tiny-librarian:

A relief with an image of Akhenaten and what is originally believed to have been Kiya, one of his minor wives.

The inscription, which referred to Kiya and her unknown daughter,  was later changed to bear the name of his third daughter, Ankhesenpaaten. She is better known as Ankhesenamun, the wife of Tutankhamun, but the part of the inscription that refers to her has been lost. Preserved is the part that refers to “Ankhesenpaaten Tasherit, born of the King’s Daughter Ankhesenpaaten.”

Archaeologists are unsure if this was a fictional child intended to replace Kiya’s missing daughter, or if she actually existed. She is referred to in multiple scenes from the end of Akhenaten’s reign and, if she did exist, is commonly thought to have been fathered by Akhenaten.