BIOGRAPHY OF TUTANKHAMUN,Tutankhamun: The Boy King of Egypt

                                                 The Mystery Of Tutankhamen - Hidden Inca Tours

                      BIOGRAPHY OF TUTANKHAMUN

On November 26, 1922, egyptologist HowardCarter entered the tomb he discovered just a few weeks prior. After decades of fruitless searching, he foundsomething more amazing than he could have ever hoped for. When asked if he saw anything inside, he simplyreplied “Yes, wonderful things.” Carter had located the tomb of a pharaoh fromthe 18th dynasty who ruled over ancient Egypt during the 14th century BC. More importantly, though, it was a tomb thathad been mostly undisturbed for over 3,000 years.

That pharaoh was Tutankhamun, who ascendedto the throne as a young boy and who died when he reached adulthood. His life was short and lacked accomplishments,but that did not matter. For Tutankhamun, death was only the beginning… He achieved far more fame and glory in deaththan he could have ever dreamed of while he ruled over the land of the Nile. This young king and his tomb rich with artifactshelped modern society understand ancient Egypt far better than anyone else and, in the process,turned King Tut into the most famous pharaoh in history. Family Life Ok, let’s start off with the name. We all know him as Tutankhamun, but thingswere not really that simple. In fact, according to the royal protocol ofancient Egypt, the full titulary of the pharaohs contained five names. First was their Horus name, the oldest cognomenwhich dated all the way back to prehistory. In Tut’s case, this was Ka nakht tut mesut. Then came the Nebty name, or the Two Ladies,referring to the goddesses Nekhbet and Wadjet.
                                                           Tutankhamun Facts | Tutankhamun For Kids | DK Find Out
 For Tut, this was Nefer hepu segereh tawy. Then there was the Golden Horus name which,for Tut, was Wetjes khau sehotep netjeru. Lastly, there were the throne name, or prenomen,and personal name, or nomen. They were the ones that pharaohs were typicallyreferred by and are similar to our standard of first name and last name. For our young pharaoh, these were Neb kheperuRa and Tut ankh Amun. These last two names were always marked distinctlyin Egyptian inscriptions to show that they referred to a royal name by encasing themin an oval with a line at one end called a cartouche. So, if we put it all together and translateit, Tut’s full name would have been “The strong bull, pleasing of birth; One of perfectlaws, who pacifies the Two Lands; Elevated of appearances who satisfied the gods; Lordof the forms of Ra; The living image of Amun.” That’s quite the mouthful so it is not surprisingthat most people simply call him Tutankhamun, although there are some ancient inscriptionswith variants on his name which are even longer. You would think that is the end of it, butthere is actually one more point to make about his name.
                                                        Why did Tutankhamun have a dagger made from a meteorite?
When he was born circa 1341 BC, his personalname was actually Tutankhaten, meaning “the living image of Aten.” This was because of his father, Akhenatenor Amenhotep IV, who was one of the most controversial pharaohs in history and someone you will likelysee on this channel in the future. The religion of ancient Egypt is still prettywell-known to this day as we’ve all heard of gods like Horus, and Anubis, and Osiris,and, most important of all, the Sun God Amun-Ra. Well, Akhenaten decided to do away with allof that and focus worship on a single deity - Aten the sun disk. The pharaoh even had a new city built dedicatedto the god which was intended to function as the new capital of his empire. He called it Akhetaten, modern day Amarna. Suffice to say that the people did not taketoo kindly to this religious revolution.
                                                      Tutankhamun - Wikipedia
After Akhenaten died, they quickly relocatedthe capital back to Thebes and went back to their old religion. They even submitted Akhenaten to damnatiomemoriae, the practice where they try to completely wipe him from history by erasing his namefrom all inscriptions. Well, we are talking about him right now so,clearly, they did not do a very good job, but this is why Tutankhamun originally hadthe name Tutankhaten and why he changed it afterwards. As far as Tut’s mother goes, she is a bitmore of a mystery since surviving inscriptions do not make her identity clear. Some egyptologists argue that his mother wasNefertiti herself, the famous Egyptian queen who was Akhenaten’s main wife, or GreatRoyal Wife, as she was called. Others are convinced that his mother was anunnamed mummy discovered over a century ago, referred to simply as the Younger Lady. Modern DNA tests support this assertion, butsome experts are still not convinced. Some of them argue that the tests are inconclusivedue to decayed samples while others opine that the mummy is, in fact, Nefertiti, asher remains have never been found.
                                                         King Tutankhamun did not die in chariot crash, virtual autopsy reveals ...
The Reign of King Tut Tutankhamun’s ascension to the throne issomewhat murky because, as we said, later pharaohs tried to make it look like that partof their history never happened. To the best of our knowledge, Akhenaten reignedfor 17 years and was followed by two short reigns before Tutankhamun took the throne. Those reigns belonged to Smenkhkare, a pharaohabout whom we know almost nothing, and Neferneferuaten, a female pharaoh who was, most likely, Nefertiti,or one of Akhenaten’s daughters. One or both of them may have reigned as co-regentswith Akhenaten prior to his death. Around 1334 BC, Tutankhamun assumed power. He was still just a young boy, only eightor nine years old, so his decisions were heavily influenced by his advisors. Particularly, one advisor named Ay who servedat the king’s court since the time of Akhenaten. It is believed he was the main power hidingin the shadows who actually made the decisions during Tut’s reign and, indeed, after theyoung king died, Ay became the new pharaoh.
                                                           King Tutankhamun did not die in chariot crash, virtual autopsy reveals ...
 He only lasted for a few years before he wassucceeded by another one of Tut’s officials, Horemheb, who ended up serving as the lastpharaoh of the 18th dynasty. Tutankhamun’s 10-year reign as ruler ofEgypt was unremarkable. The country was still in chaos due to hisfather’s religious revolution and the young pharaoh, undoubtedly guided by his advisors,renounced his father’s ideas and began restoring things to how they were before the Amarnaperiod. This mostly involved rebuilding temples, monuments,and stelae which were either destroyed or defaced during the time of Akhenaten; abandoningthe city of Akhetaten and moving the capital back to Thebes, and changing his name fromTut-ankh-aten to Tut-ankh-amun to show the pharaoh’s devotion to the once-mighty god. Tut married his half-sister, Ankhesenamun,and together they had two daughters who both died in infancy. Some scholars believe that the queen wenton to marry Ay after Tutankhamun’s death, but there isn’t conclusive evidence to supportthis. Perhaps the most noteworthy event that happenedduring that time came courtesy not of King Tut, but his wife.
                                                       Tutankhamun Biography - Childhood, Life Achievements & Timeline
After the young pharaoh’s death, Ankhesenamunmay have wrote a letter to the King of the Hittites, Suppiluliuma I, asking for one ofhis sons in marriage. The Hittites had long been a thorn in Egypt’sside and, taking advantage of the chaos during the reign of Akhenaten, they grew to be justas powerful. It would have been the first time that theson of a foreign king would have ruled over Egypt and, obviously, Suppiluliuma was overthe moon with this idea. He sent his son, Prince Zannanza, to marryAnkhesenamun, but he died somewhere on the way. The exact circumstances of his death are notknown, although many speculate that he was assassinated on the orders of Ay or Horemheb(or both). As for Tutankhamun, like we said, his reignwas nothing to write home about. The boy king would surely have been relegatedto a footnote in the history books were it not for the events that occurred thousandsof years after his death in 1325 BC. Death Is Only the Beginning We now leave ancient Egypt and travel over3,000 years into the future. We are in the same region, which is now knownas the Valley of the Kings because it had been used as a burial site for pharaohs andother important ancient officials for almost 500 years.
                                                       Paradox: THE CURSE OF THE MUMMY
 It had been excavated by archaeologists sincethe early 1800s and, at the start of the 20th century, there was a belief that everythingthere was to be found had already been found. The man in charge of the excavations, Americanexplorer Theodore Davis, famously ended a paper published in 1912 with the words “Ifear that the Valley of the Kings is now exhausted.” Davis died in 1915 and the rights to excavatethe valley were bought by an English aristocrat named George Herbert, the 5th Earl of Carnarvon. He had in his employ an archaeologist namedHoward Carter who had been digging for him since 1907, but without any tremendous success. Carter relocated to the Valley of the Kingsand resumed his work for Lord Carnarvon but, again, many years went by without any significantdiscoveries. In 1922, Carnarvon started to feel like Davismay have been right all along and there truly wasn’t anything left in the Valley of theKings. He told Carter that he would only fund onemore season of digging before he abandoned the valley for good. Carter’s time was running out but, in Novemberof that year, he made the discovery of the century. According to his own journal, the serendipitousmoment occurred by accident on November 4th when his water boy stumbled over a stone. Upon closer inspection, that stone turnedout to be the top of a set of stairs buried in the sand. Understandably excited, Carter excavated thespot and found that the stairs led to a burial site of great significance based on the royalseals.
                                                           Cairo's Egyptian Museum In 10 Artefacts
 He wrote to Lord Carnarvon and waited forthe arrival of his benefactor before going inside. On November 26, Carter, Carnarvon and hisdaughter, Evelyn Herbert, became the first people to enter the tomb of Tutankhamun inover 3,000 years. Almost immediately, the archaeologist realizedthe magnitude of the find as he saw “everywhere the glint of gold” - statues, cups, beds,and even a throne filled an antechamber which led to another room with a sealed doorway. At this point, it wasn’t clear yet whatCarter had found - was this simply a treasure cache or was there an actual burial chamberwaiting for them behind that doorway? They had to wait a bit to get their answer. It wasn’t until February 1923 that Carterwas finally able to enter the closed chamber and glimpse, for the first time, the sarcophagusof Tutankhamun. Afterwards, Carter and his team spent thenext decade cataloguing, preserving and removing over 5,000 objects that were sitting in thattomb. Inside the Tomb The tomb of Tutankhamun which was designatedKV62 consisted of four rooms, a corridor, and a staircase.

Contrary to what is commonly believed, theburial site was not completely pristine. It had actually been targeted by thieves inthe past, it’s just that the looting happened soon after Tut’s burial and Egyptian officialshad time to fix the problem. Some of the doors showed signs of repairsand being sealed more than once. It appears that the tomb was robbed twice. First time, the thief or thieves didn’tget away with much, but they did steal things like oils and cosmetics which were highlyprized in ancient Egyptian society. Such items would not have lasted long so,obviously, the theft occurred soon after the objects were placed inside the tomb.

The second occasion was more complex and organizedand involved digging a tunnel inside the burial chamber and accessing the treasury. That room was filled with jewelry and, whilethieves stole a lot of it, the scene suggested that they had been caught in the act and hadto make a hasty getaway which was why they left so much stuff behind. Even with these acts of vandalism, KV62 wasstill the most complete pharaoh’s tomb ever discovered. Then, of course, there was the burial chamber,the main event, as it were, which contained the mummy of the boy king. This was the only room which had decorationson the walls which depicted the pharaoh and multiple deities taking part in various ceremonies. The bulk of the room was taken up by fourgilded shrines made out of wood. The shrines were each smaller than the lastand were placed inside each other like Russian nesting dolls and, inside the smallest shrine,there was the sarcophagus. Inside the sarcophagus we had a similar situationas the mummy was placed inside three coffins.

The outer two were made of gilded wood likethe shrines, but it was the innermost coffin which immediately attracted attention as itwas made of over 240 lbs of pure gold. Inside the coffin was the pharaoh’s mummy,of course, wearing a gold funerary mask adorned with precious jewels which has probably becomethe most famous artifact from ancient Egypt. As egyptologists studied this treasure troveof artifacts, they couldn’t help but notice that this tomb may have never been intendedfor Tutankhamun at all. Some items showed signs that they previouslycontained different names which had been erased and “Tutankhamun” written on top of them. This alone could have been explained simplyby officials wanting to remove the pharaoh’s original name, Tutankhaten. However, there were plenty of other curiousfeatures which suggested that the tomb was originally built for an older man. The most common theory is that it was intendedfor Smenkhkare, the mysterious pharaoh that ruled for a little bit before King Tut. For decades, scholars have argued over thepossibility of there being more chambers hidden inside KV62. One of them could even contain the elusiveresting place of Nefertiti.

But this argument seemed destined to remainunsettled since, for obvious reasons, nobody was allowed to start smashing up the burialchamber in search of undiscovered rooms. However, modern technology provided us withan unintrusive solution to the problem - ground-penetrating radar scans. This technique was not without controversy. The first scans took place in 2015 and detectedthe presence of open spaces which backed up the idea that there was more to find in Tut’stomb. However, a subsequent test failed to replicatethese results. A third and final scan was performed in 2018by three different companies which negated the initial findings and detected nothingbut solid rock. The Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities has acceptedthese results and there are no plans to search for more chambers in the near future. As far as the items inside the tomb are concerned,we are obviously not going to talk about all of them since there are over 5,000 of them. We already mentioned the most important ones,but there are a few more curious objects that merit inclusion. For example, the tomb contained a pair oftrumpets, one silver and the other either bronze or copper, which may be the oldeststill-functional trumpets in the world.

These ancient instruments were actually playedonce in 1939, on an international BBC broadcast which was heard by approximately 150 millionpeople. There is one final item to mention which isout of this world...literally. It is a dagger whose blade was made out ofiron meteorite. Its exact origins are unclear as the qualitymetalwork is uncharacteristic of Egypt in Tut’s time so either ancient Egyptians werefar more skilled iron craftsmen than we previously thought or the dagger was a gift from anotherplace. Its extraterrestrial credentials were confirmedwith the help of a spectrometer which detected high levels of nickel and cobalt, indicativeof meteoritic iron. The Mummy Studying all the artifacts inside the tombwas all well & good, but what about the mummy? It won’t surprise you to learn that thebody of Tutankhamun has been examined and discussed extensively. It probably also won’t surprise you to discoverthat the young, inbred king wasn’t exactly the peak of good health. In fact, he was frail, disabled, sufferedfrom one or more genetic abnormalities, and probably needed a cane to walk around. Before we get into any specifics, we shouldmention that Tutankhamun’s health is the subject of multiple studies and many of themcontradict or disagree with each other so there isn’t universal acceptance regardingthe pharaoh’s health problems and they also include a fair bit of speculation. Let’s start with the minor stuff. Tut had several features which were believedto be genetic traits of his bloodline.

They included a small cleft palate, an overbite,and larger-than-normal center incisors. He also had an unusually elongated skull shapewhich, again, was thought to be an abnormality that ran in the family. Tut had trouble walking and, although it wasinitially believed this was due to a stress fracture caused by an accident, recent researchindicates that he was actually born with a severe club foot. His condition may have gotten even worse asthe years went by as he may have also suffered from a degenerative bone condition calledKohler disease. His spine was curved and showed fusion inthe upper vertebrae which some believed could have been a sign of Marfan’s syndrome, althoughthis idea was later dismissed by the most recent tests. The malformation on his leg would have beenso extreme that the pharaoh would not have been able to walk without a cane. As proof of this, scholars point to the factthat over 100 walking canes were buried with the young king in his tomb. There is a reason why not everyone is onboardwith this idea and it is because it cancels out one of the main theories regarding Tutankhamun’sdeath. Some egyptologists are of the firm opinionthat the boy king died from injuries suffered in a chariot crash.

However, if his foot was as bad as this newstudy indicates, then it would have been impossible for him to ride in a chariot. This brings us neatly to our next point - whatkilled Tutankhamun? There is no mention of his cause of deathin ancient records and examining his remains didn’t reveal an obvious answer. For decades, it was believed that Tut’sdeath came as the result of foul play. X-ray scans performed in the 1960s showedthat the young pharaoh had bone fragments inside his skull, indicative of a blow tothe head. However, newer tests revealed that the bitsof bone ended up there in modern times, when the mummy was removed from its coffin. There were no other signs to suggest a fatalhead blow. Then there is the aforementioned “chariotcrash theory” which asserts that Tutankhamun died either due to direct injuries sustainedin a chariot crash or from an infection that came as a result of it. Adherents of this idea point to damage doneto the young king’s ribs and chest which could be indicative of crushing injuries,plus images in his tomb that depict the pharaoh riding a chariot in battle. Again, opponents of this theory believe theseinjuries were caused recently while handling the mummy.

The most up-to-date research actually suggeststhat Tut died from malaria. Tests performed a decade ago found tracesof the infection in four mummies, including Tutankhamun. This, compounded with all the other healthproblems that lowered his immune system, could be the culprit that cut the pharaoh’s reignshort. There is no universally-accepted solution,but this is, at the moment, the most prevalent theory. The obsession with death surrounding Tutankhamunhasn’t really been restricted to his own demise. After all, many other people died after thetomb was opened because they dared to disturb the sleep of the pharaoh. Didn’t they? Yes, we’ve all heard about the notoriouscurse of the pharaohs. It has been mentioned since the 19th century,but it was the discovery of Tut’s tomb that made it infinitely more popular and helpedit reach the public consciousness. Although, curiously, there is no actual curseinscribed anywhere inside KV62. It was a fabrication of the newspapers. This was more of an Old Kingdom practice,while Tut’s 18th dynasty ruled firmly during the New Kingdom. There is one suspicious death surroundingthe discovery of the tomb, one single death that set off the mania of the “mummy’scurse.”. Lord Carnarvon, the man who funded Carter’sdigging, died a few months after entering the tomb.

 He succumbed to blood poisoning and the newspapersimmediately started touting the “curse of the pharaohs.” Since then, anything bad or remotely suspiciousthat happened to one of the dozens of people involved with the mummy was ascribed to thecurse. However, the British Medical Journal actuallydid a scientific study and found that the life expectancy rate for those people wasn’thigher or lower than the average. It was just that the abnormal cases receivedmuch more media attention. The study also debunked another notion whichsaid that there was a more direct way in which the tomb caused the demise of Carnarvon andothers - ancient mold spores which they inhaled and caused damage to their respiratory systems. This didn’t happen, either, and, if it did,it would have killed them a lot sooner, not in months or years. So you can rest assured that, should you everdisturb the pharaoh’s slumber, you will not be cursed...probably. 

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