History Explained Videos (Chronological Order) Narmer | The First Pharaoh Ancient Egypt | 3100 BC ua-cam.com/video/e_ByLv949-8/v-deo.html Imhotep | The First Pyramid Builder Ancient Egypt | 2650 BC ua-cam.com/video/gpL5TgIRukQ/v-deo.html Sargon | The Greatest King of Akkad Ancient Mesopotamia | 2300 BC ua-cam.com/video/kkSwK59CwF8/v-deo.html Sobekneferu | The First Female Pharaoh Ancient Egypt | 1800 BC ua-cam.com/video/TaI3MawgKNE/v-deo.html Hammurabi | The First Emperor of Babylon Ancient Mesopotamia | 1750 BC ua-cam.com/video/jPn-Lxuilw4/v-deo.html Hatshepsut | The Greatest Female Pharaoh Ancient Egypt | 1470 BC ua-cam.com/video/L_A8B_MdAdY/v-deo.html Thutmose III | The Deadliest Pharaoh Ancient Egypt | 1450 BC ua-cam.com/video/-2XS3vmVGjU/v-deo.html Amenhotep III | The Wealthiest Pharaoh Ancient Egypt | 1370 BC ua-cam.com/video/j5Oua9WNo8c/v-deo.html Akhenaten | The Most Hated Pharaoh Ancient Egypt | 1350 BC ua-cam.com/video/Gdcu2g5uM7o/v-deo.html Nefertiti | The Most Hated Female Pharaoh Ancient Egypt | 1340 BC ua-cam.com/video/bLWD3bVhSbM/v-deo.html Ramses the Great | The Greatest Pharaoh Ancient Egypt | 1250 BC ua-cam.com/video/TeESSvut5xA/v-deo.html Lycurgus | The Lawgiver of Sparta Ancient Greece | 750 BC ua-cam.com/video/zfC1ZnTKOJU/v-deo.html Ashurbanipal | The Cruelest King of Assyria Ancient Mesopotamia | 650 BC ua-cam.com/video/LOCm2G0R4PY/v-deo.html Nebuchadnezzar | The Greatest King of Babylon Ancient Mesopotamia | 600 BC ua-cam.com/video/WX4sTXOKRcY/v-deo.html Draco | The Lawgiver of Athens Ancient Greece | 600 BC ua-cam.com/video/sqOxqv_yIzE/v-deo.html Cyrus the Great | The Greatest King of Persia Achaemenid Empire | 550 BC ua-cam.com/video/CMc1rF8u4ro/v-deo.html Cambyses II | The First Persian Pharaoh Achaemenid Empire | 530 BC ua-cam.com/video/pXOjOcTqU5w/v-deo.html
@@yoso5934 The carry a fake Eurocentric narrative. So, these photoshoped white people did not develop their civilization in Europe or Asia but came to Egypt and the Sudan deep in Africa to found their civilization? How believable. These videos are a blatant attempt to steal black African history and civilizations. There is another proof that the Eurocentric images are fake and false. Without knowing what they were doing Eurocentric makers of these videos on UA-cam and FB have included the neck or shoulder necklaces on the images of the pharaohs. What the makers of these video don’t know is that the black African necklace depicted on ancient Egyptian and Sudanic murals, statues, mummies etc. is a UNIQUELY black African clothing accessory worn throughout Black Africa in the ancient past and up to today! Google: "images Maasai beaded necklace, images Oromo beaded necklace, images Zulu beaded necklace or images Turkana bead necklaces". The list is endless. At NO TIME in the past or today have Arab, Asian or European people worn this uniquely black African clothing attire or accessory. The ancient black African pharaohs were buried with these beaded necklaces. The fact that EuroAsians have never worn these beaded necklaces is proof enough that this videos are nothing more than a false Eurocentric narrative and a blatant attempt to steal the history of black Africa. Eurocentists should stop these ridiculous and pathetic attempts to steal the history of black Africans.
The fact that he always checks and reads comments is amazing and shows how much he cares about his audience thank you for making such a historically interesting video and thank you for just making them head and shoulders above any documentary I’ve ever seen
@@forcedtohaveahandle I disagree with you completely. God has everything to do with history especially human history. How much do you know of Him may I ask? I am not in any way proselytizing. Or are you one of them who believe what the 'scientists' tell you? If it will make you rethink your position -- let me make this statement: No scientist (gather them all together and it'll still be NONE), given the technology available to him/her today, can create a new ray of light; a new breadth of air; a new drop of water; a new grain of sand; nor a new pip of seed without borrowing from what has been originally provided. All a scientist can do is venture to explore and/or explain what already exists, and worst, plunder what have already been given in the beginning. Prove me wrong.
I think it's more likely that he loved and valued his aunt/stepmother and kept her works around even if he may not have believed in them. The fact that the desecration didn't occur until well into Thutmose's older years seems to be to imply that whatever control he had over those who would have preferred to simply erase her was slipping and they felt more emboldened to actually begin defacing items.
I have actually been to Egypt inside the temples, away from public view her monuments were not defaced or destroyed. The general consensus of Egyptology now is that hew was more or less forced to deface her monuments not as a personal damnatio memoriae but to remove evidence that a *woman* had ruled Kemet
@@johnmiller8975 well if you think about it, she was the one who saved Moses. The man who cost them more slaves than anyone and we know the plagues did happen because the Egyptians recorded it. They might have blamed her for saving Moses.
Please keep making videos like this! These relatively bite sizef and straight forward historical presentations are as valuable to me as wood was to ancient Egyptians :)
One might also liken him to Alexander, but Thutmose seems to have solidified Egyptian control of conquered territories, as the newly expanded empire did not fall apart after his death. He is a rare ruler and general in history, too see such resounding success that lasts long past his time.
@@TheMrgoodmanners Actually that's not accurate. It wasn't until the reign of Akhenaten that Ancient Egypt began to lose territory and influence in the Levant. Akhenaten was 4 kings later, and his reign began roughly 73 years later. So it's more like 2.5 - 3 generations, and Akhenaten didn't begin to lose territory immediately, that occurred after he abandoned his duties as king to focus his attention on the cult of the Aten.
@@TheMrgoodmanners even then the decline began with Ramses IV. Its also hardly his fault as the Late Bronze age collapse took out every major power save Egypy and Assyria but severely weakened both. If not for Ramses 2 and Mereneptah egypt would have fallen too. Ramses had forsight to plant drought resistant crops and to prepare while Mereneptah acted well.
Gread video! It's channels like yours which makes me interested in parts of history which would not have previously been of interest. Keep up the great work!
0:07 Hot damn!! Thutmose III, a.k.a Djehutimes, definitely was an unsurpassable, fantastic military mastermind... I learned so much from this one video alone- and I greatly enjoyed watching it! Thank you so much for uploading it :) Keep up the great work, guys! Personally, I strongly feel that it was *his* harem son, Amenhotep II, who ordered that Hatshepsut's name be erased from the historical record since Thutmose had no need to legitimize his claim to the throne: he was the rightful heir. Amenhotep II, on the other hand, was neither Thutmose's first-born son nor was he the son of his Great Royal Wife. He may have felt his claim to the throne would be stronger if he created a more direct lineage to the earlier pharaohs- by getting rid of his father's aunt/stepmother. Anyhow, this video was enjoyable to watch as well as very informative :) Can't wait to watch your next video!
Thanks so much for always commenting on my videos Gica! Some would argue Ramses II is Egypt's greatest pharaoh but they are both definitely in the top two.
@@HistoryExplained That's true. I considered only the personal merit of each ruler when slapping that tag on Thutmoses but if the criteria would be which pharaoh ruled Ancient Egypt at its peak, Ramses and Amenhotep the Magnificent are solid contenders. Speaking of which, is Amenhotep III your next video? I think it will be either him or his son, Akhenathen.
@@circumscris I was going to do my next video on Akhenaten/Nefertiti, but I just looked into Amenhotep III and now I think I might actually do it on him. Thank you for the suggestion!
@@HistoryExplained Ramses II certainly thought he was Egypt’s greatest pharaoh. However, there seems to be no dispute that the battle of Megiddo was an outright victory for Thutmose whilst opinion is divided in Ramses’ claimed victory at Kadesh. Fortunately for Ramses, he had no qualms about self-promotion.
It's insane to me that the fact his battles were some of the earliest ever recorded and it just makes me wonder about all the other great battles and sieges lost to time.
It's not fair to compare him to Napoleon nor if he's better or not than him, since the geo-political situation was quite different and the military technology of each time period drastically different. I believe his more fair to compare him with contemporaries or to similar time periods in regards to military advancements.
Yes, you are right, but it is something that 19th and 20th Egyptologists have done nonetheless. In part that was based on the assumption that Thutmosis III was fairly short. This was based on measurements of his mummy, neglecting, however, that the mummy's feet were missing and that Thutmosis was thus somewhat taller than the measurements said.
i think you have to attribute part of thutmose's sheer brilliance to his stepmother hatshepsut, she basically raised and prepared him well for the throne.
For me, he is the greatest Pharaoh of Egypt. The other pharaohs couldn't understand that in order to live safe from the enemies, you must conquer them. Sad that the likes of the usuless Tutankhamun are more famous than Thutmose III. Moreover, Napoleon left Russia with 20 thousnad men from the main 600 thousand he brought into Russia, although the Russians could capture him, while Thutmose remained undefeated. He's one of the most underrated leaders in history. I wish we knew more about the mysterious relationship between him and Hatshepsut.
Agree 100%. Hatshepsut made sure Thutmose III was protected and developed into what he became. He respected her, and they were a team. Once a young man and having been trained in his military role and in command of the army he could have sent her into retirement. He did not. They were a team. The same relationship expressed with Alienor of Aquitaine and her son Richard the Lionheart later.
Agree 100%. He led literally from the front. He truly knew how to further and sustain Maat on a grand scale. This was only possible due to the State of Maat brought forth by Hatshepsut in anticipation of the day they were no longer Co-Regents.. An amazing team!
Great video! I knew about him being compared to Napoleon before watching this video, but i didnt know that he was undefeated in battle... That reminds me of Alexander the Great!
I’m impressed that you brought up the ‘40th year’ thing, and that he probably didn’t attack Hatshepsut out of spite; a sign that you really did your homrwork.
My favorite bits about him are twofold: 1. He was a great botanist! He ensured any unusual plants that he came across in his campaigns were shipped home, then created an amazing garden in the Temple of Karmak. And 2. He invented a musical instrument -- sort of like a lute. He was more than Napoleon ever was -- he was that, PLUS daVinci. Excellent post.
I love studying the 18th Dynasty! Thutmose III is the father of Amenhotep II. Amenhotep was likely the Pharaoh who dealt with the Hebrew exodus; Hatshepsut may've been the one who cared for an infant Moses, and Thutmose probably was groomed alongside a young Moses before Moses fled to Midia during Thutmose's reign. There is much more evidence for this likelihood, than for the Hollywood-preferred 19th dynasty. The Hyksos invader-kings had just been driven out by this dynasty. Another Semitic race, the Hebrews, posed a likely threat; therefore when Thutmose's great-great-grandfather took over Egypt, "a pharaoh who didn't know Joseph" came to power (the Hyksos dynasty likely being those in power when Joseph and his family came down to Egypt. The Hyksos were likely weakened prior to being driven away, by the famine Joseph helps mitigate.). Amenhotep II's successor was not his first born. Akhenaten, who comes not long after Thutmose and his son, possibly went monotheistic Ra-crazy because of what he saw the Hebrew God do. And finally, the date of the establishment of the temple with Solomon aides in dating the exodus to around 1447. It's a fascinating study!
I don’t know why people compare Napoleon and Thutmose as it just doesn’t work, the times they lived in were so different. The only actual similarity between the two was that they were both good generals, but warfare and politics was so different in their respective times that it still isn’t much of a similarity
I am Egyptian and I am very proud of my grandfather, the great King Thutmose III, who was truly the greatest pharaoh and leader in history, and I hope that the world will know more and more about him because his story is a very great story that deserves to be known by everyone. He was not an ordinary person, but he was a first-class military commander and established the first empire in history. And he made the Egyptian army the strongest army in the world, and everyone respected and feared him for the strength and greatness of his personality. This is not an exaggeration, but rather a fact that everyone who reads about this great man knows
لم يعطيك أحد وجه 😂😂😂 هم يعتقدون أن الفراعنة أوروبيين و زنوج و شيء من هذا القبيل و يعتقدون ات العرب أو الوطن العربي لا علاقة لهم بالحضارة الفرعونية أو البابلية أو الفينيقية أو أي حضارة قامت في الشرق الأوسط يعتبروها حضارة لهم
Are you from around the nile river? I say this because in order for him to be your grandfather you must be mixed with black African for this to be true...People from Europe and especially the Middle East didn't even come into the region until 640 AD. The fact that they continue to show Egyptians as being half African let's you know that these were truly African people who they chose to make look mixed to satisfy European desires to claim Egypt as their history?
@@misswogdaily2344 😂😂Can I book you a visit to Egypt so that you can see your black African ancestors at the feet of Thutmose III? Africa is not a country for blacks. It is a multi-ethnic continent, geography, climate, and North Africa. ويرسمون أنفسهم باللون البني الفاتح ااما الافارقه السود الكوش يتم رسمهم بالاسود الداكن وهم تحت اقدام ملوك مصر تعالى الى الاقصر وانت ترى النوبيين تحت اقدام تحتمس ورمسيس حتى الليبو وهى دولة ليبيا اليوم They were not black as depicted on the walls of temples. I am looking for a history for you, black African American. You have nothing to do with Egypt. At this time, you were pastoral tribes living on cow grazing. Where is your civilization on your lands? Discover it instead of stealing the civilization of the Egyptians documented on papyrus and temple walls 🤫🤫
@@misswogdaily2344 😂😂In order for the Indian, the Arab Gulf, the Iraqi and the Syrian to be from Asia, they must mix with the Chinese, the Korean and the Japanese. I send you the shoes of Ramesses and Tutankhamun so that you can see your ancestors how their situation in Egypt was mere slaves in quarries and on farms as you were in America and Europe centuries ago 🤫🤫
Questions. 1. Did Thutmose III engage in military campaigns throughout his reign, or did they stop at some point? I’ve heard they stopped. 2. Did his second born ascend to the throne? Could that have played into making sure Hatshepsut’s son didn’t claim the throne?
Hatshepsut's son was Moses and his campaigns stopped because he the napolean of pharoh's lead his army after the israelites and drown when God let the reed sea fall on them. Check Walter Veith on this subject he is the expert on this! Mount Sinai is in the wrong place in these videos its in Saudi Arabia that should be pretty well known by now! They didnt cross the red sea they crossed the reed sea which is the gulf of aquba and the real mount sinai was a volcano and they saw it as a pillar of fire at night.
Archaeologist Steve Collins stated his campaigns stopped approximately in the year 1550 B. C . and that Thutmose lll had 18 or 19 military campaigns in his reign . Collins stated that Thutmose lll died at the Exodus crossing between the Sinai and Midian ( now Saudi Arabia ) with his 250 , 000 man army .
Another awesome video, HE. What's interesting is that Thutmose III is the pharoah whom Moses at 80 years old was sent to tell him to allow the Israelite slaves to leave Egypt. The pharoah broke his promises to Moses many times until only after his eldest son died due to the 10th plague did he relent. Moses then led the Israelites to cross the Red Sea, by a divine miracle of the sea parting, and they settled on a plain near the foothill of Mount Sinai (in modern day Saudi Arabia) in 1446 B.C. The Israelites survived on the plain, with water provided flowing out of a huge rock, for 40 years until the first generation all died. During that 40 years they were fed miraculously with manna and their clothing and sandals did not rot. Even after such grace and mercy from their creator, many Israelites throughout history continued to rebel against Him. Even up till today. This in fact is a reflection of the human condition up till now. A truly sad & unfortunate situation.
@@siversurfer3541 It's important to note that once we get our dates/timeline wrong, history will not be aligned correctly with persons & events, therefore distortion and confusion arise. Since the protestant Bible is the ONLY Book that has provided details about the beginning of human history, Steve Rudd had followed the recorded genealogy chronologically of the first man Adam down to the 24th generation with Joseph's birth arithmetically arrived at 1916 B.C. Moses' birth was arrived at 1526 B.C. About the "lack of evidence for the Israelite captivity in Egypt," one only has to study the discovery by Ron Wyatt of the location of the crossing-point in the Red Sea & Mount Sinai in Saudi Arabia, which was verified true personally by Dr. Kim (bec of his position as a personal physician to the then mayor of Mecca he was able to travel there and 'see' things for himself). Whether one believes in the accuracy & truth of Biblical history depends highly on one's honesty. Thus far, i have not come across any study that has refuted its authenticity irrefutably. Personally, the more i dig, the more truth i find in the Book. Cheers.
@@iaam8141 Thanks. You have inspired me to dig ever deeper into history, a subject I truly love. I have read a little, about Ahkenaten and Moses being possibly one and the same? As I said, I'll keep on hard at biblical and historical timelines as they are truly intriguing. Cheers.
@@siversurfer3541 Begin by getting the dates & events correct. (Like lies, wrong info will completely throw one off course.) Personally, after yrs of learning, I find the protestant Bible amazingly accurate. I'm in no way proselytizing but the events and timeline recorded in the Book simply check out. No other Book lays them out as unashamedly and unapologetically as putting Jews in a bad light, who are supposedly its protagonist. All i can conclude is the Bible is no ordinary book but one which has been divinely guided. Anyway, with the help of more recent archaeology work (the older ones are mostly suspect for they're controlled by the Smithsonian Institute which is rabid in hiding & distorting archaeological finds and history), we have available more accurate data. I would suggest you check out Steve Rudd's body of work which includes his recent effort in constructing a timeline of Biblical personalities and events up to Joseph's time in Egypt into a poster. Google him & you'd find a high-resolution one for download (don't be put off by a landing page that appears 'unrefined.' Personally, i don't think Ahkenaten and Moses were one and the same, simply bec Hatshepsut, his adopted-mother, was pharoah and there was no likelihood Moses cld have had been one. Moreover, he had to flee Egypt at 40 yrs old after killing an Egyptian who was beating Hebrew slaves. In concluding, let me share this titbit that wld probably blow you away. In 1982, Ron Wyatt, with divine prompting, discovered the Ark of the Covenant which was deemed lost bet 592-586 B.C. (I will say no more of the find lest I'd be seen doing a hard-sell. Check out Ark Files for details.) To me this is the greatest significant find of all artifacts simply bec it links Moses at Mount Sinai in Genesis of the Old Testament with the crucifixion of the son of man in the New Testament, (1446 B.C. - 33 A.D.) If this find alone does not erase all doubts about the authenticity, historicity and accuracy of the protestant Bible i cannot think of anything else that will, but the actual return of the son of man himself. More seriously, was the find a sign? Or is it a fact that it exists (and what are contained ON it & INSIDE it) is a signal for one to end all scoffings and not place one's soul at peril? Enjoy the day.
This was a fantastic video. Thutmosis III is one of my favourite historical figures and this did an exceptional job of providing his story in a brief and entertaining manner. Your videos is of excellent quality and I'm so glad I stumbled upon it. They nicely illustrated, detailed, and engaging to listen to. I'll be looking through the other videos you have and looking forward to more in the future ^^
Nice one, though would have liked it to be much longer. Regarding the "Napoleon" comparison, most Egyptologists are comparing his military genius (as Napoleon in his early career). However, on top of that, his "custom" of sending the sons of conquered state leaders back to Egypt (similar to "wards" during the medieval period) was a stroke of genius, as they were brought up not as captives, but as high-born subjects. As for comparing him to Ramses(Ramessu) II, this was a man who was given the title "great" only during the victorian period, when translators of the texts & inscriptions translated the cartouches with all the king's titles, using a little artistic license. All of the kings had the determinative "Great king -----------. However, in Ramses case, it seems that the victorians slightly altered it, and so he became (and still is) known as Ramses the Great. Diplomatically, he couldn't hold a candle to Thutmose, as his forced peace-treaty with the Hittites after Kadesh shows, not to mention his military blunders, again Kadesh, where his personal regiment were very lucky to be rescued by reinforcements. Another example of his questionable military skills can be seen with regards the depiction of a certain campaign together with his father. In this case, it is highly questionable whether Ramses took part, as the figure of a certain "fan bearer" by the name of Mehy, seems to have been altered so that Ramses was present instead. His greatest achievement seems to have been the longevity of his reign. As to his monumental building programme, it stands to reason that any ruler on a throne for such a long time would have had a similar number of monuments. Thutmose, on the other hand, showed what a brilliant military mind he had. If you look at Megiddo, the march from Egypt up to Yehem (present-day Gaza) took some 9 days, arriving just in time to celebrate his jubilee. Once there, his generals advised him to take a safe (but predictable) route to Megiddo. Thutmose over-ruled his generals and ordered his men to take the most dangerous, but less expected route, thus surprising his enemies. Without doubt, the greatest Egyptian warrior king. By the way, nice to see you call the "book" correctly (the Amduat), rather than the incorrect "book of the dead". Keep it up! (by the, reason I know a bit about this is due to my Dissertation at uni being a comparative study of both rulers. Cheers
Will you please make a video on updated chronological history of ancient INDIA by Vedveer Arya ? Date of lord Buddha is corrected to 1944 BCE to 1864 BCE. British historians did a blunder in writing history of INDIA and dated vedic period 1500 bce because they wanted to limit history of ancient India in biblical timeline of 4004 BCE. Now new excavation and astronomical data revealed that Nalanda University was functional from 1200 BCE onwards and Budhha was born in 1944 BCE, date of lord Krishna is corrected and dated in 3223 BCE to 3126 BCE by Vedveer Arya . Vedic period is dated in 11500 BCE to 10800 BCE. Have a look into his books.🙏
As to Hatshepsut, while I am not a "fan" of the feud theory either, I am wondering what heirs of Hatshepsut could have been in the way for Amenhotep II to succeed his father? As far as I know, she only had one daughter, Neferure but she "disappears" somewhere between Hatshepsut's 7th and 16th regnal years. If Neferure lived long enough to get to puberty, she may have had children of her own that could have been considered a threat to Amenhotep II's claim to the throne. But who was the father? And who were the children? And wouldn't have been easier to just have these heirs murdered, or is that too Ptolemaic and Roman? Also, while the destruction of some of Hatshepsut's monuments was done during the later years of Thutmosis III, a lot of damage may also have been done after that. Even long after that, some of the destruction done to Hatshepsut's mortuary temple seems to have been done by Akhenaton's attacks on anything related to the cult of Amun-Ra, and then later, by the "restoration" attempts under Seti I and Ramesses II, who simply replaced Hatshepsut's names with those of Thutmosises I to III, leading to a lot of confusion about the Thutmosid succession. All in all, the last hasn't been said about the destruction of Hatshepsut's monuments, and hopefully, more evidence will be found pointing us in the right directions.
'Wouldnt it be easier to have these heirs murdered' The key word is 'SMOOTH sucession.' A smooth succession is a sucession that doesnt require bloodshed, Hatshepsut probobly has surviving relatives but these people were removed from history, their names forever forgotten. At least thats what my theory is.
@@darrylerren8185 Sadly, history is full of examples of family members murdering each other to clear the path to power. One need look no further than the (attempted or successful) murder of Ramesses III by one of his wives and her son; or to the later Ptolemies, several Roman emperors, and loads of other kings throughout history. Being king or emperor was a dangerous job. That being said and while I know that absence of evidence isn't evidence of the opposite, the total lack of any other descendants from Hatshepsut than Neferure, makes it unlikely that there were any and makes the theory that Hatshepsut's memory was persecuted to ensure Amenhotep II would become the next king, also very unlikely. Another theory proposes that the persecution started after Thutmosis III finished all his military campaigns and turned his attention to internal matters. But that seems as far fetched as the "clearing the path for Amenhotep II" theory. The only actually correct thing to do is say that the destruction started during Thutmosis III's later years, that it was inconsistent, that it was taken up again during the Amarna revolution and that further destruction was done during the restorations done in the early 19th Dynasty. As to the reasons of the initial destruction, we are (still) in the dark.
What do you think of the theory that Thutmose III is the pharaoh of the exodus? If Hatshepsut is the daughter of pharaoh who rescued Moses as an infant, then Thutmose III would have hated her because Moses’ survival was her fault. That is my theory.
There is no king of Egypt who loves the children of Israel, they are enslaved from time to time, and if you want to know more about this story, join me to read the Qur’an and you will learn more🥰🥰
History Explained Videos
(Chronological Order)
Narmer | The First Pharaoh
Ancient Egypt | 3100 BC
ua-cam.com/video/e_ByLv949-8/v-deo.html
Imhotep | The First Pyramid Builder
Ancient Egypt | 2650 BC
ua-cam.com/video/gpL5TgIRukQ/v-deo.html
Sargon | The Greatest King of Akkad
Ancient Mesopotamia | 2300 BC
ua-cam.com/video/kkSwK59CwF8/v-deo.html
Sobekneferu | The First Female Pharaoh
Ancient Egypt | 1800 BC
ua-cam.com/video/TaI3MawgKNE/v-deo.html
Hammurabi | The First Emperor of Babylon
Ancient Mesopotamia | 1750 BC
ua-cam.com/video/jPn-Lxuilw4/v-deo.html
Hatshepsut | The Greatest Female Pharaoh
Ancient Egypt | 1470 BC
ua-cam.com/video/L_A8B_MdAdY/v-deo.html
Thutmose III | The Deadliest Pharaoh
Ancient Egypt | 1450 BC
ua-cam.com/video/-2XS3vmVGjU/v-deo.html
Amenhotep III | The Wealthiest Pharaoh
Ancient Egypt | 1370 BC
ua-cam.com/video/j5Oua9WNo8c/v-deo.html
Akhenaten | The Most Hated Pharaoh
Ancient Egypt | 1350 BC
ua-cam.com/video/Gdcu2g5uM7o/v-deo.html
Nefertiti | The Most Hated Female Pharaoh
Ancient Egypt | 1340 BC
ua-cam.com/video/bLWD3bVhSbM/v-deo.html
Ramses the Great | The Greatest Pharaoh
Ancient Egypt | 1250 BC
ua-cam.com/video/TeESSvut5xA/v-deo.html
Lycurgus | The Lawgiver of Sparta
Ancient Greece | 750 BC
ua-cam.com/video/zfC1ZnTKOJU/v-deo.html
Ashurbanipal | The Cruelest King of Assyria
Ancient Mesopotamia | 650 BC
ua-cam.com/video/LOCm2G0R4PY/v-deo.html
Nebuchadnezzar | The Greatest King of Babylon
Ancient Mesopotamia | 600 BC
ua-cam.com/video/WX4sTXOKRcY/v-deo.html
Draco | The Lawgiver of Athens
Ancient Greece | 600 BC
ua-cam.com/video/sqOxqv_yIzE/v-deo.html
Cyrus the Great | The Greatest King of Persia
Achaemenid Empire | 550 BC
ua-cam.com/video/CMc1rF8u4ro/v-deo.html
Cambyses II | The First Persian Pharaoh
Achaemenid Empire | 530 BC
ua-cam.com/video/pXOjOcTqU5w/v-deo.html
These videos are AMAZING!!!
@@yoso5934 The carry a fake Eurocentric narrative. So, these photoshoped white people did not develop their civilization in Europe or Asia but came to Egypt and the Sudan deep in Africa to found their civilization? How believable. These videos are a blatant attempt to steal black African history and civilizations. There is another proof that the Eurocentric images are fake and false. Without knowing what they were doing Eurocentric makers of these videos on UA-cam and FB have included the neck or shoulder necklaces on the images of the pharaohs. What the makers of these video don’t know is that the black African necklace depicted on ancient Egyptian and Sudanic murals, statues, mummies etc. is a UNIQUELY black African clothing accessory worn throughout Black Africa in the ancient past and up to today! Google: "images Maasai beaded necklace, images Oromo beaded necklace, images Zulu beaded necklace or images Turkana bead necklaces". The list is endless. At NO TIME in the past or today have Arab, Asian or European people worn this uniquely black African clothing attire or accessory. The ancient black African pharaohs were buried with these beaded necklaces. The fact that EuroAsians have never worn these beaded necklaces is proof enough that this videos are nothing more than a false Eurocentric narrative and a blatant attempt to steal the history of black Africa. Eurocentists should stop these ridiculous and pathetic attempts to steal the history of black Africans.
whitewash
The fact that he always checks and reads comments is amazing and shows how much he cares about his audience thank you for making such a historically interesting video and thank you for just making them head and shoulders above any documentary I’ve ever seen
I’m glad you enjoyed it. Thank you for all the support. It’s much appreciated!
That's right!He just sent me a comment after 9 months!
@Jesus is LORD 🙏👍God bless You
hey great video man, don't worry about views. Great things takes time
You’re right. Thank you!
Rome wasn't built in a day
Bro stop it there is nothing great about this lie
@@seandeans1279 What, Rome?
Such as the Fall of Egypt?
Come on! This 3 month wait is so excruciating! But all the worth it if the video quality is so excellent.
Thank you!
Thank you for your patience
God blessed Egypt with a rich history, and you are bringing it to us. Well done !
Thank you for always watching and commenting!
God has nothing to do with it lol
On the contrary. Also, that's why you exist
Yes , American History.. Ameru kan the ppl of America are indigenous to Egypt.. Egypt is America...
@@forcedtohaveahandle I disagree with you completely. God has everything to do with history especially human history. How much do you know of Him may I ask? I am not in any way proselytizing. Or are you one of them who believe what the 'scientists' tell you? If it will make you rethink your position -- let me make this statement: No scientist (gather them all together and it'll still be NONE), given the technology available to him/her today, can create a new ray of light; a new breadth of air; a new drop of water; a new grain of sand; nor a new pip of seed without borrowing from what has been originally provided. All a scientist can do is venture to explore and/or explain what already exists, and worst, plunder what have already been given in the beginning. Prove me wrong.
Beautiful new vid old friend! So glad to see a new release!! 🙏😊
I appreciate that my friend! 😃
Very professional and interesting
Love these videos
I appreciate that.
@@HistoryExplained hey one simple comment that you made got you this huge fan base
This video’s quality is legendary! Great job!
Also nice 10 minute mark!
It took some time tweaking the length to get it exact. Thank you!
Using white skin to describe ancient Egyptians pharaoh is an injustice to Africa
@@emmanuelaneri6683 Not every African is black.
Amazing video, even has subtitles, love you
Glad you like it. Thanks!
I think it's more likely that he loved and valued his aunt/stepmother and kept her works around even if he may not have believed in them. The fact that the desecration didn't occur until well into Thutmose's older years seems to be to imply that whatever control he had over those who would have preferred to simply erase her was slipping and they felt more emboldened to actually begin defacing items.
That’s a great point. Thank you for sharing Michael.
I have actually been to Egypt inside the temples, away from public view her monuments were not defaced or destroyed.
The general consensus of Egyptology now is that hew was more or less forced to deface her monuments not as a personal damnatio memoriae but to remove evidence that a *woman* had ruled Kemet
@@johnmiller8975 well if you think about it, she was the one who saved Moses. The man who cost them more slaves than anyone and we know the plagues did happen because the Egyptians recorded it. They might have blamed her for saving Moses.
The channel is finally getting the recognition it needs
Thank you for the support!
Please keep making videos like this! These relatively bite sizef and straight forward historical presentations are as valuable to me as wood was to ancient Egyptians :)
Happy to hear!
One might also liken him to Alexander, but Thutmose seems to have solidified Egyptian control of conquered territories, as the newly expanded empire did not fall apart after his death. He is a rare ruler and general in history, too see such resounding success that lasts long past his time.
I agree. He was a unique and fascinating figure. Thank you for sharing
It fell apart in just one generation.
@@TheMrgoodmanners Actually that's not accurate. It wasn't until the reign of Akhenaten that Ancient Egypt began to lose territory and influence in the Levant. Akhenaten was 4 kings later, and his reign began roughly 73 years later. So it's more like 2.5 - 3 generations, and Akhenaten didn't begin to lose territory immediately, that occurred after he abandoned his duties as king to focus his attention on the cult of the Aten.
@@avet4521 my bad I was thinking of Rameses 2
@@TheMrgoodmanners even then the decline began with Ramses IV. Its also hardly his fault as the Late Bronze age collapse took out every major power save Egypy and Assyria but severely weakened both. If not for Ramses 2 and Mereneptah egypt would have fallen too. Ramses had forsight to plant drought resistant crops and to prepare while Mereneptah acted well.
this channel's quality is AAA.
Thank you!
Great job. Love your quality over quantity.
Thanks!
The best channel that explain life of ancient pharaohs of egypt thumbs up ✌️,glad to find this on you tube.
I really appreciate that. Thank you!
Gread video! It's channels like yours which makes me interested in parts of history which would not have previously been of interest. Keep up the great work!
I’m happy to hear that. Thanks for your support!
great vid, ty, love this stuff
Thanks!
0:07 Hot damn!!
Thutmose III, a.k.a Djehutimes, definitely was an unsurpassable, fantastic military mastermind... I learned so much from this one video alone- and I greatly enjoyed watching it! Thank you so much for uploading it :) Keep up the great work, guys!
Personally, I strongly feel that it was *his* harem son, Amenhotep II, who ordered that Hatshepsut's name be erased from the historical record since Thutmose had no need to legitimize his claim to the throne: he was the rightful heir. Amenhotep II, on the other hand, was neither Thutmose's first-born son nor was he the son of his Great Royal Wife. He may have felt his claim to the throne would be stronger if he created a more direct lineage to the earlier pharaohs- by getting rid of his father's aunt/stepmother.
Anyhow, this video was enjoyable to watch as well as very informative :) Can't wait to watch your next video!
I appreciate that. Thank you
The fact that the landscape of Egypt is harsh outside the Nile, Thutmose accomplished something amazing with the amount of land he gained
Thanks for sharing
They were black people. That's how terrible history is corrupted.
@@cilvabakape763 Egyptian never black
🔥 🔥 🔥 as usual. Nice job
Thank you Zack!
Your videos are of amazing quality, please continue to do what you’re doing
Thank you very much.
One of the greatest kings in the history ❤❤❤🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬
Excellent video as always. Thutmoses III is Egypt's greatest ever pharaoh.
Thanks so much for always commenting on my videos Gica! Some would argue Ramses II is Egypt's greatest pharaoh but they are both definitely in the top two.
@@HistoryExplained That's true. I considered only the personal merit of each ruler when slapping that tag on Thutmoses but if the criteria would be which pharaoh ruled Ancient Egypt at its peak, Ramses and Amenhotep the Magnificent are solid contenders.
Speaking of which, is Amenhotep III your next video? I think it will be either him or his son, Akhenathen.
@@circumscris I was going to do my next video on Akhenaten/Nefertiti, but I just looked into Amenhotep III and now I think I might actually do it on him. Thank you for the suggestion!
@@HistoryExplained Ramses II certainly thought he was Egypt’s greatest pharaoh. However, there seems to be no dispute that the battle of Megiddo was an outright victory for Thutmose whilst opinion is divided in Ramses’ claimed victory at Kadesh. Fortunately for Ramses, he had no qualms about self-promotion.
Ptolemy is obviously the greatest pharaoh..had the most power and control
Amazing video as always !
Glad you enjoyed Time! Thanks for being so active on my channel Tim.
I can't believe this channel is not getting enough recognition!
Thanks for your support!
Excellent and informative video
Thank you!
It's insane to me that the fact his battles were some of the earliest ever recorded and it just makes me wonder about all the other great battles and sieges lost to time.
Hey, waiting for the video
Thanks for waiting.
this video is amazing already lol
Thanks!
This channel helped so much with my History. Thank you so much!
I’m so happy to hear that! New video soon!
You have a very soothing voice. Great video. Thank you so much for sharing this. Egyptian history has always intrigued me.
I’m happy to hear that!
I don't really know why, but whenever I hear the stories of Pharaohs throughout the dynasties I always get emotional.
I feel the same. Thank you for watching and commenting :)
Love your videos! Thank you.
Glad to hear that :)
An absolutely brilliant documentary! Sheer genius! Excellent work!
Thank you so much for sharing!
Thank you very much!
Terrific work!
Thanks!
The king is back, I wish you uploaded more these videos are awesome
Trying my best to upload more frequently. Thanks for the support!
Even tho he does not make alot of videos there are epic
Thanks for watching.
you're english is hurting me
I think I used the wrong your but im bad at english to
@@riyanagupta2984 its your not you're
@@landonsur8059 i already know that, thats why i said that I put the wrong you're.
It's not fair to compare him to Napoleon nor if he's better or not than him, since the geo-political situation was quite different and the military technology of each time period drastically different. I believe his more fair to compare him with contemporaries or to similar time periods in regards to military advancements.
You make a good point! Thanks for being so active on my channel.
Yes, you are right, but it is something that 19th and 20th Egyptologists have done nonetheless. In part that was based on the assumption that Thutmosis III was fairly short. This was based on measurements of his mummy, neglecting, however, that the mummy's feet were missing and that Thutmosis was thus somewhat taller than the measurements said.
It's a comparison of military prowess, not geopolitics. Geopolitics is irrelevant to judging how good a general he is.
I found this while trying to find videos on Amsis II. Good job really I enjoyed it and I didn't know a lot about Thutmose II so thank you. 🙏❤️
Great job as always!
Thank you very much.
i think you have to attribute part of thutmose's sheer brilliance to his stepmother hatshepsut, she basically raised and prepared him well for the throne.
What a masterpiece have I just watched!
I appreciate that!
Great video of my favorite Pharaoh!
Thanks for watching Todd!
For me, he is the greatest Pharaoh of Egypt. The other pharaohs couldn't understand that in order to live safe from the enemies, you must conquer them. Sad that the likes of the usuless Tutankhamun are more famous than Thutmose III. Moreover, Napoleon left Russia with 20 thousnad men from the main 600 thousand he brought into Russia, although the Russians could capture him, while Thutmose remained undefeated. He's one of the most underrated leaders in history. I wish we knew more about the mysterious relationship between him and Hatshepsut.
Thanks for sharing Abdul.
Agree 100%.
Hatshepsut made sure Thutmose III was protected and developed into what he became.
He respected her, and they were a team.
Once a young man and having been trained in his military role and in command of the army he could have sent her into retirement. He did not. They were a team. The same relationship expressed with Alienor of Aquitaine and her son Richard the Lionheart later.
Agree 100%.
He led literally from the front.
He truly knew how to further and sustain Maat on a grand scale.
This was only possible due to the State of Maat brought forth by Hatshepsut in anticipation of the day they were no longer Co-Regents.. An amazing team!
lol napoleon is 3000 years later, and russia is arctic
Loved your video, thanks from Egypt 🇪🇬
As an egyptian, i find your channel amazing, subscribed, keep it up.
Happy to hear that! Thank you very much!
Excellent and very informative, thank you!
I appreciate that Jade
Great video! I knew about him being compared to Napoleon before watching this video, but i didnt know that he was undefeated in battle... That reminds me of Alexander the Great!
Thank you
😂😂Is it logical to liken Thutmose to Napoleon? The correct situation is to liken Napoleon to Thutmose, and not the other way around
I’m impressed that you brought up the ‘40th year’ thing, and that he probably didn’t attack Hatshepsut out of spite; a sign that you really did your homrwork.
Odd question but are you the same guy who works on Invicta videos too? I love your narration style
I’m not. Thanks for watching!
Super job!! Love the video - looking forward to future ones. Thanks
Thank you David!
Can you make video about "tinhinan"!
@Goat man Comics search about it
Perhaps in the future but I won’t be in her time period for a really long time. I’m moving in chronological order for now. Thanks for the suggestion.
@@HistoryExplained thank you for this
8:55 ooohhhh that’s a burn.
Haha
Yesssss
Thanks for watching.
Proud of my great grandfather 🙏🙏
My favorite bits about him are twofold:
1. He was a great botanist! He ensured any unusual plants that he came across in his campaigns were shipped home, then created an amazing garden in the Temple of Karmak. And
2. He invented a musical instrument -- sort of like a lute.
He was more than Napoleon ever was -- he was that, PLUS daVinci.
Excellent post.
The historical character I would most like to meet. He was a polymath of his day and would be fascinating company.
Yea he was amazing!
Is always a great video thank you for your work 👍👍👍
Thanks for your support! 👍
Certainly Pharaoh Tuthmosis was not Arab since the Arabs didn't invade northern Africa til 500 AD. He was an East African man.
Black didn't make civilization
Just discovered this channel, I’m impress with the quality
Thank you so much
Great video! Would you consider doing a segment on Boudica in the future? I would love to hear y'alls viewpoint about her.
For sure. Just moving in chronological order and she’s about 1,500 years in the future. Thanks for the suggestion!
@@HistoryExplained 🤣 ok cool. Looking forward to it!
Thank you for your hard work! Great video!
Thanks so much!
I love studying the 18th Dynasty! Thutmose III is the father of Amenhotep II. Amenhotep was likely the Pharaoh who dealt with the Hebrew exodus; Hatshepsut may've been the one who cared for an infant Moses, and Thutmose probably was groomed alongside a young Moses before Moses fled to Midia during Thutmose's reign. There is much more evidence for this likelihood, than for the Hollywood-preferred 19th dynasty.
The Hyksos invader-kings had just been driven out by this dynasty. Another Semitic race, the Hebrews, posed a likely threat; therefore when Thutmose's great-great-grandfather took over Egypt, "a pharaoh who didn't know Joseph" came to power (the Hyksos dynasty likely being those in power when Joseph and his family came down to Egypt. The Hyksos were likely weakened prior to being driven away, by the famine Joseph helps mitigate.).
Amenhotep II's successor was not his first born.
Akhenaten, who comes not long after Thutmose and his son, possibly went monotheistic Ra-crazy because of what he saw the Hebrew God do.
And finally, the date of the establishment of the temple with Solomon aides in dating the exodus to around 1447.
It's a fascinating study!
I know so little about Egyptian history that this was a great find. Many thanks.
You’re welcome! Thanks for watching!
It's Afrikan history. They lied.
My favorite Farhon
Emperor Thutmose III
🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬🇪🇬💪
Thanks for watching!
Great Episode on 1 of my favorite Pharoahs!😁🎊🎉😆
Thank you!
Einer der ganz wenigen Feldherrn auf dem Thron des alten Ägyptens und sehr Erfolgreich.
Thanks for watching
History Explained hat jetzt einen deutschen Kanal!
@@skyisthelimit9887 ua-cam.com/channels/GOb22QnSresFWEI6xceBqg.html
I don’t know why people compare Napoleon and Thutmose as it just doesn’t work, the times they lived in were so different. The only actual similarity between the two was that they were both good generals, but warfare and politics was so different in their respective times that it still isn’t much of a similarity
I agree. Thanks for your input and for watching.
Very true. two very different eras different type of warfare different and political structure
I agree ❤️
Our grandfather ❤🇪🇬
I am Egyptian and I am very proud of my grandfather, the great King Thutmose III, who was truly the greatest pharaoh and leader in history, and I hope that the world will know more and more about him because his story is a very great story that deserves to be known by everyone. He was not an ordinary person, but he was a first-class military commander and established the first empire in history. And he made the Egyptian army the strongest army in the world, and everyone respected and feared him for the strength and greatness of his personality. This is not an exaggeration, but rather a fact that everyone who reads about this great man knows
لم يعطيك أحد وجه 😂😂😂
هم يعتقدون أن الفراعنة أوروبيين و زنوج و شيء من هذا القبيل و يعتقدون ات العرب أو الوطن العربي لا علاقة لهم بالحضارة الفرعونية أو البابلية أو الفينيقية أو أي حضارة قامت في الشرق الأوسط يعتبروها حضارة لهم
Are you from around the nile river? I say this because in order for him to be your grandfather you must be mixed with black African for this to be true...People from Europe and especially the Middle East didn't even come into the region until 640 AD. The fact that they continue to show Egyptians as being half African let's you know that these were truly African people who they chose to make look mixed to satisfy European desires to claim Egypt as their history?
@@misswogdaily2344 😂😂Can I book you a visit to Egypt so that you can see your black African ancestors at the feet of Thutmose III? Africa is not a country for blacks. It is a multi-ethnic continent, geography, climate, and North Africa. ويرسمون أنفسهم باللون البني الفاتح ااما الافارقه السود الكوش يتم رسمهم بالاسود الداكن وهم تحت اقدام ملوك مصر تعالى الى الاقصر وانت ترى النوبيين تحت اقدام تحتمس ورمسيس حتى الليبو وهى دولة ليبيا اليوم They were not black as depicted on the walls of temples. I am looking for a history for you, black African American. You have nothing to do with Egypt. At this time, you were pastoral tribes living on cow grazing. Where is your civilization on your lands? Discover it instead of stealing the civilization of the Egyptians documented on papyrus and temple walls 🤫🤫
@@misswogdaily2344 😂😂In order for the Indian, the Arab Gulf, the Iraqi and the Syrian to be from Asia, they must mix with the Chinese, the Korean and the Japanese. I send you the shoes of Ramesses and Tutankhamun so that you can see your ancestors how their situation in Egypt was mere slaves in quarries and on farms as you were in America and Europe centuries ago 🤫🤫
@@misswogdaily2344 ancient Egyptians weren't black Africans tho. They were semitic. Their language itself is a semitic language.
Great video 👍👍
Thanks!
Super high quality videos! Love it. Like from me. Peace. 💙
Thank you very much!
Great documentary. Hope to see more.
Thank you so much!
Questions.
1. Did Thutmose III engage in military campaigns throughout his reign, or did they stop at some point? I’ve heard they stopped.
2. Did his second born ascend to the throne? Could that have played into making sure Hatshepsut’s son didn’t claim the throne?
Hatshepsut's son was Moses and his campaigns stopped because he the napolean of pharoh's lead his army after the israelites and drown when God let the reed sea fall on them. Check Walter Veith on this subject he is the expert on this! Mount Sinai is in the wrong place in these videos its in Saudi Arabia that should be pretty well known by now! They didnt cross the red sea they crossed the reed sea which is the gulf of aquba and the real mount sinai was a volcano and they saw it as a pillar of fire at night.
I’m really not sure
Archaeologist Steve Collins stated his campaigns stopped approximately in the year
1550 B. C . and that Thutmose lll had 18 or 19
military campaigns in his reign .
Collins stated that Thutmose lll died at the Exodus crossing between the Sinai and Midian
( now Saudi Arabia ) with his 250 , 000 man army .
Great Video ! Recently I had no times to view your videos.
Thanks for coming back!
🇪🇬 🇪🇬 🇪🇬
Thanks for watching.
Oi...Great content, very nicely laid out. Keep it up, love this.
I appreciate that!
Amazing video!
I wanted to ask,do you make those portraits of rulers or do you find them somewhere?
A talents artist named Carlos Jaramillo draws the portraits. The credits are in the description box. Thanks for your interest.
@@HistoryExplained Thanks for the answer.
amazing video, also love your unique concept of going through history chronologically
Thanks for watching!
Another awesome video, HE.
What's interesting is that Thutmose III is the pharoah whom Moses at 80 years old was sent to tell him to allow the Israelite slaves to leave Egypt. The pharoah broke his promises to Moses many times until only after his eldest son died due to the 10th plague did he relent. Moses then led the Israelites to cross the Red Sea, by a divine miracle of the sea parting, and they settled on a plain near the foothill of Mount Sinai (in modern day Saudi Arabia) in 1446 B.C. The Israelites survived on the plain, with water provided flowing out of a huge rock, for 40 years until the first generation all died. During that 40 years they were fed miraculously with manna and their clothing and sandals did not rot. Even after such grace and mercy from their creator, many Israelites throughout history continued to rebel against Him. Even up till today. This in fact is a reflection of the human condition up till now. A truly sad & unfortunate situation.
Thanks for sharing!
ia am
Moses was at a later time.
There is a lack of evidence, for the Israelite captivity in Egypt.
@@siversurfer3541 It's important to note that once we get our dates/timeline wrong, history will not be aligned correctly with persons & events, therefore distortion and confusion arise. Since the protestant Bible is the ONLY Book that has provided details about the beginning of human history, Steve Rudd had followed the recorded genealogy chronologically of the first man Adam down to the 24th generation with Joseph's birth arithmetically arrived at 1916 B.C. Moses' birth was arrived at 1526 B.C. About the "lack of evidence for the Israelite captivity in Egypt," one only has to study the discovery by Ron Wyatt of the location of the crossing-point in the Red Sea & Mount Sinai in Saudi Arabia, which was verified true personally by Dr. Kim (bec of his position as a personal physician to the then mayor of Mecca he was able to travel there and 'see' things for himself). Whether one believes in the accuracy & truth of Biblical history depends highly on one's honesty. Thus far, i have not come across any study that has refuted its authenticity irrefutably. Personally, the more i dig, the more truth i find in the Book. Cheers.
@@iaam8141
Thanks. You have inspired me to dig ever deeper into history, a subject I truly love.
I have read a little, about Ahkenaten and Moses being possibly one and the same?
As I said, I'll keep on hard at biblical and historical timelines as they are truly intriguing.
Cheers.
@@siversurfer3541 Begin by getting the dates & events correct. (Like lies, wrong info will completely throw one off course.) Personally, after yrs of learning, I find the protestant Bible amazingly accurate. I'm in no way proselytizing but the events and timeline recorded in the Book simply check out. No other Book lays them out as unashamedly and unapologetically as putting Jews in a bad light, who are supposedly its protagonist. All i can conclude is the Bible is no ordinary book but one which has been divinely guided. Anyway, with the help of more recent archaeology work (the older ones are mostly suspect for they're controlled by the Smithsonian Institute which is rabid in hiding & distorting archaeological finds and history), we have available more accurate data. I would suggest you check out Steve Rudd's body of work which includes his recent effort in constructing a timeline of Biblical personalities and events up to Joseph's time in Egypt into a poster. Google him & you'd find a high-resolution one for download (don't be put off by a landing page that appears 'unrefined.'
Personally, i don't think Ahkenaten and Moses were one and the same, simply bec Hatshepsut, his adopted-mother, was pharoah and there was no likelihood Moses cld have had been one. Moreover, he had to flee Egypt at 40 yrs old after killing an Egyptian who was beating Hebrew slaves. In concluding, let me share this titbit that wld probably blow you away. In 1982, Ron Wyatt, with divine prompting, discovered the Ark of the Covenant which was deemed lost bet 592-586 B.C. (I will say no more of the find lest I'd be seen doing a hard-sell. Check out Ark Files for details.) To me this is the greatest significant find of all artifacts simply bec it links Moses at Mount Sinai in Genesis of the Old Testament with the crucifixion of the son of man in the New Testament, (1446 B.C. - 33 A.D.) If this find alone does not erase all doubts about the authenticity, historicity and accuracy of the protestant Bible i cannot think of anything else that will, but the actual return of the son of man himself. More seriously, was the find a sign? Or is it a fact that it exists (and what are contained ON it & INSIDE it) is a signal for one to end all scoffings and not place one's soul at peril? Enjoy the day.
Great video.
Thank you Denis
This was a fantastic video. Thutmosis III is one of my favourite historical figures and this did an exceptional job of providing his story in a brief and entertaining manner.
Your videos is of excellent quality and I'm so glad I stumbled upon it. They nicely illustrated, detailed, and engaging to listen to. I'll be looking through the other videos you have and looking forward to more in the future ^^
Thank you so much Akernis! I really appreciate you.
Great vídeo.Nice clear voice.
Thanks very much!
Nice one, though would have liked it to be much longer. Regarding the "Napoleon" comparison, most Egyptologists are comparing his military genius (as Napoleon in his early career). However, on top of that, his "custom" of sending the sons of conquered state leaders back to Egypt (similar to "wards" during the medieval period) was a stroke of genius, as they were brought up not as captives, but as high-born subjects. As for comparing him to Ramses(Ramessu) II, this was a man who was given the title "great" only during the victorian period, when translators of the texts & inscriptions translated the cartouches with all the king's titles, using a little artistic license. All of the kings had the determinative "Great king -----------. However, in Ramses case, it seems that the victorians slightly altered it, and so he became (and still is) known as Ramses the Great. Diplomatically, he couldn't hold a candle to Thutmose, as his forced peace-treaty with the Hittites after Kadesh shows, not to mention his military blunders, again Kadesh, where his personal regiment were very lucky to be rescued by reinforcements. Another example of his questionable military skills can be seen with regards the depiction of a certain campaign together with his father. In this case, it is highly questionable whether Ramses took part, as the figure of a certain "fan bearer" by the name of Mehy, seems to have been altered so that Ramses was present instead. His greatest achievement seems to have been the longevity of his reign. As to his monumental building programme, it stands to reason that any ruler on a throne for such a long time would have had a similar number of monuments. Thutmose, on the other hand, showed what a brilliant military mind he had. If you look at Megiddo, the march from Egypt up to Yehem (present-day Gaza) took some 9 days, arriving just in time to celebrate his jubilee. Once there, his generals advised him to take a safe (but predictable) route to Megiddo. Thutmose over-ruled his generals and ordered his men to take the most dangerous, but less expected route, thus surprising his enemies. Without doubt, the greatest Egyptian warrior king. By the way, nice to see you call the "book" correctly (the Amduat), rather than the incorrect "book of the dead". Keep it up! (by the, reason I know a bit about this is due to my Dissertation at uni being a comparative study of both rulers. Cheers
Th na for the detailed comment!
Très bien documenté ,merci beaucoup
Thanks for watching
Will you please make a video on updated chronological history of ancient INDIA by Vedveer Arya ?
Date of lord Buddha is corrected to 1944 BCE to 1864 BCE. British historians did a blunder in writing history of INDIA and dated vedic period 1500 bce because they wanted to limit history of ancient India in biblical timeline of 4004 BCE. Now new excavation and astronomical data revealed that Nalanda University was functional from 1200 BCE onwards and Budhha was born in 1944 BCE, date of lord Krishna is corrected and dated in 3223 BCE to 3126 BCE by Vedveer Arya .
Vedic period is dated in 11500 BCE to 10800 BCE.
Have a look into his books.🙏
Do you have any specific figures I should make videos on that you can recommend. Thanks for watching!
I NEEDED TO SEE THIS !!!!! OMG
Happy to hear that!
So... this is the Moses pharaoh. Wow! Good video!
Thank you Gabriel!
Interesting information. Thanks.
Only 10% of the ppl watching hitting that like button, come on ppl, this deserves all the likes.
Thank you. I appreciate your support Aku!
I see you’ve done your Thutmose to bring us the best videos
Haha that’s good
Can you talk about Rameses ll or lll
I’ll cover Ramses II in a couple videos.
@@HistoryExplained great!
That was absolutely
Great video
Thank you so much!
random shot at napoleon lol
Haha. Thanks for watching.
Dang Your Channel Blew up dude!!
Thanks Danny! Got a long way to go!
@@HistoryExplained yah man! Can’t wait to see more and more progress!
As to Hatshepsut, while I am not a "fan" of the feud theory either, I am wondering what heirs of Hatshepsut could have been in the way for Amenhotep II to succeed his father? As far as I know, she only had one daughter, Neferure but she "disappears" somewhere between Hatshepsut's 7th and 16th regnal years. If Neferure lived long enough to get to puberty, she may have had children of her own that could have been considered a threat to Amenhotep II's claim to the throne. But who was the father? And who were the children? And wouldn't have been easier to just have these heirs murdered, or is that too Ptolemaic and Roman?
Also, while the destruction of some of Hatshepsut's monuments was done during the later years of Thutmosis III, a lot of damage may also have been done after that. Even long after that, some of the destruction done to Hatshepsut's mortuary temple seems to have been done by Akhenaton's attacks on anything related to the cult of Amun-Ra, and then later, by the "restoration" attempts under Seti I and Ramesses II, who simply replaced Hatshepsut's names with those of Thutmosises I to III, leading to a lot of confusion about the Thutmosid succession.
All in all, the last hasn't been said about the destruction of Hatshepsut's monuments, and hopefully, more evidence will be found pointing us in the right directions.
'Wouldnt it be easier to have these heirs murdered' The key word is 'SMOOTH sucession.' A smooth succession is a sucession that doesnt require bloodshed, Hatshepsut probobly has surviving relatives but these people were removed from history, their names forever forgotten. At least thats what my theory is.
@@darrylerren8185 Sadly, history is full of examples of family members murdering each other to clear the path to power. One need look no further than the (attempted or successful) murder of Ramesses III by one of his wives and her son; or to the later Ptolemies, several Roman emperors, and loads of other kings throughout history. Being king or emperor was a dangerous job.
That being said and while I know that absence of evidence isn't evidence of the opposite, the total lack of any other descendants from Hatshepsut than Neferure, makes it unlikely that there were any and makes the theory that Hatshepsut's memory was persecuted to ensure Amenhotep II would become the next king, also very unlikely.
Another theory proposes that the persecution started after Thutmosis III finished all his military campaigns and turned his attention to internal matters. But that seems as far fetched as the "clearing the path for Amenhotep II" theory.
The only actually correct thing to do is say that the destruction started during Thutmosis III's later years, that it was inconsistent, that it was taken up again during the Amarna revolution and that further destruction was done during the restorations done in the early 19th Dynasty. As to the reasons of the initial destruction, we are (still) in the dark.
Thanks for watching
The Undefeated King
What do you think of the theory that Thutmose III is the pharaoh of the exodus? If Hatshepsut is the daughter of pharaoh who rescued Moses as an infant, then Thutmose III would have hated her because Moses’ survival was her fault. That is my theory.
I'm interested in that also.
There is no king of Egypt who loves the children of Israel, they are enslaved from time to time, and if you want to know more about this story, join me to read the Qur’an and you will learn more🥰🥰
👍🏼 agree
Thutmose III never hated his mother, infact they were in good relation, its a misconception that he hated his mother, its not true.
Amenhotep ll is the pharoah of exodus. Thutmose is the one who sought to kill him before wilderness journey.