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Mummy of Ramesses the Third

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The pharaoh Ramesses the Third is considered to have been the last great king of the New Kingdom. He was not the son of Ramesses the Second; his father was Seth-nakhte, the founder of the Twentieth Dynasty.

He was a great admirer of his ancestor Ramesses the Second and he followed in his footsteps, especially as a great warrior and in his building works. He built a great temple on the west bank of the Nile at Luxor called Medinet Habu, and many structures in Karnak and Luxor temples, in Heliopolis, Memphis, Abydos and Hermopolis.

He saved Egypt from an invasion of the so-called "Sea people," who were more dangerous than the Hyksos, and defeated them in a naval battle.

He seems to have died when he was in his sixties as the result of a harem conspiracy; the records of the trial of his murderers still survive.

He was buried in tomb KV 11 in the Valley of the Kings; it had been begun for his father but was abandoned on the latter's early death. Due to the tomb being robbed, the mummy was moved several times by the priests, and the king was reburied three times.

The last tomb was where the mummy was found in the Deir el-Bahari cachette in 1881. His mummy had pierced ears, which was the fashion during this period.

Present location

EGYPTIAN MUSEUM [01/001] CAIRO EM

Inventory number

CG 61083

Dating

RAMESSES III/USERMAATRE-MERIAMUN

Archaeological Site

DEIR EL-BAHARI

Category

MALE MUMMY

Material

ORGANIC

Technique

UNSPECIFIED