temples and statues and obelisks
After claiming victory over the Hittites, Ramses II commissioned the construction of Abu Simbel temples in Nubia. These temples were carved into the mountainside and dedicated to the gods Amun-Ra and Ra-Horakhty. The temples were not only a symbol of Ramses II's military triumphs but also served as a demonstration of his power and grandeur as a pharaoh.
he didnt have to do any thing to be come the pharaoh the peole just chose him to be the pharaoh
he united upper and lower Egypt
Treasure!
Ramses II"Most historians believe that Ramesses II was the Pharaoh during the Exodus." It was most definitely NOT Ramses II.We know for a fact that Ramses II died when he was 90 years old. How? Not only because Pharaoh's birthdays, coronations and deaths are well documented but also because he built the Temple at Abu Simbel.The most spectacular engineering achievement of Abu Simbel is that sunlight shines directly into the temple twice a year. Once on Ramses II's birthday and once on his coronation. (Even though the temple was moved due to the construction of the High Dam, the dates the sun illuminates the chambers are only off by one day.)And we know how old he was when he died. This is confirmed by the obscure fact that Pharaoh's burial chambers are a specific height. The age of the Pharaoh at death x Pi = the height of the chamber.Now Moses, according to the Bible, was 80 years old when he first approached the Pharaoh with the demand to "let my people go.". If Pharaoh died right after the Exodus he was a maximum of ten years older then Moses. The problem?The Bible says that Pharaoh's daughter found Moses in the reeds and kept him and raised him as her own child. Ramses could not have had a daughter old enough to pass for Moses' mother when he himself was only ten years old.Some possible answers:1) The Jewish scribes who wrote the bible made up the whole story about Moses being found by Pharaoh's daughter. There are many reasons why they might have done this. Also, you would have to believe that Moses never passed for Ramses II's grandson but possibly his son.2) The Egyptians not only incorrectly documented Ramses' age but the architects of both Abu Simbel and Ramses II's burial chamber were buffoons.3) The Jewish scribes who wrote the Bible were incorrect about Moses' age by around 26 years. (Assuming Ramses II had a daughter at the age of 13 and she was at least 13 herself when she found Moses.)4) The Jewish scribes were incorrect about Moses being 80 years old when he approached Pharaoh.5) The whole thing is fiction.Why do some people believe Ramses was the Pharaoh during the exodus? Because the Bible tells of the Jews building the cities of "Pithom" and "PiRamses" aka "Ramesses." However, archeologists have found evidence of Egyptian settlements long before PiRamses was built by the Jews making it much older then originally thought. Since Pithom was built, as the Bible accurately describes, of mud brick there are few remains of this city.For this reason scholars consider that the earlier name was updated to make it recognizable to those who read the account. It is thus not an anachronism or has no direct bearing on the age of the city. There are many examples of this kind of thing. In referring to Russian cities we would no longer use St. Petersburg but the current name. It is also worth noting that a number of scholars consider that the hole Egyptian chronology is in need of revision by several centuries and so it is difficult to state categorically who the Pharaoh was.In the Bible, the name of the Pharaoh of the Exodus is not given. He is simply called "Pharaoh." Muslims also believe in the exodus, as the story is told in the Muslim holy book the Qur'an (Koran), although some details of the story are different. Candidates for the identity of the King of Egypt at the time of the Exodus include:Amenemhat IV (1815 BC to 1806 BC)Tutimaios (circa 1690 BC)- also known as DudimoseA Hyksos king (circa 1648 BC to 1540 BC)Ahmose I (1550 BC to 1525 BC)Thutmose IThutmose III (1479 BC to 1425 BC)Amenhotep II (1427 BC to 1401 BC)Amenhotep IV, also known as Akhenaten (1352 BC - 1336 BC)Horemheb (circa 1319 BC to 1292 BC)Ramesses I (circa 1292 BC to 1290 BC)Ramesses II (1279 BC to 1213 BC)Merneptah (1213 BC to 1203 BC)Amenmesse (1203 BC to 1199 BC)Setnakhte (1190 BC to 1186 BC)
pharaohs told people what to do in Egypt and make pyramids for the pharaohs tomb when they died. Also they treated pharaohs as a child of there god Ra
because thats where they would place the pharaohs after they died. they would place furniture, mummified pets, and other thing the pharaoh would need in the afterlife. the bigger the pyramid, the more worsiped, loved and important the pharaoh was
Yes! Just rotate the view screen. . . The statue or whatever will rotate with you. :)
Tomb or sarcophagus
After claiming victory over the Hittites at the Battle of Kadesh, Ramses II agreed to a peace treaty with the Hittite king, rather than completely destroying or enslaving them. This treaty, known as the Eternal Treaty, is considered one of the earliest known peace treaties in history and helped establish a period of stability and trade between the two empires.
Any thing he wanted them to do.
to preserve a body, like a Pharaoh. its an Egypt thing