The mummy was found long ago but it was unidentified until 2014. They found a tooth in the organ jars and it was a match. Her mummy was found at last. Her mummy was found under the instruction of Dr. Hawass.
Sitre-Re is Hatshepsut's wet nurse. Hatshepsut's mummy might have moved into Sitre-Re's tomb.
11 meters wide and tall not
Yes. It is in the Valley of the Kings. It is in a very poor state of repair.
The mummy of Hatshepsut was originally discovered by Howard Carter in 1903 in a tomb now known as KV-60 in the Valley of the Kings. There where two mummies in this tomb and although the second mummy was removed in 1906 Hatshepsut's mummy was left in the tomb until some time in the 1980's It was then linked to a tooth in a box in the Cairo Museum, that was known to belong to Hatshepsut by Zahi Hawass, proving that this was the mummy of Hatshepsut. Originally Answered by ID1162536962, I don't know how to add a second answer so I've added to this one.. >> Zahi Hawass in June 2007.
The mummy was found long ago but it was unidentified until 2014. They found a tooth in the organ jars and it was a match. Her mummy was found at last. Her mummy was found under the instruction of Dr. Hawass.
by keeping her spirts alive and the people who tounch will die in her piece so that she will be alive
Hatshepsut attempted to protect her tomb from grave robbers by constructing it in a remote location in the Valley of the Kings, which was less accessible than other burial sites. She also designed her tomb with elaborate traps and concealed entrances to deter intruders. Additionally, she commissioned inscriptions and images that emphasized her divine right to rule, perhaps as a means to invoke protection from the gods against desecration. Despite these measures, her tomb was still ultimately discovered and looted in antiquity.
the greeks
No she didn't. Since Thutmose III was too young to assume the throne unaided, Hatshepsut served as his regent. Initially, Hatshepsut bore this role traditionally until, for reasons that are unclear, she claimed the role of pharaoh. Technically, Hatshepsut did not 'usurp' the crown, as Thutmose the III was never deposed and was considered co-ruler throughout her life, but it is clear that Hatshepsut was the principal ruler in power. He was her nephew. When she died, he tried to erase her history.
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sir William ramsay