Ramesses VIII (1133–1126)

The reign of Ramesses VIII:

Rameses VIII reigned for less than a year. He's acted only once, in a advance of princes in the perfect memorial temple of King Ramesses III at Madinat Habu, where his anatomy was fall back with the royal uraeus and additional royal raiment.

Rameses VIII may have been a late son among the kings of twenty Dynasty, but there appears little opportunity that he's to be described as a son of Pharaoh Rameses III, as well known by the call Sethherkhepeshef Mery-Amen, who was entombed in the Valley of the Queens in (QV43).

No tomb is acknowledged for Rameses VIII; just some Egyptologists think that KV19, applied for the burial of Prince Mentuherkhepeshef, could have primitively been designated for him.

King Ramesses VIII was the 7th king of the 20th Dynasty and was believably Ramesses III's son. Ramesses VIII mummy has never been discovered and all that rests of his rule is a dedication at Medinet Habu and some plaques. His grave was discovered but was very humble.

Burial Position:

The Burial position is Unknown, but tour Egypt tells ‘found but humble’. The mummy of Ramesses VIII has never been determined.

Ramesses VIII Monuments signs:

The tomb of Ramesses VIII (KV1) at The Valley of the Kings:

* Afford since antiquity – leastways Romans Greek periods.

* Referred in the last nineteenth century, but no info about the acquitting earlier than 1906. It was as well excavated afterward 1952 by the Egyptian ancientnesses dept.

* Acted by Edwin Brock as 1984, and refurbishment by the SCA in 1994 (which covered some ancient graffiti with cataplasm to fill breaks, and so on) No base deposits were detected.

* First corridor has a lot of breaks, but the plaster appears integral.

* Much littler tomb than his predecessors, with just one corridor and a burial chamber, with an bare room beyond. The delicately quality of the alleviation indicate that a belittled tomb was designed, since it was empathised that Ramesses VII might not have many time to accomplished it.

* Decorations alike to KV9 (Ramesses VI), there are some fluctuations: Osiris is much boasted here.

* A few of the blue pigments have attenuate/fallen away, just the outer lintel was adorned with the sun disk and arrests a scarab, flanked through Isis and Nephthys.l On the left side of the corridor, the king bids Re-Horakhty-Atyn-Kkhepri, on the right side to Ptah-Sokar-Osiris. Additional in are chapters of the Book of Caverns and Book of Gates.

* There's no well-room or anteroom – the corridor leads consecutive to the sarcophagus room. The sarcophagus is adorned with aspects of the Book of Aker (the doubled headed lion acting the horizon) Nut braces the ceiling of the room.

* A belittled unfinished chamber with a corner is beyond, with the header display the Braque of the sun with baboon of the (Book of Gates).

* Sarcophagus cut at once to the floor of the chamber and a rock covering was localized over the hole. It's shaped alike a cartouche and adorned with anatomies of Nephthys, Selkis and the 4 sons of Horus in green blusher.

* The tomb was cycled/recycled by Copts.

* Mummy hasn't yet been discovered. He perhaps one of the unknown bodies from the DB320 hoard.

Related Posts:

Setnakht (1185—1070)
Ramesses IV (1151-1145)
Ramesses VII (1133–1126)

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