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Thutmose IV was an 18th dynasty king who ruled in the early 14th century BCE. Amenhotep III ruled shortly afterward, from 1390 BCE until 1353 BCE. (As an aside, ...
These include Thutmose II, whose tomb has just been discovered, as well as his father and son, Thutmoses I and III, respectively, and Thutmose IV, his great-grandson.
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Why wasn't Thutmose II buried in the valley?Unlike dozens of early pharaohs who were buried in or around pyramids or later pharaohs who were interred at the Valley of the Kings, Thutmose II's tomb is on its own, more than 1.2 miles (2 ...
According to the National Museum, Thutmose II’s reign ended with the pharaoh’s death around the age of 30. Thutmose II died around 1480 BCE—more than a century before Tutankhamun.
Archaeologists in Egypt have made an exciting discovery: the tomb of Pharaoh Thutmose II, a ruler who has long been overshadowed by his famous wife and half-sister, Queen Hatshepsut.
Archaeologists in Egypt have found the tomb of King Thutmose II — the first discovery of an ancient royal tomb since King Tutankhamun's in 1922. Latest U.S.
Across the Levant in the 15th century B.C., cities were rising up against freshly-installed pharaoh Thutmose III. It would be the make-or-break test of his new power—and if he could maintain it.
Thutmose II was the fourth ruler of the illustrious ancient Egyptian 18th dynasty, which included Tutankhamun. Now, the location of his long-lost tomb, one of the last missing royal tombs, has ...
Unlike dozens of early pharaohs who were buried in or around pyramids or later pharaohs who were interred at the Valley of the Kings, Thutmose II's tomb is on its own, more than 1.2 miles (2 ...
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