8/10
Home / Albums /

Head of Hatasu

Head of Hatasu.jpg Bust of Thothmes I, the first great Egyptian ConquerorThumbnailsHead of Thothmes IIBust of Thothmes I, the first great Egyptian ConquerorThumbnailsHead of Thothmes IIBust of Thothmes I, the first great Egyptian ConquerorThumbnailsHead of Thothmes IIBust of Thothmes I, the first great Egyptian ConquerorThumbnailsHead of Thothmes IIBust of Thothmes I, the first great Egyptian ConquerorThumbnailsHead of Thothmes II
Google+ Twitter Facebook Tumblr

Hasheps, or Hatasu, was the daughter of the great warrior king, Thothmes the First, and, according to some, was, during his later years, associated with him in the government. An inscription is quoted in which he assigns to her her throne-name of Ra-ma-ka, and calls her "Queen of the South and of the North," But it was not till after the death of her father that she came prominently forward, and assumed a position not previously held by any female in Egypt, unless it were Net-akret (Nitocris).
Her father had left behind him two sons, as well as a daughter; and the elder of these, according to Egyptian law, succeeded him. He reigned as Thothmes-nefer-shau, and is known to moderns as Thothmes the Second. He was, however, a mere youth, of a weak and amiable temper; while Hatasu, his senior by some years, was a woman of great energy and of a masculine mind, clever, enterprizing, vindictive, and unscrupulous. The contrast of their portrait busts is remarkable, and gives a fair indication of the character of each of them. Thothmes has the appearance of a soft and yielding boy: he has a languishing eye, a short upper lip, a sensuous mouth and chin. Hatasu looks the Amazon: she holds her head erect, has a bold aquiline nose, a firmly-set mouth, and a chin that projects considerably, giving her an indescribable air of vigour and resolution. The effect is increased, no doubt, by her having attached to it the male appendage of an artificial beard; but even apart from this, her face would be a strong one, expressive of firmness, pride, and decision. It is thought that she contracted a marriage with her brother, such unions being admissible by the Egyptian marriage law, and not infrequent among the Pharaohs, whether of the earlier or the later dynasties. In any case, it is certain that she took the direction of affairs under his reign, reducing him to a cipher, and making her influence paramount in every department of the government.



Head of Thothmes II.jpg

Author
Ancient Egypt
By George Rawlinson
Published 1886
Available from gutenberg.org
Dimensions
512*664
Visits
934
Downloads
31