Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty, inaugurating what Egyptologists call…
1485 BCE to 1474 BCE
Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty, inaugurating what Egyptologists call the New Kingdom or the Egyptian Empire, had been founded by Ahmose I, the brother of Kamose, the last ruler of the Seventeenth Dynasty.
Ahmose had finished the campaign to expel the hated Hyksos rulers, ending the Second Intermediate Period of Egypt.
He was followed by Amenhotep I.
Both ruled for more than two decades.
Upon the death of Amenhotep’s son Thutmose I in 1493, his daughter Hatshepsut, meaning Foremost of Noble Ladies, had married her half-brother Thutmose II and assumed the title of Great Royal Wife.
Thutmose II, the fourth pharaoh of Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty, ruled for thirteen years, during which it has been traditionally believed that Hatshepsut exerted a strong influence over him, but at his death in 1480 he has only one son to take his place on the throne.
Not Hatshepsut's son but the issue of a lesser wife named Isis, the boy will eventually take the throne is Thutmose III.
Hatshepsut, as the boy king's aunt and stepmother, becomes in 1479 BCE the fifth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty.
This situation is not unprecedented, although it is uncommon for Egypt to be ruled by a woman.
Hatshepsut is the second known to have formally assumed power as "King of Upper and Lower Egypt" after Queen Sobekneferu of the Twelfth Dynasty.
She will come to be generally regarded by Egyptologists as one of the most successful pharaohs, reigning longer than any other woman of an indigenous Egyptian dynasty.
Hatshepsut reestablishes the trade networks that had been disrupted during the Hyksos occupation of Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period, and oversees the preparations and funding for a mission to the Land of Punt.
Ancient Egyptian texts are consistent in connecting the location of Punt with the Red Sea, but scholars have not agreed upon its precise location.
Modern academic consensus places Punt in the area of northern Ethiopia, Eritrea, or the southeastern Beja lands of Sudan, but some argue that Punt was as far away as Puntland, a region of Somalia that adopted this name in the twentieth century.
Frankincense and myrrh, which were imported by the Egyptians from Punt, are still found in abundance in this region.