King Tuthmose 3 King Tuthmose 3 was one of the most powerful kings of ancient Egypt, he is the sixth of the pharaohs in the eighteenth dynasty, and he received rule of Egypt at a young age, and due to his young age. Tuthmose 3 (variously also spelled Tuthmosis or Thothmes), occasionally called Tuthmose 3 the Great. Officially, Tuthmose 3 ruled Egypt for nearly 54 years, and his reign is usually dated from 28 April 1479 BC to 11 March 1425 BC, from the age of two and until his death at age fifty-six. However, during the first 22 years of his reign. He was coregent with his stepmother and aunt Hatshepsut, who was called the female pharaoh. While he was shown first on surviving monuments, both were assigned the usual royal names and insignia and neither is given any obvious seniority over the other. He did not rule Egypt alone in the first years of his rule but was subordinate to Queen Hatshepsut, Tuthmose served as the head of Hatshepsut's armies. During the final two years of his reign, he appointed his son and successor Amenhotep 2, as his junior co-regent, and after her death, he was able to lead a great kingdom. King Tuthmose 3 & The royal family. King Tuthmose 3 is the son of King Tuthmose II, and his mother is (ISET), the secondary wife of Tuthmose II, and his son, Amenhotep II, who succeeded him in the rule of ancient Egypt. As for his wife, a difference appeared between the sources in determining her, except that some references said that Tuthmose 3 married three wives from Syria. He is regarded, along with Ramses 2 the Great, as one of the two most powerful and celebrated rulers of the New Kingdom Period of Ancient Egypt, itself considered the
King Tuthmose 3 King Tuthmose 3 was one of the most powerful kings of ancient Egypt, he is the sixth of the pharaohs in the eighteenth dynasty, and he received rule of Egypt at a young age, and due to his young age. Tuthmose 3 (variously also spelled Tuthmosis or Thothmes), occasionally called Tuthmose 3 the Great.
The industry in ancient Egypt. The industry in ancient Egypt is as old as its civilization, It dates back seven thousand years. The ancient Egyptians were among the first peoples to make glass from desert sand, Archaeologists have uncovered for the first time the remains of a Bronze Age glass factory, where skilled artisans made glass from its raw materials. Surprisingly, this factory, which was bustling around 1250 B.C., is in Egypt rather than Mesopotamia, which is generally thought to be where the glass was first made. Pottery industries The industry in ancient Egypt was very important, They made pottery pots, where they engraved drawings and beautiful scenes, Ancient Egyptian pottery includes all objects of fired clay. Ceramics served as household wares for the storage, preparation, transport, and consumption of food, drink, and raw materials. Such items include beer and wine mugs and water jugs. Also, bread molds, fire pits, lamps, and stands for holding round vessels, were all commonly used in the Egyptian household. Other types of pottery served religious purposes, Specialists in ancient Egyptian pottery draw a fundamental distinction between ceramics made of Nile clay. Egyptian tomb paintings often show the preparation of the clay, and there are also models which provide some other details. Clear archaeological remains of pottery workshops, however, are rare, and it is possible that they were very ephemeral structures. Stone industry. It is the oldest industry made by the ancient Egyptians, who made stones the weapon that they used in hunting, tools, and vessels. The ancient Egyptian civilization was undoubted ‘the gift of the Nile’ in that it grew up in an environment of otherwise extreme aridity, its most remarkable monuments were unquestionably a gift of the sea. The sandstone that characterizes the monuments of Upper Egypt and the limestone that characterizes those of
The industry in ancient Egypt. The industry in ancient Egypt is as old as its civilization, It dates back seven thousand years. The ancient Egyptians were among the first peoples to make glass from desert sand, Archaeologists have uncovered for the first time the remains of a Bronze Age glass factory, where skilled artisans made glass
Queen Hatshepsut Queen Hatshepsut was the daughter of King Thutmose 1 and was the wife of king Tuthmose 2nd, and King Thutmose 2d had another child from his secondary wife was calling Tiy. The young child was calling (Mn_Khebr_R3) Thutmose 3 after king Thutmose 2 died, Hatshepsut became the coregent upon the young child Thothmose 3 (Mn-kheper-ra). Then the child was relegated from the royal palace by Hatshepsut, and the way to the throne is free for Hatshepsut with the help of her mother princess (AHMOSE), and her lover engineer (SN_N_MWT). Hatshepsut wore the royal shirts, the NEMES headdress, and the ceremonial beard and became a ruler of the ancient Egyptian empire during the 18th modern dynastic period for about 27 years. Hatshepsut Temple. The temple of Hatshepsut is framed by cliffs and poised in elegant relief, the temple of Queen Hatshepsut is justly deserving of its name “The most splendid of all“. It was the inspiration of the beautiful woman (M3T_k3_R3). The lower and the central courts. We ascend the temple of queen Hatshepsut through the lower court where 2 colonnades have been restored, twenty-two columns on each side divided into double rows. To the south is the colonnade of obelisks transportation shows the 2 obelisks of Queen Hatshepsut that have been erected in Karnak temple. This court also incorporates a colonnade on each side, the southern one called the colonnade of the Punt expedition, and to the north is the colonnade of Hatshepsut’s birth. Punt Colonnade commemorates a trip ordered by Queen Hatshepsut to the Land of Punt (East of Africa) Now Somalia Area to bring back myrrh and incense trees to be planted on the terraces of the temple. On the southern wall, we can see the village in Punt where the houses are constructed over water
Queen Hatshepsut Queen Hatshepsut was the daughter of King Thutmose 1 and was the wife of king Tuthmose 2nd, and King Thutmose 2d had another child from his secondary wife was calling Tiy. The young child was calling (Mn_Khebr_R3) Thutmose 3 after king Thutmose 2 died, Hatshepsut became the coregent upon the young child Thothmose