Inscription of Pharaoh Ramses III discovered in southern Jordan
Archaeologists in southern Jordan have uncovered a rare royal inscription bearing the seal of Pharaoh Ramses III, dating back over 3,000 years.
Archaeologists in southern Jordan have uncovered a rare royal inscription bearing the seal of Pharaoh Ramses III, dating back over 3,000 years, the Jordanian government announced on Saturday. The hieroglyphic inscription, found in the Wadi Rum Reserve, marks the first documented evidence of an Egyptian pharaoh’s name inscribed in Jordan.
Jordan’s Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Lina Annab said the discovery affirms longstanding historical connections between ancient Egypt and the Arabian Peninsula. “Jordan is an open-air library with a very rich heritage of inscriptions,” Annab said, describing the find as a new window into the region’s written history.
The inscription contains two cartouches—one with Ramses III’s birth name and another with his throne name, affirming his reign over Upper and Lower Egypt from around 1184 BCE to 1153 BCE.