New Kingdom

Egyptian history

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Assorted References

arts

    tombs

      • Ṣaqqārah
        • Step Pyramid of Djoser
          In Ṣaqqārah

          In the New Kingdom (c. 1539–1075 bce), however, Memphis became a principal administrative and military centre, and a number of tombs from that period have been found, including the finely decorated tomb of the general, later king, Horemheb, rediscovered in 1975. Also, in that era and later…

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      • Valley of the Kings
        • Valley of the Kings: Tutankhamun's tomb
          In Valley of the Kings

          The kings of the New Kingdom (c. 1539–1075 bce), fearing for the safety of their rich burials, adopted a new plan of concealing their tombs in a lonely valley in the western hills behind Dayr al-Baḥrī. There, in tombs sunk deep into the heart of the mountain, pharaohs were…

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      cities

        • Memphis
          • Memphis, Egypt: colossal statue of Ramses II
            In Memphis: Later history

            During the New Kingdom, Memphis probably functioned as the second, or northern, capital of Egypt. At one time it seems to have been the principal residence of the crown prince. Several 18th-dynasty inscriptions mention royal hunting parties in the desert near the Sphinx. Amenhotep II (reigned c.

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        • Thebes
          • temple of Hatshepsut
            In Thebes: Archaeology of the Thebes

            In the New Kingdom, when the pharaohs hid their tombs in the secret Valley of the Kings (in western Thebes), ostentation had to be concentrated in their mortuary temples, which rivaled each other in size and magnificence. Although they were designed for the performance of rites connected…

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