MAKARE HATSHEPSUT Profile

MAKARE HATSHEPSUT
MAKARE HATSHEPSUT

The 20-year reign of the outstanding queen Makare Hatshepsut, beginning about 1500 B.C., occurred near the top of Ancient Egypt. this point period may be a golden age within the long history of African people. It had been a period marked by tremendous internal stability and a time of high international prestige.

 

One of Hatshepsut‘s grandest accomplishments was a splendid expedition to the African land of Punt — regarded by the Kamites as “God’s land.” The area of Punt was within the Horn of Africa, probably encompassing a part of Somalia, Eritrea, and even Yemen across the Red Sea within the Arabian Peninsula. A journey to Punt was perhaps the best of achievements for the monarchs of Kmt.

 

Eti was the queen of Punt at the start of the 15 century B.C. The products of Punt included ebony, frankincense, and myrrh. Eti, an outsized heavy-set woman, was famously depicted during a procession with Perehu, the king of Punt, on the walls of Makare Hatshepsut’s mortuary temple at Deir el-Bahri. The first depiction is now located within the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.

 

Princess Neferure was the daughter of Hatshepsut. The Steward Senenmut raised Neferure. Several block statues of Senenmut exist with the top of Princess Neferure emerging from the block. Neferure has the titles: “King’s Daughter” and “God’s Wife.”

 

Makare Hatshepsut’s royal titles included: King of the North and South, Son of the Sun, The Heru of Gold, Bestower of Years, Goddess of Risings, Conqueror of all Lands, Lady of both Lands, Vivifier of Years, Chief Spouse of Amen, the Mighty One.

Makare Hatshepsut was one among the mightiest of African women.

 

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