Thutmose II tomb discovery raises new mysteries: Where is his mummy, and why wasn't he buried in the Valley of the Kings?
It's "a question why she buried him here and she built her [tomb] in the Valley of the Kings," Hawass told Live Science in an email. "It is very strange for her to bury him in this [area] that she and other kings did not use."
While Hatshepsut may have overseen the burial, it was likely Thutmose II himself who had his tomb constructed at this location, said Aidan Dodson, an Egyptology professor at the University of Bristol who is not involved with the excavation. He noted that "at this time the Valley of the Kings had not been adopted as the standard burial place" for Egyptian pharaohs.
It appears that Hatshepsut originally planned to be buried not far from Thutmose II. Dodson noted that there is a tomb located about 1,640 feet (500 meters) from Thutmose II's tomb that was built for Hatshepsut but was not used by her. The tomb was uncompleted, but has inscriptions indicating that it was built for her. "She only moved to the Valley of the Kings [when] she became [a] female pharaoh, seven years after her husband's death," Dodson said.
Litherland said tombs of other royal family members have been found in Wadi Gabbanat El Qurud and that tombs of other pharaohs may be in the area but haven't been identified.
Gay Robins, a professor emerita of art history at Emory University who is not involved with the dig, told Live Science that "Hatshepsut seems to be the first king to connect her burial with the location we now call the Valley of the Kings, so there is nothing odd about Thutmose II not being buried there."
The fact that Hatshepsut had Thutmose II buried away from her may lead one to speculate whether she disliked him; however there is no evidence for this, according to Filip Taterka, an Egyptology professor at the Institute of Mediterranean and Oriental Cultures of the Polish Academy of Sciences.
"We know that Hatshepsut did not persecute the memory of Thutmose II in any way, quite to the contrary, she not only provided him with a burial — as the inscription from the vase mentioned above demonstrates — but also order[ed] to construct a funerary temple for him, in order to secure his funerary cult," Taterka told Live Science in an email.
Does Thutmose II have a second tomb nearby?
Another question the tomb discovery raises is whether Thutmose II has a second, undiscovered tomb nearby. The newfound tomb was largely empty; archaeologists found that the mummy and most of the grave goods were moved after the tomb flooded shortly after Thutmose II was buried.
Litherland told Live Science that the team is currently excavating a nearby mound that contains a pile of limestone and rubble. "We have reason to believe it was constructed to conceal something and that something is likely to be an important tomb," Litherland said. The pile is about 75.5 feet (23 m) tall, and it would have taken "vast effort and expense" to place so much rubble there, he added.
Litherland estimates it will take more than a month to excavate the mound and find out what lies underneath. "We don't, and can't, know that the second tomb of Thutmose II is there but there are signs which point suggestively in that direction," Litherland said. "Only [by] excavating the mound can we find out."
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