of Men-kheper-re (not the High Priest). Since Men-kheper-re seemed not to be of the same social status as the three women, Winlock assumed that this was the first of many intrusive burials found in the tomb. The coffins of Henettawy are typical of the varnished yellow wooden coffins of Dy- nasty 21. The group originally included outer