Sunday, January 22, 2006

KING TUT

Here's more of that Trivia.......................PEACE...................Scott

ARCHAEOLOGISTS ENTER KING TUT'S TOMB:
November 26, 1922

In Egypt's Valley of the Kings, British archaeologists Howard Carter and Lord
Carnarvon become the first souls to enter King Tutankhamen's tomb in more than
3,000 years. Tutankhamen's sealed burial chambers were miraculously intact, and
inside was a collection of several thousand priceless objects, including a gold
coffin containing the mummy of the teenage king.When Carter first arrived in
Egypt, in 1891, most of the ancient Egyptian tombs had been discovered, and the
majority of these had been hopelessly plundered by tomb raiders over the
millennia. However, Carter was a brilliant excavator, and in the first years of
the 20th century he discovered the tombs of Queen Hatshepsut and King Thutmose
IV. Around 1907, he became associated with the Earl of Carnarvon, a collector of
antiquities who commissioned Carter to supervise excavations in the Valley of
the Kings. By 1913, most experts felt there was nothing in the Valley left to be
uncovered. Carter, however, persisted in his efforts, convinced that the tomb of
the little-known King Tutankhamen might still be found. King Tutankhamen was
enthroned in 1333 B.C. when he was still a child. He died a decade later at the
age of 18 and thus made only a faint impression on the history of ancient Egypt.
In the 13th century B.C., Tutankhamen and the other "Amarna" kings were publicly
condemned, and most records of them were destroyed--including the location of
Tutankhamen's tomb. A century later, in the 12th century B.C., workers building
a tomb for Ramses VI inadvertently covered Tutankhamen's tomb with a deep layer
of chips, further protecting it from future discovery.After World War I, Carter
began an intensive search for Tutankhamen's tomb and on November 4, 1922,
discovered a step leading to its entrance. Lord Carnarvon rushed to Egypt, and
on November 23 they broke through a mud-brick door, revealing the passageway
that led to Tutankhamen's tomb. There was evidence that robbers had entered the
structure at some point, and the archaeologists feared they had discovered yet
another pillaged tomb. However, on November 26 they broke through another door,
and Carter leaned in with a candle to take a look. Behind him, Lord Carnarvon
asked, "Can you see anything?" Carter replied, "Yes, wonderful things."It was
the antechamber of Tutankhamen's tomb, and it was gloriously untouched. The
dusty floor still showed the footprints of the tomb builders who left the room
more than 3,000 years before. Apparently, the robbers who had broken into
Tutankhamen's tomb had done so soon after it was completed and were caught
before moving into the interior chambers and causing serious damage.Thus began a
monumental excavation process in which Carter carefully explored the four-room
tomb over several years, uncovering an incredible collection of several thousand
objects. In addition to numerous pieces of jewelry and gold, there was statuary,
furniture, clothes, a chariot, weapons, and numerous other objects that shed a
brilliant light on the culture and history of ancient Egypt. The most splendid
find was a stone sarcophagus containing three coffins nested within each other.
Inside the final coffin, made out of solid gold, was the mummified body of the
boy-king Tutankhamen, preserved for 3,200 years. Most of these treasures are now
housed in the Cairo Museum.

No comments: