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Thutmose

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
G26ms

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Thutmose
inhieroglyphs
Era:New Kingdom
(1550–1069 BC)

Thutmose (/θtˈmsə/;[1] also renderedThutmoses,Thutmosis,Tuthmose,Tutmosis,Thothmes,Tuthmosis,Thutmes,Dhutmose,Djhutmose,Djehutymes, etc.) is ananglicization of theancient Egyptian personal namedhwty-ms, usually translated as "Born of the godThoth".

Thoutmôsis (in Ancient Greek Θούθμωσις / Thoúthmôsis) is theHellenized form of the Egyptian Ḏḥwtj-mś (reconstructed pronunciation: /tʼaˈħawtij ˈmissaw/) and means "Born of Thoth". This theophoric name was part of the royal titulary of four pharaohs of the 18th dynasty as the name ofSa-Rê or "birth name". It was also worn by the eldest son ofAmenhotep III, high priest ofPtah, as well as by a vizier who exercised his functions successively underThutmose IV and Amenhotep III. Under this last king and under his successor,Amenhotep IV, two other high dignitaries, royal sons ofKush, similarly called themselves "Born[s] of Thoth".

Ancient Egyptians

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Monarchs and royals

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The name was common among royals of the Eighteenth Dynasty, which is thus sometimes called the "Thutmosid" Dynasty from the reign of Thutmose I onward.

Royal officials

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Other Egyptians

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Others

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References

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  1. ^"Thutmose".Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary. Merriam-Webster.
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