Hatshepsut wanted to make Egypt richer.
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She helped make Egypt a wealthier country and traded with others.
Yes, Queen Hatshepsut made significant improvements for Egypt during her reign (c. 1479–1458 BCE). She focused on expanding trade networks, notably with Punt, which brought wealth and new resources to Egypt. Hatshepsut also initiated impressive building projects, including her mortuary temple at Deir el-Bahari, which showcased her architectural vision and solidified her legacy. Her reign is often seen as a period of prosperity and stability in ancient Egypt.
The first documented real zoo that was open to the public was established in Egypt - by Queen Hatshepsut in 1500 BC. Queen Hatshepsut acquired baboons when she had myrrh saplings brought to Egypt from the Horn of Africa, which, presumably, would have been kept somewhere, but no records exist. Among the animals imported from Punt were rhinos, giraffes, leopards, monkeys and more familiar species like cattle and hounds.
She didn't make a pyramid. She did built the Djeser-Djeseru. We know it as The Mortuary Temple of Queen Hatshepsut. It is located at Deir el-Bahri, The Obelisks of Hatshepsut and The Red Chapel.
both make a lot of money but usally a doctor is richer
In terms of trade, Hatshepsut was not blind to the need of bolstering Egypt's economy' and indeed, the Punt expedition is but the climax of her consistent trading enterprises with Lebanon, Crete, Syria, West Africa, South Africa, Aswan and the reopening of mines in Mt. Sinai. She traded Ivory, gold, silver and other goods for eating. Hatshepsut's legacy is also extant in the enduring architectural innovations she incorporated into her building program. The design of Djeser-Djeseru is a prime example; although there exist a few doubtful precursors of the terraced template originality of the design cannot be gainsaid.' The thematic structure of the three terraces, from her role as pharaoh, to legitimization of her rule and achievements, to the worship of the deities is indisputably her own invention, as were the ramps linking them, imitating the glory of a sun's ray. Thutmose III modeled his mortuary temple on Hatshepsut's whilst Akhenaten incorporated the design of the ramps into his own buildings. Similarly, the design of Hatshepsut's tomb, with the three successive passageways leading to the burial chamber, her royal sarcophagus, her resting stations for Amun's barque were likewise replicated by her successors. Therefore, Hatshepsut's reign was characterized by a myriad of architectural innovations that became her legacy, to be admiringly integrated into the buildings of the future generations of pharaohs.
I don't know if they make life richer, but listening carefully to what others can teach you will make you smarter! Also, life is too short to go at it alone!
At the time, all royals did. She was a pharaoh.
To look after his country and make it richer.
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