Scientists reconstruct face of pharaoh of Exodus

Using CT software, scientists employ sophisticated 3D imagery to visualize how the famed Egyptian ruler looked at the age of 45 and 90
Gilad Meiri|
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Exciting news for ancient Egypt buffs: A team of scientists has digitally reconstructed the face of ruler Ramesses II, commonly believed to be the Egyptian pharaoh from the Book of Exodus in the Hebrew Bible.
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  • The recreation, made using specialized CT software, shows an approximation of how the Egyptian monarch looked in his mid-40s and around his death at 90.
    Caroline Wilkinson, director of the Face Lab at Liverpool John Moores University, said that imaging experts reversed the aging process to reveal the ruler’s face at the peak of his power.
    Dr. Sahar Saleem, a professor of radiology at Cairo University who led the project, described the reconstructed image as "handsome".
    "King Ramesses II was a great warrior who ruled Egypt for 66 years," Saleem said in an interview with scientific magazine auntminnieeurope.com. "Bringing Ramesses' face to life in his old age and as a young man reminds the world of his legendary status."
    2 View gallery
    פני המומיה של רעמסס השני שנמצאה ב-1881 בדרום מצרים
    פני המומיה של רעמסס השני שנמצאה ב-1881 בדרום מצרים
    The mummified remains of Ramesses II
    (Photo: G. Elliot Smith; "Catalogue General Antiquites Egyptiennes du Musee du Caire: The Royal Mummies"; Wikimedia Commons)
    Ramses II's mummy was originally discovered in 1881 in the Egyptian city of Luxor and can be found at the National Museum of Egyptian Civilization in Cairo.
    Experts used CT scans of the mummy to create a 3D model of the pharaoh's skull, similar to techniques employed to rebuild evidence in criminal investigations.
    Wilkinson then used computer-generated imagery (CGI) to add skin, eyes and hair from a database of pre-modeled facial anatomy. Saleem was on hand to provide insight into how those features would've been pronounced in Egyptian men at the time.
    2 View gallery
    פסלו של רעמסס השני בלוקסור שבמצרים
    פסלו של רעמסס השני בלוקסור שבמצרים
    The statue of Ramesses II in Luxor, Egypt
    (Photo: Shutterstock)
    according to historical records, Ramesses II was born in 1303 BCE and assumed the throne upon the death of his father in 1279 BCE.
    During his reign, he expanded the Egyptian empire's reach as far north as modern-day Syria. He died around 1213 BCE.
    So far, historians and archaeologists have yet to find any evidence to support the claim that the Israelites were enslaved in Egypt or that the pharaoh's army was drowned in the Red Sea, as per the biblical account.
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    10.
    Stop the lies.
    Egyptians were black Africans from Africa or Alkebulan, Ethiopia or Kemet. The people there not. Upper Egypt is near the Sudan border and Ethiopia is to the right of Egypt. The Greeks recognized it on sight and the proof is literally on the wall. According to the European Bible scholars Ham was the progenitor of Phut Mizraim, Cush, and Canaan. Mizraim became Egypt. Logically with to known black nation as neighbors. Duh. Stop the lies. Blacks were on this planet for at 200,000 years
    Donza Stewart| 01.22.23
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    9.
    It can not be the pharoh of exedus
    The pharoh of exedus was killed in the red sea while chasing the israelites. There is a papirus that was found many years ago telling about a pharoh that went out to chase a large gruop of slaves and never returned.
    Bart| 01.21.23
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    8.
    Tax payer
    Looks like joe Biden
    Martin | 01.20.23
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