Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
BBC History Magazine

THE GREATEST PHARAOH?

In the long annals of ancient Egyptian history, only one pharaoh is accorded the epithet ‘the Great’: Ramesses II, third ruler of the 19th dynasty, who reigned for 66 years and two months in the 13th century BC (1279–1213). Lauded, like all pharaohs, during his lifetime, Ramesses also achieved lasting, posthumous fame as an exemplar of royal majesty and might. Before the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb a century ago, Ramesses II was without doubt the most famous pharaoh. When writers wanted to conjure up the world of ancient Egypt – its divine kingship and monumental architecture, its abundance and imperial grandeur – they thought of Ramesses.

A simple list of his achievements is impressive enough: he sired more children, and left behind more monuments, than any other pharaoh; he celebrated 13 jubilees and lived into his nineties; he fortified Egypt’s borders, and maintained its commercial and diplomatic influence; he negotiated the earliest known comprehensive peace treaty in history with Egypt’s arch-enemy, and presided over a glittering court which drove innovations in literature, art, architecture and scholarship. But other pharaohs could – and did – claim similar accomplishments. What made Ramesses II a truly great king?

When writers wanted to conjure ancient Egypt’s divine kingship and imperial grandeur, they naturally thought of Ramesses

To examine that question we might first turn to the opening five books of the Hebrew Bible, compiled 700 years after Ramesses’ death, where the pharaoh

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from BBC History Magazine

BBC History Magazine1 min read
Three Things I’ve Learned This Month
In this month’s Anniversaries, I was intrigued to discover that following Penguin’s victory in the 1960 obscenity trial around Lady Chatterley’s Lover, they sold more than 3 million copies of the novel in just three months (page 9). Because their rei
BBC History Magazine3 min read
Encounters
DIARY By Jonathan Wright and Danny Bird HISTORY COOKBOOK Hedgehog pudding What’s on this week? Visit historyextra.com for updates on upcoming history TV and radio programmes Based on the novels by CL Skelton, The Hardacres is a family saga that begin
BBC History Magazine2 min read
Mothers And Sons
Who’s the king and who’s the mother in your new book? As the novel opens, Edward IV is about to be crowned - and Cecily Neville is the mother of the new king. Over the course of my story, three other women compete to supplant her and bring their own

Related Books & Audiobooks