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Hatshepsut - The Woman Who Became a King Documentary

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  • čas přidán 18. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 412

  • @PeopleProfiles
    @PeopleProfiles  Před rokem +33

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  • @mariakelly90210
    @mariakelly90210 Před rokem +153

    I wish that they would make a movie about Hatshepsut.

    • @trinitytwo14992
      @trinitytwo14992 Před rokem +12

      There are so. Many great stories about women that have not been made into movies. I would love to do them. AHHHHHH

    • @thepanda1044
      @thepanda1044 Před rokem +9

      The *REAL* woman king

    • @tomengels5792
      @tomengels5792 Před rokem +5

      Yes! And one about Ramses III and the Sea Peoples

    • @timblackburn5160
      @timblackburn5160 Před rokem

      They might but don’t get your hopes up due to the subject matter and it would empower women. Lord knows men don’t wanna do that. The timing would be perfect tho considering all the controversy with trans and intersects people. I’m a LGBTQIA person. So I believed women have just as equal rights as men. I actually think women are smarter as a whole anyway. Men are stupid and think with one brain mostly. Lol. There are exceptions but the meat heads are the ones in power. Grrrrrr. ❤❤❤❤❤ all.

    • @MistBlu89
      @MistBlu89 Před rokem

      Right?!

  • @thepanda1044
    @thepanda1044 Před 4 měsíci +12

    Cleopatra: I'm the most famous queen!
    Hatshepsut: Oh yea, well I was the most powerful

  • @HistoryExplained
    @HistoryExplained Před rokem +135

    I’m happy you made a video on this incredibly impressive female pharaoh’s life. Hatshepsut was by far my favorite figure to make a video about. I love your channel’s hour long format!

  • @bluestrife28
    @bluestrife28 Před rokem +13

    Someone told me once “don’t build anything before you die, because they’ll just tear it down when they’re mad at you.”

  • @bluestrife28
    @bluestrife28 Před rokem +74

    I always imagine a young Cleopatra looking at the ancient reliefs of this extraordinary person and thinking “I can do this! She did it.”

    • @ChawieH
      @ChawieH Před rokem +9

      i like to think she thought "eye, lion, crane, owl, cup"

    • @cls4786
      @cls4786 Před rokem +10

      Cleopatra was greek. no relation to ancient Egyptians

    • @jahuti5065
      @jahuti5065 Před rokem +9

      Cleopatra very probably never knew of the existence of Hatshepsut simply because the latter had been subject to a damnation memoriae and her name erased from kinglists. Don't forget, as is pointed out in this documentary, that Cleopatra lived some 1400 years after Hatshepsut.

    • @Negs42
      @Negs42 Před rokem +1

      ​@@jahuti5065 the damnatio memoriam was only on her title as King, her title as queen was left untouched
      Also the temple of Hatshepsut, Djeser Djeseru was very revered in Egypt after her death and became one of the greatest focal points of the religion
      The name literally means "Holy of holies"

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před rokem

      @@cls4786 She was Greek descendant, but she titled herself Female Horus, just like Hatshepsut. She was Pharaoh of Egypt, she worshipped Egyptian gods and no doubts she admired those Egyptian queens she knew of.

  • @kddicks5115
    @kddicks5115 Před rokem +24

    Powerful women have always been labeled as hard, deceitful, manipulative... by the men who write history. I'm glad that research turns that theory on its head! She sounds like an incredible ruler and woman. Thank you for all the time and effort you put into these videos. I am absolutely hooked, and have been for over a year now!! Always look forward to your uploads!!👏👏👏👏👍👍

    • @Human_01
      @Human_01 Před rokem

      Genuinely, respectable human females like Pharaoh Hatshepsut should be mainstream across society.
      ______________
      Society needs better, more [high] sentient, respectable female role models (who experience genuine humanity as an instinct, like Pharaoh-Hatshepsut)!
      And the attention of [young] females should be forcedly directed there (so many are narcissistic and dumb, so they'll willfully want to direct their consciousness/attention to [sexually] degenerate role models, such as Kim Kardashian, Cardi B, and Western hypersexual feminists)!!!
      Why is it that the "degenerate" often get the spot-light, are readily given platforms, and not subtly, systematically being suppressed (they would also need to be prevented from ruining aspirating youth/socially-vulnerable females potential, especially introverted and intuitive ones [relatively socially-vulnerable]).
      They need to stop being so pathetic (most females; not including XNTJ, obviously, and a few enneagrams). At any rate, like men, being pathetic, lacking emotional resiliency and having a disregard for intelligence should [seriously] shamed in women (i.e. being pathetic, having the mind of a child, not having a genuine growth-mindset/'intent' to grow into a genuinely intelligent and competent human being, and they should grow to be especially anti-narcissit [the actual mental disorder]).
      This will bold well for society and female [collective] legacy. More importantly, it will fix a lot of societies issues, especially since most parents fail to educate and firmly warn their children against narcissists/NPD (and cluster-b), particularly breeding with them as the disorder is genetic, so they only increase the number of people/children disadvantageous mental disorder (and 'NPD', and borderline makes them particularly evil).

  • @user-jwill
    @user-jwill Před rokem +31

    Superb profile that reveals the actual truth instead of the old biases of the 19th century Egyptologists. Clearly she was a brilliant gifted human and one of the most fascinating rulers ever to have lived anywhere. 🙌

    • @ketiboablay8632
      @ketiboablay8632 Před rokem +2

      Most importantly it debunks the falsehood that the ancient Egyptians were not black or brown Africans but the occupiers of Arabia and Europe.

    • @Negs42
      @Negs42 Před rokem +2

      ​@@ketiboablay8632 the falsehood is that the ancient Egyptians were black
      None of the paintings depict an Egyptian with black paint
      All of them were painted brown.

    • @ketiboablay8632
      @ketiboablay8632 Před rokem +1

      @@Negs42
      So what's your point?
      I said black or brown Africans. It depends on what one sees as brown. But the dressings and hairdos were all African.

    • @amandabaird4401
      @amandabaird4401 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@ketiboablay8632 who would claim these peoples were white. Perhaps some painters of Jesus.

  • @areiaaphrodite
    @areiaaphrodite Před rokem +48

    I personally don't think Thutmoses III was the one who tried to remove all evidence. From what Egyptologists have found and disclosed, they had a cordial relationship as stepmother and stepson.
    If she truly wanted to keep power to herself, she could have tried to have him murdered when he was still a child and let the throne pass to her own daughter. (Hypothetical scenario.) And neither did he try to usurp her once he came of age. Her reign ended and his started only with her death.
    I'm of the same opinion that it was probably the work of later descendants of Thutmoses. Statues of her were rebranded with the name of Pharaohs further down the line, not Thutmoses himself.
    I think people are just more willing to believe the "wicked stepmother" narrative invented in the 1800s.

    • @ashiinsane90
      @ashiinsane90 Před rokem +3

      You are absolutely right. Also the destruction of some of her monuments and art depictions were done in 1800s as well not as they claim in ancient times. It doesnt make any sense that the ancient Egyptians them selfs would destroy parts of their most holy places such as the karnak, if it was done in their time they would have fixed it later on or it would be completely erased and built new again, they wouldnt leave parts of the holiest temples broken for hundreds of years. If the Egyptians wanted to erase something we wouldn't have seen it today..

    • @willwill1064
      @willwill1064 Před rokem +1

      LOL Aphrodite follow me if Hatshepsut and Thutmoses II were brother and sister. Thutmoses III is her nephew. In the video he is saying they are theories. If you look at Seti I Abydos King List, I don't think her name, Akhenaten, King Tut was removed, I don't think they were ever there in the first place because he saw their reigns as illegitimate. If you ever get a chance visit the King Tut exhibit his death mask appears as if was meant for someone else. It's a name crossed out. So, I agree with your theory I don't think it was her nephew.

    • @xg835
      @xg835 Před rokem

      @@ashiinsane90 pharoahs did often (destroy) pats of holy temples to remove the memory of previous rulers or to steal their monuments. In the case of damnatio mamoriae the current pharoah would carve out the image or name of previous pharoahs and carve their own name over it or smash their statues, however would not damage the image and name of their gods. There are examples of art from hatshepsut's time being destroyed but the depiction of Amun being left. Often if a pharoah who they wanted to remove from history had Amuns name in it they would destroy the name accept for the Amun part... in the case of akhenaten who is said to have done a lot of the damage to hatshepsuts monuments he had no issue with removing images and the name of amun as he went up againt the priesthood and destroyed many parts or karnak

    • @MybeautifulandamazingPrincess
      @MybeautifulandamazingPrincess Před rokem +4

      Yes, Thutmose most likely loved and respected his stepmother, she made him leader of her armies and he did accomplish military conquests under her reign, and he expanded her feats even more after she passed and he became Pharaoh

    • @areiaaphrodite
      @areiaaphrodite Před rokem +3

      @Truer words have never been spoken, My Princess! Exactly! You don't make someone who is an active threat, the leader of your army.

  • @kathrynjordan8782
    @kathrynjordan8782 Před rokem +21

    Hatshepsut is my favorite Queen in Ancient Egypt. In many ways, she is more fascinating than that of Cleopatra.

  • @catlover5998
    @catlover5998 Před rokem +16

    Her step son was not the only one to tear down the stuff she made I bet there where plenty of men in power that wanted her to be forgotten

    • @HaggyGT
      @HaggyGT Před 4 měsíci

      You sound like a feminist man hater, pot calling the kettle black.

  • @michaelsinger4638
    @michaelsinger4638 Před rokem +80

    Ironically by trying to erase her, they ended up making her even more fascinating in a way.
    She seems like she was a very good ruler as well.

    • @funfact8660
      @funfact8660 Před rokem +7

      Nefertiti later on tried to do something similar after the death of Pharoah Akhenaten. She too was erased from history for centuries.

    • @sailormoon2937
      @sailormoon2937 Před rokem

      But bitches love digging up the past!
      Don't they "Michael"

    • @sailormoon2937
      @sailormoon2937 Před rokem +3

      ​@@funfact8660 yes?

    • @darrylerren8185
      @darrylerren8185 Před rokem +1

      TBH i dont think theres any irony in this. Because since the erasures only began 25 years after her death, Thutmose would not have any resentment towards her. I think that Thutmose actually loved his aunt and stepmom and perhaps merely relegated her role as queen regent, which is still a prestigous position. Thutmose would himself be one of Ancient Egypt's greatest pharaohs. One more thing, I'm not comfortable with calling Hatshepsut a king. But she's still a great pharaoh regardless

    • @darrylerren8185
      @darrylerren8185 Před rokem +1

      @Harvard archaeologist Professor Bots

  • @suztjembijawatson3362
    @suztjembijawatson3362 Před rokem +7

    When visiting Egypt, a street salesman tried to insult me by calling me Hatshepsut. I laughed at him and said thank you.

  • @ultravioletcanary
    @ultravioletcanary Před 9 měsíci +8

    This is quite possibly the best documentary I've ever watched. On any subject. Thank you for how organized it was. i learned a lot!

    • @joanfourie1753
      @joanfourie1753 Před 5 měsíci

      As usual men couldn't stand a strong woman
      Pathetic

  • @rae4772
    @rae4772 Před rokem +10

    A very enjoyable and respectful look at a remarkable woman. I enjoyed hearing a more objective look at her life and achievements.

  • @BeautifulBridge444
    @BeautifulBridge444 Před rokem +53

    I can't watch this now while I'm studying. I'll watch it tomorrow but I want to thank you so much for doing this video. I love Egyptian history!! 🙏❤️

  • @karibaritunes
    @karibaritunes Před rokem +11

    Hatshepsut was a true Queen. My favorite!

    • @Human_01
      @Human_01 Před rokem

      Genuinely, respectable human females like Pharaoh Hatshepsut should be mainstream across society.
      ______________
      Society needs better, more [high] sentient, respectable female role models (who experience genuine humanity as an instinct, like Pharaoh-Hatshepsut)!
      And the attention of [young] females should be forcedly directed there (so many are narcissistic and dumb, so they'll willfully want to direct their consciousness/attention to [sexually] degenerate role models, such as Kim Kardashian, Cardi B, and Western hypersexual feminists)!!!
      Why is it that the "degenerate" often get the spot-light, are readily given platforms, and not subtly, systematically being suppressed (they would also need to be prevented from ruining aspirating youth/socially-vulnerable females potential, especially introverted and intuitive ones [relatively socially-vulnerable]).
      They need to stop being so pathetic (most females; not including XNTJ, obviously, and a few enneagrams). At any rate, like men, being pathetic, lacking emotional resiliency and having a disregard for intelligence should [seriously] shamed in women (i.e. being pathetic, having the mind of a child, not having a genuine growth-mindset/'intent' to grow into a genuinely intelligent and competent human being, and they should grow to be especially anti-narcissit [the actual mental disorder]).
      This will bold well for society and female [collective] legacy. More importantly, it will fix a lot of societies issues, especially since most parents fail to educate and firmly warn their children against narcissists/NPD (and cluster-b), particularly breeding with them as the disorder is genetic, so they only increase the number of people/children disadvantageous mental disorder (and 'NPD', and borderline makes them particularly evil).

  • @leonstanford9917
    @leonstanford9917 Před rokem +5

    Those who have dated the Exodus in 1446 have suggested that Hatshepsut brought Moses from the Nile in his infancy in 1526, and Moses led Israel from Egypt later, in 1446, 1 Kings 6:1, Judges 11:26, Acts 13:19. It is plausable that Thutmoses III, after releasing Israel and subsequently losing most of his army by drowning, blamed Hapshepsut who raised Moses, and sought to erase her memory from the monuments. Thutmoses would have been a boy and Moses an adult, around the time Hatsheput died around 1464. By 1446 Thutmoses, an adult ruler had conducted 17 military campaigns, but none after he lost his army in 1446.

    • @zacharyrogerssr9331
      @zacharyrogerssr9331 Před 3 měsíci

      Thutmose 3 was the Moses story. Found in a river and raised with the big wigs

  • @mamorgansnutrimetics
    @mamorgansnutrimetics Před 9 měsíci +4

    I love the ancient Egypt history!! Its very interesting, I think the Egyptian pharaohs were very intelligent also i love how they kept there ancient history hidden as they no longer exist in that life anymore!! 🙏✌️💜

  • @greatboniwanker
    @greatboniwanker Před rokem +5

    I love the objectivity and lack of constant commercials. Thank you People Profiles!

  • @masonstauffer5974
    @masonstauffer5974 Před rokem +20

    My favorite Queen in Egyptian history, such a great video.

  • @arnolddalby5552
    @arnolddalby5552 Před rokem +4

    It was the high priests and the Queen who would have had dreams given by the conscious living statues that proclaimed her Pharaoh. Plus Hatshepsut definitely took the Elixir of Life in the Bread and Wine as recorded on the walls at Karnak which gives an expanded consciousness. Hahaha.

  • @stephanieking4444
    @stephanieking4444 Před rokem +9

    Excellent profile video of a great woman. My favourite Ancient Egyptian ruler. 👏👏👏💖💖💖

  • @tanyashumate853
    @tanyashumate853 Před rokem +7

    I feel that she was the real deal.

  • @Pouquiloury
    @Pouquiloury Před rokem +15

    Hatshepsut acclaimed herself as appointed succesor of her father. She was of royal blood. The halfbrother she married was not, since his mother was not. Their father had a difficult decision to make. No royal male heir, a royal daughter who could not inherit due to custom. Have them marry and both be Pharao, problem solved, continuing the royal bloodline. Since they believed the royals were descendants of the gods it is plausibel Hatshepsuts father would think she was first in line. So the halfbrother could rule because of his marriage with Hatshepsut and she could inherit because of it. When the halfbrother had an heir with a non-royal wife there was even less royal blood in the succession. The only legitimacy of royal blood was with Hatshepsut. So it was very opportune to have her beside them. She was the tie to the royal blood and with that the tie to the gods and the Divine. She was not usurping anything. She was what held up their claim to the throne. And she showed her regality by being a good ruler, bringing prosperity, stability and great creativity to the realm. The devastation of her legacy most have been executed by small minded people who couldn't accept her greatness, not by the people who were raised to power by her support.
    She was a truly remarkable Pharao.
    Thank you for making this video !

    • @Human_01
      @Human_01 Před rokem

      Genuinely, respectable human females like Pharaoh Hatshepsut should be mainstream across society.
      ______________
      Society needs better, more [high] sentient, respectable female role models (who experience genuine humanity as an instinct, like Pharaoh-Hatshepsut)!
      And the attention of [young] females should be forcedly directed there (so many are narcissistic and dumb, so they'll willfully want to direct their consciousness/attention to [sexually] degenerate role models, such as Kim Kardashian, Cardi B, and Western hypersexual feminists)!!!
      Why is it that the "degenerate" often get the spot-light, are readily given platforms, and not subtly, systematically being suppressed (they would also need to be prevented from ruining aspirating youth/socially-vulnerable females potential, especially introverted and intuitive ones [relatively socially-vulnerable]).
      They need to stop being so pathetic (most females; not including XNTJ, obviously, and a few enneagrams). At any rate, like men, being pathetic, lacking emotional resiliency and having a disregard for intelligence should [seriously] shamed in women (i.e. being pathetic, having the mind of a child, not having a genuine growth-mindset/'intent' to grow into a genuinely intelligent and competent human being, and they should grow to be especially anti-narcissit [the actual mental disorder]).
      This will bold well for society and female [collective] legacy. More importantly, it will fix a lot of societies issues, especially since most parents fail to educate and firmly warn their children against narcissists/NPD (and cluster-b), particularly breeding with them as the disorder is genetic, so they only increase the number of people/children disadvantageous mental disorder (and 'NPD', and borderline makes them particularly evil).

    • @amandabaird4401
      @amandabaird4401 Před 4 měsíci

      I'm sure that's what this excellent documentary said?

  • @leeblack6139
    @leeblack6139 Před rokem +11

    Well done. I have only recently been recommended to this channel. With this documentary versus others like it. You produce an excellent work. You don't go down rabbit holes with "aliens" or other such rubbish. In fact, you present this fascinating woman in a slightly different, but, quit positive light as an innovative ruler of her time.

  • @avtlo1719
    @avtlo1719 Před rokem +3

    Thank u for this.i wish she got more recognition

  • @shellybrooks691
    @shellybrooks691 Před rokem +6

    It's always nice to more about another female doing the right thing for the sake of the family

  • @bahmat
    @bahmat Před rokem +4

    Why didn't Netflix make a docu-series about this amazing woman instead of the abomination that was "Cleopatra"?

    • @watching7721
      @watching7721 Před rokem

      Because Cleopatra is more popular in pop culture

  • @ajl8198
    @ajl8198 Před rokem +5

    I just discovered your channel and I am now obsessed!! I love your historical biographies! Absolutely professional and very enjoyable thank you!!

  • @heenanyou
    @heenanyou Před rokem +2

    Thank you for chopping it up into segments and naming them - so convenient when you want to go back and see again. And I learned something I didn't know - that there was no name for Queen. Always something new to me, however minor.

  • @MsRedwings23
    @MsRedwings23 Před rokem +5

    I agree she needs a movie

  • @daniellebleue
    @daniellebleue Před 8 měsíci +1

    I have read a pretty impressive novel on her story named ''La Dame du Nil'' from Pauline Gedge ... This changed my life... 🌙 I really enjoyed your documentary...

  • @johnstephens355
    @johnstephens355 Před rokem +14

    Great to get into ancient Egypt! Akhenaten please

  • @ksnutrition3627
    @ksnutrition3627 Před rokem +3

    Hatshepsut was a legitimate ruler. She was a rightful Pharaoh. It was uncommon for women to rule and because of that I think that's why her name was trashed. Someone later was jealous of her reign.

  • @Rodviet
    @Rodviet Před rokem +3

    Wow, what an amazing documentary, I had no idea about her story. Thank you so much. What a wonderful channel.

  • @user-xu5ec7gj7m
    @user-xu5ec7gj7m Před rokem +4

    Yes a movie would be great

  • @rowdysgirlalways
    @rowdysgirlalways Před rokem +13

    I have thought for years that she was a great and righteous ruler, defaced by envious, lesser men. She was the product of her time and ruled by necessity to keep the kingdom strong.

  • @mskimyu
    @mskimyu Před rokem +4

    excellent narration, subtle and soothing background music and sound, impressive visuals, and a very handsome and elegant voice, you'll never notice it's an hour long! thanks for all your documentaries! 👍👌💯 more power to your channel!

  • @nabihachaiti6574
    @nabihachaiti6574 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Thank you very much for the detailed information. It helped a lot to enrich my knowledge :)

  • @donaldcrawfordiii554
    @donaldcrawfordiii554 Před rokem +7

    Very good presentation! Thank everyone who made this possible!👍👍👍👍👍

  • @HadToSayIt
    @HadToSayIt Před rokem +5

    Really refreshing to see the entire story for the first time. 🙏🏽👍🏽

    • @Human_01
      @Human_01 Před rokem

      Genuinely, respectable human females like Pharaoh Hatshepsut should be mainstream across society.
      ______________
      Society needs better, more [high] sentient, respectable female role models (who experience genuine humanity as an instinct, like Pharaoh-Hatshepsut)!
      And the attention of [young] females should be forcedly directed there (so many are narcissistic and dumb, so they'll willfully want to direct their consciousness/attention to [sexually] degenerate role models, such as Kim Kardashian, Cardi B, and Western hypersexual feminists)!!!
      Why is it that the "degenerate" often get the spot-light, are readily given platforms, and not subtly, systematically being suppressed (they would also need to be prevented from ruining aspirating youth/socially-vulnerable females potential, especially introverted and intuitive ones [relatively socially-vulnerable]).
      They need to stop being so pathetic (most females; not including XNTJ, obviously, and a few enneagrams). At any rate, like men, being pathetic, lacking emotional resiliency and having a disregard for intelligence should [seriously] shamed in women (i.e. being pathetic, having the mind of a child, not having a genuine growth-mindset/'intent' to grow into a genuinely intelligent and competent human being, and they should grow to be especially anti-narcissit [the actual mental disorder]).
      This will bold well for society and female [collective] legacy. More importantly, it will fix a lot of societies issues, especially since most parents fail to educate and firmly warn their children against narcissists/NPD (and cluster-b), particularly breeding with them as the disorder is genetic, so they only increase the number of people/children disadvantageous mental disorder (and 'NPD', and borderline makes them particularly evil).

  • @aminamateen7071
    @aminamateen7071 Před rokem +4

    Definitely. Was not a schemer..only tried to fulfill her destiny

  • @whatworxproject3822
    @whatworxproject3822 Před rokem +2

    Read "Ages in Chaos" by Immanuel Velikosky, Due to the interruption of Ancient Egyptian rule by the Hyksos, he posits that the calender is off 400 years. This correction along with the relief to the Land of Punt, shows Hatshepsut as the illustrious Queen of Sheba who visited Solomon. This influenced her to mimic the Temple and temple feasts and rituals she saw at Jerusalem, and like Solomon to gain wealth and peace through trade and economic expansion without war, and how to govern well. Who knows. But being the greatest Queen to ever rule, surely she was whom the Hebrews referred to as the Queen of Sheba.

  • @funfact8660
    @funfact8660 Před rokem +17

    One of my favorite Pharoahs of the 18th dynasty, Hatshepsut 👍👽 Nefertiti tried to copy her after Akhenaten's death, and failed miserably.

  • @jessicajacobsson9161
    @jessicajacobsson9161 Před rokem +6

    She was one hell of a woman and a great
    Farao

  • @apriljeddahlynbacud9489
    @apriljeddahlynbacud9489 Před rokem +5

    You did a good job Sir! I hope you can release more videos. As a Ancient History Junkie, I really enjoy watching your contents..I hope you can cover King Arthur of Camelot too. Thank you!

  • @invinciblecucumber
    @invinciblecucumber Před rokem +2

    The biggest issue I have with ancient Egyptian history is how we're totally disregarding incredibly inhumane methods they used to build all those fancy shiny monuments. Is there even a number of lives given for "glory" of pharaohs?

    • @wendyHew
      @wendyHew Před rokem

      Recent excavations have found builders villages close to the pyramids with evidence of an abundance of food. The evidence seems now to show that the builders were fellow Egyptians that were paid very well and housed, at least for the monuments in Cairo and Giza.

  • @nautika1
    @nautika1 Před rokem +3

    That woman is true king respect

  • @Aewon84
    @Aewon84 Před rokem +8

    As an ASOIAF fan Hatshepsut gives me a strong Rhaenyra vibe. Or rather, Rhaenyra as she should have been.

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před rokem

      To me Rhaenyra more resembles Cleopatra VII. They both went to war with their (half) brothers and both bore children that weren't of pure dynastic blood.

    • @MybeautifulandamazingPrincess
      @MybeautifulandamazingPrincess Před rokem

      ​@@pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Caesarion was wasn't full dynastic blood but he had a right of claim over Rome. Had the corrupt senator's and Augustus not plotted to murder Julius Caesar, Caesarion could've become both Emperor of Rome and Pharaoh of Egypt, imagine how powerful that would've been

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před rokem

      @@MybeautifulandamazingPrincess If only Cleopatra and Antony won the battle of Actium... Or: if Ceasar wasn't murdered in first place!
      Also, according Cicero, Cleopatra wa pregnant with second child of Ceasar at the time of his assasination, but shortly after lost that child, either in miscarriage/stillbirth or infant death. Stacy Schiff, author of Cleopatra's biography, thinks that if this child would survive, he or she would have even more powerful claim to Rome than Ceasarion. Because while this child also was bastard, unlike their brother, they were conceived in Rome, and this time whole Rome saw Cleopatra who was pregnant, presumably by Ceasar.

  • @OndriaDancingStar
    @OndriaDancingStar Před rokem +3

    There are far more than 42 principal gods in ancient Egypt.

  • @blkhistorydecoded
    @blkhistorydecoded Před rokem +2

    Listen to the Anunnaki king list. It is eerily similar to the 18th Dynasty. Apparently the second Pharoah didn't have an heir so his brother took over.

  • @gonefishing167
    @gonefishing167 Před rokem +7

    Great video, thank you. Her temple is just superb, it looks so modern. Not taking anything away from it just stating. It takes one’s breath away. 👵👵🇦🇺🇦🇺

  • @justinerickson5486
    @justinerickson5486 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I feel like if someone could go back in time and let Egyptian royalty know how bad incest is, their line of kings would never have failed and they'd actually be a major power today

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Tutankhamun is the only known Pharaoh in 18th dynasty born from incest. And last Egyptian Royalty ironically failed because Cleopatra the Great decided ABANDONED incest altogether - she married Roman general and had three children by him, plus she had earlier bastard son by Caesar (at least - officially with Caesar). But Antony failed her as protector and Octavian used this relationship as pretext to invade Egypt. Before this Cleopatra was married to her brother - it can be argue that if she decided to be have heirs by him as previous rulers, she would be secure in Egypt. But she decided she will have children outside of family. It is definitely good thing that her kids get fresh genes, but contrary to your words, Pharaohnic Egypt probably would last longer if she went with tradition and consummated marriage with her brother 😅😅. Her firstborn son being Caesar's only living son was killed by Octavian as threat to his power, and younger children of Cleopatra were main reason why she couldn't simply break things with Antony and allied herself wit Octavian. Her marriage alliance outside of her dynasty was something that ultimately doomed her and Pharaohnic tradition, as Antony turned out to be unworthy of Queen's hand.

    • @justinerickson5486
      @justinerickson5486 Před 11 měsíci

      @@pendragonsxskywalkers9518 is Tut the "only known" or was it a "known tradition?" Just pointing out the contradiction there. But my point predates Cleopatra by at least a thousand years. If it had never been considered tradition, things wouldn't have reached the point of no return - as it were. Same could be said for many dynastic regimes over the past few thousand years

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@justinerickson5486 You said that Pharaoh's rule in Egypt ended because of inb****ng. I simply pointed out it didn't - Cleopatra the Great was last Pharaoh of independent Egypt and her downfall was a man who was outside of her family and outside of her country. So, no, it wasn't in****t that made last Pharaohnic dynasty end. Quite opposite. Now, in****et was often practiced during native Egyptian dynasties. However this video was about Hatshepsut who was member of 18th dynasty - and during this dynasty only known Pharaoh born of brother-sister marriage were Amenhotep I and Tutankhamun (so I did little mistake - there were two, not one). That doesn't mean there was no in***t, since Hatshepsut herself married her half-brother - but she only bore a daughter that isn't known to have children. There was marriage between Thutmose IV and his sister Iaret - they were childless.
      Ahmes I married his sister Ahmes Nefertari - they had Amenhotep I.
      Amnehotep I married his sister. No children are known.
      Thutmose I was commoner born outside of dynasty. If he was related to his wives, we have no account of it.
      Thutmose II was born to Thutmose I and Mutnofret (who presumably wasn't closely related to him). He had daughter by his half-sister Hatshepsut and son by concubine.
      Thutmose III was born to Thutmose II and (presumably unrelated) concubine named Iset.
      Amenhotep II was born to Thutmose III and Meritre who wasn't born in Royal family.
      Thutmose IV was child of Amnehotep II and Tiaa (again, not a Princess of blood). He married his sister, but his heir, Amenhotep III, was child of concubine Mutemiwya.
      Amenhotep III married Tiye who might have had some blood connection to Royal family, but it's unproven. Either way, she wasn't his sister. They were parents of Akhenaten and few other children.
      Two of this children had Tutankhamun.
      Tutankhamun married his half sister/first cousin Ankhesenamun (daughter of Ankhenaten and woman who wasn't his sister, Nefertiti) but they had no surviving babies.
      Ay and Horemheb were last Pharaohs of 18th dynasty and they were both common born.
      So, yes, in***st was a known tradition. However, turns out, Hatshepsut's dynasty produced only two Pharaohs from brother-sister unions, so the genes of rulers in THIS family might have been surprisingly "fresh", as they were born mostly of non-royal women. Even if Hatshepsut married her half-brother, this lineage ended on their daughter. Next Pharaohs for few generations up to Tut were from people who weren't related (or at least: not closely related).

    • @justinerickson5486
      @justinerickson5486 Před 11 měsíci

      @@pendragonsxskywalkers9518 it was a major contribution to the downfall of the empire is my point. An empire with more gold and manpower than natural resources could have easily overcome almost any other obstacles. I could say it was because they had a woman in power, but that would be a joke. A quote from the mummy comes to mind, "These are desert peoples, they value water, not gold." And if you look at the city of Petra, that philosophy holds true. A weakening of the bloodline due to the untimely death if leaders and an inquest from multiple countries such as Persia, Greece and Rome. There were many things that contributed to the downfall of Egypt. But, as any time travel theorist could explain. Changing that one belief would change all of history.

  • @tonihazle2034
    @tonihazle2034 Před rokem +2

    Thank you for this - I really enjoyed it,

  • @UATU.
    @UATU. Před rokem +2

    Zahi Hawass, still setting Egyptology back decades.

  • @nitawynn9538
    @nitawynn9538 Před 3 měsíci +1

    An admirable woman. She must have had a strong personality to rule as long as she did.

  • @tripperscdo9684
    @tripperscdo9684 Před rokem +1

    Glad you made a video like this.
    Love it....👍

  • @Wenchework
    @Wenchework Před rokem +3

    Her step son was co-ruler and could have easely gotten her away one way or the other when he had a chanse instead he showed deep trust and respect by letting her rule like she did and feeling comftedebul doing that as well so it oviusly was a clear strong bond between them

  • @areiaaphrodite
    @areiaaphrodite Před rokem +6

    Do a video on Ahkenaten next?

  • @silveriocastro7421
    @silveriocastro7421 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I bow down to ancient royalty because we can inherit the philosophy and bones (Mummies/Body) of royalty but it's impossible to inherit their brain 🧠.

    • @silveriocastro7421
      @silveriocastro7421 Před 8 měsíci

      We inherit life/things externally (What is perceived and judged) but I will be literally impossible to inherit royalty/Kings/Queens, Princess/ Prince/ Emperors..Pharaohs internally...❤️🧠🪥🧴

  • @meloralovesdarkness2495
    @meloralovesdarkness2495 Před rokem +5

    I Think that She was Awesome!

  • @GattoriSancho
    @GattoriSancho Před 10 měsíci +1

    Crazy how they always talk about cleopatra but never Hat.

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před 9 měsíci

      We know more about Cleopatra, and many people like tragic stories. Hatshepsut's life after she became Pharaoh is bit boring. She traded with Punt Land and she most likely had Sed celebration around Year 16 of her rule... but that's basically it. We don't even know how she passed and wheter her only known daughter outlived her.

  • @RupicaSinghWaraich
    @RupicaSinghWaraich Před 6 měsíci

    typical that the patriarchy even into modern times would portray her as a scheming, unprincipled woman rather than an effective, wise and generous ruler, even so called enlightened male archeologists, she deserves our deep respect, thank goddess for the new archeologists and museum curators who have rescued her from male jealousy

  • @bigsharess
    @bigsharess Před 18 dny

    Very strong and powerful queen to seize and mentain power for such a long time of reign

  • @Casanova102986
    @Casanova102986 Před rokem +8

    beautiful Black native born east Africans from which we all come from ♥️ .

    • @DiNaMaklad211
      @DiNaMaklad211 Před rokem +6

      She wasnt black , she was Egyptian

    • @wendyHew
      @wendyHew Před rokem +1

      Thats such a ridiculous statement on so many levels

    • @Casanova102986
      @Casanova102986 Před 11 měsíci

      @Donnell0303she was a native born Black African that didn’t come from the middle east . that’s the definition of Black .

    • @Casanova102986
      @Casanova102986 Před 11 měsíci

      @@wendyHew she was a native born Black African that didn’t come from the middle east . that’s the definition of Black . you come from Black ppl . you mad ?

  • @cheri238
    @cheri238 Před rokem +2

    I don't play games, but chess. Thanks for the offer, though. I love history, Egyptian is fascinating.

  • @paxwallace8324
    @paxwallace8324 Před rokem +2

    Why why why didn't Netflix use Hatshepsut instead of Cleopatra as the focus of their black empowerment extravaganza? Because she actually was Black she actually was Beautiful she actually was powerful and compelling. She brought about a period of artistic achievement, prosperity, and great influence. As opposed to Cleopatra who was the last Pharoh of Egypt when Egypt was just a mere Vassel state to Rome.

  • @thesolitude
    @thesolitude Před rokem +1

    Great docu thanks

  • @shireenduke4417
    @shireenduke4417 Před rokem +1

    Informative! Thank you

  • @AfricanAmerican-qi2xy
    @AfricanAmerican-qi2xy Před 11 měsíci +1

    *Original state of the mummy of Thutmose the first... Hatshepsut's father.* HE ONCE HAD HAIR IN AN OLD PUBLISHED PHOTO (1800s - early 1900s), BUT IS PRESENTLY BALD _see reply_

  • @marktaylor4496
    @marktaylor4496 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Hatshepsut actually adopted Moses as her son. Doug Petrovich wrote in his book! It’s really great! Thutmoses 3 was the Pharoah who tried to kill Moses.

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před 9 měsíci

      Moses is fictional character. Also it doesn't make any sense, as Princess in Bible never became Pharaoh.

    • @KristenK78
      @KristenK78 Před 4 měsíci

      Anyone who starts from the Christian Bible, then looks for proof that the Bible is true, is working from a flawed premise. The Hebrew Bible in particular was never intended to be a record of literal history.

  • @Human_01
    @Human_01 Před rokem +1

    On a seeming random note: And yes, kingship should return - but it must be guided with knowledge, and safeguards against cluster-B ('NPD', psychopathy, in particular; since power amplifies what was already there, cluster-B + power is 'DISASTROUS', and unsustainable combination). And equally as important, kingship (or the equivalent, depending on respective region) should be incorporate neuro-psychology/neuropersonality, as well as the subjects enneagram for optimal results. The same should apply to the kings aide/associate.
    And effort should be made to cluster-b, sensor-feelers, codependents, and codependent-prone enneagram from such levels of power/authority.
    Part of a modern day kingship duties should be to subtle erase and suppress the influence of 'narcissist'/npd (cluster-B), codependents, sensor-feelers, low-sentient feelers (at worst, they are 'vulnerable-narcissists', purposely breed and support narcissits, have a willful pathological disregard for intelligence, rationality, reality, slow progress down, are emotionally-selfish... They are barely conscious bags of meat who only savor and immerse themselves in their "feelings" - their feelings is their entire world. A build up of these narcissitic enables and potential pawns for narcissists should be prevented).
    Ideal Enneagram (for kingship): 1['1w9'], 2w1, 5, 8.
    Terrible Enneagram: 9 (they are codependent, and preoccupied with managing they emotional equilibrium/harmony, more self-centered than they reality, at worst potentially evil-friendly. This includes INFJ enneagram 9. If you make them feel good, they'll do anything. They obsess over "feeling good" - mentally premature trait, willful, annoying, 'narcissistic-enabler', especially with borderline. Surprising, secretly degenerate to boot)! Excluding 2w1, other enneagram 2 are horrible options for kingship (think: annoying, cute, brat who is overly emotional... "Overgrown child" who is a sucker for 'sickly', lovey-dovey, romance and "mushy, cuddly emotions"... It's the sort of so-called "love" that is very gross, immature/premature. Simply put, they are "blue-pill" in psychology and ideal "BETA-male", or volatile SIMP. prone to being emotionally manipulative, jealousy, extreme irrational insecurity and needs babying, and is easily offended. Potential emotional, parasite (this is noticeable among sensor-feelers-ISFJ, ESFJ, ISFP/INFP)...
    Recap: The unideal enneagram for kingship or leadership are...
    '9', '2w3' and most 2wx [excluding 2w1; they pair well with 1w9 oddly enough], 3, '4', 7 ('ExTP', ESTJ, 'sensor-feeler', and ENFP).

  • @user-gd3xy2vl1s
    @user-gd3xy2vl1s Před 5 měsíci

    Maybe the destruction of Hatshepsut's monuments 20 years after Thutmos III assumption of sole rule is because Hatchepsut did not die then but went into honourable retirement. Then when she did actually pass away it was thought best (for whatever reason) to remove her statues etc.. Just a thought

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před 5 měsíci +1

      While it possible in theory, there is no evidence of such practice as 'retirement' of Pharaoh. There was no practice of abdication in Egypt - or at least it is not known. Years were by Pharaoh name as long as he/she was alive, even if his/her reign as only formal. In Year 20 of Thuthomse III he and his step-mother are both mentioned as co-rulers, although we can suspect he might had more and more responsibilities. Then in Year 22, Thutmose is recorded as sole ruler, which means his step-mother passed away.

  • @mrains100
    @mrains100 Před 5 měsíci

    Hatshepsut was an excellent Pharaoh. Good video.

  • @aminamateen7071
    @aminamateen7071 Před rokem +1

    Thanks, a more truthful analogy

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid3587 Před rokem +2

    Excellent historical coverage introducing video thanks

  • @BHuang92
    @BHuang92 Před rokem +9

    We are so lucky that some of the records about her survived! Who knows if there were other matriarchs in other civilizations!

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před rokem

      @Harvard archaeologist Professor If she was Egyptian, she couldn't be Ethiopian, whatever her skin colour was.

  • @blackchairman2271
    @blackchairman2271 Před 5 měsíci

    A black women ruling a powerful ancient kingdom for 2 decades and lived a long time for any human being during ancient times. history is a wonderful place of time. I think actually not marrying relatives would actually have these people live a lot longer. I notice most royals for thousands of years tried to keep the bloodline pure. That has caused many of problems for ancient rulers and their families.

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před 5 měsíci +1

      There is no evidence Hatshepsut was Black. Egypt wa smulti-racial society - Hatshepsut's exact pehnotype is unknown as Egyptians were diverse society.

  • @jerryhatley5004
    @jerryhatley5004 Před rokem +1

    Until and/or unless further documentary evidence is discovered we probably will never know the truth concerning this ruler….

  • @permijitdunkley1697
    @permijitdunkley1697 Před rokem +1

    for all your fun youtube stuff...

  • @altarush
    @altarush Před rokem +2

    A woman who was power energy usurper? Like men aren’t!

  • @57jwyatt
    @57jwyatt Před měsícem

    Hatshepsut was a badass!

  • @MaydaTiger
    @MaydaTiger Před rokem

    the amount of times you accidentally said Hapshetsut is hilarious...

  • @Sphinx6x8
    @Sphinx6x8 Před rokem +2

    Fact: Ancient Egyptians are East Asians. Look the faces of Pharaoh status, Hieroglyph with Shang Oracle Bone scripts, and Culture of Death.
    The distribution of East Asians on earth 5000 years ago were totally different than today. Obviously, Asians are originated from Africa, like everyone does. In 342BC, the last native Pharaoh, Nectanebo II was defeated and that towards an end of Ancient Egypt civilization.
    Look the stone status of Tutankhamen auctioned in UK on July 4th, 2019. We simply can not lie to the world for Ancient Egypt history. Where were the Chinese from? Where were the Chinese civilization and language from?
    The old concept of races on earth are basically 3: White, Asians and Blacks. Apparently, ancient Egyptians are not white, nor they are black because Nubians on south are blacks. So they can only be Asians.
    Did you go to Egypt and look the carvings on temples walls like Karnak Temple and Luxor Temple? Did you know the carvings on the wall shows the enemies on the north (shows European face features, such as high nose, deep eyes and more mustache) and enemy of south (shows black features such as slope forehead, broad nose and curved short hair) of Ancient Egyptians?
    The Ancient Egyptian writings are same as Chinese characters. Most of the structures are two pictures combined that one for meaning and one for pronunciation. The writing could be from right to left, from left to right and from top to bottom.
    Political form of Dynasties. Both China and Ancient Egypt's history are series of Dynasties, each dynasty is the ruled by one family, they are very similar.
    Women position in society are same both in China and Ancient Egypt. Women can be traders, venders on street and even rulers. This gender equity is almost nonexistence anywhere else except China and Ancient Egypt, simply because for East Asians or Ancient Egyptians, biology differences between male and female are smaller.
    According to abundant historic resources and ancient records from ancient China, The first dynasty of China is Xia Dynasty, not Shang. However, no archaeology evidences of this dynasty ever found. It is very unlikely that scholars several thousand years ago lied to us, more likely is that Xia is not in current China territory.
    Some research shows the high coincidence of events and king's name of Xia and Egyptian Pharaoh. Specifically, the Ancient Egypt hieroglyphic of Old Kingdom Pharaoh are very similar to King's name of Xia in form of Oracle bone scripts.
    Religion: Both Ancient China and Ancient Egypt believed a religion that worship multiple gods. Both of their Every god is from one element of nature, like wind, rain, etc., or even an animal, plant, rock.
    The royal animal of The Chinese dragon King used is in a snake form, with the Chinese phenix, it is the same form of eagle and snake on the Pharaoh crown in Ancient Egypt.
    Funeral: both China and Ancient Egypt use white cloth belt wrap their head on the funeral.
    Furthermore, The Hieroglyph of Xia and Pre-Xia King's name in form of Oracle Bone Scripts are exactly the same or similar to Egyptian Kings. For example, The name of Narmer is made of catfish and chisel, that is exactly same as Yu the Great in China Xia. The list of king's names in similarity are very long but here can not post pictures.

    • @jonathanigiraneza6589
      @jonathanigiraneza6589 Před rokem

      That is just not true. Where exactly did the ancient Egyptians paint themselves as Asians in large? I’m not denying that they were some depictions that do but most of them depicted them looking more like East African with a beja or afar type of look(note the beja and afar tribes are actually indigenous to Egypt). Paintings like tomb of Nakht TT52 or tomb of Userhat TT56, Hatshepsut soldiers on her temple, Hesy-Ra and more. All these depictions look nothing like modern day Egyptians or white or asian but rather like Somalis or Ethiopians. Not only that the Egyptians themselves said that they came originally from the land of punt which most scholars agree is located in modern day east Africa and the depiction of the people of punt was identical to the average Egyptian from the clothing, the hairstyles to the skin color.

  • @dragoncomosaics9282
    @dragoncomosaics9282 Před rokem +1

    So long and not a word about true history.
    Try to deny this:
    Senenmut is Moses that was saved by Hashepsut from Nile waters, including crocodiles, during his baby form.
    After izraelites escaped from Amenhotep II this one had hatred for Hapshepsut and destroyed many of her images.
    Because Amenhotep II lost his first born son Thutmoses IV started to rule Egypt with his monotheism, as replacement for God of Israel or in honor to God of Israel.

  • @mariannehappiness2227
    @mariannehappiness2227 Před rokem +3

    These kings and queen were dark brown.please tell the truth sir.Otherwise this has to do with racism!!!!!!

  • @dr.banoub9233
    @dr.banoub9233 Před rokem +1

    What’s with the thumbnail? That crown was only worn by Nefertiti, Great Royal Wife of Akhenaten. No other Royal wore that particular crown in the entirety of ancient Egyptian civilization .

  • @rubster1975
    @rubster1975 Před rokem +2

    Queen. That's called a Queen.

  • @carolinasandberg4567
    @carolinasandberg4567 Před rokem +1

    Can you do king tut next?

  • @oldishandwoke-ish1181
    @oldishandwoke-ish1181 Před 7 měsíci +1

    It seem that those men (the conservative type) who objected to women rising above what the male authorities considered to be their station saw to it that women rulers were removed from memorials commemorating them.... See also the case of the only Chinese Empress to rule in her own right, Wu Zetian, but typical of Victorian (male) historians to play this point up! Bless..

  • @kylerrodriguez9706
    @kylerrodriguez9706 Před rokem +4

    Please make a video about John F Kennedy and Bobby Kennedy

    • @wendyHew
      @wendyHew Před rokem

      Yes, they are descended from Akhenaten too so would make a nice sequel ❤

  • @edwardrea8924
    @edwardrea8924 Před rokem +3

    Great video lads love learning about this time period any chance of a Tutankhamun video in 2023

  • @JescaML
    @JescaML Před 2 měsíci

    And possible the pharaohs daughter who took in and adopted Moses because she did not have a son. Her records were destroyed possibly to hide this information. Thutmose IV is the second born son that wasn’t supposed to be king

  • @strawberrycar711
    @strawberrycar711 Před rokem +2

    I find “Egypt “ to be fascinating enlightening and an influence on many of the worlds civilizations . I guess my question is if the Egyptians called this land Kemet why do we call it Egypt which is a Greek word created by people who lived 2000 years after them Greeks are Greeks Romans are Romans Chinese are Chinese why the difference and why are the depictions of the people in the Old Kingdom Middle Kingdom so different than when you actually see the statues in Egypt and around the world of the Pharoahs , such as Djoser, Khufu , Akhenaten , Hatshepsut and Imhotep . Strange . I think “Egyptologist “ have created a narrative and are unwilling to except any new info that appears regarding this civilization.

    • @rufusroher
      @rufusroher Před rokem

      Hmm... This is what happens when your nation eventually gets taken over by other nationalities who have a differing language. China is still ruled by Chinese, Greece is still ruled by Greeks, and Rome is still Rome, with all its Western ancestors who called it Rome past and present. Egypt has not been ruled by native Egyptians for thousands of years.
      Egypt has gone through many etymologies:
      1) a) Ancient Egypt was named Kemet, & its citizens referred to themselves as Remtju ni Keme; b) Egyptians also divided themselves by region, thus, Ta Shemau for Upper Egypt, Ta Mehu for lower Egypt, Ta Mefkat for Sinai Peninsula, c) then there's the regions of Kush & Nubia.
      2) When Macedonian Greeks visited Egypt they were told by Egyptians that the nation's name was Hwt-ka-Ptah, after the God Ptah, same as the capitol name which is now called Memphis. As Macedonian Greeks eventually conquered Egypt, and had a hard time with the pronunciation of the Egyptian "H", they used the ancient Greek term 'Aegyptus' which translates to Western languages as Egypt.
      3) Eventually, Rome defeated the Macedonian Egyptian Pharaoh, Cleopatra, and for translative purposes, had no use to change the name from Egypt; a) after the fall of Rome, Egypt became part of the Byzantine Empire, and still had no reason to change the name; b) at this time, Egypt became a Christian nation, as did Ethiopia.
      4) In the 7th century, Egypt was conquered by Muslim Arabs who named Egypt 'Misr' derived from 'Mizraim' which is likely derived from another Egyptian word and a tradition from the Quran; a) the West still keeps to the name from the Greek, Egypt, since they don't speak Arabic; b) additionally, much like Macedonian Greeks had difficulty with the pronunciation of the name for Egypt natives gave them, Arabs had difficult with the Greek word 'Aegypti' [i.e Egyptian citizen] so they referred to them as 'Copti', which the etymology of the term Coptic used for Christians in Egypt, and the region, more so than in the West, where a Christian is referred to as a Christian.
      I guess the takeaway here is, if you want to keep your ANCIENT nation's name the same, then don't get conquered by other nations with differing languages. The fact is, we know the etymology of Egypt better than most nations. It's not anything "new" regarding this civilization. It's pretty much an open book with only the finer details needing to be filled out. I think it's "nativists" that are the ones who actually want to 'create a narrative' and are 'unwilling' to accept the facts about a conquered civilization that's still under Muslim Arab rule, not native Egyptians.

  • @BRIDEOFCHRIST-kd2nl
    @BRIDEOFCHRIST-kd2nl Před rokem +1

    Thank you for this honor in regards to me!!!!!!

  • @TruthReignSupreme24
    @TruthReignSupreme24 Před 5 měsíci +1

    This is Moses Mother 1:50

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před 5 měsíci +1

      Moses was fictional character... and even if he was real, his biological mother was Hebrew, and adoptive mother was only Princess of Egypt, not Pharaoh herself.

  • @CF.
    @CF. Před rokem +2

    We already have a word for this, it’s called “Queen”. 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @theendoftheworldasweknowit9894

    Why on so many videos do they always use the image of Nefertiti? That is not how Hatshepsut looked. It drives me crazy.

  • @adamjtr94
    @adamjtr94 Před rokem +1

    I have never been this early. I absolutely adore these videos!