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In today's political landscape, women rulers are rare. However, thousands of years ago in ancient Egypt, women were pharaohs who controlled an authoritarian state in times of war and peace. Despite their success, they often ended up being used as mere pawns in a patriarchal society. By studying the lives of six remarkable pharaohs-including Hatshepsut, Nefertiti, and Cleopatra-renowned Egyptologist Kara Cooney explains how these women ruled and what made ancient Egypt unique among the great empires of history. An extraordinary testimony that sheds light on the complexities of their unusual…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In today's political landscape, women rulers are rare. However, thousands of years ago in ancient Egypt, women were pharaohs who controlled an authoritarian state in times of war and peace. Despite their success, they often ended up being used as mere pawns in a patriarchal society. By studying the lives of six remarkable pharaohs-including Hatshepsut, Nefertiti, and Cleopatra-renowned Egyptologist Kara Cooney explains how these women ruled and what made ancient Egypt unique among the great empires of history. An extraordinary testimony that sheds light on the complexities of their unusual power and explains why nothing like it has ever been seen since. But what was so special about ancient Egypt that women had access to the highest political offices? What was it about these women that enabled them to overcome the obstacles to the throne?
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Autorenporträt
Kara Cooney es profesora de Egiptología en la Universidad de California. Especializada en producción artesanal, estudios sobre ataúdes y economía en el mundo antiguo, Cooney se doctoró en Egiptología por la Universidad Johns Hopkins. En 2005, fue comisaria de la exposición 'Tutankamón y la Edad de Oro de los Faraones' en el Museo de Arte del Condado de Los Ángeles. Cooney ha producido, además, una serie de televisión de arqueología comparativa, titulada 'Out of Egypt', que se emitió en 2009 en Discovery Channel. Actualmente se encuentra inmersa en un estudio sobre la reutilización de ataúdes, centrada principalmente en el colapso de la Edad de Bronce durante las Dinastías XX y XXI de Egipto.