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Authors: Joyce Tyldesley

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When, in 1707, Father Claude Sicard, a determined Jesuit missionary, travelled to the small and insignificant town of Luxor, he became the first European to recognise and record the true nature of the Valley and its tombs:
These sepulchres of Thebes are tunnelled into the rock and are of astonishing depth. Halls, rooms, all are painted from top to bottom. The variety of colours, which are almost as fresh as the day they were painted, gives an admirable effect. There are as many hieroglyphs as there are animals and objects represented, which makes us suppose that we have there the story of the lives, virtues, acts, combats and victories of the princes who are buried there, but it is impossible for us to decipher them for the present.
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Others soon followed. In 1743 the Reverend Richard Pococke's
Description of the East and Some Other Countries
fascinated his readers while providing a highly inaccurate plan of the tombs that would baffle archaeologists for many years to come:
The vale where these grottos are, may be about one hundred yards wide. There are signs of about eighteen of them. However, it is to be remarked that Diodorus says seventeen of them only remained till the time of the Ptolemies; and I found the entrances to about that number, most of which he says were destroyed in his time, and now there are only nine that can be entered into. The hills on each side are steep rocks, and the whole place is covered with rough stones that seem to have rolled from them; the grottos are cut into the rock in a most beautiful manner in long rooms or galleries under the mountains…The galleries are mostly about ten feet wide and high; four or five of these galleries, one within another, from thirty to fifty feet long, and from ten to fifteen feet high, generally lead to a spacious room, in which is seen the tomb of the King, with his figure cut in relief on
the lid, as I saw it on one. In the furthermost room of another, the picture of the King is painted on the stone at full length; both the sides and ceilings of the rooms are cut with hieroglyphics of birds and beasts, and some of them painted, being as fresh as if they were but just finished, though they must be above two thousand years old…
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In 1798 Napoleon's Commission – a band of scientists, historians and artists charged with recording Egypt ancient and modern – arrived to count a mere eleven tombs in the main Valley plus one in the Western Valley. Publication of their survey, as part of the
Description de l'Égypte
(1809 – 29), coincided with the culmination of Jean-François Champollion's work on the decoding of the hieroglyphic script. Suddenly, it was possible for scholars to read the texts that decorated the tomb and temple walls while the texts themselves were, for the first time, available to stay-at-home scholars via the plates of the
Description
. As her king-lists were deciphered, Egypt's lost history was restored and Egyptology became a proper, respectable subject for academic study. Museums that had once regarded Egyptian artefacts as beautiful but meaningless ‘dead ends' – unlike Greek and Roman artefacts, which had always been recognised as both beautiful and relevant to the development of Western civilisation – were now increasingly interested in acquiring them.
Explorers and treasure-hunters were drawn to the Valley. These first Egyptologists had no idea that the royal mummies had already been removed from their tombs, and their hope was always that an intact royal burial would be found. Theirs was not a pure, academic curiosity: enough non-royal burials had been recovered to suggest that a royal tomb would be packed with grave-goods which could be sold at great profit to the growing number of private and institutional collectors in the west. Finding the royal tombs was not, in fact, too difficult: from 1816 – 17 the ex-circus strongman Giovanni Battista Belzoni used his practical engineering skills to locate eight, including the
tomb of Ay. But, although they yielded occasional random artefacts, none of the tombs was intact.
The missing kings would not be discovered until the 1870s, when Ahmed el-Rassul, a member of a notorious family of tomb robbers, discovered the hidden entrance to the tomb of the High Priest Pinodjem II. As we have already seen, this tomb housed not only the Third Intermediate Period Pinodjem family burials, but an entirely separate cache of New Kingdom royal mummies. Because the royal mummies had already been stripped of all valuables, the el-Rassul brothers concentrated on the Pinodjem family grave goods. They were able to sell a series of illustrated papyri, bronze vessels, figurines and at least one mummy before their dealings attracted the attention of the Antiquities Service. On 6 July 1881 the el-Rassuls revealed the whereabouts of the tomb and Émile Brugsch, the representative of the Cairo Museum, was lowered down the shaft. To his amazement, he discovered a chamber packed with coffined and labelled mummies including the 18th Dynasty kings Ahmose, Amenhotep I, Tuthmosis I (a disputed mummy), Tuthmosis II and Tuthmosis III. A second chamber held the recently desecrated burials of the Pinodjem family.
Meanwhile, French Egyptologist Victor Loret had started to explore the Valley of the Kings. He was to discover sixteen tombs, but his most important discovery, in 1898, was the tomb of Amenhotep II (KV 35). Lying in the tomb passageway he found an anonymous male mummy stuck to a model boat. Within the Burial Chamber he found the king himself, stripped of all valuables and re-wrapped, but lying in his original quartzite sarcophagus. A sealed side chamber yielded three unwrapped, unconfined and unlabelled New Kingdom mummies lying side by side, each with a hole in the head and a damaged abdomen, while a second side chamber held nine plain coffins bearing royal names including those of the 18th Dynasty Tuthmosis IV and Amenhotep III.
Within just seventeen years, almost all the 18th Dynasty kings had
been rediscovered. Still missing were Hatshepsut, Akhenaten, Smenkhkare, Tutankhamen, Ay and Horemheb. Ay, however, had an open tomb in the Western Valley, while Akhenaten had an open tomb at Amarna. Hatshepsut's pillaged tomb would be identified in 1903 (KV 20); Horemheb's equally pillaged tomb in 1908 (KV 57). By 1910 only Smenkhkare and Tutankhamen lacked both a mummy and a tomb. Excavators searching for an intact 18th Dynasty royal tomb were effectively looking for these two relatively unknown characters.
The 19th Dynasty Ramesside kings were arrivistes, a military family from the north who, in order to justify their right to rule, consistently emphasised their links with Egypt's earlier kings. The temples that the commoner-born kings Seti I and Ramesses II built at Abydos therefore included King Lists: lines of ‘ancestor' pharaohs inscribed in chronological order. These lists omitted Akhenaten, Smenkhkare, Tutankhamen and Ay, passing directly from the well-respected Amenhotep III to the equally well-respected Horemheb. Excluded from Egypt's official history, Akhenaten and his immediate successors became non-kings: their reigns, totalling maybe thirty years, had never officially happened. Modern observers find this blatant falsification of history difficult to accept. To a people who accepted that the written word might have magical properties, however, it made perfect sense. History could and indeed must be corrected to reflect events as they should have been.
Fortunately, the missing kings had left enough textual and archaeological evidence to confirm the existence of the ‘Amarna Period' – the period when Egypt was ruled from the city of Amarna – and Egyptologists were in general agreement that the omitted reigns slotted into the late 18th Dynasty as follows:
• Amenhotep III: ruling from Thebes and Memphis
• Akhenaten (initially known as Amenhotep IV): ruling first from Thebes, then from Amarna
• Akhenaten with Smenkhkare as co-regent: ruling from Amarna
• Smenkhkare: ruling from Amarna
• Tutankhamen: ruling initially from Amarna, then from Thebes and Memphis
• Ay: ruling from Thebes and Memphis
• Horemheb: ruling from Thebes and Memphis
• Ramesses I: first king of the 19th Dynasty
The exact sequence of events surrounding the death of Akhenaten was, however, hazy, and the relationship between Akhenaten, Smenkhkare and Tutankhamen was uncertain, although the succession following the death of Tutankhamen was clear. As his immediate successor, Smenkhkare was generally assumed to have been Akhenaten's son. Egyptologist Percy Newberry, influenced by the florid Amarna art-style, felt able to draw a very different conclusion. Here he describes a round-topped limestone stela, a votive dedicated by the soldier Pasi, carved with an image of two kings, seated side by side on a couch. One king wears the double crown of Upper and Lower Egypt, the other wears the blue crown:
The two royal personages here are undoubtedly Akhenaten and his co-regent Semenekhkare [sic]. The intimate relations between the Pharaoh and the boy as shown by the scene on this stela recall the relationship between the Emperor Hadrian and the youth Antinous.
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In fact Newberry was letting his imagination run away with him. It is not possible to determine who the two ‘kings' are, as the
cartouches which would have recorded their names are empty. While one is almost universally recognised as Akhenaten, the other has been variously identified as Smenkhkare, Nefertiti or Amenhotep III. Whatever their relationship, Smenkhkare was closely associated with Akhenaten as his co-regent. Like Akhenaten, he had ruled and died at Amarna and, while he was occasionally mentioned outside that city, he had almost certainly been buried in the Amarna royal tomb. It was therefore highly unlikely that his tomb would be discovered at Thebes.
Writing in 1917, for a non-specialist readership, the Reverend James Baikie, author of many popular books on Egypt and the Near East, told all that was known of Smenkhkare and Tutankhamen:
[Akhenaten]… While he had six daughters, he had no son to succeed him. He had, indeed, married some of his daughters to powerful nobles, and towards the end of his reign he associated with himself on the throne the husband of Mery-aten, his eldest daughter, a noble named Smenkhara [sic]…
His successor, Smenkhkara, enjoyed only a brief lease of power, and practically nothing is known of his reign. In turn he was succeeded by Tutankhaten who had married Akhenaten's third daughter Ank-s-en-pa-aten…
Tutankhamen seems to have made some attempt to regain a little of the old ascendancy in Syria; but no details are known of an effort which can scarcely have been very successful. The Great Eighteenth Dynasty dribbled miserably to a close in the person of the Divine Father Ay …
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Five years later, E. Wallis Budge, Keeper of Egyptology at the British Museum, was able to summarise Tutankhamen's life and reign in just six sentences:
Our knowledge of the life and times of this king is small. His reign cannot have lasted more than six years; but he is extremely important
as showing that during his reign the famous heresy of the disc worshippers came to an end. He married a daughter of Amenhotep IV, now better know perhaps as Akhenaten… Tutankhamen succeeded to the throne of Egypt through his marriage with the daughter of Amenhotep IV, but very soon after he began to reign he saw that the cult of the Aten was doomed and he promptly eliminated the name of Aten from his own name and from that of his wife, and moved his capital from Tall-al-Amarnah back to Thebes. Here he at once proceeded to undo the evil which his father-in-law had perpetuated in the city. In a very short time the city at Akhuenaten (Tall-al-Amarnah) was deserted by the inhabitants, and fell into ruin, and the old cult of Amen was set upon a firmer basis in Egypt than before, if possible, by Tutankhamen.
6
Tutankhamen was understood to have been Akhenaten's son-in-law. However, while he, too, had lived at Amarna, many of his monuments and texts had been discovered at Thebes. There had been a handful of finds at Memphis, Abydos and Gurob, and his name had even been mentioned outside Egypt, in Nubia and Palestine. Tutankhamen, unlike Smenkhkare, was not purely an Amarna king. The ‘Restoration Stela' – a large carved stone slab originally erected to stand before the third Pylon, or gateway, of the Karnak temple – confirmed this. Its thirty lines of text told how Tutankhamen worked to restore Egypt and her traditional gods after the tribulations of the Amarna Period:
The good ruler; who does things beneficial to his Father and all the gods, he has made that which was in ruins to flourish as a monument of eternal age; he has suppressed wrongdoing throughout the Two Lands; Truth is established, [he causes] falsehood to be the abomination of the land… Now when His Majesty arose as king, the temples of the gods and goddesses, beginning from Elephantine [down] to the
marshes of the Delta, had fallen into neglect, their shrines had fallen into desolation and become tracts overgrown with weeds, their sanctuaries were as if they had never been, their halls were a trodden path. The land was in confusion, the gods forsook this land. If an [army? was] sent to Djahy to widen the frontiers of Egypt, it met with no success at all. If one prayed to a god to ask things of him, [in no wise] did he come. If one made supplication to a goddess in like manner, in no wise did she come. Their hearts were weak of themselves (with anger); they destroyed what had been done.
After some days had passed by this, [His Majesty appeared] on the throne of his father; he ruled the countries of Horus, the Black Land and the Red Land were under his dominion, and every land was in obeisance to his might. Behold His Majesty was in his palace… Then His Majesty took counsel with his heart, searching out every excellent occasion, seeking what was beneficial to his father Amun… And His Majesty has made monuments for the gods, [fashioning] their statues of real fine-gold, the best of foreign lands, building anew their sanctuaries as monuments of eternal age, they being endowed with property for ever, establishing for them divine gifts as a lasting daily sacrifice, and supplying them with food-offerings upon earth. He has added to what was in former time, he has [surpassed that] done since the time of the ancestors, he has inducted priests and prophets, children of the notables of their towns, each the son of a noted man, and one whose name is known; he has multiplied their [wealth?] with gold, silver, bronze and copper, without limit of [all things?], he has filled their storehouses with slaves, men and women, the fruit of His Majesty's plundering. All the [possessions?] of the temples are doubled, trebled and quadrupled with silver, gold, lapis-lazuli, turquoise, all rare costly stones, royal linen, white cloth, fine linen, olive oil…
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