A highly detailed historical painting depicting a gathering of six royal women from the ancient Near East during the Iron Age, representing King Solomon's foreign wives. In the center, the Daughter of Pharaoh stands regally, wearing an elaborate Egyptian dark wig, heavy black kohl eyeliner, a sheer pleated white linen gown, and a massive gold pectoral collar inlaid with turquoise and lapis lazuli. To her side, a Sidonian (Phoenician) noblewoman is draped in luxurious royal purple and crimson dyed fabrics with gold embroidered edges and intricate fringe. Next to her, a Hittite royal woman wears a structured, high-waisted long-sleeved tunic and a tall, distinctive cylindrical headdress with a fine veil cascading down her back. Grouped together nearby are three Levantine women representing the Moabites, Ammonites, and Edomites; they wear beautiful, practical woven wool garments in rich earth tones, terracottas, and un-dyed cream linen, adorned with heavy silver torcs, beaded belts, and protective woven headscarves. The setting is a grand, sunlit palace courtyard in Jerusalem with limestone pillars, cedar wood beams, and lush pomegranate trees. Masterpiece, cinematic lighting, historically accurate attire, realistic skin textures, 8k resolution. Mehr sehen