![]() It's possible, perhaps, that any tomb yet to be found was so well hidden that it also escaped the notice of ancient thieves. Though their entrances were well hidden, nearly all of the valley's known royal tombs were likely robbed before the end of the 20th dynasty-Egyptian records testify to robbers' trials and to the harsh punishments handed down.īy the time the Greek writer Diodorus Siculus visited the valley's tombs (circa 60 B.C.) he wrote, "We found nothing there except the results of pillage and destruction." "You never know what you are going to find."īut if more tombs are found, will they be as relatively unmolested as Tut's? The odds are against it. Silverman, an Egyptologist at the University of Pennsylvania. "You try to find out what hasn't been discovered, and figure out where they might possibly be, and then look in those areas," said David P. Seti I Seti I, ancient Egyptian king of the 19th dynasty (12921190 bce) who reigned from 1290 to 1279 bce. 153914 bce) and founder of the 18th dynasty who completed the expulsion of the Hyksos (Asiatic rulers of Egypt), invaded Palestine, and re-exerted Egypt’s hegemony. ![]() "KV 63 is an embalming cache there must be a tomb to go with it," Ikram says.Īt least one late Ramesside pharaoh's tomb (Ramses VIII) is still undiscovered, and many believe it may be found within the valley.Ĭlues to such discoveries may be found in period Egyptian writings that mention notables who likely rated tombs but have not been identified. Ahmose I, king of ancient Egypt (reigned c. ![]() Some believe it heralds the presence of another as yet undiscovered tomb. KV 63 had no mummy but housed sarcophagi, pottery, linens, flowers, and other materials. The site, dubbed KV 63, was found only about 50 feet (15 meters) from the walls of Tut's resting place. In 2005, a team led by archaeologist Otto Schaden discovered the valley's first unknown tomb since Tutankhamun's. Many thought that the 62 tombs discovered before 1922 represented all that would be found in the valley-until Howard Carter discovered the resting place of a boy king called Tutankhamun. Although we use this word without distinction, it is an anachronism when used to refer to the Egyptian kings prior to the eighteenth dynasty. Tomb robbers, treasure hunters, and archaeologists have been combing the Valley of the Kings for centuries-yet it continues to yield surprises. "Hunting dogs, pet baboons, and gazelles." More Mysteries Await? ![]() Tombs were also well-provisioned with enough food and drink, including wine and beer, for royal feasting in the next world, as well as sacred objects meant to help the deceased achieve eternal life, even favored companions. It's curious that we have no books-from Tut at least," says Salima Ikram, a professor of Egyptology at American University in Cairo and a National Geographic grantee. "They included furniture, clothes (even underwear), and jewelry. Treasures-like the golden masks found with King Tut-are dazzling, but the tombs also contained the more mundane. King Thutmosis III, is the greatest ruler of Egypt throughout history, as he is the founder of the first Egyptian. The underground tombs were also well stocked with all the material goods a ruler might need in the next world. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |