The mummy of Ramses II (1303 BC-1213 BC) was the last great pharaoh of Egypt. He lived to be 90 years old, had 152 descendants, was red-haired and was 190 cm tall in life.

The mummy of Ramses II (1303 BC-1213 BC) was the last great pharaoh of Egypt. He lived to be 90 years old, had 152 descendants, was red-haired and was 190 cm tall in life.

Ramses II (Usermaatre Setepenre)

Son of Seti I and Tuya

Ramses II

Arguably the most famous of the New Kingdom pharaohs, Ramses II succeeded his father Seti I, and became king at the age of between 25 and 30. He enjoyed a long reign, ruling for 67 years, and left a well-recorded legacy.

He had many queens and sired around 100 children. His Great Royal Wife was Nefertari, for whom he built a temple near his own in Nubia, at Abu Simbel. Her tomb in the Valley of the Queens is perhaps the most beautiful sepulcher in the Theban necropolis. Ramses II also married at least one of his daughters, Meritamun.

Ramses II is remembered as a great warrior and recorded his Year 5 Battle of Kadesh, in which he fought against the Hitтιтes. Although the actual outcome of the battle was a draw, the king was excessively proud of his personal bravery and military prowess, bragging that he had singlehandedly saved Egypt from what might have been a terrible defeat. He continued to skirmish with the Hitтιтes for many years, but eventually signed a peace treaty—the first known in history—with their king, and married his daughter to seal the newly-founded alliance. The tomb of the ambᴀssador who delivered the peace treaty has been found at Saqqara.

This pharaoh built temples almost everywhere in Egypt, as well as in Nubia. The most famous of his projects are Abu Simbel, the Ramesseum (dedicated to his mortuary cult), and his additions to Luxor Temple. He also founded a new capital, Pi-Ramses, in the Delta. For his own glory and the glory of Egypt, he erected many statues of himself, a great number of which he usurped from earlier kings. Ramses II was originally buried in KV 7, but his body was moved to the Deir el-Bahari cache to protect it from looting. In the late 20th century, the mummy was sent to the Musée de l’Homme in Paris for study and restoration, as it was in poor condition. In his official travel document, his occupation was listed as “King (deceased)”.

Ramses II

Related Posts

500-Year-Old Treasure in the Namibian Desert: The Incredible Discovery of the Sunken Portuguese Ship Bom Jesus

The world of archaeology was shaken by an extraordinary discovery in the Namibian desert. The Portuguese ship Bom Jesus (Good Jesus), which sank 500 years ago, emerged…

Arizona’s Ancient Forests Frozen in Time – The 225-Million-Year-Old Petrified Tree Trunks

Nature amazes us every day with enthralling color palettes it scatters around us, carelessly, but perfectly. Be it the sunset sky, the leaves in autumn, or the…

The Clacton Spear: Humanity’s Oldest Weapon and the Dawn of Thought

In a quiet display case in the Natural History Museum of London lies a relic so humble, so unᴀssuming, that many pᴀss it by without notice. A…

The Benben Stone of the Black Pyramid: The Summit of Creation and the Soul of Light

Within the hushed halls of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo rests a relic unlike any other — a dark, polished pyramidion, its surface inscribed with hieroglyphs and…

The Sacred Birth: How the Ancient Egyptians Understood the Miracle of Life

On the sun-warmed walls of ancient temples, amid lines of hieroglyphs carved three thousand years ago, the story of life unfolds — not as myth, but as…

The Mystery of the One Sandal: The Hidden Symbolism of Tutankhamun’s Step Into Eternity

In the golden tomb of Tutankhamun, discovered in 1922 beneath the sands of the Valley of the Kings, every object seemed touched by divinity — each fragment…