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A Study of Royal Female Power and Political Influence in Ancient Egypt: Contextualizing Queenship in the Twelfth Dynasty / Brandi D. Hill

DOI (Published version): 10.23889/Suthesis.51920

Abstract

The Twelfth Dynasty was a time for iconographic expression, new architectural designs, and titular expansion. During the dynasty, royal women began sharing iconographic attributes with ruling monarchs and for the first time the uraeus and sphinx pose became standardized for royal women. Women in the...

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Published: 2019
Institution: Swansea University
Degree level: Doctoral
Degree name: Ph.D
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa51920
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first_indexed 2019-09-16T20:20:48Z
last_indexed 2019-09-24T14:19:06Z
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spelling 2019-09-24T10:40:27.0862723 v2 51920 2019-09-16 A Study of Royal Female Power and Political Influence in Ancient Egypt: Contextualizing Queenship in the Twelfth Dynasty 2019-09-16 The Twelfth Dynasty was a time for iconographic expression, new architectural designs, and titular expansion. During the dynasty, royal women began sharing iconographic attributes with ruling monarchs and for the first time the uraeus and sphinx pose became standardized for royal women. Women in the queenship position were buried similar to the pharaonic style and used cenotaph type burials. Princess Neferuptah became the first royal woman to have her name encircled within a cartouche and Sobekneferu was the first female ruler of Egypt to have full pharaonic titulary. This thesis explores the political power of Twelfth Dynasty royal women by aiming to redefine queenship to better understand the ancient Egyptian concept, analyze the iconography, as well as clarify the tenure and reign of Princess Neferuptah and Sobekneferu. The iconographic study discusses specific attributes that include the poses, the severity of their facial characteristics, surviving uraei, wig type, headgear worn, style of ears, cosmetic or natural eyes, dress, jewelry, and if represented independently or paired. Using an art historical analysis this study interprets the surviving representations of Twelfth Dynasty royal women as elevations of their royal statuses in governmental positions. It also compares their iconography to royal women of other time periods, such as the Old Kingdom through the beginning of the Eighteenth Dynasty, and with male monarchs of the Twelfth Dynasty. This project formulates ideas on the events of the late Twelfth Dynasty by describing the power exhibited by the royal women Neferuptah and Sobekneferu. It examines Neferuptah and Sobekneferu in an art historical and archaeological context by their art works, (possible) burial complexes, building projects, titled burial goods, and representations with Amenemhat III. This study includes a complete familial lineage with artifacts and the first catalogue of surviving representations of all known Twelfth Dynasty royal women. E-Thesis Ancient Egypt, Royal Women, Women, Twelfth Dynasty, Middle Kingdom, Sobekneferu, Neferuptah, Iconography 31 12 2019 2019-12-31 10.23889/Suthesis.51920 A selection of third party content is redacted or is partially redacted from this thesis. COLLEGE NANME COLLEGE CODE Swansea University Doctoral Ph.D 2019-09-24T10:40:27.0862723 2019-09-16T17:21:04.0148829 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - Classics, Ancient History, Egyptology Brandi D. Hill 1 0051920-24092019103608.pdf Hill_Brandi_PhD_Thesis_Final_Volume_1_Redacted.pdf 2019-09-24T10:36:08.1100000 Output 86306376 application/pdf Redacted version - open access true 2019-09-23T00:00:00.0000000 Volume 1 true 0051920-24092019103651.pdf Hill_Brandi_PhD_Thesis_Final_Volume_2 _Redacted.pdf 2019-09-24T10:36:51.1500000 Output 106138680 application/pdf Supplemental material true 2019-09-23T00:00:00.0000000 Volume 2 (Appendices) true
title A Study of Royal Female Power and Political Influence in Ancient Egypt: Contextualizing Queenship in the Twelfth Dynasty
spellingShingle A Study of Royal Female Power and Political Influence in Ancient Egypt: Contextualizing Queenship in the Twelfth Dynasty
,
title_short A Study of Royal Female Power and Political Influence in Ancient Egypt: Contextualizing Queenship in the Twelfth Dynasty
title_full A Study of Royal Female Power and Political Influence in Ancient Egypt: Contextualizing Queenship in the Twelfth Dynasty
title_fullStr A Study of Royal Female Power and Political Influence in Ancient Egypt: Contextualizing Queenship in the Twelfth Dynasty
title_full_unstemmed A Study of Royal Female Power and Political Influence in Ancient Egypt: Contextualizing Queenship in the Twelfth Dynasty
title_sort A Study of Royal Female Power and Political Influence in Ancient Egypt: Contextualizing Queenship in the Twelfth Dynasty
author ,
author2 Brandi D. Hill
format E-Thesis
publishDate 2019
institution Swansea University
doi_str_mv 10.23889/Suthesis.51920
college_str Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
department_str School of Culture and Communication - Classics, Ancient History, Egyptology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Culture and Communication - Classics, Ancient History, Egyptology
document_store_str 1
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description The Twelfth Dynasty was a time for iconographic expression, new architectural designs, and titular expansion. During the dynasty, royal women began sharing iconographic attributes with ruling monarchs and for the first time the uraeus and sphinx pose became standardized for royal women. Women in the queenship position were buried similar to the pharaonic style and used cenotaph type burials. Princess Neferuptah became the first royal woman to have her name encircled within a cartouche and Sobekneferu was the first female ruler of Egypt to have full pharaonic titulary. This thesis explores the political power of Twelfth Dynasty royal women by aiming to redefine queenship to better understand the ancient Egyptian concept, analyze the iconography, as well as clarify the tenure and reign of Princess Neferuptah and Sobekneferu. The iconographic study discusses specific attributes that include the poses, the severity of their facial characteristics, surviving uraei, wig type, headgear worn, style of ears, cosmetic or natural eyes, dress, jewelry, and if represented independently or paired. Using an art historical analysis this study interprets the surviving representations of Twelfth Dynasty royal women as elevations of their royal statuses in governmental positions. It also compares their iconography to royal women of other time periods, such as the Old Kingdom through the beginning of the Eighteenth Dynasty, and with male monarchs of the Twelfth Dynasty. This project formulates ideas on the events of the late Twelfth Dynasty by describing the power exhibited by the royal women Neferuptah and Sobekneferu. It examines Neferuptah and Sobekneferu in an art historical and archaeological context by their art works, (possible) burial complexes, building projects, titled burial goods, and representations with Amenemhat III. This study includes a complete familial lineage with artifacts and the first catalogue of surviving representations of all known Twelfth Dynasty royal women.
published_date 2019-12-31T04:03:59Z
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