Mural of King Tuthmosis III
Mural of King Tuthmosis III 1-701
One of the most important warrior kings of ancient Egypt. It was found in the Deir el-Bahari Temple in 1962 AD
The king wears a long royal beard, a wide necklace, and a crown, and the colors still retain their luster
From Luxor Museum
From the news of Ra, Tuthmosis III (1425 BC), the sixth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty, and is considered the founder of the modern Egyptian Empire at that time. This empire remained until about 1070 BC until the reign of Ramses XI.
Tuthmosis III took care of the army, made it regular, and provided it with knights and chariots. Also, during his reign, the ancient Egyptians mastered the manufacture of arrows and arrows thanks to him. Unlike the reign of Thutmose, at the time when Hatshepsut was ruling, she followed a peaceful policy with the areas of Egyptian influence in Palestine and Nubia and with its neighbors, and she cared for the navy and sent naval expeditions to the country of Punt and to the coasts of Lebanon for trade exchange. She took advantage of some protectorates in Syria and Mitanni to rebel against Egyptian rule. As soon as Thutmose III ascended the throne after the death of Hatshepsut, he had to restore Egyptian control over those areas to secure the country’s borders. Thutmose launched sixteen military campaigns against Asia (the region of Syria and Palestine), through which he was able to establish his influence there, just as he established Egypt’s influence as far south as Nubia.
The prince of the city of Kadesh in Syria was leading an alliance of the princes of the Asian countries in the Levant against Egypt. Their number reached twenty-three armies, and it was expected that Thutmose III would support his defenses and his forces on the Egyptian border near Sinai, but Thutmose decided to go with his huge armies to confront these armies in their lands within The plan to expand the Egyptian Empire to the greatest possible extent and secure the borders against the armies of harassers.


Source: websites