The "Golden Throne": The chair is solid, heavy and strongly cuboid in shape, with a completely flat seat, not curved like the other six chairs found. The whole is heavily decorated in gold, with pictures of the King and Queen on the flat back. The arms of this chair have lions' heads at the front while the side view shows crowned hooded cobras bearing large cartouches, shapes resembling a loop of rope with a knot, inscribed with the name "Tutankhamun". In the picture of the chair back, the young King rests an arm on the back of his chair while his wife, Ankhesenamon, gently holds out a protective hand towards him. She wears a diadem with twin plumes -- the atef crown, usually associated with Aten, the god of Karnak, and, in a woman, frequently worn by the God's Wife. Between and above the figures, radiating from a central sun-disc in the top frieze, hand the life-giving rays of the Aten. -- El Mahdy, Christine, The Life and Death of the Boy-King, St. Martin's Griffin (2001)