The search for the pharaoh’s second tomb, after the discovery of the first, and the possibility that the Egyptologist’s ...
Some of these tombs may never be found. But the New Kingdom Research Foundation are now looking to find the next stage in Thutmose II's postmortem journey—where was he taken after C4, but before the ...
This newly discovered Egyptian tomb belonging to a pharaoh marks the first major archeological find in over 100 years.
Theban princes of the 11th Dynasty built what can be considered royal tombs on the west bank of the Nile at Thebes at the site of Al-Tarif. These consist of a series of entryways cut into the rock ...
The huge archaeology breakthrough is thought to be the tomb of Tutankhamun's ancestor, Thutmose II, who died 3,500 years ago and ruled in the 18th dynasty.
Egyptologists believe Thutmose II’s mummified remains are hidden in a chamber beneath 23 metres of man-made mountain ...
The tomb of Thutmose II, the last undiscovered king of the 18th dynasty, has been located in the Western Valleys of the Theban Necropolis. It is the first time in over a century, since the ...
As the BBC reports, the team discovered the tomb of King Thutmose II in the Western valleys of the Theban Necropolis, near Luxor, Egypt. "It is an extraordinary moment for Egyptology and the ...
Archaeologists have found the last undiscovered royal tomb of the 18th Egyptian dynasty, which included the famous pharoah ...
Located near Luxor in the Theban mountains, the tomb was initially thought to belong to a royal wife due to its proximity to the burial sites of Queen Hatshepsut and the wives of Thutmose III.
had become vulnerable to damage from flooding and the attentions of tomb robbers. They chose a secret place in the Theban cliffs to relocate the royal remains to. The mummified bodies of kings ...