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Archaeologists have found the long-lost tomb of King Thutmose II, helping shed more light on ancient Egypt at its peak.
Upon Hatshepsut’s death in c. 1458 b.c., her stepson, then likely still in his early 20s, finally ascended to the throne. By that time, according to Hayes, Thutmose III had developed “a ...
Amid the temple’s wreckage, the team found blocks containing cartouches of the pharaoh Thutmose III (reigned ca. 1479–1425 b.c.), including versions known to have been used after Hatshepsut died.
Nestled near the tombs of Thutmose III’s wives and Queen Hatshepsut’s original burial site, it was initially thought to ...
But a better case can be made for Thutmose III, who ruled more than a century earlier ... beginning with his long years as ward of "Pharaoh" Hatshepsut, with whom, Gabriel suggests, the young man may ...
A reexamination of the earliest silver hoard found at Megiddo suggests it was likely deposited during or after Pharaoh Thutmose III’s mid-15th century BCE campaign, rather than in the Middle ...
(i) Thutmose II was an ancestor of Tutankhamen and the half-brother of Pharaoh Hatshepsut. (ii) The king’s tomb flooded after his buried, and it was badly damaged. (iii) The discovery is ...