
Archaeologists Uncover Massive Artifact Depicting Pharaoh Thought to Have Challenged Moses in Exodus
Egyptian archaeologists have uncovered a massive ancient statue believed to depict King Ramses II, the pharaoh long associated by historians with the Old Testament account of Moses and the Exodus. The Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities announced the find on April 22, identifying the location as the Tel Pharaoh site in Husseiniya Center, Sharqia Governorate, in the Nile Delta northeast of Cairo. Officials called the piece “remarkable” in size, with the upper portion alone weighing between five and six tons and measuring more than seven feet in length.
The ministry described the statue as being in relatively poor condition, with its legs and base missing, but said the surviving features likely represent King Ramses II. Egyptian antiquities official Mohamed Abdel Badie noted that early analysis suggests the piece was originally created in the city of Pi-Ramesses and transported in antiquity to the Tel Pharaoh site, known in earlier eras as Imet, where it was reused within one of the local religious complexes. He framed the find as important evidence for understanding religious and royal life in the eastern Delta.
Ramses II, born in 1303 BC and considered one of ancient Egypt’s most influential New Kingdom rulers, is frequently identified by scholars as the pharaoh referenced in the Book of Exodus, which describes Moses confronting a king who refused to release the Israelites from bondage. Officials said the statue was immediately moved from the temple complex to a museum storage facility in the San El-Hagar area to begin precise restoration work. The discovery adds to a growing list of biblical-era finds recently announced across Egypt, including eight rare papyrus scrolls dating back nearly 3,000 years.
(FOX/VFI News)
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