English, asked by vishugpt, 5 hours ago

Write a report on discovering tut

Answers

Answered by allibliyashwanth
1

Answer:

Summary of Discovering Tut: the Saga Continues

A.R. Williams is the writer of this chapter. Moreover, this chapter is regarding the last heir of the great Pharaoh Dynasty, Tutankhamun. He died in his teenage after ruling for 9 years. His death gave birth to a mystery. This chapter talks about all the possible mysteries: the curse, where his tomb is lying, his whole life and finally his death. Discovering tut: the saga continues summary will give you all the facts and information about the death of Tut.

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Answered by deepraj26101
2

Answer:

AN angry wind stirred up ghostly dust devils as King Tut was taken

from his resting place in the ancient Egyptian cemetery known as

the Valley of the Kings*. Dark-bellied clouds had scudded across

the desert sky all day and now were veiling the stars in casket

grey. It was 6 p.m. on 5 January 2005. The world’s most famous

mummy glided head first into a CT scanner brought here to probe

the lingering medical mysteries of this little understood young ruler

who died more than 3,300 years ago.

All afternoon the usual line of tourists from around the world

had descended into the cramped, rock-cut tomb some 26 feet

underground to pay their respects. They gazed at the murals on the

walls of the burial chamber and peered at Tut’s gilded face, the most

striking feature of his mummy-shaped outer coffin lid. Some visitors

read from guidebooks in a whisper. Others stood silently, perhaps

pondering Tut’s untimely death in his late teens, or wondering with

a shiver if the pharaoh’s curse — death or misfortune falling upon

those who disturbed him — was really true.

“The mummy is in very bad condition because of what Carter

did in the 1920s,” said Zahi Hawass, Secretary General of Egypt’s

Supreme Council of Antiquities, as he leaned over the body for a

long first look. Carter—Howard Carter, that is — was the British

archaeologist who in 1922 discovered Tut’s tomb after years of

futile searching. Its contents, though hastily ransacked in antiquity,

were surprisingly complete. They remain the richest royal collection

ever found and have become part of the pharaoh’s legend. Stunning

artefacts in gold, their eternal brilliance meant to guarantee

resurrection, caused a sensation at the time of the discovery —

and still get the most attention. But Tut was also buried with

everyday things he’d want in the afterlife: board games, a bronze

razor, linen undergarments, cases of food and wine.

After months of carefully recording the pharaoh’s funerary

treasures, Carter began investigating his three nested coffins.

Opening the first, he found a shroud adorned with garlands of

willow and olive leaves, wild celery, lotus petals, and cornflowers,

the faded evidence of a burial in March or April. When he finally

reached the mummy, though, he ran into trouble. The ritual resins

had hardened, cementing Tut to the bottom of his solid gold coffin.

“No amount of legitimate force could move them,” Carter wrote

later. “What was to be done?”

The sun can beat down like a hammer this far south in Egypt,

and Carter tried to use it to loosen the resins. For several hours

* See map on next page

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