
« Mon nom est Thoutmosis, et j’ai construit un monde. Un monde aux frontières menacées par les ténèbres et la barbarie. Un monde qui aurait pu disparaître sous le poids de l’avidité, du mensonge et de la médiocrité. Mais j’ai combattu, jour après jour, avec l’aide des dieux pour que rayonne la lumière, et qu’elle nourrisse les humains. Et mon royaume fut de ce monde. » Dans la suite des grands romans qui ont fait son succès, Christian Jacq nous fait revivre l’incroyable histoire du pharaon Thoutmosis III (1504-1450), celui que l’on surnomma plus tard le Napoléon égyptien. Redoutable stratège, guerrier intrépide, Thoutmosis repoussa toutes les attaques contre l’Égypte. Mais l’homme était aussi un savant qui ne cessa de vouloir améliorer le sort de son peuple. Follement épris de la musicienne Satiâh, il fut le premier roi égyptien à être appelé Pharaon. Passion, combats, sagesse ancestrale et recherche de l’harmonie, Christian Jacq, avec ce roman, nous plonge dans les aventures et les secrets d’un des plus grands rois d’Égypte.
Author

Christian Jacq is a French author and Egyptologist. He has written several novels about ancient Egypt, notably a five book suite about pharaoh Ramses II, a character whom Jacq admires greatly. Jacq's interest in Egyptology began when he was thirteen, and read History of Ancient Egyptian Civilization by Jacques Pirenne. This inspired him to write his first novel. He first visited Egypt when he was seventeen, went on to study Egyptology and archaeology at the Sorbonne, and is now one of the world's leading Egyptologists. By the time he was eighteen, he had written eight books. His first commercially successful book was Champollion the Egyptian, published in 1987. As of 2004 he has written over fifty books, including several non-fiction books on the subject of Egyptology. He and his wife later founded the Ramses Institute, which is dedicated to creating a photographic description of Egypt for the preservation of endangered archaeological sites. Between 1995-1997, he published his best selling five book suite Ramsès, which is today published in over twenty-five countries. Each volume encompasses one aspect of Ramesses' known historical life, woven into a fictional tapestry of the ancient world for an epic tale of love, life and deceit. Jacq's series describes a vision of the life of the pharaoh: he has two vile power-hungry siblings, Shanaar, his decadent older brother, and Dolora, his corrupted older sister who married his teacher. In his marital life, he first has Isetnofret (Iset) as a mistress (second Great Wife), meets his true love Nefertari (first Great Wife) and after their death, gets married to Maetnefrure in his old age. Jacq gives Ramesses only three biological children: Kha'emweset, Meritamen (she being the only child of Nefertari, the two others being from Iset) and Merneptah. The other "children" are only young officials trained for government and who are nicknamed "sons of the pharaoh".