. The fine grain of the limestone       used to build the temple allowed for the intricacy of the work.
Seti I is admired by many art   historians for the superb quality of the relief carvings made during his reign.   This pharaoh's high standards is especially appreciated when it is compared to   the often poor quality of reliefs carved during the reign of his son Ramesses II   and later in the Ramesside era. One scholar, Herbert Winlock, went so far as to   write an elaborate description of Seti as an art connoisseur!
The finest reliefs made during the   reign are found in the temple of Seti I at Abydos. In this temple, flawless   blocks of limestone were used to their full advantage by sculptors who   embellished the reliefs with exquisite details usually done in paint. Only the   fine grain of the limestone permitted this high level of detail. 
The reliefs in the Karnak Hypostyle Hall are   typical of the excellent quality we expect from Seti I, although they are not   quite as fine as the Abydos reliefs.  The reason for this is that the   Hypostyle Hall was built of sandstone, which is much coarser than limestone.   Sandstone is made of compacted sand crystals, while limestone is basically   compacted chalk powder. 
Seti had reliefs inside the Hypostyle Hall   carved in the bas relief style where the figures and hieroglyphs stand out   against a flat background. They are very elegant, but take longer to make than   sunk relief. 
             All of Seti's inscriptions inside the   Hypostyle Hall are in bas relief, but a closer look reveals some interesting   changes along the way.  We know that the first wall scenes were carved on   the north gateway 
Some reliefs on the north gateway and on the   east half of the north wall just to the right of the gate were carved with the   high level of detail found in the Abydos temple.  
But soon, it was decided that this method was   too laborious or that the sandstone was too coarse for such elaborate relief.    Other reliefs of Seti I in the hall have a more usual level of carved detail.   The rest was done in paint. 
The sculptors had completed all of the walls   and smaller columns in the south wing of the Hypostyle Hall and had just started   on the walls in the south wing when Seti I died.  Although the clerestory   roof was inscribed in his name, the twelve great columns were not carved until   Ramesses II became king.  
The great columns were the first inscriptions   carved in the name of the young king.  Ramesses bows to the gods in the   scenes on the great columns. This bowing pose is typical of Seti I's work but   not of Ramesses II's own reliefs. 
The most likely explanation is that Seti's   artists had drawn cartoons for the scenes, but had not yet carved them. In fact,   they may have also colored these drawings as a temporary substitute for genuine   relief carving.  With so much work to complete, this is hardly surprising   and similar colored cartoons are found in parts of the Abydos temple of Seti   that were never carved in relief.l.
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Although the basic themes remained mostly the   same, Ramesses II's made other changes to his style of decoration as well.   Ramesses completed the Hypostyle Hall in the first two years of his reign. At   the same time, he was experimenting with the way his royal names were written in   his cartouches.  
In his first year or so, his throne name was  User-maat-re, meaning something like   "Powerful-of-Truth-is-the-Sun-God-Re." The name is "spelled" with different   combinations of hieroglyphs in the scenes carved at this time. 
He also spelled his personal name in two   different ways. Sometimes he was Ra-mes-su, like his father   Ramesses I, elsewhere the cartouche is in the more familiar written   Ra-mess-es
In the south east corner of the hall, Ramesses  inscriptions have been       partly sheltered from sunlight and weather. Much of the original colors are       preserved, giving us a partial view of the Hypostyle Hall's original       brilliance.
Sometime during his second year on the   throne, Ramesses II decided on the final form of his cartouches.  Now,   Ra-mess-es was used consistently.  He had also been experimenting with   adding different epithets on to his throne name. His final choice was   Setep-en-Re, "The-Chosen-One-of-Re."  The full throne name was   therefore always written User-Maat-Re-Setep-en-Re until the end of   his reign. 
Once he had decided the permanent form of his   cartouches, Ramesses II went about making the different styles of decoration in   the south wing of the Hall uniform.  Both he and his father had made some   bas relief decoration here. This was all converted to sunk relief.  The   cartouches of Seti I along with the earlier form of his own cartouches were all   changed to the final version.  By detecting all these changes,   Egyptologists have been able to discover the order in which the decoration in   the south wing was completed.
Although Ramesses II seemed to show little   respect for his father Seti I by taking credit for his inscriptions in the   southern wing of the Hypostyle Hall, other reliefs show this was not the case.   
In several reliefs Ramesses carved there, he   is shown conducting the offering ritual for his deceased father who is portrayed   as a deified king. Although Seti looks like any other king at first glance, he   always holds an ankh-sign, the symbol of life usually carried only   by the gods. 
The Ramesside 19th Dynasty was only a decade   old when Ramesses II came to the throne. They came from a line of military   officers after the old 18th Dynasty had died out. But their legitimacy might   still be challenged. Just as Seti I had done by honoring Ramesses I on the west   wall, Ramesses II honored Seti on the south wall. Each wanted to show that he   was the son of a pharaoh, no matter how brief his father's reign had been. Only   the son of a pharaoh could become pharaoh
 
 
 
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