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Pharohs. Ancient Egyptian Pharaohs In Ancient Egypt there were over 29 Kings
and Pharaohs and over 5 Queens. Some of the most famous ...
... This strike was said to be a hard one that left the workers hungry and poor (as
cited in J. Romer, Ancient Lives: The story of the Pharohs’ Tombmakers, p.116 ...
... Stierlin, HR 1983, The Pharohs, Educational Resources Publishing Ltd, Geneva; Time
Life Books, 1996, What Life Was Like on the Banks of the Nile, Time Life Inc ...
... Kingdom - If deceased was judged worthy by Osiris, they continued to afterlife -
The pyramids were built to serve as tombstones to great pharohs - Pyramids can ...
Submitted by D_Camino on December 11, 2005
Category: History Other
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Ancient Egyptian Pharaohs
In Ancient Egypt there were over 29 Kings and Pharaohs and over 5 Queens. Some of the most famous kings and queens were: Ramses II, Ramses III, King Tut, Cleopatra, and Nefertiti.
Ramses II (reigned 1279-1212 BC), ancient Egyptian king, third ruler of the 19th dynasty, the son of Seti I. During the early part of his reign Ramses fought to reign the territory in Africa and Western Asia that Egypt had held during the 16th and 15th centuries BC. His principle opponents were the Hittites, a powerful people of Asia Minor, against whom he waged a long war upon. The major battle of this war was fought in 1274 at Kadesh, in Northern Syria, was hailed by Ramses as such a great triumph. In 1258 BC a treaty was signed whereby the contested lands were divided and Ramses agreed to marry the daughter of the Hittite king.
The remaining years of his rule were distinguished by the construction of such monuments as the rock-hewn temple of Abû Simbel, the great hypostyle hall in the Temple of Amon at Al Karnak, and the mortuary temple at Thebes, known as Ramesseum.
Ramses III (reigned 1182-1151 BC), Egyptian king of the 20th dynasty, a great military leader who repeatedly saved the country from invasion. In the 5th year of his reign, Ramses defeated an attack by the Libyans from the west, and two years later he routed invaders known as the Sea Peoples. In his 11th year he again repelled an attempted attack by the Libyans. Ramses was also a builder of temples and palaces in the tradition of his 19th-dynasty predecessor, Ramses II. His victories are depicted on the walls of his mortuary temple at Medinet Habu, near Luxor. Egyptian records tell of a strike by workers at Ramses's burial site and a plot against the king near the end of his reign. Ramses III was the last of the great rulers and after his death there were centuries of weakness and foreign domination.
King Tut...
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