That's a disgrace... and is one of the reasons why the 🌎 is falling apart . Especially society. Too many holy and sacred places been Destroyed by modern people.
@@nile7999 How does your "anti vaxxers" comment make any sense in relation to this post? Trust me, they're not fuming over anything but your absolute incompetence. It's no wonder why you're so easily brainwashed into following communist rule.
I love how the first thing people think of is a curse, rather than a disease that was trapped within the tomb, bacteria, mold, etc. Lots of stuff would be polluting the air that you are breathing in, after opening a 3000+ year old coffin, wouldn't you think? Also, I honestly feel really bad for King Tut- he died so young, suffered a lot throughout life, and even after his death, his body was immensely disrespected. Also as someone else mentioned, merely dying quite some years later does not mean "oh, it's because that guy opened King Tut's tomb!" No, it means that nobody is immortal, and everyone dies at some point.
So, you don’t believe in the devil, eh? I got a few tasks for you. Go visit Robert the Doll, and take his picture without asking permission. Go visit Annabelle and touch the glass and mock her. Go visit Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Australia and take a rock with you. Unless of course you’re scared.
I love how they attribute the deaths of those who entered were the result of some kind of curse when in reality only 6 of 26 were killed and that was over the course of an entire decade.
Yeah, I was thinking the same.. I'd believe it's a curse if they died in a month or at most the same year after they discovered the tomb.. And the cause of deaths are not that weird to be called curse, I mean I don't really know about curse but pneumonia seriously? If anything it's the pneumococcus that gave him curse
@@Elbanjomon it doesn't matter. He was pharaoh. He had the resect a pharaoh would get based on their belief systems. It wasn't 2020 back then. They still had fear in them. Pharaoh's were the closest to the gods. He was an important king because that is what he was born into. They all were.
@@tsemiu King Tut didn’t really accomplish much, and his death was a surprise and rushed, sure. To them, he was just another pharaoh. He was only really important to us because he’s the only pharaoh we found in modern times. How many hieroglyphs do you see him recorded in history? Not as much as others. And with his crippled body, I wouldn’t be surprised if the masses thought of him as a commoner just like them.
@@Elbanjomon bro, he's famous because of the Pharoahs curse, the mystery surrounding his death, and the fact he took the throne as a child. I believe they said he had people ruling for him until he was old enough to rule, then ruled for 8 or 9 years until he died. He died at 19 so he was 10 or 11 when he begin his solo rule. Also he was accomplishing something. He was reversing something his father did that his people didn't like. Had to do with religion but I can't remember what it was. I think it was the God they worshipped. When he died, his successor continued his task. The reason we don't see a lot about him is because the next Pharoah after his successor did everything he could to erase him and others connected to him from history. The reason why? Who knows. Maybe he didn't like what King Tut started. Maybe because he was a new bloodline on the throne and wanted to pretend he was chosen by God from the beginning and not just took it. Idk. But I honestly wish I knew but it was probably political or religious reasons. The crazy thing about people back then is that they would go out of their way to erase history. Out of shame, jealousy, religion, hatred... all of the above. Imagine what we would know today if they didn't do that crap. Destroying temples, documents, books... crazy.
@@Elbanjomon you cant be thought of as a commoner when you were born from a king. Crippled or not, he was royalty. You can't just use how you would feel nowadays and assume people who had the fear of the Gods in them from thousands of years ago would feel. From what I read, they most likely loved him for reversing his fathers religious reforms they didn't like. Ancient Egyptians knew the Pharoahs were able to speak with the gods after death on their behalf, no way they would treat him with any kind of disrespect. Definitely not on a wide scale. I bet there were shadow groups that plotted against him though.
"They found themselves in a small cramped room that looked like a warehouse." I don't think I have ever thought of a warehouse as a small cramped room...
Poor king tut. He never stood a chance. He’s the product of multiple generations of incest, which explains his deformities and sudden death at a young age. He was also made to marry his half sister, they had twins who couldn’t survive. Most likely because of, yet again, incest. If ancient Egyptians weren’t so greedy and wanted to keep their gold to their family only, they may still be alive today. Incest is what brought down the entire Egyptian empire. It all ended with Tut because his heirs didn’t survive, and thus no more Egyptian royals. All they had to do was introduce new blood into their lineage. Lol
interesting, to take this even further i would say it may have even been because of the greek culture left by tholomy and alexander’s greeks. the macedonians were notorious for not wanting to breed with what they viewed as lesser peoples
Incest/inbreeding is a very common thing across royal families wanting to keep a tight grip on their wealth and status. It was practiced in England where the Greek influence wasn’t really that prevalent so I wouldn’t say that was really a major factor.
Your bigotry and racism is showing…..shhhh 🤫 It was a common practice amongst royals to practice incest which they didn’t know at the time was inappropriate. Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip was cousins, do they deserve to have their wealth taken away or monarch destroyed? I guess you would say no since their wealth was built from the African Slave Trade right?
have humans ever wondered that Egypt didn't have our medicine knowledge and he could have a bad disease (that the egyptians wouldn't know it was a disease), and that' because he was locked away and with extra protection, and reopening his tomb could bring a disease to the world that didn't exist anymore?
@@pipo-dp3ls they were pretty advanced but if they knew everything we wouldn't need to discover all the diseases that were found after that time. it 's not so hard to think about it, just be more than eight years old.
I was lucky to visit both tomb and his mommy ( they keep them at two different museums). It was absolutely fascinating. The tour guide said something very interesting! He said he doesn’t even believe we know 5% of ancient Egypt secrets. I
Ok so facts known: - Chest crushed - Had malaria - Had a weakened immune system and brittle bones due to genetic defects If he had malaria with a weakened immune system, he was likely very weak, so he probably wouldn't be around racing a chariot and such unless it was needed. Perhaps he was being transported by chariot to some place that would hopefully be able to help him recover from the malaria. As kings generally moved in caravans, not just a singular chariot for security purposes, there would have been other chariots at least behind and at both sides of his. He may have reached a certain point and fallen out of the chariot because he was too weak to keep holding on, or the terrain was too bumpy, or he lost his grip. Obviously because king being weak is a pretty urgent matter, plus being in the middle of the desert, they'd have been travelling as quickly as possible, and so when he fell off of the chariot, the chariot behind him unintentionally ran over him because there was no time to stop. Due to his brittle bones, his chest was crushed. They probably noticed and went somewhere closer by to get more urgent medical attention, not being able to tell that he was already dead, and when they got there, the person tending to him could have thought it was a heart-based problem, or maybe his chest was crushed so badly that his heart was just mush and they had to remove it in order to clean it up and make mummification easier. It's likely the chest crushing that killed him, because of how they rushed to bury him, whereas his ancestors had their tombs worked on over a way longer period prior to their own deaths. 100% something that they couldn't predict; which is why it's likely the chest because a sickly person dying from illness isn't unpredictable.
Quick question, how are we so sure that it's Tut's body and not somebody else's? What if his actual grave is much deeper under the found grave? What if he was never actually given a good burial, because he was more of a puppet, which would be one reason why he would have gotten such a burial, due to rivalry. What are your thoughts?
After watching many documentaries and interviews with egyptologists, I think you have several things wrong in this video. His body was not "burned" like with fire, but the resins used in the mummification can get quite hot as they cure. There was more resin used on Tut than other mummies, again pointing to hasty or amateur preparation. This extra resin got hotter than usual and caused carbonization in the body, which is also what happens when something burns.
Sad, I get the feeling that he wasn't liked by the members of the royal court and the general public. It wasn't his fault that he was so inbred and weakened by genetic diseases. I don't think he was run over by a chariot, maybe he was poisoned...
There were actually four cursed items found within Tut's tomb that were kept secret from the press. Each of the four cursed items were discovered at the four cardinal directions within the tomb. They are small standing sculptures held up by its base, which had the ominous words carved around it promising swift death and retribution upon the souls of any who dared disturb the tomb of the young pharoh.
Whoever wrote the script we're listening to is some sort of whack-head. He couldn't dream up a better idea for King Tut's story than the one he told. Your's sounds far more likely. In a race, another one would easily have run the good king Tut over. After that is anyone's guess.
Well yeah but if you think about it the incision would’ve been starting at the shoulder/head level and would’ve ran down farther as well. Unless he fell off with his feet facing the chariot behind him and the wheel caught him in the thigh/groin area and ran up to the belly button before falling off of him to the side of his stomach
@@gmccool1576 What difference does it make. Whether he's chariot ran over him or another one ran over him? Who knows which way he would have been laying on the ground? He might have been in the process of getting up on to he's feet. One thing's for sure. It would have been really rotten luck if his own horses had turned round to run him over it would have been bloody lousy luck, they just don't do that.
“Oh, who cares?! That guy doesn't matter! Let him stay, locked up for another half an hour! The police will be here by then, and there are two dead bodies in the study!!”
giving a reply and a notice that I fully agree with the comment - the inexplicably perplexing original one is just far from any logic, unless there are additional details surrounding the case that we've not been informed about in the video.
It depends what your idea of a "Curse" is. A sealed space with a dead body in it, is a dangerous place, Full of deadly spores. Of course they didn't know this, and rushed in to tear everything apart, not knowing they were inhaling this lethal crap. Not long ago, a tourist, in Tuts tomb, scratched the walls of the tomb. She had recently had treatment for an illness, and had a compromised immune system. She inhaled some of the mould on the wall and died a short time later. So we have to ask ourselves, "Curse or rough justice." Now scientists and archaeologists usually wear masks. Mick Aston, one of the time team stars, died from aspergillosis, a fungal spore disease, probably from his career poking about in nasty old ruins.
it's mold. You can die from fresh mold spores, nevermind those hundreds or thousands of years old. I wouldn't even go near any excavated stuff or mummified body while wearing a space suit.
My ancient history teacher in high school said this tomb was mediocre at best , the great tombs had all been plundered. Can you imagine the splendor of those?
as i learned EgpTh farmers .... plundered first i donT wanna know how many people died as i learned ThaT Pyramids were proTedcTed also per proTecTion spells ... am no Fanv of DisrespecT
@@happylucky7354 anything of gold was likely melted down over the years and at very best a few pieces survive in the private collections of wealthy people.
I lived half a kilometre from the Tut exhibit when it was on loan to Melbourne Museum from the Louvre. I couldn't wait to go see it...and got sick on the last week and missed out. One of my biggest regrets.
Am I the only one that thinks it's kinda messed up that people opened up a coffin. I mean I get it for the name of "Science" but it's kinda messed up to open someone's coffin of someone your not related too. 🤷🏿♂️
Been asking same question, why would pple not just respect other pple's culture and just let them b, digging out dead pple in the name of exhibition and calling it science.... extremely disturbing.
Quick backstory about why tut’s tombe is such a mess: he died very young and unexpected so they didn’t have a tombe Made for him yet. Sinds he was so young he didn’t have kids so there wasn’t a clear new follower to become leader op Egypte. So his second in command would be the most likely follower for tut. But he was on the egyptian border fighting with the hadrians so he couldn’t plan the burriel of tut (the burrier of the deceased emperor shall become the new emperor to ancient egyptian rules) so the next persoon in line, a very high ranked politician of sorts rushed the burrial and used a second hand coffin, a coffin holder that was Only partially finished, the politician even switched tombes with tut’s burrial tombe. That is why the tombe is so small and also very different to other tombes of big emperors of egypt. The mummification was also rushed and there are even rumours a lot of the gifts in tut’s tombe wheren’t even supposed to be his but his gifts wheren’t Made yet. Thanks for Reading and I hope this gives you more understanding of tut’s weird tombe. Source: documenturies on UA-cam and books
Nahh bro there are still too many unanswered questions this makes me uneasy & makes me think it was something more to his death …. why was his tomb half assed ? Why was he buried so far from where he lived? Why was his heart removed ? Why was his body burned ? And most definitely why was Osiris cut off toes in tuts tomb? There is more to this story that we think
All he wanted was to have fun on a chariot. Poor kid. But hey at least his afterlife has been incredible. Millions of people know his name to this day and his tomb/afterlife home is still VERY well preserved.
I visited the tomb and saw one of his sarcophagi in 2019! Absolutely incredible. Had to bribe the guy standing guard to let me take a photo and video as they don’t allow it in the Valley of Kings (where he’s buried along with many others like Rameses II).
I went to Cairo to visit the tomb and saw one of his sarcophagi in 2019! Absolutely incredible. Had to bribe the guy standing guard to let me take a photo and video as they don’t allow it in the Valley of Kings (where he’s buried along with many others like Rameses II). The preservation was incredible. Was told they sometimes used egg white to coat their pigments because the protein in it preserves it when hardened.
@@lancer717 it left a super small layer of film and I’m sure they examined smaller fragmented pieces more closely to determine what it was chemically made of (the pigments they used were wild. Purple was so damn hard to get)
@@lancer717 purple pigment dust was obtained by crushing thousands of this certain snail shell since it rarely occurs naturally it was only used for royalty who could afford it
The truth is that king Tutts tomb was not meant for him it was actually meant for his uncle or another relative and that his tomb that was much much larger was not finished yet and would not be finished at all in time so they hired someone else to very quickly make a tomb and corridor for Tutankhamen but it was not very nice and if you even look at Tutankhamen‘s coffin and sarcophagus in the surrounding encasement you could actually see things that are etched off that have change the name from one name to another and designs lettering‘s and symbols that are all changed from one to another and even areas that weren’t fully chiseled and painted in some areas of it while others were due to the fact that they needed to get it done extremely fast before the body routed even his modification was rushed due to circumstances which led to an extremely poor modification normally they soak the body in a mushy liquid and wrap it then do it again and wrap it again but they actually only did it once and then double wrapped dry on top and didn’t actually properly remove his organs They actually didn’t remove some of his organs while removing his heart which they’re not supposed to do and didn’t remove his eyes and tongue if I remember correctly wall also making odd incision types on his body and like I said they didn’t properly embalm and wrap his body like they were supposed to along with any other things that were supposed to be removed from mostly left intact which causes more rotting and problems with the body Tutankhamen also didn’t have near as much wealth in his tomb as he was supposed to why do people think that was due to the fact that many people had raided the tomb previously in the last thousand plus years but there is also a theory that the people who are bringing it in slowly Broke chairs apart that had gold on them and pieces that had gold and jewels on them and would remove them and put them in their clothes or something like that there’s a whole documentarian on Tutankhamen’s tomb and the pyramids it’s pretty awesome you guys should watch it
Scientists recently have been doing some new studies with the mummy of Egypt's famous boy king. With the aid of highly advanced mri scans they were able to ascertain he suffered from a major gastro intestinal disorder. Apparently he was lactose intolerant. Ya turns out me and the Egyptian kid got a toot in common
This is probably unrelated but it's strange how when we view deaths 200+ years nobody sympathizes but the reality is that humans, especially the ones at Pompeii, had horrific deaths and certainly felt terror when dying just as we did
3:40 the incest wasn't just from his parents. There is a long line of close family incest that created his deformaties. Not just one brother-sister born child. If you check out Mortal Faces page you can see how far back their close incest goes.
I have yet to actually watch this fully all the way, but as I was watching the beginning of it, I remember hearing something somewhere about how the curse of King Tut's tomb started because somebody got bitten by a mosquito that was carrying a disease
I’m telling you bro… Tut was murdered and Egypt was desperate to bring back the religion they had before tut and his dad. The council was prob thinking that Tut was not ready to be a pharaoh
He got crushed in the red sea when it parted back into place. That is why he was buried without much time. His son was killed at 12 years old from the first born child being killed from the gases of the volcano that went off around the time of his reign. He was Moses' brother. I'm being extremely short in details here but this is from 11 + years of research
@@Mr.Josh. Moses could possibly be a myth, brother :/ - akhenaten was looked at as the worst pharaoh is Egypt history for introducing them to a new religion, making them move to a new city and not having good chemistry with his people Egyptian records do not identify a person who matches the Biblical story of Moses. Moses took place during “Exodus” , which by date, makes Ramses ii the pharaoh and not Tut or his Dad. Your question made me google so many different things… I am now convinced Exodus never occurred… oh Gees 😭
@@wilsongv95 No, the dates are off by a couple to a few hundred years. You need to take into account the eruption of Mt Santorini which may be responsible for the 12 plagues.
He was a young boy extremely rich and his mummy was not removed immediately but later when they open the coffin his mummy was already decomposed, the coffin was entirely gold
I read something very differently. He had A LOT of weapons in his tomb. He actually had a steel dagger that still baffles people to this day, because the only way to find steel back when was from a particular meteorite. Many believe he could have died in battle, i could see an enemy removing the heart of a soon to be king in a tomb to prevent after life or something. Who knows though, we never will unless something ground breaking is found somewhere in the world.
He actually died on the battlefield,he fell off his chariot and the enemy rode on his left chest crushing his heart,that why his left shoulder was also damaged..,recent research confirmed it.they checked his and akenaten dna,there was no genetic problems.
At 7:29 it explains how they died. Most of the explorers that went in first were already pretty old. Most of them were in their early to 60s to mid 70s.
Poor guy. Tut had a rough life from the start and was disrespected after death. I actually feel bad for him 😭 I know I’d curse someone for doing my dead body like that. I really hope he’s in the afterlife and at peace now, and no longer in the pain that his psychical body had to go through. I know he died bricks ago but I hope the guy rests in peace 😭❤️
That is very emphatic and nice of you. He has probably already incarnated again and does not care about the personality his spirit soul ego self once was.
@@jayronimo5667 haha yeah it be like that. I wonder if i would be hurt after words too. Probly as you said after the fact id be good but its hard to avoid feeling in the moment tbh 🤦🏽♥🤣
sad thing is, according to their own religion, without a heart, king tut would have never crossed over into the afterlife as they needed their heart so they could be judged before entry.
I have a high respect for archeologists, but I will never agree with trespassing into burial sites like this. It’s so highly disrespectful to the one who passed. They should be allowed to rest in peace and not have their items taken away.
Considering what Muslim extremists did in Egypt, they have no choice. The tribes that used to protect these graves are long gone or have resorted to selling antiquities themselves. They have to retrieve and safekeep whatever they can.
What if these people did not die from a curse but rather they discovered something that a few started talking about and were killed off but a curse was then told so many wouldn't go digging around
What.. do you even watch the video? He explained how each of the 6 archeologist died... Natural causes and one was shot. And most of them died only after a decade when they did research on pharaoh tuts body
a comedy about him could be called “tut strut” in which he time travels to present day with the use of some special artifact he finds in ancient egypt, and lands a high fashion modeling career due to his unique walk (strut) from his leg abnormality, while simultaneously trying to blend in with humans and keep his true identity hidden after scientists and the military become suspicious of his possible arrival. i would do it in the style of austin powers or something because it’s too ridiculous of a plot to try and make actual sense out of, but that’s what a lot of comedy movies are anyways lol
Egyptian history is so fascinating, I love learning anything I can and the more you dig, no pun intended, the more you question and wonder. great video.
From the time I was 6 or 7 I had wanted to be an archaeologist, desperately!! In 6th grade only so many kids were chosen to go, most just wanted to go to get out of class, where I was so into it. Sadly I wasn't chosen and at 56 it still hurts!! But can u imagine opening a room that hadn't been opened in 2000yrs!!!!!!! What does it smell like?? What does it feel like??? I know I sound crazy, to be that invested in something like that...
@@a-listercrowley2737 oh my goodness, I was so into the feeling as I was writing i forgot to put what it was they went to see. It was the mid 70's and it was the Tutankhamun exhibit in Los Angeles ❤
No Anu, great injustice was done to the King Tutankhamun. He was assassinated and then his soul was trapped in his tomb so that he couldn't reincarnate and get justice. When his tomb was opened well over 3,000 years later he was released into world Anu Naik and those beings that killed and trapped him was drawn to the King Tutankhamun like a moth to a flame. I pray that the King got the justice he deserved.
@@cobrakai83 No evil spells were done to him Cobra. To trap his soul so that he couldn't take his justice. For thousands of years they trapped him in his tomb. Pray and for him so that he may rest in peace.
I question this video. We always learned Tut was murdered, but was made to look like an accident or natural cause. I have NEVER seen a horse willingly RUN backwards especially with a chariot. That ridiculous scientist would even have that theory when it would make more sense he was ran over on PURPOSE or was made to look like he died of sickness. Long story short, Tut was murdered!
Kings and pharaohs never travelled alone (for security reasons) and generally were accompanied by other chariots which had guards and other dignitaries in them. In that convoy of chariots, the pharaoh would generally be in the front or the middle chariot. So if by any means he fell down from his chariot due to weakness, he was very likely run over by the chariots behind before they came to a halt. This probably caused his chest and heart to be crushed and hence died before his tomb was even built. Most pharohs had their tombs lavishly built when they were still alive. This was not possible for King Tut since he died unexpectedly, so probably thats why he was burried hastily and in someone else's tomb.
@@mikethespike056 nah, clearly the guy driving the chariot shifted to reverse when he saw him fall out. Sadly, they didn’t have rear-view mirrors back then so he ended up going right over him.
9:05 Title: Two-Ton Carmen (phonetic pun) King Tut is summoned back to life and falls in love with Carmen, a morbidly-obese historian working on his case.
As the tomb was made in haste, the paint was not dry when it was sealed. The fumes over time produced a poisonous gas. When those 10 people who entered the tomb first, they breathed this in. That was the cause of their deaths. Source: From Egyptologist Expert Manal , in Cairo, when I went there for a tour.
tut's has always looked like at least one re-burial/re-sealing had to be done. look at all the chariot wheels at the entrance to the tomb chamber - it's like they were quickly re-piled by priests/guardians. for a pharaoh, everything would have been placed with respect "nice and neat". it was like a team of movers had walked in, re-stacked everything, then left. i bet at least once the tomb was opened by robbers who don't seem to have gotten much.
I just realised that the reason why it’s kept so well it’s bc the dessert is dry and it doesn’t have moisture.Which can cause erosion to occur very quickly
The Ancient Egyptians should've filled the tombs with traps, specifically punji sticks/stakes. One false move, and you're impaled for eternity, with or without the treasures you attempted to steal. I'm sure if this had been the case, many of the tombs we know today, would be left intact or, at the very least, undiscovered. To me, there's no difference between archaeology and grave robbing: you're disturbing something that wasn't meant to be opened.
@@buildinasentry1046 “Egypt” was named that by Greeks. It’s original name is Kemet. I don’t think people realize it’s one of the oldest civilizations in the world. It’s gotten “conquered” many times, and white washed
Interesting that he was thought to be burnt. In New Orleans where many burials are still done in stone mausoleums like you see in Easy Rider, the bodies go through a slow cremation process over the course of a year or so. I wonder if that’s what happened to Steve Martin’s favourite archæological discovery.
Some other researchers think it’s because they overloaded his mummification process with resin made with frankincense which can cause chemical burns to human skin in larger concentrated quantities. Overdid the resin portion maybe as an attempt to make up for the shitty start of his mummification process ooof
What's even stranger than the thirteen people who passed away after opening the tomb is the fact that all their prior ancestors also died and the majority of their subsequent ancestors have also since died. So weird. Haven't seen that happen to any other family in history...... /s
"I want my mummy" its a movie about a spoiled pharoe who throws tantrums like a toddler and finds hinself in weird situations all the time. Bonus: The movie makes fun of the fast and the furious franchise and even has street racing with chariots. Vin Diesel has a cameo after Tut dies in a racing related accident and talks about the inportance of family.
Having a curse on a tomb kinda goes against the idea of having one in the first place. But also you'd think that if one pharaoh could place a curse on their tomb to protect their own afterlife, that every single pharoah would do the same. But since that isn't the case, we're just gonna go with it being counterintuitive.
If a curse was the equivalent to a software like a firewall, then a curse at the time may have been technologically sound and helpful also hopefully peacefully.
If I'm not mistaken, that's well known to everyone that watched The Mummy movie. Booby Traps were placed on anyone tampering with cursed objects. Scarabs in the wall plates, concentrated acid to kill the sealed coffin openers, locusts or pharaoh's undead guards if you read the Egyptian Books, lastly a lever at the end of the movie for a self-destruct sequence.
@@AugustDreamScape Surprisingly, the Egyptian tombs' defenses are somewhat lackluster in real life. False, winding passages that lead to false, empty chambers, heavy stone doors that are closed and sealed after the burial was completed.....stuff like that......
@@overlord5068 Okay, then let me go over it in a more complex manner that better covers what I meant. No, there weren't traps like acidic salt that sprayed out at you if you set it off, arrows rigged to shoot at you or boulders rigged to roll down a narrow corridor leading to pits of snakes or scorpions. The *real* defenses, as I mentioned were winding, maze-like passages that lead to various chambers and rooms within the tomb. On top of these maze-like passages, they even went to the trouble to make fake, empty chambers to confuse and deter thieves. One last defense was the placement of three stone doors that they'd slide into place in front of the real burial chamber. Rather lackluster stuff, in comparison to what Hollywood shows.
I’m surprised Egytpians even let their tombs to be touched & opened, especially pulled apart like that. Shouldn’t they be up in arms about their past, ancestors & respect?
Well, to be fair, most Egyptians now are barely related to those guys; even in the day of Julius Caesar, the Egyptian ruling class were Greek. Nowadays, most people in Egypt are Arabs. I don't know if there are any pure Egyptians still around. Furthermore, they are culturally quite different, being Muslims now. Basically, modern Egyptians (I say modern, it's been this way for hundreds of years.) are not the descendants of the ancient Egyptians.
@@keeganowens8949 that’s not true, DNA has proved that 77% of the population’ s DNA is related to ancient Egyptians and only 18% of Arab defend and rest is European and Turkish and small Persian
Cause the culture would be lost otherwise. Who robbed tombs before modern archeologists? The same people who were there when the tomb was being filled with treasures lmao
So they can lie about history like these people weren't black. They are hiding a hell of a lot more history from black people too! It's always some Europeans disrespecting history and people.
NO egyptian king or queen has ever been found in a pyramid in Egypt! Still they say the pyramids are tombs for kings and queens. Funny how most tombs are in valley of kings or at temples around egypt. 0 in any pyramids
I love King Tut. He will always be the most amazing pharaoh in my eyes ☺️ Egypt has always fascinated me, and I'm gutted i didn't visit Egypt when i traveled but it will forever be one of my top places in my heart ❤
There was a time in Ancient Egypt when people started stealing valuables due to scarcity and financial gains. It got so bad that the Egyptians began writing curses that would harm anyone that tried to steal them.
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Also heard it was something else when they opened the coffins originaly, it was something that had turned poisoneus with time from his mumification or something. Honestly, sinch I just heard about it, might just be a folkelore by now.
Not really outright lies, but this vid has a lot of half truths. King Tut has so much resin inside he might still have his heart, we just can't find it. And the long cut for removing organs wasn't unheard of, it just wasn't common practice until way later. There's a lot of evidence his burial was rushed and that a lot of his stuff was repurposed for him.
5:17 this fucking scene scarred me for life from when I was like 12, it made me believe at the time that was how Egyptians were mummified. Thank you for reliving that trauma 😁
I don't think there is anything to laugh about to a young boy King.. whose body has been so disrespectfully treated. He did not live long it is true..and he suffered many things. But these days he is the emblem of his Country and much respected.. As the saying goes Don't speak ill of the Dead.
I bet Tut was killed. His heart was removed because he was cursed in life. Those who wanted him dead REALLY wanted him dead. They took every step to make sure he wasn't reunited with his family.
Higher Secondary CBSE students probably watched this video thinking Hornbill has provided them everything they need to know about King Tut but psych - that's the wrong number.
Assassination is the only thing that makes sense to me as to why his burial was so hasty. The person that killed him and took the throne wanted everything hushed up and handled quickly.
Perhaps that’s the God’s will so that people of today with so much wealth do not be arrogant . And take this as am admonition and fear God and don’t be ignorant while alive. As you can see he had so much but he’s nothing. Indeed every living thing will come to an end one day sooner or later.
i thought they had to bury him fast so a person could become a pharaoh but it had to be under a time limit for him to become one, so they buried him messily and fast.
His tombs appearance was due to tut dying so young. A tomb is started from a Pharoahs birth, the longer you live more extravagant it will be. Tut died young and suddenly so his tomb was rushed to finish which is why it was smaller, the walls bare and the floors cluttered with treasure.
I legit went to school with the great grandson of one of the guys who brought him back and I remember he brought in loads of crazy photos of it and a couple research papers
The ancients knew the art of creating a "Thought Form" to guard the important places. The thought form caused death of those intruding the guarded places.
Imagine being a God to your people and 3000 years later some guy on UA-cam calls your dead body “of low quality.” 💀
And have your tomb mocked as a closet 💀
He probably would have wanted the UA-camrs head on a silver plate
That's a disgrace... and is one of the reasons why the 🌎 is falling apart . Especially society.
Too many holy and sacred places been Destroyed by modern people.
I just witnessed, without imagining it, and not surprised. I am GOD.
🤣🤣🤣
the egyptians were really out there making the burial of their king like a last minute assignment
😂
Looll
😂😂😂
That’s not even funny
Well he was a boy. Probably thought he had decades. But being so sick, I doubt it.
If you die 16 years after participating in the opening of the tomb, I think its safe to say there's no connection between the events
anti vaxxers fuming rn
Sh!t doesn't have to work immediately to do its job. Dead is dead.
Edit: Not necessarily disagreeing, just making a point.
@@nile7999 How does your "anti vaxxers" comment make any sense in relation to this post? Trust me, they're not fuming over anything but your absolute incompetence. It's no wonder why you're so easily brainwashed into following communist rule.
people are still dying from agent orange from like 50 years ago
Bro how did nobody of you catch the average age of the people who died?
I love how the first thing people think of is a curse, rather than a disease that was trapped within the tomb, bacteria, mold, etc. Lots of stuff would be polluting the air that you are breathing in, after opening a 3000+ year old coffin, wouldn't you think?
Also, I honestly feel really bad for King Tut- he died so young, suffered a lot throughout life, and even after his death, his body was immensely disrespected.
Also as someone else mentioned, merely dying quite some years later does not mean "oh, it's because that guy opened King Tut's tomb!" No, it means that nobody is immortal, and everyone dies at some point.
Humans really are dumb🤣😅😂
Yea like 7000 of 6000 yrs old
So, you don’t believe in the devil, eh? I got a few tasks for you. Go visit Robert the Doll, and take his picture without asking permission. Go visit Annabelle and touch the glass and mock her. Go visit Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park in Australia and take a rock with you. Unless of course you’re scared.
@@johnnyblaze2931 I'm not saying people can't have religious beliefs, but there can still be scientific explanations to things lol
@@johnnyblaze2931 I don't believe in the devil, and I would do all those things if I had the money to go to those places.
I love how they attribute the deaths of those who entered were the result of some kind of curse when in reality only 6 of 26 were killed and that was over the course of an entire decade.
Ooooooo its a curseeeee
Yeah matr sure
He just explained that on the video lol
Yeah, I was thinking the same.. I'd believe it's a curse if they died in a month or at most the same year after they discovered the tomb.. And the cause of deaths are not that weird to be called curse, I mean I don't really know about curse but pneumonia seriously? If anything it's the pneumococcus that gave him curse
The mummy probably killed the rest a bit later.
Bet in 100 years all those left will die from the curse
My grandfather was there too, luckily he was spared from the curse. Televisions do help save lives
Dope
I was there and I bitchsmacked that ghost Pharoah back into the fires of hell! No curse for meee
💀💀💀💀
Cool and all, but my inmortal grand,grand,grand,grand,grand mother was present on the day of hes funeral.
Bro curses arnt real🤣
Tut: Big important king
Also Tut: massively disrespected multiple times at death
he wasn't really a big important king though, he wasn't really important at all. they didn't see him as a strong leader.
@@Elbanjomon it doesn't matter. He was pharaoh. He had the resect a pharaoh would get based on their belief systems. It wasn't 2020 back then. They still had fear in them. Pharaoh's were the closest to the gods. He was an important king because that is what he was born into. They all were.
@@tsemiu King Tut didn’t really accomplish much, and his death was a surprise and rushed, sure. To them, he was just another pharaoh. He was only really important to us because he’s the only pharaoh we found in modern times. How many hieroglyphs do you see him recorded in history? Not as much as others. And with his crippled body, I wouldn’t be surprised if the masses thought of him as a commoner just like them.
@@Elbanjomon bro, he's famous because of the Pharoahs curse, the mystery surrounding his death, and the fact he took the throne as a child. I believe they said he had people ruling for him until he was old enough to rule, then ruled for 8 or 9 years until he died. He died at 19 so he was 10 or 11 when he begin his solo rule. Also he was accomplishing something. He was reversing something his father did that his people didn't like. Had to do with religion but I can't remember what it was. I think it was the God they worshipped. When he died, his successor continued his task.
The reason we don't see a lot about him is because the next Pharoah after his successor did everything he could to erase him and others connected to him from history. The reason why? Who knows. Maybe he didn't like what King Tut started. Maybe because he was a new bloodline on the throne and wanted to pretend he was chosen by God from the beginning and not just took it. Idk. But I honestly wish I knew but it was probably political or religious reasons.
The crazy thing about people back then is that they would go out of their way to erase history. Out of shame, jealousy, religion, hatred... all of the above. Imagine what we would know today if they didn't do that crap. Destroying temples, documents, books... crazy.
@@Elbanjomon you cant be thought of as a commoner when you were born from a king. Crippled or not, he was royalty. You can't just use how you would feel nowadays and assume people who had the fear of the Gods in them from thousands of years ago would feel. From what I read, they most likely loved him for reversing his fathers religious reforms they didn't like. Ancient Egyptians knew the Pharoahs were able to speak with the gods after death on their behalf, no way they would treat him with any kind of disrespect. Definitely not on a wide scale. I bet there were shadow groups that plotted against him though.
"They found themselves in a small cramped room that looked like a warehouse." I don't think I have ever thought of a warehouse as a small cramped room...
I think he meant a small cramped room that ALSO looked like a warehouse.
I read this comment at the exact time the video was saying it. Far out mannnnn
@@goodvibes4260Allah is one God God is Allah Allah has 99 names Allah is almighty
@@BreadBreeder42don't die as a disbeliever
Fear Allah unseen
"What killed people who opened king Tut's tomb?"
My dumb brain: THE SMELL
🤣🤣🤣🤣
omg yes?????? I was thinking the same thing
Exactly
Glad this wasn't just me😂
Haha! I don’t have my smell.
Poor king tut. He never stood a chance. He’s the product of multiple generations of incest, which explains his deformities and sudden death at a young age. He was also made to marry his half sister, they had twins who couldn’t survive. Most likely because of, yet again, incest. If ancient Egyptians weren’t so greedy and wanted to keep their gold to their family only, they may still be alive today. Incest is what brought down the entire Egyptian empire. It all ended with Tut because his heirs didn’t survive, and thus no more Egyptian royals. All they had to do was introduce new blood into their lineage. Lol
Yeah bro, they were nasty
interesting, to take this even further i would say it may have even been because of the greek culture left by tholomy and alexander’s greeks. the macedonians were notorious for not wanting to breed with what they viewed as lesser peoples
Incest/inbreeding is a very common thing across royal families wanting to keep a tight grip on their wealth and status. It was practiced in England where the Greek influence wasn’t really that prevalent so I wouldn’t say that was really a major factor.
Your bigotry and racism is showing…..shhhh 🤫 It was a common practice amongst royals to practice incest which they didn’t know at the time was inappropriate. Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip was cousins, do they deserve to have their wealth taken away or monarch destroyed? I guess you would say no since their wealth was built from the African Slave Trade right?
RIP bro 🙏🏽
have humans ever wondered that Egypt didn't have our medicine knowledge and he could have a bad disease (that the egyptians wouldn't know it was a disease), and that' because he was locked away and with extra protection, and reopening his tomb could bring a disease to the world that didn't exist anymore?
the disease wouldn't be alive after being in a tomb for 3 thousand years
interesting theory though
Yall knowlege of medcin 😂😂😂😂😂 the audacity you joking right ? They was way advanced then anybody comon man
@@pipo-dp3ls they were pretty advanced but if they knew everything we wouldn't need to discover all the diseases that were found after that time. it 's not so hard to think about it, just be more than eight years old.
@@factsdataworld9899 actually it started in india
I was lucky to visit both tomb and his mommy ( they keep them at two different museums). It was absolutely fascinating. The tour guide said something very interesting! He said he doesn’t even believe we know 5% of ancient Egypt secrets. I
Ok so facts known:
- Chest crushed
- Had malaria
- Had a weakened immune system and brittle bones due to genetic defects
If he had malaria with a weakened immune system, he was likely very weak, so he probably wouldn't be around racing a chariot and such unless it was needed. Perhaps he was being transported by chariot to some place that would hopefully be able to help him recover from the malaria. As kings generally moved in caravans, not just a singular chariot for security purposes, there would have been other chariots at least behind and at both sides of his. He may have reached a certain point and fallen out of the chariot because he was too weak to keep holding on, or the terrain was too bumpy, or he lost his grip. Obviously because king being weak is a pretty urgent matter, plus being in the middle of the desert, they'd have been travelling as quickly as possible, and so when he fell off of the chariot, the chariot behind him unintentionally ran over him because there was no time to stop. Due to his brittle bones, his chest was crushed. They probably noticed and went somewhere closer by to get more urgent medical attention, not being able to tell that he was already dead, and when they got there, the person tending to him could have thought it was a heart-based problem, or maybe his chest was crushed so badly that his heart was just mush and they had to remove it in order to clean it up and make mummification easier.
It's likely the chest crushing that killed him, because of how they rushed to bury him, whereas his ancestors had their tombs worked on over a way longer period prior to their own deaths. 100% something that they couldn't predict; which is why it's likely the chest because a sickly person dying from illness isn't unpredictable.
Nailed it 👌
That is very plausible. Very good thinking my friend. If the experts ever come to that conclusion, you called it first.
Dude go and get patent over this idea
Nice man, 👍
Well, that makes sense.
Quick question, how are we so sure that it's Tut's body and not somebody else's? What if his actual grave is much deeper under the found grave? What if he was never actually given a good burial, because he was more of a puppet, which would be one reason why he would have gotten such a burial, due to rivalry. What are your thoughts?
you've got a point actually, never thought of that.
Puppet?
@@APPANOOO one with a title and no power
well archeology is 75% creative writing.
Stop overthinking
After watching many documentaries and interviews with egyptologists, I think you have several things wrong in this video. His body was not "burned" like with fire, but the resins used in the mummification can get quite hot as they cure. There was more resin used on Tut than other mummies, again pointing to hasty or amateur preparation. This extra resin got hotter than usual and caused carbonization in the body, which is also what happens when something burns.
Watch the video again.. He already said what you said.
Exactly right, he used the word burned and set on fire which was very misleading. You described it very well.
he literally said that in the video
Sad, I get the feeling that he wasn't liked by the members of the royal court and the general public. It wasn't his fault that he was so inbred and weakened by genetic diseases. I don't think he was run over by a chariot, maybe he was poisoned...
no.. they wanted to better preserve lmfao.. 🤦♂
There were actually four cursed items found within Tut's tomb that were kept secret from the press. Each of the four cursed items were discovered at the four cardinal directions within the tomb. They are small standing sculptures held up by its base, which had the ominous words carved around it promising swift death and retribution upon the souls of any who dared disturb the tomb of the young pharoh.
source? not that i'm doubting you, but i'm interested to know more
Are you fucking with me? Or is this legit?
@@KamenNepper source: trust me bro
I believe it. I also believe on top of the curse that mold and other things could have been released in the air
Swift death? The guy who opened the tomb lived 16 years after opening the tomb.
People can just never learn to respect and leave the dead alone
curiosity kills not only the cats it seems
Man people are strange
Would you if there gold with a dead ones 😂
Cursed gold that can make you regret for the rest of your life ? It's a no no for me @@Name-dj9ck
I think it woudl be more likely there was another chariot behind him when he fell off and that ran over him than they stopped and backed over him.
Whoever wrote the script we're listening to is some sort of whack-head. He couldn't dream up a better idea for King Tut's story than the one he told. Your's sounds far more likely. In a race, another one would easily have run the good king Tut over. After that is anyone's guess.
Well yeah but if you think about it the incision would’ve been starting at the shoulder/head level and would’ve ran down farther as well. Unless he fell off with his feet facing the chariot behind him and the wheel caught him in the thigh/groin area and ran up to the belly button before falling off of him to the side of his stomach
@@gmccool1576 What difference does it make. Whether he's chariot ran over him or another one ran over him? Who knows which way he would have been laying on the ground? He might have been in the process of getting up on to he's feet. One thing's for sure. It would have been really rotten luck if his own horses had turned round to run him over it would have been bloody lousy luck, they just don't do that.
“Oh, who cares?! That guy doesn't matter! Let him stay, locked up for another half an hour! The police will be here by then, and there are two dead bodies in the study!!”
giving a reply and a notice that I fully agree with the comment - the inexplicably perplexing original one is just far from any logic, unless there are additional details surrounding the case that we've not been informed about in the video.
It depends what your idea of a "Curse" is. A sealed space with a dead body in it, is a dangerous place, Full of deadly spores. Of course they didn't know this, and rushed in to tear everything apart, not knowing they were inhaling this lethal crap. Not long ago, a tourist, in Tuts tomb, scratched the walls of the tomb. She had recently had treatment for an illness, and had a compromised immune system. She inhaled some of the mould on the wall and died a short time later. So we have to ask ourselves, "Curse or rough justice." Now scientists and archaeologists usually wear masks. Mick Aston, one of the time team stars, died from aspergillosis, a fungal spore disease, probably from his career poking about in nasty old ruins.
Haha
Leave the royalty at peace is really the karma in all of this 🤣 don’t go snooping around
curse i form of disease i guess?
it's mold. You can die from fresh mold spores, nevermind those hundreds or thousands of years old. I wouldn't even go near any excavated stuff or mummified body while wearing a space suit.
The King never ever thought that people would watch him after 3000 yrs later 😱 🤯
My ancient history teacher in high school said this tomb was mediocre at best , the great tombs had all been plundered. Can you imagine the splendor of those?
as i learned
EgpTh
farmers ....
plundered
first i donT wanna know how
many
people
died as i learned ThaT Pyramids were
proTedcTed also per proTecTion
spells ...
am
no
Fanv of
DisrespecT
Wonder where did they go?
@@happylucky7354 anything of gold was likely melted down over the years and at very best a few pieces survive in the private collections of wealthy people.
I lived half a kilometre from the Tut exhibit when it was on loan to Melbourne Museum from the Louvre. I couldn't wait to go see it...and got sick on the last week and missed out. One of my biggest regrets.
Cool
Or luckiest escapes
@@ghostofsparta1045 Lol maybe,those ancient egyptians seems like negative entities.
@@hp4z18 not exactly negative but like closed community people who didn't want to be disturbed
Maybe the curse made you sick or something
Am I the only one that thinks it's kinda messed up that people opened up a coffin. I mean I get it for the name of "Science" but it's kinda messed up to open someone's coffin of someone your not related too. 🤷🏿♂️
If its science, nothing is messed up
Been asking same question, why would pple not just respect other pple's culture and just let them b, digging out dead pple in the name of exhibition and calling it science.... extremely disturbing.
@@princessbalogun3946 dude frrr
@@rimasikder3781 this is what the Nazi scientists or other people who did horrifying experiments said to themselves
@@princessbalogun3946 💯
Quick backstory about why tut’s tombe is such a mess: he died very young and unexpected so they didn’t have a tombe Made for him yet. Sinds he was so young he didn’t have kids so there wasn’t a clear new follower to become leader op Egypte. So his second in command would be the most likely follower for tut. But he was on the egyptian border fighting with the hadrians so he couldn’t plan the burriel of tut (the burrier of the deceased emperor shall become the new emperor to ancient egyptian rules) so the next persoon in line, a very high ranked politician of sorts rushed the burrial and used a second hand coffin, a coffin holder that was Only partially finished, the politician even switched tombes with tut’s burrial tombe. That is why the tombe is so small and also very different to other tombes of big emperors of egypt. The mummification was also rushed and there are even rumours a lot of the gifts in tut’s tombe wheren’t even supposed to be his but his gifts wheren’t Made yet.
Thanks for Reading and I hope this gives you more understanding of tut’s weird tombe.
Source: documenturies on UA-cam and books
He had wives so naturally he had kids but none of the babies survived.
Thank you- yes much better explanation than this whole video!!!!
Nahh bro there are still too many unanswered questions this makes me uneasy & makes me think it was something more to his death …. why was his tomb half assed ? Why was he buried so far from where he lived? Why was his heart removed ? Why was his body burned ? And most definitely why was Osiris cut off toes in tuts tomb? There is more to this story that we think
fr. this made me uneasy watching this. the chariot theory seems so outlandish
Are they your relatives 🤔
they want us to know what's best to know.sad.
@@Mr.Josh. Christian boy.
Check gyrtez detailed answer in the comment section
Comparing him too mr bean is the biggest honor an egyption king can have
i bet he must feel honored.
Yea right now that's not disrespectful
@@InvincibleCosmicEnigma it’s not? Pharos we’re born into their titles, not deserving any special respect than a normal person
Corny ass comment. OP and whomever liked his comment gets 0 bitches
More comparable to Mr. Beast
AKA Mr. Breast 🙏🏽💯
All he wanted was to have fun on a chariot. Poor kid. But hey at least his afterlife has been incredible. Millions of people know his name to this day and his tomb/afterlife home is still VERY well preserved.
Yeah I feel sorry for him. He died far too young.
I visited the tomb and saw one of his sarcophagi in 2019! Absolutely incredible. Had to bribe the guy standing guard to let me take a photo and video as they don’t allow it in the Valley of Kings (where he’s buried along with many others like Rameses II).
I don't think he cares much about such things now
Wasn't it that he happened to rally on a battlefield during some war -battle? Somebody shot an arrow in hes chariot wheels or something, yea! ?
what? he's in hell screaming right now
Imagine learning about a country or people without disturbing the dead, letting them rest in peace.
It's cool, he didn't wake up.
I went to Cairo to visit the tomb and saw one of his sarcophagi in 2019! Absolutely incredible. Had to bribe the guy standing guard to let me take a photo and video as they don’t allow it in the Valley of Kings (where he’s buried along with many others like Rameses II). The preservation was incredible. Was told they sometimes used egg white to coat their pigments because the protein in it preserves it when hardened.
That’s crazy. Like how did they know that about the egg? Baffling
@@lancer717 it left a super small layer of film and I’m sure they examined smaller fragmented pieces more closely to determine what it was chemically made of (the pigments they used were wild. Purple was so damn hard to get)
@@lancer717 purple pigment dust was obtained by crushing thousands of this certain snail shell since it rarely occurs naturally it was only used for royalty who could afford it
share those pics
Nothing incredible about digging out deceased people I don’t care what the reasons is for .
The truth is that king Tutts tomb was not meant for him it was actually meant for his uncle or another relative and that his tomb that was much much larger was not finished yet and would not be finished at all in time so they hired someone else to very quickly make a tomb and corridor for Tutankhamen but it was not very nice and if you even look at Tutankhamen‘s coffin and sarcophagus in the surrounding encasement you could actually see things that are etched off that have change the name from one name to another and designs lettering‘s and symbols that are all changed from one to another and even areas that weren’t fully chiseled and painted in some areas of it while others were due to the fact that they needed to get it done extremely fast before the body routed even his modification was rushed due to circumstances which led to an extremely poor modification normally they soak the body in a mushy liquid and wrap it then do it again and wrap it again but they actually only did it once and then double wrapped dry on top and didn’t actually properly remove his organs
They actually didn’t remove some of his organs while removing his heart which they’re not supposed to do and didn’t remove his eyes and tongue if I remember correctly wall also making odd incision types on his body and like I said they didn’t properly embalm and wrap his body like they were supposed to along with any other things that were supposed to be removed from mostly left intact which causes more rotting and problems with the body Tutankhamen also didn’t have near as much wealth in his tomb as he was supposed to why do people think that was due to the fact that many people had raided the tomb previously in the last thousand plus years but there is also a theory that the people who are bringing it in slowly Broke chairs apart that had gold on them and pieces that had gold and jewels on them and would remove them and put them in their clothes or something like that there’s a whole documentarian on Tutankhamen’s tomb and the pyramids it’s pretty awesome you guys should watch it
Go read a book. Learn to use periods and commas. And structure a paragraph.
@@BusinessWolf1 😭😂
Holy run on sentence.
im outta breath reading this🤣🤣🤣
@@BusinessWolf1 i mean i read it just fine
Scientists recently have been doing some new studies with the mummy of Egypt's famous boy king. With the aid of highly advanced mri scans they were able to ascertain he suffered from a major gastro intestinal disorder. Apparently he was lactose intolerant. Ya turns out me and the Egyptian kid got a toot in common
what is the game cutscene shown in the video 1:00 ?
You aren't lactose intolerant, you're easily manipulated by advertising. Go work on a farm and develop some immunity to idiocy.
Lol!
@@jessielove1252 Hey you're right I don't it's a joke obviously. What was that you said about idiocy?
@@jessielove1252 yes people can’t consume milk. It’s not false advertisement it real dummy.
If you watched the entire video and feel like you didn't get the answer you were expecting, that makes tu(t) of us.
This is probably unrelated but it's strange how when we view deaths 200+ years nobody sympathizes but the reality is that humans, especially the ones at Pompeii, had horrific deaths and certainly felt terror when dying just as we did
3:40 the incest wasn't just from his parents. There is a long line of close family incest that created his deformaties. Not just one brother-sister born child. If you check out Mortal Faces page you can see how far back their close incest goes.
When they first found the tomb door there was a small horn on the wall. They deciphered the hieroglyphs to find they said "toot and come in"
🤣🤣🤣
👊🏻
Nice
😂
I have yet to actually watch this fully all the way, but as I was watching the beginning of it, I remember hearing something somewhere about how the curse of King Tut's tomb started because somebody got bitten by a mosquito that was carrying a disease
I’m telling you bro… Tut was murdered and Egypt was desperate to bring back the religion they had before tut and his dad. The council was prob thinking that Tut was not ready to be a pharaoh
Mad valid bro..valid af
He got crushed in the red sea when it parted back into place. That is why he was buried without much time. His son was killed at 12 years old from the first born child being killed from the gases of the volcano that went off around the time of his reign. He was Moses' brother. I'm being extremely short in details here but this is from 11 + years of research
@@Mr.Josh. Moses could possibly be a myth, brother :/ -
akhenaten was looked at as the worst pharaoh is Egypt history for introducing them to a new religion, making them move to a new city and not having good chemistry with his people
Egyptian records do not identify a person who matches the Biblical story of Moses.
Moses took place during “Exodus” , which by date, makes Ramses ii the pharaoh and not Tut or his Dad.
Your question made me google so many different things… I am now convinced Exodus never occurred… oh Gees 😭
@@wilsongv95 No, the dates are off by a couple to a few hundred years. You need to take into account the eruption of Mt Santorini which may be responsible for the 12 plagues.
@@Mr.Josh. I read that too.. the eruption of Sinai could have caused the events.
Interesting 😝
He was a young boy extremely rich and his mummy was not removed immediately but later when they open the coffin his mummy was already decomposed, the coffin was entirely gold
And what the gold casket used for?
@@Oyzatt maybe to give tut some bling inn the afterlife, who knows? 😂
Of the 13 people that "died soon after opening the tomb", only 1 of them happened within a year
(died of natural causes 16 years after opening the tomb at age 64)
"Oh my god it's the CURSE"
@@Cancer6667 lol its Obviously not that one 😂😂
What he is saying is the other people that die that year 🙃 Explain that Senpai 🙃
@@NaldzHobbySide ok...people die every year of all the causes. I explained it for you weeb
@@greenkoopa 😂😂
@@NaldzHobbySide He wasn't talking about the one that died in the first year :)
I read something very differently. He had A LOT of weapons in his tomb. He actually had a steel dagger that still baffles people to this day, because the only way to find steel back when was from a particular meteorite. Many believe he could have died in battle, i could see an enemy removing the heart of a soon to be king in a tomb to prevent after life or something. Who knows though, we never will unless something ground breaking is found somewhere in the world.
He actually died on the battlefield,he fell off his chariot and the enemy rode on his left chest crushing his heart,that why his left shoulder was also damaged..,recent research confirmed it.they checked his and akenaten dna,there was no genetic problems.
Nothing has been confirmed. Where do you people come from CNN?
I really liked the part where we learned what exactly killed them
Seriously. He talked about everything except what killed them.
Well you saved me from watching this whole video and 9 minutes of my life thank you!
Thanks to you i only wasted 1 minute of my life
At 7:29 it explains how they died. Most of the explorers that went in first were already pretty old. Most of them were in their early to 60s to mid 70s.
What Killed People Who Opened King Tut's Tomb? is the title of the video......
Poor guy. Tut had a rough life from the start and was disrespected after death. I actually feel bad for him 😭 I know I’d curse someone for doing my dead body like that. I really hope he’s in the afterlife and at peace now, and no longer in the pain that his psychical body had to go through. I know he died bricks ago but I hope the guy rests in peace 😭❤️
That is very emphatic and nice of you. He has probably already incarnated again and does not care about the personality his spirit soul ego self once was.
@@jayronimo5667 haha yeah it be like that. I wonder if i would be hurt after words too. Probly as you said after the fact id be good but its hard to avoid feeling in the moment tbh 🤦🏽♥🤣
sad thing is, according to their own religion, without a heart, king tut would have never crossed over into the afterlife as they needed their heart so they could be judged before entry.
@@jayronimo5667 What type of bullshitery are y'all on?
Also yeahhhhhh
the pharaoh of Egypt sure did have ot rough!!! While many citizens suffer from everything from famine and poverty
What killed 13 people that opened the Tomb?
There was a lot of gold, so 1 guy killed all others so he can take it by himself.
Yes maybe
all of the gas and liquids that was poured on the body
So it like plot of movie "The Italian Job"
🤣🤣
I have a high respect for archeologists, but I will never agree with trespassing into burial sites like this. It’s so highly disrespectful to the one who passed. They should be allowed to rest in peace and not have their items taken away.
Considering what Muslim extremists did in Egypt, they have no choice. The tribes that used to protect these graves are long gone or have resorted to selling antiquities themselves. They have to retrieve and safekeep whatever they can.
I dont think dead people care if you take their stuff, lol
nuh uh.
Heathanous woodwose don’t know respect. They aren’t civilized or civil.
What if these people did not die from a curse but rather they discovered something that a few started talking about and were killed off but a curse was then told so many wouldn't go digging around
Like stealing the gold that was there ?! ….
Fair enough
Bullseye
What.. do you even watch the video? He explained how each of the 6 archeologist died... Natural causes and one was shot. And most of them died only after a decade when they did research on pharaoh tuts body
You get me thinking ⌛💡
a comedy about him could be called “tut strut” in which he time travels to present day with the use of some special artifact he finds in ancient egypt, and lands a high fashion modeling career due to his unique walk (strut) from his leg abnormality, while simultaneously trying to blend in with humans and keep his true identity hidden after scientists and the military become suspicious of his possible arrival. i would do it in the style of austin powers or something because it’s too ridiculous of a plot to try and make actual sense out of, but that’s what a lot of comedy movies are anyways lol
Genius
Struttin' Tut
Sounds great 😂 i hope some good movie director sees this comment
my bro you gotta give me some of that weed🤣
Hollywood: WRITE THAT DOWN. WRITE THAT DOWN!
"A small cramped room, that looks like a warehouse." That's very contradictive...🤔🙄😂
Very entertaining video, thank you!
Riddle's editing is top quality
Egyptian history is so fascinating, I love learning anything I can and the more you dig, no pun intended, the more you question and wonder. great video.
So your ok with digging up dead people ?
Don’t tut your own horn buddy
Ancient Sumerian and Egyptian history are very interesting
From the time I was 6 or 7 I had wanted to be an archaeologist, desperately!! In 6th grade only so many kids were chosen to go, most just wanted to go to get out of class, where I was so into it. Sadly I wasn't chosen and at 56 it still hurts!! But can u imagine opening a room that hadn't been opened in 2000yrs!!!!!!! What does it smell like?? What does it feel like??? I know I sound crazy, to be that invested in something like that...
Nah, I fully understand your curiosity
@@a-listercrowley2737 oh my goodness, I was so into the feeling as I was writing i forgot to put what it was they went to see. It was the mid 70's and it was the Tutankhamun exhibit in Los Angeles ❤
@@joannemadden7449 never been out west
You're never too old to start something new
Jackie Chan adventures.
Everytime something new on this channel...i appreciate his hardwork 👏👍🔥
Imagine being the most insignificant pharaoh who isn't even buried in the valley of the kings and thousand years later you are the most famous.
No Anu, great injustice was done to the King Tutankhamun. He was assassinated and then his soul was trapped in his tomb so that he couldn't reincarnate and get justice. When his tomb was opened well over 3,000 years later he was released into world Anu Naik and those beings that killed and trapped him was drawn to the King Tutankhamun like a moth to a flame. I pray that the King got the justice he deserved.
@@anadasingh3456 you sound like his agent or something
@@cobrakai83 No evil spells were done to him Cobra. To trap his soul so that he couldn't take his justice. For thousands of years they trapped him in his tomb. Pray and for him so that he may rest in peace.
He had the last laugh
I question this video. We always learned Tut was murdered, but was made to look like an accident or natural cause. I have NEVER seen a horse willingly RUN backwards especially with a chariot. That ridiculous scientist would even have that theory when it would make more sense he was ran over on PURPOSE or was made to look like he died of sickness. Long story short, Tut was murdered!
Kings and pharaohs never travelled alone (for security reasons) and generally were accompanied by other chariots which had guards and other dignitaries in them. In that convoy of chariots, the pharaoh would generally be in the front or the middle chariot. So if by any means he fell down from his chariot due to weakness, he was very likely run over by the chariots behind before they came to a halt. This probably caused his chest and heart to be crushed and hence died before his tomb was even built. Most pharohs had their tombs lavishly built when they were still alive. This was not possible for King Tut since he died unexpectedly, so probably thats why he was burried hastily and in someone else's tomb.
Bruh I cringed at how stupid that was. Obviously the horses behind him ran him over lmao.
@@mikethespike056 nah, clearly the guy driving the chariot shifted to reverse when he saw him fall out.
Sadly, they didn’t have rear-view mirrors back then so he ended up going right over him.
@@banditkeef3864 accidentally put the horse on reverse 💀
@@mikethespike056 .....
9:05 Title: Two-Ton Carmen (phonetic pun)
King Tut is summoned back to life and falls in love with Carmen, a morbidly-obese historian working on his case.
As the tomb was made in haste, the paint was not dry when it was sealed. The fumes over time produced a poisonous gas.
When those 10 people who entered the tomb first, they breathed this in. That was the cause of their deaths.
Source: From Egyptologist Expert Manal , in Cairo, when I went there for a tour.
Some of these egyptian tombs were preserved so well, like perfectly intact cloth and wrappings held in tact for 2,000 years.
tut's has always looked like at least one re-burial/re-sealing had to be done. look at all the chariot wheels at the entrance to the tomb chamber - it's like they were quickly re-piled by priests/guardians. for a pharaoh, everything would have been placed with respect "nice and neat". it was like a team of movers had walked in, re-stacked everything, then left. i bet at least once the tomb was opened by robbers who don't seem to have gotten much.
I just realised that the reason why it’s kept so well it’s bc the dessert is dry and it doesn’t have moisture.Which can cause erosion to occur very quickly
The Ancient Egyptians should've filled the tombs with traps, specifically punji sticks/stakes. One false move, and you're impaled for eternity, with or without the treasures you attempted to steal. I'm sure if this had been the case, many of the tombs we know today, would be left intact or, at the very least, undiscovered. To me, there's no difference between archaeology and grave robbing: you're disturbing something that wasn't meant to be opened.
Exactly! And that pisses me off! Our people have no peace in life or death
@@shesherachal yeah but not many people exactly liked the pharoahs....
@@shesherachal our people? You Egyptian?
@@buildinasentry1046 “Egypt” was named that by Greeks. It’s original name is Kemet. I don’t think people realize it’s one of the oldest civilizations in the world. It’s gotten “conquered” many times, and white washed
@@montgomeryscottys8213 it wasn’t white washed
Interesting that he was thought to be burnt.
In New Orleans where many burials are still done in stone mausoleums like you see in Easy Rider, the bodies go through a slow cremation process over the course of a year or so.
I wonder if that’s what happened to Steve Martin’s favourite archæological discovery.
Some other researchers think it’s because they overloaded his mummification process with resin made with frankincense which can cause chemical burns to human skin in larger concentrated quantities. Overdid the resin portion maybe as an attempt to make up for the shitty start of his mummification process ooof
An ancient Egypt newbie out here still getting roasted for his terrible mummification job lol (jk)
@@DelightfulDandelion444 I’m citing Steve Martin and The Toot Uncommon.
What's even stranger than the thirteen people who passed away after opening the tomb is the fact that all their prior ancestors also died and the majority of their subsequent ancestors have also since died.
So weird. Haven't seen that happen to any other family in history......
/s
"I want my mummy" its a movie about a spoiled pharoe who throws tantrums like a toddler and finds hinself in weird situations all the time. Bonus: The movie makes fun of the fast and the furious franchise and even has street racing with chariots. Vin Diesel has a cameo after Tut dies in a racing related accident and talks about the inportance of family.
this sounds like if the Emperor's New Groove was made today
Lmao-
😂😂😂😂
Having a curse on a tomb kinda goes against the idea of having one in the first place. But also you'd think that if one pharaoh could place a curse on their tomb to protect their own afterlife, that every single pharoah would do the same. But since that isn't the case, we're just gonna go with it being counterintuitive.
If a curse was the equivalent to a software like a firewall, then a curse at the time may have been technologically sound and helpful also hopefully peacefully.
If I'm not mistaken, that's well known to everyone that watched The Mummy movie. Booby Traps were placed on anyone tampering with cursed objects. Scarabs in the wall plates, concentrated acid to kill the sealed coffin openers, locusts or pharaoh's undead guards if you read the Egyptian Books, lastly a lever at the end of the movie for a self-destruct sequence.
I always wondered if they really did that shit. Lol
@@AugustDreamScape Surprisingly, the Egyptian tombs' defenses are somewhat lackluster in real life. False, winding passages that lead to false, empty chambers, heavy stone doors that are closed and sealed after the burial was completed.....stuff like that......
@@19TheFallen Speak English so we can understand you. Do you mean it happened or didn't happen?
@@overlord5068 Okay, then let me go over it in a more complex manner that better covers what I meant. No, there weren't traps like acidic salt that sprayed out at you if you set it off, arrows rigged to shoot at you or boulders rigged to roll down a narrow corridor leading to pits of snakes or scorpions. The *real* defenses, as I mentioned were winding, maze-like passages that lead to various chambers and rooms within the tomb. On top of these maze-like passages, they even went to the trouble to make fake, empty chambers to confuse and deter thieves. One last defense was the placement of three stone doors that they'd slide into place in front of the real burial chamber. Rather lackluster stuff, in comparison to what Hollywood shows.
That gem shining, suspended on top of this stairs, that brought everything down but luckily that one good guy always makes it out
RIP TUTANKHAMUN AFTER 3000 YEARS STILL TALKED ABOUT
7:12 is where they talk about what the people died of. Before that it's all about the tomb and burial
Does anyone else here noticed that this is the 3rd time this video got uploaded about king tut's tomb!!!
I'm a fan of Riddle, lets see who else
I’m surprised Egytpians even let their tombs to be touched & opened, especially pulled apart like that. Shouldn’t they be up in arms about their past, ancestors & respect?
Well, to be fair, most Egyptians now are barely related to those guys; even in the day of Julius Caesar, the Egyptian ruling class were Greek. Nowadays, most people in Egypt are Arabs. I don't know if there are any pure Egyptians still around. Furthermore, they are culturally quite different, being Muslims now. Basically, modern Egyptians (I say modern, it's been this way for hundreds of years.) are not the descendants of the ancient Egyptians.
@@keeganowens8949 actually if you compare the dna of ancient and modern Egyptian, modern and ancient Egyptian are the same dna lol
Yeah..me too.
@@keeganowens8949 that’s not true, DNA has proved that 77% of the population’ s DNA is related to ancient Egyptians and only 18% of Arab defend and rest is European and Turkish and small Persian
@@youssefelmasry95 All right, I guess I was wrong then. Thanks for putting me straight, that's good to know.
My father flew the treasures to London from Cairo for the Exhibition. All of the flight crew passed within a few years. My Dad lived for another 35...
So basically I got clicked baked into watching this
I always question why do people stay digging up other cultures tombs but never their own
The majority of the people digging up tombs are Egyptian.
I can answer that. Because they want to. This is why college exists. That be a better use of your time than the comment section.
Cause the culture would be lost otherwise. Who robbed tombs before modern archeologists? The same people who were there when the tomb was being filled with treasures lmao
So they can lie about history like these people weren't black. They are hiding a hell of a lot more history from black people too! It's always some Europeans disrespecting history and people.
NO egyptian king or queen has ever been found in a pyramid in Egypt!
Still they say the pyramids are tombs for kings and queens.
Funny how most tombs are in valley of kings or at temples around egypt. 0 in any pyramids
What if the 10 lost tribes of the bible are hidden underneath or in the pyramids
@@jesusistheonlyway1017 what if the troll lived under the pyramid.
The empty sarcophagus had the bones of Joseph in it but when Moses led the slaves out of Egypt they took the bones so that they may be buried...
@@oguzmen5451 lol 😭😭😭
I’d survive u trippin
I love King Tut. He will always be the most amazing pharaoh in my eyes ☺️
Egypt has always fascinated me, and I'm gutted i didn't visit Egypt when i traveled but it will forever be one of my top places in my heart ❤
I love how you came from Riddles to these cool videos of artifacts!
Showing LOVE for the channel thank you and have a blessed day everyone
There was a time in Ancient Egypt when people started stealing valuables due to scarcity and financial gains. It got so bad that the Egyptians began writing curses that would harm anyone that tried to steal them.
Hi baby how are you doing now i hope you are really doing good you are awesome looking at you baby makes happy when I look at your picture it is beyond my imagination that a creature like you really exist like a rose you make the garden so beautiful You are a diamond to any man that have eyes to see goodness of a womanhood Baby am Ben easy going person very understandable Am a civil engineer and a contractor I work at so many places like Asia Europe and Africa I love art craft and I write music I like ideal people when I see your picture am impress I want a good woman that understand what real love is all about who will understand me and perfectly be for me So we can build our world strong enough to care for each other I want you to be mine and I hope to hear from you soonest thanks
7:19 Man, those two dudes doing the pimp walk. 😂
The narrator really has a calming voice.
I feel calm now.
It was mould spoures (from the ancient paint) that killed most of the people surrounding the opening of the tomb.
Also heard it was something else when they opened the coffins originaly, it was something that had turned poisoneus with time from his mumification or something. Honestly, sinch I just heard about it, might just be a folkelore by now.
Not really outright lies, but this vid has a lot of half truths. King Tut has so much resin inside he might still have his heart, we just can't find it. And the long cut for removing organs wasn't unheard of, it just wasn't common practice until way later. There's a lot of evidence his burial was rushed and that a lot of his stuff was repurposed for him.
Saya orang Indonesia.
Saya orang Eropa.
Saya orang Egypt.
Nabi atau Raja Ratu Islam banyak di Eropa.
Benar.
5:17 this fucking scene scarred me for life from when I was like 12, it made me believe at the time that was how Egyptians were mummified. Thank you for reliving that trauma 😁
Bro samee I'll never forget that shit lmfaoo
It was a fungus. When they opened the tomb and stuff laying there for centuries, the fungal spores went into their lungs.
Yes.
I don't think there is anything to laugh about to a young boy King.. whose body has been so disrespectfully treated.
He did not live long it is true..and he suffered many things.
But these days he is the emblem of his Country and much respected..
As the saying goes Don't speak ill of the Dead.
Wow thanks for this informative video! My favorite part when you explained what killed the people :D
Video title: what killed the people - goes on a rant for 10 minutes saying absolutely nothing about what killed them.
I bet Tut was killed. His heart was removed because he was cursed in life. Those who wanted him dead REALLY wanted him dead. They took every step to make sure he wasn't reunited with his family.
My thoughts exactly!! Glad I'm not the only one with this theory.
The scenes from the movie The Mummy are 100% accurate.
Outstanding work !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Higher Secondary CBSE students probably watched this video thinking Hornbill has provided them everything they need to know about King Tut but psych - that's the wrong number.
Assassination is the only thing that makes sense to me as to why his burial was so hasty. The person that killed him and took the throne wanted everything hushed up and handled quickly.
Makes sence
Allow Me to congratulate you Mr for the best job you're doing man
Great video
They should of just left him alone, to rest. Find the tomb, take a look around but no need to remove the body it’s just disrespectful!
Perhaps that’s the God’s will so that people of today with so much wealth do not be arrogant . And take this as am admonition and fear God and don’t be ignorant while alive. As you can see he had so much but he’s nothing. Indeed every living thing will come to an end one day sooner or later.
When they opended Tut's tomb, his bad breath killed the tomb robbers!🤣
xD
Lol
Hahahah
i thought they had to bury him fast so a person could become a pharaoh but it had to be under a time limit for him to become one, so they buried him messily and fast.
No
His tombs appearance was due to tut dying so young. A tomb is started from a Pharoahs birth, the longer you live more extravagant it will be. Tut died young and suddenly so his tomb was rushed to finish which is why it was smaller, the walls bare and the floors cluttered with treasure.
I legit went to school with the great grandson of one of the guys who brought him back and I remember he brought in loads of crazy photos of it and a couple research papers
And there he is as always: the truely invincible camera man
“Toot, The Common”
This could definitely be a name of a King Tut comedy😂
The ancients knew the art of creating a "Thought Form" to guard the important places. The thought form caused death of those intruding the guarded places.