his wife Hatshepsut—one of the few women who reigned as king in her own right—and his son, Thutmose III. The tomb may have been hiding in plain sight for 3,500 years, buried under 75 feet of ...
The newly excavated tomb was also in an unlikely place for a king’s burial: beneath two waterfalls and at the bottom of a slope, during the much wetter conditions of the 15th century B.C.
He was husband and half-brother of the female pharaoh Hatshepsut, and father of Thutmose III, arguably ancient ... and it is the last missing king's tomb of the 18th dynasty.