The Woman Who Was Pharaoh

Who was the first female Pharaoh?

Hatshepsut

    Long excluded from the top rung of power, women have pressed hungrily into history's leadership vacancies when circumstances have been ripe. Few have been as successful as the great ruler Hatshepsut, whose reign brought Egypt 22 years of peace and prosperity and some of its finest monuments.
    The pharaoh of Egypt was an icon, much as the Queen of England or even the president of the United States sometimes appears to be.
    But, how far can icons be stretched? Pharaoh could have been anything: he could be  old, lazy, incompetent, boring, alcoholic or insane, but he would still be pharaoh.
    Examples of all these types are known, or hinted of in many text and records. So naturally this question arose: could he be female? The answer to this question just may be yes.
    Female rulers are indicated in the long history of dynastic Egypt, and later tradition puts the names of queens near both the ends of the Old Kingdom and surprisingly the middle kingdom, some five centuries later.
    Egyptian society gave many remarkable freedoms and legal rights to women--far more than the rest of the Near East or in the classical world--but limits were limits. . .even by the Nile.

Deir el-Bahri