It belonged to the sons of Ramesses II.
Ramesses VI's Great Royal Wife was queen Nubkhesbed.
Heqamaatre Ramesses IV(also written Ramses or Rameses)
Tomb KV11 is the tomb of Ancient Egyptian Pharaoh Ramesses III.
and may have been completed by his son Ramesses the Great after his death.
As the mummy of Ramesses II was rapidly deteriorating,
it was flown to Paris for examination.
As the mummy of Ramesses II was rapidly deteriorating,
a group flew it to Paris for examination.
The formal burial site
is believed to have been built sometime 3300 years ago by Ramesses II.
Ramesses tells us, in his Kadesh inscriptions, that he incorporated some of the Sherden into his own personal
Heqamaatre Ramesses IV(also written Ramses or Rameses)
was the third pharaoh of the Twentieth Dynasty of the New Kingdom of Ancient Egypt.
When the mummy of Ramesses II was sent to France for refurbishment in 1974,
the mummy was actually issued a legal Egyptian passport.
Tomb KV7 in the Valley of the Kings was the final
resting place of Ancient Egyptian Pharaoh Ramesses II("Ramesses the Great") of the Nineteenth Dynasty.
When the mummy of Ramesses II was flown from Egypt to Paris in 1974,
Egyptian authorities issued the former pharaoh with an official Egyptian Passport so he could travel.
Many stories written in demotic during the Greco-Roman period were set in previous historical eras,
when Egypt was an independent nation ruled by great pharaohs such as Ramesses II.
Tomb KV3, located in Egypt's Valley of the Kings,
was intended for the burial of an unidentified son of Pharaoh Ramesses III during the early part of the Twentieth Dynasty.