Answer:
The Hyksos were expelled from Egyptian territory and the region of the Levant was conquered by Egypt.
Step-by-step explanation:
The Hyksos were a group of people from the Levant, mainly Syria-Palestine, that ruled over Lower Egypt for a long period during the Middle Kingdom, with its capital in Avaris. At the beginning of the 16th century BCE, the so-called 17th dynasty ruled in Thebes. The members of this royal family undertook the war that ended with the expulsion of the Hyksos from the Egyptian territory. The war was very difficult, and several of the kings of this dynasty died as a result of wounds caused in combat. Finally, Amosis I managed to take the capital, Avaris, and definitively expelled the Hyksos from Egypt, around 1550 BCE (the chronology is doubtful). Ahmosis continued the fight entering Asian territory and conquering the Levant region to make sure that the Hyksos would not attempt to reconquer Egypt. This made him the founder of the New Kingdom of Egypt. That is why he deserved to be considered the initiator of a new dynasty, the 18th dynasty, the brightest in Egyptian history, although there was no breakage of lineage with the 17th dynasty.