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13d
IFLScience on MSN5,000-Year-Old Rock Art May Show One Of Ancient Egypt’s First Rulers
A newly-discovered rock art panel on the western bank of the River Nile may depict an Ancient Egyptian authority figure from ...
Shattered depictions of Hatshepsut have long thought to be products of her successor’s violent hatred towards her, but a new study presents a different narrative ...
She was one of ancient Egypt's most successful rulers, a rare female pharaoh who preceded Cleopatra by 1,500 years, but Queen Hatshepsut's legacy was systematically erased by her stepson successor ...
Generations of creatives have looked back to ancient Egypt in their search for art and design inspiration—here are three ...
University of Pennsylvania researchers have discovered an Egyptian hex could be modern science's secret to battling leukemia.
A rock art panel near Aswan, Egypt, may depict a rare example of an elite individual from the First Dynasty, shedding light on the formation of the ancient Egyptian state.
An ancient rock engraving in the Lower Nile Valley may offer a rare glimpse into the origin of Egyptian kings. The art panel ...
An engraved panel from Aswan may show one of Egypt's earliest political elites. It reveals how rulers used art to claim space ...
18d
Daily Express US on MSNMystery of ancient Egypt's female pharaoh solved after 100 years
When Queen Hatshepsut, one of ancient Egypt's only two female rulers, died, it was widely believed that her nephew, Thutmose III, ordered for her statues to be defaced and destroyed to erase her from ...
An archaeologist has studied broken statues of Queen Hatshepsut—one of the few women to rule as an Egyptian pharaoh, 4,000 years ago—and found that they were not attacked during the ...
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