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How archaeologists solved the mystery of missing pharaoh after 3,500 years The Egyptian pharaoh’s tomb is the first found in Luxor since Tutankhamun ...
The ministry of antiquities said the discovery of the tomb of Thutmose II, whose wife, Hatshepsut, took the throne after his death, was the first excavation of a royal tomb near the Valley of the ...
When the tomb was first discovered, its location near the tombs of Thutmose III’s wives and Queen Hatshepsut led archaeologists to believe it belonged to a royal consort (a spouse of a king).
The first royal tomb discovered in over a century is shedding new light on the pharaoh who ruled before Hatshepsut.
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.
Dodson noted that there is a tomb located about 1,640 feet (500 meters) from Thutmose II's tomb that was built for Hatshepsut but was not used by her.
The Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities announced that archaeologists have discovered the long-lost tomb of King Thutmose II, marking the first royal tomb discovery since 1922.
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.
Archaeologists have uncovered intact portions of the foundation wall of pharaonic Queen Hatshepsut's valley temple in Luxor and the nearby tomb of Queen Teti Sheri, grandmother of Ahmose I, the ...
Archaeologists have discovered intact sections of the foundation wall of Queen Hatshepsut's valley temple in Luxor, along with the nearby tomb of Queen Teti Sheri, grandmother of Ahmose I, the ...
His wife, Queen Hatshepsut, was one of the few women known to have ruled Egypt. Her mortuary temple is on the west bank of the Nile at Luxor, not far from where her husband’s tomb was found.