People

Ramesses II

Ramesses II, also known as Ramesses the Great and Ozymandias, was pharaoh of Egypt from 1279 to 1213 BC. He fought the Battle of Kadesh, made a landmark treaty with the Hittites, built Abu Simbel and ruled during the Nineteenth Dynasty.

Born
1303 BCE
Died
1213 BCE
Role
Pharaoh of Egypt

Pharaoh of Egypt (1303 BC–1213 BC)

Portrait of Ramesses II in ancient Egyptian royal attire
Quick facts

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Also known as
Ramesses the Great, Ozymandias
Facts

Ramesses II timeline facts

Selected specifics from this profile's life story.

c. 1303 BC–1279 BC
Prince and warrior

Ramesses II was born into Egypt's Nineteenth Dynasty and trained under Seti I for kingship, warfare and imperial command.

c. 1279 BC–1213 BC
Building campaign

Ramesses II commissioned one of the most ambitious building programmes in Egyptian history, including the temples at Abu Simbel, Luxor additions, and the new capital Pi-Ramesses.

c. 1240 BC–1213 BC
Decades of reign

Ramesses outlived many of his own sons and most of his contemporaries, reigning for over sixty-six years and dying around the age of ninety.

After 1213 BC
Legacy and myth

Ramesses II became the model of pharaonic greatness, remembered through monuments, later Egyptian imitation and the Ozymandias legend.

Life Journey

Sixty years of conquest, construction, and self-invention

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c. 1303 BC–1279 BC

Prince and warrior

Ramesses II was born into Egypt's Nineteenth Dynasty and trained under Seti I for kingship, warfare and imperial command.

c. 1279 BC–1275 BC

Early campaigns

In the first years of his reign, Ramesses conducted military operations in Libya, Canaan, and Nubia, establishing his authority and extending Egyptian influence.

c. 1274 BC

Battle of Kadesh

Ramesses led an Egyptian army against the Hittite king Muwatalli II at Kadesh in Syria — the largest chariot engagement in history — and came close to personal disaster before fighting to a standstill.

c. 1279 BC–1213 BC

Building campaign

Ramesses II commissioned one of the most ambitious building programmes in Egyptian history, including the temples at Abu Simbel, Luxor additions, and the new capital Pi-Ramesses.

c. 1259 BC

Treaty with the Hittites

After years of continuing conflict, Ramesses II and the Hittite king Hattusili III agreed the first known written peace treaty in history, dividing influence over the Levant.

c. 1260 BC–1240 BC

Peak of the reign

The middle decades of Ramesses's reign saw Egypt at a peak of stability and prosperity, with the Hittite alliance holding and building projects continuing across the empire.

c. 1240 BC–1213 BC

Decades of reign

Ramesses outlived many of his own sons and most of his contemporaries, reigning for over sixty-six years and dying around the age of ninety.

c. 1213 BC

Death and burial

Ramesses II died around 1213 BC and was buried in the Valley of the Kings, his mummy later moved and ultimately discovered in a royal cache in 1881.

After 1213 BC

Legacy and myth

Ramesses II became the model of pharaonic greatness, remembered through monuments, later Egyptian imitation and the Ozymandias legend.

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Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

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Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for Ramesses II,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for Ramesses II,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for Ramesses II,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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