Egypt, Thutmose
Tomb of missing pharaoh found in biggest discovery since 1922 - Thutmose II died 3,500 years ago and his tomb was thought to ...
He was husband and half-brother of the female pharaoh Hatshepsut, and father of Thutmose III, arguably ancient Egypt’s greatest military leader. Thutmose was himself of royal blood as a ...
Thutmose III. But that doesn’t make the discovery of his final resting place any less important. On February 18, the Egyptian government announced that an international team of archeologists ...
The recent discovery of the grave of Pharaoh Thutmose II in Luxor brings to light crucial information on the 18th Dynasty of Egypt.
He is believed to have ruled for around four years, and fathered one child, Thutmose III. The reign of Thutmose II is thought to date from approximately 1493 to 1479 BCE, but his life has been ...
given its proximity to the tomb of the wives of King Thutmose III and to the tomb of Queen Hatshepsut, the only woman to have reigned as a pharaoh in Egypt. Artefacts discovered in the tomb ...
This was based on its proximity to Queen Hatshepsut’s tomb and the tombs of King Thutmose III’s wives, explained Mohammad Ismail Khaled, secretary general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities ...
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