Menmaatre Seti (I) was the Pharoah who returned Egypt to its lost glory of the 18th dynasty. He led military campaigns into Syria and Libya and expanded the Egyptian empire. He battled the Hittites and kept them from invading Egypt. His army was the first to battle the Hittites.
Ever since the Europeans and Arabs invaded Kemet and Africa, over a thousand years ago, they have been fascinated and obsessed with the vast knowledge and heritage which the African continent houses.
For centuries, they have dug up the ancient graves of notable Africans from various empires, kingdoms, and cultures, in a bid to understand how Africa got to be so magnificent in civilization, technology, and culture and even stole most of their craven images.
The more they searched, the more they found undeniable evidence which points to the fact that Africa’s civilization predated European and Western civilization. This led many Egyptologists and historians to find ways to discredit the Black/African origin of ancient Egypt (Kemet).
For hundreds of years, they have tried to explain that Egypt was built by aliens, whites, or even giants. But all of these lies meet a water-low when pieces of evidence such as the mummified face of Pharaoh Menmaatre Seti I is put on display.
He died 3,298 years ago.
He ruled when Egypt was at one of its most affluent peaks – precisely 1290 to 1279 BCE.
He was the father of Ramesses II – The greatest pharaoh of all time. When he died, Egyptian Mummification was at its absolute peak of perfection.
Although it is disrespectful to exhume the dead in Africa, the opening of his tomb, by the rebellious researcher Giovanni Battista Belzoni on October 16, 1817, contributed to reducing the arguments which claimed ancient Kemet was white.
Seti I was buried at the Valley of Kings.
His tomb is known to be the longest in the ancient cemetery of Noble people of Kemet.
Despite being covered with a yellow garment, they desecrated his tomb and dismembered his body, messing up the bandages used in mummification and smashing his abdomen open.
They separated his head from the rest of his body. Fortunately, the raiders did not scar his face. Well, that is what we have been made to know. What is left of his mummified body, is today resting among other Egyptian royal mummies in the Cairo museum.
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