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Thutmose and I
Just before coming to the mosque entrance I crossed the street, entered the Hippodrome, and walked ahead to the Obelisk of Theodosius, originally erected in Heliopolis in Egypt about 1,600 B.C. by Thutmose, who also built those now in New York, London and Rome at the Lateran.
* c. 1506 BC — Thutmose I ( Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt ) starts to rule.
* 1493 BC — Thutmose I ( Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt ) died.
* c. 1492 BC — Thutmose I dies ( other date is 1493 BC ).
In this myth, Amun goes to Ahmose in the form of Thutmose I and awakens her with pleasant odors.
Almost all scholars today view this as historical revisionism, or prolepsis, on Hatshepsut's part since it was Thutmose II — a son of Thutmose I by Mutnofret — who was her father's heir.
Moreover, Thutmose I could not have foreseen that his daughter Hatshepsut would outlive his son within his own lifetime.
For this, KV20, originally quarried for her father, Thutmose I, and probably the first royal tomb in the Valley of the Kings, was extended with a new burial chamber.
Hatshepsut also refurbished the burial of her father and prepared for a double interment of both Thutmose I and her within KV20.
During the reign of Thutmose III, however, a new tomb, ( KV38 ), together with new burial equipment was provided for Thutmose I, who then was removed from his original tomb and re-interred elsewhere.
She is a daughter of Thutmose I.
Shunem is listed on the towns conquered by the Egyptian pharaohs Thutmose III and Shoshenk I.
In addition to the palaces described below, other sources indicate the existence of a palace founded in the city by Thutmose I, which was still operating under the reign of Tuthmosis IV.
1480 BC ) of the official astronomer and clockmaker Amememhet, who returned from the " foreign country called Me-ta-ni " at the time of Thutmose I.
This culminated in a number of royal marriages: the daughter of King Artatama I was married to Thutmose IV.
Thutmose I erected an enclosure wall connecting the Fourth and Fifth pylons, which comprise the earliest part of the temple still standing in situ.
He was a member of the Thutmosid family that had ruled Egypt for almost 150 years since the reign of Thutmose I.
* Thutmose I, ( ca.
* c. 1550 – 1400 BC: Jerusalem becomes a vassal to Egypt as the Egyptian New Kingdom reunites Egypt and expands into the Levant under Ahmose I and Thutmose I.
By c. 1550 – 1400BC, Jerusalem had become a vassal to Egypt after the Egyptian New Kingdom under Ahmose I and Thutmose I had reunited Egypt and expanded into the Levant.
Thutmose I, Thutmose III and his son and coregent Amenhotep II fought battles from Megiddo north to the Orontes River, including the conflict with Kadesh.

Thutmose and sometimes
Commenting on the fact that Egyptologists have no problem in reconstructing history using inference of this sort, whereas critics will sometimes not allow the same historical method to be applied to the Bible, Young writes, " Do those who reject the Menahem / Pekah rivalry as improbable also reject as improbable this reconstruction from Egypt's Eighteenth Dynasty that Egyptologists use to explain the regnal dates of Thutmose III?
In the side chamber alongside Tiye were found, The Younger Lady, proved to be her daughter and the mother of Tutankhamun, and a young identified boy, sometimes thought to be Prince Thutmose.
Thutmose II ( sometimes read as Thutmosis, or Tuthmosis II and meaning Born of Thoth, probably pronounced during his lifetime as Djhutymose ) was the fourth Pharaoh of the Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt.
Ineni ( sometimes transliterated as Anena ) was an Ancient Egyptian architect and government official of the 18th Dynasty, responsible for major construction projects under the pharaohs Amenhotep I, Thutmose I, Thutmose II and the joint reigns of Hatshepsut and Thutmose III.
Thutmose IV ( sometimes read as Thutmosis or Tuthmosis IV and meaning Thoth is Born ) was the 8th Pharaoh of the 18th dynasty of Egypt, who ruled in approximately the 14th century BC.
Representations of Thutmose III sometimes are accompanied by feminine pronouns and he is shown twice walking alongside Hatshepsut ’ s soul, her ka.

Thutmose and Thothmes
Thutmose ( also rendered Thutmosis, Tuthmose, Tutmosis, Thothmes, Tuthmosis, Djhutmose, etc.

Thutmose and Thutmosis
" The King's Favourite and Master of Works, the Sculptor Thutmose " ( also spelled Djhutmose and Thutmosis ), flourished 1350 BC, is thought to have been the official court sculptor of the Egyptian Pharaoh Akhenaten in the latter part of his reign.
Items found were stone vases bearing the names of Ahmose-Nefertari, Thutmosis I, and Hatshepsut, two quartzite sarcophagi inscribed for Thutmose I and Hatshepsut ( as pharaoh ), a canopic chest for Hatshepsut ( again as pharaoh ), the limestone blocks bearing funerary text ( see above ), and several fragments of the usual funerary furnishings.

Thutmose and meaning
Pharaoh, meaning " Great House ", originally referred to the king's palace, but during the reign of Thutmose III ( ca.
The full titulary of Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh Thutmose III, providing a guide to pronunciation and its equivalent meaning, is as follows

Thutmose and was
Although contemporary records of her reign are documented in diverse ancient sources, Hatshepsut was described by early modern scholars as only having served as a co-regent from approximately 1479 to 1458 BC, during years seven to twenty-one of the reign previously identified as that of Thutmose III.
Hatshepsut had begun construction of a tomb when she was the Great Royal Wife of Thutmose II, but the scale of this was not suitable for a pharaoh, so when she ascended the throne, preparation for another burial started.
It is possible that Amenhotep II, son to Thutmose III by a secondary wife, was the one motivating these actions in an attempt to assure his own uncertain right to succession.
Toward the end of the reign of Thutmose III and into the reign of his son, an attempt was made to remove Hatshepsut from certain historical and pharaonic records.
For many years, presuming that it was Thutmose III acting out of resentment once he became pharaoh, early modern Egyptologists presumed that the erasures were similar to the Roman damnatio memoriae.
Writers such as Joyce Tyldesley hypothesized that it is possible that Thutmose III, lacking any sinister motivation, may have decided toward the end of his life, to relegate Hatshepsut to her expected place as the regent — which was the traditional role of powerful women in Egypt's court as the example of Queen Ahhotep attests — rather than king.
When Thutmose II died, the intended heir was his son Thutmose III, who was still a boy.
As he grew older, Thutmose III was given the position of commander of the army, similar to Pekah's position as commander, but still under his aunt and stepmother Hatshepsut.
After Hatshepsut died, Thutmose, in an inscription describing his first campaign, said it was in his 22nd year of reign, thereby counting his regnal years from the time his father died, not from the death of Hatshepsut.
Thutmose left no explanation for modern historians that his 22nd year was really the first year of sole reign, any more than Pekah or the historian of 2 Kings left an explanation that Pekah's 12th year, the year in which he slew Pekahiah, was really his first year of sole reign.
Modern historians rely on a comparison of inscriptions and chronological considerations to reconstruct the chronology of Thutmose III, and there is unanimity among Egyptologists that he counted as his own years the 21 years that Hatshepsut was on the throne, even though no inscription has ever been found explicitly stating this fact.

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