The Battle of Kadesh (~1274 BCE) was fought between the Egyptian Empire under Ramesses II and the Hittite Empire under Muwatalli II near the city of Kadesh on the Orontes River (modern Syria). It is the earliest battle for which detailed tactical accounts survive from both sides. @t[~1274 BCE]
The Battle of Kadesh (~1274 BCE, traditionally May) was fought between the Egyptian Empire under Ramesses II and the Hittite Empire under Muwatalli II near the city of Kadesh on the Orontes River (modern Syria). It is the earliest battle for which detailed tactical accounts survive from both sides, and the earliest pitched battle for which details of formations and troop dispositions are known. @t[~1274 BCE]
## Key Facts
- Date: ~1274 BCE @t[~1274 BCE]
- Date: ~1274 BCE (May, by Egyptian chronology)@t[~1274 BCE]
- Location: Kadesh, on the Orontes River (modern Tell Nebi Mend, Syria)
- Belligerents: Egypt vs. Hittite Empire
- Commanders: Ramesses II (Egypt), Muwatalli II (Hittites)
- Commanders: Ramesses II (Egypt, r. 1279–1213 BCE), Muwatalli II (Hittites, r. 1295–1272 BCE)
- Forces: Egyptian ~20,000 men and ~2,000 chariots; Hittite forces claimed by Egyptian sources at 37,000 men and 3,500 chariots (figures likely exaggerated) [^1]
- Result: Tactically indecisive; both sides claimed victory [^1]
## The Battle
- Largest chariot battle in history (~5,000–6,000 chariots total)
-Ramesses was ambushed after receiving false intelligence from Hittite spies
-The Egyptian army advanced in four divisions named after gods: Amun, Ra, Ptah, and Seth [^1]
- Ramesses was ambushed after receiving false intelligence from Hittite spies; he was leading the Amun division when the Ra division was routed
- Egyptian camp nearly overrun before reinforcements arrived
- Ramesses personally led a counterattack
## Primary Sources
Two major Egyptian literary accounts survive:
- **Bulletin of Kadesh** — a prose account of the battle inscribed on temple walls
- **Poem of Pentaur** — a poetic glorification of Ramesses' personal heroism, known from eight separate inscriptions [^2]
Both texts present an Egyptian victory narrative; Hittite records from Hattusa offer a contrasting perspective.
## Aftermath
- Led to the Treaty of Kadesh (~1259 BCE), the earliest known international peace treaty @t[~1259 BCE]
- Led to the Treaty of Kadesh (~1259 BCE), the earliest known international peace treaty @t[~1259 BCE] [^3]
- Egypt retained influence in Canaan; Hittites kept Syria
- Ramesses commissioned extensive propaganda reliefs at Abu Simbel, Karnak, and the Ramesseum [^2]
- Ramesses commissioned extensive propaganda reliefs at Abu Simbel, Karnak, Luxor, Abydos, and the Ramesseum [^2]
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[^1]: Spalinger, A. *War in Ancient Egypt* (Blackwell, 2005)
[^2]: Kitchen, K.A. *Pharaoh Triumphant* (1982)
[^3]: Beckman, G. *Hittite Diplomatic Texts* (Scholars Press, 1999)
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- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 10: "Date: ~1274 BCE" - when was this true?
> BCE event. Date from Egyptian records at Karnak and Abu Simbel; modern analysis in Spalinger, *War in Ancient Egypt* (2005) [^1] and Kitchen, *Pharaoh Triumphant* (1982) [^2].
- [x]`@q[temporal]` Line 11: "Location: Kadesh, on the Orontes River (modern Tell Nebi Mend, Syria)" - when was this true?
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