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The Battle
of Kadesh
(1275 BC):
major battle between the Egyptians under Ramses II and the Hittites under
Muwatallis in Syria southwest of Homs on the Orontes River. Seeking to recapture
the Hittite held city of Kadesh in Syria Ramses II invaded Syria with four
divisions and an auxiliary force. Muwatallis gathered a large alliance among his
vassal states and, hiding his army behind the city mound, sent out false reports
that he was at
Aleppo farther north. Ramses, falling into the trap, hurried his army toward
Kadesh, his units stretched along the Orontes Valley road. Toward evening Ramses
II with the first division reached Kadesh and set up camp. Too late, two
captured Hittite scouts confessed the actual situation. The Hittites forded the
river and after routing the second division, stormed the Egyptian camp. His
first division destroyed, Ramses was saved mostly by his auxiliary force that
struck the attacking Hittites in the rear. Pushing the Hittites into the river,
the mauled Egyptians retained the battlefield. The next day after indecisive
fighting Ramses was compelled to withdraw his battered army; and in the
aftermath the Hittites advanced south to the region of
Damascus, halting the Egyptian resurgence into Syria. The biased Egyptian
version of the battle was recorded on numerous temples by Ramses but a Hittite
version excavated at
Boghazköy has enabled a truer assessment of the battle .....
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