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
Seated on a cushion at the Pharaoh Tutankhamun’s feet, Ankhesenamun hands her young husband an arrow to shoot at ducks in a papyrus thicket. Delicately engraved on a gilt shrine, it’s a scene (above) of touching intimacy, a window into the lives of the ancient Egyptian monarchs who reigned more than 3,300 years ago. Unfortunately, the window closes fast. Despite recent findings indicating that Tut, as he has come to be known, was probably not murdered, the life and death of the celebrated boy-king remain a tantalizing mystery.
“The problem with Tutankhamun is that you have an embarrassment of riches of objects, but when you get down to the historical documents and what we actually know, there is very little,” says Kathlyn Cooney, a Stanford University Egyptologist and one of the curators of the first Tutankhamun exhibition to visit the United States in more than a quarter-century. (The show opens at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art on June 16 and travels to the Museum of Art in Fort Lauderdale, the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago and the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia.)
On display are 50 stunning funerary objects from the pharaoh’s tomb and 70 pieces from other ancient tombs and temples, dating from 1550 to 1305 B.C. On loan from the Egyptian National Museum in Cairo, this astonishingly well-preserved assemblage includes jewelry, furniture and exquisitely carved and painted cosmetics vessels.
Negotiations for the exhibition dragged on for three years while the Egyptian Parliament and many archaeologists resisted lifting a travel ban imposed in 1982 after a gilt goddess from Tut’s tomb was broken while on tour in Germany. In the end, Egypt’s president, Hosni Mubarak, intervened.
“Once the president decided to put Egypt’s collections back on the museum circuit, we obtained the green light for the project,” says Wenzel Jacob, director of the Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle museum in Bonn, Germany, where the exhibition was on display before moving to Los Angeles.
Most of the objects were excavated in the Valley of the Kings, two desert canyons on the west bank of the Nile, 416 miles south of Cairo. Covering half a square mile, the valley is the site of some 62 tombs of Egyptian pharaohs and nobles. Unlike the blockbuster show of the 1970s that focused exclusively on Tut and the discovery of his tomb by English archaeologist Howard Carter in 1922, the current exhibition also highlights the ruler’s illustrious ancestors.
“This period was like a fantastic play with magnificent actors and actresses,” says Zahi Hawass, secretary general of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities. “Look at the beautiful Nefertiti and her six daughters; King Tut married one of them. Look at her husband, the heretic monarch Akhenaten; his domineering father, Amenhotep III; and his powerful mother, Queen Tiye. Look at the people around them: Maya, the treasurer; Ay, the power behind the throne; and Horemheb, the ruthless general.”
Born circa 1341 B.C., most likely in Ankhetaten (present-day Tell el-Amarna), Tutankhamun was first called Tutankhaten, a name that meant “the living image of the Aten,” the sole official divinity by the end of the rule of Akhenaten (1353 to 1335 B.C.). Tut was probably Akhenaten’s son by Kiya, a secondary wife, but may have been the son of Amenhotep III and Queen Tiye, making him Akhenaten’s younger brother.
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Comments (21)
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
About the whole curse thing, the man didn't die from the curse, "Carnarvon died from a mosquito bite that he had infected while shaving". (that is what it says in the article) So it might not even have been bacteria from the tomb at all... if it really was bacteria, the people who were figuring out the reason for the man's death, would have found similarities between the bacteria in the tomb and the bacteria that infected the person.
Posted by J on February 7,2009 | 02:03 PM
is the curse of king tut really real? if so, then how come other scientists without a doubt says that the burial chamber was just filled with bacteria and that caused allergic reactions to the unfortunate people? while others say that they had checked for bacteria and supposedly, there was no bacteria at all. as you can see, i am a superstitious person and i do believe in supernatural things like curses. so i would like to know whether of not king tuts curse was actually true, its hard to know between all these different answers. Posted by Amanda on December 26,2007 | 08:16PM Ok, we can say that scientist group 1 had checked and found nothing. However, group 2 had went in and discovered all sorts of bacteria. There are several possibilities to this. You can go to a doctor and they will tell you that you don't have anything wrong with you. A week later the symptoms get worse and you see another doctor and they find out that you have a disease. Just because one did not find bacteria does not mean it's not there. However, if the first group found bacteria and the second group did not. The bacteria could have went away like a seasonal thing or they might not have had the proper tools. Superstition is just that. Maybe they went down there and were allergic to something but others aren't. Say, you and I had walked into this place and you became ill but I was still quite healthy. Let's take it a step further and say that I messed around with everything and you touched nothing and was still fine. I believe they could have set it up with traps and bacteria just so the grave robbers would stay out or die trying. But years later when we examined these places the stuff deteriorated or whatever. It is nothing to worry about. Good and bad stuff will happen no matter what you do. Whether you read this or agree is irrelevant. But someone else may read this and may get something out of it. I however will not be back to this site to check so I hope this helps.
Posted by Simply J on February 3,2009 | 07:42 PM
To Amanda...No, sorry, the curse of King Tut is not real. Most of the "facts" that people know about curse came from period newspaper articles, including the famous, "Death comes on swift wings..." That inscription never appears in the tomb at all. I had not heard about mysterious deaths being explained by bacteria. Lord Carnarvon most certainly died of an infection. (Blood poisoning due to a shaving cut was the stated cause.) If you read actual accounts, in fact, nothing mysterious occurred at all. Accidents happen. Applying a supernatural cause to it and embroidering in a few newspaper exaggerations (and outright fiction) will not make a curse. There are no curses needed to account for the way most humans meet their ends. Things happen and we are fragile creatures, comparatively. Let's look at this in a way more open to superstition...Please remember that according to the the religion of the time, speaking the name of the dead will give them life. Without the discovery of this tomb, most people would not be speaking his name. If you accept those things as baseline, logically, can you think of a single reason why he would curse the excavators? I would think he would have thrown out the welcome mat. Floyd Hall and She, I am curious where this info is coming from. Is there any research I should be aware of?
Posted by Nef on November 2,2008 | 07:19 PM
That picture is so cool but weird at the same time! i also think tut is lying between the elder lady and the younger lady in kv 35. this is so cool!
Posted by she on September 28,2008 | 06:48 PM
royal family of amarna is in kv 35,43 and 57.i believe it is horemheb in the so called tomb of tut.i also believe tut is lying between the elder lady and the younger lady in kv 35.
Posted by floyd hall on March 6,2008 | 11:30 AM
is the curse of king tut really real? if so, then how come other scientists without a doubt says that the burial chamber was just filled with bacteria and that caused allergic reactions to the unfortunate people? while others say that they had checked for bacteria and supposedly, there was no bacteria at all. as you can see, i am a superstitious person and i do believe in supernatural things like curses. so i would like to know whether of not king tuts curse was actually true, its hard to know between all these different answers.
Posted by Amanda on December 26,2007 | 11:16 PM
is the curse of king tut really real? if so, then how come other scientists without a doubt says that the burial chamber was just filled with bacteria and that caused allergic reactions to the unfortunate people? while others say that they had checked for bacteria and supposedly, there was no bacteria at all. as you can see, i am a superstitious person and i do believe in supernatural things like curses. so i would like to know whether of not king tuts curse was actually true, its hard to know between all these different answers.
Posted by Amanda on December 26,2007 | 11:16 PM
love bazar
Posted by virginia rogers on December 22,2007 | 03:36 PM
he has a big head
Posted by me on December 10,2007 | 02:47 PM