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Mummy of famous Egyptian pharaoh digitally unwrapped for first time

TBP Desk
29 Dec 2021 09:24:17 | Update: 29 Dec 2021 09:34:09
Mummy of famous Egyptian pharaoh digitally unwrapped for first time
Modern day Luxor, 140 years ago the mummy of Amenhotep was found here — Courtesy/ egymonuments.gov.eg

The mummified body of Amenhotep I, one of the famous ancient Egyptian pharaohs has been studied for the first time in 3,000 years after being digitally "unwrapped". 

Pharaoh Amenhotep I ruled ancient Egypt from 1525 to 1504 BC.

The mummy of Amenhotep I was found at a site in Deir el-Bahari 140 years ago.

But archaeologists have refrained from opening it in order to preserve the exquisite face mask and bandages.

Computed tomography (CT) scans have now revealed previously unknown information about the pharaoh and his burial, reports BBC.

"We got to see the face of the king that has been wrapped for more than 3,000 years," Dr Sahar Saleem, professor of radiology at Cairo University's Faculty of Medicine and lead author of the study published in the journal Frontiers in Medicine, told the BBC.

She said the first thing that had struck her was how Amenhotep I's facial features resembled those of his father Ahmose I, the first pharaoh of ancient Egypt's 18th Dynasty, with a narrow chin, a small narrow nose, curly hair, and mildly protruding upper teeth.

The researchers also established that Amenhotep I was approximately 169cm (5ft 6in) tall and that he was about 35 years old when he died.

Dr Saleem said the scans showed he was in a very good physical condition and in good health at the time of his death, with no signs of any wounds or disfigurement due to disease. That suggested he died as a result of an infection or a virus.

The researchers were able to gain insights about the mummification and burial of Amenhotep I, including that he was the first pharaoh to have his forearms folded across his chest and that, unusually, his brain was not removed.

They also concluded that his mummy was "lovingly repaired" by priests of the 21st Dynasty, which ruled about four centuries after this death.

The scans showed that the mummy suffered from multiple post-mortem injuries that were likely to have been inflicted by grave robbers.

They also showed that the priests fixed the detached head and neck to the body with a resin-treated linen band, covered a defect in the abdominal wall with a band and placed two amulets beneath, and wrapped the detached left arm to the body.

Dr Saleem said the 30 amulets and "unique" golden girdle with gold beads that Amenhotep I was wearing disproved theories that the priests might have removed his jewellery for use by later pharaohs.

The mummy of Amenhotep I was reburied by the priests in the Deir el-Bahari Royal Cache, a complex of tombs and temples near Luxor, to keep them safe.

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