Hatchepsut: The Female PharaohViking, 1996 - 270 pages Queen - or, as she would prefer to be remembered, King - Hatchepsut was a remarkable woman. Born the eldest daughter of King Tuthmosis I, married to her half-brother Tuthmosis II, and guardian of her young stepson-nephew Tuthmosis III, Hatchepsut, the Female Pharaoh, brilliantly defied tradition and established herself on the divine throne of the pharaohs to become the female embodiment of a man, dressing in male clothing and even sporting the pharaoh's traditional false beard. Her reign was a carefully balanced period of internal peace, foreign exploration and monumental building, and Egypt prospered under her rule. After her death, however, a serious attempt was made to obliterate Hatchepsut's memory from the history of Egypt. Her monuments were either destroyed or usurped, her portraits were vandalized and, for over two thousand years, her name was forgotten. The political climate leading to Hatchepsut's unprecedented assumption of power and the principal achievements of her reign are considered in detail, and the vicious attacks on Hatchepsut's name and image are explored in full. By combining archaeological and historical evidence from a wide range of sources, Joyce Tyldesley provides the reader with an intriguing insight into life within the claustrophobic Theban royal family in early 18th Dynasty Egypt. At last, the Female Pharaoh is restored. |
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Page 37
... palace buildings . The royal progression from palace to palace ensured that the authority of the king became a reality to those in even the most distant provinces and , at a more practical level , may well have been an efficient cost ...
... palace buildings . The royal progression from palace to palace ensured that the authority of the king became a reality to those in even the most distant provinces and , at a more practical level , may well have been an efficient cost ...
Page 54
... palace itself was a self - contained and self- supporting unit , fully independent of the king's palace and deriving its income from its own endowments of land and the rents paid by tenant farmers . Many of the lesser harem women , far ...
... palace itself was a self - contained and self- supporting unit , fully independent of the king's palace and deriving its income from its own endowments of land and the rents paid by tenant farmers . Many of the lesser harem women , far ...
Page 164
... palace was situated on the north side of the temple façade , but unfortu- nately no trace of it now remains . The larger , fully equipped palace where the King and her retinue stayed while visiting Thebes is also lost ; almost certainly ...
... palace was situated on the north side of the temple façade , but unfortu- nately no trace of it now remains . The larger , fully equipped palace where the King and her retinue stayed while visiting Thebes is also lost ; almost certainly ...
Contents
Egypt in the Early | 15 |
The Tuthmosides | 43 |
Queen of Egypt | 70 |
Copyright | |
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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 egyptologists epsut's evidence excavation 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 Twosret Valley walls Winlock woman women