Hatchepsut: The Female PharaohPenguin Books Limited, 1998 - 304 pages Queen - or, as she would prefer to be remembered King - Hatchepsut was an astonishing woman. Brilliantly defying tradition she became the female embodiment of a male role, dressing in men's clothes and even wearing a false beard. Forgotten until Egptologists deciphered hieroglyphics in the 1820's, she has since been subject to intense speculation about her actions and motivations. Combining archaeological and historical evidence from a wide range of sources, Joyce Tyldesley's dazzling piece of detection strips away the myths and misconceptions and finally restores the female pharaoh to her rightful place. |
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Page 6
... lived consort to an unconventional king , has , on the basis of one remarkable portrait - head , become immortal , her name syn- onymous with Egyptian beauty throughout the western world . Hatch- epsut herself would almost certainly ...
... lived consort to an unconventional king , has , on the basis of one remarkable portrait - head , become immortal , her name syn- onymous with Egyptian beauty throughout the western world . Hatch- epsut herself would almost certainly ...
Page 35
... lived in the modest rectangular houses which had been laid out with all the precision of a modern American city , within a defining wall . Beyond the wall there was a cemetery , a collection of chapels for private worship , and possibly ...
... lived in the modest rectangular houses which had been laid out with all the precision of a modern American city , within a defining wall . Beyond the wall there was a cemetery , a collection of chapels for private worship , and possibly ...
Page 52
... lived their whole lives within the harem without the chance of either marriage or returning to their own lands ; when they died they were buried in the nearby desert cemetery . The women of Egypt have the character of being the most ...
... lived their whole lives within the harem without the chance of either marriage or returning to their own lands ; when they died they were buried in the nearby desert cemetery . The women of Egypt have the character of being the most ...
Contents
Introduction | 6 |
Backdrop Egypt in the Early Eighteenth Dynasty | 15 |
A Strong Family The Tuthmosides | 43 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
18th Dynasty Ahmose Nefertari Amenhotep Amenhotep III Ancient Egypt Ancient Egyptian archaeological barque building burial chamber carved Chapelle Rouge co-regency coffin consort cult daughter death Deir el-Bahri temple divine Djeser-Djeseru early 18th Dynasty Egyptian Archaeology egyptologists epsut's evidence father female funerary God's Wife goddess gods harem Hatchepsut Hatchepsut's reign Hathor Horus Hyksos inscription Journal of Egyptian Kamose Karnak temple King Hatchepsut king of Egypt King's Lady land London Lower Egypt maat Maatkare Majesty male Metropolitan Museum Middle Kingdom military monarch monuments mortuary temple mother mud-brick mummy Naville Neferure Nile Nubia obelisks official Old Kingdom palace pharaoh Prince Princess Punt Queen Ahmose Ramesses Ramesses II record regnal role royal family rule ruler sarcophagus scenes Senenmut shrine sister Speos Artemidos statues stela suggest Temple of Amen Temple of Deir Theban Thebes throne tion Tomb 71 tradition Tuth Tuthmosis III Valley walls Winlock woman women