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Recent discoveries in Egypt uncover how daily life unfolded under Pharaoh Akhenaten, offering insight into a city lost for ...
Others have had plenty to say about the king, who ruled from around 1353 B.C. until 1336 B.C. and tried to transform Egyptian religion, art, and governance. Akhenaten’s successors were mostly ...
The remains of a 3,400-year-old village in Egypt dating to the New Kingdom have been uncovered. The village may have […] ...
Archaeologists in Egypt have uncovered the remains of a "major" 3,400-year-old town dating to the New Kingdom that was ...
During an excavation at a site believed to date back to the Greek-era near Alexandria, archaeologists uncovered a stunning ...
He restored traditional polytheistic worship, ending Akhenaten’s religious reforms. Ay (c. 1323–1319 BCE) Also known as Ay, he ruled after Tutankhamun and may have acted as a trusted co-regent.
The BBC aired a documentary called Tutankhamun: The Truth Uncovered in 2014, which presented results from genetic analysis of royal mummies. This research was carried out by Egypt’s Supreme Council of ...
Amenhotep III (a granite head from the temple complex is his best extant portrait) was succeeded by his son Akhenaten, who revolutionized Egypt's religion—temporarily. ALADIN ABDEL NABY ...
NBC News gains exclusive access to a treasure trove left behind in Egypt's "golden city," where 3,300 years ago Pharaoh ...
They found some Khamun ground. Archaeologists have discovered a 3,400-year-old town that was possibly erected by King Tutankhamun’s father, Akhenaten — and harbored a wine jug stamped with the ...
Tutankhamun inherited a throne tainted by the shifts in religious and political practices implemented by his father, Akhenaten. His reign had been hallmarked by the move from the capital city of ...