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  1. The Ancient Egyptians do not like people to disturb their dead. See more in this scene from Season 5, Episode 3, "Curses Unleashed."Watch all new episodes of...

    • 6 min
    • 184.4K
    • HISTORY
  2. Apr 26, 2012 · A review of the find of Egyptian King Tutankhamun's tomb by Howard Carter and the possibility it was protected by a curse.For more information on this subjec...

    • 5 min
    • 291.6K
    • TheUnMuseum
  3. Join us on an extraordinary journey as we delve into the fascinating world of ancient Egypt with our latest video, "Unearthing King Tut's Tomb: The Mummy's C...

    • 6 min
    • 1
    • Epoch Rays
    • George Herbert, 5th Earl of Carnarvon
    • Sir Bruce Ingham
    • George Jay Gould
    • Aubrey Herbert
    • Hugh Evelyn-White
    • Aaron Ember
    • Richard Bethell
    • Sir Archibald Douglas Reid
    • James Henry Breasted
    • Howard Carter

    The man who financed the excavation of King Tut's tomb was the first to succumb to the supposed curse. Lord Carnarvon accidentally tore open a mosquito bite while shaving and ended up dying of blood poisoning shortly thereafter. This occurred a few months after the tomb was opened and a mere six weeks after the press started reporting on the "mummy...

    Howard Carter, the archaeologist who discovered the tomb, gave a paperweight to his friend Bruce Ingham as a gift. The paperweight appropriately (or perhaps quite inappropriately) consisted of a mummified hand wearing a bracelet that was supposedly inscribed with the phrase, "cursed be he who moves my body." Ingham did not die from the mummy's curs...

    George Jay Gould was a wealthy American financier and railroad executive who visited the tomb of Tutankhamenin 1923 and fell sick almost immediately afterward. He never really recovered and died of pneumonia a few months later.

    It's said that Lord Carnarvon's half-brother suffered from King Tut's curse simply by being related to the amateur Egyptologist. Aubrey Herbertwas born with a degenerative eye condition and became totally blind late in life. A doctor suggested his rotten, infected teeth were somehow interfering with his vision, so Herbert had every single tooth pul...

    Hugh Evelyn-White, a British archaeologist, visited King Tut'stomb and may have helped excavate the site. By 1924, after seeing death sweep over about two dozen of his fellow excavators, Evelyn-White died by suicide—but not before writing, allegedly in his own blood, "I have succumbed to a curse which forces me to disappear."

    American Egyptologist Aaron Ember was friends with many of the people who were present when King Tut's tomb was opened, including Lord Carnarvon. Ember died in 1926, when his house in Baltimore burned down less than an hour after he and his wife hosted a dinner party. He could have exited safely, but his wife encouraged him to save a manuscript he ...

    Bethell was Lord Carnarvon's secretary and the first person behind Carter to enter the tomb. He died in 1929 under suspicious circumstances—though one modern historian has attributed his death to the work of infamous occultist Aleister Crowley. Bethell was found smothered in his room at an elite London gentlemen's club. Soon after, the Nottingham E...

    Proving that you didn't have to be one of the excavators or expedition backers to fall victim to Tutankhamun's curse, Sir Archibald Douglas Reid, a radiologist, merely X-rayed Tut before the mummy was given to museum authorities. He got sick the next day and was dead three days later.

    James Henry Breasted, another famous Egyptologist of the day, was a member of Carter's team when King Tut's tomb was opened. Shortly thereafter, he allegedly returned home to find that his pet canary had been eaten by a cobra—and the cobra was still occupying the cage. Since the cobra is a symbol of the Egyptian monarchy, and a motif that kings wor...

    Carternever had a mysterious, inexplicable illness and his house never fell victim to any fiery disasters. He died of lymphoma at the age of 64. His tombstone even says, "May your spirit live, may you spend millions of years, you who love Thebes, sitting with your face to the north wind, your eyes beholding happiness." Perhaps the pharaohs saw fit ...

    • Stacy Conradt
  4. May 16, 2024 · Yet, the legacy of King Tut's tomb transcends mere archaeological intrigue. The subsequent surge of public fascination, coupled with rumors of a curse, propelled the young pharaoh into global consciousness, spawning cultural phenomena and sparking renewed interest in ancient Egypt's rich history and traditions.

    • Ancient-Origins
  5. Nov 12, 2012 · Updated: September 19, 2023 | Original: November 12, 2012. In early 1923, British archaeologist Howard Carter and his financier friend George Herbert, Lord Carnarvon, ceremoniously opened the long ...

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  7. Oct 24, 2022 · Here’s how it works . Tutankhamun was an Egyptian pharaoh who lived between roughly 1343 and 1323 B.C. Often called the "boy-king," he ascended the throne at around the age of 10.(Image credit ...

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