About This Book
A compact survey of Egypt’s royal women traces biographical sketches from early dynasties through Persian and Ptolemaic rule, describing individual queens’ public functions, ritual roles, and reputed deeds. The author synthesizes inscriptions, monuments, art, and travellers’ reports to reconstruct funerary practices, court ceremonies, and aspects of daily life. Attention is given to the interpretive difficulties posed by fragmentary texts, damaged monuments, and variant name forms, and to the ways modern scholarship and archaeological discovery have helped revive and organize scattered evidence about succession and female authority in ancient Egypt.
About the Author
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