After the death of her father at age 12, Hatshepsut married her half-brother Thutmose II, whose mother was a lesser wife, a common practice meant to ensure the purity of the royal bloodline. During the reign of Thutmose II, Hatshepsut assumed the traditional role of queen and principal wife. Thutmose II died after a 15 year reign, making Hatshepsut a widow before the age of 30.
In the ancient Egypt, the queen after her husband died was Queen Hatshepsut
queen hatshepsut
It was King Thutmose the third. The reason is queen Hatshepsut was only a regent for him because he was too young to rule. So he was designated as pharoah even before her. But when she died of unknown cause Thutmose became pharaoh.
Queen Hatshepsut was born in Egypt. and lived there her life
Her father died and her stepson was to young to become king so she became the regent for her stepson. After a while she became Pharaoh but when her stepson became older he became Pharaoh.
No.
what in the-
From hatshepsut: "Hatshepsut (reigned 1503-1482 B.C.) was an Egyptian queen of the Eighteenth Dynasty"
Hatshepsut was a queen of Egypt Reigned 1473-1458 B.C
Yes. Hatshepsut was the first queen of Egypt. She ruled over much land and expanded trade routes.
Born circa 1508 B.C., Queen Hatshepsut reigned over Egypt for more than 20 years. She lived in the Palace of Ma'at. It was rectangular structure. The capital was Thebes, Amarna, and then again Thebes.
Yes Thutmose 111 did kill queen hatshepsut by putting posion into her wine.