Pictures of Queen Hatshepsut 1

Pictures of Queen Hatshepsut
1
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Statue of Hatshepsut on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art



A Fallen obelisk of Hatshepsut - Karnak.


Dual stela of Hatshepsut (centre left) in the blue Khepresh crown offering wine to the deity Amun and Thutmose III behind her in the hedjet white crown, standing near Wosret - Vatican Museum


These two statues once resembled each other, however, the symbols of her pharaonic power: the Uraeus, Double Crown, and traditional false beard have been stripped from the left image; many images portraying Hatshepsut were destroyed or vandalized within decades of her death, possibly by Amenhotep II at the end of the reign of Thutmose III, while he was his co-regent, in order to assure his own rise to pharaoh and then, to claim many of her accomplishments as his


The Hawk of the Pharaoh, Hatshepsut—Temple at Luxor
  

Copper or bronze sheet bearing the name of Hatshepsut. From a foundation deposit in "a small pit covered with a mat" found at Deir el-Bahri, Egypt. 18th Dynasty. The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology, London


From left to right: Queen Ahmos, King Tuthmosis I, Mother Hatshepsut and her father and then her older sister, Nefro Ra. Note the small photographing and its sole expanse


A tree in front of Hatshepsut's temple, claimed to have been brought from Punt by Hatshepsut's Expedition which is depicted on the Temple walls



Statues of Osiris in the temple of Hatshepsut in the Monastery of the Sea in Luxor-West.


The Djsarro Bridge is the main building of the funerary temple of the Hatshepsut complex in Deir al-Bahari. Designed by Sinmut, as an example of the full parathion-like predation of a thousand years.


A head of colored limestone from a statue in the shape of Azriz of Queen Hatshepsut.



The summit of the incomplete obelisk in Aswan, believed to have been for Hatshepsut.




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