Copyright © Egypt, Cradle of Civilization
Throughout the history of the Egyptians there where several women who came to rule their people, but none was brave or ambitious enough to assume the title of King and
Pharaoh, except for
Queen Hatshepsut, or more accurately put….
King Hatshapsu (dropping the “t” of the end of her name made it a masculine name instead). Before
Hatshepsut there where queens who had ruled
Egypt but until then ….never a female
Pharaoh!

Contrary to any ancient culture, where women were expected to stay at home, women of ancient
Egypt had a lot more freedom. They were allowed to own property and hold official positions, they were also given rights to inherit from deceased family members and were allowed to present their cases in court. They also played a cardinal role in the religion, where religion was integral to a ruler’s role so royal women acted as priestesses and officiated at the rites in temples.
Hatshepsut ruled
Egypt between 1479-1458/57. She was a unique and intelligent individual, who brainstormed, not only to legitimize her position as pharaoh but also make herself god-like, to win the complete approval of her subjects. Due to her boldness she may have been the first to start a
Feminist movement to seek out prominent women from antiquity and publicized their achievements.
Ma'at-ka-Ra Hatshepsut was the eldest daughter to
Thutmose I and
Queen Ahmose, the first king and queen of the Thutoside clan of the eighteenth dynasty. Upon the death of her father,
Hatshepsut married her half-brother,
Thutmose II, and assumed the title of
Great Royal Wife. They had one daughter,
Neferure, who
Hatshepsut groomed to take over the roles she played as queen. Upon his death
Thutmose II left behind a very young
Thutmose III (born to Isis a lesser wife of
Thutmose II) to succeed him. Being too young to assume the tasks of pharaoh,
Hatshepsut became his regent not long before she proclaimed herself
Pharaoh.

After the
Oracle of Amun pronounced that the will of the god
Amun was that Hatshepsut should become
Pharaoh; she adopted many male attributes. She assumed all the regalia and symbols of the pharaonic office: the
Khat head cloth, topped with the
uraeus, the traditional false beard and
shendyt kilt.
Welcome my sweet daughter, my favorite, the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Maatkare Hatshepsut. Thou art the Pharaoh, taking possession of the Two Lands
She ruled for about twenty years gloriously, during which
Egypt witnessed a long period of prosperity. She was also known to be a strong, fair and just ruler. Besides being the only female pharaoh to erect the most monuments during her reign, the projects she commissioned took
Ancient Egyptian architecture to higher standards that set the calibre for the pharaohs that succeeded her. The first and the most beautiful of the temples in the
Valley of the Kings was her great mortuary temple
Djeser-Djeseru. It is the focal point of the complex at
Deir al-Bahari on the west bank of the
Nile, opposite the city of
Luxor.

Although she was known to be a peaceful queen, she made some conquests notably the expedition to the
Land of Punt (perhaps present day
Somalia) She re-established trading relations that were lost during a foreign occupation by the
Hyksos, bringing great wealth to
Egypt. The expedition to
Punt brought back myrrh, frankincense, woods, sweet-smelling resin, ivory, spices, gold, ebony, ivory and aromatic trees, this was the first ever recorded attempt to replant foreign trees.
Hatshepsut was also the first
Pharaoh to erect an
obelisk; she had two erected in front of her temple yet only one still stands today, as the tallest surviving ancient obelisk on Earth. She is also the owner of
“the Unfinished Obelisk” in
Aswan as it establishes how obelisks were quarried.

With all her success and accomplishments she disappeared from history after about twenty years of her reign. To this day no one knows how and when she died exactly, or where her mummy is buried. However, if the recent identification of her mummy in
KV60 is correct, CT scans of the mummy indicate that she died of metastatic bone cancer in her 50s.
Depicted in many novels and films, whether as a wicked step mother or a romantic amiable queen, it is undeniable that she was
the first great woman in History!
About the Author:
Gawhara Hanem