| Nofret | |
|---|---|
| King's Wife | |
| Burial | |
| Spouse | Ameny Qemau? |
| Issue | Hatshepsut (King's Daughter) |
| Dynasty | earlyThirteenth Dynasty |
| Religion | Ancient Egyptian religion |
| |||
| Nofret inhieroglyphs | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Era:Middle Kingdom (2055–1650 BC) | |||

Nofret (Neferet) was anancient Egyptian king's wife, most likely dated to the earlyThirteenth Dynasty. She might have been the wife of kingAmeny Qemau.
She is so far only known from one stela found atAbydos that is today in theEgyptian Museum in Cairo.[1] The stela dates most likely to the13th Dynasty and belongs to thecommander of the ruler's crew {3tw n tt hq3} Nedjesankh/Iu. His wife was theking's daughterHatshepsut. The text states that the latter was born to theking's wife Nofret. Not much can be said about her. Her royal husband is not yet identified.[2]
At Dahshur, a pyramid of King's Daughter Hatshepsut has been associated with kingAmeny Qemau, making Nofret a possible wife of this king.[3] If her husband and daughter were buried at Dahshur, it is likely she also was buried at this location.[citation needed]