Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Tutmose III


Related Topics
8

  
  Deir El-Bahari
Hatshepsut and Tutmose II had no offspring, however, she had a daughter, Nefrure, believed to be fathered by Senmut the architect of her great temple; Tutmose II had a son, Tutmose III, with the commoner, Isis.
At her death, it is believed Tutmose III began a campaign to rid Egypt of any memories of Hatshepsut and her lover.
Tutmose III ordered that all mention of her be erased from every temple and monument in Egypt.
www.anniebees.com /Egypt/Valley_3.htm   (758 words)

  
  Web Owls » Blog Archive » Ancient Egypt VI - The Amarna Hiccup
Tutmose III conquered a realm that stretched from the eastern bank of the Euphrates to the fourth cataract of the Nile.
Tutmose III may have tried to erase all mention of Hatshepsut, but he was wise enough to build upon the power base she had created.
Tutmose IV’s son, Amenhotep III, would develop the concept of the “aton” further, and his son, Amenhotep IV or Ahkenaton, (”(He who serves) the Spirit of the Aton”) would rock Egyptian civilization to its core by announcing that the Aton was the one and only, single and exclusive, divinity.
web-owls.com /2006/06/09/ancient-egypt-vi-the-amarna-hiccup   (6751 words)

  
 New Kingdom: Rulers and Attitudes   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
In fact, in the Poetical Stele of Tutmose III, a fl granite stone from the temple of Amon at Karnak, the god himself proclaims and justifies the king's rule and his triumphs.
Tutmose III's attitudes towards empire building and his god Amon are apparent in these inscriptions as well as in his actions.
Tutmose III was not entirely successful in his efforts; Hatshepsut's successes as ruler of Egypt survive, especially through her outstanding mortuary temple.
www.idst.vt.edu /thbecker/1024NewKingdom.html   (1331 words)

  
 Answering the Question in Egypt
This is the stage on which Tutmose III and Hatshepsut played out their grand opera tragedy of lust and intrigue.
Tutmose III would go on to stabilize the borders of the Empire and begin the building spree that would turn Thebes into simply "The City," wonder of the ancient world.
Tutmose IV solidified Egypt's imperial position and passed to his son, Amenhotep III, a vast and wealthy empire at peace both internally and externally.
www.sangraal.com /library/SS2.html   (2919 words)

  
 El Nuevo Diario - Managua, Nicaragua - Con Todo el Poder de la Información
Si Tutmose II fue el faraón del cual huyó Moisés, es posible que Tutmose III fuese el faraón del Éxodo.
Tutmose III reinó conjuntamente con la reina Hatshepsut hasta la muerte de ella en el año 1482 a.
Puede ser que Tutmose III, por lo celoso que estaba, se acreditase las victorias sobre los etíopes, a pesar de que fue Moisés el que las obtuvo.
www.elnuevodiario.com.ni /2006/10/19/suplemento/mundooculto/3786   (1589 words)

  
 Egyptian Project 2   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
She co-ruled with Tutmose III, the son of her half-brother by another wife.
Tutmose III ruled alone with her until her death.
The second wife of Thutmose III was named Meryetre Hatshepsut but she was not related to the queen.
www.internet-at-work.com /hos_mcgrane/egypt/egypt_2_8.htm   (163 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Tutmose II Hatshepsut was Tutmose I's only child by his official wife.
Tutmose II, of a lesser wife, was married to her.
Tutmose III was from a minor wife of Tutmose II.
www.familybiblefellowship.org /teachers/biblestudies/Exodus/dynasty.htm   (131 words)

  
 Valley of the Kings - Mega Wallpapers
Tutmose Is rest however did not last long, neither did that of the other kings.
It was not only thives, who already during the pharaonic era were engaged in systematic plundering to obtain the also religious and devout men who, knowing that their sovereigns were not safe, carried them away from one burial spot to bury them in another.
Almost all the inhabintants of the village of Gurnah made a living from this commerce of objects stolen from the tombs, the plundering of tombs having for all practical purposes become a regular occupation which from the XIIIth century B.C. onwards was passed down from father to son.
www.megawallpapers.org /gallery/1508/Valley_of_the_Kings?show=full   (454 words)

  
 Vincent Bridges » Blog Archive » Ahkenaton & the Myth of Monotheism   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
The long and aggressive reign of Tutmose III had carved out a vast empire and his son, Amenhotep II, was determined to hold onto every last hectare of it.
Imperial Egypt broke with tradition, which held that maintaining the purity of the bloodline by marriage within the family was the most important component of kingship, and began to use royal marriage as apolitical tool to cement the Empire together into a larger royal family.
Tutmose III’s problems with Hatshepsut helped this tendency to become policy, but it rendered his successors open to the accusation that the Pharaoh was no longer a descendent of Amon or Re.
vincentbridges.com /?p=81   (6596 words)

  
 Free College Essays.com - Free Essays, Term Papers and Book Reports.
Tutmose the first was the first pharao that made his tomb in the Valley of the Kings.
Her stepsun, Tutmose III hated her because she wouldn't let him reign tough he was allowed to do it, thats what his father sayd.
Tough Tutmose III might have been a killer, he still was a very good pharao.
www.free-college-essays.com /History_Other/14495-Egypt.html   (1829 words)

  
 Ancient Egypt
Another intriguing pharaoh of the New Kingdom was Queen Hatsheput, and her affairs with her predecessor, Tutmose III.
When Tutmose II died, Tutmose III was just a small boy and could not take the place of pharaoh, so Hatsheput took the throne.
When Tutmose III grew of what he thought was the appropriate age to rule, Hatsheput would not step down, until her death.
www.ccds.charlotte.nc.us /History/Egypt/03/howe/hearn.htm   (1125 words)

  
 Hatshepsut, Queen of Sheba, Red and Blonde Haired Mummies of Egypt and the Middle East, BUFO Paranormal and UFO Radio, ...
As was common in royal families, she married her half-brother, Thutmose II, who had a son, Thutmose III, by a minor wife or concubine.
Dressed in men’s attire, Hatshepsut administered affairs of the nation, building her magnificent temple at Deir el Bahari in Thebes she made reliefs of her divine birth as the daughter of god Amun and goddess Hathor.
Driven by the lust for power and hatred for Hatshepsut, Tutmose III murdered the pharoah, destroying her sthrines, statues and reliefs.
www.burlingtonnews.net /redhairedmummieshatshepsut.html   (416 words)

  
 Who Was the Pharaoh of the Exodus?
Tutmose III was the Pharaoh of the Oppression, and Amenhotep II the Pharaoh
He then identifies the famous queen Hatshepsut with the "daughter of Pharaoh" who found Moses in the bulrushes (Hatshepsut was the grandmother of Amenhotep II and mother of Tutmose III, the great conqueror).
Since Hatshepsut corresponds to the time of Solomon, then her son, Thutmose III, the "Napoleon of ancient Egypt," would correspond to a mighty Egyptian ruler who ruled contemporary with Solomon's son, Rehoboam.
www.hope-of-israel.org /pharexod.htm   (6153 words)

  
 Egypt Tour 2001 - Luxor
Higher still is the one erected by his daughter Hatshepsut for the construction of which it is said that the queen spared no expense, the chronicles of the period state that she provided "bushels of gold as if they were sacks of grain" for the project.
In this courtyard there also stand the little temple of Tutmose III which possesses three chapels dedicated to the triad of Amon, Mut and Khonsu who are worshipped in the sanctuary of Karnak.
Finally and imposing colonnade, 25 meters long, leads into the courtard of Amon-Ofis III which is surrounded on three sides by a double row of columns with close papyrus capitals, a veritable petrified forest which is very evocative.
danielschereck.com /wp/wp-luxor.htm   (1526 words)

  
 Untitled Document   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Hatshepsut was the daughter of Tutmose I. She married Tutmose II, who died in 1504 BC.
He was extremely young, so Hatshepsut would rule with Tutmose III until he came of age.
When Tutmose III and Senamut, who was not a royal, but great official, went on a journey into foreign lands, they brought back wealth, riches, and glory.
charon.sjs.org /~history8web/CMM/Historical.htm   (328 words)

  
 [No title]
Today, the young prince, Tutmose III, had succumbed to another illness, one that had the palace in an uproar and the Pharaoh screaming for her personal physician.
But rumors were flying that Hatshepsut had killed her half brother and husband, Tutmose II and that in order to secure her throne, Tutmose's son, by another, would have to be next.
Tutmose listens to him and as long as Jacob lives, Hapuseneb has limited power." "You are playing with fire, my captain.
www.852prospect.org /archive/cgi-bin/convert.cgi?filename=3/sandsof   (22392 words)

  
 Nubia the source of the Gold for Ancient Egypt and the gold used in the Ark of the Covenant
The great personalities of this historic time frame recorded in Egyptian art and literature compare favorably with any personality in recorded history.
The three most illustrious rulers of the New Kingdom being Tutmose III, Hatshepsut, and Akhenaten.
The 18th and 17th centuries BCE had seen the gradual occupation of the Egyptian Delta by immigrants called the Hyksos, or foreign princes.
artsales.com /ARTistory/ark_covenant/Nubia_the_source_of_the_Gold_For_The_Ark_of_the_Covenant.htm   (602 words)

  
 The Heretic King
Young Tut was just a boy when he became pharoah, and may have been killed by a blow to the head when he was about 18 or 20, according to some recent shows on the Learning Channel.
The most vicious mutilations were of the images of the female pharoah and regent Hatshepsut after her nephew Tutmose III came of age and took the throne.
Yet those mutilations took place many years later, when Tutmose III had been pharoah quite a while.
www.suite101.com /discussion.cfm/ancient_egypt/5624/-3-6   (565 words)

  
 Lecture 5 : Ancient Egypt || History of the Build Environment || ENVDES/LD ARC 543 || Professor Annaliese Bischoff
Suggestions of sophisticated aesthetic concerns are apparent in the design of the houses, of which few traces now remain.
Example: The garden of a high official of Amenhotep III at Thebes, c1400BC.
Components: A rectangular, wall-enclosed area containing a porter’s lodge, house and various garden areas, separated from one another by low walls with gateways.
www-unix.oit.umass.edu /~abischof/la543/website/lectures/egypt.html   (732 words)

  
 ARCE/NC ARCHIVES
Most of what remains is Ptolemaic and Roman, but a lintel of Rameses III and the lower portion of a seated statue of Senusert I lie in the yard next to the temple.
A partially preserved barque shrine dating from Tutmose III and restored by Amenhotep II, Seti I, Amenmesse, Rameses III and Rameses IV stands before the small temple.
Work was begun on a restoration of the temple by Hakoris and Nectanabo I (blocks are found in the open air storerooms) and continued in two phases under the Ptolemies.
home.comcast.net /~hebsed/march2001.htm   (1730 words)

  
 .: Valley of the Kings sightseeing, Kings valley in Luxor, kings valley sightseeing tour in the west bank of luxor   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
The Valley of the Kings (what used to be Thebes) lies about 7km from the Nile on the west bank, and must have been one of the most amazing discoveries made in Egypt.
It was here that bodies of kings such as Tutankhamoun, Ramses II, Ramses IV, Tutmose III and many other kings once lay.
The Pharaohs that followed did the same -- hence changing a tradition that had been going on for close to 2000 years.
www.2travel2egypt.com /sightseeing/valleykings.asp   (343 words)

  
 syrian textile-syrian brocade-damascene brocade-natural silk brocade-syrian natural silk brocade   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
The first Nabatean city in the 2nd century BC, it bore the name Buhora, and then Bustra during Hellenistic period.
It is an extremely ancient city mentioned in the lists of Tutmose III and Akhenaten in the fourteenth century B.C. The first Nabatean city in the second century B.C., it bore the name Buhora, but during the Hellenistic period, it was known by the name of Bustra.
Later the Romans took an active interest in the city, and at the time of the Emperor Trajan it was made the capital of the Province of Arabia (in 106 B.C.) and was called Neatrajana Bustra.
www.syriangate.com /syria/daraa.htm   (733 words)

  
 Who was the Pharoah of the Exodus?
In the March-April 1988 Good News magazine, author Keith Stump claims that Tutmose III was the Pharaoh of the Oppression, and Amenhotep II the Pharaoh of the Exodus.
He then identifies the famous queen Hatshepsut with the "daughter of Pharaoh" who found Moses in the bulrushes (Hatshepsut was the grandmother of Amenhotep II and mother of Tutmose III, the great conqueror).All these claims are made without any evidence or proof supplied.
Since Hatshepsut corresponds to the time of Solomon, then hers on, Thutmose III, the "Napoleon of ancient Egypt," would correspond to a mighty Egyptian ruler who ruled contemporary with Solomon's son, Rehoboam.
www.rogerswebsite.com /others/Who-was-the-Pharoah-of-the-Exodus.htm   (6099 words)

  
 Busra Theatre on Flickr - Photo Sharing!
Mentioned in lists of Tutmose III and Akhenaton in the fourteenth century BC.
Under the Romans, it was renamed Nova Trajana Bostra, residence of the legion III Cyrenaica and capital of the Roman province Arabia Petraea.
The city flourished and became a major metropolis at the juncture of several trade routes, including the Roman road to the Red Sea.
www.flickr.com /photos/37613730@N00/163801284   (205 words)

  
 [No title]
He said that it was Amenhotep III who was the >incarnation of the universal god.
2 Antecedents to Amenhotep III (Betsy Bryan) 27 Ch.
Weinstein 223 Amenhotep III, the Aegean, and Anatolia (Eric H. Cline) 236 Amenhotep III and Mesopotamia (Kenneth Kitchen) 250 Amenhotep III and Nubia (David O'Connor) 261 Ch.
oi.uchicago.edu /OI/ANE/ANE-DIGEST/1998/v1998.n284   (6606 words)

  
 [No title]
Hatshepsut was the only child of Tutmose I and his official wife.
She was married for political reasons to Tutmose II, weak and sickly son of another wife.
After 21 years under her control, Tutmose III managed to get independent control of the throne.
www.pvbible.com /sermons/Moses2.htm   (1686 words)

  
 Bosra, Syria
Bosra is an extremely ancient city mentioned in lists of Tutmose III and Akhenatcn in the fourteenth century BC.
The first Nabataean city in the 2nd century BC, it bore the name Buhora, and then Bustra during Hellenistic period.
An important Muslim citadel, dating back to Ayoubite and Mamluk period still stands, and one of its towers now houses a museum of Antiquities and Traditional Arts.
www.atlastours.net /syria/bosra.html   (309 words)

  
 The Great Sphinx
The guardian of the pyramids and it also symbolizes the rising and setting of the sun.
In heirogliphics, the Head is that of the king that was ruling at the time (King Tutmose III).
Egyptian history has told us that the body was made when Re (the Sun god) and Horus (the Hawk god) refused to protect the pyramids and the Egyptian way of life.
watertown.k12.sd.us /gate/webpage06/brentdwebpage/TheGreatSphinx.html   (168 words)

  
 Land of the Mummies
Akhentan 1379 - 1362 BC, Son of Amenhotep III and Queen Tiy
Daughter of Tutmose I, Wife of Tutmose II, Step-mother of Tutmose III
Tuthmosis II Tuthmosis III 1504 - 1450 BC, Stepson of Tuthmosis II and Hatspepsut
www.geocities.com /internet_guru_2000   (948 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.