The Challenges Of Queen Hatshepsut

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In the Beginning, Pharaoh Thutmose I and his wife Ahmose were ruler of Egypt was common in royal households. They were the third ruler of the 18th dynasty Thutmose I was a warrior king who launched successful campaigns into Nubia and Syria, expanding the territory under Egyptian rule. They had two girls, Hatshepsut, along with her sister Nefrubity, Thutmose II were their half-brother in that family. After Thutmose I death, her father, the throne was placed for Hatshepsut, when she was about 12 years old. Thutmose II took over as Pharaoh. passed to Thutmose II who married Hatshepsut (age 15) as they do in royal houses in Egypt at that time. It seemed like incest now days when brother marries sister.
Queen Hatshepsut had a daughter with Senmut …show more content…

Thus, despite her being a female, she had the makings to become a queen. For the queen there were not many women who became Kings who ruled under a city and would become king. When she ascended the throne she changed her name from the feminine Hatshepsut to the male Hatshepsut. She surrounded herself with strong and loyal advisors, many of whom are still known today: Hapuseneb, the High Priest of Amun, and her closest advisor, the royal steward Senemut, some speculate he was Hatshepsut’s lover during her rule. During her rule, Egyptians were the most powerful, advanced civilization in the world. She reestablished the trade networks that had been disrupted during the Hyksos ' occupation of Egypt, bring wealth for the 18th dynasty. She oversaw the preparations and funding for a mission to the Land of Punt, a region of East Africa that was rich in gold, resins, ebony, blackwood, ivory and wild animals, including monkeys and baboons. The mission also went in search of slaves. Hatshepsut probably died around 1458 B.C., when she would have been in her mid-40s. She was buried in the Valley of the Kings, located in the hills behind Deir el-Bahri. In another effort to legitimize her reign, she had her father’s sarcophagus reburied in her tomb so they could lie …show more content…

After Hatshepsut 's death, Thutmose III destroyed or defaced her monuments, erased many of her inscriptions and constructed a wall around her obelisks. Thutmose III did that to take the credit for all of Queen Hatshepsut’s work in 22 year period that she reigned. It was unlikely, for women to be king and Thutmose III took all her work as his own work. Though past Egyptologists held that it was merely the queen’s ambition that drove her, more recent scholars have suggested that the move might have been due to a political crisis, such as a threat from another branch of the royal family, and that Hatshepsut may have been acting to save the throne for her stepson. Hatshepsut was only the third woman to become pharaoh in 3,000 years of ancient Egyptian history, and the first to attain the full power of the position. Cleopatra, who also exercised such power, would rule some 14 centuries later. There have been rumors and stories about Thutmose III wanted to overrule Queen Hatshepsut reign. It was his reign actually, but Thutmose III was a child and could not rule Egypt. Thutmose I and Ahmose rulers of Egypt, and was the mother and father of Hatshepsut. As people talked back then Queen Hatshepsut was the first female to become Egypt’s king. She ruled for over 22 years of reign in peace. She was married to Thutmose II, and had

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