I might call Thutmose III a mummy’s boy. His official mother was his aunt, Hatshepsut (above), the second female Pharaoh (we can be certain of). She had been the Great Royal God Wife of Thutmose II until he died in 1479 B.C. E. Thutmose III’s actual father was also Hatshepsut’s own half brother - Egyptian royal family trees tend to lean heavily on inbreeding. But in this case it worked out.
Stone age pottery kilns were able to produce temperatures above 900 degrees Celsius. A mere two hundred degrees higher melted copper, which, when naturally contaminated with tin or arsenic, made bronze. And bronze tools had many advantages over stone. They held a point and an edge longer. They are easier to shape, easier to sharpen, they are durable and should they break, they can be heated until they soften, and then can be reformed. Or, melted and cast as an entirely new tool.
The Bronze Age had begun about 4,000 years before today, and although copper was a relatively rare metal, it was heavily mined along the southern end of the narrow strip of arable land which connects Africa to Eurasia, called the Levantine Corridor, This was why Egypt had invaded and conquered the Levantine about 1500 B.C.E., dominating the local Philistine population.
Hatshepsut ran the two Kingdoms of Upper and Lower Egypt (above) for twenty years as Pharaoh, while Thutmose III remained the Pharaoh-in-waiting, since his actual birth mother, Iset, had been a "lesser" wife. And it seems likely Hatshepsut was a difficult boss lady.
Examination of her mummy (above) in the Cairo museum reveals that besides menopause (she was in her mid-fifties when she died) Hatshepsut suffered from arthritis, diabetes, liver and bone cancer, and really bad teeth. Of course most Egyptians had bad teeth, a by-product of chewing sand in every mouth full of food.
But what finally put Hatshepsut in her Luxor Temple, on 10 March, 1459 B.C., was blood poisoning caused by an abscess in her gums. And then, finally, after all those years playing second fiddle to his aunt, Thutmose felt the need to show his power by invading somebody, and quickly.
So within days of ascending to the Throne of Horus, the 22 year old Thutmose III (above) ordered the army to gather troops and supplies by the last week of August 1458 B.C, at the border fortress of Tjaru in the Nile Delta. He was a powerful young man, with a strong strain of Nubian blood in his veins. And there was need to reassert Egypt's authority. The great Sahara desert protected Egypt to the west. But to the south, north and east threats to the empire hovered.
To the south, beyond the cataracts and in the great bend of the Nile was the gold rich Nubian desert kingdom of Kush, The Egyptians had been waring with these fellow pyramid builders for a century, at one time even being ruled over by Kushite Kings. But at the moment, Kush was under Egyptian control.
To the north was the Mediterranean Sea, occupied by the trading and war fleets of Mycenae, Greece, and the Greek city states and their Asian colonies, such as Ephesus. North of that, up the coast of modern day Turkey, was the rich city of Wilusa, known to the classical Greeks as Troy, Wilusa was a protectorate of the rising Hittite Kingdom to the east in modern day Turkey,
And across the Sinai Desert, beyond the border at Gaza Wadi, were the Philistines, occupying a Semitic land known as Canaan. The Canaanites were a loose confederation of city states in the Levantine Corridor, and because of their copper deposits, they had been dominated by Egypt for over a century.
But, during the distracted leadership of Hatshepsut's later years, the most northern Canaanite city of Meggido (above), sitting north of the Carmel Ridge, and commanding the rich agricultural Jezreel valley, had sought a more comforting and closer alliance with a nearer military power, the kingdom of Mittani.
There was a delay in gathering the army, and Thutmose did not leave Tjaru until February of 1457 B.C. His Egyptian army was mostly infantry, perhaps 10,000 men, divided into platoons of six to ten men each, consisting of bowmen and lancers.
These people were used to walking, and never rode on horseback, so the army did not reach the Philistine fortress of Gaza (“The key to Syria”) until mid-March. After another 11 days marching up the coastal plain Thutmose’s army entered the port of Jamnia, near present day Tel Aviv. Here they rested while scouts brought word that the Canaanite army was awaiting him on the Plain of Esdraelon, before the hill fortress of Megiddo. So in early May, with his communications back to Egypt secured by his navy, Thutmose swung inland, to the small village of Yaham.
In front of Thutmose now rose a line of low hills, stretching from the northwest (Mt. Carmel at 1,740 feet) to the southeast (Mts Tabor & Gilboa, 1,929 feet). Megiddo and the Canaanite army were on the northern flank of these hills, and his generals told Thutmose there were two possible routes to attack Megiddo
The most direct route headed due north from Yaham and then turned northwestward on the Via Maris (sea route) to the village of Taanach, before reaching Megiddo. The longer path headed northwest from Yaham along the flank of the mountains before crossing the hills to reach the valley at the village of Yokneam. From there it was an easy backtrack southeastward to Megiddo.
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