The recent discovery of the grave of Pharaoh Thutmose II in Luxor brings to light crucial information on the 18th Dynasty of Egypt.
King Thutmose II was the fourth and final pharaoh of Egypt’s 18th dynasty. His mummy, discovered much earlier in 1881 at another site, is now located at the National Museum of Egyptian Civilization.
The resting place of King Thutmose II, the fourth Pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt who ruled around 3,500 years ago, was uncovered in west Luxor. The mummy was found in the 19th century not ...
the last of the lost tombs of the kings of ancient Egypt's Eighteenth Dynasty, which reigned for over two centuries between about 1550 BC and 1292 BC. It's the first royal Egyptian tomb to be ...
An Egyptian-British archaeological mission has found the tomb of King Thutmose II, who ruled ancient Egypt about 3,500 years ...
one of ancient Egypt’s elusive 18th Dynasty rulers. Discovered by a joint British-Egyptian team led by Dr Piers Litherland, the tomb was hidden away in the Western Valleys of the Theban ...
the last of the missing royal tombs from Egypt’s 18th Dynasty. Thutmose II, who reigned from around 1550 BC to 1292 BC, was… Archaeologists in Egypt. Archaeologists have uncovered a long-lost ...
((Photo by Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities / AFP) Located west of the Valley of the Kings, Thutmose II's tomb was the last lost tomb of the kings of Egypt's 18th dynasty, and the first royal tomb ...
Located west of the Valley of the Kings, Thutmose II’s tomb was the last lost tomb of the kings of Egypt’s 18th dynasty, and the first royal tomb discovered since King Tutankhamun’s in 1922, the ...