http://www.nilemagazine.com.au/2015-september/2015/9/30/its-a-queen-but-not-the-one-we-think
The
Antiquities Minister believes there ARE hidden chambers behind the
walls of Tutankhamun's tomb. But it's not Nefertiti buried there. It's
another queen.
This
week saw British Egyptologist, Nicholas Reeves, along with officials
from the Ministry of Antiquities, examine Tutankhamun's burial chamber
to investigate Reeves' theory. Dr. Reeves is convinced that the final
resting place of Queen Nefertiti lies hidden behind a false wall in
Tutankhamun's tomb, however the Antiquities Minister, Mamdouh
el-Damaty, thinks it may be the boy king's mother, Kiya.
The story so far:
High-resolution
laser scans were made a few years ago by Factum Arte, a team of
conservators who built a replica of Tutankhamun's tomb near the entrance
of the Valley of the Kings. Generously, they posted all of their data
online.
Because they scanned the walls in 3-D, they also produced
versions without the tomb decorations. For the first time, the bare
burial chamber's walls could be examined in great detail. It was in
these scans that Dr. Reeves noticed traces of what could be the outlines
of concealed doors.
Nicholas Reeves believes that
stylistically, the scenes painted on the northern wall of the tomb
actually represents Tutankhamun completing the funerary ritual for Queen
Nefertiti, his predecessor.
Conventional thinking says that the painting shows King Ay doing the rituals for Tutankhamun.
Comparing
images of 'Tutankhamun', Reeves noticed how the jawline, brow, nose,
chin and the distinctive 'oromental groove' running down from the corner
of her mouth, unique to Nefertiti, all point to this pharaoh actually
being the famous queen.
The theory goes that construction of
Tutankhamun's tomb wasn't far enough advanced when the young king died
unexpectedly at the age of 19. Another tomb needed to be adapted for the
royal burial, and the prime candidate was that of Queen Nefertiti;
Tutankhamun's Step-mother, who had died ten years earlier.Dr. Reeves
believes that beyond the tomb's northern wall (on the right in this
picture), lies the undisturbed burial of Nefertiti. Photo: Kenneth
Garrett.
A false wall is a well-known ruse to try and deflect tomb robbers.
Nicholas
Reeves' tour on Monday started with the tomb of Horembeb (TT 57), the
general who took the throne after the short-lived reign of Tutankhamun's
successor, Ay.
On the opposite side of a decorated well shaft was
constructed a decorated false wall, designed to give the impression that
the tomb corridor stopped there. The thieve weren't that easily fooled
of course, and they cut through the decoration to help themselves to the
king's riches.
"I agree with him [Dr. Reeves] that
there's probably something behind the walls," el-Damaty says. But he
believes that if anyone is buried there it is likely Kia, believed by
some Egyptologists to be Tutankhamun's mother.
His reasoning is that
when Tutankhamun abandoned his childhood home at Amarna for Thebes, he
would have had the burial of his mother transferred to Thebes for
safekeeping and installed in her own tomb in the Valley of the Kings. It
was this tomb, el-Damaty believes, that was repurposed for
Tutankhamun's burial, a decade later.
Interestingly though, this
canopic jar lid of Kiya's was found in the Valley of the Kings tomb KV
55. It begs the question, if Kiya is in KV62 (Tutankhamun's tomb), why
would her canopic equipment, which is crucial for her well-being in the
afterlife, be left behind in another tomb. My money is still on
Nefertiti.
Nicholas Reeves believes that the
original owner of Tutankhamun's tomb was Queen Nefertiti, famed for the
3,300-year-old bust, discovered in 1912 and now in Berlin.
She was
the primary wife of the Pharaoh Akhenaten; a true individual who pursued
a personal vendetta against the state god, Amun, in favour a previously
little-mentioned deity, the Aten, symbolised by the sun-disc.
The
change back to a normal state of affairs began after Akhenaten's death,
with his successor, Smenkhare. Reeves believes that this pharaoh is
actually Nefertiti, who had changed her name upon succession.
Pictured is a portrait of Nefertiti wearing her distinctive flat-topped, tall crown. Photo: Kenneth Garrett.
So what did they discover this week?
The
physical examination of the tomb allowed Reeves and el-Damaty to look
for features not present in the digital photos he had been using. The
main findings were:
- A distinct line that extends along the
ceiling from the antechamber to the edge of what he believes is the
false door. This supports his theory that originally, Tutankhamun's
burial chamber was part of the corridor leading to the false wall hiding
Nefertiti's burial. When Tutankhamun died, the space before the wall
was extended westward to accommodate the boy king's sarcophagus and
golden shrines.
- A marked contrast in the materials that
cover different parts of the same wall. There is a distinct difference
between the area that was cut westward to expand the room for
Tutankhamun's burial, and the area that originally comprised the false
wall concealing Nefertiti's burial.
What happens now?
A press conference is being tomorrow to announce formally this week's findings and the proposed next step.
Ground
penetrating radar equipment is being summoned from Japan to test for
the presence of cavities behind the northern and western walls of the
tomb. That should be happening during November sometime. And if there IS
evidence of hidden rooms? Well, that's when it gets really challenging
because the proposed northern doorway is covered by a priceless wall
painting.
The last word goes to the man who started this latest
wave of "Tutmania", Nicholas Reeves: "I'm pretty sure that a very
important discovery is to be made soon inside Tutankhamun's tomb."
It's unlikely that Tutankhamun knew
that he was going to spend eternity in a hand-me-down tomb. His intended
tomb, very likely one that his successor, Ay, appropriated for himself
(WV 23), is in a quiet, western branch of the Valley of the Kings.
In
this image, Tutankhamun's golden outer sarcophagus watches serenely
from under glass in the burial chamber of his famous tomb. Photo:
Nariman El-Mofty.
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