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King Tutankhamen’s Death

Edwin R Martinez

Dr. James Hewitt

Humanities 111

July 30, 2014

There are many theories relating to the cause of King Tutankhamen’s death. Many people say King Tut was murdered, some say it was from an accident from a chariot, while others say it was from a serious illness. Though the majority of the people believe that King Tut was murdered, in recent medical examination reveals it was due to and illness.

King Tutankhaten born 1323 B.C, was the son of King Akhenaten. When King Akhenaten died, King Tutankhaten became Pharaoh changed his name to King Tutankhamen which meant, the living image of Amun. King Tut was 9 years old when he became King and ruled for 10 years till his death. King Tut married his half-sister, Ankhensenamun. King Tut was very young and was guided as king. Some say he was manipulated, by his Elderly Aye and Horemheb till he was at age to make his own decisions to rule. After King Tut death, Aye ruled then followed by Horemheb to restore order for Egypt. Some say they try to destroy the name Pharaoh Akhenaten. Could that been motive to say they might have been involved in the murder King Tutankhamen? A theory to King Tut death is murder. Some say he was struck in the back of the head that cause his death. Elder Aye, knew that he would follow after King Tut to gain the throne and assume power to Egypt. For many people, they speculated that Aye had something to do with the death of King Tut. At the age of 19, King Tut dies. The wife of King Tut, Ankhensenamun, wrote a letter to king of the Hittites,"My husband is dead," she wrote. "Send me your son and I will make him king (National Geographic,2005) " but he was assassinated during his journey. Aye then married Ankhensenamun and became ruler of Egypt. The theory is that Aye had planned the death of both Kings to gain power. Deputy Horemheb may have been involved, since he help make decisions for the young king. Once King Tut became of age to make decisions on his own he was no longer needed. It possible Deputy Horemheb may have been persuaded by Elder Aye to carry out his plan, since he may have felt belittle by the king. Is possible that he was involved in causing of the kinds death?

In 2005, Dr. Zahi Hawass and his team, they got permission to do a CT scan on King Tut body, also in 2007 DNA was done and revealed that King Tut was a product of incest between the pharaoh Akhenaten and one of his sisters. The CT scan revealed that the death was not due to a head trauma, like people had believed . The CT scan, had concluded that he may have suffered from an impacted wisdom tooth, but it did not cause his death. In the CT “Medical scans told the story of the king who had been about 5 feet 6 inches tall (Current Events2007).” and had a one leg longer than the other by one inch. Which explains why so many artifacts on the walls in his tomb has pictures of him with a walking cane and many golden walking cane was present. It also reviled that he had multiple fractures. One fracture on is left leg, reviled that and infection took place just before he died. The bone was broken completely and not had time to heal. ” The used imaging, anatomical and DNA techniques and suggested Plasmodium falciparum malaria, as his probable cause of death (Butler 2010)”. It is possible since evidence suggest that since he was a product to incest and possibly with illnesses, the infection suffered from the accident may have triggered his death more rapidly, due to the infection.

We will never know the truth of his death. Maybe in the future technology will become more advance and find the cause. There are many theories of his death from murder, malaria, epilepsy, heterozygous and many other reason or theory that maybe possible. One fact remain, Egypt book of death states,” to speak the name of the dead, is to make them live again. It restores the breath of life to he has vanished.” so along as his name is mention by his people and in history, he will never be forgotten.

Reference:

Butler D (2010) King Tut’s death explained? Nature News 16.2.2010, http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-3156.2010.02614.x/pdf

Current Events (11/19/2007), Vol. 107 Issue 10, p4-5. 2p.

National Geographic. Jun2005, Vol. 207 Issue 6, p3-21. 20p. 31.

The book of the dead

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