Djedmaatesankh lived a challenging life.
Today, her closed coffin, with mummified remains inside, is a key artefact at the Royal Ontario Museum, in Toronto Canada.
She died ca. 850 BC. She lived in a time called the "Third Intermediate Period." The Egyptian state had collapsed by the period and the country had fragmented into local power groups.
She was a musician in the temple of Amun-Re at Karnak and her husband was a door-keeper at the same temple. Judging from her coffin (seen here on the right) she appears to have lived, what we might call, a middle class lifestyle.
Still, her life wasn’t easy - evidence from CT scans show that, when she was in her early to mid thirties, she died from a dental cyst in her upper left jaw. It burst open and poisoned her.