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 ...
making it the last of the lost tombs of the kings of Egypt's Eighteenth Dynasty that reigned between 1550 and 1292 B.C.E. and the first royal Egyptian tomb to be discovered since that of King Tut ...
One of the figures from Ancient Egypt placed in his study is this Heart Scarab. The scarab, or dung beetle, was a sacred symbol of resurrection and crucial in the imagery relating to the passage ...
After being lost for centuries, an 18th Dynasty tomb has been unearthed in the Valley of the Kings. A joint Egyptian-British archaeological team made this discovery on the west bank of Luxor city ...
The discovery has considerable implications for our understanding of the 18th dynasty of Egypt, which spanned the period from 1549 to 1292 BC. The last pharaoh's tomb to be discovered belonged to ...
King Thutmose II tomb na di last undiscovered royal tomb of di 18th Egyptian dynasty. A British-Egyptian team locate am for di Western Valleys of di Theban Necropolis near di city of Luxor.