The lid depicts the mummy of the deceased. She wears a wig and a broad collar. On the breast is an image of the sky goddess Nut with outstretched wings. The loss of the inlaid eyes made of valuable materials is presumably due to the plundering of the tomb during the pharaonic period. In her hands she holds cult implements indicating her devotion to Hathor, goddess of fertility: a rattle called a “sistrum” in her right hand, and in her left hand a standard with the head of the goddess, depicted as a cow with a sun disk between her horns. The lid also differs from that of her husband in the absence of a beard and in the rendering of the feet – found by the Hungarian mission that worked here from 1983 onward – which were naked to stress the freedom of movement in the hereafter that the deceased aspired too. The inscribed bands reproduce the bandages that gathered the shroud around the body. They contain utterances by the gods of the netherworld placing the deceased under their protection.