Hatshepsut was one of the greatest pharaohs, and her legacy was erased and forgotten for over 3,000 years

Header.jpg

Jackie Lay / NPR

Victoria Claflin Woodhull running for president in 1872
The Picture Show
Meet Victoria Woodhull, the woman who ran for president 50 years before she could vote

For Women’s History Month, I wanted to highlight Hatshepsut, who was forgotten to history for over three millennia and is still not quite a household name. While Cleopatra and Nefertiti are much better known, no female ruler of the ancient world was as adept and successful as Hatshepsut, which may be the key to why her legacy was erased for so long:

Hatshepsut1.jpg

Hatshepsut2d.jpg

Hatshepsut3b.jpg

Hatshepsut4.jpg

Hatshepsut5.jpg

Hatshepsut6.jpg

Hatshepsut7.jpg

Hatshepsut8.jpg

Hatshepsut9.jpg

Hatshepsut10.jpg

Hatshepsut11.jpg

Hatshepsut12.jpg

To learn more about Hatshepsut — and the source for much of this reporting — read Kara Cooney’s The Woman Who Would Be King: Hatshepsut’s Rise to Power in Ancient Egypt and Elizabeth B. Wilson’s “The Queen Who Would Be King,” in Smithsonian Magazine.

Jackie Lay works on the Visuals team at NPR. She’s an animator and illustrator who has been published at The Atlantic, Vox and The Washington Post. Find more of her work online, at JackieLay.com.

Sponsor Message