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New Spin on King Tut
Written by René O'Deay   
Friday, 19 October 2007
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New Spin on King Tut
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What makes Tales of King Tut: Sun Child, Prince of Egypt, different from other novels?

This fascinating and tragic character captured the world’s imagination when his tomb in the Valley of the Kings was discovered in 1922 and still continues to entrance almost 100 years later.


Sun Child, Prince of Egypt has a new more positive spin than others have offered without haring off into unacceptable theories. In the series, ‘Tales of King Tut’: Prince Tut is charming, considerate, a natural born leader, a child genius who becomes King of the World and seizes the reins of power and magic.



Last Updated ( Sunday, 09 December 2007 )
 
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Reference Articles on Egyptian Religion and Magic, I've posted on my blog and here.
With Links to Online Texts. I'll add to this as we go along.
 

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Everything About Magic

The Magic of King Tut








The Latest from My 360

Blasts from the Past

Books, History, Ancient Egypt, King Tut

First Edition of Sun Child, Prince of Egypt

I am so proud to announce the publication of my novel:

Sun Child, Prince of Egypt --Tales of King Tut


Now available online at my
eStore.

Soon will be available on Amazon too!

For more information on the novel and research visit:
Tales of King Tut.com

Newly designed cover as above
300 pages 6 x 9 format

Wishing all a Happy Christmas and a Merry New Year!

René O'Deay



King Tut Exhibit returns to US This Fall

The King Tut Exhibit is returning to the US, But it is not the same exhibit. New artifacts are to be included in the tour, and since the Exhibit is planned for two venues at about the same time, different items in each.

The Atlanta exhibit, "Tutankhamun: The Golden King and the Great Pharaohs," is scheduled for the Atlanta Civic Center from Nov. 15 to May 22, 2009, sponsored by the Michael C. Carter Museum of Emory University.

The original exhibit, TUTANKHAMUN AND THE GOLDEN AGE OF THE PHARAOHS, is scheduled to return to the US in Dallas on October 3, 2008. The exhibit at the Dallas Museum of Art will include the original 130 artifacts plus some extras that will be announced later. The exhibit is scheduled for Oct 3 to May 17, 2009.

The Atlanta exhibit will have 50 treasures from King Tut's tomb, plus a recreation of the four rooms of the tomb, and 70 artifacts representing a broad expanse of Ancient Egypt's history. A collossal statue of King Tut never seen before in the US will also be exhibited. There will also be three more destinations to be announced.

Since they are two very different exhibits, it will be hard to choose which one to go to. Perhaps the rising price of gas will be the deciding factor for many.

Are you going to go to one or both of them? Which one?

I want to go to both.


René O'Deay



Rumors of a New Tomb in the Valley of the Kings

Recent rumors on the net and in Mysteries magazine (German-language) are that a new tomb was discovered in November 2007 in the Valley of the Kings. Speculation about whose tomb it might be run from Rameses III or VIII, Thutmose II, SmenkhKare, Akhenaten or even Nefertiti.
So far the whole discovery has been kept under wraps and recently a new Egyptian exploration team has been appointed by Dr. Zahi Hawass to excavate tombs in the Valley of the Kings. Perhaps this team will be doing the actual excavations.
Supposedly there is more than one possible tomb, but the one in question has stairs similar to the Amarna era which has fueled wild speculation about whose tomb is it.
Hopefully artifacts will be found as beautiful as the coffin mask shown above, discovered in KV63, identity unknown, but in the style of the Amarna era.

René O'Deay


Who Stole King Tut's necklace and cut away his ribs?

Tutankamen's tomb robbed in modern times?

According to a story about a documentary sponsored by the Earl of Carnarvon, King Tut's tomb was plundered during World War II.

So what of the broken ribs and the pharaoh's member, which were both intact when Howard Carter first opened the tomb, but have mysteriously disappeared?

So valuable was the tomb that it has been guarded round the clock since its discovery. However, there was one period when a modern grave robbery might have taken place. During the Second World War when the Egyptian desert was reduced to a battleground.

The latest tests indicate quite clearly that someone must have used this opportunity to deliberately cut away the pharaoh's ribs in order to get tothe jewelled collar he was wearing and which was glued fast to the body by the ancient embalmer's sticky black resin. The extraordinary story of Tutankhamun is not over yet.

Who Stole King Tut's Jewels?
The missing penis showed up when Dr. Hawass conducted the CAT scans on Tut's mummy, within the plain wooden box under his body that Carter left King Tut in.

Now the question is: What happened to that necklace? What happened to the cut-away ribs?

The gallery of Harry Burton's King Tutankhamen photos at the Griffith Institute does not reveal which necklace was left on his body. Though photo P2002 looks promising. Maybe it was a vulture necklace, or? The link takes you to the page that shows Tut's mummy covered in a shroud (P2001), and uncovered (P2003) still with all the splendid jewels and mask, his golden hands and sceptres. But P2000 and P2002 might shock you.

Carter's notes on the mummy of Tut, and what was left on his head

On removing these last two objects it was found that the head wrappings were tied at the back in the manner of a chinon. Note linen headdress. (4S) Beneath more wrappings, a thin sheet gold band exactly similar to (4P) and in similar position was tied beneath the occiput by means of linen tape fastened by knot in centre - (see photo).

Upon the head was placed a sort of skull cap of fine linen and worked upon a design of curve serpent pattern, this was supposed to secure for the dead one a sight of the sun. (4T) This actual skull-cap of the thinnest cambric fabric having device of four uraeii worked with very fine faience and gold beads, the centres of the head of the cobras bearing small cartouches, takes in order sequence the letter 4T, and fits closely to the crown of the head. As it would have been practically impossible to remove this device owing to its fragile nature & minuteness of work, it was consolidated with paraffin wax and left in place.

The beaded skull cap seems to now be missing also. Did Dr. Hawass have them removed? It would have taken many hours of work since the linen cap the beads had been sewn on was too fragile to remove.

In the photo above from the King Tut exhibition website, the skull cap and gold band seem to be still in place.

But they also seem to be missing in the recent photos of King Tut's head when they put his body on display in the Valley of the Kings tomb.

René O'Deay

2007 a good year for Egyptologists

Cairo, December 30 (ANI): As far as discoveries related to Egyptian history are concerned, 2007 has been a very good year for archaeologists so far, says a report.

Excavators carrying out routine excavation or cleaning at various sites in Egypt made a new discovery almost every day.

However, what particularly generated huge interest among archaeologist fraternity was the the identification of the mummy of the female Pharaoh, Queen Hatshepsut, and the uncovering of the real face of the boy-king Tutankhamun, reports Al-Ahram.

The restoration of the Step Pyramid of Djoser, the reopening of the Kuttub Khana, the discovery of a New Kingdom fortress in Sinai, an intact tomb brimming with fine funerary pieces in the Delta and Palaeolithic rock art depicting animals in Upper Egypt, were the other important events that took place during the year.
Hatshepsut's empty sarcophagus, now in the Egyptian Museum, was found alongside that of her father, Tuthmosis I.
2007 has been a good year for Egyptologists - Thaindian News
Nice roundup. Enjoy. Happy New Year!
René O'Deay
Compliments of René
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