ChatterBank1 min ago
The curse of Tutankhamun's tomb...
19 Answers
Isn't it sobering to think that on this day, Howard Carters birthday, all involved in desecrating the tomb of the pharaoh are dead?
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No best answer has yet been selected by sandyRoe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Really jno? I wonder who took that, and why and what they did with it. How could you prove where it came from? Now here's a real mystery, much more interesting than how long they all lived after opening the tomb. There wouldn't be any papers proving provenance would there? I think you have opened a can of worms here jno.
not exactly a curse eh..
Lord Carnarvon:
Carnarvon had been in poor health for over 20 years following a motoring accident in Germany. Less than two weeks after the official opening of the burial chamber, Carnarvon received a mosquito bite which became infected after he cut it while shaving. Carnarvon fell ill and, with his resistance lowered, came down with pneumonia and eventually passed away at the age of 57.
Howard Carter:
As discoverer of the tomb, Carter should have been Number 1 on the curse's "hit list", but he survived until March 1939, just short of his 65th birthday and nearly 17 years after entering the tomb - about a decade of which was spent working in the tomb itself.
Lord Carnarvon:
Carnarvon had been in poor health for over 20 years following a motoring accident in Germany. Less than two weeks after the official opening of the burial chamber, Carnarvon received a mosquito bite which became infected after he cut it while shaving. Carnarvon fell ill and, with his resistance lowered, came down with pneumonia and eventually passed away at the age of 57.
Howard Carter:
As discoverer of the tomb, Carter should have been Number 1 on the curse's "hit list", but he survived until March 1939, just short of his 65th birthday and nearly 17 years after entering the tomb - about a decade of which was spent working in the tomb itself.
Really McMouse? why's that?
Seriously interested because it's quite a deal with museums at the moment I think. Do Plague pits count? What about Stone age burials?
Personally I think Tombs are there so the living can honour the dead - desecration occurs when those living are genuinely offended by it.
So I think you have to look at whether there is a surviving culture that associates with it.
Consequently the returns of aboriginal remains is quite right and proper. Ancient Egyptian culture is long dead whereas some like Aztec can be a more marginal call
Seriously interested because it's quite a deal with museums at the moment I think. Do Plague pits count? What about Stone age burials?
Personally I think Tombs are there so the living can honour the dead - desecration occurs when those living are genuinely offended by it.
So I think you have to look at whether there is a surviving culture that associates with it.
Consequently the returns of aboriginal remains is quite right and proper. Ancient Egyptian culture is long dead whereas some like Aztec can be a more marginal call
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