The Excavation of Tutankhamun’s Mummy | King Tut in Color

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @Shreyas_Jaiswal
    @Shreyas_Jaiswal 2 года назад +3245

    Here in India, we have a chapter in NCERT English Prose: Discovering Tut, the saga continues.

    • @ankitarath1423
      @ankitarath1423 2 года назад +92

      I was thinking about the same.

    • @doljjong_
      @doljjong_ 2 года назад +64

      i was thinking the same thing!

    • @AK-ud5bi
      @AK-ud5bi 2 года назад +190

      Class 11 Hornbill 😃

    • @SD-is6yc
      @SD-is6yc 2 года назад +99

      Yeah.....that's why iam watching it

    • @gokulg552
      @gokulg552 2 года назад +24

      Well that was something 🧞

  • @deborahpensa5211
    @deborahpensa5211 2 года назад +1836

    In 1978 I saw the King Tut exhibit in New York. It was breathtaking.The tour guide said they found wine and fruitcake that was so well preserved that it was still edible.The ancient Egyptians were so advanced in every way.

    • @scarletttroquille3304
      @scarletttroquille3304 2 года назад +92

      Nice to hear someone else saw the highlight life exibit. I saw it in New Orleans , as a teenager..We Raised money at School to go on the School buses . Yes , it was Breath Taking, and highlight of my life..

    • @Sham0000
      @Sham0000 2 года назад +50

      Is the cake and wine available on EBAY ?🧐

    • @lukecarvill7721
      @lukecarvill7721 2 года назад +70

      Imagine people from New York turning up at the museum in Egypt to be told half the stuff is out on tour , in New York! 😳

    • @marissasturzaker3483
      @marissasturzaker3483 2 года назад +14

      I saw the king tut exhibit in Melbourne 10 years ago, it was so incredible

    • @61574
      @61574 2 года назад +10

      my friend i would love to experience that

  • @teresaharris-travelbybooks5564
    @teresaharris-travelbybooks5564 2 года назад +771

    I saw his gold funeral mask, in the Museum of Antiquities, in Cairo; in October of this year; as well as his dagger, a lot of jewelry and other things. The level of fine detailing and intricacies that went into making these things, is astounding. I knew I'd be impressed by the large pieces but the beauty of the smaller items, made tears come to my eyes. There were golden harness buckles that had metalwork so fine, it was like lace. The artisans who created these things were superb craftsmen.

    • @lawalewade6636
      @lawalewade6636 2 года назад +13

      You are correct, I was astounded when I saw the Mask, dagger, coffin and other artifacts at the museum in September this year.

    • @hassanstormie3612
      @hassanstormie3612 2 года назад +1

      My bad, stupid me i thought the archeologists took these things.

    • @pbj0815
      @pbj0815 2 года назад +4

      I’m jealous!!! How cool!!!!!!

    • @lukecarvill7721
      @lukecarvill7721 2 года назад +3

      I went there twice , both times from Cyprus when on holiday there. If they still do those day trips via flight or the 24 hr cruises there from Cyprus , i 100% recommend doing it , should anyone happen to be in Cyprus who hadn’t ever planned on visiting Egypt direct. Aside from visiting the pyramids, as you’ve mentioned , the museum is brilliant. To see Tuts gold mask and many other things , amazing!. I got such a buzz standing up close to it and seeing it with my own eyes. And I’m not usually a museum kinda guy either!

    • @user-ie7lk2cc4f
      @user-ie7lk2cc4f 2 года назад

      จะยี่งใหญ่แค่ใหน....สุดท้ายที่ที้งไว้ให้ดู...ให้รู้ว่าไม่มีใครพ้นจากความตายพุื่งสงวรจ้า

  • @davidellis5135
    @davidellis5135 Год назад +121

    A hundred years after he's tomb was discovered ,and yet it still fascinates, I love Egyptian art, It's incredible how they made king Tut's death mask, the artistic precision and detail is just staggering.

    • @allmightlionthunder5515
      @allmightlionthunder5515 5 месяцев назад +1

      ill love to hear see more of this The tomb of Yuya and Thuya, also known by its tomb number KV46, is the burial place of the ancient Egyptian noble Yuya and his wife Thuya Tutankhamun King Tut lol

  • @ohreallyeliza
    @ohreallyeliza 2 года назад +440

    This is so beautiful. I got goosebumps looking at the mummy revealed. Thank you for continuing to tell this story and adding more information and details.

    • @hantus77
      @hantus77 2 года назад

      Mary Wyatt's Book: Battle for the Firstborn

    • @ayanokoji715
      @ayanokoji715 2 года назад +7

      Ikr! this is so amazing just seeing something and someone being put in a tomb by some people thousands of years ago? I dunno, I can't really describe what I'm feeling rn but it sure makes me wonder.

    • @specialforcesguy
      @specialforcesguy Год назад +4

      @@ayanokoji715 Its the feeling that u want fo back in time for that 1 day to see glory of egypt and him how he rules and builts pyramids and other stuff..Makes me wonder so hard how that looked like!! We will mever know 100%..NEVER.

  • @twstf8905
    @twstf8905 2 года назад +428

    As of this writing, the gold price per ounce is $1,866.
    Since there are 12 troy ounces in a troy pound, gold is selling at approximately $22,392 per pound ($1,866 x 12).
    The total amount of gold found in King Tut's tomb was 1200 kg. (or 2,645.547 pounds.)
    Inside the innermost coffin laid King Tut's mummified remains clad with a golden death mask in the Kings likeness.
    The mask sits 1.8 feet tall and contains a total of 321.5 troy ounces of gold.
    This gives it a value of over a half a million dollars in _just_ its weight in gold.
    The total amount of gold, (1200 kg. or 2645.547 pounds,)at, $22,392 per pound means that; in today's market, the _total_ amount of just the gold discovered inside of King Tut's tomb would fetch a price upwards of $59,239,088.42.
    (In case you ever wondered. ✌)

    • @nanayobizack8132
      @nanayobizack8132 2 года назад +23

      I have wondered, thanks.

    • @LittleWhiskey
      @LittleWhiskey 2 года назад +30

      I have solid gold balls

    • @jistheename8002
      @jistheename8002 2 года назад +4

      @@LittleWhiskey lol

    • @Tom-kc5tf
      @Tom-kc5tf 2 года назад +6

      Just keep it easy and use metrics system ponds stones Armes and feets are over

    • @lilitudeamnocte248
      @lilitudeamnocte248 2 года назад +10

      most useful comment I've ever read, thank you 💕

  • @vinaygurjar8292
    @vinaygurjar8292 2 года назад +413

    In India we have a chapter in our class 11 English literature book about this whole extract . Love Egyptian history a lot ❤️🙏🏻

    • @adilck1494
      @adilck1494 2 года назад +51

      Discovering tut:the saga continues 😹🙌

    • @nensisharma5321
      @nensisharma5321 2 года назад +27

      Here's another CBSE 11th Grader 😊

    • @sanveeraulakh6988
      @sanveeraulakh6988 2 года назад +14

      Yeah that interesting ch... 🙃

    • @gardensofthegods
      @gardensofthegods 2 года назад +23

      By the way are you Hindu and if so , may you have a peaceful beautiful Diwali , my friend .

    • @JennieGem7
      @JennieGem7 2 года назад +16

      Yes and I'm watching this coz I've exam tomorrow

  • @Catlady77777
    @Catlady77777 2 года назад +961

    Am I the only one who believes the archaeologists were also tomb robbers?
    The Egyptians were fixated on eternal life and carefully planned their resting places. It is sacrilege to disturb them so casually.

    • @wesleymarvelous1293
      @wesleymarvelous1293 2 года назад +56

      True

    • @litodat233
      @litodat233 2 года назад +102

      That’s because they are im sure king tut family didn’t think they were going be dug up 100s of years later and treated like they weren’t even human beings

    • @Hm-dh1vu
      @Hm-dh1vu 2 года назад +10

      Girl what

    • @GJS.178
      @GJS.178 2 года назад +14

      Never thought of it that way

    • @sfguzmani
      @sfguzmani 2 года назад +61

      Except it's not for the purpose of "robbery"

  • @nosny3570
    @nosny3570 2 года назад +91

    My family went to the King Tut exhibit in Toronto in 1979. Seeing it as a 9 year old child impacted my entire life

  • @allisonle8596
    @allisonle8596 Год назад +53

    I’m so intrigued by the Egyptians. Watching this gave me goosebumps. Unbelievable discovery.

    • @luvangelmyers2731
      @luvangelmyers2731 Год назад +4

      🙏🏽🙏🏽IKR!! I get a chill and then I want to cry at the mystique and beauty. Just AMAZING!! And honestly researchers only know maybe 1/4 of it. And due to climate change destruction and erosion things are starting to deteriorate so that sadly our modern world may never know it all. Personally, I think it was purposely designed to be like that🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽We never will

  • @aquarian1820
    @aquarian1820 2 года назад +118

    To be able to capture the first facial reactions of the archeologists as the tomb was opened. Now this would also be a treasure. 💎👑📿💍
    (Thanks for this surreal share.)

    • @dsgx1353
      @dsgx1353 2 года назад +6

      I keep saying that. Once they saw that tomb and opened that coffin, They probably felt like insects in a world that was far greater than they'd known

    • @brandonmcc94
      @brandonmcc94 2 года назад +8

      You mean tomb raiders? 😉

    • @The_Black_Caps
      @The_Black_Caps 2 года назад +1

      Bro come on those weren't even that scary since it is so old and dried up, but ofc if you open a body that was buried a month ago, you might be scared

  • @WtfYoutube_YouSuck
    @WtfYoutube_YouSuck 2 года назад +206

    Nice job. imagine being living well in your comfortable afterlife and then some pasty, bald angols come along and rip you back from bliss.

    • @earth_angel2750
      @earth_angel2750 2 года назад +10

      For real so disrespectful I hope they never find Cleopatra and Anthony burial place 🙌🏻

    • @earth_angel2750
      @earth_angel2750 2 года назад +1

      @@Sargy18MPBDE u don't have to dig every Pharoah to know that by now They digged royalty commoners nobles young old it's just disgration for their graves just to satisfy ur curiosity and they still doing it

    • @aishaomar2695
      @aishaomar2695 2 года назад +13

      @@earth_angel2750 I believe it is so degrading. You as a human being have to think, would you like your body or your ancestors to be dug up and displayed in museums, to generate money? I definitely wouldn't!

    • @earth_angel2750
      @earth_angel2750 2 года назад +3

      @@aishaomar2695 exactly !! even the dead are not safe :(

    • @aishaomar2695
      @aishaomar2695 Год назад +1

      @@mikko3 Learn history on someone else's body, then allow yre great grandfathers bodies to be displayed like animals, disgusting !!!

  • @thecrow6915
    @thecrow6915 Год назад +48

    It's amazing how much detail was put in making this coffin you can even see the Holes in the ears meaning that the young king had his ears pierced at one point in his life..

  • @bellaiswijianto9807
    @bellaiswijianto9807 2 года назад +28

    Look at that tomb... So beautiful..

  • @proudtobeanindian5484
    @proudtobeanindian5484 2 года назад +42

    Seriously the way national geographic represent history it's just awesome

  • @cuzimnotlaughing
    @cuzimnotlaughing 2 года назад +98

    Ancient Civilazition is amazing. The earth must have been in its purest and healthiest form back then. Considering global warming never existed before the deserts and islands must have had beautiful, clear, and clean bodies of water.

    • @allmightlionthunder5515
      @allmightlionthunder5515 5 месяцев назад +1

      We have had many cold and global warming events natural or unnatural

    • @allmightlionthunder5515
      @allmightlionthunder5515 5 месяцев назад +2

      Mass volcano chains have gone off many times them events change weathers and so on lol

    • @allmightlionthunder5515
      @allmightlionthunder5515 5 месяцев назад

      ill love to hear see more of this The tomb of Yuya and Thuya, also known by its tomb number KV46, is the burial place of the ancient Egyptian noble Yuya and his wife Thuya Tutankhamun King Tut lol
      The Egyptian name for Thebes was wꜣs.t, "City of the wꜣs", the sceptre of the pharaohs, a long staff with an animal's head and a forked base. From the end of the New Kingdom, Thebes was known in Egyptian as njw.t-jmn, the "City of Amun", the chief of the Theban Triad of deities whose other members were Mut and Khonsu. This name of Thebes appears in the Tanakh as the "Nōʼ ʼĀmôn" (נא אמון) in the Book of Nahum[5] and also as "No" (נא) mentioned in the Book of Ezekiel[6] and Jeremiah.[7][8]
      "Thebes" is sometimes claimed to be the Latinised form of Ancient Greek: Θῆβαι, the hellenized form of Demotic Egyptian tꜣ jpt ("the temple"), referring to jpt-swt; the temple is now known by its Arabic name, Karnak ("fortified village"), on the northeast bank of the city. Since Homer refers to the metropolis by this name, and since Demotic script did not appear until a later date, the etymology is doubtful. As early as Homer's Iliad,[9] the Greeks distinguished the Egyptian Thebes as "Thebes of the Hundred Gates" (Θῆβαι ἑκατόμπυλοι, Thēbai hekatómpyloi) or "Hundred-Gated Thebes", as opposed to the "Thebes of the Seven Gates" (Θῆβαι ἑπτάπυλοι, Thēbai heptápyloi) in Boeotia, Greece.[n 1]
      In the interpretatio graeca, Amun was rendered as Zeus Ammon. The name was therefore translated into Greek as Diospolis, "City of Zeus".

  • @NaturalBiotopes
    @NaturalBiotopes 2 года назад +103

    The color shots are impressive.

  • @shelly9784
    @shelly9784 2 года назад +58

    In 2011 I went to his exhibition in Melbourne called, Tutankhamun and the golden age of the Pharaohs, ❤️ I went to Egypt in 2019 and seen Tutankhamuns golden mask and his tomb, lucky enough it reopened to the public one month before I arrived so I got to see him after it was closed for over 10 years of restoration, I was meant to go when I did. And I'm glad I did.

    • @shelly9784
      @shelly9784 2 года назад +1

      @Nikki Lauren thanks 😊 appreciate it 🌸

    • @BigZoe99
      @BigZoe99 Год назад +1

      So it's closed for over 10 years now?? Well from 2019 to 2029?? I thought it was still open to see now

    • @luvangelmyers2731
      @luvangelmyers2731 Год назад

      WOW!! I can only imagine. Just talking about it and researching it takes my breath away

    • @starkereality69
      @starkereality69 Год назад

      @@BigZoe99 reread carefully?!

    • @user-xt2rv2td4p
      @user-xt2rv2td4p 6 месяцев назад

      U and ur family now cursed by God 😡

  • @otienoodongo1790
    @otienoodongo1790 2 года назад +20

    What amazes me is the notion of present-day Egyptians thinking that they are the descendants of the ancient Egyptians.

    • @mastertrump6747
      @mastertrump6747 2 года назад +2

      Ancient Egyptians DNA matches the coptic people of egypt not the arab Egyptians..

    • @otienoodongo1790
      @otienoodongo1790 2 года назад

      @@originsandcivilizations3983 No the current people are migrants. They have no connections with ancient people.

    • @otienoodongo1790
      @otienoodongo1790 2 года назад

      @@mastertrump6747 True.

    • @ariikwek7795
      @ariikwek7795 2 года назад

      They're just settlers and invaders from the Middle East. They're not indigenous and original Africans.

    • @tiondavis1226
      @tiondavis1226 Год назад +2

      I almost laughed when she said it's proof that they are The Descendants despite history saying otherwise

  • @litodat233
    @litodat233 2 года назад +421

    It’s crazy how they just dig up a kings tomb and his jewel like yeah that’s totally okay

    • @-metaknight-1135
      @-metaknight-1135 2 года назад +64

      He’s been dead 3000 years.. nobody will have a problem with it. It is history

    • @danielpaulson8838
      @danielpaulson8838 2 года назад +87

      @@-metaknight-1135 Dig it up and save it from the Black market, or leave it for the constant grave robbers so it gets into private collections. This is the right thing to do today in order to preserve the history.

    • @rileybrewerton4001
      @rileybrewerton4001 2 года назад +21

      When it was discovered people believed that their was a curse on the tomb and people suddenly died

    • @CaliBred92
      @CaliBred92 2 года назад +14

      It’s for history. You would of never been able to marvel at it if it wasn’t dug up

    • @julianmitchell5776
      @julianmitchell5776 2 года назад +6

      Are you gonna cry about it or what ?

  • @KeepCalmandLoveClassics
    @KeepCalmandLoveClassics 2 года назад +29

    Breathtaking Egypt 👑
    Love & Respect from India 🙏🏻

  • @jolyfrye1871
    @jolyfrye1871 2 года назад +17

    Ancient Egyptians👑 were soo wise. I can watch these programs all day long.🌞

  • @scarletttroquille3304
    @scarletttroquille3304 2 года назад +50

    I was fortunate enough to see the exibit as a teenager in New Orleans. One of the most exquisite highlights of my life. In my 50s now , it's still breath Taking to See and Remember.

  • @gerhardadal
    @gerhardadal 2 года назад +15

    Currently in Cairo overlooking the pyramids as I write this. I saw Kings Tuts Tom's in Kings Valley and today his coffin and treasure at the museum in Cairo... Amazing

  • @c.erine78
    @c.erine78 Год назад +9

    King Tut has always fascinated me, all of Egyptian history has. Thank you

  • @riversider2506
    @riversider2506 2 года назад +34

    Such a privilege to be the first to see this in person tho 🤞 💯 🏁

  • @ManuelGutierrez-be1ci
    @ManuelGutierrez-be1ci 5 месяцев назад +7

    Digging up a grave or bariel site should be against the law no matter what. It's disturbing a grave and dead people that should be left alone.

  • @rbb9369
    @rbb9369 Год назад +53

    I wish I can time travel to those times and see Tut alive 🧐

    • @renceline6029
      @renceline6029 Год назад

      My professor said that he looked disfigured and was sickly due to inbreeding. He only ruled for two years too cause he was a weak child.

    • @Hether6971
      @Hether6971 Год назад +2

      🤓

    • @billsmith281
      @billsmith281 Год назад

      Dont be so stupid, youd need a DeLorean time machine to do that🤣

    • @TheWalkingDeadEdits606
      @TheWalkingDeadEdits606 Год назад +2

      🤨📸

    • @realtalk8350
      @realtalk8350 Год назад

      And the Egyptian will kill you

  • @cweefy
    @cweefy 2 года назад +45

    Just try to imagine what one of the major Pharaoh's tombs might have contained had thieves not found and robbed them. Hopefully another will be found.

    • @ahmedabdelsatar1562
      @ahmedabdelsatar1562 Год назад

      the problem is that every civilization come to decline in at a certain point in history we have declined badly after the pharohs and been through many many invasions that looted and stole our monuments and of course thieves only care about themselves whether they are egyptians or foriegners

    • @cweefy
      @cweefy Год назад +1

      @@ahmedabdelsatar1562 you are correct. Sad

  • @tomg.625
    @tomg.625 2 года назад +36

    Our archeology teacher in university says that the coffin's are buried too deep and too secured are not just it has a lot of golds/diamonds etc. Most of them contain unknown diseases.

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 2 года назад +18

    A Tomb complex like this is what we should've done when my grandpa and father passed

  • @Gamingxone.
    @Gamingxone. Год назад +12

    We are here because of simran sahani
    😊😊

  • @jamesmckay8663
    @jamesmckay8663 2 года назад +32

    It's absolutely beautiful

    • @KarenKSmith-tm2kp
      @KarenKSmith-tm2kp 2 года назад +1

      Yes.. that's what I keep repeating " Absolutely Beautiful" 👍🏼💖

  • @hitmangeming178
    @hitmangeming178 2 года назад +12

    All ❤️‍🔥Egyptian lover from sri lanka

    • @user-xt2rv2td4p
      @user-xt2rv2td4p 6 месяцев назад

      God curse u to be doomed by sea water 🌊😡

  • @davidcaldecoat7414
    @davidcaldecoat7414 2 года назад +13

    The coloured photos of tutankhamuns tomb look quite amazing

  • @artistjk883
    @artistjk883 2 года назад +14

    amazing🙏🏻👍

  • @arringar
    @arringar 5 месяцев назад +1

    Tut was a young Pharaoh who died long before preparations were made, he was from a much hated dynasty directly following a tumultuous period (the 18th dynasty, Amarna period), yet his sarcophagus was nothing short of magnificent. Can you imagine what a beloved Pharaoh's tomb goods and sarcophagus might have been like? Say Seti I or Ramesses II for example.... the riches, the art, the craftsmanship would have been beyond what I think we could even comprehend.

  • @dianalee3059
    @dianalee3059 Год назад +7

    To come across something like this as it was left thousands of years ago…speechless

    • @user-xt2rv2td4p
      @user-xt2rv2td4p 6 месяцев назад

      Nefertiti will definitely kill you 😡🌊

  • @pinkyizthebrain2397
    @pinkyizthebrain2397 2 года назад +77

    Imagine if they’d of found Ramses tomb untouched?

    • @ashiinsane90
      @ashiinsane90 2 года назад +6

      The zionists wouldnt be happy about that, they dont want their lies to be uncovered

    • @astralenlightenment1743
      @astralenlightenment1743 2 года назад +1

      @@ashiinsane90 what is a Zionist?

    • @abdulawan7357
      @abdulawan7357 2 года назад +8

      they did find his body in 1881 ., Ramses died in the sea by drowning but still lives as a mummy by gods will. Located in Egypt or some Museume

    • @ashiinsane90
      @ashiinsane90 2 года назад +2

      @@abdulawan7357 The king who persecuted the jews its not Ramses check your facts

    • @sol___invictus
      @sol___invictus 2 года назад

      @@astralenlightenment1743 An "esoteric Judaist". One that follows Jewish principles to the extreme, and once you see what their literature has to say about non Jews and how they are to be treated, you'll see the problem with that.

  • @birdone4568
    @birdone4568 2 года назад +25

    Is there a reason they are considered under the term Mummy versus the concept they are simply digging up graves?

    • @louel9272
      @louel9272 Год назад +4

      Mummification was only bestowed on the Pharaohs and other important individuals. Yes it still is only digging up graves/tombs but they are also digging up a lot of ancient history and knowledge.

  • @mr.galactic8064
    @mr.galactic8064 2 года назад +24

    I appreciate history and all but we still have to respect the body of those people who passed away

    • @earthangel8730
      @earthangel8730 2 года назад +6

      How was this disrespectful?

    • @BigStarworldheaven
      @BigStarworldheaven 4 месяца назад

      ​@@earthangel8730digging his grave without his consent

  • @MissesWitch
    @MissesWitch Год назад +5

    So many coffins it did not want to be opened. The utmost highest level of respect, Giving you a chance to turn back each time, But I must say, It is fascinating to see the decorations inlaid on these golden human like coffins, Truly magnificent!

  • @PoketMon1008
    @PoketMon1008 Год назад +2

    Decorations were presentable and very Colorful to those Ancient Times. - Egypt

  • @meneerkleinervoor5374
    @meneerkleinervoor5374 2 года назад +4

    You are the best

  • @aisiaalt
    @aisiaalt 7 месяцев назад +1

    Wow, personally I absolutely love Tutankhamun! The Ancient Egyptians are so intresting!!

  • @billbright1755
    @billbright1755 Год назад +3

    Even if it could be duplicated today which would be extremely difficult and material/ labor intensive.
    To the point of being impossible the costs would be staggering and even then pale to the original.
    Amazing craftsmanship in funerary arts. Highly symbolic and never intended to be seen by human eyes again.

  • @alanhodge984
    @alanhodge984 3 месяца назад +1

    just got back from 2 weeks in egypt saw the tut exhibit at cairo museum it was mind blowing

  • @JustMe-12345
    @JustMe-12345 2 года назад +52

    19…. I never knew he died THIS young.
    I mean… yes, the mask makes him look maybe mid 20s or so….. but that he actually died so young ….. 😔

  • @manoftherainshorts9075
    @manoftherainshorts9075 Год назад +5

    Imagine if there were no ancient grave robbers in the world. Imagine if location of pharaohs' tombs were kept strictly in secret in a secluded areas. Imagine if those items weren't destined to crumble when they were to be transported to their safekeeping place.
    Thousands of thousand of priceless artifacts could be uncovered. We probably could fit a small-ish Egyptian exhibits in every museum in the world if we could.

    • @uncletony6210
      @uncletony6210 Год назад +3

      There's a huge irony in your comment.

  • @ismailwaqas2098
    @ismailwaqas2098 11 месяцев назад +3

    Imagine being a labor worker giving workers water time to time while excavation of the grave and then u suddenly discover the greatest discovery of all time and then someone else takes credit for it
    I feel bad for that waterboy who discovered that staircase

  • @varyolla435
    @varyolla435 Год назад +20

    Putting Carters' famous discovery aside. The real takeaway here was that this find heralded the arrival of true science-based archeology. Carter meticulously cataloged and studied the find as opposed to simply emptying the tomb as some might have done. He spent years systematically going through each item and documenting it prior to its removal from the tomb. It was years after its discovery before he even got to studying the sarcophagus.

  • @tiotigeorge4794
    @tiotigeorge4794 2 года назад +12

    Great civilisations with their great wonders!

  • @nggimthia6804
    @nggimthia6804 Год назад +60

    I've read about how the jumbled objects and small tomb was due to King Tut's expected passing at a young age, but I wonder how did they have enough time to make such elaborate coffins and the gold mask if the funeral was indeed rushed? Could it be that the items outside the burial chamber were shrewn all over the place by the ancient robbers known to have breached the site?

    • @iizneoO
      @iizneoO Год назад +11

      Gold and wood are easy carvable/malleable materials. Creating a whole burial chamber, painting it, and arranging it with all the gifts would have been the real time consuming process.

    • @lsy7733
      @lsy7733 Год назад +4

      maybe they were pre-made

    • @iMertin90
      @iMertin90 Год назад +4

      They reckon the mask was altered, the back says that according to experts and his coffin the paint was rushed you can see with the running marks of paint etc

    • @gavinlaird85
      @gavinlaird85 Год назад +3

      Some of the items previously belonged to his father, Akhenaten. like the throne which still had Aten as the main deity.

    • @softplanet777
      @softplanet777 Год назад +3

      His funeral mask was mainly at first meant to be for a female but they altered it to fit him since he passed away so sudden .

  • @cadengovender9565
    @cadengovender9565 2 года назад +13

    Nice

  • @speciessquad
    @speciessquad 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'm here after our English chapter "discovering tut : the saga continues " of grade 11 , couldn't hold my curiosity to know more n more about it ...

  • @samtitiheruw
    @samtitiheruw 2 года назад +4

    Ancient Egypt is amazing👍

  • @priyanshunegi7553
    @priyanshunegi7553 2 года назад +3

    Cool

  • @adrianorafacho9706
    @adrianorafacho9706 Год назад +71

    Tutancamon was only a ordinary pharaoh, and because of his chamber and treasure became the most famous pharaoh. Imagine if the biggest pharaohs like Ramses, queops and others pharaohs chamber didn't have been robbed. The treasures we should discover....

    • @TheIndependentLens
      @TheIndependentLens Год назад +8

      Supposedly King Tut's tomb was robbed twice in antiquity, but most of the tomb remained intact.

    • @TheDentist27
      @TheDentist27 Год назад

      Those other Pharaoh’s gold masks didn’t disappear either. They’re secretly owned by the Freemasons and others.

    • @manqobamkhwanazi1956
      @manqobamkhwanazi1956 Год назад +2

      How do they rob those tombs I don't understand without being noticed

    • @Fin3sse
      @Fin3sse Год назад +6

      @@manqobamkhwanazi1956bro it was 800bc 💀💀💀 like of course they didn’t see shiii

    • @manqobamkhwanazi1956
      @manqobamkhwanazi1956 Год назад +1

      @@Fin3sse I thought the tombs were guarded

  • @DesertVox
    @DesertVox 2 года назад +18

    Today, Egypt is still being ruled by outsiders, like it has been for 200 years at least.

    • @ahmedabdelsatar1562
      @ahmedabdelsatar1562 Год назад

      who are these outsiders president Sisi is an egyptian

    • @user-lc8mn5ud1l
      @user-lc8mn5ud1l 3 месяца назад +1

      Ruled by outsiders for the last 2500 years; from the Persians and Assyrians, to the Ptolemies and Macedonians, to the Romans, to the Arabs, to the Mamelukes and Turks, to the French and English.
      All of these invasions and colonizations occurred AFTER the fall of a 3500-year dynastic Kemetic civilization, and a probably longer pre-dynastic Kemetic civilization.
      These outsiders had nothing to do with Kemet except the demise of its indigenous population.

  • @davidmccormick2957
    @davidmccormick2957 2 года назад +6

    I just sense that the ancient Egyptians was magical. It was more than just stones and preserving etc. It was mysticism etc the ancient Egyptians seemed very in tune and psychic mystical.

  • @sashabasha449
    @sashabasha449 2 года назад +7

    Rob, steal and damage... This is the stroy of paryamids. They preserved well for centuries but these archeologist damage their tombs

  • @datafun9950
    @datafun9950 Месяц назад +3

    Why don’t y’all just leave him alone. He passed. Let him be in peace. Some things are just simply none of our business.

    • @KMartin-jf5kw
      @KMartin-jf5kw 11 дней назад

      *Why don't you all just leave him alone
      Use correct grammar and spell properly.

  • @lindatorres8318
    @lindatorres8318 2 года назад +38

    I hope they didn't take anything from, A young King should always be there in Egypt where he was born and bury. Never taken out of the country.

    • @bellerophonchallen8861
      @bellerophonchallen8861 2 года назад +6

      Canarvon wanted to take some of the contents back to England for his collection as he had bought the concession to excavate. Theodore Davis who gave up the concession feeling the Valley was worked out, sent material back to America for investigation from earlier finds of Tut-ankh-amun material (some sealed jars with the king's cartouche). Howard Carter, who was much more in tune with Egyptian sensitivities and had even learnt to speak Coptic to be able to converse directly with his workmen, insisted the entire tomb must be kept in Egypt. The king's body still lies in his sarcophagus in the Valley.

    • @albertpuppymaster671
      @albertpuppymaster671 2 года назад +3

      You think Egyptians can let that happen? Not in a million years I bet.

    • @ahmedabdelsatar1562
      @ahmedabdelsatar1562 Год назад

      @@albertpuppymaster671
      Yes in these days we are working hard to return our robbed Artifacts like Nefertiti bust And others hopefully we will return as much as we can

  • @AzlianaLyana
    @AzlianaLyana 2 года назад +27

    Truly remarkable discovery!👍

  • @dianalee3059
    @dianalee3059 Год назад +22

    Can you even imagine this happening OMG! Years ago I read the most wonderful novel by Allen Drury called A God Against the Gods about Akenaten and Nefertiti, one of my all time favorite books! I’m going to Cairo in February for a 12 day trip including a Nike cruise and I just can’t wait.

    • @luvangelmyers2731
      @luvangelmyers2731 Год назад +2

      🙏🏽🖤Safe, blessed travels. I would love to hear about it

  • @miguelsantos648
    @miguelsantos648 Год назад +2

    Egyptians in the pharaonic era were so adavanced , it was incredible, now a days there are just not advanced at all , and it’s is really a shame that such a nation , with such history, went down like this

  • @kakarroto007
    @kakarroto007 2 года назад +30

    King Tut was truly the first "Russian Nesting Doll".

  • @temanbaikku7732
    @temanbaikku7732 2 года назад +4

    I was astonished during my visit to see the King Tut's Treasures exhibition.

  • @manasbahediya
    @manasbahediya 2 года назад +24

    "Carter" and "Carefully" don't go well with each other..
    He in order to open that ruined it all the way breaking it ruthlessly with shivel..
    Dude nat geo 2 years back you were the one telling that "Howard Carter's expedition ruined the mummy more than it revealed!" 🤔

  • @robertbaloloy3979
    @robertbaloloy3979 2 года назад +3

    National geographic is
    Eduavational please update.

  • @ronaldbelken396
    @ronaldbelken396 2 года назад +4

    His voice got me hooked, and it ended, he ever thought about trying to sell beer lol

  • @annaopuszanska1348
    @annaopuszanska1348 2 года назад +2

    Thank you ✨

  • @lghammer778
    @lghammer778 2 года назад +16

    Brilliantly shown, thank you for the in-depth look into the Tomb of King Tutankhamun 🙏🏽 NatGeo ❤

  • @officialehi5047
    @officialehi5047 2 года назад +94

    I love the fact that they're discovering all good this but unbalancing nature comes with consequences

    • @withereds0ul
      @withereds0ul Год назад +5

      literally I love learning about Ancient Egypt but they need to leave these people alone.. like you said consequences are so resly

    • @withereds0ul
      @withereds0ul Год назад +2

      *real

    • @theinvade1197
      @theinvade1197 Год назад +3

      No one should be disturbed after they are put to rest. Sad.

  • @user-yx6kn1pv6f
    @user-yx6kn1pv6f Год назад +1

    Please leave king Tut and his tomb alone respect king Tut and his tomb please ❤

  • @kareemkalisari
    @kareemkalisari 2 года назад +9

    Why?
    O, admin. Why?
    O please help meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee. ..!
    Yes thank you
    National Geographic | Channel.
    Thank you.
    ###
    .

    • @EdwardLawrence-12345
      @EdwardLawrence-12345 2 года назад +1

      ah haaaaaaaa..
      Don't be worried!
      Don't be worried!.
      I thank you
      National Geographic Channel.
      I Love you so.
      Thank you.
      ###
      .

  • @canalsentir
    @canalsentir Год назад +1

    wow

  • @marvel_avengers-
    @marvel_avengers- 2 года назад +7

    Amazing 💯

  • @al-hassan9200
    @al-hassan9200 2 года назад +1

    Egyptians are wholesome 😌 🇮🇶🇪🇬

  • @saman.0460
    @saman.0460 2 года назад +4

    🔥

  • @sucheta5993
    @sucheta5993 10 месяцев назад +1

    Realising:- The less you reveal…. The More people can wonder✨

  • @Kessoku
    @Kessoku 2 года назад +20

    it's shame that the other tomb is robbed.

    • @shahidamazhar7818
      @shahidamazhar7818 2 года назад +7

      Dont you think this was also a robbery
      Also why would they open it ? It was not sealed to be opened also if they did for research why would they take one county’s heritage n treasures to some other country
      I am against it

    • @missouriresole4726
      @missouriresole4726 2 года назад +6

      @@shahidamazhar7818 at least in this case everyone can admire the precious artifacts. In other tomb cases all of the cont is vanished and nobody apart from thefts known how glorious was the tomb

    • @OAwesomeO
      @OAwesomeO 2 года назад

      @@shahidamazhar7818 It is and it isnt. We at least get to uncover the tombs mysteries and see the artifacts and guarantee the preservation. I wish he could have stayed undisturbed for all time but he was going to be found eventually, so at least this way he was found by respectful archeologist that made sure to preserve him and his belongings

    • @Mr_Riffman08
      @Mr_Riffman08 4 месяца назад

      ​@@shahidamazhar7818it's a disrespect so vile.I don't care that they have scientific research to pursue,who in their right minds digs up a dead body for research

    • @Mr_Riffman08
      @Mr_Riffman08 4 месяца назад

      ​@@OAwesomeOyou're just an indecent individual because I certainly don't feel the need to admire peoples belongings

  • @profsasikumark8210
    @profsasikumark8210 6 месяцев назад

    I was in Egypt 5 months back for 8 days. My interest was mainly to SEE Tuth .l had been studying about Tuth from 1978.Spect aculat and wonderful Egypt.

  • @roybm3124
    @roybm3124 2 года назад +3

    Amazing craftmanship

  • @Thunder_Dome45
    @Thunder_Dome45 2 года назад +1

    Color gave it more impact. Thanks.

  • @aaroneaton583
    @aaroneaton583 2 года назад +4

    I always found it funny how Egypt is in Africa but a lot of people don't knowledge that

    • @TamaraGarrettAlpha
      @TamaraGarrettAlpha 2 года назад +1

      So much stolen stuff from Africa 😞

    • @ahmedabdelsatar1562
      @ahmedabdelsatar1562 Год назад

      Being in Africa doesn’t mean you have to be black African
      Africa is a huge continent like Asia with 10+ races you will find Chinese Arabs Japanese Indians very much different races
      That is what Africans need to understand because I see many Africans are racist like Europeans if you are not black then you aren’t from Africa and that is wrong given that Egypt is literally 1\3 of it in Asia which is Siani

  • @user-zf9jj3xc6o
    @user-zf9jj3xc6o Год назад

    I loved when she say that he is a proof that we are the grondson of ancient Egyptians because tut looks like Egyptians. love you all from Egypt 💓

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 2 года назад +24

    How did Tutankhamun attract the ladies?
    *With his Pharaohmones*

  • @dougadams9419
    @dougadams9419 8 месяцев назад +2

    NOT Excavation. Exhumation. the action of digging up something buried, especially a corpse.
    Excavation would be the opening of the pyramid tomb, not the Sarcophagus and mummy.

  • @nonterrestriaI
    @nonterrestriaI 2 года назад +9

    I don't remember growing much after 19..
    Let's just admit Tut was a little dude.

    • @arunramesh8133
      @arunramesh8133 2 года назад

      People do grow, mostly until 21. Well, everyone's body is different

    • @patrick.771
      @patrick.771 2 года назад +2

      even a few hundred years ago people were much smaller than they are now (men often 1.5 - 1.6 meters). Average body size always changed over time.

  • @jamesroy791
    @jamesroy791 2 года назад +1

    ACTUALL ICE 🥶🥶🥶 Ancient Egyptians weren't playing around

  • @PripurnanandaGiri-dl5gf
    @PripurnanandaGiri-dl5gf 3 месяца назад

    Thanks to Respected NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC.

  • @AdamSmith-gt7jv
    @AdamSmith-gt7jv 2 года назад +37

    I think it's nice to preserve history and answer questions of the past, but makes me feel weird sometimes thinking about how they are disturbing the dead. What if in 3000 years they start digging up our graves? lol

    • @athathsonty2925
      @athathsonty2925 2 года назад +2

      What if ?

    • @stevensteven3417
      @stevensteven3417 2 года назад +1

      He doesnt care anymore, probably was already reborned many times or is just non existing.

    • @andrewcrandon2837
      @andrewcrandon2837 8 месяцев назад

      3000 years? In 100 years most current graves/cemeteries will be emptied and moved to give space to more dead.

  • @hellenback7588
    @hellenback7588 8 месяцев назад +1

    Poor King Tut,He's Missing Out On A Mummy Cat Because There Wasn't One In His Tomb!

  • @Stevieisgoinnuts
    @Stevieisgoinnuts 2 года назад +10

    They say his tomb was hastily assembled.
    But it must have taken months at a minimum, to craft these bejeweled objects, with crude tools
    So I winder how long after he died, was he finally entombed? I’d guess at least 6 months.
    Although I have seen a show that said the mask etc were repurposed from someone else.

    • @Marwan-tx5nb
      @Marwan-tx5nb 2 года назад +4

      The Royal treasury usually had funerary objects made around the clock all year. They produce these stuff with unmarked cartouches and generic faces, ready to be labelled as necessary. They are made to be used primarily for the Royal family (It's not only the king who is buried with funeral art). The face of the mask (not the whole mask) had to be custom made for the king (if it was not prepared in advance, It had to be prepared quickly upon his death). An yes many stuff is recycled (stolen and repurposed), or were labelled in the treasury with the names of previous kings, but were not used.

    • @BreakTheIce222
      @BreakTheIce222 2 года назад +2

      they would always be making stuff for the king's burial, not just assembling it after he died. The Egyptians believed in life after death so the tomb of a pharaoh was constructed all the time throughout his/her reign. However there are signs that he was hastily buried: the relatively poorly detailed paintings in his burial chamber, the paint streaks on the walls, his mummification itself, etc. It is theorized that Ay (his successor) quickly buried him before his chief military commander returned because the commander had a legit right to the throne as well. This is also why there's a giant painting of Ay and Tut in his tomb as well, for no apparent reason.

  • @surendrasahu1164
    @surendrasahu1164 2 года назад +1

    OH MY GOLD!!!!!!!!!!

  • @YTSH0RTMEME3
    @YTSH0RTMEME3 Год назад +3

    Ayo let my homie rest🗿

  • @sumdebbarma6697
    @sumdebbarma6697 Год назад +1

    What a nice piece of art..... So beautiful... Mask

  • @kepler240
    @kepler240 2 года назад +3

    1:33 is beyond mind boggling...then you see 2:07

  • @albertobezerraartinmotion
    @albertobezerraartinmotion 4 месяца назад +1

    Excellent.....Thanks.....Namaste🙏