This is the temple built by the famous queen of hatshepsut and her father tutmos i in egyptian history. It is located in the valley surrounded by cliffs, two long slopes connect three flat colonnades in series, the overall shape is simple and bright, but reveals the momentum of the unparalleled. The Queen's story Hatshepsut was the 18th Pharaoh who pioneered the ancient Egyptian generation and was the only child of Tutmos I and the Queen. She wore a fake beard, a man's dress, a broad chest, a scepter's hand, and she was majestic, the most powerful woman in ancient Egypt, and few had ever seen her, and her true appearance was as mysterious as her legend. Legend has it that she co-monks invented the world and called herself the daughter of the sun god Amon. Many gold discs were placed on top of the temple's stone tablets to reflect the sun's rays to prove her close relationship with the sun god. She began dressing up as a man and ordered everyone to call her by male pronouns. But this also replaced the hatred of her exiled Tutmos III. The centuries-old destruction left what was probably the finest site in ancient Egypt a little empty, with Tutmose III making his stepmother's name clearest, and early Christians transformed it into a monastery, destroying reliefs