King Tut: The Pharaoh Returns!
An exhibition featuring the first CT scans of the boy king's mummy tells us more about Tutankhamun than ever before
- By Richard Covington
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2005, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Most probably, the royal couple spent much of their time in Memphis, with frequent trips to a hunting villa near the Great Sphinx at Giza and to the temples of Thebes to preside over religious festivals. The teenage queen apparently suffered two failed pregnancies: the miscarriage of a 5-month-old female fetus and a stillborn baby girl. (Both were mummified and buried in Tutankhamun’s tomb.)
Then, around 1323 B.C., Tut suddenly died. According to the recent computed tomography (CT) scans, he was 18 to 20 years old at the time of death (judging from bone development and observations that his wisdom teeth had not grown in and his skull had not fully closed). Despite the fact that Carter’s team had badly mangled the mummy, the scans indicate that Tutankhamun had been in general good health. He may, however, have succumbed to an infection due to a badly broken left thighbone. “If he really did break his leg so dramatically,” Cooney points out, “the chances of him dying from it are reasonably high.” But some members of the scanning team maintain that Carter and his excavators fractured the leg unwrapping the mummy; such a ragged split, had it occurred while Tut was still alive, they argue, would have generated a hemorrhage that would have shown up on the scans.
One theory that appears to have been finally put to rest is that Tut was killed by a blow to the head. A bone fragment detected in his skull during a 1968 X-ray was caused not by a blow, but by the embalmers or by Carter’s rough treatment. Had Tut been bludgeoned to death, the scanning report found, the chip would have stuck in the embalming fluids during burial preparations.
After Tut’s death, his widowed queen, many scholars believe, wrote in desperation to the enemy Hittite chieftain, Suppiluliuma, urging that he send one of his sons to marry her and thereby become pharaoh. (Some scholars, however, think that the letter may have been written by Nefertiti or Tiye.) Since no Egyptian queen had ever married a foreigner, writing the letter was a gutsy move. The Hittites were threatening the empire, and such a marriage would have averted an attack as well as preserving Ankhesenamun’s influence. After dispatching an envoy to make sure the request was not a trap, Suppiluliuma sent his son Zananza. But despite the chieftain’s precaution, Zananza was killed on his way to Memphis, perhaps by general Horemheb’s forces.
How did Tutankhamun escape the fate of so many pharaohs, whose graves were ransacked within a few generations of their death? For one thing, he was buried in a relatively small tomb. During his lifetime, work was under way on a grand royal tomb with long corridors and several rooms leading to a burial chamber. Perhaps because it was still unfinished at the time of his early death, the young king was buried in a much smaller crypt, possibly one meant for Ay.
After Tut’s funeral, the elderly vizier married Ankhsenamun and became pharaoh. Dying three or four years later, some suggest at Horemheb’s hand, Ay was buried in the large tomb that may have been meant for Tut. In 1319 B.C. the ambitious Horemheb seized power and immediately set about wiping Tutankhamun’s name from the official records, in all likelihood, Cooney speculates, so that Horemheb himself “could take credit for restoring stability.” Then, nearly 200 years after Tut’s death, his tomb was covered over by huts of laborers digging a crypt for Ramses VI. As a consequence, the pharaoh lay buried and forgotten in an unmarked grave, largely safe from potential plunderers.
The boy-king’s obscurity, however, came to an end on the morning of November 4, 1922, when a water boy with Carter’s archaeological team dug a hole for his water jar and exposed what turned out to be the first step of Tut’s long-lost grave. Despite Horemheb’s efforts to erase Tut from history, excavations in the early 20th century had uncovered seal impressions inscribed with his name. Carter had spent five years futilely searching for Tut’s tomb, and his English patron, Lord Carnarvon, was ready to withdraw financing.
Soon after the water boy’s discovery, the 48-year-old Carter arrived at the site to find the men working feverishly. By dusk the next day, they had hollowed out a passage 10 feet high by 6 feet wide, descending 12 steps to a doorway, which was closed off with plastered stone blocks. “With excitement growing to fever heat,” Carter recalled in his diary, “I searched the seal impressions on the door for evidence of the identity of the owner, but could find no name. . . . It needed all my self-control to keep from breaking down the doorway and investigating then and there.”
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Comments (21)
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What did king tut say before he was a king
Posted by Hayden on January 9,2013 | 02:18 PM
i think that the head is creepy! but that is pretty cool! i LOVE egyptian stuff! so...AWESOME!
Posted by Marley on February 14,2012 | 08:46 PM
No, the curse is not real(there has even been a study where 20 people assist in unwrapping king Tut's mummy and they all had normal life spans). There's been a study where genetic tests showed he had malaria. CT scans showed he had a deteriorating left foot, dislocated left knee, fractures and broken skin and bone. I even heard there was even a theory where they think he was holding his kneecap in his hand. And all these injuries are on the left side!!!!! He also could have died of brain tumors,a lung disease, or assassinated by the angry people who were mad at his father for taking away the old religion of Amun, or vise/ versa, they assassinated him for attempting to bring back polytheism. They also found coriander in his tomb, which you know reduces fever, a symptom of malaria (the DNA tests showed he had the most severe type of malaria that lots of people still die from today). He was a carrier for Marfans Syndrome because his father and daughter (who died from it) had it.
Posted by Ration on December 14,2011 | 01:31 AM
i think he had brain malaria because his head looks slightly larger than the average head
Posted by M on October 21,2011 | 03:30 PM
This Passagemakes you think a litte bit.
Posted by on March 29,2010 | 10:10 AM
wow thats really cool
Posted by on October 29,2009 | 09:57 AM
this is really cool
Posted by on October 24,2009 | 11:58 AM
knowone broke into his tomb bc he had a huge tomb and he had like rooms in his tomb and also everything in his tomb was sealed and loakced up good
Posted by kari on October 7,2009 | 06:46 PM
how many more artifacts are there than just the ones that were found? do you think there are more?
Posted by liyla on September 23,2009 | 10:50 AM
how much are king tuts belongings worth and how many artifacts were found?
Posted by danie guevara on September 5,2009 | 11:19 PM
Why didn't anyone braek into KING TUT'S TOMB!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
Posted by joah on July 20,2009 | 08:46 PM
Can you please tell me when the exhibition of King Tut will be in Atlanta, Ga. and how much the tickets are for children and adults. Thank you.
Posted by LeeAnn on March 25,2009 | 01:58 PM
Please, return this gold boy king Tut back home to Egypt, to his mummies. They are missing him more, than we love him. Sincerely yours, Artist Olga from New York City. P.S.The Gold Mask Of King Tut is enclosed.
Posted by Olga Tsytsarina on March 3,2009 | 04:48 PM
Go King Tut!
Posted by waterise on February 25,2009 | 08:21 PM
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