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Created page with "Como el faraón Tutmosis III (hacia 1567 a.C.), profeta y sumo sacerdote, expandió el reino egipcio hasta incluir la mayor parte de Oriente Medio. Su victoria más decisiva f..."
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(Created page with "Como el faraón Tutmosis III (hacia 1567 a.C.), profeta y sumo sacerdote, expandió el reino egipcio hasta incluir la mayor parte de Oriente Medio. Su victoria más decisiva f...")
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=== Tutmosis III ===
=== Tutmosis III ===


As Pharaoh Thutmose III (c. 1567 <small>B</small>.<small>C</small>.), greatest of pharaohs, prophet and high priest, patron of the arts, he is considered the architect of the Egyptian empire. He expanded the Egyptian kingdom to include most of the Middle East. His most decisive victory was on the battlefield near Mt. Carmel. There he led the entire army single file through narrow Megiddo Pass to surprise and defeat an alliance of 330 rebellious Asian princes—a daring maneuver protested by the pharaoh’s terrified officers. Thutmose alone was assured of his plan and rode ahead holding aloft the image of Amon-Ra, the Sun God who had promised him the victory.
Como el faraón Tutmosis III (hacia 1567 a.C.), profeta y sumo sacerdote, expandió el reino egipcio hasta incluir la mayor parte de Oriente Medio. Su victoria más decisiva fue en el campo de batalla cerca del monte Carmelo. Allí condujo a todo el ejército en fila a través del estrecho desfiladero de Megido para sorprender y conquistar a una alianza de 330 príncipes asiáticos rebeldes, una osada maniobra protestada por sus aterrorizados oficiales. Sólo Tutmosis estaba seguro de su plan y cabalgó delante alzando la imagen de Amón-Ra, el Dios Sol que le había prometido la victoria.


[[File:Pythagoras with tablet of ratios.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=Seated figure wearing a robe, writing in a book|Pythagoras, from ''The School of Athens'', Raphael (1509)]]
[[File:Pythagoras with tablet of ratios.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=Seated figure wearing a robe, writing in a book|Pythagoras, from ''The School of Athens'', Raphael (1509)]]