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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/82588-004-A6DA5854_2104.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:300:[[WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog The man in gauze!]]]]
3
4->My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:\
5[[LookOnMyWorksYeMightyAndDespair Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!]]
6-->--'''Creator/PercyByssheShelley''', "Ozymandias" (UsefulNotes/{{Ancient Gree|ce}}k name for Ramses II[[note]]Derived from his throne name ''Userma'atre`''[[/note]])
7
8[[TheMagnificent The Horus, the Strong Bull, Beloved of Ma'at; the one protected by the Two Ladies, the Protector of Egypt who curbs foreign lands; the Golden Horus, the Rich in Years and Great in Victories; the King of Upper and Lower Egypt, Userma'atre` Setepenre`; the Son of Re` Ramesses Meryamun]].[[note]]"Ma'at"=truth, justice, righteousness, [[UsefulNotes/{{Taoism}} the Way]]; "Userma'atre`"="Powerful is the ma'at of [[Characters/EgyptianMythology Ra]]"; "Setepenre`"="The Chosen of Ra"; "Ramesses"="Ra`messu"="Born of Ra"; "Meryamun"="Beloved of Amun".[[/note]] Also known as Ramses the Great, Ramses II (1303 BC-1213 BC, r. 1279 BC-1213 BC) was the third king of the [[UsefulNotes/AncientEgyptianHistory Nineteenth Dynasty of ancient Egypt]]. His long reign was an era of political stability, military power, economic prosperity, and cultural flourishing for New Kingdom Egypt. Egyptians of the day seem to have seen Ramses's time as a restoration of the glories of the middle Eighteenth Dynasty, of the days of Thutmose III and Amenhotep III, after the chaos of the [[UsefulNotes/{{Akhenaten}} Amarna Period]]. He is thus popularly considered the greatest and most famous of all {{Ancient Egypt}}ian pharaohs.
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10To modern Egyptians, he's a national hero - sort of the equivalent of Myth/KingArthur, part real man and part legend - whereas to the rest of the world he is best known for his portrayal as [[Literature/BookOfExodus the Pharaoh of the Exodus]]. Believers actually claim that it's more likely that one of the pharaohs of the earlier Eighteenth Dynasty (the one with Thutmose II, UsefulNotes/{{Hatshepsut}}, UsefulNotes/{{Akhenaten}}, and UsefulNotes/{{Tutankhamun}}) was the one in Exodus. (Ramses himself was the third monarch of the Nineteenth Dynasty.) However, Egyptian rule in Canaan continued throughout that time and through his entire reign, making a founding of Israel unlikely at that time. One of the few clues in the Bible as to the time of the Exodus is that the Hebrews laboured to build the cities of Pithom and Pi Ramses, which are now known to have been constructed or greatly expanded in his reign. Also, the first mention of Israel outside of the Bible occurs in a record made sometime after his death, during his son's period on the throne, which indicates possible involvement, at least in the background. Altogether, the evidence points to the events on which Exodus is based most likely happening—if they happened at all—during the decline of the New Kingdom and the retreat of the Egyptian Empire from Canaan, which really only began after Ramesses II's death.
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12Although he has often been accused of exaggerating his own achievements, Ramses remains one of the most powerful figures of ancient history. He was a courageous warrior, indefatigable ladies' man, builder of enormous temples (some of them dedicated to himself), and is notorious for being one of the two kings to sign the first peace treaty between superpowers in all of recorded history, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egyptian%E2%80%93Hittite_peace_treaty the Kadesh Peace Treaty]], a clay tablet dated 1269 BC, signed by Hattusilli III, King of the Hittites, and Ramses, Pharaoh of the Egyptians.
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14Notably, Ramses is one of a handful of pharaohs to be commonly known worldwide, along with UsefulNotes/{{Tutankhamun}} and UsefulNotes/CleopatraVII. In 1976, when Ramses' mummy was brought to France for restoration, he was issued a passport noting his status and received a king's welcome. Contemporary records indicate that he had feared being forgotten after his death, and sought to make himself known to the future.[[note]]He had good reason to fear this; Egyptian pharaohs already had a centuries-long history of chiseling off the names of their predecessors' monuments and claiming them for themselves. He carefully designed his monuments and the carvings of his royal steles in such a way that removing his name would be difficult.[[/note]] By all accounts, he succeeded.
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16----
17
18!!Tropes as portrayed in fiction:
19
20* AdaptationDyeJob: Despite the discovery he was red-haired in his youth (his mummy still has wispy red hair on its scalp), most portrayals after 1994 [[note]]except ''Princess of the Nile'' and ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog'' of all things, which actually got it right[[/note]] still portrays him with black hair. Probably because a red haired Egyptian would run into both RealityIsUnrealistic and BlackVikings territory and the unaware might perceive it as a RaceLift with ''very'' UnfortunateImplications.[[note]]A now discredited [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynastic_race_theory racist theory]] attributes all the achievements of the ancient Egyptians to a "pharaonic race" that somehow kept ruling over the place for millennia and which was white or at least whiter than today's Egyptians. This is of course [[ArtisticLicenseBiology impossible]] even ''with'' all the incest the Egyptian royal families were known for through the ages. The Egyptians themselves will often annoyedly comment that there are and more or less always have been Egyptians of all skin and hair colors, the country being a crossroads and melting pot for millennia; indeed, recent scholarship puts the Ramses dynasty as being descended from immigrants [[/note]]
21* AdaptedOut:
22** As a young man, Ramses owned a lion that fought alongside him at Kadesh. The only works of fiction to have featured this lion has been the book series by Christian Jacq, ''Thunder at Kadesh'' by Gordon Doherty and the ''Classics Illustrated'' issue "The Ten Commandments".
23** Screen adaptations tend to omit most of his children to the point where he only has one or two, though this depends on his role in adaptations of the Exodus. When he is the Pharaoh of the Oppression, he will have two at the most, while he usually only has one when he is the Pharaoh of the Exodus. The H. Rider Haggard novel ''Moon of Israel'' is notable for featuring him as the Pharaoh of the Oppression and going past the two child limit with his thirteenth son and successor Merneptah being the initial pharaoh in the story, Merneptah's elder brother Khaemwaset being mentioned, and an unidentified daughter, who was Moses' adoptive mother, being mentioned.
24* BigBad or PredecessorVillain: In adaptations of the Exodus, which he is depends on whether he is the Pharaoh of the Exodus or the Pharaoh of the Oppression. If he is the former, then either his father Seti I or his grandfather Ramses I will be the latter. If he is the latter, then his son Merneptah will be the former. The one exception is ''The Moon of Israel'' where the Pharaoh of the Exodus is Amenmesse, one of Merneptah's two successors who was either a younger son of Ramses or a younger son of Merneptah. (He is specifically portrayed as Merneptah's nephew, being the son of his elder brother Khaemweset.)
25* CoolCrown: He is often represented wearing the Kepresh, or "Blue Crown of War", which was basically a Cool Crown of the Pimped Out Helmet variety; basically a star-studed blue helmet with the royal ureus (the cobra) which was used during battle.
26* DatedHistory: In 1994, Ramses was discovered to be a redhead and in 2016, he was discovered to be fair-skinned. Portrayals of him where he is black haired and brown skinned are thus dated. Since there have always been Egyptians of all skin and hair colors (some of Ramses' own hieroglyphic murals depict his subjects running the full gamut of skin colors), this shouldn't come across as surprising though.
27* DueToTheDead: When his mummified remains were brought to France in September of 1976, millenia after his death, his arrival was celebrated like that of any contemporary, living royalty.
28* TheEvilPrince: He is sometimes portrayed as this in fiction, and at one point, Egyptologists believed he had been responsible for the disappearance of Seti I's true successor (whose name was erased of all records after the latter's death). But Ramses fans think this is slander.
29* FolkHero: Even today the Egyptians regard him as a national hero and many claim proudly to be his descendants. Given the number of his children (ninety-six sons and sixty daughters) such a claim is more than probable and effectively all but meaningless. He is often refered to as the "Great Ancestor" and it's thought that barring any extremely isolated tribes, everyone living today is a direct descendant of the guy.
30* TheGoodKing: The works that don't villify him tend to portray him as this, in line with how modern Egyptians view him.
31* HistoricalVillainUpgrade: He tends to be depicted as the tyrannical [[NephariousPharaoh Pharaoh of the Exodus]] in media the most often out of the historical candidates for the role (with his son Merneptah being the second most frequent and Amenmesse, son or grandson to Ramses, having been portrayed in the role once). Historical consensus is that it's unlikely for him to have been the Pharaoh of the Exodus because the dates don't line up (Ramses was from the Nineteenth Dynasty in the thirteenth century, whereas Biblical chronology indicates that the Exodus would've likely occurred within the fifteenth century and around the Eighteenth Dynasty) and his archivements, exagerated or not, would've been outright impossible had most of his workforce left overnight. That would've definitely plunged Egypt into chaos for generations.
32* InconsistentSpelling: There are three different accepted spellings of his name so naturally it varies depending on the work. His name could be spelled "Ramses", "Rameses" or "Ramesses."
33* OutlivingOnesOffspring: Frequently the case with Exodus adaptations, but historically he did outlive many of his sons, the first twelve no less, only three of whom actually served as crown prince. His firstborn Amun-her-khepeshef was crown prince for twenty-five years (thus he was not the child he is often portrayed as), his second also called Ramesses was crown prince for twenty-five years after that and his fourth son Khaemwest was crown prince for the next five years, after which his thirteenth son Merneptah was crown prince for the remaining eleven years, succeeding his father at the age of seventy.
34* PhenotypeStereotype: Unlike his portrayal in movies, where it is black, when not shaved off, examinations of his mummy showed that he had red hair.
35* RaceLift: Some screen portrayals of him do not seem to match Ceccaldi's observation of Ramesses having been a "Berber type" (This does not mean he actually was a Berber, just that ethnically he may have come from a similar group), who can be fair-skinned and red-haired. This may be in relation to the fact that Egypt is not always portrayed as diverse as it was in ancient times.
36* RedHeadedHero: When a work portrays him heroically and remembers he had red hair, this is the end result. Strangely, he rarely if ever shows up as an EvilRedhead except on ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog''.
37* SavedByCanon: If he is used as the Pharaoh of the Exodus, expect him to be the SoleSurvivor of his army when the Red Sea claims them since he historically died of old age and his mummified body has been recovered in 1881.
38----
39!!Portrayals in Media:
40
41[[foldercontrol]]
42
43[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
44* Briefly mentioned in ''Manga/RedRiver1995'', where Ramses I is a major supporting character in the WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue marrying, [[spoiler: Yuri and Kali's]] granddaughter.
45* Appears in ''Manga/ImGreatPriestImhotep'' as an Anti-Villain siding with the BigBad. Unlike most versions, this version's is TheGoodKing who fights for the weak, as well as a BoisterousBruiser and a BloodKnight who savors a good fight against a good opponent.[[note]] And also looks '''''radically''''' different from how he was actually believed to have looked.[[/note]]
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Comic Books]]
49* Ozymandias from ''ComicBook/{{Watchmen}}'' takes his name from Ramses II's Greek name, a corruption of his Egyptian royal name Useermaatre.
50* ComicBook/{{Tintin}}: In ''Recap/TintinCigarsOfThePharaoh'' Professor Sarcophagus goes mad and thinks he is Ramses II.
51* ComicBook/{{Papyrus}}: His temple appears in "Ramses' Ravenge" and his son Merneptah is the current pharaoh making one of the main characters, Theti-Cheri, his granddaughter.
52* ComicBook/BlackAdam is oft portrayed as a son of Rameses.
53* Orlando from ''ComicBook/TheLeagueOfExtraordinaryGentlemen'' was sold as a slave to Ramses II as a youth, until he grew "older than the king prefered his boys". When Orlando visited Egypt millenia later to view the stone monuments left behind by Ramses, he notes that the famous statue doesnt resemble the real Ramses much, not having his weak chin or chubby jowls. Orlando himself notes that Ramses II, while not a tyrant or a bad leader by any means, had been self-absorbed and vain.
54* An unusual example in that the ''Classics Illustrated'' adaptation of the Exodus, titled "The Ten Commandments", does not refer to the Pharaoh of the Exodus by name, but the inclusion of a lion in many of his scenes identifies them as Ramses and Slayer of His Foes in all but name.
55[[/folder]]
56
57[[folder:Film]]
58* He is used as the villain in most renditions of the [[Literature/TheBible Biblical]] [[Literature/BookOfExodus Exodus]] (the pharaoh is not named in the original). It includes:
59** ''Film/{{The Ten Commandments|1923}}'' (1923), portrayed by Charles De Rochefort.
60** ''Film/{{The Ten Commandments|1956}}'' (1956), portrayed by Creator/YulBrynner.
61** ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt'' (1998), voiced by Creator/RalphFiennes.
62** ''Film/ExodusGodsAndKings'' (2014), portrayed by Creator/JoelEdgerton.
63* He appears (mummified) as a comedic character in Creator/LucBesson's ''Film/TheExtraordinaryAdventuresOfAdeleBlancSec'', along with several other mummies.
64[[/folder]]
65
66[[folder:Literature]]
67* He appears as a Rider-class Servant in ''Anime/FatePrototype: Fragments of Sky Silver'', referring to himself as Ozymandias. Like many Servants in the Franchise/{{Nasuverse}}, there's some AlternateHistory with his backstory. Moses was his best friend, and while their backstory does follow the events of the ''Literature/BookOfExodus'', Ramesses does not pursue the Israelites upon seeing Moses part the Red Sea. Instead, he [[GracefulLoser bids his once close friend farewell and lets Moses and the Israelites leave unopposed]]. Additionally, his backstory seems to be a combination of ''Film/TheTenCommandments1956''[[note]]In which Nefertari is a notable person in Ramesses and Moses' lives. Though Ramesses in ''Prototype'' is shown to love her very much unlike the Ramesses of ''Ten Commandments'' who only viewed her as a trophy[[/note]] and ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt''[[note]]In which Ramesses and Moses viewed each other as brothers. Though in that case, they were foster brothers while they are close friends in the Nasuverse[[/note]].
68* French writer Christian Jacq dedicated five books to Ramses II. Moses appears in books 1-4 and Ramses does play the role of Pharaoh of the Exodus but neither he nor Moses go under any HistoricalVillainUpgrade not does he pursue the Hebrews but rather a captain of the guard does. On further note all but three of his children (Khaemwaset, Merneptah and Meritamen) undergo UnrelatedInTheAdaptation with all of the others being children who attend school in the royal palace. And yes, he is portrayed as a RedheadedHero.
69* Creator/AnneRice's ''Ramses The Damned''
70* The Egyptian writer NaguibMahfouz wrote a book or two on the pharaoh during his early period as a writer of historical fiction (he switched to realistic fiction afterwards). This is part of the whole national-hero thing.
71* Famously, Percy Bysshe Shelley's poem "Ozymandias" (TropeNamer for LookOnMyWorksYeMightyAndDespair) is about Ramses.
72* In Creator/HRiderHaggard's novel ''Moon of Israel'', Ramesses is identified as the Pharaoh of the Oppression and the order that all male Hebrew infants should be killed is made, but never carried out due to Moses' adoptive mother having pleaded for them, Moses himself having been a case of prematurely hiding the infant.
73* ''Literature/ThunderAtKadesh'' by Gordon Doherty features Ramses as a mercurial tyrant and the BigBad, seeking to utterly destroy the Hittite Empire and enslave its people.
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
77* ''Series/MosesTheLawgiver'' is a rare exception among ''Exodus'' adaptations for once. He is instead the Pharaoh of the Oppression, and the Pharaoh of the Exodus is Merneptah, one of the sons of Ramses II. However, Merneptah is portrayed as his grandson instead of his son.
78* In ''Moses'' (1995), he appears as the Pharaoh of the Oppression (father of the antagonist pharaoh), played by Creator/ChristopherLee (who was the only actor who both played him and who out-lived him past age 92).
79* He is a major character in the Brazilian telenovela ''Moses and the Ten Commandments'', in which he is as usual portrayed as Moses' adoptive brother and the Pharaoh of Exodus. Despite being an antagonist, he is made a complex and even tragic character easy to sympathize with. He is portrayed by Sergio Marone.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:Music]]
83* The song "Chosen By Re" by Timo Kotipelto (of {{Music/Stratovarius}} fame), off of his solo Ancient Egypt-themed ConceptAlbum "Waiting for the Dawn", is a power ballad dedicated to Ramses the Great.
84* Death Metal band {{Music/Nile}} has a song about him, appropriately titled "User Maat Re," in which his tremendous achievements are recounted, by Ramses himself, to the ghost of his father, Seti I, [[WellDoneSonGuy as an attempt to seek his approval]]. The kicker is that all of Ramses' extraordinary achievments have been solely for this purpose, and that Seti tells him "User-Maat-Re, thou hast done ''nothing''."
85[[/folder]]
86
87[[folder:Video Games]]
88* The second campaign of ''Cleopatra'', the expansion of ''Videogame/{{Pharaoh}}'', takes place during his reign and has the player building his iconic monuments and fending off the Hittites under his direct command. One of the missions is an adaptation of the Literature/BookOfExodus, one of the ''very'' few to be told from the perspective of "the Pharaoh" instead of Moses.
89* He is Egypt's leader in every game of ''VideoGame/{{Civilization}}'' and ''VideoGame/CivilizationCallToPower'', sharing the pool of national leaders with Hatshepsut in ''IV''. He aims for a cultural victory and will try to build as many wonders as possible.
90* In ''VideoGame/FateGrandOrder'' he's one of the summonable Servants, and is the same one mentioned above in ''Anime/FatePrototype: Pale Silver Fragments''.
91* Appears as an OptionalBoss in the ''VideoGame/AssassinsCreedOrigins:'' ''Curse of the Pharaohs'' DLC. Stands as being one of the few depictions to actually mention he had red hair (we don't get to see it on Ramses himself, but it's noted that his offspring and descendants ''do'' have it).
92* In the obscure and short-lived [[MultiplayerOnlineBattleArena "Moe Strike EX", also known as "Kawaii Strike"]], a genderflipped, MsFanservice [[https://danbooru.donmai.us/posts/2393678 version]] is a playable character.
93[[/folder]]
94
95[[folder:Western Animation]]
96* He appeared as "King Ramses" in an episode of ''WesternAnimation/CourageTheCowardlyDog''. He actually scared quite a few viewers. Understandable, considering that this version of Ramses is the bringer of a terrible curse for anyone who steals from his tomb, in this case the mythical "Slab Of Ramses". Interestingly, it's one of the man's few appearances to accurately depict him with red hair.
97* Creator/BurbankFilmsAustralia production ''Prince of the Nile: The Story of Moses'' featured Ramses as both Pharaoh of the Oppression and Pharaoh of the Exodus. Moses being given an AgeLift so he is twenty-seven by the time of the Exodus certainly made it easier as did the historical Ramses' sixty-six year reign.
98* Due to being set during his reign and the title character being the sister of his wife Nefertari and thus his sister-in-law, Ramses is a major character in ''Princess of the Nile.'' On additional note, it portrays him with his red hair and he is a hero making him altogether a RedHeadedHero.
99* In WesternAnimation/TestamentTheBibleInAnimation Ramses is the Pharaoh of the Oppression who informs his son Merneptah of the need to be hard on the Hebrews following Moses' escape.
100* He appears as the Pharaoh of the Exodus in ''WesternAnimation/ATaleOfEgypt'', {{Mockbuster}} of ''WesternAnimation/ThePrinceOfEgypt.''
101[[/folder]]

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