she was the first women paraoh because she ran Egypt after her husband but in like three years she disapeared she was the first to make a oblisk which is a four sided tall stick with a pyramid pointy top this was filled with writing on the walls after her death her step son tried to get every thing distroyed that people would remember her as he might have been the one who murtered his step mother because he was suppose 2 be king and only men would be pharaohs soon hatshesut daughter hatshesut 11 was married to hatshesut's step son
Cleopatra had 4 husbands Ptolemy IX, drowned in 47 BC Ptolemy X, believed to be poisoned in 44 BC Julius Caesar, assassinated in Rome in 44 BC Mark Anthony, he and Cleopatra both committed suicide in 31 BC, after a failed naval campaign against Rome led by Octavian..
How Thutmose the lll took revenge on Hatshesut (his stepmother), for attempting to take the throne from him. Was once she died he had all the statues and hieroglyphics that mentioned her removed.
Slavery in general started thousands of years ago, when one group of people captured members of another group of people. The beginnings aren't certain, but it was going on in ancient Egypt, Rome, Greece, Japan, Ancient America... you name it. Slavery in Africa also started thousands of years ago. When one tribe would battle with another, the "loosers" were often captured and forced to work or to be second class "wives" to tribsmen. When the Dutch traders visited Africa seeking something of value to trade, many of the tribes offered captured enemies as a comodity in exchange for the trinkets and other goods offered by the Dutch traders. For many of the slaves, the conditions were better than they would have encountered had they remained the "property" of their enemies in Africa since many of them would have been murdered for their "crime" of being a member of the enemy tribe. That is not to say that there was anything good about slavery. It was a truly evil practice, where one group of people considered themselves to be sufficiently superior to another that they felt the right to "own" a fellow human being. It is generally agreed that the world has become a little more enlightened in the not too distant past, and we have learned to treat even our enemies with enough respect that they are no longer considered slaves.
uhhmmm welll i think in hatshesut rukes ;)
Thutmose, Hatshesut was more into trade than war.
a egyptian pharaoh,dauther of king thutmose I and queen aahmes.her hubby died she then made herself pharaoh later she died her nephew thutmose III became pharaoh ur welcome :) have fun with ur homework (im guessing this is ur homework)
Hatshepsut was an Egyptian ruler - pharaoh - from about 1502 to 1481BC. She was the daughter of Thutmose I. When her husband, Thutmose II died the successor was her son, but she ruled Egypt instead of the son for 20 years, till her death. She had Karnak finished and built a magnificient temple at Deir-al-Bahri.
Cleopatra had 4 husbands Ptolemy IX, drowned in 47 BC Ptolemy X, believed to be poisoned in 44 BC Julius Caesar, assassinated in Rome in 44 BC Mark Anthony, he and Cleopatra both committed suicide in 31 BC, after a failed naval campaign against Rome led by Octavian..
How Thutmose the lll took revenge on Hatshesut (his stepmother), for attempting to take the throne from him. Was once she died he had all the statues and hieroglyphics that mentioned her removed.
Slavery in general started thousands of years ago, when one group of people captured members of another group of people. The beginnings aren't certain, but it was going on in ancient Egypt, Rome, Greece, Japan, Ancient America... you name it. Slavery in Africa also started thousands of years ago. When one tribe would battle with another, the "loosers" were often captured and forced to work or to be second class "wives" to tribsmen. When the Dutch traders visited Africa seeking something of value to trade, many of the tribes offered captured enemies as a comodity in exchange for the trinkets and other goods offered by the Dutch traders. For many of the slaves, the conditions were better than they would have encountered had they remained the "property" of their enemies in Africa since many of them would have been murdered for their "crime" of being a member of the enemy tribe. That is not to say that there was anything good about slavery. It was a truly evil practice, where one group of people considered themselves to be sufficiently superior to another that they felt the right to "own" a fellow human being. It is generally agreed that the world has become a little more enlightened in the not too distant past, and we have learned to treat even our enemies with enough respect that they are no longer considered slaves.