English: Detail of Hatshepsut, Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt, c. 1473-1458 B.C. Indurated limestone sculpture at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City.
Hatshepsut is depicted in the clothing of a male king though with a feminine form. Inscriptions on the statue call her "Daughter of en:Re" and "Lady of the Two Lands." Most of the statue's fragments were excavated in 1929, by the Museum's Egyptian Expedition, near Hatshepsut's funerary temple at Deir el-Bahri in Thebes. The lower part of the statue was acquired by Karl Richard Lepsius and taken to Berlin in 1845. The head, left forearm, and parts of the throne were excavated by the Museum, 1926-27 season and acquired in the division of finds. The Berlin fragment was acquired by the Museum in an exchange in 1929.
კჷნ მანგი პიჯალეფით გობჟინაფა – დო თქვა ქოთირანთ, ვარ-და გჷთმაჭყანთ ახალ ნახანდის თე ნახანდიშ გჷმორინაფათ-და, თქვა გიღჷნა ნება თინა გაბჟინუათ კჷნ თი ვარ-და ომანგე ლიცენზიათ, ნამუშჷთ იბჟინუაფჷ წყუ.
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Statue of Hatshepsut in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (USA).
Estátua de Hatshepsut no Metropolitan Museum of Art, Nova Iorque (EUA).