News
Because the statues were found in fragments, early archaeologists assumed that they must have been broken up violently, perhaps due to Thutmose III’s animosity towards Hatshepsut. For instance ...
Researchers dated the building to the reign of 18th-Dynasty pharaoh Thutmose III, who ruled between 1479 and 1425 B.C.E. Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities ...
Egyptologists have uncovered the first pharaoh’s tomb since Tutankhamun’s discovery more than a century ago. The tomb of King Thutmose II is the last royal tomb of Egypt’s 18th dynasty to be ...
He was succeeded on the throne by his son, Thutmose III. As the first Egyptian royal burial spot uncovered in over 100 years, the tomb was a historic find, but an incomplete one, as Thutmose II ...
Given its relative simplicity and location near Queen Hatshepsut’s grave, archeologists initially theorized No. C4 contained one of King Thutmose III’s wives.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results