The Ancient World
Deir el-Bahri (Temple of Hatshepsut), near Luxor, Egypt. The Temple built as her tomb by Hatshepsut, the only woman to rule ancient Egypt as a man (pharoah), is built high into the cliff walls on the opposite side of the mountain from the Valley of the Kings. Hatshepsut was scourged by her successors, as the only woman who ever had the temerity to rule Egypt as a man (pharoah). As a woman, she could not be burried in the valley of the kings, but legend says this temple represents her way of getting around that rule -- by placing her tomb down a deep tunnel behind this temple, with the burial chamber beyond the half-way point, in the side of the mountain that faces the all-male Valley of the Kings. © Rick Collier
Egypt Egyptian Karnak Luxor tourist tourism history historic antiquity antiquities Thebes Theban Thebian Nile 'Nile River' temple tomb monument Hatshepsut pharoah 'Deir el-Bahri'
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