“Discovery of the century”: Archaeologists believe they are approaching the ancient tomb of the legendary queen, King Tutankhamun’s wife, which is about 3,300 years old.

Ankhesenamun, the queen of Egypt’s 18th Dynasty, was 13 when she married nine-year-old Tut

SCIENTISTS believe they are closing in on the remains of legendary Egyptian King Tutankhamun’s wife.

The tragic Ankhesenamun, immortalised as the villain in blockbuster film The Mummy, was 13 when she married the nine-year-old pharaoh Tut, her half-brother.

Scientists may be closing in on the remains of Egyptian King Tutankhamun’s wife AnkhesenamunCredit: Getty – Contributor

She went on to marry Tut’s successor, Ay, her maternal grandfather, according to experts at Ancient Origins.

The third of six daughters and the queen of the Egypt’s 18th Dynasty is also thought to be the first wife of her own father, Akhenten.

Archaeologist Zahi Hawᴀss discovered what he claimed was her final resting place in the Valley of the Kings using ground-penetrating radar in July.

The dig to uncover the mythical queen’s remains – a find he dubs the “discovery of the century” – is now finally underway, he announced on his website.

The final remains of Ankhesenamun, immortalised in film The Mummy, are believed to be buried in the Valley Of The Kings
A new tomb was discovered in the Valley Of The Kings in July and scientists reckon it contains Tut’s wife

“In January 2018, Zahi Hawᴀss launched his own excavations at the Valley of the Monkeys, a side valley in the area of the Valley Of The Kings,” a spokesman for the research team said.

They added: “The focus of the excavations is in the area in close proximity to the tomb of Ay, Tutankhamun’s successor.

“The radar scans in the area detected the presence of a possible entrance to a tomb at a depth of five metres (16ft).”

Alongside Italian researchers, Hawᴀss had been excavating the area as part of  a fresh investigation into the boy king’s resting place – also in the Valley of The Kings – earlier this year.

Extended preview video for new ITV drama mini series Tutankhamun

Archaeologist Zahi Hawᴀss discovered what he claimed was her final resting place in the Valley of the Kings (pictured) using ground-penetrating technologyCredit: Getty – Contributor

Tutankhamun is believed to have died before his burial chamber was built and buried in a rushCredit: Getty Images

Speaking when the excavation was first announced, Franco Porcelli, the project’s director, said: “Who knows what we might find as we scan the ground.”

The tomb was first discovered by British archaeologist Howard Carter in Egypt’s Valley of the Kings in November 1922.

Carter’s patron Lord Carnarvon died weeks after the tomb was opened, fuelling supernatural rumours.

Carnarvon, who funded Carter’s expeditions, was believed to be the victim of a curse inscribed on the Pharoah’s tomb which claimed anyone who disturbed it would be “visited by wings of death”.

Is Neferтιтi hidden behind Tutankhamun’s Tomb?

Hawᴀss had been excavating the Valley of the Kings area as part of  a fresh investigation into the resting place of TutankhamunCredit: Getty – Contributor

Archaeologist Howard Carter removing oils from the coffin of Tutankhamen in 1922Credit: Getty – Contributor

The Brit was likely killed by an infected mosquito bite and no such inscription was ever found.

But some believe the burial site contains a secret room and the final resting place of the boy king’s step-mother Queen Neferтιтi.

Porcelli, a professor of physics at the Polytechnic University in Turin said that his team’s mission will be the “final investigation” which will “provide an answer which is 99 per cent definitive”.

The team will use a bevy of high tech radar systems to detect the underground architecture and spot any anomalies in between the tomb walls.

The hunt is part of a larger study to map the ancient resting place of the Egyptian Pharaohs.

It is the third time researchers have entered the 3,300-year-old tomb in the past two years.

Doubts have been cast over the existence of the missing chamber.

Nicholas Reeves, a British Egyptologist at the University of Arizona first claimed to have spotted a secret room back in 2015.

Elevated view over temple and limestone cliffs near the Temple of HatshepsutCredit: Getty Images
Radar scans appeared to back up his theory, and were welcomed by Mamdouh Eldamaty, Egypt’s former minister of antiquity.

The bombshell news was met with concern, with the National Geographical Society failing to replicate similar results.

Scientists recently opened ancient Egyptian tomb after 3,600 years and were shocked to discover entire families intact, next to goats and the skeleton of a mᴀssive crocodile.

Related Posts

The Cylindrical Cut Stone Block: A Mystery of Ancient Craftsmanship

The cylindrical-cut stone block—found in 1978 in the Precambrian granite fields of Karelia—is one of the most puzzling objects encountered by the research team led by Dr….

AN IRON KNIFE EMBEDDED IN AN ANIMAL VERTEBRA: AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF HUMAN–WILDLIFE INTERACTION IN THE LATE PREHISTORIC TO PROTOHISTORIC PERIOD

The artifact is dated to approximately 800–1,200 years ago, corresponding to the transitional period between late prehistory and early protohistory in northern regions such as Alberta, Canada….

A FOSSILIZED PREHISTORIC EQUINE-LIKE FORM IN MUD PRESERVATION: ARCHAEOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF A UNIQUE DISCOVERY IN THE ARCTIC PERMAFROST

The estimated age of this specimen ranges between 28,000 and 30,000 years, corresponding to the late Pleistocene, a period when the thick layers of Arctic ice and…

Early 20th-Century Archaeologists and the Ritual Stone Monument

The engraved monolith depicting a multi-armed anthropomorphic figure and surrounding symbols, shown in the vintage pH๏τograph, is believed to date from the early 20th-century era of European…

THE “STONE HAND” ON THE MOUNTAIN SLOPE: AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL HYPOTHESIS OF A UNIQUE ARTIFACT

The stone formation resembling a “giant hand” on the mountainside was first documented between 2021 and 2022 by a local survey team conducting stratigraphic measurements in a…

THE GRANITE HÓRREO OF GALICIA: AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE

The stone structure depicted in the image is an exceptional example of a Galician hórreo, a raised granary commonly found in northwestern Spain, particularly the autonomous region…