why dose this say answer when im the one asking the question!
This is held by the Metropolitan Museum of Art - see the link below.
Obelisks.Hatshepsut means Foremost of Noble Ladies is one of the most victorious pharaohs. Her two notable accomplishment were the Hatshepsut needle or granite obelisks and the granite sphinx statue.
yes
For sure, no one knows who built the Spinx. Great Sphinx of Giza, situated at the Giza Plateau adjacent to the Great Pyramids of Giza is a mythical creature with, as a minimum, the body of a lion and a human head. So we can't say it is her.
why dose this say answer when im the one asking the question!
Hatshepsut.
This is held by the Metropolitan Museum of Art - see the link below.
The Alabaster Sphinx was built durring the 18th dynasty. It was built in honor of an unknown pharaoh. People think it was for Hatshepsut, Amonhotep II, or Amonthep III.
For sure, no one knows who built the Spinx. Great Sphinx of Giza, situated at the Giza Plateau adjacent to the Great Pyramids of Giza is a mythical creature with, as a minimum, the body of a lion and a human head.
Obelisks.Hatshepsut means Foremost of Noble Ladies is one of the most victorious pharaohs. Her two notable accomplishment were the Hatshepsut needle or granite obelisks and the granite sphinx statue.
A Sphinx. The great spinx was built near the great pyramid, and was supposed to protect Khufu (or if you prefer Greek, his name would be Cheops). There were many more statues of Sphinxes, though, including Hatshepsut having two pink sphinxes at her temple.
yes
Now one knows who the builder of the sphinx was. It was believed that the head represented Pharaoh Khafra. Some scholastic think it was a lion first but the head broke and later was sculpture as the pharaoh. That statue was made years before Hatshepsut. It could reach 1000 years or more.
For sure, no one knows who built the Spinx. Great Sphinx of Giza, situated at the Giza Plateau adjacent to the Great Pyramids of Giza is a mythical creature with, as a minimum, the body of a lion and a human head. So we can't say it is her.
Pharaohs did not each have an individual "symbol", but they had hieroglyphs that spelled out all their names and titles.In the case of the queen we called "Hatshepsut", her name was written with signs spelling out the words ht.shpswt, meaning "foremost of noble women".
Ball of yarn. What else could it have been?