The Queen Nefertari, nicknamed "Mariette in death", that is, the beloved deity Mout, was the great royal wife of the most famous pharaohs of Egypt, King Ramses II (1279 - 1213 BC), the third king of the nineteenth family, during the first twenty years of his long reign, and she is the most altruistic In preference he has more than any other wife, but her name means beautiful beauties... The pharaoh honoured her by dedicating one of the rock temples to her and the Abu Simbel small temple that erected Ramses II in Nubia and which was also devoted to the goddess Hathor, next to his great temple there and which the pharaoh devoted to his personal worship and worship The gods Amon and Ptah pardoned my sister. Through the small temple of Abu Simbel many of the scenes recorded for that great Queen, which describes the different relations with the Egyptian gods. Nefertari also appeared through some of the scenes on the walls of the Temple of Ramsium and had a cabin there in partnership with Queen Mother Toya.
It was found in the Hittite capital of Khatushash (present-day Bogaz Koy, Turkey) on one of the permitted plates on which a letter from Queen Nefertari to the Hittite king Khattosel III was found, as well as letters from King Ramses II sent to the wife of Khattusel III Queen Baduhaiba, for the sake of it. Support the bonds of friendship and peace between the two great empires after the peace treaty concluded between Egypt and Khita in the twenty-first year of the reign of King Ramses II, which indicates the political and diplomatic role played by Queen Nefertari during the period of her husband's rule.
Nefertari was for many of the older sons of King Ramesses the Second and they were the princes Amon Hurr Khbash F Free Hare and Num F and Mary Atum and Mary Ra, that they all died during the period of their father’s rule, as was the case of princesses Marit Amun and Hanout Tawi, and that it was as for Princess Pak The death of Nefertari the second and grew Tawi. Providing that Queen Nefertari died shortly after the twenty-fourth year of the rule of the Pharaoh, and was buried in Cemetery No. 66 in the Valley of the Queens. As well as the tomb of Queen Nefertari rock in the Valley of the Queens in the West mainland with the kindest and most beautiful tombs that are there at all, and not under its beautiful colours Pretty bright.