Ancient Egyptian genius in the manufacture of the golden mask of King Tutankhamun

A British Egyptologist has found new evidence suggesting the death mask of ancient Egyptian king Tutankhamun was not made for him – in fact, it was made for his stepmother, Queen Neferтιтi.

Egyptologist Nicholas Reeves told Egyptian news service Ahram Online the famous gold death mask of Tutankhamun was in fact never intended for him.

Dr Reeves points to a cartouche (royal name stamp) that appears to have been retouched as evidence. The stamp conceals traces of another name: Ankhkheprure Nefernefruaten, which can be translated to Queen Neferтιтi.

Tutankhanum's famous gold death mask may have been intended for his step-mother, Neferтιтi

“Blinded by the piece’s sheer beauty and enormous bullion worth… the world has looked and yet has completely failed to see – that the gold mask had never been intended for Tutankhamun at all,” said Dr Reeves, who was a curator in the former Department of Egyptian Antiquities in the British Museum

Other features that back his conclusion the death mask was intended for a woman include the presence of pierced ears. In almost all other ancient Egyptian depictions, pierced ears were a feature only reserved for queens and children.

Tutankhamun Gold Mask Egyptian Pharaoh King Tut IDENTICAL Replica Reproduction | eBay

The discovery was made possible by an accident involving the mask’s beard being broken off and hastily glued back on by an employee of the Egyptian Museum in January.

The botched repair job led to the mask being taken off display for restoration, and for the first time, it was examined meticulously and pH๏τographed.

“A fresh examination of the mask in Cairo at the end of September 2015 yielded for the first time, beneath the hieroglyphs of Tutankhamun’s praenomen (personal name), lightly chased traces of an earlier, erased royal name,” said Dr Reeves.

Tutankhamun Discovery 100th Anniversary Gold Sovereign

This is the second time this year Dr Reeves has shaken up the archaeological community. In October, he studied ultra high-resolution images and believed he found clues in the walls of Tutankhamun’s burial chamber of having been painted over with scenes depicting the young Pharaoh’s life, as well as hidden doors that may lead to the discovery of Neferтιтi’s final resting place.

Egypt’s antiquities authorities received the news with enthusiasm, and have approved the use of ground-penetrating radar to probe the tomb after a preliminary infra-red scan of the walls last month appeared to back Dr Reeves’ claim up.

Related Posts

The Mosaic of El Djem: The Colorful Legacy of a Roman Empire in Africa — The Stone Carpet of Civilization

This magnificent floor mosaic was discovered in the ancient city of El Djem, located in central Tunisia — once a major urban center of the Roman province…

The Ancient Roman Road of Timgad — A Testament to the Engineering Genius of Empire

Geographic Location and DiscoveryThe archaeological site in the image is located in Timgad, an ancient Roman city situated in the Aures Mountains of northeastern Algeria. Known in…

Sennacherib’s Prisms Reveal the Glorious Reign of an ᴀssyrian King

Imagine if all of the world’s ancient cultures and civilizations had had well-developed writing systems. Then envision the marvels we would know about today, the hidden secrets…

World’s Oldest Bridge Is Still In Use & You Can See It In Greece

For nearly two millennia, the Little Theatre of Epidavros lay underground. Its engraved seats, concentric and tiered, belonged to a world of roots; in this case the roots of…

Decapitated Statues of Greek Deities Finally Reunited with Their Heads

Excavations at western Anatolia’s ancient Greek city of Aizanoi (also spelt Aezani) continue to unearth stunning artifacts and architectural wonders. The latest in the series of fascinating…

The Ziggurat of Ur is a Neo-Sumerian ziggurat in what was the city of Ur near Nasiriyah, in present-day Dhi Qar Province, Iraq. The structure was built during the Early Bronze Age but had crumbled to ruins by the 6th century BC of the Neo-Babylonian period, when it was restored by King Nabonidus.

The Ziggurat of Ur, a monumental structure standing in Ancient Mesopotamia, has captured the imagination of historians and archaeologists alike. Standing in present day Dhi Qar Province,…