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Authors: Joyce Tyldesley

BOOK: Tutankhamen
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As for the mask:
In the same manner that the outside of the golden coffin was covered with a viscid mass, so was the interior, to which still adhered the gold mask. This mask had also been protected by being bound with a folded wet blanket continually fed with water, its face padded with wet wadding. As it had necessarily been subjected to the full power of the heat collected in the interior of the coffin, it was freed and lifted away with comparative ease …
22
With the pieces separated, the unguent could be removed with the help of cleaning solvents and a blast lamp. It was now apparent that the mask was made of gold sheets beaten together, the surface of the mask being 18.4 carat gold, the headdress 22.5 carats and the underlying mask 23 carats. There were solder-lines around the edges of the face and forehead, and rivets visible at the base of the throat, while the beard was a separate piece, made of gold inlaid with faience. The mask wore the
nemes
headdress: a headcloth covering the head and nape of the neck, with large flaps of cloth decending behind each ear to the shoulder. This was inlaid with stripes of blue glass, and bore the protective vulture and cobra on the brow. Texts inscribed on the back of the mask were taken from the
Book of the Dead
.
On 31 December 1925, the innermost coffin and the funerary mask journeyed north by train, escorted by Carter, Lucas and an armed guard. For maximum security, the train was shunted directly into the Museum gardens. The rest of the season was then dedicated to conserving the coffins and the jewellery.
The Fifth Season: 1926 – 7
Work started with the restoration of the mummy to the granite sarcophagus. With Tutankhamen secure, attention turned to the Treasury. This room, too, had been robbed, with many of its chests showing the unmissable evidence of broken seals. However, it appeared to have suffered less disturbance, or maybe to have been better restored, than the other chambers. Here were a host of highly symbolic artefacts including a large shrine topped with the jackal-figure of the funerary god Anubis, a large and curious golden cow's head representing a form of the goddess Hathor, and a fleet of boats that would allow the dead king to sail to Abydos, the cult centre of Osiris. Most astonishing of all was the object that had caught Carter's eye four years earlier: the magnificent canopic shrine provided to house Tutankhamen's preserved entrails:
Facing the doorway, on the farther side, stood the most beautiful monument that I have ever seen – so lovely that it made one gasp with wonder and admiration. The central portion of it consisted of a large shrine-shaped chest, completely overlaid with gold and surmounted by a cornice of sacred cobras. Surrounding this, free-standing, were statues of the four tutelary goddesses of the dead – gracious figures with outstretched protective arms, so natural and lifelike in their pose, so pitiful and compassionate the expressions upon their faces, that one felt it almost sacrilege to look at them. One guarded the shrine on each of its four sides, but whereas the figures at the front and back kept their gaze firmly fixed upon their charge, an additional note of touching realism was imparted by the other two, for their heads were turned sideways, looking over their shoulders towards the entrance, as though to watch against surprise. There is a simple grandeur about this monument that made an irresistible appeal to the imagination, and I am not ashamed to confess that it brought a lump to my throat.
23
The Annexe was the last chamber to be cleared. This was the chamber most affected by the robberies, and unlike the ‘orderly confusion' of the Antechamber, its restoration appeared to have been effected by the ancient equivalent of sweeping everything under the bed. There was not a single inch of floor space for Carter and his team to stand, and the tower of grave goods reached a height, in some places, of 1.8m:
… a jumble of every kind of funerary chattels, tumbled any way one upon the other, almost defying description. Bedsteads, chairs, stools, footstools, hassocks, gameboards, baskets of fruits, every kind of alabaster vessel and pottery wine-jars, boxes of funerary figures, toys, shields, bows and arrows, and other missiles, all topsy-turvy. Caskets thrown over, their contents spilled; in fact, everything in confusion.
24
The fact that the floor of the Annexe was almost a metre below the floor of the Antechamber simply compounded Carter's problems: the first objects had to be moved by team members dangling headfirst from the doorway, supported by a rope sling which passed under the armpits, and was held by three or four men standing in the Antechamber. Once it became possible to actually stand in the room, Carter realised that the Annexe had originally been used to store food, wine, oils and perfumes, plus some miscellaneous furniture which more properly belonged in the over-filled Antechamber. Work proceeded slowly and methodically, following tried and tested patterns, until the final piece was removed from the Annexe on 15 December. Attention then switched to the conservation lab and to the large shrines, which were still stacked in pieces in the Antechamber.
The Final Seasons: 1928 – 30
The 1928 – 9 season was a peaceful one, although the team was plagued with illnesses. The 1929 – 30 season proved more tricky. With the work almost ended, Lady Carnarvon had given up her concession and, from 1930 onwards, all costs were met by the Egyptian government. This caused problems for Carter, who, as a foreigner with no official position, suddenly found himself locked out of the tomb and the lab. His knee-jerk response – to argue that the steel gates, locks and keys actually belonged to Lady Carnarvon rather than to the Antiquities Service – did little to help resolve the issue. Finally it was agreed that the keys would be held by a local Antiquities Service Inspector, who would arrive every day to unlock the tombs.
The last piece of shrine was removed from Tutankhamen's tomb in November 1930. Conservation work continued for another year, and it was not until February 1932 that the last consignment of grave goods was sent to Cairo. Carter's long labour was finally over and he was free to turn his attention to the academic publication of his work.
Carter never did finish the publication of Tutankhamen's tomb. This may explain why he never received any official recognition for his life's work. What few academic honours he did receive came from abroad. In 1924 he received an honorary science doctorate from Yale, and that same year he became a corresponding member of the Royal Academy of History in Madrid. He received a decoration from the King of Egypt in 1926, and a decoration from the King of Belgium in 1932. Given that he lived in an age when prominent British archaeologists and Egyptologists were routinely rewarded with knighthoods – Sirs Flinders Petrie, Leonard Woolley, Max Mallowan, Mortimer Wheeler and Alan Gardiner were either contemporaries, or near-contemporaries – he might reasonably have expected something similar. His lack of a patron, lack of a supporting institution and, perhaps, lack of breeding did not help his cause, but it may simply be that his
own complex personality was to blame. Opinion among his contemporaries seems to have been more or less equally divided over whether Carter was simply shy and insecure about his lack of formal education, or an overbearingly arrogant boor.
 
8. Tutankhamen's ‘wishing cup': a calcite vessel in the form of a lotus.
Carter died in London on 2 March 1939. After an unimpressive, ill-attended funeral he was buried in a nondescript grave in Putney Vale Cemetery. A simple headstone commemorated ‘Howard Carter, Archaeologist and Egyptologist, 1874 – 1939'.
25
His grave was then more or less forgotten so that when, in 1991, archaeologist Paul Bahn arrived to pay his respects to perhaps the most famous archaeologist in history, the stone surround was broken and it was barely possible to read the epitaph. Bahn wrote an article for
Archaeology
magazine in the United States, suggesting that something should be done to restore the grave for the seventieth anniversary of the discovery of Tutankhamen's tomb, and readers started to send in cheques.
26
Inevitably,
The Times
picked up the story. When the British Museum stepped in to commission a new gravestone, the cheques were returned to the
generous American readers. Today his grave bears a more splendid stone, dedicated to ‘Howard Carter, Egyptologist, Discoverer of the tomb of Tutankhamen 1922. Born 9 May 1874, Died, 2 March 1939.' There are two quotations from hieroglyphic texts. ‘Oh night, spread thy wings over me as the imperishable stars', a version of the hymn to the sky goddess Nut, which is inscribed inside many New Kingdom coffins, is on the foot of the surround. The headstone bears an abbreviated form of the prayer engraved on Tutankhamen's ‘wishing cup':
May your spirit live, may you spend millions of years, you who love Thebes, sitting with your face to the north wind, your eyes beholding happiness.
4
INVENTORY
First they saw three magnificent State couches, all gilt, with exquisite carving and heads of Typhon
[Seth]
, Hathor and lion … Two life-sized bituminized statues of the king, with gold work holding a golden stick and mace, faced each other, the handsome features, the feet, and the hands, delicately carved, with eyes of glass and head-dress richly studded with gems. There were also four chariots, the sides of which were encrusted with semi-precious stones and rich gold decoration. These were dismantled, with a charioteer's apron of leopard's skin hanging over the seat … There were some remarkable wreaths, still looking evergreen, and one of the boxes contained rolls of papyri, which are expected to render a mass of information.
The Times
1
The box of papyri – Tutankhamen's library – caused great excitement. As the linguist charged with decoding the tomb's texts, Gardiner outlined its importance for readers of
The Times
:
My own predilections lead me to be particularly interested in the box of papyri which has been found. It is possible – it is even probable – that the papyri will turn out to be no more than ‘Books of the Dead' as they are called, such as were buried with practically every king and person of note, and which consisted of incantations ensuring the dead king's welfare in the other world. On the other hand, these documents may throw some light on the change from the religion of the heretics back to the old traditional religion, and that would be extremely interesting.
2
Unfortunately, the library proved to be a less than exciting box of discoloured linen rolls. The
Daily Mail,
no great friend to Carter, dismissed them as ‘simply folded table napkins'; they have since been tentatively identified as Tutankhamen's loincloths. Much to everyone's great surprise, the tomb yielded no original or personal writings and, although there were extracts from the standard funerary texts engraved on some of the grave goods, there was just one badly decayed and essentially uninformative scrap of papyrus recovered from the mummy itself. Gardiner was far less optimistic when he next shared his thoughts with
The Times
:
What students of Egyptian history and philology long for is not a corrupt, garbled version of ancient funerary spells such as a papyrus of the ‘Book of the Dead' belonging to this period would undoubtedly present, but rather a series of letters, journals, or archives of some sort that could throw light upon the stirring times in which King Tutankhamen lived, or upon his conversion from the Aten heresy back to the faith of his forefathers.
The hope that any such documents will emerge is, we must admit, but a very faint one. Probably in the end the claim of the new tomb to be the greatest discovery ever made in Egypt will rest mainly on the great quantity of objects found and their amazingly high artistic quality. The historical harvest will be of less importance.
3
It was natural that Gardiner felt some disappointment. Technology and material culture, no matter how beautiful, would never excite a linguist, while a library of scrolls, or even a simple family tree, would have given a welcome boost to the understanding of the complex history of the late 18th Dynasty royal family. However, Gardiner was wrong in his supposition that Tutankhamen's mute grave goods would be valued primarily for their artistic quality. As Egyptology has developed into a science rather than a language-based discipline, items that in his day were essentially ornate dead ends are starting to yield an unexpected harvest. It is now recognised that every artefact, no matter how superficially mundane, has a story to tell. This phenomenon is particularly well illustrated by a consideration of the textiles recovered from the tomb.

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