I'm just fascinated by Tutankhamun. Wow, the stories about him are just shocking. I couldn't believe it. and they keep coming. It's so amazing. He continues to intrigue.🐫🐫🌴☀️
Wiping Tut's name from the list of kings is what preserved his tomb. Tombraiders were working off a list of kings. Tut's name wasn't on it. And since Tut had a smaller tomb, anyone who got close would assume it wasn't a king's tomb.
@@amandathomas796 bringing his name back restored his soul in the afterlife. With all but a few sources of his name destroyed, discovering his tomb logically would be the best thing basing on their afterlife beliefs.
I went in 1990. Spent a whole day going from tomb to tomb. So amazing. I was 25 and my mom joined me. She is the one who instilled the love of ancient Egypt in me. She sent me on a bus to Seattle to see his exhibit when it toured the US in the 70s. She was extremely claustrophobic but she overcame it for the first time to visit this tomb and a few of the others afterwards. I had to hold her hand and she needed to just stop and breath on and off, but dang that woman had strength. I'd prove my own a few days later when I went into the center of the big pyramid. OMG...it's like a quarter of a mile, at a slant, bent over at the waist (I'm over six feet and the tunnel is 4'-ish and not quite that wide in places. About 2/3 of the way in, a group of large-bodied German tourists were coming out and we had to smash up against the sides while they pushed past. They were really pushy and rushing so our faces were pushed up against the tunnel wall. For the first time ever I kind of panicked. (My hands are shaking typing this!) At times you were kind of trapped and it started to really push my limits. Hunching over like that, while on a slant, really starts to mess with your body and it begins to burn in your calves and hips, your back and neck start to ache, your head bumps into the top of the tunnel every time you trip or step wrong. It is not a pleasant experience. Finally though we stepped out into the burial chamber in the center and I was able to stand up. The air was terrible and it was hot and I was panicking about the fact I had to go back out through that terrifying tunnel. But still, you cannot help but marvel at what was every day life for the people who built this amazing tomb. And then you have to stand at the tunnel opening, gulping down air, sweating and so hot you feel like you could get light-headed. And then you have to bend over and commit to a very long, hot, airless trek back to blue sky and fresh desert air. (The city was much farther away from the Pyramids then). It took every bit of self-control I had and just remembering the experience has my stomach trembling and goosebumps on my skin. I'm proud I did it, and really freaked out at the same time. Like the time I did the giant slide at the Waterpark.(The other fourth grade teacher was doing it and his class was teasing my class that their teacher was more brave and my students looked at me with this sad sad look and so despite my absolute terror of heights, I called "Wait up Mr Hall!' and trotted up the stairs with absolute terror in my heart).
Lapis, many semi- precious stones mined in the region, they were skilled metalworkers and jewelers. A lot of the craftmanship was performed by slaves, the Pharaohs had special "divisions" of workers whose sole duties centered around preparations for their journey to the afterlife. (Not the least of which were the pyramid/ tomb builders).
In 3rd grade one of our studies was on Egypt and pharaohs. We had a song. All i remember is Shadoof Shadoof sha dada sha dada sha dada. I'm still interested in it to this day.
I AGREE!!😌 ESPECIALLY WHEN YOUR AN "EMPRESS" AND YOUR FIRST NAME IS "DOROTHY" AND THE WIZARD OF OZ IS COMMING BACK AFTER 50YRS?? HISTORY( ME...) IS MAKING A COMEBACK ON A MORE POSSITIVE AND MOST GREATFUL NEW LEAF OF A NEW LIFE!!
King tut: why did i die so young😭 Anubis: i have no idea your majesty, mabye you were murdured Horus: mabye he died of a illness Osirus: mabye, he was attacked by an angry hiopo King tut: well, whatever the reason is, i did not deserve to die at a young age
makes sense . i was in both tombs in 2005. ay tomb is of the beaten track and not allow entrance . i managed to get there on a motorbike with a person i met in the winter palace. it was amazing
Egypt is treasure more!! More n more!!! Egypt is archeologi land!!! National geographic can speak about gadjah Mada... Mysterious of gadjah Mada death... Thanks from... North Banten... Indonesia...
The fear of the unknown is inherent to humanity. Our ancestors tried to give answers to the things they couldn't comprehend with superstitions. It's high time we stop being mere followers of those traditions and leverage our knowledge base to find the real answers.
I've been to Luxor three times, I've been making videos from ancient sites lately 🎥, so I'll film something for you on my next visit this year! I love Tutankhamun, thanks for your video!
4:40 didn't they say tut had a sudden death and his tomb was unfinished so they buried him in a small new one ...because the tomb that was meant for him was unfinished not because of Ay wanted tut's tomb for himself
I kinda agree. But I wanna know about that history and what it was like. I hope someone digs me up in 5000 years and learns about me. Would be pretty cool imo 😂
I would rather have the smaller tomb because they stay warmer and you don't freeze. My little sister conned her way into getting the bigger bedroom and hers is freezing and my little bedroom stays warm.
I used AI to make a short movie about advanced ancient civilizations, and it became really popular fast. It's seriously mind-blowing to see how AI can find connections and make predictions about things like ancient Egypt.
@@resinfingers3896 I appreciate your encouragement. It's important to strike a balance between creating content that attracts views and maintaining authenticity and quality. Focusing on creating meaningful and engaging content that resonates with viewers can lead to more sustainable success in the long run. Thank you for your support!
We will all die and we should all fear what's to come next in the afterlife. Only one way is the right way to return to him. "Turn to him, before you return to him".
That Ai guy was a true villain, an usurper. He had been the first adviser of Tut, his father and the faraoh before him. He had power safely in his hands and cheated to have his way. King Tut's wife had to marry him because the couple had had no heir. She was 21 and him 61. She tried to avoid her sad fate but there was nothing she could do. The designed heir, Tut's highest rank general, was abroad fighting and he became faraoh 4 years later upon Ai's death.
i think Ay wanted Tut gone and forgotten about. The fact that his mummification was so poorly done kind of makes it seem like they said "he's dead? so what get rid of his body"
If only all those tales of Pharaohs still haunting their tombs were true. People are digging up their tombs without any respect for the dead. These are supposed to be left alone. Not dug up and treated like profane objects. As an admirer of Kemitic culture this hurts me.
What are you talking about?... And "profane objects" doesn't even make sense?... You do know that you can't just go to Egypt and dig for tombs, you have to be granted permission. And who grants permission? - EGYPT.
@@NiceButBites And how many egyptians still honor these deities? I'd love to see the data. I know this, 90% of egypt's population is muslim. Interesting, I bet King Tut would be proud. It's not surprising at all why these great pharoahs knew they must be hidden. Religious tyranny was already thriving.
i think everything taken should be put back,there is enough of pictures, literature, and what ever else stolen from burials that should be put back, except they would have to be protected, and put back in a secure manner. its the least we can do,there are 3d printers that can replicate mummies and artifacts there is no reason for them to be on display any longer. would you like it if your decendants graves were exhumed for the purpose of what ever excuse they use to gain access? or in the name of....you see, we all deserve our perminent resting place, in peace. i think it is a real tragedy that ancient tombs, and graves, and temples are being desecrated because of interest to science. maybe they should do the study at the site and re bury the dead and gravesites,tombs etc.all this for the interest of science? where do we draw the line on respecting burial grounds? where do we think we deserve to see such things? have scientists not done enough to harm this world? am i the only one who thinks this type of scientific study should be changed to examination on site? another tragedy is the terra cotta army, egyptian tombs, and other types of ignorance of intrusion. some can never be returned but even stolen art auctioned off from being stolen during ww2, these are atrocities in their own way also. family heirlooms, we can put a rover or a few on mars, send a probe outside our galaxy but we fail to recognise the importance of a persons burial site?.....it makes me sick to think no one has advocated for the return to the grave for these people and artifacts.....why?
Wow! Love your argument. Well said and I mostly agree. But, there are complications. The egg of emptying a tomb cannot be unscramble. There was specific order and arrangement that even included fungal mold and apparent debris. Next is that the tombs were made (prepared) to be found at some later time. I think today we call such preparations time capsules (packed for others to find later). I agree with your position but the mummies are envoys (sent) from the past in a very real sense. The tombs are certainly not yet well understood to put them back together as they were found even if that was a realistic possibility. Still, I think you are right in sense that new preparations of tombs should be made to securely bury the Dead with their artifacts (when possible) to survive several thousand more years. Undisturbed. But, do we today know how to do such a thing without electricity and would we commit to such an effort? For now, temporary or final storage seems to be museums where artifacts are safer from thieves, building dams, cities, and climate change. The considerations are really complex and complicated. But, I agree with you.
as a youngster on my ten speed, watching folks file in to see the King Tut exhibit in Golden Gate Park, i never imagined that Dynastic Leaders in that region of North Africa, actually have very little to do with much of their inherited "monuments." repurposed caverns cut deep into bedrock called "burial tombs" massive rectangular granite boxes that have nothing to do with burial of human or "Apis Bull" remains. i found a Nat Geo DVD about the removal of a Famous Female Mummy, which was kinda' interesting, but what makes that North African region so mysterious, is the infrastructure, below ground.
"Why did Ay banish Tutankhamun to such a small tomb? " That is such a ridiculous question that presumes a bigger tomb is better or somehow more important, that the current tomb is fully known, and that Ay "banished" or tried to defame his predecessor. At 4:26 the speaker says, "Ay buried Tutankhamun in the smaller tomb so he could have the bigger tomb for himself." My kindest response is that the hypothesis is silly because Ay as any pharaoh had the resources and authority to build what he wanted. Would he not have known his authority as pharaoh? He could have commissioned a city to be built, but not a tomb? The notion that any pharaoh coveted to steal the goods or fame of another is ridiculous at face value. The factual record is misunderstood. Then, the narrator makes a silly comment about Tutankhamun being in an "unworthy" tomb as if the tomb and burial are actually understood. Why is the tomb supposedly "unworthy"? What would make it worthy and in whose judgment would it be worthy? Is the order (ma'at) of the tomb or its intent recognized or known? If yes, then why is there speculation about hidden chambers or the mistaken belief that the tomb was ever robbed? It was not robbed. So, at best, the assessments about it are honestly mistaken. Also, there was no attempt to erase Tutankhamun from history. Hiding the burial ideally brought it into greater perfection with the hidden aspect of Amun (the hidden one) and safeguarded the burial. The tomb and burial were fully intact as originally found by Carter. The tomb and burial are more complex than is currently recognized and the real facts about it are far more interesting than nonsensical claims about magic preparations and kings with ambitions toward petty theft. Magic and mysticism are explanations where there is no real understanding.
Hey they left out the guy going 'Anubis... (points at jackal) Horus... (points at eye)', then tells you the 10 spots to take a picture while following you everywhere you go and then asking baskheesh for not giving you a moment of space to actually enjoy what you're there for
I'm just fascinated by Tutankhamun. Wow, the stories about him are just shocking. I couldn't believe it. and they keep coming. It's so amazing.
He continues to intrigue.🐫🐫🌴☀️
Ancient Egypt will never stop astonishing me
samee
Can't ever get enough of Tutankhamun's tales.. Tales of the super boy king..
Shiet with your name, you might be his relative
تيچجاچ gy5w🍍
He was full grown king
@@mymagic372 he die young
Ancient Egypt is the best of human development
tutankhamun : "i will sleep in peace"
scientist : "ehmm.."
😂
Archeologist*
Wiping Tut's name from the list of kings is what preserved his tomb. Tombraiders were working off a list of kings. Tut's name wasn't on it. And since Tut had a smaller tomb, anyone who got close would assume it wasn't a king's tomb.
@TheNewfieDogGuy not everlasting, since it was found by graverobbers... ghm, I mean, Archeologists
Uhm..
I'm bored
Shouldn't disturb the dead
@@amandathomas796 bringing his name back restored his soul in the afterlife. With all but a few sources of his name destroyed, discovering his tomb logically would be the best thing basing on their afterlife beliefs.
Tutankhamun was banished and that's why his treasure was preserved, I cannot imagine how are the treasures of the other great pharaohs looked like.
He was not banished. Later kings erased his name.
He was never banished. Get your facts together
He wasn't banished, he was a GREATLY loved King for the short time he was one
If I robbed just one tomb…
@@DirtyLifeLoveyou’d be several millennia old!
Egyptian history is so interesting to me.
I wish i could go back in time and witness those things 😭❤️❤️
You might be enslaved to build the pyramids
@@beautifulloser8074 lol
@@beautifulloser8074 😂 nooo i will become king's advisor cause i know all history facts😎 easy job
@@beautifulloser8074 correct me if I'm wrong but I thought that the guy building the pyramid wasn't a slaves.
@@beautifulloser8074 the pyramids were build by payed workers , not slaves
He did everything possible to protect his grave
Wasn't enough
I'm so glad the treasures remained intact by this lucky accident of history and I got to see them in person at the Met in NY.
Lucky you! Now only certified replicae can be seen abroad. Still it is worthwhile. For the real thing you must travel to the Cairo.
I’ve been there and it’s an insane feeling , when you keep going down the stairs
I went in 1990. Spent a whole day going from tomb to tomb. So amazing. I was 25 and my mom joined me. She is the one who instilled the love of ancient Egypt in me. She sent me on a bus to Seattle to see his exhibit when it toured the US in the 70s. She was extremely claustrophobic but she overcame it for the first time to visit this tomb and a few of the others afterwards. I had to hold her hand and she needed to just stop and breath on and off, but dang that woman had strength.
I'd prove my own a few days later when I went into the center of the big pyramid. OMG...it's like a quarter of a mile, at a slant, bent over at the waist (I'm over six feet and the tunnel is 4'-ish and not quite that wide in places. About 2/3 of the way in, a group of large-bodied German tourists were coming out and we had to smash up against the sides while they pushed past. They were really pushy and rushing so our faces were pushed up against the tunnel wall.
For the first time ever I kind of panicked. (My hands are shaking typing this!) At times you were kind of trapped and it started to really push my limits. Hunching over like that, while on a slant, really starts to mess with your body and it begins to burn in your calves and hips, your back and neck start to ache, your head bumps into the top of the tunnel every time you trip or step wrong. It is not a pleasant experience. Finally though we stepped out into the burial chamber in the center and I was able to stand up. The air was terrible and it was hot and I was panicking about the fact I had to go back out through that terrifying tunnel. But still, you cannot help but marvel at what was every day life for the people who built this amazing tomb.
And then you have to stand at the tunnel opening, gulping down air, sweating and so hot you feel like you could get light-headed. And then you have to bend over and commit to a very long, hot, airless trek back to blue sky and fresh desert air. (The city was much farther away from the Pyramids then).
It took every bit of self-control I had and just remembering the experience has my stomach trembling and goosebumps on my skin. I'm proud I did it, and really freaked out at the same time. Like the time I did the giant slide at the Waterpark.(The other fourth grade teacher was doing it and his class was teasing my class that their teacher was more brave and my students looked at me with this sad sad look and so despite my absolute terror of heights, I called "Wait up Mr Hall!' and trotted up the stairs with absolute terror in my heart).
How did they make that perfect gold face/tomb? What tools did they use? What material are the other brilliant blue colors made of in the crown?
Lapis, many semi- precious stones mined in the region, they were skilled metalworkers and jewelers. A lot of the craftmanship was performed by slaves, the Pharaohs had special "divisions" of workers whose sole duties centered around preparations for their journey to the afterlife. (Not the least of which were the pyramid/ tomb builders).
Don't tell me u believe aliens help them? lol 😆
Ask me to tell you; I was there with them before my father brought me to life 60 years ago.
@@Taqarvust what..
Can you also imagine how they made the pyramids. I think its much more labor haha
All by hand ,with brushes .... so amazing
I need the whole documentary
Tutankhamun is really a mystery!!
Fate sought to see Tut rule over all of them with such a discovery like his Tomb.
In 3rd grade one of our studies was on Egypt and pharaohs. We had a song. All i remember is Shadoof Shadoof sha dada sha dada sha dada. I'm still interested in it to this day.
In Egypt Shadoof is used in agriculture 😊
my ultimate dream is to become part of National Geographic team😍
I AGREE!!😌
ESPECIALLY WHEN YOUR AN "EMPRESS" AND YOUR FIRST NAME IS "DOROTHY" AND THE WIZARD OF OZ IS COMMING BACK AFTER 50YRS??
HISTORY( ME...) IS MAKING A COMEBACK ON A MORE POSSITIVE AND MOST GREATFUL NEW LEAF OF A NEW LIFE!!
then try to lying keeeeeepp lying
@@taashaa7806 lol
Ai caliça
@@fireanrain901 stop YELLING at us!
Art is eternal!!!
The workmen love that guy...because of the shade that his nose provides
This would be great to see the whole documentary in full 👍
King tut: why did i die so young😭
Anubis: i have no idea your majesty, mabye you were murdured
Horus: mabye he died of a illness
Osirus: mabye, he was attacked by an angry hiopo
King tut: well, whatever the reason is, i did not deserve to die at a young age
This all so fascinating to me!
Still waiting for the Nefertiti tomb discovery 🥲
It could happen, someday.
i fell like nefertiti might be the younger lady. but if she isnt. we will eventually find it
I love Egypt
I love Tutankamon. I am his next generation. Thank you king Tutankamon for die brave for us. Let your spirit visit me often. 🪐❤️🌈🕊🦷
makes sense . i was in both tombs in 2005. ay tomb is of the beaten track and not allow entrance . i managed to get there on a motorbike with a person i met in the winter palace. it was amazing
Awesome!
Was Ay there?
@@gandolph999 he was but he was grounded
Egypt is treasure more!! More n more!!!
Egypt is archeologi land!!!
National geographic can speak about gadjah Mada...
Mysterious of gadjah Mada death...
Thanks from...
North Banten... Indonesia...
Fascinating.........
Thanks NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC.
I have stood in that tomb. It is amazing! GOOOOOO! You will not be sorry.
This is such a great documentry
The religious footprint on earth is insane. Imagination and beliefs in the afterlife is just as strong today and the footprint not any less.
Almost like something is embedded in the core of mankind that makes us sense there is something outside of the life we see.
@@TheJimyyy I hope you are right🤔
The fear of the unknown is inherent to humanity. Our ancestors tried to give answers to the things they couldn't comprehend with superstitions. It's high time we stop being mere followers of those traditions and leverage our knowledge base to find the real answers.
there is an after life though everyone knows that
@@allentoyokawa9068 wrong, some choose to believe so.
Would love to go there
Tutankamun might be very sad seeing soo many stories made up in his name.
I've been to Luxor three times, I've been making videos from ancient sites lately 🎥, so I'll film something for you on my next visit this year! I love Tutankhamun, thanks for your video!
hey there🌹
@@shantirelaxingmusic5285 HI
Yeahhh very good. I interested in ancient sites. Already Thank you 😊
@@umutcan450 Thank You!
Watched your videos 👍
Oh thanks for the latest!
Love watching geo
4:40 didn't they say tut had a sudden death and his tomb was unfinished so they buried him in a small new one ...because the tomb that was meant for him was unfinished not because of Ay wanted tut's tomb for himself
Great documentary
O antigo Egito é sempre um assunto fascinante! 👏👏👏👏
Outstanding
More informative ....nice
Nice video.
How dare they desecrate these Graves they have absolutely no right doing this!!!
He was love n justice in one 😇
Why does modern science insist on opening up graves? Leave them alone.
I kinda agree. But I wanna know about that history and what it was like. I hope someone digs me up in 5000 years and learns about me. Would be pretty cool imo 😂
To study
Money!
Why leave them alone and get nothing out of it, when we can study them and learn more about our history?
Very informative broh
Wow incredible
Thank you for this glorious documentary 👏🏽👏🏆💐🌞🇪🇬
🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳
Yay sorry I was to happy and we need more please I love these things
if Ay userped Tut for his tomb, it's only fitting we all know Tut and not Ay and mostly for his tomb - justice served
Where can we find the full episode if there is one?
Look in the description at the bottom...there's a few links at the bottom
Cartoon Network
Have you tried ESPN?
Just search tutankharmun tomb you'll find one on this channel with full episode on the title
I would rather have the smaller tomb because they stay warmer and you don't freeze. My little sister conned her way into getting the bigger bedroom and hers is freezing and my little bedroom stays warm.
🤣🤣🤣
animations are very nice
Fantastic Wow
I used AI to make a short movie about advanced ancient civilizations, and it became really popular fast. It's seriously mind-blowing to see how AI can find connections and make predictions about things like ancient Egypt.
Ok rando, keep pushing for those views
@@resinfingers3896 I appreciate your encouragement. It's important to strike a balance between creating content that attracts views and maintaining authenticity and quality. Focusing on creating meaningful and engaging content that resonates with viewers can lead to more sustainable success in the long run. Thank you for your support!
Amazing
Gold are very beautiful that's a great treasure nice where is the full documentary.
Look at tuts hairstyle 😍
Tut has the last laugh for ETERNITY! 💪
True
true
Beautiful
We will all die and we should all fear what's to come next in the afterlife. Only one way is the right way to return to him.
"Turn to him, before you return to him".
So, Tut was before Jesus time, and no one knew anything about Christianity back then because it simply didn’t exist….
I love your videos cinema 😊
She's standing in Aye's burial chamber, accusing him of robbing his grandson Tutankhamen. Classy.
Fascinating
That Ai guy was a true villain, an usurper. He had been the first adviser of Tut, his father and the faraoh before him. He had power safely in his hands and cheated to have his way. King Tut's wife had to marry him because the couple had had no heir. She was 21 and him 61. She tried to avoid her sad fate but there was nothing she could do. The designed heir, Tut's highest rank general, was abroad fighting and he became faraoh 4 years later upon Ai's death.
He may of even killed tut
@3:08 this chick looks like Micheal cera lmao
@jimmy_mcfall
Spot on, my guy! Now I can't unsee Michael Cera in a wig 😂🤣
Wow 😳
Jai Shree Mahakal Ji 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳🕳
Very good
Tutankhamun was betrayed and stabbed in the back, internal politics.
Why is the music soundtrack so annoying? Completely out place and distracting. Overshadows any interesting information that the series is exploring.
Nice
nice👍
i think Ay wanted Tut gone and forgotten about. The fact that his mummification was so poorly done kind of makes it seem like they said "he's dead? so what get rid of his body"
Well this sure is pretty interesting.
Adoro coisas antigas ;)
Quanto mi sarebbe piaciuto partecipare agli scavi, lo farei anche gratuitamente.. Saluti DALL Italia, complimenti
That’s one way to wake up!
Excellent information
Great
Wasn't there also something about Tut's tomb being closer to the bottom of the hills & so it was buried during a flood & harder to find.
He is very young only 3300 years..
😂
If only all those tales of Pharaohs still haunting their tombs were true. People are digging up their tombs without any respect for the dead. These are supposed to be left alone. Not dug up and treated like profane objects. As an admirer of Kemitic culture this hurts me.
What are you talking about?...
And "profane objects" doesn't even make sense?...
You do know that you can't just go to Egypt and dig for tombs, you have to be granted permission. And who grants permission? - EGYPT.
@@NiceButBites And how many egyptians still honor these deities? I'd love to see the data. I know this, 90% of egypt's population is muslim. Interesting, I bet King Tut would be proud. It's not surprising at all why these great pharoahs knew they must be hidden. Religious tyranny was already thriving.
@@NiceButBites those aren't the real Egyptians
@@LazerEyeX_X there are real Egyptian. Who do you think? Is it subsaharan Africa?
@@LazerEyeX_X someone over the internet who never set a foot on Egypt, is telling us Egyptians are fake and the real ones evaporated 😂
Would be nice to see the place for real.
Rich art....
i think everything taken should be put back,there is enough of pictures, literature, and what ever else stolen from burials that should be put back, except they would have to be protected, and put back in a secure manner. its the least we can do,there are 3d printers that can replicate mummies and artifacts there is no reason for them to be on display any longer. would you like it if your decendants graves were exhumed for the purpose of what ever excuse they use to gain access? or in the name of....you see, we all deserve our perminent resting place, in peace. i think it is a real tragedy that ancient tombs, and graves, and temples are being desecrated because of interest to science. maybe they should do the study at the site and re bury the dead and gravesites,tombs etc.all this for the interest of science? where do we draw the line on respecting burial grounds? where do we think we deserve to see such things? have scientists not done enough to harm this world? am i the only one who thinks this type of scientific study should be changed to examination on site? another tragedy is the terra cotta army, egyptian tombs, and other types of ignorance of intrusion. some can never be returned but even stolen art auctioned off from being stolen during ww2, these are atrocities in their own way also. family heirlooms, we can put a rover or a few on mars, send a probe outside our galaxy but we fail to recognise the importance of a persons burial site?.....it makes me sick to think no one has advocated for the return to the grave for these people and artifacts.....why?
Wow! Love your argument. Well said and I mostly agree.
But, there are complications.
The egg of emptying a tomb cannot be unscramble. There was specific order and arrangement that even included fungal mold and apparent debris.
Next is that the tombs were made (prepared) to be found at some later time. I think today we call such preparations time capsules (packed for others to find later).
I agree with your position but the mummies are envoys (sent) from the past in a very real sense.
The tombs are certainly not yet well understood to put them back together as they were found even if that was a realistic possibility.
Still, I think you are right in sense that new preparations of tombs should be made to securely bury the Dead with their artifacts (when possible) to survive several thousand more years. Undisturbed.
But, do we today know how to do such a thing without electricity and would we commit to such an effort?
For now, temporary or final storage seems to be museums where artifacts are safer from thieves, building dams, cities, and climate change.
The considerations are really complex and complicated.
But, I agree with you.
Thank you.
《ĐỒ VẬT CŨNG ĐƯỢC BỐ TRÍ CẨN THẬN》🌌
1:38 AHHH! MUMMY!
Where can i watch more?
Good
Assalamu alikum
روووووووووووعه ......
as a youngster on my ten speed, watching folks file in to see the King Tut exhibit in Golden Gate Park, i never imagined that Dynastic Leaders in that region of North Africa, actually have very little to do with much of their inherited "monuments." repurposed caverns cut deep into bedrock called "burial tombs" massive rectangular granite boxes that have nothing to do with burial of human or "Apis Bull" remains. i found a Nat Geo DVD about the removal of a Famous Female Mummy, which was kinda' interesting, but what makes that North African region so mysterious, is the infrastructure, below ground.
The tombs of the Egypitan Pharohs are sacred, and people are not supposed to enter them. They exist only to facilitate the afterlife of the Pharoh.
"Why did Ay banish Tutankhamun to such a small tomb? "
That is such a ridiculous question that presumes a bigger tomb is better or somehow more important, that the current tomb is fully known, and that Ay "banished" or tried to defame his predecessor.
At 4:26 the speaker says, "Ay buried Tutankhamun in the smaller tomb so he could have the bigger tomb for himself."
My kindest response is that the hypothesis is silly because Ay as any pharaoh had the resources and authority to build what he wanted.
Would he not have known his authority as pharaoh? He could have commissioned a city to be built, but not a tomb?
The notion that any pharaoh coveted to steal the goods or fame of another is ridiculous at face value. The factual record is misunderstood.
Then, the narrator makes a silly comment about Tutankhamun being in an "unworthy" tomb as if the tomb and burial are actually understood.
Why is the tomb supposedly "unworthy"? What would make it worthy and in whose judgment would it be worthy?
Is the order (ma'at) of the tomb or its intent recognized or known?
If yes, then why is there speculation about hidden chambers or the mistaken belief that the tomb was ever robbed?
It was not robbed. So, at best, the assessments about it are honestly mistaken.
Also, there was no attempt to erase Tutankhamun from history. Hiding the burial ideally brought it into greater perfection with the hidden aspect of Amun (the hidden one) and safeguarded the burial.
The tomb and burial were fully intact as originally found by Carter.
The tomb and burial are more complex than is currently recognized and the real facts about it are far more interesting than nonsensical claims about magic preparations and kings with ambitions toward petty theft.
Magic and mysticism are explanations where there is no real understanding.
Good comment! Well said.
@@aircastles1013 I heard in a BBC documentary that his tomb was meant to be bigger, but because he died young it was a rush job
@@evacameron6288 Also logical! So interesting all the thoughts and such a shame we can never really know. I wish time travel was real.
@@aircastles1013 The documentary mentioned nothing about Ay though
@@evacameron6288 Did they say how large a Pharaoh's tomb was supposed to be? That has to be known to validly say that his tomb was too small.
Why is the video cut short...?
Hey they left out the guy going 'Anubis... (points at jackal) Horus... (points at eye)', then tells you the 10 spots to take a picture while following you everywhere you go and then asking baskheesh for not giving you a moment of space to actually enjoy what you're there for
Yeah very good
I love ❤️ King narmer