Discovered inside the Tomb of King Tutankhamun, inside black resin-covered wooden shrines which were accessible via double doors, were 34 ritual figures. Of significant importance during the ritual ceremony, these statuettes are believed to assist the King Tut's passage to the afterlife. Upon discovering the shrines in KV62, the great explorer Howard Carter found only one of the boxes had been raided by tomb robbers, with the rest laying undisturbed since antiquity.
Dr Janice Kamrin takes a tour of the alabaster lifestyle ornaments in the final part of this series on the treasures of the Tomb of King Tutankhamun (KV62), which are now housed in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo. Explaining how the perfumed ointments were considered a better target than the vases that contained them by tomb robbers, Dr Kamrin also gives a fascinating insight into the importance of food and drink in the burial process.
Submitted by veigapaula on Tue, 12/29/2009 - 11:21
In this Heritage Key video, Dr. Janice Kamrin, head of the EgyptianMuseum Database Project, shows and discusses some of the lifestyle objects found in Tutankhamun’s tomb by Carter in 1922, and now housed in The Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Board games, and containers for perfumes, cosmetics and unguents, are amongst the objects shown in this video that give an insight into the livestyles of the rich and famous ancient Egyptians.
Dr Janice Kamrin continues her tour of the Egyptian Museum, Cairo with a look at the ritual figures found in the Tomb of King Tutankhamun (KV62). She explains that they were related to religion, as well as protection and as part of the funerary rituals. She also points out that not all of the 34 ritual statues were not originally made for King Tut, noting the differences in the shapes of the faces.
Three ritual beds were found inside the Tomb of King Tutankhamun (KV62), made up of four pieces of gilded wood and bound together with hooks and staples. Assembly instructions were painted on the beds in black paint, with each bed representing a different animal deity.
Dr Janice Kamrin explains the importance of animal iconography in Ancient Egypt, and in particular, the artefacts that were discovered in the Tomb of King Tutankhamun (KV62). Walking around the Egyptian Museum, Cairo, Dr Kamrin shows the three beds found in King Tut's tomb, which all adorn symbols of animal gods, and explains how they were significant in Ancient Egyptian beliefs.
Submitted by Sean Williams on Tue, 12/01/2009 - 13:32
The three ritual beds of Tutankhamun are a very serious proposition, guarded by some of the ancient world's fiercest chaperones. King Tut'sAnubis Shrine, fashioned in the seventh year of Akhenaten's reign, was something to be carried processionally during the final movements of the king's mummy.
As we described in our recent handy guide to how to make a mummy, the ancient Egyptians went to great and grizzly lengths to ensure that every last bit of a body was efficiently preserved. The internal organs had to be removed in order to effectively dry out a corpse. They would then be individually wrapped and preserved separately in canopic vessels.