Ramses II ruled Egypt for approximately 67 years in the 1200s B.C. Ramses II's government was an example of what type of government? A. democracy B. republic C. dictatorship D. monarchy

Respuesta :

The correct answer is letter D.

Explanation: Under the command of Ramesses II, Egypt is to become the largest empire in the ancient world. Powerful and rich, the country will become a military power, conquering territories of the Hittites in the north, the Assyrians in the east and the Nubians in the south, until they reach their maximum size. It will bring slaves, new raw materials and technology. It will be the economic and cultural heyday of Egypt.

Answer:

hi!

Explanation:

answer D)monarchy.

Ramses II ruled Egypt for approximately 67 years in the 1200s B.C. Ramses II's government was an example of what type of government?  

D. monarchy

 

Ramses II, Ramses also spelled Ramesses or Rameses, third king of the 19th dynasty (1292–1190 BCE) of ancient Egypt, whose reign (1279–13 BCE) was the second longest in Egyptian history.  

Background And Early Years Of Reign

Ramses’ family, of nonroyal origin, came to power some decades after the reign of the religious reformer Akhenaton and set about restoring Egyptian power in Asia, which had declined under Akhenaton and his successor, Tutankhamen.  

Ramses’ father, Seti I, subdued a number of rebellious princes in Palestine and southern Syria and waged war on the Hittites of Anatolia in order to recover those provinces in the north that during the recent troubles had passed from Egyptian to Hittite control.  

Seti achieved some success against the Hittites at first, but his gains were only temporary, for at the end of his reign the enemy was firmly established on the Orontes River at Kadesh, a strong fortress defended by the river, which became the key to their southern frontier.

During his reign Seti gave the crown prince Ramses, the future Ramses II, a special status as regent. Seti provided him with a kingly household and harem, and the young prince accompanied his father on his campaigns, so that when he came to sole rule he already had experience of kingship and of war.  

It is noteworthy that Ramses was designated as successor at an unusually young age, as if to ensure that he would in fact succeed to the throne. He ranked as a captain of the army while still only 10 years old; at that age his rank must surely have been honorific, though he may well have been receiving military training.

Because his family’s home was in the Nile River delta, and in order to have a convenient base for campaigns in Asia, Ramses built for himself a full-scale residence city called Per Ramessu (“House of Ramses”; biblical Raamses), which was famous for its beautiful layout, with gardens, orchards, and pleasant waters.  

Each of its four quarters had its own presiding deity: Amon in the west, Seth in the south, the royal cobra goddess, Wadjet, in the north, and, significantly, the Syrian goddess Astarte in the east.  

A vogue for Asian deities had grown up in Egypt, and Ramses himself had distinct leanings in that direction.

The first public act of Ramses after his accession to sole rule was to visit Thebes, the southern capital, for the great religious festival of Opet, when the god Amon of Karnak made a state visit in his ceremonial barge to the Temple of Luxor.  

When returning to his home in the north, the king broke his journey at Abydos to worship Osiris and to arrange for the resumption of work on the great temple founded there by his father, which had been interrupted by the old king’s death.  

He also took the opportunity to appoint as the new high priest of Amon at Thebes a man named Nebwenenef, high priest of Anhur at nearby This (Thinis).

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