“A red stone coffin was found by an Egyptian removal mission at the Saqqara archeological site in the south of Cairo,” Xinhua news organization cited Mostafa Waziri, secretary-general of the Preeminent Board of Relics, as saying.

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The high-positioning authority, recognized as Ptah-em-uya, was an imperial secretary, boss manager of steers, and top of the depository of the Ramasseum, Ramesses’ funerary sanctuary in the Theban necropolis in Luxor city, as per Waziri.

Ptah-em-uya’s burial place was found last year, he noted. The Egyptian group figured out how to enter the burial chamber of the aristocrat and found his stone coffin shrouded in messages about protecting the dead, and scenes addressing the children of the god Horus, Waziri said.

Starting examinations of the stone casket showed that it was broken and ransacked in antiquated times since there is no indication of materials utilized for preservation.

Ramesses II, usually known as Ramesses the Incomparable, was the third pharaoh of the nineteenth Administration of Egypt.

He is frequently viewed as the best, generally celebrated, and most remarkable pharaoh of the New Realm, itself the most impressive time of Old Egypt.