One of her greatest achievements apart from these obelisks was her Mortuary temple, which resides near the Valley of Kings on the west bank of the Nile River. Boundless Art History praises Hatshepsut, and recounts in their educational website that “The masterpiece of Hatshepsut's projects was her tomb, the Temple of Hatshepsut. Its splendid colonnaded structure predates the Parthenon by over a thousand years.” The architecture that Hatshepsut was using was well advanced for its time, and is still admired today. Further, Boundless Art History hyperbolised that “Hatshepsut's construction of statues was so prolific that today almost every major museum in the world has a statue of hers among their collections.” These statues are tourist attractions, some of the most notable of which reside at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Hatshepsut’s “…building projects…raised the calibre of Ancient Egyptian architecture to a standard, comparable to classical architecture, that would not be rivalled by any other culture for a thousand years.” (Ohgrc History, 2007). Her achievements continued to influence Egyptian architecture for many years after her death, and established a standard for other cultures to aspire
One of her greatest achievements apart from these obelisks was her Mortuary temple, which resides near the Valley of Kings on the west bank of the Nile River. Boundless Art History praises Hatshepsut, and recounts in their educational website that “The masterpiece of Hatshepsut's projects was her tomb, the Temple of Hatshepsut. Its splendid colonnaded structure predates the Parthenon by over a thousand years.” The architecture that Hatshepsut was using was well advanced for its time, and is still admired today. Further, Boundless Art History hyperbolised that “Hatshepsut's construction of statues was so prolific that today almost every major museum in the world has a statue of hers among their collections.” These statues are tourist attractions, some of the most notable of which reside at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Hatshepsut’s “…building projects…raised the calibre of Ancient Egyptian architecture to a standard, comparable to classical architecture, that would not be rivalled by any other culture for a thousand years.” (Ohgrc History, 2007). Her achievements continued to influence Egyptian architecture for many years after her death, and established a standard for other cultures to aspire