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During
ancient times, the royal house hired special police to protect the Valley
of the Kings. These men were relatively effective until the late New Kingdom,
when, despite their best efforts, the royal tombs were at first randomly
and then systematically violated.
The Robbery and Rescue of Tuts
Tomb
Thieves invaded Tutankhamuns tomb fairly soon after his burial,
but they were caught in the act. Official inspectors hastily reorganized
the contents and then resealed the tomb.
Shortly thereafter, workmen constructing the nearby tomb
of another pharaoh built their huts over the young kings place of
burial, thus obscuring it. Later flooding in the area erased any evidence
of its existence. Tutankhamuns tomb would remain hidden for more
than three thousand years.
Early
Explorations of the Valley of the Kings
The first historical record of burial discoveries in the Valley of the
Kings comes from a Jesuit priest, who found ten royal tombs already open
in 1708. Napoleons expedition to Egypt in 1799 recorded the wall
paintings and reliefs found in these tombs.
With the cracking of the hieroglyphic code in 1822 by Jean-François
Champollion, the field of Egyptology was born. Hordes of Europeans and
Americans pillaged the land, carrying off everything they could find.
The First Discoveries of 18th Dynasty
Tombs
In 1871, an Egyptian stumbled across a hidden cache that contained many
of the most famous kings of the New Kingdom. A second cache found in 1898
held the mummies of many 18th Dynasty Pharaohs, including Amenhotep II,
likely Tutankhamuns great, great grandfather.
Continue to Howard
Carters Arrival. >>
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