PHARAOH RAMESES II #2
Rá Àmú Ïssī Dúwá
Àmúásí, is what the Akans in West Africa called him,
Many months after the death of Rá Àmú Ïssī Domà (Rameses I), Sánï Àmï Yï Pà Dūwà (Ahmenotep II), wrote an epilog to his friend and father figure ,Àmùbàsú Àmú Ïssī, who was to be the heir to the throne of his father, Rameses I.
Sánï & Àmùbàsú became friends at a time when Egypt was made up of small tribes in the north eastern part of the Nile.
Àmùbàsú Àmú Ïssī, became the epitome of the person Sánï always looked up to as a father.
Many people came to Amenhotep II to write epilogs for them. Only the godmother of Sánï , knew about his prowess in writing.
Sánï Àmï Yï Pà Dūwà (Ahmenotep II), became the eulogist for the king of the south, Rá Àmú Ïssī Dūwà , and his father, Rá Àmú Ïsí Domà, who became king only after the death of his predecessor, Sétü Àmï Fàtáō.
Àmúsã "Âmùbàsú" Àmú Ïssī, Rá Àmú Ïssī Dūwà, Rameses II to be; assassinated his own father, Rameses I, on the pretext of eulogizing his mother.
Two weeks after the burial of Rá Àmú Ïssī Domà, many people came to pay homage to the assassinated king and to know more about the Egyptian crown.
In 1400 BC, the new king of the south, Rá Àmú Ïssī Dūwà, Rameses II, also suffered an assassination attempt by his own kings men. The ancient Egyptians called this (assassination), Sāqūâbà.
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