The face of King Seti I is one of the most well-preserved faces in Egyptian history.
King Seti I, whose name means: Belonging to the god Set.
He died 3,298 years ago and ruled when Egypt was at its highest peaks. He was the father of one of the most famous kings in the ages, who is (Ramses II).
Mummification of his era was at the height of perfection.
And some wonder why the mummy is black and think it was burnt.
But this blackness results from the interaction of some embalming materials with the body, including (natron salt), which contains four substances, two substances that work to absorb fluids in the body, and two substances that form cells that swallow bacteria, causing this blackness.
Mummification developed in the 21st Dynasty, and they painted the mummy with some colors that resembled the color of the skin.
This mummy is the most preserved in the world.
The face of King Seti the First) is one of the most well-preserved faces in Egyptian history
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This is the face of Seti, one of the most well preserved mummy in all of Egyptian history. He was black and not Caucasian.
Menmaatre Seti (I) was the Pharoah who returned Egypt to its lost glory of the 18th dynasty. He led military campaigns into Syria and Libya and expanded the Egyptian empire. He battled the Hitтιтes and kept them from invading Egypt. His army was the first to battle the