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Authors: Joyce Tyldesley

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A NOTE ON TOMBS AND TOMB NUMBERS
The Theban west bank is honeycombed with tombs of all ages, some royal and some private. Starting in the 18th Dynasty, the New Kingdom pharaohs chose to be buried alongside some of their more important courtiers in rock-cut tombs cut into the remote Valley of the Kings. During the 19th Dynasty the nearby Valley of the Queens was developed as a cemetery for some of the more important royal wives and their children.
In AD 1827 John Gardner Wilkinson surveyed the twenty-one known tombs in the Valley of the Kings. Each tomb was given a number, allocated as he came to it. Today it is possible, by following his number sequence, to see that he walked first from the Valley entrance southwards, then turned towards the east. His system has continued into modern times, with the tombs now being numbered in the chronological order of their discovery, so that in 1922 Tutankhamen's tomb was designated KV (or King's Valley) 62. When, in 2005/6, the next ‘tomb' was discovered by a team led by Dr Otto Schaden, it became KV 63. KV 64 is a suspected tomb, discovered by radar, while KV 65 is a suspected tomb entrance. The next tomb to be discovered will become KV 66, and so on. Just twenty-five of the KV tombs are royal tombs. The others were built for
Egypt's non-royal elite; KV 46, for example, is the tomb of Yuya and Thuya, parents of the formidable Queen Tiy and, perhaps, great-grandparents of Tutankhamen. Some are not even tombs; KV 54 is a simple, stone-lined pit, while KV 63 appears to be a storage chamber.
The tombs in the Western Valley, an offshoot of the main or Eastern Valley, are given interchangeable WV or KV numbers, so that the tomb of Amenhotep III can be either KV 22 or WV 22, the tomb of Ay either KV 23 or WV 23. Tombs in the Valley of the Queens are given QV numbers, tombs in the Deir el-Bahri bay are given DB numbers and other Theban tombs have TT numbers.
A NOTE ON THE NUMBERING OF TUTANKHAMEN'S GRAVE GOODS
Tutankhamen's tomb yielded 5,398 separate finds. Howard Carter assigned every object, or group of objects, a number from 1 to 620, with letters used for subdivisions (atypically, Find 620 was given numbered subdivisions). The finds were numbered as they were recorded, as follows:
Find 1 – 3: Outside the tomb and staircase
Find 4: First doorway
Find 5 – 12: Passageway
Find 13: Second doorway
Find 14 – 170: Antechamber (28 being the blocked doorway to the Burial Chamber)
Find 171: Annexe blocking
Find 172 – 260: Burial Chamber (256 being Tutankhamen's mummy)
Find 261 – 336: Treasury
Find 337 – 620: Annexe
Subsequently, as they were received by Cairo Museum, each object was given a ‘
journal d'entrée'
museum number. For example, the first object to be officially removed from the tomb, a beautifully painted
chest filled with children's garments, was Carter's number 21, and this became JE61467.
The vast majority of Tutankhamen's grave goods are currently displayed in Cairo Museum. There is a subsidiary exhibition in Luxor Museum, and the botanical material is in the Cairo Agricultural Museum. Some of the larger shrines are in storage in Luxor. Tutankhamen himself still rests in his tomb in the Valley of the Kings.
Even today, the tomb and its contents remain substantially unpublished, although there are occasional volumes written by experts and dedicated to individual and somewhat diverse components of the grave goods such as footwear, chariots and gaming boxes. The Griffith Institute at Oxford University, repository of Carter's papers, has done a great deal to remedy this deficiency by making Carter's diaries and his meticulous records and drawings, plus the diaries of Arthur Mace, notes taken by Alfred Lucas and the numerous photographs taken by Harry Burton, available online in
Tutankhamun: Anatomy of an Excavation:
www.griffith.ox.ac.uk/gri/4tut.html
. Meanwhile Nicholas Reeves's comprehensive
Complete Tutankhamen
(1990) provides a scholarly yet accessible introduction to the tomb and a detailed analysis of its contents for non-specialist readers. There are many other Tutankhamen-themed works aimed at different audiences, some good, some less so, others decidedly bad. The difficulty, for the non-expert, is to sort the wheat from the chaff. As a general rule of thumb, any book that refers to the king as ‘Tut', and his wife as ‘Ankhy'or ‘Patty', and any book that includes the word ‘truth' on its cover, is best avoided.
INTRODUCTION: TUTANKHAMEN'S MANY CURSES
It was a thrilling moment for an excavator. Alone, save for my native workmen, I found myself, after years of comparatively unproductive labour, on the threshold of what might prove to be a magnificent discovery. Anything, literally anything, might lie beyond that passage, and it needed all my self-control to keep from breaking down the doorway and investigating then and there.
Howard Carter
1
On 4 November 1922 labourers employed by Lord Carnarvon and his archaeological partner Howard Carter discovered a flight of steps leading down to the lost tomb of the 18th Dynasty Egyptian king Tutankhamen. The tomb was virtually intact and Tutankhamen's mummified body still lay within, protected by a nest of golden coffins and surrounded by a vast array of slightly dusty but still glittering grave goods. This discovery – Egypt's first near-complete royal burial – provoked unprecedented media interest. Reporters flocked to Egypt,
where they perched on the stone wall surrounding the tomb and irritated the naturally taciturn Carter almost to breaking point. Pushed by their editors to write about the most exciting discovery ever made, yet denied access to the tomb and its contents, the journalists published a highly entertaining mixture of fact and fiction spiced with a dash of vitriol aimed at the archaeologists.
Tutankhamen's was by no means the first mummy to be discovered, nor the most important, yet he quickly became a celebrity and, like all celebrities, was featured relentlessly in newspapers and journals. As ‘Tut-mania' gripped the West, Egyptology, no longer the dull refuge of earnest scholars and library-bound academics, acquired a popular appeal that was reflected in fashion, architecture and fiction. Meanwhile in Egypt, an increasingly independent country struggling to enter the modern world, the discovery raised uncomfortable questions about colonialism, the ownership of Egypt's past, and the right of the archaeologist to mine a foreign land for knowledge, profit or personal glory. Things would never be quite the same again.
For me, like many of my generation, Tutankhamen provided an introduction to the hot and glamorous world of the pharaohs. I was born and raised in Bolton, Lancashire, some 2,600 geographical miles from the Valley of the Kings, and far, far away in terms of heat and glamour. Damp, prosaic Bolton – an ex-mill town – is, however, a remarkably good place for an aspiring Egyptologist to live. The nineteenth-century entrepreneurs who made their fortunes from the cotton trade developed a strong interest in ancient Egypt and its possible links to the Bible. Driven by a need to amass not just knowledge but actual artefacts, they sailed along the Nile collecting souvenirs ranging from the smallest of beads to full-sized coffined mummies. Back home they expanded their collections by buying from antiquities dealers, and they financed archaeological digs that entitled them to a share of the excavated finds. Their private acquisitions eventually made their way into local museums, so that Bolton, Burnley,
Blackburn, Liverpool, Macclesfield and Manchester (to name just a few) are today blessed with extraordinarily rich Egyptology collections. As a child, of course, all this passed me by. It seemed perfectly natural that Lancashire's museums should be packed with exotic Egyptian treasures. If I thought about it at all, I assumed that all museums were similarly well endowed.
In 1972 the ‘Treasures of Tutankhamen' exhibition arrived at the British Museum, bringing with it an assortment of artefacts including the king's iconic funerary mask. Almost overnight, a new wave of Tutmania swept over Britain. Colour television, still something of a novelty, showed the grave goods in all their golden glory and, as Tutankhamen invaded the nation's living rooms, viewers were introduced to a past very different to the classical history learned in school. Well over a million visitors were inspired to make their way to the British Museum to see for themselves. So infectious was the atmosphere that the brave (some might say foolish) decision was made to take my entire school to London. A train was chartered, and by the time it was realised that we could not travel on the day that schools had priority access to the Museum, it hardly seemed to matter. Off we went, hundreds of girls armed with packed lunches and waterproof coats. The day itself could not be counted as an unqualified success: having first visited the Science Museum and the Tower of London we ran out of time and, after queuing for an hour or so in the grounds of the British Museum we left, clutching posters and postcards but without having actually seen the king himself. It would be another ten years before I gazed at Tutankhamen's golden face in an almost empty Cairo Museum. Nevertheless, my latent interest in Egyptology had been kindled, and there was no going back. This Tutankhamen-inspired fixation with ancient Egypt may well be my own, personal version of Tutankhamen's curse.
I am able to make the suggestion that I have been cursed by Tutankhamen quite lightly, because I don't believe that ancient curses
– either real or imagined – can have any effect on the modern world unless we allow them to. In fact, I have to come clean and admit that I don't believe in curses at all. However, there are many who do indeed believe, and who see Tutankhamen's curse as a very serious matter: a deadly protection derived from an archaic, esoteric knowledge, used by the necropolis priests to guard the dead king and his tomb. This protection can take many forms, ranging from the magical and unverifiable (deadly spells and elemental spirits) to the more scientific and physical (hidden ‘biosecurity' measures, pathogens and poisons). Believers – and a quick trawl of the internet confirms that there are many, each armed with a slightly different version of ‘the truth' – accept that this curse somehow killed Lord Carnarvon within five months of the opening of the tomb, simply because he financed the archaeological mission that desecrated the burial. The curse then went on to kill others linked either directly or indirectly with Tutankhamen, using a variety of ingenious and, to the sceptic, needlessly perverse means.
Carnarvon's sudden death thrust his archaeological partner into an unwelcome limelight, so that today we remember Carter as the driving force behind the Tutankhamen mission while Carnarvon is relegated to the role of genial and generous backer with a passing infatuation for ancient Egypt.
2
Their contemporaries, however, understood that the tomb belonged fairly and squarely to Carnarvon. The initial report of the discovery, published in
The Times
on 30 November 1922, makes this very clear. Headlined ‘Great find at Thebes. Lord Carnarvon's long quest', it tells how ‘for nearly sixteen years Lord Carnarvon, with the assistance of Mr Howard Carter, has been carrying out excavations on the west bank of the Nile at Luxor'. The next day's
Times
carried a ‘tribute to Lord Carnarvon', written by Sir E. A. Wallis Budge, Keeper of Egyptian Antiquities at the British Museum, which started ‘The news of the very important Egyptian discovery which has been made by Lord Carnarvon and his trusty helper, Mr
Howard Carter, is one which will send a thrill of pleasure throughout the whole of the archaeological world.' This is Tutankhamen's story, and not Carter's. Yet Carter's personality and behaviour so influence our understanding of the discovery and emptying of the tomb that it is impossible to consider one without the other. Anyone interested in reading more about Carter's life should start with James's thought-provoking biography
Howard Carter: The Path to Tutankhamen
(1992). Unfortunately, there is no equivalent biography of Lord Carnarvon and, as much of the family archive was destroyed during the Second World War, there may never be one.
For Carter, the discovery of a warehouse-like set of chambers crammed with fragile artefacts proved both a blessing and a curse, as it forced him to assume a diplomatic role for which he was supremely ill-suited. Tutankhamen brought Carter a great deal of fame and some fortune, but little of the academic recognition that he might reasonably have expected. Effectively, his great find brought his career as an excavator to an end. He was to devote the rest of his life to Tutankhamen's grave goods, dying before the academic publication of his work was anywhere near complete. This means that much of our information about the excavation of the tomb comes from popular sources: private writings, Carter's own books, and contemporary newspapers,
The Times
in particular, which carried regular reports of events in the Valley. I have used these writings to convey a flavour of the wonder and excitement with which the excavators, and the general public, welcomed Tutankhamen to the modern world.
Many Egyptologists would argue that the true curse of Tutankhamen is the fixation that the general public, thoroughly egged on by the media, has developed with the king at the expense of the rest of Egypt's long history. Our overwhelming interest in Tutankhamen has effectively distorted our perception of the past so that, almost a century after his rediscovery, and more than 3,000 years after his death, ‘Tut' – we are so familiar with him that we even accord him a
friendly nickname – remains the ultimate ancient-world celebrity. Only Nefertiti and Cleopatra VII can approach his superstar status. Ramesses II ‘The Great' lags some way behind, while Senwosret III and Pseusennes II and many others – magnificent, heroic god-kings once widely celebrated for their mighty deeds – are remembered only by those who have made a special study of Egyptian history. As the newly revealed Tutankhamen surfed the zeitgeist, two spectacular, near-contemporary discoveries, Leonard Woolley's 1920s excavation of the royal death pits in the Mesopotamian city of Ur, and Pierre Montet's 1939 excavation of the near-intact Third Intermediate Period royal tombs at the Egyptian city of Tanis, failed to capture the public imagination.
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