The pharaoh that wouldn't be forgotten - Kate Green

4,636,626 views ・ 2014-12-15

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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Three and a half thousand years ago in Egypt,
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a noble pharaoh was the victim of a violent attack.
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But the attack was not physical.
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This royal had been dead for 20 years.
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The attack was historical,
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an act of damnatio memoriae, the damnation of memory.
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Somebody smashed the pharaoh's statues,
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took a chisel and attempted to erase the pharaoh's name and image from history.
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Who was this pharaoh, and what was behind the attack?
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Here's the key:
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the pharaoh Hatshepsut was a woman.
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In the normal course of things, she should never have been pharaoh.
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Although it was legal for a woman to be a monarch,
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it disturbed some essential Egyptian beliefs.
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Firstly, the pharaoh was known as the living embodiment
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of the male god Horus.
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Secondly, disturbance to the tradition of rule by men
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was a serious challenge to Maat,
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a word for "truth," expressing a belief in order and justice,
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vital to the Egyptians.
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Hatshepsut had perhaps tried to adapt
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to this belief in the link between order and patriarchy through her titles.
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She took the name Maatkare,
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and sometimes referred to herself
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as Hatshepsu, with a masculine word ending.
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But apparently, these efforts didn't convince everyone,
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and perhaps someone erased Hatshepsut's image
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so that the world would forget the disturbance to Maat,
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and Egypt could be balanced again.
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Hatshepsut, moreover, was not the legitimate heir to the thrown,
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but a regent, a kind of stand-in co-monarch.
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The Egyptian kingship traditionally passed from father to son.
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It passed from Thutmose I to his son Thutmose II,
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Hatshepsut's husband.
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It should have passed from Thutmose II directly to his son Thutmose III,
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but Thutmose III was a little boy when his father died.
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Hatshepsut, the dead pharaoh's chief wife and widow,
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stepped in to help as her stepson's regent
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but ended up ruling beside him as a fully fledged pharaoh.
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Perhaps Thutmose III was angry about this.
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Perhaps he was the one who erased her images.
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It's also possible that someone wanted to dishonor Hatshepsut
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because she was a bad pharaoh.
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But the evidence suggests she was actually pretty good.
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She competently fulfilled the traditional roles of the office.
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She was a great builder.
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Her mortuary temple, Djeser-Djeseru,
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was an architectural phenomenon at the time
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and is still admired today.
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She enhanced the economy of Egypt,
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conducting a very successful trade mission to the distant land of Punt.
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She had strong religious connections.
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She even claimed to be the daughter of the state god, Amun.
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And she had a successful military career, with a Nubian campaign,
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and claims she fought alongside her soldiers in battle.
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Of course, we have to be careful when we assess the success
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of Hatshepsut's career,
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since most of the evidence was written by Hatshepsut herself.
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She tells her own story in pictures and writing
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on the walls of her mortuary temple
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and the red chapel she built for Amun.
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So who committed the crimes against Hatshepsut's memory?
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The most popular suspect is her stepson, nephew and co-ruler, Thutmose III.
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Did he do it out of anger because she stole his throne?
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This is unlikely since the damage wasn't done
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until 20 years after Hatshepsut died.
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That's a long time to hang onto anger and then act in a rage.
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Maybe Thutmose III did it to make his own reign look stronger.
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But it is most likely that he or someone else erased the images
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so that people would forget that a woman ever sat on Egypt's throne.
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This gender anomaly was simply too much of a threat to Maat
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and had to be obliterated from history.
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Happily, the ancient censors were not quite thorough enough.
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Enough evidence survived for us to piece together what happened,
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so the story of this unique powerful woman can now be told.
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