Ongoing excavations at Egypt’s Karnak Temple Complex revealed a cache of ancient gold artifacts. Stashed for centuries inside ...
Thutmose II, who reigned from 1493 to 1479 BCE, was identified as the occupant via his name carved on shards of alabaster.
The remarkable find is located in the Western Valley (a burial ground for queens rather than kings), near the complex of Deir el-Bahari, which houses the funerary temple of Hatshepsut. Both of us ...
Egypt's Valley of the Kings is part of a massive necropolis along the Nile that includes the Mortuary Temple of Hatshepsut ... His son, Thutmose III, born to a different royal wife, was also ...
Researchers first believed it to belong to the wife of a king because of its location near the tombs of the wives of King Thutmose III, his son, and of Queen Hatshepsut. Due to flooding shortly ...
Thutmose II’s tomb found west of the Valley of the Kings after 100 year Pottery inscriptions confirm the tomb belonged to Thutmose II Possibility of a second tomb being explored for missing artifacts ...
Thutmose II is believed to have ruled for only four years, from about 1493 to 1479 BCE, overshadowed by his father, Thutmose I, and later, his son, Thutmose III. In his short life, he survived just ...