•One of the unique views of the tomb of Queen Nefertari, the wife of the great King Ramses and her beloved


•Height 22cm

•width 20cm

•Depth 2cm

•Material Polyresin(Artificial stone)

•Handmade by me Artist 👨‍🎨 MO Taghian

•Made In Egypt

•Weight 1100gm

•Brand: GrandsonOfThePharaoh


🔴NB. If you have a price problem, contact me



•Noticeable📌

You can choose any statue you want and you can request the implementation of a coloring pattern of your choice on your statue🧑‍🎨. Check out the rest of my store products to see several coloring patterns, or you can order a special pattern of your own creation🙏. It is also available to write your name on your statue 😉.


•Shipping✈️

Shipped by DHL


•customers service📞

I will contact you and send you the latest updates regarding your order until you receive your order.


•Product packaging📦

Products are carefully packaged, and several materials are used in packaging according to the nature of the products


•Definition of the figure of the statue📖


The beautiful Queen Nefertari with the god Ra, the sun god

Tomb of Queen Nefertari

Valley of the Kings 😍 Luxor

Queen Nefertari, wife and lover of the great King Ramses II

The most impressive, most luxurious, most beautiful and greatest tomb in the Valley of the Queens. Nefertari was called by many titles the praised princess, the lady of grace, the comfort of love, the inheritor of the two kingdoms, skilled in playing and sweet talking and singing.

In her youth, Queen Nefertari married Prince Ramses II, when he was fourteen years old

She was close to her husband, so he built the Abu Simbel temple for her and sculpted two large statues for her among his statues. She was very similar to the statues of King Ramses II in Luxor and the Temple and Abu Simbel.


The tomb of Nefertari is one of the most impressive and luxurious tombs in the Valley of the Queens. Its tomb is coordinated and its inscriptions are among the most beautiful inscriptions on the walls of the tombs.

Her tomb was distinguished by the beauty and accuracy of the inscriptions, the ingenuity of photography, the use of bright colors, and the display of the beauty and elegance of Queen Nefertari in her photographs in the tomb.

From the main room, a corridor ends with a rectangular room. At the end of the first room there is a staircase that leads to the sarcophagus room consisting of four pillars and three small rooms in the middle of the hall.

The tomb was discovered in 1904 AD. It has not been opened to the public since its discovery until the early nineties of the last century, due to some damage to the inscriptions and decorations due to the deposition of salts.