Concepts
Civilizations/Leaders
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Wonders and Projects
Units
Unit Promotions
Great People
Technologies
Civics
Governments and Policies
Religions
Terrains and Features
Resources
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Governors
Historic Moments

Civilizations

Leaders

Introduction

Abraham Lincoln

Alexander

Amanitore

Ambiorix

Basil II

Bà Triệu

Catherine de Medici (Black Queen)

Catherine de Medici (Magnificence)

Chandragupta

Cleopatra (Egyptian)

Cleopatra (Ptolemaic)

Cyrus

Elizabeth I

Frederick Barbarossa

Gandhi

Genghis Khan

Gilgamesh

Gitarja

Gorgo

Hammurabi

Harald Hardrada (Konge)

Harald Hardrada (Varangian)

Hojo Tokimune

Jadwiga

Jayavarman VII

João III

John Curtin

Julius Caesar

Kublai Khan (China)

Kublai Khan (Mongolia)

Lady Six Sky

Lautaro

Ludwig II

Menelik II

Montezuma

Mvemba a Nzinga

Nader Shah

Nzinga Mbande

Pedro II

Pericles

Peter

Philip II

Poundmaker

Qin (Mandate of Heaven)

Qin (Unifier)

Ramses II

Robert the Bruce

Saladin (Sultan)

Saladin (Vizier)

Sejong

Seondeok

Shaka

Simón Bolívar

Tamar

Teddy Roosevelt (Bull Moose)

Teddy Roosevelt (Rough Rider)

Theodora

Tokugawa

Tomyris

Trajan

Victoria (Age of Empire)

Victoria (Age of Steam)

Wilhelmina

Wu Zetian

Yongle

Ramses II
Unique Ability

Abu Simbel

Gain Culture equal to 15% of the construction cost when finishing Buildings and 30% when completing Wonders.

Summary
Who says that wonders are their own reward? So it is with Ramses, who gets large amounts of Culture for completing wonders and a small amount for finishing buildings.
Detailed Approach
With a nice river start, Egypt gains bonuses towards wonders and districts. Wonders are a great source of Culture with Ramses’ Abu Simbel ability that gives 30% of the construction cost as Culture. The Sphinx then gives even more Culture if placed adjacent to these Wonders. The Maryannu Chariot Archer will protect Egypt while they focus on construction, leading to a Culture Victory.
Historical Context
Iconic for the New Kingdom of Egypt, Ramses’s reign is marked not by anything distinctive but by a series of exemplary moments – military conquests, monumental architecture, etc. Here is the arrogance and might of the pharaoh made flesh.

Many of our leaders come from obscurity to greatness. Pachacuti was the second son of a royal dynasty and was never intended to lead the Inca. Cleopatra was the subject of a foreign kingdom that rose into rebellion. Not so with Ramses, the son of Seti.

While Seti’s family was not originally royal, they emerged in the wake of the social and religious upheaval of Akhenaten, who sought to create a new religious order and under whose rule (and subsequent rule of Tutankhamun), Egypt’s foreign borders declined. Seti sought to correct this – expanding Egyptian power to end the Hittite domination of the Levan and re-establishing Egypt as a far-flung empire whose borders extended far beyond the Nile. Ramses showed promise early, and his father appointed him as regent at the age of ten. Seti’s reconsolidation of Egyptian power was outward-looking in other ways, incorporating Syrian deities into the thought-to-be monolithic and conservative Egyptian state.

In his early years, Ramses sent warriors to subdue Libya and retake Syria from the Hittites and, in a brilliant strategical maneuver against Sardinian pirates, captured the entirety of the rebel fleet by allowing them certain victories that lulled them into complacency. Another significant point in his expansion was the Battle of Kadesh (in Syria), where an overextended Egyptian force, personally led by the pharaoh, almost captured the city of Kadesh, under Hittite rule, but then was forced to retreat. What might have been a demoralizing defeat turned into victory, as the Egyptians used the time to rethink their strategies and push the war to a draw. The resultant peace treaty became the balance of power in the region.

At home, Ramses embarked on a construction spree, most notably the temples at Ramesseum and Abu Simbel, ensuring that his name – often under its Greek version, Osymandyas (Ozymandias in Percey Shelley's celebrated poem) – lived through the ages.

Ramses died well into his nineties, giving Egypt nearly seven decades with him on the throne. His name is now synonymous with Egyptian power, arrogance, and might (rightly or wrongly).
icon_leader_default
I have been granted sheaves of wheat like sand, buildings that approach heaven, and grain heaps like mountains.

Traits

Civilizations
icon_civilization_egypt
Egypt

Preferences

Agendas
Ma'at
Clears all features and improves all possible tiles. Likes civilizations with a high percentage of improved tiles. Dislikes civilizations with low percentage of improved tiles or that found National Parks.
icon_leader_default
I have been granted sheaves of wheat like sand, buildings that approach heaven, and grain heaps like mountains.

Traits

Civilizations
icon_civilization_egypt
Egypt

Preferences

Agendas
Ma'at
Clears all features and improves all possible tiles. Likes civilizations with a high percentage of improved tiles. Dislikes civilizations with low percentage of improved tiles or that found National Parks.
Unique Ability

Abu Simbel

Gain Culture equal to 15% of the construction cost when finishing Buildings and 30% when completing Wonders.

Summary
Who says that wonders are their own reward? So it is with Ramses, who gets large amounts of Culture for completing wonders and a small amount for finishing buildings.
Detailed Approach
With a nice river start, Egypt gains bonuses towards wonders and districts. Wonders are a great source of Culture with Ramses’ Abu Simbel ability that gives 30% of the construction cost as Culture. The Sphinx then gives even more Culture if placed adjacent to these Wonders. The Maryannu Chariot Archer will protect Egypt while they focus on construction, leading to a Culture Victory.
Historical Context
Iconic for the New Kingdom of Egypt, Ramses’s reign is marked not by anything distinctive but by a series of exemplary moments – military conquests, monumental architecture, etc. Here is the arrogance and might of the pharaoh made flesh.

Many of our leaders come from obscurity to greatness. Pachacuti was the second son of a royal dynasty and was never intended to lead the Inca. Cleopatra was the subject of a foreign kingdom that rose into rebellion. Not so with Ramses, the son of Seti.

While Seti’s family was not originally royal, they emerged in the wake of the social and religious upheaval of Akhenaten, who sought to create a new religious order and under whose rule (and subsequent rule of Tutankhamun), Egypt’s foreign borders declined. Seti sought to correct this – expanding Egyptian power to end the Hittite domination of the Levan and re-establishing Egypt as a far-flung empire whose borders extended far beyond the Nile. Ramses showed promise early, and his father appointed him as regent at the age of ten. Seti’s reconsolidation of Egyptian power was outward-looking in other ways, incorporating Syrian deities into the thought-to-be monolithic and conservative Egyptian state.

In his early years, Ramses sent warriors to subdue Libya and retake Syria from the Hittites and, in a brilliant strategical maneuver against Sardinian pirates, captured the entirety of the rebel fleet by allowing them certain victories that lulled them into complacency. Another significant point in his expansion was the Battle of Kadesh (in Syria), where an overextended Egyptian force, personally led by the pharaoh, almost captured the city of Kadesh, under Hittite rule, but then was forced to retreat. What might have been a demoralizing defeat turned into victory, as the Egyptians used the time to rethink their strategies and push the war to a draw. The resultant peace treaty became the balance of power in the region.

At home, Ramses embarked on a construction spree, most notably the temples at Ramesseum and Abu Simbel, ensuring that his name – often under its Greek version, Osymandyas (Ozymandias in Percey Shelley's celebrated poem) – lived through the ages.

Ramses died well into his nineties, giving Egypt nearly seven decades with him on the throne. His name is now synonymous with Egyptian power, arrogance, and might (rightly or wrongly).
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