Etchings page five

The Woman Who Was King

Parade -------------- The Army

-Parade - one plate one colour - edition 200 - image size 366 X 478 - paper size 494 X 606 -
The Army - one plate one colour - edition 100 - image size 340 X 415 - paper size 468 X 543 -
- both printed on BFK Rives Cream 280gsm -

Queen Hatshepsut's rise to power went against all the conventions of her time but she was one of the most extraordinary personalities of the ancient world and the first great woman in recorded history. The forerunner of such figures as Cleopatra, Catherine the Great and Elizabeth I.

She was the first wife and Queen of Thutmose II and on his death proclaimed herself Pharaoh denying the old king's son, her nephew, his inheritance. To support her cause she claimed the God Amon-Re spoke, saying "welcome my sweet daughter, my favourite, the king of Upper and Lower Egypt, Maatkare, Hatshepsut. Thou art the King, taking possession of the Two Lands." She dressed as a king even wearing a false beard and the Egyptian people seem to have accepted this unprecedented behaviour. She remained in power for twenty years and during this time the Egyptian economy flourished, she expanded trading relations and built magnificent temples as well as restoring many others. Her mortuary temple at Deir el Bahri, near Luxor, is one of the most unusual and beautiful in Egypt. Eventually her nephew grew into a man and took his rightful place as pharaoh. The circumstances of this event are unknown and what became of Hatshepsut is a mystery.

Her successor became the greatest of all Pharaohs, Thutmose III, "the Napoleon of ancient Egypt." He had her name cut away from the temple walls which suggests he was not overly fond of his auntie. But the fact that she was able to contain the ambitions of this charismatic and wily fellow for so many years, hints at the qualities of her character


The etchings were made from drawings done at Deir el Bahri where Hatshepsut's solders 'Parade' across the walls of the temple. 'The Army' represents a trading expedition to the Land of Punt (thought to be somewhere on the coast of Somali) and shows Nehsi leading his army of Nubians.

Mark Millmore R.E.



E-Mail m.millmore@ukonline.co.uk