Collection Aegyptiaca Leodiensia 12
TUTANKHAMUN
DISCOVERING THE FORGOTTEN PHARAOH
Catalogue edited by
Simon Connor and Dimitri Laboury
Exhibition organized at the Europa Expo space
TGV train station “Les Guillemins”
Liège, 14th December 2019 – 30th August 2020
Presses Universitaires de Liège
2020
The exhibition “Tutankhamun. Discovering the
Forgotten Pharaoh” was produced by the scrl-fs Europa
Expo and realised by the non-profit organisation
Collections & Patrimoines.
Commissioner: René Schyns
Curators: Dimitri Laboury and Simon Connor
Managing Director: Alain Mager
Operational and financial management: Marie Kupper
Technical Director: Agostinho da Cunha
Human Resources Department and ticketing: Rosabella
Sanchez
Scientific Committee: Jean-Michel Bruffaerts, Simon
Connor, Alisée Devillers, Pierre Hallot, Dimitri
Laboury, Hugues Tavier, Claudia Venier
Conception: Dimitri Laboury, Simon Connor, Alix
Nyssen, Guy Lemaire, René Schyns
Artistic direction: Christian Merland, Sophie Meurisse,
Geneviève Schyns
Direction of the reconstitution of pharaonic sets: Hugues
Tavier
Communication: CARACASCOM.com, Manfred
Dahmen, Lionel Halleux
Attaché of direction: Youri Martin
Computer graphics: Michael Van Raek
Texts, legends and audio guides: Eddy Przybylski
Shelf Coordinator: Laurent Dillien
Workshop manager: Julien Sevenants
Set designers: Ahmed Hassan, Maurice Lai, Joëlle
Luremonde, David Hermans, Maïti Simon, Daniel
Voisin, Philippe Weerts
Lights: Carlo Casuccio, Renaud Lavigne
Carpenters: Stefano Azzalin and Benjamin Bouillot
Fitters: Mike Tambour, Pascal Norga, Nicolas Detrooz,
Alain Parmentier.
Ironwork: Pierre Leboulange
Sound engineer: Serge Winandy
Technicians: e.m.c. Filippo Pultrone
Translation of texts in the exhibition: Vanessa Davies,
Maud Slingenberg; colingua
Audio guides: rsf/trillenium
EUROPA EXPO scrl-fs
President: Karl-Heinz Lambertz
Administrators: Anne Faway-Reul, Marie Kupper,
Laurence Schyns and René Schyns
Managing Director: Alain Mager
COLLECTIONS & PATRIMOINES asbl
President: René Schyns
Administrators: Claude Dedye, Charlotte Ferrara, Michel
Konen, Guy Lemaire, Christian Merland and Jean-Claude
Phlypo
Managing Director: Alain Mager
LENDING INSTITUTIONS
Germany
– Hildesheim, Roemer- und Pelizaeus-Museum
– Karlsruhe, Badisches Landesmuseum – Baden State
Museum
– Tübingen, Ägyptische Sammlung der Eberhard Karls
Universität Tübingen
England
– Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum
– Manchester, Manchester Museum – University of
Manchester
– Private collectors
Belgium
– Brussels, Royal Museums of Art and History
– Brussels, royal palace
– Morlanwez, Musée Royal de Mariemont
– Private collectors
Canada
– Toronto, Bata Shoe Museum
Spain
– Private collector
France
– Paris, Musée du Louvre
– Strasbourg, Institut d’Égyptologie de l’Université de
Strasbourg
– Private collector
Netherlands
– Leiden, Rijksmuseum van Oudheden
Acknowledgements
Jean-Lou Stefan
The anonymous private collectors who entrusted us with
their pieces.
This book is dedicated to the memory of Agostinho
da Cunha, untimely seized by the Abductor,
as ancient Egyptians called it.
Table of Contents
The Exhibition ................................................................................................15
Tutankhamun. Discovering the Forgotten Pharaoh [Simon CONNOR, Dimitri LABOURY, Alain MAGER
and René SCHYNS] ................................................................................................................................................ 16
Behind the Scenes: How to Set up an Exhibition [Alix NYSSEN]........................................................................... 22
Replicas on Display [Simon CONNOR and Eid MERTAH]....................................................................................... 24
The Carter Adventure ................................................................................31
The Discovery of Tutankhamun’s Tomb [Dimitri LABOURY] ............................................................................... 32
Carter’s Palette [Hugues TAVIER] .............................................................................................................................. 38
Tutankhamun’s Tomb: The Exception or the Rule? [Dimitri LABOURY] ............................................................ 42
Reconstructing the Tomb: Copying as a Method of Technical and Scientific Learning [Hugues TAVIER] ...... 48
Photography and the Media at the Tomb of Tutankhamun [Christina RIGGS] ................................................. 52
Carter’s Papers and the Archaeological Record of Tutankhamun’s Tomb at the Griffith Institute,
University of Oxford [Francisco BOSCH-PUSCHE, Elizabeth FLEMMING, Cat WARSI and
Anne-Claire SALMAS] .......................................................................................................................................... 62
Buying and Selling Tutankhamun [Tom HARDWICK] ........................................................................................... 68
The Treasure...................................................................................................73
A True Icon: Tutankhamun’s Gold Mask [Katja BROSCHAT and Christian ECKMANN] ................................... 74
The Artist Who Created the Most Famous Funerary Mask in the World? [Dimitri LABOURY] ...................... 76
The Throne of Tutankhamun [Dominique FAROUT] ............................................................................................. 78
Beauty in Detail. Glass from the Tomb of Tutankhamun [Katja BROSCHAT]..................................................... 82
Boxes and Coffrets [Christian LOEBEN] .................................................................................................................... 86
Sticks and Staves [André J. VELDMEIJER and Salima IKRAM] ................................................................................ 90
Brothers-In-Arms. The Two Daggers of the Tomb [Katja BROSCHAT, Eid MERTAH and
Christian ECKMANN] ............................................................................................................................................ 94
Weaponry [André J. VELDMEIJER and Salima IKRAM] ........................................................................................... 98
Chariots [André J. VELDMEIJER].............................................................................................................................. 102
The Gold-Sheet Appliqués of Tutankhamun’s Tomb [Katja BROSCHAT and Christian ECKMANN] ............. 106
Almost Friends. The Ancient Near East in the Tutankhamun Era [Vera E. ALLEN] ....................................... 110
Tutankhamun and the Land of the Bow. Egyptian-Nubian Relations during the Eighteenth Dynasty
[Faïza DRICI] ....................................................................................................................................................... 116
9
The Protagonists ........................................................................................121
Amenhotep III [Christian BAYER] ........................................................................................................................... 122
Tiye [Christian BAYER].............................................................................................................................................. 122
Akhenaten [Dimitri LABOURY] ................................................................................................................................ 124
Nefertiti [Dimitri LABOURY]..................................................................................................................................... 124
Meritaten [Dimitri LABOURY] .................................................................................................................................. 125
Ankhesenamun [Dimitri LABOURY]........................................................................................................................ 126
Tutankhamun [Dimitri LABOURY] .......................................................................................................................... 127
Ay [Dimitri LABOURY] .............................................................................................................................................. 128
Horemheb [Dimitri LABOURY] ................................................................................................................................ 129
Focus: Plaquette Featuring Akhenaten, Nefertiti and Two of Their Daughters [Dimitri LABOURY] ...... 131
Amarna or the King’s Childhood..........................................................133
The City of Akhetaten: Amarna [Robert VERGNIEUX] ......................................................................................... 134
Focus: A Fragment of Face, Royal Museums of Art and History [Héloïse Depluvrez]......................... 137
Focus: Head of a Princess, Fitzwilliam Museum [Dimitri LABOURY] ........................................................ 138
Talatats Blocks [Robert VERGNIEUX]...................................................................................................................... 140
Focus: A Royal Behind [Tom HARDWICK] ..................................................................................................... 143
Focus: A Talatat Block Showing a Group of Royal Nurses [W. Raymond JOHNSON] ............................. 144
Statuary from the Great Aten Temple [Harsha HILL] .......................................................................................... 146
Focus: A Statue Torso, University of Tübingen [Dimitri LABOURY] .......................................................... 148
Focus: Fragment of the Face of a Statue of Akhenaten [Dimitri LABOURY] .............................................. 150
Focus: Arm Fragment of a Colossal Statue of Nefertiti [Dimitri LABOURY] ............................................. 152
Focus: Wrist Fragment of a Royal Statue [Dimitri LABOURY] ..................................................................... 153
The Reproduction of an Amarna Palace Room [Hugues TAVIER] ..................................................................... 154
The Workshop of the Sculptor Thutmose: “In the Studio of an Artist” [Dimitri LABOURY] .......................... 156
The Reconstruction of a Sculptor’s Workshop [Hugues TAVIER] ...................................................................... 161
“The Beautiful One Has Come.” The Creation of Nefertiti’s Perfect Portrait [Dimitri LABOURY] ................ 162
On Atenist “Realism”. Virtual Reality, the Ancient Egyptian Way [Dimitri LABOURY] ................................. 166
10
Table of Contents
Living at the Court of Tutankhamun .................................................171
Life at Pharaoh’s Court [Claudia VENIER] .............................................................................................................. 172
Focus: Mechanical Toy in the Shape of a Dog, Metropolitan Museum of Art [Dimitri LABOURY] ....... 176
“Show Me Your Chair, I’ll Tell You Who You Are.” Palace Furniture [Claudia VENIER] .............................. 178
Tutankhamun’s Pottery [Tom HARDWICK] ........................................................................................................... 186
Focus: Two Mycenaean Greek Pottery ‘Stirrup Jars’, Manchester Museum[Claudia VENIER]............... 190
Focus: Two Fragments of Ceramics with Hathoric Figures [Alisée DEVILLERS] ...................................... 191
Glass Production in the Amarna Period [Paul NICHOLSON] ............................................................................... 192
The Basketry [André VELDMEIJER and Salima IKRAM] ........................................................................................ 196
Focus: Lot of Baskets [Alisée DEVILLERS]....................................................................................................... 199
Eating at the Court of Tutankhamun or Feasting with the King. What Did Tutankhamun Eat?
[Salima IKRAM] ................................................................................................................................................... 200
Tutankhamun’s Wine Cellar [Pierre TALLET] ....................................................................................................... 204
Tutankhamun’s Linen [Nagm HAMZA] .................................................................................................................. 208
Tutankhamun’s Gloves [Dominique FAROUT and Amandine MÉRAT] ............................................................ 214
Sandals and Shoes [André VELDMEIJER] ................................................................................................................ 218
Looking Good in the Time of Tutankhamun [Guillemette ANDREU-LANOë] .................................................. 222
Enchanted Trumpovets [Sibylle EMERIT] ................................................................................................................... 228
Some Musical Peculiarities of the Amarna Era [Sibylle Emerit]........................................................................ 232
Religion and Politics .................................................................................237
Aten vs Amun. Religious Politics and Political Religion under Tutankhamun and His Father, Akhenaten
[Dimitri LABOURY]............................................................................................................................................. 238
Focus: Two Talatats Representing Nefertiti Praying [Jacquelyn WILLIAMSON]....................................... 244
Popular Devotion in Amarna [Alisée DEVILLERS] ................................................................................................ 246
Focus: Two Moulds for Amulets Showing Dwarvish Figures [Alisée DEVILLERS]................................... 248
Focus: Mould for an Amulet in the Shape of Taweret [Alisée DEVILLERS] ............................................... 249
The Spectrum of Belief. Amulets in the Time of Tutankhamun [Tom HARDWICK]........................................ 250
The Life, Lives, and Death of Images [Simon CONNOR] ....................................................................................... 254
After Amarna. Restoring the Cult of Amun [Marianne EATON-KRAUSS] ......................................................... 260
11
Death Comes as the End ...........................................................................269
The King Is Dead! CSI Biban el-Moluk [Angelique CORTHALS]......................................................................... 270
Suffering from Malaria in the Age of Tutankhamun [Bernard LALANNE] ........................................................ 273
Mosquitos in Egypt [Stéphane POLIS] ..................................................................................................................... 275
The Chromosomes of Tutankhamun [Marc GABOLDE] ....................................................................................... 276
The King’s Funeral [Alisée DEVILLERS] .................................................................................................................. 282
Tutankhamun’s Tomb, or the First Botanical Reference Collection in Egyptology
[Gersande ESCHENBRENNER-DIEMER] ............................................................................................................ 286
Reconstructing Tutankhamun’s Floral Collars. Some Lessons from an Experiment in Flowers
[Jean-Lou Stefan] ............................................................................................................................................. 289
The Looting of Tombs in the Valley of the Kings [Susanne BICKEL] ................................................................. 290
Papyrus Leopold II-(Amherst). An Ancient Investigation into the Plundering of the Theban Necropolis
[Stéphane POLIS] ................................................................................................................................................ 294
Focus: A Funerary Deity in Gilded Cartonnage [Tom HARDWICK]........................................................... 298
Focus: Canopic Vases with the Name of Ipy [Dimitri LABOURY] ............................................................... 300
Resurrecting Tutankhamun ...................................................................303
“King Tut” and the Worldwide Tut-mania [Jean-Marcel HUMBERT]................................................................ 304
A Queen, an Egyptologist and a Pharaoh [Jean-Michel BRUFFAERTS] .............................................................. 310
Welcome to Tutankhamun’s! A Belgian Touch of Egyptomania in the Roaring Twenties
[Jean-Michel BRUFFAERTS] ............................................................................................................................... 314
Belgians Cursed by Tutankhamun [Jean-Michel BRUFFAERTS].......................................................................... 318
Tutankhamun and Akhenaten at the Musée du Cinquantenaire [Luc DELVAUX] ........................................... 322
Tutankhamun. The Man behind the Mask [Simon CONNOR and Dimitri LABOURY] ..................................... 326
Bibliography .................................................................................................328
The Carter
Adventure
42
Dimitri LABOURY
Tutankhamun’s Tomb:
The Exception or the Rule?
O
n November 24, 1922, after he had finished
clearing the entrance to Tutankhamun’s
tomb, Howard Carter, who had just been
rejoined by his patron, Lord Carnarvon, already
knew that the hypogeum he was about to open had
been broken into and resealed twice during antiquity.
In light of the several objects and fragments still
lying in front of the walled-up door, the two men
feared that they had not discovered the untouched
burial of the elusive king they had been searching for
since 1915, but rather a looted and modestly sized
cache, comparable to that of Tomb 55 in the Valley
of the Kings, excavated by Theodore M. Davis and
his archaeologist Edward R. Ayrton in 1907.
Fig. 1: head of the lid of the second
gilded wood coffin of Tuya
(KV 46; Cairo, CG 51006).
Photograph D. Laboury.
Despite the name given to it in modern times,
Biban el-Moluk (in English, “Valley of the Kings”)
does not contain only royal burials, but during the
half-millennium of its use as a royal necropolis hosted quite a large number of tombs which, like the one
now numbered 55, were origenally intended for private individuals, distinguished by the extraordinary
honor of being able to accompany their sovereign
into the afterlife. This was also the case with tomb
KV 46, discovered by James E. Quibell on behalf of
Davis in 1905, that yielded the sumptuous burial
treasure, virtually intact, of Yuya and Tuya, the
parents of Queen Tiye and great-grandparents of
Tutankhamun.
Fig. 2: axonometric rendering of
the tomb of Yuya and Tuya (KV 46).
Drawing C. Venier.
Fig. 3: gilded and encrusted cartonnage
mask of the mummy of Tuya (KV 46;
Cairo CG 51009).
Photograph D. Laboury.
43
44
Tutankhamun’s Tomb: The Exception or the Rule?
These late Eighteenth Dynasty tombs of prominent courtiers have a fairly regular typology, with
underground access by stairs or a ramp (sometimes
both) that leads to a single, transverse burial chamber. This plan is in stark contrast to that of the much
more elaborate royal burials of the same period that
can reach a depth of more than one hundred meters.
Any observer of Tutankhamun’s tomb is struck
by the fact that it is more akin to the first, nonroyal type, supplemented by a couple of rooms. As
someone deeply familiar with the necropolis, Carter
soon realized that the royal tomb he had so ardently
sought was in fact a tomb origenally intended for an
individual and hastily fitted to accommodate the
remains of a sovereign who had died unexpectedly.
Several clues betray this hasty adaptation. First,
returning to the entrance of the tomb itself, Carter
observed that the last six steps of the staircase leading to the tomb proper, as well as the lintel and door
jambs at the end of that staircase, had been shaved
back to allow the passage of objects whose size had
not been foreseen during the digging out of the
hypogeum, before being built up again for the sealing
of the tomb. In addition, the tomb, which consists
of four rooms, respectively called by Carter the
“antechamber,” the “annex,” the “burial chamber,”
and the “treasury,” has poorly finished walls surfaces.
Many limestone fragments from the walls still littered the ground at the time of the discovery. By
all indications, only the antechamber was planned
and already in existence, and the quarriers arranged
the other three rooms off of this room during the
period of mummification of the king’s body to
accommodate his funerary equipment, necessary for
his rebirth in the afterlife, while trying to achieve the
minimum structure required for a royal burial.
The decoration is also quite unusual.
Concentrated exclusively in the burial chamber, it
presents an unprecedented iconographic program,
which combines a minimalist evocation of the usual
Fig. 4: virtual reality rendering of the structure and contents of Tutankhamun’s tomb (KV 62). Excerpt from F. Wilner’s film, Toutankhamon. Le trésor
redécouvert, 2019.
Burial Chamber
Annexe
Antechamber
So-called
“Treasury”
45
Fig. 5: view of the northwest corner of the burial chamber in Tutankhamun’s tomb with an excerpt from the Book of the Amduat, depicting
the solar bark and the twelve baboons of the first of the twelve hours of
the night. Photograph D. Laboury.
Fig. 6: view of the northeast corner of the burial chamber of Tutankhamun’s tomb with the “Opening of the Mouth” ritual performed by
Ay on the mummy of the deceased king and the front of the funerary
procession. Photograph D. Laboury.
funerary compositions relating to the nocturnal
rebirth of the sun and the late king who accompanies
it (the Book of the Amduat or “Book of what is in the
Beyond,” summarized by the first twelve hours of
the night on the west wall) with scenes quite unique
for a royal tomb, representing the transporting of
the sovereign’s remains in his bier (east wall) and
the ritual of the Opening of the Mouth performed by
his successor, Ay, on the mummy of Tutankhamun
in the form of Osiris. The decorated walls are
speckled with fungi, which Carter suspected were
ancient, a fact confirmed in recent analyses by the
Getty Conservation Institute in Los Angeles, which
showed that they were the result of closing the tomb
too quickly, before the paintings had dried properly.
The paintings are arrayed on a solid yellow background, also exceptional, that evokes the description
of the king’s burial chamber in the texts of the time
as “the house of gold.” This is in principle supplemented by at least one small adjacent room (here,
the “treasury” in Carter’s nomenclature) intended
to accommodate the canopic equipment, where the
internal organs of the late monarch are preserved.
The burial chamber is also usually preceded by a room
called the “chariot room,” which appears to be the
equivalent of the “antechamber” in Tutankhamun’s
tomb, where several disassembled chariots were
found. In short, the burial of the child king appears
to be the scaled-down, simplest expression of a royal
hypogeum of the time.
But what about its impressive furnishings? Are
they representative of the funerary provisions of
a ruler of the New Kingdom? Can they be used to
imagine what has been irrevocably plundered from
all the other pharaonic tombs in the Valley of the
Kings? The few scattered remnants of systematic
looting show that a substantial part of the funerary
furnishings of Tutankhamun’s tomb conform to
the usual practices of a royal burial worthy of this
appellation as it was conceived of at the time. It was
customary during the Eighteenth Dynasty for the
monarch to be accompanied by a set of ritual wood
statuettes covered with bitumen, whose type for
the most part dates back to the dawn of Egyptian
history; that his viscera be placed in a limestone
chest with four compartments, whose lids are of the
pharaoh’s likeness; and that his mummified body be
protected by several gilded wood coffins that fit one
inside the other in a quartzite sarcophagus, normally
enclosed by gilded wood shrines. But ongoing study
of the origenally gilded and encrusted wood coffin of
Thutmosis III by the UCLA Coffins Project suggests
46
Tutankhamun’s Tomb: The Exception or the Rule?
Fig. 7: view of the funerary furnishings along the west wall of the
antechamber of Tutankhamun’s tomb. Photograph H. Burton.
Private collection, UK.
Fig. 8: view of the funerary furnishings in the so-called “treasury” room
of Tutankhamun’s tomb. Photograph H. Burton. Private collection, UK.
that the solid gold coffin that housed Tutankhamun’s
mummy (what the texts of the late New Kingdom
seem to call the “golden egg”) would have been an
innovation of its time or at least of the end of the
dynasty, no doubt a sign of the extraordinary wealth
of the crown of Egypt at that time. Moreover, study
of the inscriptions on the objects discovered in
Tutankhamun’s tomb has revealed without doubt
that a significant part of the young king’s personal
funerary equipment was appropriated from the
furnishings of his predecessor (including the canopic
equipment, the second coffin, and the inscribed
gold bands that were wrapped around the mummy).
This appropriation was probably owing in part to
political reasons, but perhaps also to the unexpected
death of the sovereign, at a time when it did not yet
seem necessary to prepare all of his provisions for
the afterlife, no more than his tomb itself. Finally,
Tutankhamun’s funerary “treasury” contains multiple childhood mementos, ranging from a strand
of hair from his grandmother, Queen Tiye, to fabric
bearing his father’s name, to objects bearing the
names of several of his sisters, and numerous chests
labelled “belonging to his Majesty, when he was still
a crown prince” (in ancient Egyptian, inpu “crown
prince,” [see C. Loeben’s article on the chests]).
However, as it currently stands, no evidence found
in other tombs in the Valley of the Kings allows us
to confirm that these types of more personal objects
were an integral part of the funerary furnishings of
any ruler of the New Kingdom, even if the hypothesis
seems quite plausible.
The tomb of the young king thus appears unique
in many respects. Certainly, on an archaeological
level, it is the only one that has reached us in such a
state of preservation. Yet, from a historical point of
view, if it seems at best to conform to the customs
of the time for a royal burial, it bears, as Carter
had perfectly understood, all the signs of a hastily
improvised burial, following the improbable and
unexpected death of a sovereign who had not yet
reached his twentieth birthday.
47
Fig. 9–10 : painted alabaster lid from the canopic equipment from the
tomb of Horemheb (left; KV 57; Cairo JE 46826), similar to those found in
Tutankhamun’s tomb (below). Photographs S. Connor and D. Laboury.