The Mummy of Ramesses II

The mummy of Ramesses II was among those found in the royal cache (DB320) at Deir el-Bahari
West Thebes.
It was completely covered with linen bandages that bear the king’s name and epithets in Hieratic script.
The mummy has silky hair, which was white at the time of death, but has yellowed from the preservative chemicals. His nostrils were filled with resin and seeds, perhaps to better hold their shape.
According to the X-rays
the king was suffering from dental problems and severe arthritis in his hip joint. Ramesses II’s mummy was sent to Paris for further studies and preservation.
The king most probably died in his late eighties or early nineties.
New Kingdom,
19th Dynasty,
reign of Ramesses II
c.a 1279-1213 BC.
Now in the Royal Mummy Room
Egyptian Museum
Cairo.

Published by khaled gamelyan

Researcher in the Egyptian civilization And its relationship with ancient civilizations in the East and West

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