Very little is known about his reign, though it was evidently a period of some turmoil, as grain prices soared.
Year 7 Ostraca O. Strasbourg h 84 is dated to Year 7, II
Shemu day 16. The Turin Accounting Papyrus 1907+1908 is dated to Year 7 III Shemu day 26, and reconstructed to show that 11 full years passed from Year 5 of Ramesses VI to Year 7 of Ramesses VII.
Year 8 tomb C.J. Eyre (1980) demonstrated that Papyrus Turin Cat. 1883 + 2095, dated to
Year 8 IV Shemu day 25 most likely belonged to Ramesses VII, which details the record of the commissioning of some copper work and mentions two foremen at
Deir El-Medina: Nekhemmut and Hor[mose]. The foreman Hormose was previously attested in office only during the reign of
Ramesses IX while his father and predecessor in this post—a certain Ankherkhau—served in office from the second decade of the reign of Ramesses III through to Year 4 of Ramesses VII, where he is shown acting with Nekhemmut and the scribe Horisheri. The new Year 8 papyrus proves that Hormose succeeded to his father's office as foreman by Year 8 of Ramesses VII. Dominique Valbelle regards C.J. Eyre's attribution of this document to Ramesses VII as uncertain since the chief workman Hormose was previously only securely attested in office in Years 6 and 7 of
Ramesses IX instead. However, this papyrus clearly bears the cartouche of Usermaatre Setepenre—the
prenomen of Ramesses VII—at its beginning whereas the royal name of
Ramesses IX was Neferkare—which rules out Ramesses IX as the king whose Year 8 is recorded in the P. Turin 1883 + 2095 document. The presence of Hormose's contemporary—the foreman Nekhemmut—also establishes that this papyrus dates to the mid-20th dynasty--most probably to the reign of Ramesses VII, since Nekhemmut is attested in office "from the second year of Ramesses IV until the seventeenth year of Ramesses IX."
Reign length Since Ramesses VII's accession is known to have occurred around the end of III
Peret, the king would have ruled Egypt for a minimum period of 7 years and 5 months when this document was drawn up provided that it belonged to his reign as seems probable from the royal name given in the papyrus. The respected German Egyptologist
Jürgen von Beckerath also accepts C.J. Eyre's evidence that Year 8 IV Shemu day 25 was Ramesses VII's highest known date. or 5 months after the Year 8 IV Shemu day 25 date of Ramesses VII. Therefore, if Ramesses VII did not die between the short 2 week period between IV Shemu day 29 to I Akhet 13, this pharaoh would have been on the throne for at least another 4 more months until I Peret day 2 and ruled Egypt for 7 years and 9 months when he died (perhaps slightly longer if he died after I Peret day 2). Therefore, it is possible that Ramesses VII could have ruled Egypt for almost 8 years; at present, his certain reign length is 7 years and 5 months. ==Death==