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Topic: Thutmose


  
  Thutmose - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thutmose (also rendered Thutmosis, Tuthmose, Tutmosis, Thothmes, Tuthmosis, Djhutmose, etc.) is the name conventionally given to several Egyptian pharaohs of the 18th Dynasty, an Anglicisation of the Egyptian name "Djehuty-mes", usually translated as "Born of the god Thoth":
Although Egyptologists preferred the Greek Manethonian spelling "Thutmosis" at an earlier time in the history of the discipline, more recent usage has tended towards the 'compromise' spelling of "Thutmose", as used in this article.
A relatively common name at this period, Thutmose is also the name of several prominent non-royal ancient Egyptians, including Akhenaten's court sculptor at Amarna, to whom is attributed the famous Berlin bust of Nefertiti.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Thutmose   (179 words)

  
 Egyptian Pharaohs : New Kingdom : Dynasty 18 : Thutmose I
Thutmose is normally considered to be the military commander for Amenhotep I, who took the throne after the death of the pharaoh.
Thutmose was married to Ahmose, who was a sister to Amenhotep I and daughter of Ahmose the pharaoh.
Internally, Thutmose was a prolific and visible builder, relying on his architect Ineni to add extensively to the temple at Karnak, where he added the fourth and fifth pylons, added a cedar hypostyle hall and expanded the treasury, in addition to adding the largest standing obelisk in the temple courtyard.
www.phouka.com /pharaoh/pharaoh/dynasties/dyn18/03thumose1.html   (429 words)

  
 Thutmose II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Praenomen of the Cartouche of Thutmose II preceded by Sedge and Bee symbols, Temple of Hatshepsut, Luxor
Thutmose II fathered with Hatshepsut, Nefrure and Meritre, but also managed to father a male heir, the famous Thutmose III, by a lesser wife named Isis before his death.
If Thutmose II was indeed a young child on his accession, he would probably have reigned for 13 Years in order to reach maturity and father children of his own.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Thutmose_II_of_Egypt   (602 words)

  
 Thutmose II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Subsequently, the reign length of Thutmose II has been a controversial and much debated subject among Egyptologists with little consensus given the small number of surviving documents for his reign.
Thutmose II was the son of Thutmose I and a minor wife, Mutnofret.
Some archaeologists believe that Hatshepsut was the real power behind the throne during Thutmose II’s rule because of the similar domestic and foreign policies which were later pursued under her reign and because of her claim that she was her father’s intended heir.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Thutmose_II   (602 words)

  
 The Quest for Immortality
Thutmose III was the sixth ruler in a line of young and famous rulers during this dynasty that included Hatshepsut, one of the few women pharaohs and Tutankhamun, the boy king known as King Tut.
Thutmose set up an efficient administration, both civil and military, and assessed large yearly tributes from the defeated kings and chiefs of conquered lands.
The impact of Thutmose III on Egyptian culture was profound.
www.daytonartinstitute.org /exhibits/egypt/lm_thutmose.htm   (354 words)

  
 Thutmose I
Thutmose I [010] became king of Egypt not as a son of the previous king but as a result of unknown circumstance.
Thutmose I here proclaims his full titulary as king of Egypt and commands all oaths and temple offerings to be made in his name, setting his fourth titled name, `He of the Sedge and Bee Aakheperkara', at the heart of the entire religious and judicial structure of the country.
A drawn image of Queen Hatshepsut and her co-regent Thutmose III together with the`King's Daughter' Neferure, daughter of Hatshepsut and Thutmose I. A drawn image of the throne name of Thutmose I, the deified father of Hatshepsut, between Hatshepsut and the god king Amun.
www.specialtyinterests.net /thutmose1.html   (3271 words)

  
 Thutmose 3 and Hatshepsut
Thutmose was filled with a certain admiration for Hatshepsut but he knew he was dependent of her, he saw she was building her own fate without Thutmose.
Thutmose I was her father and he brought her up, she was still filled with a certain admiration for him and she wanted him to be buried with her.
Thutmose III destroyed all of her statues, reliefs and shrines in spite of her and hacked out her name from inscriptions and replaced them with Thutmose I, II or III.
www.geocities.com /TheTropics/Shores/7037/thutmose/thut3.htm   (1280 words)

  
 Thutmose III   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Thutmose himself waited at the head of the pass till the last man was safely through.
However, Thutmose was determined and when the allies saw him at the head of his men leading them forward, they lost heart for the fight and fled for the city of Megiddo "As if terrified by spirits: they left their horse and chariots of silver and gold"
Thutmose was very angry, he said to them "If only the troops of his Majesty had not given their hearts to spoiling the things of the enemy, they would have taken Megiddo at that moment.
www.ahram.org /thutmose_iii.htm   (896 words)

  
 Thutmose I - Search Results - ninemsn Encarta   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Thutmose I, third pharaoh of the 18th dynasty in Ancient Egypt (reigned 1504-1492 bc).
Thutmose III, pharaoh of Egypt (reigned 1479-1425 bc), sometimes called the Napoleon of ancient Egypt.
He was the son of Thutmose II and a concubine,...
au.encarta.msn.com /Thutmose_I.html   (117 words)

  
 Her Majesty, The King
Thutmose I did have a surviving son, Thutmose II, born to a secondary wife, but the son's claim to the throne was weaker because of his bloodline.
Thutmose II took Hatshepsut as his Great Royal Wife and became Pharaoh after the death of Thutmose I. Hatshepsut had at least one daughter, Neferura, but no sons, while Thutmose II had a son, Thutmose III, whose mother was a low-born concubine.
Thutmose III bore a deep resentment against Hatshepsut, and one of his first acts as Pharaoh was to obliterate her from history.
www3.sympatico.ca /seraphan/fact/hatsheps.html   (2283 words)

  
 Tuthmosis II
Thutmose II was the King of Egypt during the 18th Dynasty.
Thutmose I, had no sons with the royal queen, he had to marry one of her daughters.
Thutmose II was both physically and mentally weak and dominated by his wife and half-sister, Hatshepsut.
www.mnsu.edu /emuseum/prehistory/egypt/history/people/tuthmosi_2.html   (444 words)

  
 Living in Truth by Charles N.Pope - Chapter 14: "Brave Among Men" (The Female Pharaoh Hatshepsut)
Tyldesley assumes that Thutmose I was deceased during Hatshepsut's reign, as was her former husband Tuthmosis II.
Thutmose I was torn between his love for Hatshepsut (Absalom) and Thutmose III (David, Jr.).
This is a strong indication that Thutmose I retracted or at least qualified his previous election of Thutmose III as heir and successor.
www.domainofman.com /book/chap-14.html   (3054 words)

  
 Egypt Ancient, Thutmose III   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Thutmose III was an Egyptian king of the 18th dynasty (reigned 1479-26 BC),and is often regarded as the greatest of the rulers of ancient Egypt.
Thutmose III was a skilled warrior who brought the Egyptian empire to the zenith of its power by conquering all of Syria, crossing the Euphrates to defeat the Mitannians, and penetrating south along the Nile to Napata in the Sudan.
Thutmose III was the son of Thutmose II; his mother was one of the king's minor wives or concubines, named Isis.
history-world.org /thutmose_iii.htm   (550 words)

  
 Thutmose III: Facts and details from Encyclopedia Topic   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The amarna letters is the name popularly given to a cache of correspondence, mostly diplomatic, found at amarna, the modern name for the capital of the egyptian...
Thutmose III was the son of Pharaoh Thutmose II Thutmose II quick summary:
The battle of megiddo (15th century bc) was fought between egyptian forces under the command of the pharaoh thutmose iii and a large canaanite coalition...
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/t/th/thutmose_iii2.htm   (1315 words)

  
 Egyptian Pharaohs : New Kingdom : Dynasty 18 : Thutmose II
Thutmose II was a third son of Thutmose I out of a minor wife.
It is assumed that they died before their father, although it is possible that Thutmose I passed over his primary sons for his namesake.
Thutmose II may have appointed his young son, Thutmose III, to the throne right before he died -- possibly to keep his wife, Hatshepsut -- and ambitious and sometimes ruthless woman -- from taking power.
www.phouka.com /pharaoh/pharaoh/dynasties/dyn18/04thutmose2.html   (288 words)

  
 Thutmose
Thutmose I was the general who drove the Hyksos out of Egypt.
Thutmose II's wife was Hatshepsut, who took the throne for herself when her son, Thutmose III, was very young.
Thutmose IV was the son of Amenhotep II and ruled from 1392 to 1382.
www.socialstudiesforkids.com /wwww/world/thutmosedef.htm   (100 words)

  
 Hatshepsut   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Thutmose II then sought to have the throne pass to Thutmose III, his child by a concubine, or perhaps a commoner secondary wife, named Iset (Aset, Isis), by claiming that the god Amen Ra chose Thutmose III as his successor by prophecy.
Thutmose II sought to win public support for his son by another wife by claiming that the god Amen Ra revealed through prophecy that it was Thutmose III who was to succeed him.
Declaring that her father, Thutmose I, had, in fact, publicly named her not Thutmose II as his successor, she crowned herself as the sole heir to the throne of Egypt (Forbes 1998:48; Hussein 1989:23).
www.bibarch.com /Chronology/Exodus/Hathseptsut.htm   (1433 words)

  
 Pharaoh Thutmose III
Thutmose had the image of Amon in its portable shrine carried on the shoulders of a body of priests, as the Hebrews carried the ark, according to Nelson.
Thutmose was not afraid of a human enemy, but he was reluctant to enter a road where `The God of Israel' had signally intervened for his people.
It is very likely that Thutmose III, son of Thutmose II and his Royal Wife Iset as a young prince, accompanied Hatshepsut on her voyage to Punt and Jerusalem and had seen the riches of Solomon at that time.
www.specialtyinterests.net /thutmose.html   (9562 words)

  
 Egyptian Pharaohs : New Kingdom : Dynasty 18 : Thutmose IV
Thutmose IV is best known for the "Dream Stela" that lies between the paws of the Great Sphinx at Giza.
Unlike his father and grandfather, Thutmose IV was not much of a military leader and in fact he had fewer military commanders during his reign, replacing them with a larger cadre of beauracrat, both religious and civil.
Decorations in he burial chamber on the south were added by Horemheb and refers to the robbery of the tomb and Horemheb's attempt to fix the damage.
www.phouka.com /pharaoh/pharaoh/dynasties/dyn18/08thutmose4.html   (441 words)

  
 Ancient Egyptian History: The New Kingdom - Dynasties 18 to 20
Toward the end of her reign she lost influence to Thutmose III who came to be depicted as her equal.
Thutmose III (c.1504-1450 BCE) was very young when his father, Thutmose II, died and was until 1482 the co-regent of his aunt, Hatshepsut.
Thutmose expanded his navy and used it to transport his armies swiftly to the Phoenician coast, while in Setet (Nubia) and Kush he extended his rule beyond the fourth cataract.
nefertiti.iwebland.com /history18-20.htm   (2452 words)

  
 wais: Ancient Egypt: Hateshepsut and Thutmose II April 2005   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Ancient Egypt: Hateshepsut and Thutmose II Max Navarro charges that I have insulted Tutmosis III of ancient Egypt, for which I meekly apologize lest I fall victim of the curse of the Pharaohs.
Thutmose II ruled for only a few years, during which it is believed Hatshepsut exerted tremendous influence.
Thutmose III, by a lesser wife named Isis before his death.
www.stanford.edu /group/wais/ztopics/week040105/egypt_050401_hateshepsutthutmoseii.htm   (495 words)

  
 Tombs Treasures Mummies: Seven Great Discoveries of Egyptian Archaeology   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
One of the reasons for Maspero’s uncertainty regarding “Thutmose I” was that the mummy’s arms are pendant, whereas other New Kingdom male rulers were embalmed with their arms crossed on their chests, at least this was true from “Thutmose II” onward.
Harris concluded that this was No. 61073, “Thutmose IV.” Historically, the fourth Thutmose would have been either the grandfather or great-grandfather of Tutankhamen, depending on which candidate is favored as the latter’s father (the two most often touted being Amenhotep III and Akhenaten, with majority opinion in the Heretic’s camp).
Something so simple as the apparent correspondences of “portraits” of Thutmose IV and Amenhotep II to the mummies thought (by the ancient necropolis priests) to be theirs should give pause to any rush to judgment about the latter’s identities as suggested by apparent discrepancies in their craniofacial morphologies.
www.egyptology.com /kmt/spring99/mummies.html   (2195 words)

  
 Thutmose III - Search Results - ninemsn Encarta   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
He was the son of Thutmose II and a...
Hatshepsut, Egyptian ruler of the 18th Dynasty (ruled 1479-1457 bc), daughter of Thutmose I. She married her half-brother, Thutmose II, who had a son,...
Thutmose IV, king of Egypt (reigned 1401-1391 bc) of the 18th Dynasty, son of Amenhotep II, and grandson of Thutmose III.
au.encarta.msn.com /Thutmose_III.html   (110 words)

  
 The Exodus, Biblical Archeology during the Exodus Period
A son of Thutmose I by a lesser wife was married to Hat­shepsut, so that her legal title might work in his behalf.
One daughter only, Nefrure, was born to Thutmose II and Hatshepsut, and so again a son of the Pharaoh by a lesser wife was brought forward as successor.
It was after Thutmose II had died, Thutmose III was about 10 years old, when Hatshepsut took the daring step of assuming full control of the kingdom.
www.truthnet.org /biblicalarcheology/5/Exodusarcheology.htm   (8311 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Thutmose I (Ancient History, Egypt, Biography) - Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
B.C. Unlike Hatshepsut, his half-sister whom he married, Thutmose II did not have a royal mother.
She relegated Thutmose III to an inferior position for 22 years while she ruled Egypt.
Thutmose died (1436), after having made his son Amenhotep II coregent, and was buried in the Valley of the Tombs at Thebes.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/T/Thutmose.html   (444 words)

  
 Living in Truth by Charles N.Pope - Chapter 12: "At the Side of My Father" The Birth and Succession of ...
Hatshepsut, the daughter of Thutmose I, was the Chief Royal Wife of Thutmose II.
It is with Thutmose II that Abraham negotiates and purchases the burial ground of Machpelah.
Thutmose I (Abimelech) and his general Phicol were accompanied by the "personal advisor Ahuzzath." The name Ahuzzath means "to seize and hold back." With the help of her advisor Senenmut, Hatshepsut seized and held back the throne from Thutmose III.
www.domainofman.com /book/chap-12.html   (8493 words)

  
 Thutmose III , Tuthmosis   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Thutmose III officially became king as a child but his step-mother and co-regent, Hatshepsut soon took over as King.
It is not known precisely what Thutmose was doing in the years his step-mother was running the kingdom.
After her death, Thutmose set about changing the temples and monuments she had had built for herself.
ehistory.osu.edu /ancient/egypt/PeopleView.cfm?pid=325   (245 words)

  
 Manetho's Eighteenth Dynasty
The primary difficulty is that Thutmose III served a total of 53 years, 10 months, and 26 days, and none of the Josephus kings served more than 26 years.
Thutmose I has a high-year mark of either 4 or 9 but many Egyptologists believe that the accomplishments belonging to his reign require a much longer length of rule.
Thutmose IV has a high-year mark of 8, but there is a wide range of opinion as to how long he actually ruled.
ggreenberg.tripod.com /ancientne/manetho1.html   (3264 words)

  
 Egypt Ancient, Thutmose I and Thutmose II   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Egypt Ancient, Thutmose I and Thutmose II Ancient egypt, a history of ancient egypt Ancient Egypt.
Thutmose I and Thutmose II Lacking a surviving heir, Amenhotep I was succeeded by one of his generals, Thutmose I (ruled 1493-c.
Thutmose III meanwhile coordinated the landing of other army divisions on the Syro-Palestinian littoral, whence they proceeded inland, so that the strategy resembled a pincer technique.
history-world.org /thutmose_i_and_thutmose_ii.htm   (1379 words)

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