Video: Ancient Mysteries - The Queen Pharaoh
Summary:
Ancient Mysteries examines the extraordinary reign of one of the most
unusual and little-known rulers in history. Her name was Hatshepsut, and three
thousand years ago she did the unthinkable in patriarchal Egypt—she crowned
herself pharaoh. By any standard, it was a daring gamble. After her brief reign,
Hatshepsut’s name was all but obliterated from history. The Queen Pharaoh
would be useful for classes on World History, Ancient History, Western
Civilization, Women’s History and Political Science. It is appropriate for
middle school and high school.
Vocabulary
Discussion Questions
- Why is Hatshepsut called the “first great woman in history?”
- Archeologists and Egyptologists have been searching for the truth about
Hatshepsut for many years. Why is the pursuit of knowledge about this
pharaoh a detective story?
- Pharaohs lived lives of luxury and splendor. How did the lives of the
royal families of Egypt differ from the lives of the peasants or common
people? How do lives of royal families today differ from those of commoners?
- Why was literacy a mark o privilege or power in ancient Egypt? What does
literacy mean today? How might your life be different if you were
illiterate?
- Normally, women did not become pharaohs in ancient Egypt. How then did
Hatshepsut ascend to the throne?
- Most societies have a strong taboo against the practice of incest or
intra-familial marriages. But in the royal families of ancient Egypt,
brothers and sisters often married. Why did the royal families intermarry?
- How did Hatshepsut defy the gender conventions of her time and place?
- Many pharaohs built monuments to themselves in the forms of obelisks.
Discuss the process of creating and erecting an obelisk.
- Why did Hatshepsut represent herself as a male in the statues she
commissioned?
- Why is Hatshepsut’s death a mystery?
- Why were Hatshepsut’s images defaced and her name obliterated form the
records of ancient Egypt?
Extended Activities
- Design a monument for Hatshepsut that celebrates her breaking the gender
conventions of her time.
- Ancient Egyptians painted murals to tell the stories and accomplishments
of their pharaohs. Create a mural that tells the story of your life.