The rediscovery of Thutmose III and Hatshepsut

Date

Apr 16, 2024 6:00 PM - 7:00 PM

Location

Smith library

Sponsor

Salmagundi Library Committee
ARCE-NY

Admission

Open to the public
RSVP required

$25 | General admission
$15 | Online access
FREE | Salmagundi members
FREE | ARCE members with discount code

ARCE members receive discount codes via their own membership emails.

About the Event

Rediscover the history of Ancient Egyptian figures Thutmose III and Hathshepsut, featuring Aidan Dodson.

A statue of Egyptian pharaoh Thutmose the III under a spotlight.

Thutmose III | reigned for almost 54 years, until c. 1425 BC. For the first 22 years he was kept in the background by his step-mother Hatshepsut. As sole ruler, he embarked on a career of conquest, expanding the Egyptian Empire to its largest extant and ushering in a Golden Age. Having never lost a battle, he is nicknamed “The Napoleon of Egypt” and his military tactics are studied to this day. Late in his reign the memory of his predecessor Hatshepsut was expunged from historical records.

A painting of an egyptian woman.

Hatshepsut | Wife of Pharaoh Thutmose II, became regent to his successor, her step-son Thutmose III. She seized the throne, becoming one of the few female rulers of Ancient Egypt from c: 1505-1482 BC. Her reign was typified by supreme artistic and cultural achievements. Her temple, opposite modern-day Luxor, is considered one of the masterpieces of world architecture.

Ultimately, they were both forgotten to history and only rediscovered after the ability to read hieroglyphs was regained in the 19th Century. They remain subjects of intense interest and debate to this day.

About the Speaker

A bald man with glasses smiles at the camera, with a pyramid behind him.Aidan Mark Dodson is a world-renowned Egyptologist and historian. He has been honorary professor of Egyptology at the University of Bristol since 2018. Born in London, he completed a BA at the University of Liverpool (1985), and an MPhil (1986, museum practice and archaeology) and PhD (1995, Egyptology) at Christ’s College, Cambridge. He began teaching at the University of Bristol in October 1996, also holding the post of Simpson Professor of Egyptology at the American University in Cairo from January to July 2013. His primary research interests concern Ancient Egypt, with a particular focus on dynastic history and chronology, tomb architecture, sarcophagus and coffin design, canopic equipment, and the history of Egyptology; he is also an historian of late 19th and early 20th century navies, and has written on the royal tombs of Great Britain.

He is the author of over twenty books, 300 articles and reviews, and is well known to viewers of documentaries concerning Egyptology.

Dodson was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 2003.

Hungry?

If you have membership with Salmagundi, you are always welcome to have dinner beforehand in our dining room. Dining reservations must be made in advance via our Reservations page.

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