Ramesses the Great was the third pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt
@Kings, Family and Childhood
Ramesses the Great was the third pharaoh of the Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt
Ramesses had several wives and concubines. His first and most favorite queen was Nefertari, who probably died comparatively early in the reign. She was very beautiful as well as intelligent. Highly educated, she was able to both read and write hieroglyphs, a very rare skill at the time.
Some of his other queens were Isetnofret, Maathorneferure, Meritamen, Bintanath, Nebettawy, and Henutmire. In addition to his wives he had a large harem of concubines. Ramesses is believed to have fathered over a 100 children through his numerous wives and concubines.
He lived a long life and reigned over his country for 66 years. He suffered from several health problems during his last years and died at the age of around 90 in 1213 BC. He was mummified upon his death and his mummy is now preserved in the Egyptian Museum at Cairo. Ramesses was succeeded by his son Merneptah.
Ramesses II was born in c. 1303 BC to Seti I and Queen Tuya in ancient Egypt. Seti I, a pharaoh of the New Kingdom Nineteenth Dynasty of Egypt, was considered to be a brave warrior and a great king.
Ramesses was groomed for succeeding his father from a young age. He was ranked as a captain of the army when he was just ten years old. Though it is obvious that his rank would have been honorific given his tender age, it is believed that he had started receiving military training by then.
When Ramesses was 14, his father made him the Prince Regent. The young prince started accompanying his father on his military campaigns and had gained some experience of kingship and war by the time he reached his late teens.
Seti I died in 1279 BC and Ramesses ascended to the throne. During the initial years of his reign he immersed himself in extensive building projects. He supervised the building of a large number of cities, temples and monuments. He also established the city of Pi-Ramesses in the Nile Delta as his new capital.
The young pharaoh matured into a brave warrior and led numerous campaigns to conquer those territories which his father had been unable to do so and secure Egypt’s borders.
In 1274 BC, the Battle of Kadesh broke out between the forces of the Egyptian Empire under Ramesses II and the Hittite Empire under Muwatalli II at the city of Kadesh on the Orontes River. It was a chariot battle fought with thousands of chariots. Ramesses' army crossed the Egyptian border and reached the area of Kadesh from the South.
The pharaoh personally led several charges into the Hittite ranks together with his personal guard and using the superior maneuverability of their chariots, attacked the Hittite chariotry. The heavier Hittite chariots were easily overtaken and dispatched by the lighter, faster, Egyptian chariots.
However, as the battle progressed, both the Egyptians and the Hittites suffered heavy casualties. The Egyptian army failed to break Kadesh's defenses while the Hittite army failed to defeat the Egyptians and gain a complete victory.
The Battle of the Kadesh which was fought between the forces of the Egyptian Empire under Ramesses II and the Hittite Empire under Muwatalli II was the battle Ramesses was most famous for. The battle, which is believed to be the largest chariot battle ever fought, involved around 5000-6000 chariots. The battle continued for years with neither of the armies achieving a definite victory and was finally concluded with a treaty of peace between the two armies.