History of Ancient Egypt: Dynasty XIX – Ramesses II, the Battle of Kadesh and the Israel Stela
History of Ancient Egypt: Dynasty XIX – Ramesses II, the Battle of Kadesh and the Israel Stela
In this program we’ll take a close look at the 19th Dynasty of ancient Egypt. It’s a dynasty filled with greatness but also a lot of controversy. We’ll meet several important pharaoh’s including the dynasty’s founder, Ramesses I, his highly capable son, Seti I, the famous Ramesses II (Ramesses the Great), Merenptah, Seti II, the controversial…
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Wait wait wait wait.
Are you saying that Rameses II married 4 of his own *daughters*??? That is beyond fucked up.
E1b1a. God id good.
Thank you for this effort
No mention of Moses or Israelites by Egypt only stated in the Bible SCRIPTURES- written by the Greek invaders in 325 AD
Beautiful Black African Civilisation- The Root to all Spiritual and Intellectual Knowledge – from the Calendar to Biblical Stories – Why their depicted as slightly tanned is racist and ignorant- please see tons of genetic, linguistic and cultural evidence of the Nile Valley Inhabitants
Great!
15:18 Nice simulation of a charge of Hittite chariots, showing their heavier construction compared with the very light and elegant Egyptian chariots, but I believe the Hittite chariots carried three soldiers (as opposed to two in the Egyptian ones). I think the Egyptian chariots were used for fast hit and run archery passes, whereas the Hittites were more adapted for contact fighting. 20:24 conversely, the pretty Egyptian chariots had a crew of two: the archer, and the driver. We are misled by the monumental art showing just one occupant (the King) charging into battle, and chariots used for transportation (e.g. in the Amarna reliefs showing Akhenaten and Nefertiti each in their own chariot, though sometimes together in one). Chariots were very much the prestige sports cars of the rich during the New Kingdom.
Heavy metal music when war is coming. Nice touch.
"Imaginethe Number of, Ramses G-Grandchildren today!"
🔺Ramses II "the Pharoh that has favor in the West ,like a Star Football or Baseball Player"
Ramses II is the Pharoh that the Westerners, and the Western Culture easily identifies with, due to the fact we are taught and are to learn to favor Dictatorial Military Leaders, Emperors, "Caesar", "Constatine", "Alexander the Great", to be held as positive and successful.
We are still influenced by Rome.
The Public has overwhelmingly been taught that Aggressions, Power, War Wins, and Money, are the signs of success, (These points, and the personality of Ramses II, his giant ego, giant Sculptures, and Propaganda etc, "mirror an Ancient form of Capitalist and Capitalism".
… and he may very well have been a likeable Ruler, once he Matured of Mind, (in his 40's/50's, maybe.)
Sociologist and History Perspective and Discernment.
Our Channel Host does vast work preparing these.
Beth Bartlett
Sociologist/Behavioralist
and Historian
I seriously doubt that there was much or possibly any second day fighting at Kadesh. Instead I suspect Rameses retreated almost immidiately after the battle. Certainly afterwards much of the Egyptian Empire in ther Levant revolted afterwards and Rameses had to spend several campaigns crushing them before he got to grips with the Hittites again. So bluntly the Hittite claim to victory seems more credible.
The second day fighting looks like little more than a face saving bit of propaganda by Rameses and what clinches it in my view is the nonsense in the account of Rameses imposing a peace on the Hittites after the second day of fighting.
In fact the whole Egyptian account of the battle of Kadesh, if you read it critically looks quite damning. Rameses walks into a Hittite trap with his forces strung out and barely avoids a castrophic defeat with himself killed or captured. Rameses seems to have been to a singular extent rather incompetent before and at the begining of the battle.
Looks like a Hittite victory to me.
Wow. Excellent! Beyond excellent!!! I assume dynasty 20 has not been produced yet? I have watched from the beginning through D 19.
Why not talking about the ipuwer papyrus? It's not during the 19th?
I think you were a bit weak on the story of horemheb, a lot of things you didn't say. He's not 19th century but he's important even for the 19th
Handsome black pharaoh….
This was fascinating, and you are a very entertaining narrator. I find a history channel I really enjoy, and it has to be perfect, then I watch literally every video they make while I fall asleep. I end up watching every video like 3 times because I always restart the video a little before I fell asleep so I'm sure to watch the whole thing. Last 3 were "The Histocrat" "Flash Point History" and "Fall Of Civilizations" I'm exited I found you. I really enjoy your work. Good stuff, thanks!
Love these videos! Can’t wait for the next Dynasty.
Bring us next dynasty!!
well. that's the big boys done.
phew!
on to the 20th!
excelsior!
I can't wait for the next instalment!!
Well done condensing the 19th dynasty into an hour. Looking forward to seeing your video on the 20th, which is the poor relation of the New Kingdom dynasties.
Black africans history👍🏽
Tutankhamun was murdered by Akhenaten Cain and Abel 😮😮
Revelation 22:16
Jesus Christ EROS Lucifer morningstar
Pompeii Roman earthquake plus volcano mountain Vesuvius erupt end
Quran 14:22
Quran Muhammad ibn Abdullah mecca necronomicon Satan
Ephesus earthquake plus volcano mountain erupt end
James 4:7
God Allah Zeus Dionysus Dios goat devil 👿 Greek Akrotiri and acropolis earthquake plus volcano mountain erupt end
OSIRIS-TUTANKHAMUN RISE UP AGAIN
Rameses the ginger
FEED THE ALGORITHM
Great video as always! please make more stuff on greece, I long for it
Ashkelon gets a mention too 🤟
Paramessu? I think we may have found the Pi-Ramesses from the Old Testament Exodus story. It may not have been a city they built, but a unified kingdom.
I have been trying to figure out where that part of the narrative could have come from originally for years. There are bits and pieces like Mitanni being called Midian and the Golden Calf being a statue of Hathor during the restoration of the temples, but I never thought about the building of Pi-Ramesses being the military campaign to bring the rebellious territory in Canaan back under control under Ramesses I. The city by that name was too far into the 19th Dynasty for it to have been the source, but Paramessu does fit. It puts it back into that period between Amenhotep IV and Ramesses I.
You just made somebody who studied theology very happy.
Pi-Ramesse and Paramessu are spelled the same in Hebrew. That could put the date for the Exodus earlier than most theologians assume it to be because it was the king they left from, not the city.
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Lorab
EC3ICAFUCKU
If vitaphamacukkokmethus
In RAMESSES DEATH AZ IT WUZ WRITTEN
URNVOLVED
I can read u like a book
Sheti
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