"King tut is.... in death regally ahead of his country men"How far do you agree with the assertion and why?
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Answers
King Tut, in death as in life was regally ahead of his countrymen because he was the first mummy to be examined by computed tomography or a CT scan which would perform a diagnostic imaging in order to arrive at the cause of his death. In life, he had been fabulously rich as a young pharaoh and treated above the rest and even in death, he continued to hold that power of intriguing people who employed the latest in archaelogical technology in order to ascertain how he died and at what age. King Tut's demise had been a major event even by royal standards, he had been the last of his family line. His body would now be scanned from head to toe, first of the countless mummies in the Egyptian Mummy Project by a portable CT machine donated by the National Geographic Society and its manufacturer Siemens.
Answer:
King Tut is, in fact in death regally ahead of his countrymen.
Explanation:
- The death King Tut’s was a great event because in his family he was last one and his death knell for dynasty.
- After his death he had no surviving children. After him there were two short-term pharaohs and then new dynasty began with Ramses
- Initially Tut was known as Tutan khtaen.
- He was the son of Ankhenaten, who had attempted to overturn long history of Egyptian gods and replace it with a monotheism worshiping Aten.
- During his life-time he was forced to compromise or capitulate to powerful old beliefs.
- King Tut, in death as in life was regally ahead of his countrymen because he was the first mummy to be examined by computed tomography or a CT scan.
- The scan would perform a diagnostic imaging in order to arrive at the cause of his death.
- In life, he had been fabulously rich as a young pharaoh and treated above the rest and even after his death, he continued to hold that power of intriguing people who employed the latest in archaelogical technology in order to ascertain how he had died and at what age.
- King Tut's mummy was first of the countless mummies in the Egyptian Mummy Project by a portable CT machine donated by the National Geographic Society and its manufacturer Siemens.