Monuments of Ramses II

This is the king who above all others bears the name of honor of A-nakhtu "the Conqueror", and whom the monuments and the rolls of the books often designate by his popular names of Ses, Sestesu, Setesu, or Sestura, that is, the "Sethosis, who is also called Ramesses" of the Manethonian record, and the renowned legendary conqueror Sesostris of the Greek historians. The number of his monuments, which still to the present day cover the soil of Egypt and Nubia in almost countless numbers, as the ruined remnants of a glorious past, or are daily brought to light from their concealment, is so great and almost countless, that the historian of his life and deeds finds himself in a difficulty where to begin, how to spin together the principal threads, and where to end his work. If to honor the memory of his father be the chief duty and the first work of a dutiful son, and we shall see that this was the persuasion of Ramses II, the beginning is made easy for us, and we shall honor the king's memory in the worthiest manner by using the very words of the great Sesostris about his first acts on entering upon his sole reign. Temple of Ramses II in Abydos: King Seti had died. The temple of Abydus stood half finished. The first royal care of Ramses was to complete the work, and in a long inscription on the left wall of the entrance, to record the intention with which his heart was charged, for the imitation of his contemporaries and of posterity. The lord of the land arose as king, to show honor to his father, in his first year, on his first journey to Thebes
 
He had caused likenesses of his father, who was King Seti I, to be sculptured, the one in Thebes, the other in Memphis at the entrance gate, which he had executed for himself, besides those which were in Nifur, the necropolis of Abydus. Thus he fulfilled the wish which moved his heart, since he had been on earth, on the ground of the god Unnofer. He renewed the remembrance of his father, and of those who rest in the under world, in that he made his name to live, and caused his portraits to be made, and fixed the revenues set apart for his venerated person, and filled his house and richly decked out his altars. The walls were rebuilt, which had become old in his favorite house, the halls in his temple were rebuilt, its walls were covered, its gates were raised up; whatever had fallen into decay in the burial place of his father in the Necropolis was restored, and the works of art which had been carried away were brought back into the interior. All this did the Conquering King Ramses II for his father Seti I. He established for him the sacrifices in rich profusion, in his name and in that of the earlier kings. His breast had a tender feeling towards his parent, and his heart beat for him who brought him up. 
 
Related Pages:

Storage jar: Dynasty 18
Stool with woven seat: New Kingdom
Stela of the Sculptor Qen worshipping Amenhotep I ...
Stela of the Scribe Amenhotep
Stela of the Overseer of the Treasurers Isi
Stela of Tetu and Nefertjentet
Stela of Qenamun worshipping Amenhotep I and Senus...
Stela of Itubaal and Masutu
Stela of Amenhotep Adoring the Rising and Setting ...
Stela of Ahmose
Stela of Aamtju
Stela from New Kingdom, Dynasty 18
Statuette of Taweret
Statuette of Huwebenef
Statuette of Amun
Statuette: New Kingdom
Statue of Kneeling Captive: Dynasty 6
Statue of Kedamun and His Family
Statue of an asymmetrically seated man: Early New ...
Statue of a seated baboon: Ptolemaic Period
Statue of a man: Middle Kingdom
Statue of a Female Figure: Middle Kingdom
Standing figure of Amenhotep III
Spoon Decorated with a Duck's Head: New Kingdom
Spindle whorl: New Kingdom

Labels