(left) and
Anubis (right) in
KV16 Given that Ramesses was previously a vizier, it's likely that he had commissioned a tomb in
Saqqara that went unused due to his accession to pharaoh. The unused outer and inner coffins that were made when he was a vizier were later taken to
Gurob for use in the burial of his great-grandson
Ramesses-Meryamun-Nebweben, and the inscriptions were changed to his name instead of that of Ramesses I, although only the outer coffin was ultimately used, and the inner one was found by archeologists in a pit in
Medinet Habu. He is known to us only from the inscriptions of his coffins. The identity of his mother is unknown. He spent his life in the Mer-wer harem (modern day
Gurob), and was buried nearby after his death in his 30s. Ramesses was buried in the Valley of the Kings. His tomb, discovered by
Giovanni Belzoni in 1817 and designated
KV16, is small in size and gives the impression of having been completed with haste.
Joyce Tyldesley states that Ramesses I's tomb consisted of a single corridor and one unfinished room whose walls, after a hurried coat of plaster, were painted to show the king with his gods, with Osiris allowed a prominent position. The red granite sarcophagus too was painted rather than carved with inscriptions which, due to their hasty preparation, included a number of unfortunate errors.
Rediscovery and repatriation A mummy currently believed to be that of Ramesses I was displayed in a private Canadian museum for many years before being repatriated. The mummy's identity cannot be conclusively determined, but is most likely to be that of Ramesses I based on CT scans, X-rays, skull measurements and radio-carbon dating tests by researchers at
Emory University, as well as aesthetic interpretations of family resemblance. Moreover, the mummy's arms were found crossed high across his chest which was a position reserved solely for Egyptian royalty until 600 BC. The mummy had been stolen from the
Royal Cache in
Deir el-Bahari by the Abd el-Rassul family of grave robbers and sold by Turkish vice-consular agent Mustapha Aga Ayat at
Luxor to Dr.
James Douglas who brought it to North America around 1860. Douglas used to purchase Egyptian antiquities for his friend Sydney Barnett who then placed it in the
Niagara Falls Museum. At the time, the identity of the mummified man was unknown. In 1999, Jamieson sold the Egyptian artifacts in the collection, including the various mummies, to the
Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University in
Atlanta, Georgia, for US$2 million. The mummy was returned to Egypt on October 24, 2003, with full official honors and is on display at the Luxor Museum. == Portrayals in film ==