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 4 of 4)
Carter loosely repacked the rubble, then sent a telegram to Carnarvon at his Hampshire castle: “At last have made wonderful discovery in the Valley; a magnificent tomb with seals intact; re-covered same for your arrival; congratulations.” Three weeks later, the 57-year-old Carnarvon arrived with his daughter, Evelyn Herbert. Carter and his team then dug away four more steps, excitedly uncovering seals that bore the name Tutankhamun. Removing a door, they encountered a passageway packed with rubble. Sifting through flint and limestone chips, they discovered broken jars, vases and pots—“clear evidence of plundering,” wrote Carter—and their hearts sank. But at the end of the 30-foot-long passage, they found a second blocked door also bearing Tut’s seals. Boring a hole in the upper left corner, Carter poked a candle into the opening as Carnarvon, his daughter and Arthur Callender, an architect and engineer who assisted in the excavations, looked on impatiently. Can you see anything? Asked Carnarvon. Momentarily struck dumb with amazement, the archaeologist replied at last. “Wonderful things,” he said.
Widening the opening and shining a flashlight into the room, Carter and Carnarvon saw effigies of a king, falconheaded figures, a golden throne, overturned chariots, a gilded snake, and “gold—everywhere the glint of gold.” Carter later recalled that his first impression was of uncovering “the property room of an opera of a vanished civilization.”
Carter spent nearly three months photographing and clearing out the antechamber’s objects alone. Then in mid-February 1923, after digging out the blocked doorway to the burial chamber, he encountered what appeared to be a solid wall of gold. This proved to be the outermost of four nested gilded wood shrines, an imposing construction—17 feet long, 11 feet wide and 9 feet high, embellished inside with scenes of winged goddesses, pharaohs and written spells—that enclosed Tutankhamun’s yellow quartzite sarcophagus.
Slipping through the narrow space between the nested shrines and a wall painted with murals welcoming the king into the afterlife, Carter shined his flashlight through an open doorway to the treasury room beyond, guarded by the statue of a recumbent jackal representing Anubis, the god of embalming. Beyond it gleamed a massive gilt shrine, later found to house a calcite chest containing the desiccated remains of Tut’s liver, stomach, intestines and lungs. Surrounded by a quartet of goddesses, each three feet tall, the shrine, Carter wrote, was “the most beautiful monument that I have ever seen. . . . so lovely it made one gasp with wonder and admiration.”
Grave robbers had in fact broken into the tomb at least twice in ancient times, and made off with jewelry and other small objects from the antechamber, the first room Carter discovered, and a smaller, adjoining annex. They had also penetrated the burial chamber and treasury, but, apparently unable to access the inner shrines protecting Tut’s sarcophagus, had taken very little of value. After each occasion, necropolis guards had resealed the tomb. According to calculations based on packing inventories found in the tomb, the thieves made off with about 60 percent of the original jewelry. But more than 200 pieces of jewelry remained, many inside Tut’s sarcophagus, inserted into his mummy’s wrappings. In addition, hundreds of artifacts—furniture, weapons, clothing, games, food and jars of wine (all for the pharaoh’s use in the afterlife)—were left untouched.
Seven weeks after the opening of the burial chamber, Carnarvon died from a mosquito bite that he had infected while shaving. Immediately, sensation-seeking journalists blamed his death on the pharaoh’s “curse”—the superstition, spread after Carter’s discovery by Marie Corelli, a popular Scottish author, that anyone who disturbed Tut’s tombwould suffer an untimely end.
It took another two years and eight months of removing and cataloging objects before the ever-meticulous Carter raised the lid of the third and final coffin (245 pounds of solid gold) inside the sarcophagus and gazed at the gold and lapis lazuli mask atop Tut’s mummy. Three weeks later, after cutting away resin-encrusted wrappings from the mask, Carter was able to savor the “beautiful and well-formed features” of the mummy itself. Yet it was not until February 1932, nearly a decade after opening the tomb, that he finally finished photographing and recording all the details of Tut’s treasures, a mind-boggling 5,398 items.
Just eight years before Carter’s discovery, American lawyer and archaeologist Theodore Davis, who had financed numerous expeditions to the Valley of the Kings, had turned in his shovel. “I fear the Valley is now exhausted,” he had declared. Mere feet from where Davis had stopped digging, the dogged Carter, quite literally, struck gold.
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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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