Victor Sasson has come to this same conclusion, that the “Pharaoh’s daughter” was the desirable lady of the Song of Solomon (“King Solomon… Solomon?s marriage to Pharaoh?s daughter is not technically a violation of the law, and is consistent with Solomon?s love for Yahweh. It is indeed a sign of the fulfillment of Abrahamic promise. Pharaoh's daughter is a figure in the Hebrew Bible, described as marrying Solomon to cement a political alliance between the United Monarchy of Israel and Egypt.While there is no archaeological evidence of a marriage between an Egyptian princess, the daughter of a Pharaoh, a king of united Israel, claims of one are made at several places in the Hebrew Bible. by Damien F. Mackey Given King Solomon’s special love for “Pharaoh’s daughter”, it would figure that she was the same as the beautiful “Shunammite” of the Song of Solomon (6:13).

Rather it may be saying that Solomon loved many foreign women, of which Pharaoh’s daughter was just named as the primary or preferred of the foreign wives. Of Solomon's many wives, 1 Kings 11:1 says "Now King Solomon loved many foreign women. These came from the nations that the LORD had commanded the Israelites about: "Don't intermarry with them.

This reading also leaves open the possibility that Solomon’s Egyptian wife had died, after which Solomon married several foreign women.

besides Pharaoh's daughter, he married women from Moab, Ammon, Edom, Sidon, and from among the Hittites." King Solomans wife according to the Bible was Naamah the daughter of the Paharoah. Chaim Dov Rabinowitz (Daas Soferim) comments that it seems likely that Shlomo had 100 children or less (which would of course mean that most of his wives were childless), since in Eccles. And King Solomon made affinity with Pharaoh king of Egypt, and took Pharaoh’s daughter Naamah, and brought her into the city of David, until he had made an end of building his own house, and the house of the Lord, and the wall of Jerusalem round about. The timing of this scenario is plausible. Only three of his children are named in Tanach: his successor Rechavam, and two daughters named Tafath and Basemath, who married two of Shlomo's officials (I Kings 4:11, 15).R. 1 Kings 11 - CEB: In addition to Pharaoh's daughter, King Solomon loved many foreign women, including Moabites, Ammonites, Edomites, Sidonians, and Hittites.