Hatshepsut, as a woman, had many obstacles to overcome. To have a female pharaoh was surpassing and probably unheard of as well. She…
The person that should get the medal of honor should be Marion Blumenthal Lazan. In this paper we will be talking about who should be given the medal of honor. The people that we are goning to be talking about is Marion Blumenthal Lazan, Anne Frank, Oskar schindler, Elie Wiesel, and Meip Gies. The person that deserves the medal of honor is Marion Blumenthal Lazan. Who do you think should get the medal of honor?…
She was Dutch woman of German-Jewish origin and was youngest child of Mr. and Mrs. Frank. In her work of the written diary, she is unambiguously precocious, charming and intelligent, and retained her cheerfulness and even during most testing and difficult of circumstances. Over the course of two years, she is transformed from spoiled and naive girl of thirteen into thoughtful and self-aware woman of fifteen. She did not have sufficient political acumen and knowledge, but becomes inquisitive to the length of asking the reasons and logic about anti-Semitism. While whole point of war does not make any sense to her at all.…
He became pharaoh when he was seven years old after his father died but his aunt Queen hatshepsut was still Pharaoh and queen of Egypt. Thutmose then had children his four sons named Amenhotep II, Amenemhat, Menkheperre, and his last son Siamun. He then had his daughters Beketmun, Nebetiunet, Mertanen and his last daugher, Iset. After Queen Hatshepsut died Thutmose became pharaoh of the kingdom. He was the sixth Pharaoh of the eighteenth…
Hatshepsut would work well with other countrie leaders, and keep peace between our world. Hatshepsut honored trade when she was Pharaoh of Egypt. She could start trade between the U.S. and other countries, and help us communicate more with other countries. While Hatshepsut was the ruler of Ancient Egypt, she ruled with the power of peace. She made Egypt strong without fighting for more land,…
Hatshepsut, the most successful of several female rulers of ancient Egypt, declared herself king sometime between years 2 and 7 of the reign of her stepson and nephew, Thutmose III. She adopted the full titulary of a pharaoh, including the throne name Maatkare, which is the name most frequently found on her monuments. Her throne name and her personal name, Hatshepsut, are both written in cartouches making them easy to recognize. This life-size statue shows Hatshepsut in the ceremonial attire of an Egyptian pharaoh, traditionally a man's role. In spite of the masculine dress, the statue has a distinctly feminine air, unlike most representations of Hatshepsut as ruler (see, for example, three granite kneeling statues in the Museum's collection,…
No one knows exactly when she died, egyptologists guess around her 40s. Thutmose the 3rd went on to reign for about 30 years and in the later years he ordered to have most anything with the marking of Hatshepsut to be destroyed. Scholars have very few reasons why he would have done this, but not many. It was very out of the ordinary. She was buried in the Valley of the Kings and reburied her father’s sarcophagus so that they could live on in the after life together.…
When you think about an ideal pharaoh with warrior-like attributes, you most likely aren’t thinking about a woman. In this case, Co-Ruler and Pharaoh, Hatshepsut was a ruler who gained a legacy that many will remember. Historians say, 1 “Hatshepsut was only the third woman to become pharaoh in 3,00 years of ancient Egyptian history, and the first to attain the full power of the position”. Hatshepsut’s story of reigning was different than most would have had. She was the daughter of King Thutmose I.…
One of the most accomplished Pharaohs of Egypt is the one and only Hatshepsut. By using her many good qualities, she rose to be king in a time when women did not typically hold power. She did many great things for her people, and she is remembered as one of the great and powerful kings of Egypt. Hatshepsut was a very intelligent and ambitious woman. Because her husband, Pharaoh Thutmose II died during his reign, Hatshepsut’s stepson, Thutmose III was to take over; unfortunately, he was only an infant at the time of his father’s untimely demise.…
We are lucky to know about Hatshepsut especially after someone tried to erase her name from history. In this report, you will learn about Hatshepsut’s early life and successes as a pharaoh. Without a doubt, Hatshepsut truly changed ancient Egypt’s history forever. Hatshepsut was born in a palace garden next to the Nile River around 1500 B.C. She was born into royalty.…
In “Hatshepsut: His Majesty, Herself”, by Catherine Andronik, she informs the reader about Hatshepsut and her role as an effective female pharaoh in Ancient Egypt. One supporting detail of how Hatshepsut was an effective ruler is that she was a regent. In paragraph eight, it states,”Until Tuthmosis lll was mature enough to be crowned pharaoh, what Egypt needed was a regent, an adult who could take control of the country.” This quote explains what Egypt needed and how Hatshepsut was a regent so she could take this role. In paragraph 11, it states,”Hatshepsut settled into her role as regent, she gradually took on more and more of the royal decision making.”…
Everyday we pass by a work of art and don't even acknowledge its existence. Art is everywhere we go, for example, a statue in a park is a work of art, it’s not only there for decorations. It has a purpose for being at that particular location, with hope that someone may notice it. Having the opportunity to learn about previous artworks, one of them really stood out to me from ancient Egypt. When an individual hears Egyptian art they mostly think about mummies, pyramids, or Pharaohs.…
Despite what many think, the pharaohs of ancient Egypt did not succeed each other as an unbroken, patrilineal chain by any means. By the Eighteenth Dynasty, the state of kingship had recovered is authority from the Asiatic ruling of the Second Intermediate Period. Hatshepsut, one of the most well-known female kings of Egypt, is a clear outlier to what one would expect from a typical pharaoh. Her story, in summary, involves her gaining control over administration after King Thutmose II, her husband and step-brother, dies, and using that as a stepping stone to claim solitary kingship rather than continuing a life of co-regency – meaning, shared kingship – with Thutmose III, the originally intended male heir and her step-son. This essay will analyze…
The most famous Pharaoh of Egypt’s 18th dynasty has to be King Tutankhamen. The riches of his tomb have given him international fame and recognition , but in a historical sense his accomplishes cannot be compared to those of Ahmose I. Ahmose I accomplished something that Pharaohs before him could not and that was then continued by his Successor. Although the lack of riches in his tomb could not allow him to have the modern recognition that King Tutankhamen he is rich in his history. Before Ahmose I was Pharaoh, Egypt was going through its second intermediate period where Egypt was not unified and foreigners were ruling the Delta.…
During the reign of Thutmose II, Hatshepsut took the traditional role of queen and main wife. Hatshepsut gained the role of ‘God’s Wife of Amun,’ participating in the cult. After Thutmose II death, Hatshepsut’s children consisted of only a daughter, Neferure. The male heir, Thutmose III, was still an infant and born to a concubine named Isis. He was too young to ascend the throne unaided so Hatshepsut served as his regent.…