The Shadow King

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The Shadow King Page 33

by Jo Marchant


  21. Wendrich, W., “Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs,” Near Eastern Archaeology 67(4), 2004, 226–228.

  22. Ibid.

  23. Alexander, K., “As Tut Time Approaches, His Hosts Are Working to Crank Up the Buzz,” The New York Times. March 30, 2005.

  24. Waxman, S., “The Show-Biz Pharaoh of Egypt’s Antiquities,” The New York Times. June 13, 2005.

  25. Boehm, M., “Eternal Egypt Is His Business.”

  26. Girling, R., “King Tut Tut Tut,” The Sunday Times. May 22, 2005.

  27. Waxman, S., “The Show-Biz Pharaoh of Egypt’s Antiquities.”

  28. Ibid.

  29. Quilici, B., Nefertiti and the Lost Dynasty, 50 min., first aired on the National Geographic Channel on July 16, 2007.

  30. James, S., “Who is the Mummy Elder Lady?” Kmt 12(2), 2001, 42.

  31. Nefertiti Revealed, 120 min., first aired on the Discovery Channel on September 7, 2003; Fletcher, J., The Search for Nefertiti: The True Story of an Amazing Discovery. New York: HarperCollins, 2004.

  32. For example, see El-Aref, N., “Zahi Hawass: A Hat Is a Hat,” Al Ahram Weekly. August 25–31, 2005; Girling, R., “King Tut Tut Tut.”

  Chapter 13: The Third Door

  1. El-Aref, N., “Identity Crisis,” Al Ahram Weekly. December 14–20, 2000.

  2. In 2007, Brier and Corthals’s work on the modern mummy featured in a big-budget 3D IMAX film called Mummies: Secrets of the Pharaohs, narrated by Christopher Lee.

  3. Quilici, B., Secrets of Egypt’s Lost Queen, 100 min., first aired on the Discovery Channel on July 15, 2007.

  4. Thimes, J. L., “New Doubts,” Kmt 19(3), 2008, 7.

  5. Graefe, E. “Der angebliche Zahn der angeblich krebskranken Diabetikerin Königin Hatschepsut, oder: Die Mumie der Hatschepsut bleibt unbekannt,” Göttinger Miszellen, 2011, 231, s. 41–43.

  6. “Manchester Expert Helps with Pharaoh DNA Analysis,” press release issued by Manchester University on July 16, 2007.

  7. Dickinson, B., “Tooth IDs Famed Egyptian Queen,” Discover, January 2008.

  8. Brown, C., “The King Herself,” National Geographic, April 2009. This article notes that the identity of the mummy isn’t proven.

  9. Doughton, S., “King Tut Treasures to Visit Seattle in 2012,” The Seattle Times. April 13, 2010.

  10. Marchant, J., “Searching for the Venice of the Nile,” New Scientist 24, March 2012, 12. Graham, A. et. al., “Reconstructing Landscapes and Waterscapes in Thebes, Egypt,” Journal for Ancient Studies special volume 3, 2012, 135–142.

  11. For video and photos, see Stanek, S., “Tut Move Designed to Save Mummy,” National Geographic News. November 4, 2007: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/11/071104-tut-mummy.html.

  Chapter 14: Fingerprints, Forensics, and a Family Tree

  1. Quilici, B., King Tut Unwrapped, 174 min., first aired on the Discovery Channel on February 21, 2010.

  2. Hawass, Z., et al., “Ancestry and Pathology in King Tutankhamun’s Family,” JAMA 303(7), 2010, 638–647.

  3. Than, K., “King Tut Mysteries Solved: Was Disabled, Malarial and Inbred,” National Geographic Daily News. February 16, 2010.

  4. Aldred, C., and A. T. Sandison, “The Pharaoh Akhenaten: A Problem in Egyptology and Pathology,” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 36, 1962, 293–316.

  5. Dodson, A., Amarna Sunset: Nefertiti, Tutankhamun, Ay, Horemheb, and the Egyptian Counter-Reformation. Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2009.

  6. Weller, M., “Tutankhamun: An Adrenal Tumour?” The Lancet 300, 1972, 1312; Walshe, J. M., “Tutankhamun: Klinefelter’s or Wilson’s?” The Lancet 301, 1973, 109–110; Taitz, L. S., “Tutankhamun’s Breasts,” The Lancet 301, 1973, 149; Swales, J. D., “Tutankhamun’s Breasts,” The Lancet 301, 1973, 201.

  7. Harrison, R. G., “Tutankhamun Postmortem,” The Lancet 301, 1973, 259.

  8. Paulshock, B., “Tutankhamun and His Brothers: Familial Gynecomastia in the Eighteenth Dynasty,” JAMA 244, 1980, 160–164.

  9. Brier, B., The Murder of Tutankhamen: A True Story. New York: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1998 (reprinted by Berkley in 2005).

  10. Braverman, I. M., D. B. Redford, and P. A. Mackowiak, “Akhenaten and the Strange Physiques of Egypt’s 18th Dynasty,” Annals of Internal Medicine 150, 2009, 556–560.

  11. Hawass, Z., “King Tut’s Family Secrets,” National Geographic, September 2010.

  12. Genzlinger, N., “CSI: Egypt, Complete with DNA Tests of Mummies,” The New York Times. February 19, 2010.

  13. Than, K., “King Tut Mysteries Solved.”

  14. Bates, C., “Unmasked: The Real Faces of the Crippled King Tutankhamun (Who Walked with a Cane) and His Incestuous Parents,” Daily Mail Online. February 20, 2010, http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1251731/King-Tutankhamuns-incestuous-family-revealed.html.

  15. Koerth-Baker, M., “Mummy DNA: History or Hype?” Boing Boing, February 2, 2011, http://boingboing.net/2011/02/02/mummy-dna-history-or.html.

  16. JAMA 303(24), 2010: “King Tutankhamun’s Family and Demise,” Baker, B. J., 2471–2472; Timmann, C., and C. G. Meyer, 2473; Braverman, I. M., and P. A. Mackowiak, 2472–2473; Gamble, J. G., 2472; Lorenzen, E. D., and E. Willerslev, 2471; author reply: Gad, Y. Z., A. Selim, and C. M. Pusch, 2473–2475.

  17. “The Discovery of the Family Secrets of King Tutankhamun,” press release issued by Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, February 2010.

  18. Quilici, B., Nefertiti and the Lost Dynasty, 50 min., first aired on the National Geographic Channel on July 16, 2007.

  19. Eaton-Krauss, M., “Mummies (and Daddies),” Göttinger Miszellen: Beiträge zur ägyptologischen Diskussion 230, 2011, 29–36.

  Chapter 15: DNA Down the Rabbit Hole

  1. Lorenzen, E. D., and E. Willerslev, “King Tutankhamun’s Family and Demise,” JAMA 303(24), 2010, 2471.

  2. Higuchi, R. G., et al., “DNA Sequences from the Quagga, an Extinct Member of the Horse Family,” Nature 312, 1984, 282–284.

  3. Pääbo, S., “Molecular Cloning of Ancient Egyptian Mummy DNA,” Nature 314(6012), 1985, 644–645.

  4. Woodward, S., et al., “DNA Sequence from Cretaceous Period Bone Fragments,” Science 266, 1994, 1229–1232.

  5. Hedges, S. B., and M. H. Schweitzer, “Detecting Dinosaur DNA,” Science 268, 1995, 1191–1192.

  6. Gitschier, J., “Imagine: An Interview with Svante Pääbo,” PLoS Genetics 4(3), 2008, e1000035.

  7. van der Kuyl, A. C., et al., “DNA from Ancient Monkey Bones,” Ancient DNA Newsletter 2, 1994, 19–21.

  8. Cooper, A., and H. N. Poinar, “Ancient DNA: Do It Right or Not at All,” Science 289(5482), 2000, 1139.

  9. Gilbert, M. T., et al., “Long-term Survival of Ancient DNA in Egypt: Response to Zink and Nerlich (2003),” American Journal of Physical Anthropology 128(1), 2005, 110–114; discussion 115–118.

  10. Marota, I., et al., “DNA Decay Rate in Papyri and Human Remains from Egyptian Archaeological Sites,” American Journal of Physical Anthropology 117(4), 2002, 310–318.

  11. Marota, I., et al., “DNA Decay Rate.”

  12. Krings, M., et al., “MtDNA Analysis of Nile River Valley Populations: A Genetic Corridor or a Barrier to Migration?” The American Journal of Human Genetics 64(4), 1999, 1166–1176.

  13. For example, see: Zink, A., et al., “Molecular Evidence of Bacteremia by Gastrointestinal Pathogenic Bacteria in an Infant Mummy from Ancient Egypt,” Archives of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine 124, 2000, 1614–1618; Zink, A., et al., “Molecular Analysis of Ancient Microbial Infections,” FEMS Microbiology Letters 213, 2002, 141–147; Zink, A. R., et al., “Characterization of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Complex DNAs from Egyptian Mummies by Spoligotyping,” Journal of Clinical Microbiology 41(1), 2003, 359–367; Zink, A. R., and A. G. Nerlich, “Molecular Strain Identification of the Mycobacterium Tuberculosis Complex in Archival Tissue Samples,” Journal of Clinical Pathology 57(11), 2004, 1185–1192; Zink, A. R., W. Grab-ner, and A. G. Ne
rlich, “Molecular Identification of Human Tuberculosis in Recent and Historic Bone Tissue Samples: The Role of Molecular Techniques for the Study of Historic Tuberculosis,” American Journal of Physical Anthropology 126(1), 2005, 32–47; Zink, A., et al., “Leishmaniasis in Ancient Egypt and Upper Nubia,” Emerging Infectious Diseases 12(10), 2006, 1616–1617; Nerlich, A. G., et al., “Plasmodium Falciparum in Ancient Egypt,” Emerging Infectious Diseases 14(8), 2008, 1317–1319.

  14. Donoghue, H. D., et al., “Tuberculosis in Dr Granville’s Mummy: A Molecular Re-examination of the Earliest Known Egyptian Mummy to Be Scientifically Examined and Given a Medical Diagnosis,” Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 277(1678), 2010, 51–56.

  15. Geddes, L., “Fallible DNA Evidence Can Mean Prison or Freedom,” New Scientist. August 11, 2010.

  16. Hekkala, E., et al., “An Ancient Icon Reveals New Mysteries: Mummy DNA Resurrects a Cryptic Species Within the Nile Crocodile,” Molecular Ecology, 2011.

  17. Spigelman, M., et al., “Preliminary Genetic and Radiological Studies of Ibis Mummification in Egypt,” Mummies and Science. World Mummies Research, 2008, 545–551.

  18. Rasmussen, M., et al., “Ancient Human Genome Sequence of an Extinct Palaeo-Eskimo,” Nature 463(7282), 2010, 757–762.

  19. Green, R. E., et al., “A Draft Sequence of the Neandertal Genome,” Science 328(5979), 2010, 710–722.

  20. Reich, D., et al., “Genetic History of an Archaic Hominin Group from Denisova Cave in Siberia,” Nature 468(7327), 2010, 1053–1060. A new technique that amplifies single strands of DNA recently allowed researchers from Pääbo’s team to sequence this genome much more accurately: Meyer, M., et al., “A High-Coverage Genome Sequence from an Archaic Denisovan Individual,” Science, 2012, doi: 10.1126/science.1224344.

  21. Keller, A., et al., “New Insights into the Tyrolean Iceman’s Origin and Phenotype as Inferred by Whole-Genome Sequencing,” Nature Communications 3, 2012, 698.

  Chapter 16: Spare Ribs and Hand Kebabs

  1. Johnson, W. R., “Tutankhamen-Period Battle Narratives at Luxor,” Kmt 20(4), Winter 2009–10, 20–33.

  2. Johnson, W. R., “Warrior Tut,” in Archaeology 63(2), March/April 2010, http://www.archaeology.org/1003/etc/tut.html.

  3. Johnson, W. R., “Tutankhamen-Period Battle Narratives.”

  4. Johnson, W. R., “Warrior Tut.”

  5. Hawass, Z., et al., “Ancestry and Pathology in King Tutankhamun’s Family,” JAMA 303(7), 2010, 638–647.

  6. Harer, W. B., “An Explanation of King Tutankhamen’s Death,” Bulletin of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo 3, 2006, 83–88.

  7. Harer, W. B., “New Evidence for King Tutankhamen’s Death: His Bizarre Embalming,” Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 97, 2011, 228–233.

  8. Connolly, R. C., “The X-ray Plates of Tutankhamen: A Reassessment of Their Meaning and Significance,” in Pharmacy and Medicine in Ancient Egypt. Proceedings of the Conference held in Cairo (2007) and Manchester (2008), ed. J. A. Cockitt and A. R. David. BAR International Series, 2010, 2141. See: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nlmcatalog/10156455.

  9. Harer, W. B., “Was Tutankhamun Killed by a Hippo?” Ancient Egypt 72(6), 2012, 50–54.

  Chapter 17: Revolution

  1. Hawass, Z., “The State of Egyptian Antiquities,” Zahi Hawass blog, February 2, 2011, http://www.drhawass.com.

  2. The Andrew Marr Show, BBC, January 30, 2011.

  3. El-Aref, N., “Uneasy Lies the Head That Bears the Crown,” Al Ahram Weekly. June 23–29, 2011.

  4. www.drhawass.com/blog/message-all-my-friends.

  5. El-Aref, N., “No Treasure in Archaeologists’ Vaults,” Al Ahram Weekly. October 6–12, 2011.

  6. Lawler, A., “The Fall of Zahi Hawass,” Smithsonian.com, July 18, 2011, http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/The-Fall-of-Zahi-Hawass.html.

  7. Eaton-Krauss, M., “Mummies (and Daddies),” Göttinger Miszellen: Beiträge zur ägyptologischen Diskussion 230, 2011, 29–36.

  8. Rowland, M., “The Political Significance of Egyptian Antiquities Before and During Revolution,” master of philosophy dissertation, Jesus College, University of Cambridge, UK, 2011.

  9. See Rowland, 2011 (above), as well as, e.g., Stack, L., “Complaints of Abuse in Army Custody,” The New York Times, March 17, 2011; McGreal, C., “Egypt’s Army ‘Involved in Detentions and Torture,’” The Guardian, February 9, 2011; Sobhy, A., a personal account of torture inside the Egyptian Museum, posted March 14, 2011, at https://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=10150208831989046 (in Arabic; English translation published in Rowland, 2011).

  10. The book, Tutankhamun: The Legend, the Mystery, and the Great Discovery, is due to be published in May 2013.

  11. Suskind, R., “Faith, Certainty and the Presidency of George W. Bush,” The New York Times magazine, October 17, 2004.

  Chapter 18: Audience with the King

  1. Harrison, R. G., “The Tutankhamun Post-Mortem,” in Chronicle: Essays from Ten Years of Television Archaeology, ed. R. Sutcliffe. London: BBC, 1978, 41–52.

  2. Hawass, Z., and S. N. Saleem, “Mummified Daughters of King Tutankhamun: Archeologic and CT Studies,” American Journal of Roentgenology 197(5), 2011, W829–836.

  3. Hanawalt, R. A., Did Tut Lie in State? The Amarna Research Foundation, 1998.

  4. Carter, H., The Tomb of Tut.Ankh.Amen Volume 2. London: Cassell, 1927 (reprinted by Cambridge University Press in 2010).

  5. Hawkes, J., “The God in the Machine,” Antiquity 41(163), 1967, 174–180.

  Afterword: A Brief Window

  1. See, e.g., El-Aref, N., “Heritage at What Cost?” Al Ahram Weekly. January 12–18, 2012; El-Aref, N., “Revised Strategy to Protect Egypt’s Heritage: Returning Minister,” Al Ahram. August 3, 2012.

  2. Burman, A., “Golden Mummies: What Happened to the Indiana Jones of Egypt?” Huffington Post, July 16, 2012, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/16/golden-mummies-what-happe_n_1677919.html.

  3. Ashrafian, H., “Familial Epilepsy in the Pharaohs of Ancient Egypt’s Eighteenth Dynasty,” Epilepsy and Behavior 25(1), 2012, 23–31.

  4. “Tutankhamun’s Death ‘Could Be Linked to His Man-Boobs,’” The Sun. September 13, 2012.

  5. Hamzelou, J., “Tutankhamun’s Death and the Birth of Monotheism,” New Scientist. September 5, 2012.

  6. Schlögl, H. A., Nofretete. Munich: Verlag C. H. Beck, 2012.

  7. Carter, H., The Tomb of Tut.Ankh.Amen Volume 3. London: Cassell, 1933.

  INDEX

  Abd el-Rassul family, 5, 9–12, 18–19, 24

  Abdalla, Ali, 93–95

  ABO blood group system, 90, 120–121, 120(fn). See also Blood groups

  Abu Simbel, 112

  Aflatoxin, 142–143

  African heritage, Tutankhamun’s, 136

  Afterlife: mummification process, 81

  Agglutination technique, 103

  Ahmed, Samir, 119

  Ahmed, Soheir, 108, 118–121, 135

  Ahmose I, 13, 20, 115, 127, 135

  Ahmose-Nefertari, 13, 17, 30–31, 135, 175–176, 176(fn)

  Akhenaten

  Amenhotep III, Yuya, and Tjuiu blood group data, 109

  biblical connections, 127, 130

  building construction, 214

  DNA analysis of Tutankhamun and others, 188

  identifying the KV55 mummy, 85, 192–193

  medical condition, 189–190

  Meritaten, 92

  Obama and, 137

  reburial of, 29

  revolt, 27–29

  skull dimensions, 72

  Akhmim mummies, 132

  Alcott, Louisa May, 53

  Aldred, Cyril, 190

  Aliens, 140

  Amarna cache, 29

  Carter and Carnarvon’s search near, 31, 35

  destruction of the mummy, 63

  excavation of, 25–29

  identity of the mummy, 85

  skull dimensions, 72

  Smith’s analysis of, 65

 
See also KV55

  Amduat, Book of, 56–57

  Amenhotep I, 13, 20, 93, 135

  Amenhotep II, 22, 117–118

  Amenhotep III

  architecture and engineering at Karnak, 180–181

  Ay and, 146

  cephalometric studies, 115

  DNA research on Tutankhamun and family, 185, 187–188

  Egypt’s strength under, 27

  identification of, 117, 244

  splendor of the temple, 11, 11(fn)

  Tiye and, 25

  X-ray data, 120

  Amenhotep IV. See Akhenaten

  Amulets, 68–69

  Amun, 180

  Amun-Ra, 27

  Animal attack causing death, 220–222

  Ankhesenamun, 72, 77, 146–147, 236–237

  Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG), 162

  Antiquities. See Artifacts

  Antiquities trade, 8–10, 98

  Antley-Bixler syndrome, 190, 193

  Anubis, 37, 50, 62, 75–76

  Applied Biosystems, 173–174

  Archived information, 33–34

  Artifacts

  Abd el-Rassul find, 12–13

  annex, 77–79

  appearance on the international market, 9

  autopsy of Tutankhamun, 66–68, 71–72

  ceramics, 35

  DNA lab and the Hatshepsut project, 172–173

  embalming materials, 36

  modern traveling exhibition, 163

  mummy of Tutankhamun, 66–67

  removal during World War II, 85–86

  Seti’s tomb, 8

  theft of, 102(fn)

  trumpets, 85–86

  Tutankhamun’s tomb, 39–40, 42, 49

  See also Looting

  Arts and Exhibitions International (AEI), 162

  Artwork, 28, 34

  Ashrafian, Hutan, 243

  Aspergillus fungus, 142–143

  The Assassination of King Tut (film), 148–149

  Aswan High Dam, 112

  Aten (sun disc), 27, 214

  Atomic Energy Authority (UK), 102

  Auroch, 220

  Autopsy, 57(fn), 63–74, 140(fn)

 

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