Mrs. Tsenhor: A Female Entrepreneur in Ancient Egypt
Mrs. Tsenhor: A Female Entrepreneur in Ancient Egypt
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Abstract
Reconstruction of the actual life of the ancient Egyptian female entrepreneur Tsenhor daughter of Nesmin (6th-5th century bce). Her papers—papyri written in Demotic—are now kept in museums in London, Paris, Turin, and Vienna. The story is embedded in a general framework describing the age she lived in (which saw the conquest of Egypt by the Persians), as well as the extraordinary legal position of women in Ancient Egypt. The papers left by Tsenhor strongly suggest that she was a liberated woman, almost 2,500 years before the concept was invented. This book aims to change the general view on women in ancient Egypt, which is far too often based on the lives of Nefertiti, Hatshepsut, and Cleopatra.
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Front Matter
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1
People
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2
Earth and Water: Nesmin, 556 bce
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3
Love and Death: Psenese, Tsenhor, Ruru, and Peteamunhotep, 530–517 bce
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4
Slave: Tsenhor, 517 bce
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Bricks: Tsenhor, Psenese, and Nesamunhotep, 512–506 bce
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Cattle: Burekhef and Ituru, 507–487 bce
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Love and Death: Tsenhor, Psenese, Ituru, and Ruru, 498–494 bce
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Earth and Water: Tsenhor, Ruru, and Nesamunhotep, 497–491 bce
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End Matter
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