Graphics experts have recreated the face of a pharaoh who founded the Valley of the Kings and rewrote history in ancient Egypt.
AmenH๏τep I – the second ruler of Egypt’s 18th Dynasty – is thought to have died 3,500 years ago at around age 35 before being painstakingly preserved through mummification.
He was the first to be buried in the Valley of the Kings – the resting site of almost all the Pharaohs of the 18th, 19th and 20th dynasties.
He was worshipped as a god after he died, primarily because he ushered Egypt into a new age of peace and prosperity during his reign.
Brazilian graphics designer Cicero Moraes digitally reconstructed AmenH๏τep’s likeness, revealing his face for the first time in 3,500 years.
Cicero Morares, a Brazilian 3D designer who specializes in forensic facial reconstruction, created these images by blending faces made through a variety of methods.
One method involved distributing soft tissue thickness markers across the Pharaoh’s skull, guided by computed tomography (CT) scan data from living donors.
Another was a technique called anatomical deformation, in which a digital recreation of a donor’s head was adjusted until the skull matched the Pharaoh’s.
This method was made possible thanks to CT scans of AmenH๏τep’s skull that were taken in 2021.
That work was conducted by paleo radiologist Sahar N. Saleem of the University of Cairo and Egyptologist Zahi Hawᴀss, who do not endorse the digital recreations and described them to DailyMail.com as ‘scientifically flawed’.
Regardless, their work ‘virtually unwrapped’ AmenH๏τep’s mummified remains using CT scanning, and revealed details his appearance, skeletal structure and some preserved internal organs, including his heart and brain.
The scans did not indicate a cause of death, but estimated the age of death at roughly 35 years.
Once Morares had revealed the Pharaoh’s face, he noticed that it didn’t match the god that had been depicted in statues
Many mummies, such as AmenH๏τep I, show an overbite. But this is generally not reflected in a compatible way in statues
Their work also suggested that he suffered a series of postmortem injuries ‘probably inflicted by tomb robbers or by the embalmers who re-wrapped the mummy later,’ said Morares’ co-author, archaeologist Michael Habicht of Flinders University in Australia.
It also showed that AmenH๏τep stood about five and a half feet tall, his teeth were in good condition and he had curly hair, Habicht added.
‘By crossing the data from all the projections, we generated the final bust and complemented the structure with historical costume,’ Morares said.
Once Morares had revealed the Pharaoh’s face, he noticed that it didn’t match the god that had been depicted in statues.
‘Many mummies, such as AmenH๏τep I, show a retrognathism or overbite, and this is generally not reflected in a compatible way in the statues,’ he said.
The mummy of AmenH๏τep I, the first to be buried in the Valley of Kings
University of Cairo-led experts uses computed tomography (CT) scans to create 3D reconstructions of AmenH๏τep I
‘In general terms, the statues of AmenH๏τep I are compatible in the nose region, but more gracile in the glabella region and more projected in the chin region.’
AmenH๏τep I’s reign came in the wake of his father Ahmose I’s expulsion of the Hyksos invaders and successful reunification Egypt – and represented something of a golden age for ancient Egypt.
Not only was the ‘New Kingdom’ both prosperous and secure, but AmenH๏τep I also oversaw a religious building spree and successful military campaigns against both Libya and northern Sudan.
‘Under the peaceful rule of AmenH๏τep I, the rise of Egypt was initiated and the heyday of the New Kingdom began,’ Habicht said.
AmenH๏τep’s name meant ‘Amun is satisfied’ – referring to the ancient Egyptian god of the air.
Morares and Habicht’s digital reconstruction offers a first-of-its-kind look at the face of this celebrated king. It was made possible by the Egyptologists who paved the way for this work.
‘This work was not done just by us, but by all those who studied and study ancient Egypt seriously, always sharing information,’ Morares said.